Joe Rogan Experience #2483 - Spencer Pratt

33 views

23 days ago

0

Save

Spencer Pratt

1 appearance

Spencer Pratt is an entrepreneur, author, candidate for the office of Mayor of Los Angeles, and co-host of “The Fame Game” with his wife, Heidi Montag. His new memoir, “The Guy You Loved to Hate: Confessions from a Reality TV Villain,” is available now. https://www.simonandschuster.com/books/The-Guy-You-Loved-to-Hate/Spencer-Pratt/9781668211762 https://www.youtube.com/ThePratts https://www.youtube.com/spencerpratt https://www.mayorpratt.com

ChatJRE - Chat with the JRE chatbot

Timestamps

0:17Why he decided to run for LA mayor: Palisades fire mismanagement, alleged cover-ups, and NGO/charity funding scams
9:58Alleged homelessness funding fraud in Los Angeles: NGO real-estate deals, audits, and enforcement plans
20:23LA homelessness spending, incentives, and enforcing laws (SB 43, policing, Skid Row)

Show all

Comments

Write a comment...

Mentioned

Transcript

0:00

Joe Rogan podcast check it out. The Joe Rogan experience. Train by day Joe Rogan

0:07

podcast by

0:08

night all day. What's going on Mr. Mayor? I'm so thankful to be here. My

0:16

pleasure.

0:17

So first of all how did this idea even get into your head of running for mayor

0:23

in LA?

0:26

To be clear I never wanted to run for any political office or have anything to

0:30

do with politicians. What happened was after spending a year uncovering how my

0:35

house and my parents house burned down and my neighbors burned alive and 7000

0:41

houses burned and then I realized there's a cover up going on. All the negligence

0:46

and I keep posting about it and I have all the facts. I have all the whistleblowers.

0:50

I have all the evidence and business as usual.

0:54

And I see that nobody is stepping up to run against the mayor who's responsible

1:00

for this disaster and so many other disasters. So it became to the point where

1:05

I got so sick of just being a as the younger people say in the comment section

1:10

a yapper like I felt like I was just yapping like making these videos. I'm

1:15

telling the truth.

1:16

I got a lot of truth. I got a lot of truth. I got a congressional investigation.

1:20

I went to Washington. I met with everyone possible that I could do as just a

1:24

citizen. And I was like okay well game on now. I'm going to go into your

1:30

headquarters and just take your job and then remove all these toxic entities

1:35

that are destroying our way of life in Los Angeles.

1:38

So let's start from the fire. So the narrative was God there was a lot of

1:44

terrible stupid fake narratives and one of them was climate change. That was

1:49

the craziest one. The climate change is causing the fire.

1:51

Look I lived in LA for 29, 30 years whatever it was and I guess it was yeah

1:58

somewhere around there. Maybe even more whatever it was. When I lived in LA

2:04

fire season happened every year. This is not climate change. This is not some

2:10

new thing over the last couple of decades. I was evacuated three different

2:13

times.

2:13

I used to live in Bell Canyon and my neighbors three of the homes right across

2:20

the right across the street from my house burnt to the ground in 2018. There's

2:24

always been fires in Los Angeles but the lack of preparation for the Palisades

2:31

fires was astonishing.

2:32

The fact that the reservoir was empty was criminal mismanagement. I mean it was

2:38

just insanity that everybody knew that we had fires like massive fires that it

2:44

was a dry place and when the Santa Ana winds would blow if something caught

2:50

fire it was a real problem.

2:51

We had known that forever and when you see all these people that are passing

2:58

the buck and moving the blame and then the fund when they had that big charity

3:07

thing for the fire and you found out that hundreds of millions of dollars was

3:13

raised.

3:14

You know if you're you're looking at it like a rational person a rational

3:19

person would say oh this is great all these people who lost their homes will

3:24

have some funds from this and they'll be able to rebuild.

3:27

And then you find out that the money was given to what was it like a hundred

3:31

and eight different NGOs 200 plus 200 plus where that money got distributed to

3:39

these organizations these supposed nonprofit organizations.

3:42

And most of that money goes to overhead and almost nothing goes to the people

3:48

who lost their homes.

3:50

So to rewind the start with what we thought we were told climate change and

3:57

with the climate change because I've spent hours and hours arguing with people

4:01

that will argue with that.

4:03

I go okay great the climate changes right so we're aware of this dry weather it

4:09

hasn't rained.

4:11

So what should we actually be doing should we just say oh everybody should burn

4:15

alive and houses burn down or should we clear the dead brush.

4:19

Should we pre deploy.

4:20

Should we make sure that both reservoirs have water in it.

4:24

So the idea that climate change is the get out of jail burn everything down

4:28

excuse it doesn't even add up.

4:30

So we know that so let's make a difference.

4:33

And I went and met with the chief of the US Forest Service and talked to him

4:38

for a few hours this guy chief Garcia is one of the most famous fire chiefs

4:43

from the hot shots.

4:43

And I quizzed him and he told me this was not a surprise.

4:47

He said they all have a map I forget the name of this map that it goes to all

4:52

cities and emergency personnel.

4:55

They have photos you look at him he showed him to me everything is bright red

5:00

leading up to January 7 bright red.

5:03

They knew this was coming to the point where chief Garcia had all of his

5:08

firefighters on the tarmac kitted up in their helicopters.

5:12

He said his whole team was standing by their computers because it was so

5:16

obvious this fire was coming based off of if you want to say climate change

5:20

because it's it had not rained.

5:22

It was record dry.

5:24

So this idea that they use that it's it's just an excuse and then the big one

5:29

that everyone falls for to this day that is the best propaganda ever is

5:34

hurricane winds.

5:35

We were told you know Newsom's doing the thing and he's saying the winds would

5:39

come in the hurricane he lit his hair on fire.

5:42

There was no hurricane winds in the Pacific Palisades.

5:45

The max wind speed was 40 miles per hour and for the first six hours when the

5:51

helicopter is the initial attack when you put out the the fire.

5:55

It was max setting 27 miles per hour.

5:58

So they got everyone with its unprecedented its hurricane winds its climate

6:04

change no responsibilities.

6:06

So now we go to fire aid.

6:08

This is this was another thing that just woke me up to you know we always heard

6:13

about the homeless NGO scam and the homeless industrial complex but living as a

6:18

fire victim and watching all these celebrities go on stage.

6:23

They actually took fire victims from Altadena on stage whose houses burned down

6:27

and they raise this hundred million dollars.

6:30

And as a victim I'm thinking okay you know we're gonna get a few thousand

6:33

dollars.

6:34

That's nice or you know you break a hundred million up.

6:37

This should be a grand you know even FEMA and these places when you get that

6:43

thousand dollar check it's helpful.

6:45

You're like oh I just lost everything every little thousand adds up.

6:48

So when that happened and nobody I know anywhere got money and Sue Pasco from

6:56

circling the news a local journalist whose house burnout she spent months

7:01

investigating calling up every single NGO who did you give money to which which

7:07

victim nobody got money.

7:08

Nobody got money and even though the law firm that they hired to do the you

7:13

know the cover-up for the fire aid the law firm says in their own little three

7:18

page document where they're defending fire aid.

7:21

They say several of the money went directly to fire victims.

7:26

Why Google just to see because I know the definition of several I want to see

7:30

what is Google say several is it was definitely under 10.

7:33

So out of 200 plus NGOs their own lawyers are saying several gave to fire

7:39

victims.

7:40

And then you look at the three that they name like we gave gift cards to

7:45

victims which victims which you were just handing out if you were but it was

7:50

that that woke me up too.

7:52

They just stole the money.

7:53

Yeah and if they'll do that to the people whose houses just burned down of

7:57

course they're going to do it to our tax money with the homeless industrial

8:01

zombie complex.

8:02

So that was a real wake up that put me into oh here's where the 25 30 billion

8:08

dollars goes.

8:09

It doesn't go to solving anything or fixing it.

8:12

It goes to scams.

8:14

Well I don't think before doge and before Elon started investigating into a lot

8:20

of these NGOs.

8:21

I don't think anybody was really aware most people were not aware of how this

8:24

all works and how there's a whole bureaucracy like a business that's set up

8:33

where a bunch of people get paid from this money to essentially make no

8:38

improvements whatsoever and whatever the problem is whether it's homelessness.

8:42

The homelessness is one of the biggest ones in LA because there was 24 plus

8:47

billion dollars spent on homelessness and when people when representatives have

8:53

tried to do an audit to find out where this money went Newsom has blocked it.

8:58

He has vetoed this audit.

9:01

So it's it's even worse in the sense that it's not going to just their salaries.

9:06

There's actual cases now with the DOJ and the feds.

9:09

They're arresting people who are just stealing 30 million 20 million buying Bentleys

9:14

mansions in Brentwood.

9:16

So the idea that it's just going to salaries and people are paying themselves

9:20

out.

9:20

That's one but there's also people just straight up stealing money and and you

9:24

can't even figure out how they steal it.

9:27

For instance, this lovely lady came on my podcast and she's she created her own

9:32

charity type thing the integrity project to expose NGOs because she lives in

9:37

Westwood.

9:38

And all of a sudden one day on her block in this, you know, she invested with

9:42

her husband have a nice single family house on this nice street in Westwood and

9:46

the old person home.

9:48

They're kicking all the senior citizens out.

9:50

What's going on here?

9:51

And then next thing you know, the buildings on the on the market for sale and

9:56

it's for 11 million dollars.

9:58

Six days later that building sells to a developer for 27 million dollars ends

10:04

up this NGO Weingart who's one of the top.

10:08

I think they're at maybe a hundred million dollars just this year.

10:12

They haven't turned in their audit to the feds.

10:14

It's late right now.

10:16

But for instance, no one knows why it went from 11 million to 27 million over

10:20

the weekend in three days.

10:22

So people pocket that money.

10:24

Here's the craziest part.

10:25

Guess who?

10:26

So you the grant, you know, Weingart gets a grant from the city of the state.

10:29

Guess who owns that building?

10:31

Not the city or the state.

10:33

Weingart.

10:34

So our tax money buys for 20 extra million dollars of property to have it as a

10:40

homeless housing.

10:41

Each of these beds because I think there's maybe only 70 beds in it.

10:44

It's now six years later approximately totally not finished not done more.

10:49

You know construction this or that they still get paid as operators.

10:54

So these NGOs not only get the money for the grants to buy the building.

10:58

Then they get like a million dollars a year to be operators.

11:01

And here's the best part.

11:02

There's no mandatory that they have to actually put a body in the beds.

11:07

So, you know, so the scam is like I keep saying this is a cartel.

11:12

This is mafia.

11:14

This is real mafia criminal stuff going on.

11:18

And the problem is.

11:19

So one thing I'm so excited to do when I'm mayor and people in the comments

11:23

section like, oh, he's so stupid.

11:25

You can't do that.

11:26

I've met with the IRS criminal investigation team three times in LA twice in

11:31

Washington DC.

11:32

And they are so excited for me to be mayor because all they need is one

11:36

document from each of these NGOs and these grants and they can open these

11:41

investigations on fraud.

11:42

Right now, they know the fraud and the crimes are happening.

11:46

But if the city doesn't hand over the document and the NGO doesn't, they say

11:49

they can't just open up these cases without that one document.

11:53

So first week.

11:55

Sorry.

11:56

So for first week as mayor, I'm bringing in the criminal investigation team.

12:00

Here's all the NGOs we're working with.

12:03

I guarantee you 95% of them already just call and they're like, oh, Mayor Pratt.

12:07

Oh, we're good.

12:08

We're actually going to Seattle.

12:09

We don't want to work here.

12:10

Once they know someone's coming to stop the cookie jar stealing.

12:14

And then when people are like, oh, LA has no money.

12:17

How are you going to do all this stuff?

12:18

LA has plenty of money that we're just letting our tax money just be stolen.

12:23

And to increase a problem homeless since our current mayor, Karen Bass has has

12:28

joined the city power.

12:30

She's increased homeless.

12:31

They reference numbers.

12:33

They reference numbers that she'll be like, oh, we remove 1500 people this year.

12:38

But she doesn't say, oh, 1500 were removed into the cemetery because they owed

12:43

deed.

12:44

Not to mention how much tax money we're spending on just keeping zombies alive.

12:49

I met with firefighters a few days ago at the Hollywood station, and they were

12:54

telling me the amount of Narcan they go through.

12:57

So in one night in the, I talked to MacArthur Park, their fire station.

13:03

He did 17 overdoses in one night.

13:06

Jeez.

13:07

So if they're not there, given the Narcan where the amount of people dying is

13:12

even more insane.

13:14

Right now, six people are dying a day in the street.

13:16

And then they say, oh, this is compassionate.

13:19

These people have rights.

13:20

No, these people do not have rights for us to just die.

13:22

We need to protect these people as humans.

13:25

And again, that's why my whole thing is enforce the law.

13:28

It is illegal to just be doing fentanyl on the street.

13:31

So if we come in and we give you mandatory treatment, not jail, if you're not,

13:37

you know, some of these people are just straight going to jail for animal abuse.

13:40

They're torturing animals all day long on Skid Row.

13:44

The videos that I get sent, once you see them, you can't unsee them.

13:48

Not to mention now I'm working with all the rescue ones, the ones they text me

13:52

and they're just like, Spencer, we have to stop this.

13:54

And the city knows they call the cops all day long.

13:57

The cops all day long, the cops come and they say, I mean, LAPD's hands are

14:00

tied.

14:01

If the mayor and the city attorney, they don't have like enforce the law, they

14:06

just get away with it.

14:07

So we're in Mad Max life in Los Angeles.

14:11

And people like to say, oh, it's not this.

14:14

I'm from L.A.

14:15

I've grown up.

14:16

And I keep saying I'm fighting to get L.A. back to what I grew up.

14:20

It was beautiful.

14:21

It's why I wanted to be on a TV show and be famous and be part of Hollywood.

14:25

It was magical.

14:27

Not even mentioned.

14:28

Hollywood is now gone.

14:29

The fact that Hollywood Boulevard should be the greatest tourist attraction in

14:34

the world.

14:35

You couldn't pay me right now to go on Hollywood Boulevard, step on human feces,

14:39

the smell of pee, inhaling.

14:42

Everyone can just smoke fentanyl on the streets now.

14:45

It's psycho.

14:46

So, again, why did I, once you start digging in and you spend all your life now

14:51

exposing this because, again, they burn my house down.

14:55

They burn my mom's house down.

14:57

I have to, they put me in the game.

14:59

And once you, the bubble's gone, I just, all I have is this energy to stop this.

15:04

Not to mention now the amount of thousands of messages I get every day from

15:09

every part of the city sending me photos.

15:12

There's parents that, when they drive to school all across the city, this is

15:16

not just one unique area.

15:18

They have to have their kids in the backseat staring at an iPad not to look out

15:21

the window because meth addicts will just be having sex on the side of the

15:25

street.

15:26

There's just naked people everywhere now.

15:29

And when I say people, naked zombies.

15:31

And the DEA will tell you 90% of these homeless people have a drug problem.

15:36

We have a drug addict problem.

15:38

These aren't people that just, like, missed a paycheck and we need to get them

15:42

help and get back.

15:43

This is a drug problem that needs mandatory treatment.

15:46

Not handing people needles and pipes and saying, oh, here's a million dollar

15:51

bed.

15:51

If you're a fentanyl zombie hanging upside down, you don't care about a million

15:55

dollar empty bed because you're just high.

15:58

You sober up and you go get high again.

16:00

But what were we talking about?

16:02

Got me pumped up.

16:03

Got me pumped up.

16:04

It's good to be pumped up.

16:05

I mean, there's no other explanation other than extensive fraud.

16:08

There's no way they could be getting that much money from our taxes and have

16:12

this big of a problem with crime and with homelessness.

16:15

And it's almost like they want everybody to feel helpless.

16:20

They want you to feel like there's nothing you do so that it justifies throwing

16:24

more money at the problem.

16:26

Pull that article up again.

16:27

So here it is.

16:29

This is an L.A.'s homeless deal now under federal investigation.

16:36

So even in L.A.'s famously overheated real estate market, the profit and quick

16:41

turnaround on senior housing complex.

16:43

And what's that word?

16:45

Cheviot?

16:46

Cheviot?

16:47

How do you say that word?

16:48

Cheviot Hills.

16:49

Cheviot Hills.

16:50

Do you know where that is?

16:51

Neighborhood seems extraordinary.

16:52

Man at the center of the deal.

16:53

Since identified by federal prosecutors as Brentwood landlord and developer,

16:57

Steven Taylor bought the property on Shelby Drive in 2023 for 11.2 million

17:03

purchase record shows.

17:04

Okay.

17:05

So this is exactly what you're talking about.

17:09

$27.3 million to pay for that acquisition came from taxpayer grant funds

17:14

authorized by city and state officials according to grant documentations.

17:18

L.A. Mayor Karen Bass and Governor Newsom touted the purchase as a key tool in

17:24

the fight against homelessness.

17:26

The fight against homelessness that they're losing.

17:28

The deal called for Taylor's involvement to be kept secret according to a

17:32

confidentiality clause included in the purchase contract obtained through a

17:37

public records request.

17:39

That changed last month when federal authorities announced criminal charges

17:42

against Taylor.

17:43

He's accused of submitting fraudulent documents to borrow money from private lenders

17:49

when he bought this and other properties.

17:52

So news conference regions top federal prosecutor Bill Assayley said the

18:00

investigation is ongoing.

18:02

Taylor was arrested in August when the case was under seal and pleaded not

18:06

guilty court records show.

18:07

It's the first of the two known criminal cases brought so far by the federal

18:11

task force.

18:12

Assayley assembled in April to investigate fraud and corruption around the use

18:16

of billions of dollars earmarked to combat homelessness in Southern California.

18:20

So these people are just buccaneers.

18:22

They're just buccaneers.

18:23

They're just buccaneers.

18:24

This is a just a gigantic criminal enterprise that exists under this guise of

18:32

you know being kind.

18:34

Like so that case only exists because of that mom Samantha spent did 7,500 of

18:41

her own public records requests on that senior citizen home.

18:45

That and then the FBI came to she started posting an FBI knocked on her door

18:49

and said can we meet with you and she gave them all of her files.

18:53

So it's back to what I was saying.

18:54

The feds wouldn't even got that story if this woman Samantha from the integrity

18:59

project didn't do 7,000 public records requests and build this case on her own

19:04

because she was what's going on in my next door neighbor.

19:07

This episode is brought to you by ketone IQ.

19:10

The demands on my time energy and focus are immense.

19:13

So when I need my brain to lock in for hours and hours and fire at its fastest

19:19

most alert state.

19:20

I'm taking ketone IQ.

19:22

It's an energy shot powered by this little miracle molecule that your body

19:27

already naturally makes and your brain especially loves ketones.

19:32

I've been talking about ketones for over a decade and this company's finally

19:36

figured out how to put them in a bottle.

19:38

When I take ketone IQ I drop right into a state of laser like focus and

19:43

sustained mental clarity whether I'm podcasting training in the gym or just

19:48

want to show up locked in when it matters.

19:51

The difference is night and day with ketone IQ visit ketone dot com slash Rogan

19:57

for 30% off your subscription order or find ketone IQ at Target stores

20:04

nationwide in the protein and electrolyte aisle.

20:07

And get your first shot free.

20:10

Plus they have a 60 day money back guarantee.

20:14

That's how confident they are that you're going to love the increased focus you

20:18

get from ketone IQ.

20:19

Well this has got to be just one piece of the puzzle.

20:23

That's 30 million of 25 plus billion dollars.

20:26

This is so this is an extensive coordinated effort to siphon money.

20:32

100% and again there's plenty of money to stop homelessness.

20:37

Karen Bass will tell you let's use her low number and made up number they go

20:42

around and they count.

20:43

They drive.

20:44

There's a real thing.

20:45

They drive around and they do the homeless count.

20:46

You can volunteer and you just count.

20:47

I go wonder.

20:48

So that's how they do it.

20:49

Yes, they just had a count recently.

20:52

So the count supposedly is let's say 45,000.

20:57

The Rand Corporation will say that count is 30% low.

21:00

I'll say that counts 100% low.

21:02

But even so let's say there's a hundred thousand homeless people in Los Angeles.

21:07

20 billion dollars.

21:09

Okay, that's California.

21:10

Let's bring it down to in the last year to a couple billion dollars.

21:15

We can't get people off the street with that much money.

21:19

Just today this DSA city council member was doing a video.

21:23

She's bragging about oh, I just secured 16 million dollar grant.

21:27

I love to use the grant.

21:28

I just got 16 million dollars more of our tax money and she is putting in

21:32

little tiny homes next to somebody like just next to a normal street where

21:36

again, this shouldn't be where that is.

21:38

And it's housing approximately I say 60 people or whatever I did that it was a

21:42

quarter million dollars per person that they're bragging about $250,000 a

21:49

person can get anybody sober a nice little condo or apartment for a year

21:56

potentially whatever job tools you need.

21:59

So this idea that takes a quarter million dollars to put a tiny it's everyone's

22:03

getting a cut.

22:04

It's like again, it's like the mafia who's there's a bunch of things going on.

22:08

There's a bunch of employees that are getting paid.

22:11

So and getting paid substantial amounts of money.

22:14

You know, my friend Cole on the war found this out about San Francisco.

22:17

So he went up to San Francisco.

22:19

He saw this homelessness and he's a lawyer, but he's also he doesn't know what's

22:23

going on over there.

22:24

He's like wow, what's going on?

22:25

Do they need more money?

22:26

He's like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.

22:29

What's going on is they're actually incentivized to have more homeless people.

22:33

Because the more homeless people, the bigger the bureaucracy grows, the bigger

22:37

you can have your homeless foundation, your homeless task force, whatever it is.

22:42

And these people are making quarter million dollars a year plus, which is

22:45

insane.

22:46

And he showed the list of the salaries of all these people.

22:49

Like, how are you getting paid when the problem keeps getting worse?

22:52

And all you're doing is hiring more people and they're getting paid more money

22:58

and more projects and more grants and more homelessness.

23:02

And it's not getting any better.

23:03

But the money keeps coming in.

23:05

So you're incentivized to keep the problem.

23:07

And increase it.

23:08

Yes.

23:09

More money.

23:10

It's a business.

23:11

Right.

23:12

And, you know, people always talk.

23:13

I grew up and I was well aware of the military industrial complex.

23:17

But even with that, they track the bombs and the fighter jets.

23:21

This, it's even, it's even crazier because there's no, I think we, we serve.

23:26

They use the word serve and cared for.

23:29

They don't track results.

23:30

They say, oh, we house 1,400 people for a night, two nights.

23:35

You know, it's not like we're getting people have bracelets and we're tracking

23:39

them and they're getting air tags.

23:40

We have no idea what's going on.

23:42

So again, I keep saying as mayor, I'll enforce the laws because you cannot be a

23:49

crazed drug addict zombie just running amok naked on the street.

23:53

That is why, thank God, our amazing Democrats in California made this year SB

23:59

43.

24:00

And that means if you can't manage your own mental state, you can come in and

24:05

have a hole, the psych hole for 72 hours.

24:08

And if it seems like, oh, this person needs real treatment, it can go to 45

24:13

days and then it can go up to a year conservatorship.

24:15

And as mayor, what I keep telling people is once you start enforcing the law,

24:20

first off, people who just want to do drugs and live on the streets,

24:23

they will leave L.A. because they'll see, oh, this mayor is not playing around.

24:28

We need to go somewhere else or they're so crazy and we're going to help them

24:32

get medical treatment or they're one of these dog abusing type people.

24:37

And I'm going to put them under the jail to the point where once they get from

24:40

under the jail, somehow, if they ever get out, they will never come back to L.A.

24:44

because now they've been under the jail and they're going to go under two times

24:48

more till they end up in prison.

24:49

Because if you abuse animals once again, once you see what I've seen, we're

24:54

talking, they're stapling dogs, eyes closed.

24:56

I mean, yeah, it's it's it's insane.

25:01

The shelters alone where it's the city is doing mass murder because they're not

25:05

giving these people enough funding.

25:07

And I'm convinced now they must make money off of euthanizing.

25:11

So there's the street issue with the zombies abusing dogs and then the city

25:18

just mass murdering dogs because they're not getting the proper funding and

25:22

facilities.

25:23

And they're not spaying and neutering and enforcing all the laws to keep, you

25:28

know, street breeders from just flooding the streets with the dogs.

25:32

So back to you enforce the law and this isn't impossible.

25:36

I've met with a lot of people that have real estate in Los Angeles and they

25:40

have real estate in San Francisco.

25:42

And Mayor Lurie came in and he started enforcing the law and just saying you

25:46

can't do this.

25:47

And he has cleaned up the city pretty well.

25:50

And, you know, there's obviously people that say he's not doing enough.

25:53

And again, I'm sorry, what city is this?

25:54

San Francisco.

25:55

San Francisco.

25:56

And so he he took the call from the feds and he said, I'm going to do this.

26:00

And he's doing a solid job.

26:02

Again, I'm going whole next level because I'm not concerned about optics.

26:06

I'm not concerned about, oh, Spencer's doing this.

26:09

He's so mean.

26:10

No, what's mean is letting people live on the street in human poop and dying on

26:14

the street.

26:15

And these people I run against, they're all the same.

26:17

They go, oh, we need more housing.

26:19

We need more affordable housing.

26:20

We need more beds.

26:21

This isn't working.

26:22

We they just keep doubling down.

26:24

Well, that's a false narrative.

26:25

Everybody knows it's not a housing problem.

26:27

It's not.

26:28

That's not what it is.

26:29

It's a drug abuse and mental health problem.

26:31

That's all it is.

26:32

It's not a housing problem.

26:33

That's a flat out lie.

26:34

And anybody who says that should be shamed when they say we need more

26:38

affordable housing.

26:39

Well, you're fucking lying.

26:40

And you're part of the problem.

26:42

If you're saying it's just an affordable housing problem, that means either you

26:47

are a

26:47

part of the propaganda narrative and you've been told to say this or you're in

26:51

on it.

26:52

100 percent.

26:53

And at this point, it's fucking nuts.

26:56

Skid Row is 50 blocks.

26:59

It's it can't even be called Skid Row anymore.

27:01

It's called Los Angeles.

27:02

We're every community before my house burned down in the Palisades.

27:06

My wife was ready to move because every morning front of Palisades Elementary

27:11

that then burned

27:11

down and across the street at my son's preschool at Methodist.

27:14

There was a lady cleaning her private parts in front of kids at 7:45 in the

27:18

morning.

27:19

You call LAPD.

27:20

They pull up and they go.

27:22

You don't know 'cause they can't enforce the law.

27:26

She go around the corner and she go number two in front of Joe's Barbershop.

27:30

I would know because I had to step over the number two because I'd always park

27:34

right near Joe's Barbershop.

27:35

So it's not Skid Row.

27:37

It's everywhere.

27:38

So the police are told not to do anything about it.

27:40

Is that what it is?

27:41

If you don't enforce the law, what are they going to do?

27:45

Right.

27:46

So this comes down from the mayor.

27:48

Of course.

27:49

And the mayor and the city attorney.

27:50

If the mayor is not telling the city attorney to prosecute all his misdemeanors,

27:54

put these

27:54

people in mandatory hold.

27:56

If you're cleaning your private parts in front of kids and you're a normal

28:00

citizen, you are

28:01

going to jail.

28:02

You're going to be on the citizens app as a sex offender.

28:05

Right.

28:06

But the consequences for zombie people, they don't have them.

28:11

That's crazy.

28:12

It's not fair for all the normal tax paying people in Los Angeles that we have

28:16

to abide

28:17

by laws.

28:18

And then there's a whole class is like, it's like anarchy.

28:21

It's like a, it's psycho.

28:23

It's so weird to see, you know, cause I lived in LA for so long.

28:28

And when I first moved there in the nineties, there was nothing like this.

28:31

It was, it was nice.

28:33

You know, I mean, it was a lot of traffic, but that was it.

28:36

There was some crime, but it wasn't that bad.

28:38

And everything just keeps getting worse and worse and worse.

28:41

And it, it didn't seem really bad until, well, Skid Row was always bad and Skid

28:48

Row was bad

28:49

on purpose.

28:50

So for people that don't know, and we, we looked into this because we were,

28:54

well, I found out

28:55

about Skid Row.

28:56

I knew it existed, but I found out about it when we were filming Fear Factor.

29:00

So one day, cause we filmed a lot in downtown LA and a lot of these abandoned

29:03

warehouses

29:04

and buildings, and we were in one of these warehouses and we left the set and I

29:10

drove

29:10

home and I took a wrong turn.

29:12

And, uh, I went down near the outskirts of Skid Row.

29:17

And it's hard to believe that it's real.

29:21

If you haven't seen it, when you're talking just blocks and blocks and blocks

29:26

where there's

29:27

nothing but homeless people, just people on the streets, camped out, wandering

29:33

through the streets.

29:33

There's no cars driving whatsoever, garbage everywhere.

29:37

And the idea that that's never been cleaned up is fucking insane.

29:41

So what we found out is that that was an area a long time ago where they

29:45

started moving people.

29:47

I don't know when was this.

29:48

This was the Jerome hotel, right?

29:50

That's what we talked about.

29:51

That's what it was.

29:52

So there was a documentary on the Jerome hotel.

29:55

And when we looked into it, it turns out that what they would do is they would

30:00

find vagrants, which

30:02

is the old school term for it.

30:04

And they would find them in Beverly Hills or Hollywood.

30:07

And they would just move them to downtown LA to Skid Row and leave them there

30:12

and keep them there.

30:13

The idea was to keep them there.

30:15

They had food there for them.

30:17

They had kitchens.

30:18

They let them camp out on the street.

30:19

Just stay here.

30:20

And it ruined all Cecil, the Cecil hotel.

30:23

That's right.

30:24

So this is where they, so Cecil hotel was like this beautiful hotel that

30:28

existed in downtown

30:30

LA.

30:31

And now it's just like, it's in zombie land.

30:33

And the whole area is filled with fucking just everything around it is homeless.

30:39

Like the sheer volume of it is impossible to describe unless you go there and

30:44

see it.

30:45

And the fact that that's never been addressed, that no one does anything about

30:49

it.

30:49

It's gotten to 50 entire blocks of nothing but homeless people, no businesses,

30:55

no nothing.

30:56

Nothing's functioning.

30:57

It's all just taken over by zombies.

30:59

I went to USC and I lived in a loft on Skid Row at the top of the old bank

31:04

district.

31:05

So in 2003, that was my street that I would pull in and park.

31:10

Very good deal.

31:11

That's why I was like, this is, I got an entire penthouse.

31:14

You know, I didn't get, you know, at 20 why it was so cheap.

31:18

But so I've seen the progression to the point where it's insane.

31:23

And again, this is fixable.

31:25

There's so much money.

31:27

We are already paying for it.

31:28

Right.

31:29

These people in charge don't want to fix it.

31:31

It's clear.

31:32

Right.

31:33

And they'll continue doubling down.

31:34

They need somebody to come and say, oh, we're done with this.

31:37

And that's why I'm excited to actually be a mayor that's in these streets.

31:41

And here's what they keep saying.

31:43

Oh, you can't do this because the city council, they're all in on it.

31:46

You know, 90% of them because they have four of these socialist DSA members on

31:51

the city council that actually want to destroy our way of life in Los Angeles.

31:55

Why do you think they want to do that?

31:57

Because they're socialists.

31:58

Go on the DSA, Democratic Socialists of America's website, and they're not

32:03

Democrats.

32:04

They hate Democrats.

32:05

They use the word to hide their true agenda of socialism.

32:09

So they want to keep taking as much of our tax money.

32:12

And exactly the main lady I was talking about with that 60 million.

32:15

She's one of these DSA people.

32:16

She's bragging about taking $16 million of our tax money to give 40 plus people

32:22

or 50 people, 250,000 each to live in a tiny home.

32:26

That is not a working solution.

32:28

We need to have a plan to get these people back into society, not bankroll an

32:33

entire existence of Los Angeles where we're like, oh, you can just be a drug

32:38

addict and we're going to pay for you because.

32:40

Yeah, this is the problem with that narrative that the rich people aren't

32:43

paying enough.

32:44

And this is one of the things that I've seen progressive podcasters talk about

32:48

the wealth tax.

32:49

And they were talking about imposing a wealth tax on billionaires.

32:52

And they're like, stop being greedy.

32:53

Pay your fair share.

32:55

Like, what is your fair share and where is it going?

32:58

Like, if you could show me that an increase in taxes would fix all the problems.

33:03

I said this when I lived there.

33:04

I wouldn't mind paying more taxes if they fixed everything.

33:07

But it doesn't seem like it fixes anything.

33:10

Not one thing gets fixed.

33:12

And they keep asking for more money, which is crazy.

33:16

The solution is cut it all off.

33:19

One of the things that Texas has, no state taxes.

33:22

There's no state taxes.

33:24

You don't pay state taxes in Texas.

33:27

In California, you pay 14%.

33:30

So they're incentivized to take that money and do with it whatever they want.

33:36

So the more they can come up with, like building tiny homes or whatever the

33:40

fuck it is.

33:41

It's just incentives for them to siphon money.

33:45

And again, as mayor, I want to have full accountability and transparency.

33:49

Where that's what everybody that's paying.

33:51

There's a lot of good people that are fine with paying as much tax as they want.

33:56

If you're helping people get off the street.

33:58

If the lights work.

33:59

If the streets work.

34:00

If there's less crime.

34:01

If it's safe.

34:02

If it's nice.

34:03

If it's clean.

34:04

So we need to track every single dollar and make sure that there's no waste and

34:09

abuse.

34:09

And with that type of live dashboard, not track it with these weird data.

34:13

I'm talking anyone can understand this money goes here.

34:17

And we're talking real accounting.

34:19

They don't want to do this because everyone's eating.

34:22

Everyone's getting a cut.

34:23

All these people are living off of the scam.

34:27

So you need to come in and really just say no more of this.

34:30

So let's talk real world practical application.

34:34

So you get into office.

34:36

Now you have all these council members that these democratic socialist people.

34:40

How do you handle that?

34:41

What do you do?

34:42

How do you keep them from blocking all these things you're trying to do?

34:45

So that is what excites me because there's never been a mayor that comes in and

34:52

literally goes to each of their constituents of these districts.

34:56

For instance, this DSA member wants to keep giving the fentanyl needles and the

35:00

pipes.

35:01

Then I go to that district.

35:03

I have a press conference.

35:04

I bring everybody.

35:05

I say this so and so wants to keep these zombies going number two and having

35:10

sex in front of your kids and put the heat on the city council members.

35:14

Right now they care about their jobs.

35:17

They get two hundred and thirty eight thousand a year salary.

35:20

They get not even including their entourage.

35:23

Then they get, you know, our grants and our tax money for all their little scams

35:26

they're running.

35:27

So they actually want those jobs.

35:29

If a mayor comes in and is like, oh, we're I'm going to put the heat on each

35:33

one of you.

35:34

Because right now the mayor, Karen Bass, isn't calling out each district and

35:39

their failures.

35:40

This this constituents, the taxpayers need somebody to come in and expose each

35:46

of these districts and go into their communities.

35:48

Be like, this is what you're voting for.

35:50

So at least at the next election, they're out.

35:53

So then once they start feeling the pressure, somebody on their neck, they're

35:56

going to start.

35:58

Oh, I don't want.

35:59

I want to keep my job.

36:00

I like this power.

36:01

But there's been a concerted effort to put those people in the government.

36:03

Right.

36:04

And, you know, a lot of people point to George Soros and he's one of them.

36:07

And his Open Society Foundation is one of the people that likes to do that,

36:10

particularly for very progressive prosecutors and DAs.

36:15

But it's there's more than just him.

36:18

There's there's a whole machine behind it.

36:20

And this is what I don't understand, because if you wanted to destroy a city,

36:24

if you wanted to destroy society, you would do it exactly the way they're doing

36:28

it.

36:28

So what is their incentive and why are they doing it this way?

36:31

Well, they want to destroy it to then rebuild it in their vision.

36:34

The second my town burned down and it's all dirt, who's coming in with the

36:38

ideas?

36:39

Oh, we got 100 million for affordable housing.

36:42

We're going to do this.

36:43

They have a plan.

36:44

They have a vision that's not going to work, but they have their utopia that

36:49

they would love to then rebuild.

36:51

How do you say it's not going to work?

36:52

What's going to stop them from doing that?

36:54

Because socialism has failed everywhere.

36:56

Well, it's certainly going to fail.

36:57

But what's to stop them from ruining the Palisades?

37:00

Well, I did.

37:03

I stopped them.

37:04

They can say that SB 79 or whatever their, you know, housing thing was never

37:08

going to apply to Palisades.

37:10

But after me attacking it all day for weeks, they added like 13 notes and made

37:17

the Palisades a fire hazard area where you couldn't build high density.

37:22

Because what they do, there's a new state law that just got passed.

37:26

And if you're, again, these aren't exact.

37:28

All the YIMBYs are going to go nuts.

37:30

I'm saying it wrong.

37:31

What's a YIMBY?

37:32

You're something about your backyard now.

37:35

Who knows?

37:36

I don't, you know, they're, I have to block them usually on social media, but I,

37:42

they have a vision that everything in California and Los Angeles should be high

37:46

density.

37:47

How then we need to build these seven, nine story structures to have more

37:51

affordable housing.

37:53

So they want to get rid of single family homes and put seven story buildings on.

37:58

So the NIMBYs not in, not in my backyard, they, they fight these people on, on

38:04

X.

38:04

So, you know, to be honest, I'm not either of them.

38:07

They try to, I'm fine with more housing, but I also want people to have single

38:12

family homes.

38:13

And I think the fact that we lost the idea where we can't fight for the

38:17

California dream to have a front yard with grass and it's gotten so expensive

38:22

and impossible.

38:23

That should be the problem.

38:24

Not that, Oh, we've given up.

38:26

Nobody should ever get that.

38:27

We need to build these seven story prison like structures and give anyone who

38:31

can't afford just a box to live in.

38:33

Let's fight to get the California where people had a front yard and grass.

38:38

Well, it's also insane to try to do that with the Palisades, because the Palisades

38:42

has always been a wealthy neighborhood where people with a lot of money spent a

38:46

lot of money and also paid a lot of money in taxes and had these beautiful

38:51

homes.

38:51

And the idea that you're going to take that over with low income housing.

38:56

Well, those people are going to move out of there and there goes the tax money

38:59

from those people.

39:00

Not only that, those people lost their homes, their homes were taken from them

39:04

by the fire.

39:05

And that's not fair.

39:06

It's not fair at all that you would just do that.

39:09

It doesn't make any sense.

39:10

I like to use the word stolen.

39:12

The houses were stolen from all these people.

39:15

A misconception, though, because I'm from the Palisades and I grew up.

39:18

The Palisades just became this wealthier, you know, famous people in the last,

39:24

let's say, ten years.

39:26

But growing up...

39:27

That's it?

39:28

Really?

39:29

Ten years?

39:30

We're talking big, you know, $40 million type big houses.

39:35

Like when I grew up...

39:36

I thought it was always like that.

39:37

No.

39:38

I thought it was always nice.

39:39

It was nice.

39:40

But, you know, lawyers and doctors, you know, not Silicon Valley and movies.

39:45

Got it.

39:46

Hard-working people pass these houses down generations.

39:50

So, they were nice houses.

39:51

But, you know, your great grandfather probably passed the house down.

39:55

And, you know, my dad's a dentist.

39:57

He came in, he was a surfing dentist and was able to get a house in the Palisades.

40:00

And it's a beautiful area.

40:01

Yeah.

40:02

It's...

40:03

Gorgeous area.

40:04

Amazing weather.

40:05

So...

40:06

And people should know that an area bigger than the size of Manhattan burnt to

40:12

the ground.

40:12

So, let's go back.

40:14

Let's do the fire.

40:15

Because that's a great...

40:16

We haven't even...

40:17

You know, we just touched on it.

40:18

But nobody's really talked about what happened.

40:20

How this fire started.

40:21

You know, why we're on the fire.

40:23

So, people would think about the Palisades fire and they go, "Oh, January 7th."

40:27

Well, what happened?

40:28

The fire for January 7th actually started on New Year's Eve.

40:32

So, there's a case right now.

40:33

It's kind of fallen through the cracks.

40:35

It may not go forward.

40:37

There's arson cases.

40:38

Supposedly, allegedly, this guy lit a fire at New Year's Eve.

40:41

With a lighter or a cigarette.

40:43

And there was an 8-acre fire.

40:45

Now, according to witness testimony, there's about 30 people that saw fireworks

40:50

go into

40:51

this site called Lockman, Skull Rock.

40:54

So, at New Year's Eve, 8-acre fire starts.

40:58

LAFD responds.

40:59

But the issue...

41:00

What people don't understand...

41:01

When they respond, they can't come up there with heavy dozers.

41:04

So, a dozer, like a bulldozer, has a rake-type thing on the front and they

41:10

clear around the fire and they make a fire break even when the fire is going.

41:14

Ideally, you'd want the fire break before.

41:16

Which, because of California state parks and plant over people policies, we don't

41:21

have fire breaks.

41:22

So, dead fuels, dead brush has been growing around lots of communities for 50,

41:28

60 years.

41:29

So, right now, the Palisades burned down.

41:31

But what's next is Brentwood, Hollywood Hills, Sunland, Tujunga, what else?

41:39

What else?

41:40

Bel Air.

41:41

All these are going...

41:42

I'm sorry, people, you live here.

41:43

They're all gonna burn down if we don't come in here, make fire breaks up 300

41:48

feet.

41:48

Because when I met with Chief Bobby Garcia and I asked him about fire breaks,

41:52

the purpose of the fire break is to give firefighters a chance to dig in.

41:56

And when they drop the retardant, if there's not a 300-foot break, then all the

42:01

retardant just falls through the different levels of the foliage and it doesn't

42:05

make a moat.

42:06

So, if you have a break, it creates a moat-type situation and now the

42:10

firefighters have a chance to get up there and respond.

42:13

So, back to January 1st.

42:15

They couldn't bring their dozers up.

42:17

We now have text messages because, again, I'm one of the lead plaintiffs suing

42:21

the city of LA, LADWP, and the state of California state parks.

42:25

So, I have all the text messages public now.

42:28

But we have the texts from the park rangers, the LAFD, and they're joking about,

42:32

"Of course I'm not bringing any dozers.

42:34

I know the rule, you know, protected plants."

42:37

Keep in mind, I never knew about this plant.

42:40

It's called milk vetch.

42:41

Nobody respectfully cares about milk vetch.

42:43

But somebody in the environmental world cares more about milk vetch than 12

42:48

people burning alive.

42:50

Because the plant that was protected is the reason, pretty much, these people

42:54

burned alive.

42:55

So, they do their best.

42:58

You know, the LAFD puts it out.

43:00

But now we know that the fire was still smoldering.

43:04

We have hiking footage of the next day and the day after in the state park, Topanga

43:09

State Park.

43:10

Hikers, tourists.

43:11

We have a guy who lived down the street.

43:13

Of course, he had his own drone that had not only a regular drone, he had a

43:16

thermal imaging drone.

43:18

So, the whole hillside is just smoking.

43:20

And we now have a firefighter, Pike, on his subpoena video.

43:25

He says that he clearly saw smoldering pockets of coal that he didn't even want

43:31

to touch.

43:32

And he informed his chief, "Hey, we can't pull the hoses."

43:36

And the chief said, "Pull the hoses."

43:38

Not just Pike, multiple firefighters have now said that it was all smoking.

43:43

But why would they pull the hoses?

43:45

After meeting with so many firefighters since, I've realized the fire

43:49

department is so understaffed, so underfunded.

43:53

They're operating a fire department from the 1960s with 50% more calls now.

43:59

80% of them are for zombies to overdoses.

44:03

30% of the fires are zombie encampment fires.

44:07

So, to me now, I'm trying to get in that chief.

44:10

I spoke with that chief on the phone.

44:12

And in my mind, it's a budget thing.

44:16

Everything's just like, "Oh, we don't have, you know, clocks tick in.

44:19

We don't have the money to stay up here with the hoses."

44:21

Because three years earlier, the same area in the Highlands,

44:24

I think they left the hoses up in the Palisades for 18 months.

44:27

You leave the hoses up because it stays hot and they have them up.

44:30

They pull them the next day.

44:32

So, I think it's a funding thing.

44:33

I mean, the chief, Chief Crowley, who Mayor Bass fired in retaliation for

44:37

telling the truth,

44:38

seven weeks before the Palisades fire, she wrote a memo to Karen Bass and said,

44:43

"I am dangerously underfunded.

44:45

I cannot keep Angelino safe."

44:47

What does Mayor Bass do?

44:48

Cuts another $17 million from the fire department.

44:51

So, in my mind, the chief's like, "I don't have the money to leave guys up here.

44:56

We gotta go."

44:57

So, has anyone asked her what was her justification for the cuts?

45:01

Well, the city's broke.

45:02

The city has no money.

45:03

But how do they have so much money to buy homes and homeless shelters and spend

45:08

all that money?

45:08

Here's the best part.

45:09

I've now found out since then there was $400 million just in an account that

45:15

they hadn't even touched for homeless.

45:18

Literally.

45:19

At the time she cut the $17 million, there's $400 million that right now is

45:22

still there that they haven't used, allocated $400 million.

45:26

So, they got it for the zombies, not for the tax paying citizens, public safety.

45:31

Not to mention, back to the taxpayers, the Palisades probably as largely, at

45:35

the time of the fire, was probably the most money in taxes was going to the

45:40

city from the Palisades.

45:41

Right.

45:42

So, back to Lachman.

45:44

So, they leave.

45:45

Because if you listen to their testimony, the state park rangers say, "Oh, we

45:48

got this.

45:49

We'll keep an eye on this."

45:51

Da-da-da-da-da.

45:52

In the subpoenaed depositions, they asked one of the state park rangers, "Well,

45:56

did you see the smoldering hill?"

45:57

They say, "Oh, yeah.

45:58

What'd you do?"

45:59

"Oh, I took a photo."

46:00

"What'd you do with the photo?"

46:01

"Nothing."

46:02

"What do you mean?"

46:03

"Well, I'm not a firefighter."

46:04

So, the state park's own manual says they're supposed to close this park to

46:09

make sure it's not a dangerous condition, obviously, and to monitor it.

46:14

Did they close the state park?

46:15

No worse.

46:16

Guess what the state park rangers asked the firefighters to do?

46:20

And there's photos.

46:21

It's mind boggling.

46:22

They asked the firefighters to take dead brush and fuel and they carry it and

46:26

they put it over the fire break from a day earlier around where they made the

46:32

fire break around that January 1st.

46:33

They take the dead bushes and they cover up the fire break.

46:37

There's photos of it.

46:38

It's the craziest thing you've ever seen.

46:39

What?

46:40

Because they didn't want people to go on the wrong trails because they look

46:44

like hiking trails now.

46:45

Oh my God.

46:46

So, they take...

46:47

So, if you wanted to be cynical, do you think that having this $400 million and

46:51

keeping it in there and keeping funneling money into homelessness and not into

46:56

the fire department is simply because the fire department is not profitable.

47:00

You can't siphon money off of the fire department.

47:03

The fire department basically just goes to fight fires.

47:06

It goes to equipment, people's salaries, maintaining the fire departments.

47:12

You can't steal that money.

47:13

You want to know how sick it is right now?

47:16

The fire department, LAFD, their union, all the members, get like choked up.

47:21

I feel so, because I met with these, you know, I keep meeting with these guys

47:24

and you hear from their heart.

47:25

You're like, oh, this is so heavy.

47:27

They had to take their own money to get on ballot measure a million dollars.

47:31

They all pooled it together to get a ballot measure this coming election to get

47:35

a half cent on sales tax in LA so that they can have money to fund actual

47:41

things they need.

47:42

A half a cent.

47:43

A half a cent on all that.

47:44

But the point is.

47:45

That's it.

47:46

They need to go out of their own pocket to get a ballot measure because they

47:50

know they will never get funded by the city to keep Angelino safe, that they

47:55

got to go out of it.

47:56

But there's only one way to look at it.

47:58

You would look at it like, well, what would be the logical reason why they

48:02

would allocate so much money towards homelessness and so little towards the

48:05

fire department?

48:06

When the fire department is, you know, I've said this before, but if you want

48:09

to talk about like socialism that works.

48:11

The fire department is socialism that works.

48:14

If you really care about socialism and that's the thing that you really believe

48:18

in, there's certain aspects of socialism that are applicable in a healthy

48:22

community.

48:23

One of them is the fire department.

48:24

That your money should go, we should pool some of our taxes to go to make sure

48:28

that we're all protected.

48:30

And the fire department doesn't just protect the rich people, protects all

48:33

people.

48:33

Fires break out.

48:34

The fire department comes in regardless whether you have any money or not.

48:38

We all pool our money together for the fire department.

48:41

It makes sense.

48:42

But if it's that, you can't steal that money.

48:46

Right?

48:47

So there's no way you can, the homelessness is, it's vague.

48:51

It's weird.

48:52

You could hide it.

48:53

It's like you're counting bodies on the street.

48:56

Oh, one, two, three, let's write 5,000.

48:59

Like you don't have like real accounting these people because it's so chaotic.

49:04

But fire department, you know the employees.

49:07

You know the fire department.

49:08

You know where the trucks are.

49:09

You know where everything is.

49:10

You can't steal that money.

49:12

But that homeless budget, boy, there's a lot of wiggle room in that homeless

49:17

budget.

49:17

And if you wanted to be cynical, you would say that's why they fund the fire

49:23

department so little and they fund the homeless so much.

49:27

Well also, these DSA socialists, they don't want to fund the fire department.

49:33

They don't want to fund the police department.

49:35

They want these type of entities to be defunded.

49:38

They don't even want them to exist.

49:40

So what do they expect when fires happen?

49:43

Right now they want things just to burn.

49:46

If you look around the city.

49:47

How the fuck do these people get in office?

49:49

Like who's voting for them?

49:50

They're tricky.

49:51

They have these ground teams and they go around.

49:54

They got a real ground game and they go knock on people's doors and they say,

49:58

oh, we're Democrats.

50:00

We helped.

50:01

They have nice words and they got a strong like in L.A.

50:04

I think there's 5000 at least members that can hit the street.

50:08

Whereas a normal, you know, for instance, Spencer Pratt running for mayor.

50:11

I don't have 5000 people on deck to go knock on doors and not to mention they're

50:15

funded.

50:16

They have a hundred thousand plus members across the U.S.

50:20

They have outside entities to give them money.

50:22

And again, they're sneaky.

50:23

They're sneaky.

50:24

If you go watch on YouTube videos, they talk so much SHIT about Democrats,

50:29

Republicans.

50:30

They hate all these people.

50:32

So they don't want either party.

50:34

They want them.

50:35

Here's the craziest part.

50:36

This should be legal.

50:37

Right now, the one who's running against me, they're Democrat, you know,

50:40

socialist, champagne

50:42

queen.

50:43

And she, when you sign up with the DSA, you sign it like a contract to co

50:48

govern with

50:49

the DSA.

50:50

How is it legal when you are?

50:52

What?

50:53

Yes.

50:54

Wait a minute.

50:55

Explain that.

50:56

So when you become, you get like, you're a DSA member.

50:58

So right now she's a city council member.

51:00

And when the DSA gives you an endorsement, you sign a contract with them to co

51:04

govern.

51:05

So right now she's not representing her district as an American citizen, a Los

51:10

Angelinos.

51:10

She's representing the Democrat Socialists of America.

51:12

Yes.

51:13

Wow.

51:14

And that should be co govern.

51:15

That should be illegal.

51:16

I mean, illegal.

51:17

And so they can just go full ham with all these radical ideas.

51:20

Yeah.

51:21

And their idea is to just come in, take all of our tax money and keep trying to

51:25

invent this.

51:26

They've like, for instance, that lady has had six years in charge of her city

51:30

council.

51:31

Her thousands of her constituents message me photos.

51:34

It looks like again, Mad Max in her area.

51:37

So we're going to put her in charge.

51:40

The only thing worse actually than the Cuban communist Karen Bass is actually a

51:46

socialist DSA.

51:47

So I'm running against worse and worse.

51:50

It's truly-

51:51

Is Karen Bass running for reelection?

51:53

Yeah.

51:54

That's why I stepped in.

51:55

When I saw her announce, I was like, oh no, you don't get to burn my house down.

51:59

Do people like, what is the general population?

52:02

Like what, how, I think most people have jobs and families and they're busy.

52:08

They're very busy.

52:09

So it's very difficult to be completely informed about all this.

52:12

What is the general perception of Karen Bass?

52:14

Like what is her approval rating in Los Angeles?

52:17

So she has the record lowest approval rating in the history right now.

52:21

So UCLA just did a poll about a week ago.

52:23

I'm number two to Karen Bass.

52:24

She has approximately 20 something percent.

52:27

I think I have 13% with 40% undecided.

52:31

Those 40%, I keep saying, those are my voters.

52:35

Those are people that are fed up.

52:37

They know they're not voting for Karen Bass.

52:39

They just don't know.

52:40

There's a guy named Spencer Pratt that's saying, we need common sense.

52:44

We need to clean these streets.

52:45

No more fentanyl at the park.

52:47

Parents need to feel comfortable taking their kids to school without seeing

52:51

meth zombies having

52:52

sex on the side of the street.

52:53

We're talking common sense.

52:55

This is not political.

52:56

What I'm running on, not to mention the mayor is a nonpartisan race.

53:00

There's no letters on it for a reason.

53:03

The mayor is supposed to represent all of Los Angeles period.

53:07

It's not a, you'll never get me ever doing these performative politics, talking

53:12

about national

53:13

issues, doing the bait and switch stuff where, oh, talking about over here, why

53:17

I destroy

53:18

your actual local government.

53:20

That's the problem.

53:21

Everyone gets caught up in the media and they follow what's going on in

53:25

different states and

53:26

different politics and the federal government.

53:29

When the people that really affect your life, who are destroying your way of

53:33

life are your local

53:34

government, your mayor, your city council, your fire commission, your police

53:38

commission.

53:39

When I'm mayor, I'm wiping out this fire commission.

53:41

We're putting actual experts that know what they're talking about.

53:45

They're not these rando political pointy lunatics.

53:48

Same with the police commission.

53:50

You need to have people that pride themselves in law enforcement and want

53:53

accountability and

53:54

want the best from the police department.

53:55

You know, the police department is the lowest it's been in 30 years in Los

54:00

Angeles.

54:00

And here's my favorite thing.

54:02

In terms of staff.

54:03

Yeah.

54:04

In terms of police officers.

54:05

30 years.

54:06

30 years.

54:07

Here's the best part.

54:08

They will tell you the mayor said crime is down.

54:11

I have truly because I spend all day long just reading DMS.

54:14

It's down in terms of its reporting.

54:17

Thank you.

54:18

Every message I get.

54:19

They say call 911.

54:21

You'll be on hold for God knows how long if they ever pick up.

54:25

If it's literally not like somebody's getting shot at that moment.

54:29

You know, if you're trying to report crime or this, they're not coming.

54:33

Nobody's filing it.

54:34

They don't have the staff to be doing that.

54:36

So the real crime numbers are so insane.

54:40

Not to mention Karen Bass will brag about homicides are down.

54:44

First off, that's a national trend.

54:45

She taking credit for the whole United States down.

54:48

But I even have another angle on that.

54:50

I'd have to go pride of some emergency hospitals.

54:53

But I think Los Angeles has such good trauma nurses and trauma doctors.

54:59

The amount of stabbings and shootings.

55:01

They probably keep people alive.

55:03

That's the real number.

55:04

You know, maybe 30 years ago before we were so good with quick clot.

55:08

And, you know, and you know, God knows we have so much stuff now.

55:12

Right.

55:13

That keeps people alive just on the Metro alone.

55:16

The stabbings are everything is double last year.

55:20

So these people are living, but everyone's getting stabbed everywhere.

55:22

I keep joking that everyone loved that guy in New York, Mondami or whatever his

55:27

name is,

55:27

because he said everything's going to be free.

55:29

Well, as mayor on the metros in Los Angeles, Mayor Pratt will make sure you're

55:34

going to be free from stabbings.

55:36

So there you go.

55:37

You're welcome.

55:38

Yeah, that's a good point.

55:41

It's like just because the actual murders are down, it doesn't mean that the

55:45

actual violence is down.

55:47

New analysis by L.A. City controller says that at least 513 million meant to

55:52

help homeless went unspent.

55:54

This was just 2024.

55:55

That's about 400 plus in 2025 also.

55:58

Good Lord.

55:59

Yeah.

56:00

The 400 is for sure.

56:01

Like, and just last-

56:02

And then where's that money go?

56:04

Yes.

56:05

Just last week, the federal government paused a $400 million payment that was

56:10

coming because they said all these federal audits aren't, you're not showing

56:14

the book.

56:15

So just the money is just coming.

56:18

And that's, we're just talking to L.A., which is the epicenter of the whole

56:21

state of California.

56:22

You know, all this fraud that you keep hearing about everything, it all comes

56:26

from L.A. and then goes out to California.

56:28

It's like L.A. is the death star, you know, and that's why I'm coming in. Luke

56:34

Skywalker.

56:34

Well, Nick Shirley started doing investigations into all sorts of other fraud

56:39

that's all around Los Angeles with hospices and all these different things.

56:44

And they're finding hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars of fraud.

56:48

But not for much longer because he could be facing a $10,000 fine.

56:52

Isn't that crazy?

56:53

According to the new California bill yesterday or whatever.

56:56

So this is a new bill.

56:57

Instead of saying, wow, thank you for uncovering this fraud, they passed a bill

57:03

that if you film things and you go to a place and identify that place and then

57:10

somehow or another those people, what, get harassed or something because of it?

57:15

You could get fined.

57:16

Yeah.

57:17

So I was already saying on my own podcast, my plan as mayor, because everyone

57:20

kept being like, oh, you need Nick Shirley.

57:22

Nick Shirley.

57:23

No, what I need is all of Los Angeles to be a Nick Shirley.

57:25

I, as mayor, am going to offer cash bounties.

57:29

If you film any fraud, city workers doing something suspicious, any type of scams,

57:36

and you bring it to the mayor's office and we check it out, I'm going to pay

57:39

you.

57:40

So now I got to deal with the state, you know, if that passes.

57:43

But I was already going to just make the city become these Nick Shirley.

57:47

Everybody has an iPhone.

57:48

What an insane response.

57:50

What an insane response.

57:51

What an insane response.

57:52

It's a cartel.

57:53

Instead of thanking someone for uncovering criminal fraud, you make a new law

57:58

where you turn them into criminals.

58:00

These people are laundering more money than El Chapo.

58:03

Yeah.

58:04

Oh, yeah.

58:05

That's what I keep trying to say.

58:06

Oh, it's billions.

58:07

Billions and billions of dollars.

58:08

This is real criminals.

58:10

Like the gaudy.

58:11

All these people we used to think were mobsters at the Italian shops back in

58:14

the day.

58:15

They couldn't even comprehend what's going on right now.

58:18

And then even on the city level.

58:20

Like when I went, man, in a fire station, they were telling me about how if a

58:24

refrigerator, this is mafia stuff.

58:26

If a refrigerator breaks, you know, firefighters, they know how to take the

58:29

refrigerator and they put it out.

58:30

The city person comes in and they go, oh, no, put that back in.

58:34

Well, you can't have that taken in.

58:36

So they make them put the broken thing back in before the next person comes.

58:40

And then it costs like $50,000 in this only this one city contract can fix it.

58:47

It's not for, you know, up for bid.

58:49

And that is where all this extra money that isn't going to actually getting

58:54

these firefighters within the fire station.

58:56

I was at they had a fire truck that should have been in retired to Mexico 10

59:00

years ago.

59:01

And instead they like pay to put a new back bumper on it.

59:04

And they just it's these guys have to pay out of their own pocket for the blinds,

59:08

the paint.

59:09

And they do it because they live here.

59:11

It's so sad where LFD used to be the symbol of great like the goat firefighters

59:18

that everyone looked to how we've just let it fall apart.

59:21

Same with LAPD.

59:22

We have just no pride in what's happening is the Olympics are coming.

59:27

And what I keep telling everybody is we're going to have a terrorist attack is

59:32

because we're not even safe for our streets right now.

59:35

They're not even protected.

59:36

They're not even protected.

59:37

If we do fires alone, all a terrorist cell needs to do is get five of those

59:41

black e-bikes and they need to go on a windy day leading up to the Olympics, go

59:46

around with road flares, tossing them out on all the 50 years of dead brush.

59:51

The entire city will look like a nuclear bomb went off.

59:54

Look at the Palisades.

59:55

Yeah.

59:56

One area.

59:57

Oh, five bad guys, bad actors go around and do that.

1:00:01

It's done.

1:00:02

And by the way, there's a lot of evidence that a lot of the fire in the Palisades,

1:00:06

not just the initial fire, but subsequent fires were caused by arson.

1:00:10

In fact, my friend Andrew filmed some guys doing it.

1:00:13

He filmed guys lighting things on fire.

1:00:15

He filmed it in his car.

1:00:17

He was watching these vagrants, filming them lighting things on fire.

1:00:22

Two days ago, there's photos of a vagrant homeless zombie in the Palisades

1:00:27

trying to light a fire right now.

1:00:30

Thankfully, the area has no hasn't grown back yet, but they're two days ago.

1:00:35

These zombies, people don't like the word zombie, but they are zombies.

1:00:40

Yes, there's different boxes of homelessness.

1:00:44

There's people that need help and down on their luck.

1:00:48

They lost their job quick.

1:00:50

Boom.

1:00:51

That is one box.

1:00:52

It's a very small box, but I am aware of those.

1:00:55

Then there is a 95% box that are people that are just fentanyl zombies, meth,

1:01:01

just want to live on the streets and be a drug addict right now.

1:01:04

Maybe some of those people get help.

1:01:06

They get sober, get proper treatment.

1:01:09

Now they get a new chance of life.

1:01:11

Then there's another box that are just people that want to do drugs and be a

1:01:15

bad person.

1:01:16

We have to acknowledge there's actually just bad people that are in a different

1:01:20

box.

1:01:21

There's also people that want everything else to fall apart because their life

1:01:25

is in the shit.

1:01:26

They live in shit.

1:01:27

Their life is hell and they don't want to see you drive by an Alexis.

1:01:31

They don't want to see you go to your nice house.

1:01:33

They don't want to see any of that.

1:01:35

They want to light things on fire.

1:01:36

Well, that's how also these DSA people get support because they've destroyed

1:01:41

the city so much.

1:01:42

You look around and you think, oh, the American dream is broken.

1:01:45

Capitalism is broken, but they're the ones that broke it.

1:01:49

So if you're just like a young 20 year old looking around, you're like, oh my

1:01:54

God, there's zombies everywhere.

1:01:55

Rent so much.

1:01:56

All the restaurants are closing.

1:01:57

This system doesn't work.

1:01:58

But what they're not looking at is who's breaking the system that did work.

1:02:02

The one that I grew up in that was so beautiful.

1:02:05

Over a hundred restaurants in LA have closed this year.

1:02:09

Over a hundred.

1:02:10

And these aren't chains.

1:02:11

These are people that put their, you know, life into this.

1:02:14

These are chefs and they can't make it in a place.

1:02:17

There was a go to food spot.

1:02:19

Well, where I used to do comedy in Los Angeles on Sunset at the Comedy Store.

1:02:24

If you drive down Sunset now, everything is for lease.

1:02:28

It's fucking nuts.

1:02:30

It used to be very difficult to get a property on Sunset because it was so

1:02:34

valuable.

1:02:35

In the 90s and the early 2000s, like everybody wanted to have a restaurant on

1:02:39

Sunset.

1:02:39

Everybody wanted to have a bar on Sunset because that's where everybody went.

1:02:42

There was always cars and it was nice and you could walk on the street.

1:02:45

We would walk down to get food.

1:02:47

We would go to the stand after we would, the standard rather, after we would go

1:02:51

to the car.

1:02:52

I would fucking never walk down that street now.

1:02:54

It was normal.

1:02:55

And that's you trained up, you know, ready to go with the sidekick.

1:02:59

Imagine a lovely lady that just wants to walk her little dog.

1:03:04

The amount of people that just are just dog walkers.

1:03:06

They're like, I am scared to walk my dog.

1:03:09

I had, I won't say which newscaster, but I had a newscaster off camera recently

1:03:13

and said,

1:03:13

everything you're saying is true.

1:03:15

She goes, every morning I have to get up at 5:00 AM because it's the safest

1:03:18

time for me to do my morning run.

1:03:19

Every day, naked zombie run.

1:03:22

She said, I'm running by a naked zombie trying to, can you imagine not, you

1:03:26

know, you and I don't want to go walk on the street,

1:03:28

but just like a woman with their little dog or moms with strollers.

1:03:32

And it's not, it's across the entire city.

1:03:35

I watched news in Spanish where these underpasses in South Central or East L.A.

1:03:41

These families have been coming to the news and they're like, please, because

1:03:44

they're having to take their kids under these underpasses with encampments to

1:03:48

get to the schools.

1:03:48

It's not just like a Hollywood thing or a valley.

1:03:51

It's everywhere.

1:03:52

It's everywhere.

1:03:53

I don't think people understand it.

1:03:55

Can we show some videos?

1:03:56

Let's show some videos of some of the real chaotic homelessness in Los Angeles

1:04:01

so people can get a look at it.

1:04:03

Because, you know, I've had some friends send me videos like my friend Whitney

1:04:06

Cummings.

1:04:07

She went through Los Angeles a couple of months ago and she sent me a video.

1:04:12

And I was like, this is fucking nuts.

1:04:15

Because I haven't been.

1:04:16

I don't go there anymore, man.

1:04:18

I fucking avoid that place like the plague.

1:04:20

I used to love it.

1:04:21

I used to love it.

1:04:22

I never even thought until the pandemic hit, I was like, I'll probably be here

1:04:26

forever.

1:04:27

And now it's just nuts.

1:04:29

This is the Street People of Los Angeles Instagram account.

1:04:31

They show this stuff all the time.

1:04:33

Street People of Los Angeles Instagram account.

1:04:36

This is a dad and a son walking by.

1:04:38

Yeah.

1:04:39

Well, this is a small-

1:04:41

That's in the valley.

1:04:42

No, but the point is, yeah, I posted this also in the sense that look at these

1:04:47

little kids.

1:04:48

They got to go by.

1:04:49

We used to have our studio in Woodland Hills and we used to have guys that were

1:04:52

camping out right in front.

1:04:54

Look at that.

1:04:55

Even Perez Hilton is on your side.

1:04:57

Pratt is the path.

1:04:58

What Los Angeles needs.

1:04:59

You see that, Pratt?

1:05:01

Perez.

1:05:02

God bless Perez.

1:05:03

You might be the only person saying that.

1:05:05

No, he had a near death experience and came to Jesus.

1:05:09

Oh, good for him.

1:05:10

He's locked in.

1:05:11

I hope it sticks.

1:05:12

Is that somebody died?

1:05:13

No, he died twice pretty much.

1:05:15

From what?

1:05:16

What happened?

1:05:17

He took antibiotics without food when he, which I didn't know was a thing.

1:05:24

That's why I say to take food.

1:05:26

And then again, I'm going to say this wrong, but whatever that creates some

1:05:29

situation, boom.

1:05:31

Now he has sepsis and he's next to death for 30 days.

1:05:34

And then we just got out of the hospital.

1:05:36

Then he has a blood clot.

1:05:38

No.

1:05:39

So he's like Bible all day.

1:05:40

He had, he talked to God when he was like dead.

1:05:43

So I think he's for real, for real.

1:05:45

Okay.

1:05:46

Well, that would be nice.

1:05:47

He's another nice person in the world.

1:05:50

He's a powerful prayer warrior now.

1:05:52

Show me some Skid Row.

1:05:55

Some Skid Row footage is the nuttiest.

1:05:58

Okay.

1:05:59

Skid Row footage is the real, that's the real red pill.

1:06:03

Where are you?

1:06:04

You're like, how?

1:06:05

It's just, there's no better way to describe it than how you described it

1:06:08

earlier.

1:06:09

It's literally like a criminal cartel.

1:06:11

It's a criminal cartel that's siphoning money off of people.

1:06:14

Look at that guy.

1:06:15

Just needs a job.

1:06:16

These people just need a home.

1:06:18

Come on, man.

1:06:19

This is, this is not that bad.

1:06:21

This is, this is very minor.

1:06:23

Like if you, there's certain areas of Skid Row.

1:06:26

Like how they have tents, which is so crazy.

1:06:29

Well, you paid for that and you didn't, I did.

1:06:31

Oh, look at this.

1:06:32

This guy's protecting against vampires.

1:06:34

Yeah.

1:06:35

These are nice clips.

1:06:36

That guy just needs a job, dude.

1:06:38

Relax.

1:06:39

Poor dog.

1:06:40

Oh.

1:06:41

I know.

1:06:42

I see dogs with homeless people.

1:06:43

I just want, I'm, I'm such a dog lover.

1:06:45

I can't go to the dog pound.

1:06:47

If I went to the dog pound, I'd have a hundred dogs and my wife would never let

1:06:50

that happen.

1:06:51

But I, that drives me nuts.

1:06:53

So that guy there and the fentanyl, these fentanyl hangs, they don't need beds.

1:06:57

Right.

1:06:58

That's not a bad issue.

1:06:59

No.

1:07:00

It's not a housing.

1:07:01

They need to get cleaned up.

1:07:02

And for people that don't know, this was not like this.

1:07:07

This was not like this a decade ago.

1:07:09

This is a rapid decline in what this city looks like.

1:07:13

Oh, there's some nice people.

1:07:15

Oh.

1:07:16

It's just crazy.

1:07:18

It's a, this is not as radical as it could be.

1:07:22

Skid Row is really, if you could find some.

1:07:25

Oh man.

1:07:26

There's innumerable videos.

1:07:27

I can't click, uncheck them all fast enough, but.

1:07:29

All right.

1:07:30

Try this one.

1:07:31

Skid Row, right, right there.

1:07:32

It's got 600 views.

1:07:33

I was going to try to find one.

1:07:34

Also the reality is.

1:07:35

Right there, that one.

1:07:36

I spent a day on Skid Row.

1:07:37

There was a comic in the early 2000s that went undercover and lived on Skid Row

1:07:44

for a couple

1:07:45

of days to film things.

1:07:47

And it was pretty astonishing even back then.

1:07:50

But again, this is a created environment that they created because they didn't

1:07:54

want to deal

1:07:54

with the homeless people.

1:07:55

And they're like, you know what we should do?

1:07:57

We should just take these people and put them in one spot and don't let them

1:08:00

leave.

1:08:00

And that's how they created Skid Row.

1:08:02

And, you know, decades later you have five zero, 50 blocks of nothing but this

1:08:09

kind of shit,

1:08:11

where it's just fucking chaos.

1:08:12

It's just homeless people everywhere.

1:08:14

And it's so sad.

1:08:16

All lost lives.

1:08:17

You know, as a father, you know, you're a father.

1:08:20

These are, this is someone's children.

1:08:22

This is someone had a baby and that baby they loved more than anything.

1:08:26

Like, oh my God, they're so precious.

1:08:28

That precious person is now in the middle of an intersection hunched over on

1:08:31

fentanyl.

1:08:32

Well, the amount of people that message me and say, thank you.

1:08:36

My so-and-so brother, daughter, son died of fentanyl overdose.

1:08:41

These people need mandatory treatment.

1:08:43

They don't need just, oh, if you want, we have these needles for you.

1:08:48

We have, we have street med teams where we can come in.

1:08:51

You know, it's, it's crazy.

1:08:53

And it's back to being a dad.

1:08:55

I'm only running for mayor to do one last Hail Mary to try to save the city I

1:09:01

love and grew up.

1:09:02

So God willing.

1:09:03

And if it doesn't work, you're out.

1:09:04

Well, they already burned down my house.

1:09:05

That's what the LA Times was.

1:09:07

That's the funniest.

1:09:08

Did you see this?

1:09:09

No.

1:09:10

You know, I had to do a hit piece, LA Times and say that I wasn't eligible to

1:09:14

run for mayor because my house burned down.

1:09:17

This was, this was last week.

1:09:18

No, I'm not, I'm not kidding.

1:09:19

This is real.

1:09:20

So, and they were like, oh, he's living in Santa Barbara right now.

1:09:24

I thought the LA Times had become more reasonable when that guy owned it.

1:09:28

That was completely not true.

1:09:30

And the funniest part is the LA Times is in El Segundo for the last eight years.

1:09:35

So they're the ones that should be worried about.

1:09:37

So what happens is they say, oh, it's up in the air because he's in Santa

1:09:40

Barbara.

1:09:41

So I call the city clerk and I say, hey, the LA Times is reporting that I, I'm

1:09:45

not, I know I'm eligible.

1:09:47

Everybody knows.

1:09:48

It's like saying that 7,000 people whose houses burned down now can't vote.

1:09:52

Right.

1:09:53

They can't vote because Karen Bass, who you're not supposed to vote for because

1:09:56

she burned your house down.

1:09:58

You can't vote for her.

1:09:59

So he's like, of course you can run.

1:10:00

I said, anybody can call and ask this?

1:10:02

Like, yes, it's on our website.

1:10:04

So it was just a full hit piece.

1:10:06

So why would the LA Times, who is the person who wrote that story?

1:10:08

This guy, Noah Goldberg.

1:10:09

And why is cause he's pushing the Nithya Raman.

1:10:13

There's a video of him at the bar with her.

1:10:15

Like, yay.

1:10:16

They won.

1:10:17

And she's the democratic socialist.

1:10:18

Yes.

1:10:19

And LA Times wants their own clickbaity Mandami.

1:10:22

They try to make their, Mandami is a custom built Manchurian candidate, 20

1:10:27

years in the making.

1:10:28

He's a star.

1:10:29

That's why he's got the smile.

1:10:31

You can't take this bootleg wannabe and try to cook her into it.

1:10:35

So they dropped this fake hit piece on me the day the UCLA poll comes out that

1:10:40

has me in the lead.

1:10:41

And not the one that they had just run some fake DSA, you know, BS poll that

1:10:47

nobody believed.

1:10:48

It was movie scene.

1:10:49

How is this person doing in the polls?

1:10:51

This person that you're running against?

1:10:52

They're at 9%, I think.

1:10:54

But again, the polls, I'm in number one.

1:10:56

Anybody, they know this.

1:10:57

She's in charge on the city council.

1:11:00

She's the chairperson of the homeless, of the homeless plan.

1:11:05

Okay.

1:11:06

She wants to, what's she going to change?

1:11:08

She's had six years.

1:11:10

So we're going to, we're going to put, and then she's tweeting or X, you know,

1:11:14

whatever we call it.

1:11:14

Like my new plan, homeless is not working.

1:11:17

Oh, so you just announced you're running for mayor.

1:11:20

The best part is she's had six years to not say any of these problems until she's

1:11:24

running for mayor.

1:11:25

These politicians are just, it's the problem back to people.

1:11:29

They're demons.

1:11:30

The problem is people have jobs.

1:11:31

People aren't paying attention like me.

1:11:33

They just hear the little fake.

1:11:35

I care.

1:11:36

This isn't working.

1:11:37

Oh, she's a city council member.

1:11:39

Oh, she's a Democrat.

1:11:41

No, she's not.

1:11:42

She's not a Democrat.

1:11:43

I'm the one who's been fighting for Democrats for the last year and a half to

1:11:46

expose all of this fraud.

1:11:49

Our literal city letting our town burn to the ground.

1:11:53

So that's when I really stepped up.

1:11:55

So I watched this movie, Hot Shot, a documentary on, you know, fires.

1:11:59

And I see in this documentary, a hundred mile per hour.

1:12:03

I think it was the Oak, the Oak fire.

1:12:06

I don't know, in the, in the film.

1:12:08

And you see a hundred mile per hour wind and the firefighters are just standing

1:12:12

there with like garden hoses.

1:12:13

And you're seeing that a hundred mile per hour wind does not mean everything

1:12:16

burns down because this community have fire breaks.

1:12:20

So then I like see who this guy who like live with these, these hot shots for

1:12:24

six years.

1:12:25

So I find them on X and he's live streaming, talking about how the Palisades

1:12:30

fire before anybody was not started on January 7th, but a rekindle from that

1:12:36

first fire.

1:12:37

When the LAFD, this is where it gets so conspiracy Chinatown movie type shit.

1:12:44

Um, they hired a crisis PR firm, the lead company.

1:12:50

Here's the best part.

1:12:51

Guess where they got the money?

1:12:52

The mayor's office where they got the money to hire the crisis from the LAF.

1:12:57

The foundation, they use charity money to hire a crisis team to alter the after

1:13:03

action report that says all these things that went wrong.

1:13:06

To make the mayor Karen Bass look good.

1:13:09

Oh my God.

1:13:10

I find this out because I start, you know, posting about what this, this

1:13:15

director Gabriel man is saying about, you know, the Palisades fires.

1:13:18

I'm posting now.

1:13:19

I got info.

1:13:20

So now firefighters start coming in my DMS as whistleblowers.

1:13:23

Hey, just so you know, the after action report that went out, that was the

1:13:28

ninth version and the battalion chief that wrote it wouldn't put his name on it

1:13:32

because they changed it so much.

1:13:34

So I do a post about that three weeks later, the LA times, everything I post

1:13:39

three weeks later, they would steal my thing.

1:13:41

And I pulled surprise guy.

1:13:43

It's like, I posted that three weeks ago.

1:13:45

Cause the firefighters were coming to me and telling me what was going on

1:13:48

behind the scenes.

1:13:49

So also as mayor, I'm going to make sure that the fire department, the fire

1:13:54

chief has civil protections again.

1:13:57

So right now the fire chief is like a puppet.

1:14:00

They have to do whatever the mayor says, cover up for the mayor.

1:14:03

They're just another politician.

1:14:05

They need to be responsible for the Angelenos, the public.

1:14:09

And they don't have that protection.

1:14:10

The mayor can just get rid of them.

1:14:12

So you got to give them these civil protections back like they have.

1:14:15

The mayor can't just get rid of the police chief, for instance.

1:14:18

But that's when I was like, Oh, these people are organized crime.

1:14:22

It's organized crime.

1:14:23

Thank you.

1:14:24

It sounds like the mob.

1:14:25

Here's the best part.

1:14:26

You know, when the mayor was in Ghana, as everything was burning down, do you

1:14:30

know who she left in charge?

1:14:32

Her deputy mayor.

1:14:33

Do you know where the deputy mayor was?

1:14:35

The deputy mayor, mayor Karen Bassett, deputy mayor was on house arrest because

1:14:40

he was arrested for calling in a bomb threat to city hall.

1:14:45

This is real life.

1:14:46

This is, this is the person that's supposed to take the call because she's in

1:14:50

Africa.

1:14:51

Why did he call in a bomb threat to city hall?

1:14:53

Great question.

1:14:55

You know, so that's the type of people we're dealing with.

1:15:01

So when they're like, Oh, Spencer, you don't have the experience to be mayor.

1:15:04

Well, I promise my deputy mayors that I have on deck, they aren't calling in

1:15:08

any bomb threats to city hall.

1:15:10

So we're already starting ahead of the curve.

1:15:12

Also, I'm not going in to steal taxpayer money.

1:15:16

I'm going in to stop all this.

1:15:18

So again, I really believe there's enough common sense people that see that I'm

1:15:23

not doing politics.

1:15:24

I don't want to do any of this.

1:15:26

Politics are, it's a job.

1:15:28

These people are career politicians.

1:15:29

I never want to be a career politician.

1:15:31

Before my house burned down, I was selling my healing crystals.

1:15:35

They just to be clear, they have no magical powers.

1:15:38

They all burned in my house.

1:15:39

So anybody, you know, you're buying them.

1:15:42

They, you know, I thought that had protection energy.

1:15:45

They don't.

1:15:46

So, you know, and feeding hummingbirds and taking my kids to school.

1:15:51

That was my dream life.

1:15:54

And they burned it down.

1:15:55

And now they have their worst nightmare coming to just undo the whole thing.

1:15:59

Former Los Angeles deputy mayor of public safety agrees to plead guilty to

1:16:04

threatening to bomb L.A. City Hall last year.

1:16:06

Now, what was the reason?

1:16:08

Brian K. Williams, 61 of Pasadena, is charged in a single count information

1:16:12

with threats regarding fire and explosives.

1:16:15

It doesn't have a reason, but it says what he did.

1:16:18

Mmm.

1:16:19

You know, I don't think there's ever a good reason.

1:16:22

I mean, I would like to hear his reason.

1:16:25

Bomb threat.

1:16:26

I received a call on my city cell phone at 10:48 this morning.

1:16:30

The mail caller stated that he was tired of the city support of Israel, and he's

1:16:35

decided to place a bomb in City Hall.

1:16:37

So that's it.

1:16:38

It might be in the rotunda.

1:16:40

I immediately contacted this.

1:16:42

So it was about Israel.

1:16:43

Wow.

1:16:44

I think he made it up up here.

1:16:47

It says that he uses Google voice application on his personal cell phone to

1:16:50

place a call to a city issued cell phone.

1:16:52

Wow.

1:16:53

He then left the meeting and called the chief of staff up.

1:16:56

Doesn't say why.

1:16:57

What a fucking idiot.

1:16:59

I will say Mayor Bassett.

1:17:00

Is that guy still employed?

1:17:02

Find out if that guy's still employed.

1:17:04

I would think not.

1:17:06

I would imagine he's going to...

1:17:07

Oh no!

1:17:08

I think he's going to federal prison.

1:17:12

Oh, he's facing 10 years?

1:17:13

Yeah, I think so.

1:17:14

What if he has paid leave?

1:17:16

Probably.

1:17:17

He's trying to go.

1:17:18

Oh God.

1:17:19

But notice, he at least, Mayor Bass with her cell phone, the whole week of the

1:17:24

Palisades fire, she deleted all her text messages.

1:17:26

I wonder why.

1:17:27

Oh.

1:17:28

You know, they're like a terrorist cell.

1:17:32

Breaking burner phones.

1:17:34

How the fuck are you even allowed to do that?

1:17:36

Former L.A. deputy mayor sentenced to probation and $5,000 fine.

1:17:42

That's it.

1:17:43

Just probation.

1:17:44

Well, in his defense, his mayor was spending, I think she went to Cuba 30 times

1:17:49

to learn how to build bombs and bomb America when she was part of the Vanessa Ramos

1:17:57

Brigade.

1:17:58

So Karen Bass...

1:17:59

How old was she?

1:18:00

1920.

1:18:01

And she never, ever said she had any problem with being like a Cuban communist

1:18:05

terrorist until Biden was going to pick her as VP.

1:18:09

And then they made her say, "I denounce that I was trying to blow up the

1:18:14

Capitol with my terrorist cell when I was younger."

1:18:18

But for all those years, she never said anything.

1:18:20

When Fidel Castro died, she said something like, "Rest in peace, El Comedante."

1:18:26

What?

1:18:27

Yes.

1:18:28

No way.

1:18:29

Yes, but you can find it.

1:18:30

For real?

1:18:31

And then it gets even better.

1:18:32

Oh, well, hey guys, relax.

1:18:34

Williams was just suffering from stress and anxiety when he called it a threat.

1:18:38

Oh, poor guy.

1:18:39

No big deal.

1:18:40

Poor guy.

1:18:41

Overworked.

1:18:42

Stress and anxiety and somehow or another, it was about Israel?

1:18:45

Not to mention, these people would just get away with all of this.

1:18:49

They keep getting away with it.

1:18:50

Yeah.

1:18:51

That's the problem with the media, what I've learned from being part of the

1:18:54

television world.

1:18:56

And you notice, why do they let the mayor and the city councils get away with

1:19:00

all of, you know, talking about this?

1:19:02

At the end of the day, that's their talent.

1:19:05

It's like a soap opera.

1:19:07

They got to keep filming with the mayor and the city council.

1:19:10

If they just air them out, they're not picking up the call.

1:19:13

It's like a production.

1:19:14

Exactly.

1:19:15

They don't have content anymore.

1:19:16

Exactly.

1:19:17

So the local news needs to like keep it.

1:19:20

Right.

1:19:21

Right.

1:19:22

They don't have access anymore.

1:19:23

Yeah.

1:19:24

So that's why I'm like, why?

1:19:25

Because I talk to these people off camera and they're all like.

1:19:27

Like an organized crime organization.

1:19:29

They're like, please.

1:19:30

You know, I'm like, why aren't you, you know, but it's organized crime.

1:19:33

Yeah.

1:19:34

I mean, it's like they pay people off.

1:19:36

They've got little deals.

1:19:38

You wash my back.

1:19:40

I wash yours.

1:19:41

Come on.

1:19:42

Yeah.

1:19:43

And so thankfully, because people are like, aren't you scared of these people?

1:19:46

I'm like, what are they going to burn my house down again?

1:19:48

Are they going to burn my mom's house down again?

1:19:51

So it gives you like a confidence.

1:19:52

What are they going to do?

1:19:53

I mean.

1:19:54

The crime in Los Angeles, when you talk to average people, like the people that

1:19:59

I know that live

1:19:59

there, they're fucking terrified.

1:20:00

They say break-ins are just commonplace now where they used to be very rare.

1:20:05

You get home invasions constantly.

1:20:07

I mean, Ted Sarandos, his mother-in-law was killed in a home invasion and they're

1:20:12

happening

1:20:12

all the time.

1:20:13

It's because there's no police response and they know there's not going to be a

1:20:17

police response.

1:20:17

So more people are hiring private security.

1:20:21

It's very difficult to get a gun or at least a concealed carry permit.

1:20:25

It's very difficult.

1:20:26

In defense of LA County Sheriff and LAPD, they have gotten better at CCWs now

1:20:33

because of

1:20:34

the law.

1:20:35

Because of the crime.

1:20:36

It's not the sheriff's fault.

1:20:37

The sheriff wants it.

1:20:38

Yeah.

1:20:39

And they don't have the staff even to process it.

1:20:41

So it just takes up to a year.

1:20:43

But I know they all, that's the thing.

1:20:45

I talked to so many sheriffs, so many LAPDs, so many firefighters.

1:20:49

Everybody is just broken.

1:20:51

Their spirits are broken.

1:20:53

Why are we doing this?

1:20:54

Why don't we just go to Newport Beach or Huntington?

1:20:58

Or Florida.

1:20:59

Yeah.

1:21:00

Just leave the state.

1:21:01

What am I doing?

1:21:02

They keep saying.

1:21:03

Well, this is the thing that Newsom always chimes in about how much money

1:21:06

California brings

1:21:07

in, how many venture capitalists are in California, how much money in tech is

1:21:12

in California.

1:21:13

Right.

1:21:14

But it has nothing to do with your government.

1:21:16

It has, in spite of your government, they're doing that.

1:21:21

And they're leaving.

1:21:22

Yeah.

1:21:23

Hollywood was the greatest thing.

1:21:24

The amount of money Hollywood made for Los Angeles, from the grips to the

1:21:29

camera operators,

1:21:30

to the glam people, to the costume.

1:21:32

Sure.

1:21:33

People don't understand.

1:21:34

Like, you know, people hate like, oh, Hollywood, you know, stupid movie stars

1:21:38

are so rich.

1:21:39

They forget about the ecosystem that connects to that, say Tom Cruise, that

1:21:45

makes some, the

1:21:46

amount of money is gone.

1:21:48

And for instance, just last week, they finally got Baywatch to come back to LA.

1:21:52

Baywatch starts shooting for like two days and then they kick him off the beach.

1:21:56

There's all these permit problems.

1:21:57

So I write a sub stack calling this out, calling out the mayor.

1:22:01

Next thing you know, they come back and the mayor makes a deal.

1:22:05

What's funniest thing right now is whatever I post and do, the mayor is now

1:22:09

doing.

1:22:10

Like I said the other day, I'm getting rid of the whole fire commission.

1:22:13

This fire commission has been there for like 10 years, I think.

1:22:16

After I do this post or whatever, boom, four out of five of the fire commission

1:22:20

resign.

1:22:20

So they're trying to just get ahead of all the things of what I'm saying, which

1:22:25

is fun

1:22:25

because it's already, I'm like the mayor.

1:22:26

So I'm like, this is great.

1:22:28

Well, it's also, they can't possibly do enough without completely undermining

1:22:33

their entire organization.

1:22:34

They're always going to have so much fraud and waste that your case will always

1:22:38

be solid.

1:22:39

There's no way.

1:22:40

There's no, they would have to literally like tank everything they're doing

1:22:44

that got them into position.

1:22:45

And if they talk about how much of a failure, then they're definitely not

1:22:49

keeping their job.

1:22:50

Right.

1:22:51

Which is, that's the problem with all of, they're all in a, ready for this.

1:22:55

The lady, Janice Quinonez, that was in charge of the LADWP that drained.

1:23:03

So in the Pacific Palisades, there was the San Yonez reservoir.

1:23:06

It had 117 million gallons of water.

1:23:09

When it was created, the engineer, he's on the cover of LA times back in the

1:23:14

day.

1:23:14

And he's talking about, he built this for wildfire protection.

1:23:18

Now in their defense, the city and LADWP says that was drinking water.

1:23:22

No one was drinking this water.

1:23:24

I promise you.

1:23:25

So there was a tear on this drinking water that allegedly the firefighting

1:23:29

water.

1:23:30

So they drain the entire reservoir because of a little tear that would have

1:23:36

cost $120,000

1:23:38

to repair for over a year.

1:23:40

This woman was making $750,000 a year as the head of LADWP.

1:23:46

Twice her predecessor that Mayor Bass brought in.

1:23:50

Keep in mind, if you make that much money, do you know what the people below

1:23:54

her are making?

1:23:54

$500,000, $400,000.

1:23:56

These people get so much money and they spend over a year to fix a tear.

1:24:02

And it's back to the mafia thing.

1:24:03

Oh, I'm sure it's like, oh, we got to use this contractor because we don't have

1:24:07

an open bid.

1:24:08

Oh, that's too cheap.

1:24:09

Who knows the conspiracy to why they didn't tear it.

1:24:12

So while that's drained next door to my house that I watched weekly, the local

1:24:18

LAFD would do training.

1:24:19

They'd hook up to it.

1:24:20

I had a 5 million gallon reservoir for firefighting.

1:24:23

So while they're doing that one, they're like, oh, we should fix this one, too.

1:24:27

They drain that one.

1:24:28

And they're like, oh, we drained it.

1:24:30

When we refill it, there's some issues.

1:24:32

We can't refill it.

1:24:33

They leave two reservoirs empty back.

1:24:36

Rewind what I told you in a season that's the driest ever that they've actually

1:24:42

had a fire.

1:24:43

I think in 2019 where there wasn't water in the reservoir and thankfully there

1:24:48

was no wind and they had to drive 10 water tenders up onto the hillside for the

1:24:53

helicopters to dip because that's the key.

1:24:55

What people don't understand is like, oh, this nothing could have stopped this

1:24:59

fire.

1:24:59

You know, people that defend these people.

1:25:01

If the reservoir had the water in it, the helicopters, these 17 million dollar

1:25:06

helicopters that Newsom loves to do the photo shoots in front of how fast they

1:25:10

are would have had to fly less than 30 seconds from the origin of the fire.

1:25:14

Again, when the winds were fine for six hours in the initial thing, but instead

1:25:19

those helicopters had to fly all the way to Malibu to Pepperdine College and

1:25:23

all the way to Encino to get the water for the helicopters to fly all the way

1:25:28

back to where the fire was next door to where the empty reservoirs.

1:25:32

So they spent 66% of their time not fighting the fire going to get the water.

1:25:37

So it's back to like why I say it's Chinatown with Jackie.

1:25:42

Listen, we have this LADWP that these people get all this money.

1:25:47

They increase everyone's rates this year.

1:25:49

Everyone's rates went up 17 or 11%.

1:25:52

They're going to go up 7% annually for no reason.

1:25:55

You're not getting alkaline water out of it.

1:25:57

I'm convinced we used to joke like, oh, there's fluoride in the water.

1:26:00

How much fentanyl is in our damn water right now?

1:26:03

I mean, we're not getting better water for that 7% increase.

1:26:07

They're doubling everyone's trash, even though the entire city has more trash.

1:26:13

I talked to this guy Juan from Clean LA.

1:26:15

He goes around.

1:26:16

He's from Ecuador.

1:26:17

He does these Mingas where he moved here from Ecuador.

1:26:20

And he said it's the dirtiest thing he's ever seen his whole life.

1:26:22

So he just started cleaning up trash and posting it.

1:26:25

And now people will give him GoFundMe money.

1:26:27

And he cleans more of the city than the city.

1:26:29

And I had him on my podcast.

1:26:31

I said, what's the problem here, Juan?

1:26:33

And he said, people don't care, Spencer.

1:26:35

And I said, so I'm mayor.

1:26:37

I hire you.

1:26:38

Are we going to get the city clean?

1:26:39

He's like, Spencer, they want a billion dollars next year for the trash.

1:26:43

He's like, I can do this for easy $500 million.

1:26:46

I said, okay, you're hired Juan.

1:26:48

I said, what are we going to do with them?

1:26:49

He said, we got to fire all these people, Spencer.

1:26:51

They don't care.

1:26:52

He said, it's dirtier than any third world country he's ever been.

1:26:56

So they're doubling our trash rates.

1:26:58

They're doubling our sewage.

1:27:00

So more money, more money.

1:27:02

It's back to taxes.

1:27:04

Oh, the rich need to give more.

1:27:06

If the quality of life just keeps getting worse and worse.

1:27:10

Why would anybody with money stay in California or Los Angeles?

1:27:14

Exactly.

1:27:15

When they know the fraud, the waste, the corruption.

1:27:18

People that are rich, billionaires, whoever they are.

1:27:21

If the city lights all work.

1:27:23

Right now, the two mayors I'm running for let.

1:27:26

Do you know about the copper theft?

1:27:28

There's no working lights in the city of LA.

1:27:30

Cause they let, they got rid of the copper task force.

1:27:32

Cause they obviously can't fund the LAPD.

1:27:35

So they let everyone steal all the copper.

1:27:37

So there's everything's dark in the whole city.

1:27:39

So mayor Bass goes last week and makes a press conference.

1:27:42

I solved it.

1:27:43

I'm going to spend $200 million and we're going to do solar power lights.

1:27:47

You think these thieves aren't going to then pivot to stealing solar batteries

1:27:51

and slaying in those.

1:27:52

No, we got to stop the criminals.

1:27:54

The best video right now.

1:27:55

I think there's a couple of good ones.

1:27:57

This Nithya Rahman, the democratic socialist who's running for mayor.

1:28:00

She is asked about all the Cadillac converters that are being stolen.

1:28:04

She said, well, Toyota is making these too easy to steal.

1:28:08

It's like leaving your, your Mac book on the front seat.

1:28:11

This is real talk.

1:28:13

I'm not kidding.

1:28:14

This Toyota's fault.

1:28:15

The people.

1:28:16

Toyota's fault that people are stealing catalytic converters.

1:28:18

Yes.

1:28:19

Here's it.

1:28:20

That's hilarious.

1:28:21

Every fucking car has a catalytic converter.

1:28:23

It just sits underneath.

1:28:24

You can just saw off the exhaust and take it out.

1:28:26

If you know anything about cars, it's not fucking Toyota.

1:28:29

It's every car.

1:28:30

Oh, here's another great one of her lines.

1:28:33

She's at our city council meeting.

1:28:35

She's the city council member.

1:28:36

All these moms and parents are saying, we don't want these encampments where

1:28:40

there's

1:28:40

two known gangs selling fentanyl through holes in the, in the tents.

1:28:44

The zombies are everywhere.

1:28:46

These parents are saying, we don't want these encampments, which are illegal.

1:28:50

They're asking them, the city council member to enforce the law.

1:28:53

And she argues with the parents and say, there's no difference.

1:28:56

The encampments one foot or 500 feet from the school.

1:29:00

All the parents boo her.

1:29:01

And she goes, whatever.

1:29:03

And rolls her eyes.

1:29:05

These are the people that are going to show up and vote for me.

1:29:08

These moms and these dads that are done.

1:29:10

Well, there's a giant amount of people in California that have been red pilled.

1:29:15

That just, just realize like whatever you thought your government was, when you

1:29:20

thought you were voting for progressive, kind, compassionate government, that

1:29:25

is a sheep outfit over a wolf.

1:29:29

It's not what you have.

1:29:30

It's not what you're getting.

1:29:31

What you're getting is organized crime.

1:29:32

What you're getting is organized crime that is using this filter of

1:29:37

compassionate, caring, inclusive government.

1:29:41

And it's not real.

1:29:42

It's not real.

1:29:43

What you're getting is more homeless, more crime, more murder, more chaos, more,

1:29:48

maybe not more murder.

1:29:49

Maybe it's more shootings and stabbings, but better medical care is keeping

1:29:55

them alive.

1:29:56

But the idea that crime is down, it's like anecdotally, you ask anybody in LA,

1:30:00

they would not agree to that.

1:30:02

Most people think crime is up.

1:30:04

Home invasions are fucking ubiquitous.

1:30:06

It's everywhere.

1:30:07

So I spoke with these SWAT guys the other day and I said, you know, are you

1:30:11

guys having a lot of, you know, gang standout?

1:30:14

He said, actually, no, the gang's business as usual.

1:30:17

They know when we show up that, you know, the hands up, they're going to get

1:30:20

out in a week.

1:30:21

They're professional.

1:30:22

They're just for the money.

1:30:23

He says, our biggest call outs now are mental health, you know, episodes that

1:30:29

the person doesn't know where they are or whatever.

1:30:32

And I said, but what about all these like home invasion crews and that are

1:30:35

coming in, robbing everyone's house?

1:30:37

He goes, there's nothing we could do.

1:30:39

He says, these people all know they're getting out in two weeks.

1:30:42

I said, what do you mean?

1:30:43

Is that a felony?

1:30:44

They're coming in with guns?

1:30:45

He said, no, you can go break into a house with a gun while people are there.

1:30:51

Families, rob them, tie them up and get out.

1:30:54

Not only that, if you shoot those people while they're in your house, you'll be

1:30:58

prosecuted.

1:30:59

Yeah.

1:31:00

You got to prove you are fearing for your life.

1:31:02

You're supposed to leave your house rather than defend your house against

1:31:06

people with weapons that enter your house.

1:31:08

I personally would advise to lock yourself in a closet and have your firearm

1:31:15

and have a strong point.

1:31:18

Yeah.

1:31:19

But even that, like what you're going to just let someone break into your house

1:31:22

and steal your childhoods, whatever, whatever they're stealing, whatever, steal

1:31:27

your fucking jewelry.

1:31:28

And you have to.

1:31:29

Heirlooms and whatever you've worked your whole life to earn.

1:31:33

Yeah.

1:31:34

That's fucking insane.

1:31:35

That's insane.

1:31:36

And the fact that you have this no cash bail situation and just letting these

1:31:39

people out on the street that are violent criminals, repeat offenders.

1:31:43

It's like if you wanted to destroy LA, that's how you would do it.

1:31:47

They're doing it.

1:31:48

And that's why I get so, my hardest thing every day now is just staying not too

1:31:53

pumped up.

1:31:54

Because now that I'm in this fight and I have all the messages all day long,

1:31:58

everywhere I go on the street, people, old ladies hugging me, crying like,

1:32:02

please, I'm scared.

1:32:03

The pressure I feel to get in here and just undo this, unplug this.

1:32:09

And I met with a lot of business owners and they said the mayor, the city

1:32:13

council, they all know what needs to be done, but they don't want to push the

1:32:17

buttons.

1:32:18

Somebody needs to just come in and push them.

1:32:20

If there's one thing I know, I will push these buttons and we're going to get

1:32:24

the city under control because it just starts with enforcing the law.

1:32:28

So I have a deputy mayor that I can't say who he is because of fear of retaliation

1:32:32

at this point, because of issues with the city right now who's in power.

1:32:36

But this deputy mayor who will help me enforce the law made it very clear.

1:32:40

Once you start enforcing the law, criminals leave.

1:32:43

They know, oh, this is the gigs up.

1:32:45

They will go somewhere else.

1:32:47

You, once you start making arrests, people will leave this idea.

1:32:51

Oh, there's no room in the jails.

1:32:53

Where are you going to put all these people?

1:32:54

Once you start enforcing law, they will leave.

1:32:57

And it's as simple as that.

1:32:59

He was suggesting for two weeks, you go around the city, you put up signs, no

1:33:03

more fentanyl at the park, no more open drug use, no more encampments.

1:33:08

You have two week countdown.

1:33:09

You tell every, you give them a warning.

1:33:11

So if you want to leave in advance, you know, most of these people, which is

1:33:14

what I hear the most from law enforcement are not from Los Angeles.

1:33:18

They have been flown in, bust in back to the business.

1:33:22

There's a body business where they bring homeless people to the city to make

1:33:27

the money off them.

1:33:28

They're from all over the country.

1:33:29

They're brought here because this is the epicenter where they're making all the

1:33:33

money.

1:33:34

So you don't think these NGOs, when they hear Spencer Pratt's the new mayor, he's

1:33:38

got the IRS criminal investigation team.

1:33:40

They're going to take this scam.

1:33:42

I'm sorry to other states and cities on the show is going to go on the road and

1:33:46

they're going to open up shop where there's a mayor that lets this go down and

1:33:49

it will stop in L.A.

1:33:50

And this trickle down effect when restaurants don't have zombies in front of

1:33:54

them.

1:33:55

You can go back to having outdoor seating because it doesn't smell like human

1:33:59

poop.

1:33:59

The whole town smells like the whole city smells like human poop and pee.

1:34:03

It's crazy.

1:34:04

So when you get rid of that, not to mention you're in my best plan.

1:34:08

Yeah, I'm bringing in the CDC, Los Angeles, love the white suits.

1:34:13

And during COVID they love, they love CDC.

1:34:16

I'm bringing in the CDC because you know how much typhoid and medieval diseases

1:34:21

are in these encampments that nobody's swabbing.

1:34:24

Mayor Pratt is bringing the CDC and we're going to swab all of them.

1:34:27

And once we get those test results back, I promise you the federal government

1:34:31

will be shutting down streets with white tents and hosing things down with

1:34:36

chlorine.

1:34:37

God knows what, because people are living in the sewers.

1:34:41

I don't know if you saw last week, that lady pops out of the sewer that Juan

1:34:44

from Clean L.A. did a video.

1:34:46

It went viral.

1:34:47

She's living in like in the sewer, a whole full thing.

1:34:51

What is what's with poop and pee?

1:34:55

You know what type of diseases are going on in there?

1:34:58

CDC will clean these streets again.

1:35:00

People are like, oh, Spencer is not going to have the resources with the

1:35:03

Olympics coming.

1:35:04

We have Homeland Security.

1:35:06

We got DEA.

1:35:07

Another thing.

1:35:08

We're just letting.

1:35:09

I talked to the dog rescue people.

1:35:11

They say you stand on Skid Row or any street in L.A.

1:35:14

You can watch the drug dealers just pulling up in Escalades.

1:35:17

Tesla is all the nicest cars.

1:35:19

Just slaying.

1:35:20

No problem.

1:35:21

Mayor Pratt.

1:35:23

DEA is coming in.

1:35:25

ATF.

1:35:26

We have so much funding when you bring the feds in to enforce the law to get

1:35:30

the streets ready for the Olympics.

1:35:32

The current administration, they want to play pretend, get that money to launder.

1:35:36

Oh, we need that billion dollars.

1:35:38

We'll we'll clean the streets.

1:35:39

No, no, no.

1:35:40

You come do it.

1:35:41

Help me out.

1:35:42

So it's not like I won't be able to do this.

1:35:43

And people when they hear me say they're like, sorry, guy.

1:35:46

So let's.

1:35:48

We haven't even talked jujitsu.

1:35:50

Are we going to put on geese or what?

1:35:53

Let's talk about day one.

1:35:55

So day one, realistically, what can you do?

1:35:59

And how do you implement all these ideas that you have?

1:36:03

So right now what I've learned is all the smartest, brightest people would

1:36:06

never want to come work in L.A.

1:36:09

Because they know any of their ideas are not going to be used.

1:36:12

The system is in play.

1:36:13

The amount of private industry.

1:36:16

Like, for instance, a CEO's house burned down who sold his company to Warren

1:36:21

Buffett.

1:36:22

We're talking big, legit CEO.

1:36:26

He said, I'll come in.

1:36:27

I'll work for a dollar a year.

1:36:29

You know, there's people like this that want to get L.A. back that I'm going to

1:36:33

surround myself.

1:36:34

People like Rick Caruso.

1:36:36

He wants to get building.

1:36:37

You lean on these people that they talk about it.

1:36:40

They just don't want to go into this toxic environment that you can't.

1:36:44

It's a cartel.

1:36:45

They know there's only so much they can do unless there's a mayor like me that's

1:36:48

going to let them do it.

1:36:49

I just got a phone with Steve Moscow.

1:36:51

He was the president of multiple studios.

1:36:54

Sony.

1:36:55

I'm going to bring him in with an Avengers team for Hollywood.

1:36:58

How we clean up all these permit issues and get Hollywood back and make the

1:37:03

incentives.

1:37:04

My idea is literally not charge.

1:37:06

You want to shoot in L.A.?

1:37:08

We're going to charge you?

1:37:10

We need work.

1:37:11

We need work.

1:37:12

And then in six years we can come back and worry about that.

1:37:14

But bring the business back.

1:37:16

So meeting with the Ted Sarandos.

1:37:18

Putting these actual commissions.

1:37:20

Not to mention I already met with the there's the community budget advocates.

1:37:25

They're like L.A. budget experts.

1:37:27

They presented seven budget initiatives to Mayor Bastion and do one.

1:37:31

I'm going to do all seven.

1:37:32

These type of budget things where you don't just increase all these payments to

1:37:38

city unions or whatever with if the budget doesn't have the money.

1:37:41

There's going to be a commission that looks everything publicly for 30 days.

1:37:45

Right now it's just her CAO.

1:37:47

It's like having your accountant and and check your taxes like from the IRS.

1:37:51

It's all we need to have outside independent people checking all this stuff.

1:37:56

So it's more of again I'm talking with Chief Garcia who's retiring who's the GOAT

1:38:01

firefighter to be one of my deputy to be one of my deputy mayors of fire and

1:38:06

public safety.

1:38:07

Not a deputy mayor that calls bomb threats into the city.

1:38:10

So just using experienced people that want to get L.A. is surrounding myself.

1:38:15

One thing I know I have is common sense.

1:38:18

Now all the things that I need the professionals you bring them in and they'll

1:38:21

want to work with me because they know they hear my message.

1:38:24

Oh, he's going to undo all this.

1:38:26

You're telling me for seven hundred fifty thousand dollars.

1:38:30

I couldn't find a better L.A. D.W.P. CEO to make sure there's waters in the

1:38:35

reservoir figure out how to get rates down.

1:38:37

We have plenty of money.

1:38:38

We're paying these jobs.

1:38:40

We're clearly not getting the proper talent.

1:38:42

Obviously, look at the city.

1:38:44

You're getting talent that's ideologically aligned.

1:38:48

Yeah, exactly.

1:38:49

And it's a part of this whole cartel.

1:38:51

Exactly.

1:38:52

And they know what they're doing.

1:38:53

They know the game.

1:38:54

They play the game.

1:38:55

They listen to whatever the top dogs say.

1:38:58

And they follow business as usual.

1:39:00

And the money keeps getting moved around.

1:39:02

To the point where I can poach talent from other major cities that are

1:39:06

successful at these jobs.

1:39:08

I can pay them more clearly than other people like, wow, you did this here.

1:39:13

Come out to L.A.

1:39:14

Don't worry.

1:39:15

The zombies will be gone by the time you get here.

1:39:17

But there are these people.

1:39:19

There's tons of cities around America that don't look like L.A.

1:39:23

This is not some rocket science I have to figure out.

1:39:26

You're in one of them right now.

1:39:28

There we go.

1:39:29

Yeah.

1:39:30

Drive around Austin.

1:39:31

There's a homeless problem, but it's minor.

1:39:33

It's very small in comparison to Los Angeles.

1:39:36

Again, there will be homeless problems always.

1:39:39

Everywhere.

1:39:40

Always.

1:39:41

But the drug addiction, crime, where they run the streets, that's a problem

1:39:45

that can be fixed.

1:39:46

And encampments can be fixed.

1:39:48

Look at what they did in San Francisco when Xi Jinping was visiting San

1:39:52

Francisco.

1:39:53

And Gavin Newsom literally said, when someone comes to your house to visit, you

1:39:58

clean up your house.

1:40:00

How about just keep your fucking house clean?

1:40:03

Like, what are you saying?

1:40:04

If you have the resources to clean it up when a foreign dignitary comes into

1:40:08

town, why don't you just keep your town clean?

1:40:10

And we're the ones that own the house, the taxpayers.

1:40:12

Yeah.

1:40:13

We already pay to keep the house clean.

1:40:15

Yeah.

1:40:16

Back to Newsom and fires.

1:40:17

One other thing we need to touch upon.

1:40:19

Back to climate change and him going to Munich.

1:40:21

And he talks about the fires.

1:40:23

It's 365 days a year.

1:40:26

It's climate.

1:40:27

That's interesting for somebody whose fire service, the Cal Fire, he only pays

1:40:32

them seasonal.

1:40:33

When the Palisades fire hit, most of Cal Fire was down for the season.

1:40:38

If it's a 360 forest, and that's why the only reason Brentwood exists and didn't

1:40:44

burn all the way, just like the Palisades, is that Chief Garcia, he was ready

1:40:49

with the U.S. Forest Service because he fought the feds to make sure he has a

1:40:52

real fire service that's 365 because he understands it can pop off whenever.

1:40:57

So he had all his tankers and helicopters.

1:41:00

They came to Palisades and saved the day.

1:41:02

So this idea, they just talk, talk.

1:41:05

Oh, I spend all this money on all these things.

1:41:07

But then you don't.

1:41:08

And then he cut their salaries.

1:41:10

I mean, we could do a whole episode on Newsom.

1:41:12

I've got to stay focused.

1:41:13

And it's back to...

1:41:14

It's amazing that that guy thinks he could be president.

1:41:17

Not when I'm mayor of L.A.

1:41:18

Because I'm going to cook him.

1:41:20

I just don't understand how anybody could think that he would do a good job.

1:41:24

He ruined San Francisco.

1:41:25

Then he ruined California.

1:41:27

And now he wants to ruin the country?

1:41:29

Like what...

1:41:30

How the fuck do they think because he talks well?

1:41:34

And he doesn't even talk well.

1:41:35

He just talks well for people that are in that position.

1:41:38

There's just a lot of people that talk way better than him that aren't

1:41:42

interested in the job.

1:41:43

Well, that's what we need to get past.

1:41:45

And the audience, the taxpayers, audience, whatever you want to call them.

1:41:48

We need to stop falling for performative politics.

1:41:51

The mayor of L.A., she's so good at it.

1:41:54

She gets everyone riled up like she's Che Guevara fighting for freedom.

1:41:58

But she can do nothing.

1:42:00

She literally, as mayor, cannot stop anything with the federal government.

1:42:04

It's all just an act.

1:42:05

And same with Newsom.

1:42:06

They're like social media influencers.

1:42:09

Do your job.

1:42:11

We're paying our tax money for you to make sure our houses don't burn down.

1:42:15

Zombies aren't attacking our families on the way to school.

1:42:18

Everything that's the basic quality of life, you're failing at.

1:42:22

But what you're good at is just yelling on social media.

1:42:25

And that was back to why I ran.

1:42:26

Because I didn't want to be one of these.

1:42:28

They're just yappers.

1:42:29

They just yap.

1:42:30

You don't do anything.

1:42:31

Yeah, well, it's refreshing.

1:42:34

It's refreshing seeing something.

1:42:36

But I think this is how it has to be done.

1:42:38

I think it has to be someone from the outside.

1:42:40

That all these people that have a career in politics, they know what feathers

1:42:46

they can't ruffle.

1:42:47

They know that if you want to make it, you have to be aligned with whatever the

1:42:51

party's doing.

1:42:52

And if you go against them, you get in trouble.

1:42:55

And everyone knows this.

1:42:57

So they all just sort of stay the course and hope that their time comes.

1:43:00

Hope that they'll look the right way and say the right things.

1:43:04

And somehow or another, it'll allow them to elevate their career and become a

1:43:09

mayor somewhere or become a governor somewhere.

1:43:11

Well, if you look, smart people come up to me and they'll be like, you're doing

1:43:15

what the founders of America wanted.

1:43:17

Real people, part of the communities getting into politics, not this job where

1:43:22

I'm going to do this for 30.

1:43:24

It was supposed to be your neighbor.

1:43:27

You're somebody who understood what everyone was going through.

1:43:30

Exactly.

1:43:31

And I feel that.

1:43:32

And again, I'm going in there to stop these people.

1:43:36

Not, I don't have a new utopia of what L.A. should be.

1:43:39

I want L.A. back.

1:43:40

I want the L.A. I grew up in.

1:43:42

Right.

1:43:43

I want my two sons to be able to, once we win all our lawsuits against Gavin

1:43:46

Newsom and his State Park, to rebuild in the Palisades and grow up in the city

1:43:51

of L.A. that I grew up in, that you could dream.

1:43:56

Have you thought about a timeline of how all these ideas that you have, like

1:44:01

how long it'll take to actually implement them?

1:44:04

Once you start enforcing the law, things are going to move quick.

1:44:08

It's, it's, it's as simple as, okay, I'm mayor of L.A.

1:44:12

I got my new, my new deputy mayors.

1:44:14

We have my new police commissions.

1:44:16

We're going around and we're just arresting people.

1:44:20

And the people that aren't getting arrested, we're getting to mandatory medical

1:44:23

treatment.

1:44:24

And we're just going to start clearing the streets, clearing the encampments.

1:44:27

And then from that, it just, everything's going to come to, first off, imagine

1:44:32

the communities.

1:44:33

Like the, how pumped people are going to be in these neighborhoods when I come

1:44:38

in and I'm like, this is done.

1:44:39

What is this other person, this democratic socialist lady, what, what is her

1:44:44

solution to all these problems, crime, homelessness, all these things?

1:44:48

What is she saying?

1:44:49

She, is she admitting that there are issues and does she have a solution that

1:44:53

she's proposing?

1:44:54

As she just posted it yesterday.

1:44:57

I didn't read it.

1:44:58

Somebody just tagged it.

1:44:59

It was so funny.

1:45:00

One of the quotes was, we're going to have a street medical team, a street

1:45:04

medical team.

1:45:05

We already have that.

1:45:06

It's called the LAFD and they're spending 80% of their calls responding to

1:45:11

these overdoses.

1:45:12

And we're also paying for that.

1:45:13

No, they, cause they're so deep in it.

1:45:16

They can't say mandatory treatment because these people have rights to die on

1:45:21

the sidewalk.

1:45:22

They have rights to attack.

1:45:23

So we need more housing.

1:45:25

This isn't, these beds aren't working.

1:45:27

We need to get more beds.

1:45:28

So yes, she needs more affordable beds more.

1:45:31

It's not working as she's running it.

1:45:34

As she's running it.

1:45:35

Yeah.

1:45:36

So she just wants to keep business as usual, just with more funds.

1:45:39

No, she wasn't even running until three hours before the last where you have to

1:45:43

fill it out.

1:45:43

But when everyone saw, I was going to win and be the mayor.

1:45:46

They, so the real conspiracy is, is my conspiracy.

1:45:50

I don't know if it's real.

1:45:52

That Karen Bass and they are working together just to block me to make sure,

1:45:57

because it's a jungle runoff.

1:45:59

So June 2nd, the top two numbers go to November.

1:46:03

I was 1 billion percent going to November until one hour before she just pops

1:46:08

up.

1:46:09

After she already endorsed Mayor Bass, they were doing photo ops together a

1:46:13

week before.

1:46:14

They're close.

1:46:15

Mayor Bass endorsed this Nithya lady.

1:46:17

They're like a team.

1:46:18

So two hours before that last minute where you have to sign to where they

1:46:22

announced the final candidates.

1:46:24

She's had a year to run for mayor or plus you could have announced.

1:46:28

It's just to block me from going to November.

1:46:30

But what they don't understand is people that will vote for me would never vote

1:46:35

for her or Karen Bass.

1:46:37

They're actually picking off their own stats.

1:46:40

If anything, what they're doing is making me the mayor on June 2nd, because if

1:46:45

you have 51% of the vote, I just become the mayor on June 2nd.

1:46:49

And I think they're in for a big surprise and they're underestimating how angry

1:46:53

everybody is in the city of L.A.

1:46:55

And I think I become mayor June 2nd and it won't even go to November.

1:46:58

I think they really are underestimating how angry everybody is because there's

1:47:03

people that I talked to that used to be just hardcore Democrats.

1:47:07

Hardcore leftist progressives that are really saying like in hushed tones, we

1:47:14

really need a Republican.

1:47:15

We really need like some no nonsense Rudy Giuliani person.

1:47:19

I hate to say that.

1:47:20

I hate to say it, but that's what we need.

1:47:22

We need someone who's going to be really tough on crime and clean everything up

1:47:25

and stop all these people from having tents on the street.

1:47:27

There's so many people like that that are just quiet about it.

1:47:31

They don't want to talk about it openly and publicly because they're afraid of

1:47:34

being shamed.

1:47:35

I grew up in Palisades.

1:47:37

I went to Crossroads High School.

1:47:38

I don't think I've ever met a Republican.

1:47:41

No, I mean, for real, like all the people I know, all my family and friends,

1:47:46

everybody I know is a Democrat.

1:47:48

And all the people that are supporting me, all the people I talk to, they're

1:47:51

Democrats.

1:47:52

We're, this is not the Democrat Party that's running LA.

1:47:55

The other day I posted the, like the commandment list of, I think it was 1996,

1:48:01

Bill Clinton's Democratic Party.

1:48:04

It looks like what I would say right now.

1:48:06

Yeah.

1:48:07

That's the demo.

1:48:08

No, this is socialism.

1:48:09

This is communist.

1:48:10

This is cartel.

1:48:11

This is mafia.

1:48:13

This is not Democrats.

1:48:15

Love me.

1:48:16

They want all the same things.

1:48:17

They want to feel safe.

1:48:18

It's really amazing how they can hide it, but just pretend to be compassionate.

1:48:23

They can hide all this money that they're just siphoning off because it really

1:48:27

is just organized crime.

1:48:29

Well, they say to people, there's nothing we can do.

1:48:32

That's right.

1:48:33

People in my comments section be like, there's nothing you can do.

1:48:36

It's like, they are so good at just keeping this.

1:48:40

These people have rights.

1:48:42

First off, it is illegal.

1:48:44

Just, this is below people's mind.

1:48:45

It's illegal to live on the sidewalk.

1:48:47

Right.

1:48:48

It's a, that's a Democrat law.

1:48:50

All the laws I want to enforce are Democrat laws.

1:48:54

I am the Democrat law enforcer, mayor.

1:48:57

I should be every day.

1:48:59

It's, I'm actually excited.

1:49:01

Cause I, I finally feel like there's like hope.

1:49:04

Cause when your house burns down and your mom's crying, cause her house burned

1:49:08

out every single day,

1:49:09

everyone you know's house burned out.

1:49:10

You go through a dark, just all my tax money.

1:49:14

Like I should be a millionaire.

1:49:16

You know, cause I got some big checks.

1:49:19

People always say, oh, he burned all of his money.

1:49:21

They don't understand living in LA in the entertainment business with a manager,

1:49:25

an agent,

1:49:26

a business manager, your taxes in LA, your state taxes.

1:49:30

It's very hard to keep all that money.

1:49:32

So they're like, oh, he burned it.

1:49:33

No, I, regardless the amount of money I put in to the city of LA and the state,

1:49:39

my house should still be here.

1:49:40

So it's very sad moment.

1:49:42

And then it, then you start uncovering, oh no, this is almost strategic.

1:49:47

This is this, you know, a lot of people reached out after with the line and

1:49:50

they're like, oh, they line at you.

1:49:53

This is a land grab.

1:49:54

And I was like, no, no.

1:49:55

And then you start going down.

1:49:56

You're like, I'm not even arguing with these people anymore because of how the

1:50:00

writing was so on the wall.

1:50:02

It's so on the wall.

1:50:03

The entire insurance industry dropped everyone in the Palisades leading up to

1:50:06

the fire.

1:50:07

It was that flagrant.

1:50:09

There was 70 year old people, 70 year old plus.

1:50:12

I talked to 80 year olds that got dropped by their insurance.

1:50:16

January 1st been paying 40 plus years.

1:50:19

Didn't even get to re up lost everything.

1:50:21

No insurance.

1:50:22

If all the insurance companies are dropping an area, it's very clear that they

1:50:27

know what's about to happen.

1:50:29

So your city leaders, your mayor, everybody, your state, they should be getting

1:50:35

ready or saying, oh, wow, everyone's dropping this.

1:50:37

What can we do?

1:50:38

Oh, we need to clear the dead brush.

1:50:40

We need to make the water in the reservoirs.

1:50:43

They're just obvious things.

1:50:44

So I don't even argue with the land grab things because here's a crazy thing

1:50:48

that I never did the math for.

1:50:50

This hurts.

1:50:51

So your house burns down.

1:50:53

You lost everything.

1:50:54

Now you got to buy stuff over again.

1:50:56

Now you're paying the city sales tax.

1:50:59

So the people who just let your house burn down.

1:51:01

Now you're giving them tax to rebuy underwear, rebuy shoes, rebuy.

1:51:06

So they're making money now off of your house burning down.

1:51:10

Not to mention you got to start buying things too.

1:51:13

Actually, maybe if you're lucky, not only 14 people in 15 months have built the

1:51:18

house.

1:51:18

So it's only 14 people have built a new house.

1:51:20

Let's max out at 16 just to be like, oh, no, it's 16.

1:51:23

He's a misinformation.

1:51:25

Less than 20.

1:51:27

Less than 20.

1:51:28

Yeah, less than 20 and 15 plus.

1:51:29

Which is crazy.

1:51:30

And how many houses burned down?

1:51:31

7,000.

1:51:32

Wow.

1:51:33

So now you got the sales tax.

1:51:36

God, that's so crazy.

1:51:37

That's such a crazy number.

1:51:38

7,000 houses is so crazy.

1:51:41

What's even crazier is most of these houses burned down on January 8th.

1:51:45

When now there's no wind and they just didn't figure out, let's drive water in

1:51:51

from all.

1:51:52

Again, when you're on Lahaina, you're on an island.

1:51:55

I'll start arguing, oh, it's hard to get resources.

1:51:58

When everything's burning down on January 7th and you already realize you effed

1:52:02

up.

1:52:02

And now you're hearing the fire department saying, oh, the fire hydrants are

1:52:05

empty.

1:52:05

There's no water.

1:52:06

It's red alert.

1:52:07

Get enough water tankers from the whole state.

1:52:10

Every city drive in water.

1:52:12

I have videos from January 8th of moms walking in front of my son's elementary

1:52:15

school.

1:52:16

It's totally there.

1:52:17

My son's preschool, 12 o'clock, totally there.

1:52:19

By the afternoon, all this is gone.

1:52:22

Cause there was no, they didn't bring water in.

1:52:25

It's crazy.

1:52:26

So back to the land grab thing.

1:52:29

So for instance, all these properties that burned down, like I said, it's years

1:52:34

of passed

1:52:35

down family properties.

1:52:37

So when you pass that, you pay that old tax rate.

1:52:40

Now these 7,000 dirt lots in the next couple of years, guess what the new tax

1:52:44

rate is.

1:52:45

They're going to have, when somebody buys that and they're now paying 20, 27,

1:52:49

20, 28

1:52:50

Pacific Palisades tax rates, not 1970, you know, your grandfather's tax rate.

1:52:55

Cause you know, you've still lived in the house.

1:52:57

So there's like a hundred plus billion.

1:53:00

They're going to make just in taxes.

1:53:02

So the idea that, oh, why would they ever let that happen?

1:53:06

You start thinking, oh, well they don't care because not only do they make a

1:53:11

lot of money,

1:53:11

they can rebuild it.

1:53:12

They can try to put, you know, affordable housing and do this.

1:53:17

These complex, it just gets, it gets fishy.

1:53:20

It does get weird.

1:53:21

Like you don't want to accuse people of land grabs, but at the very least they're

1:53:26

capitalizing on a tragedy.

1:53:28

Well, you know, the number one buyer right now of Palisades dirt lots, China.

1:53:34

No way.

1:53:35

Yeah.

1:53:36

Really?

1:53:37

Yeah.

1:53:38

Well, they do it through New Zealand or it's a New Zealand business owned by

1:53:43

the Chinese.

1:53:44

So, you know, it's, it's all movie stuff.

1:53:46

I keep saying to people.

1:53:48

Watch the movie Chinatown.

1:53:49

I watch it once a week just to like stay locked in, you know, but it's, it's

1:53:55

exciting because

1:53:56

I feel this window of change where the stars are aligning, where an outsider

1:54:02

comes in and

1:54:03

just blows up their whole spot.

1:54:05

Not the way the deputy mayor calls him bomb threats, but energetically.

1:54:09

And so it gives me hope.

1:54:11

And then again, if it goes, if it's not God's plan, my wife is very on the, you

1:54:16

know, prayer

1:54:17

warrior, Bible, Jesus.

1:54:19

So, you know, I check in with her and I go, what's Jesus saying, honey?

1:54:23

And, you know, I talk, but I think she has a better path.

1:54:27

And her thing is, if it's God's will, it's going to go down.

1:54:32

And if not, then I'll probably end up with some of my former Palisades that

1:54:36

moved to Bentonville,

1:54:37

Arkansas, and it is what it is.

1:54:39

But I will, there could be no doubt that Los Angeles needs a radical shift.

1:54:44

They need a radical change.

1:54:46

And it sounds like that's exactly what you're proposing.

1:54:48

Big time.

1:54:51

And it's exciting, you know, cause most people are scared.

1:54:54

They have fear of this system.

1:54:55

They're fear of being attacked.

1:54:57

The, I get why a normal person that's just has a good heart.

1:55:01

The smart doesn't want to go into politics.

1:55:03

They will.

1:55:04

You have the LA times writing hit pieces.

1:55:06

They got machines to keep the system.

1:55:08

You got the comments sections.

1:55:10

You got people making videos and trying to expose bots.

1:55:14

You feel that.

1:55:15

But thankfully I have experienced from being hated in television for many years.

1:55:20

You know, now the flip is I have so much love energy.

1:55:26

I was able to maintain with negativity for so many years and just stay in the

1:55:30

game.

1:55:30

Cause it was business as usual.

1:55:32

And I knew they wanted a villain on all these shows.

1:55:34

I will, you know, shout out David Foster to put me on this path many years ago.

1:55:39

He said, you got to be like Simon Cowell.

1:55:41

And I leaned into that and it worked for many years.

1:55:44

But the point is being hated for so many years.

1:55:47

Now having so much love, obviously I'd much rather be loved.

1:55:52

Let's speak to anybody that wants to be loved is a lot more fun.

1:55:55

For sure.

1:55:56

For sure.

1:55:57

Listen, man, I'm voting for you.

1:55:59

I can't vote for you, but I'm rooting for you.

1:56:02

I mean, if I lived in Los Angeles, no question whatsoever, I would vote for you.

1:56:06

You have time to get one of these affordable beds.

1:56:09

I can put you, I could probably connect you with one of these beds.

1:56:12

I don't think that's legal.

1:56:14

I think I'm a Texas resident.

1:56:16

Okay.

1:56:17

Yeah.

1:56:18

I'm a Texas resident.

1:56:19

Take that back.

1:56:20

I think I can only vote.

1:56:21

Did you see what they're doing right now with the cigarettes and the ballots in

1:56:24

LA?

1:56:24

Have you seen this?

1:56:25

What?

1:56:26

They caught all these people signing ballots, trading the zombies for

1:56:29

cigarettes.

1:56:30

Oh, I did see that.

1:56:31

So I need the DOJ.

1:56:32

If you're watching the feds, we need, no, we need come to LA for my election.

1:56:37

We need to make sure we get a real election.

1:56:39

I can't believe we didn't do an hour on jujitsu though.

1:56:41

Yeah.

1:56:42

That really is gross.

1:56:43

What they're doing with giving people cigarettes to sign up for things.

1:56:46

Do you know how many people are like in the jujitsu game?

1:56:49

If you don't shout me out, like I need to just like end with like a list of

1:56:53

people.

1:56:53

No, no, I'm just kidding.

1:56:54

But guys, we didn't talk jujitsu.

1:56:56

Yeah.

1:56:57

Well, I talk jujitsu so much.

1:56:58

I know, I know, but I just have to.

1:57:00

Here's another thing.

1:57:01

Like flavored nicotine is illegal in Los Angeles.

1:57:04

Just think about how many people are camped out on the streets.

1:57:08

How many people are in tents, open fentanyl use.

1:57:11

You can't buy flavored zins.

1:57:14

Well, even the cleanest ones that like my health biohacker friends allegedly

1:57:19

may or may not access it.

1:57:20

You can't have those.

1:57:21

Like fitness people can't even.

1:57:23

Like athletic nicotine.

1:57:24

Peptides are technically, you know.

1:57:26

Yeah.

1:57:27

Well, they're working on that nationwide and hopefully that'll get passed soon.

1:57:31

But there's so many regulations in California that make fucking no sense.

1:57:36

Like no sense, particularly in Los Angeles, they make no sense.

1:57:40

And it's just they just want to keep you like a child.

1:57:43

And they are the people that are supposed to be the overseers of everybody.

1:57:47

And they're looking out for you.

1:57:48

And it's gross.

1:57:49

And it's just business as usual.

1:57:51

They want to keep moving in a direction of more regulation, more rules, less

1:57:56

rights, more restrictions.

1:57:58

One last thing that's speaking is this is so crazy.

1:58:01

Do you know right now in L.A., if you're just a mom and pop landlord, you know,

1:58:06

not they always like to say landlords are like cruel at DeVille level.

1:58:09

Like, you know, just like a mom and pop.

1:58:11

Maybe you own one apartment building with units.

1:58:13

If you have like a drug addict, crazy person living in there, most of them now

1:58:19

also with their Section 8 scammer and Range Rovers have two cars.

1:58:23

If you want to get them out, they can go a whole year with not paying these

1:58:28

landlords.

1:58:29

And then they have to pay 100 grand in legal fees to try to get them out.

1:58:32

So then they settle with this criminal that's just abusing this loophole in

1:58:37

this system.

1:58:38

They'll give them 50, 40 K to just leave.

1:58:40

That person is not put on any list.

1:58:42

And then they go do it to another apartment building.

1:58:44

So a lot of these apartment buildings, they don't even want to rent out to

1:58:48

people because they can't afford to then have one of these people.

1:58:52

So again, with this housing and then ready for this, the city council, if it

1:58:55

was not 170 million, it's 200 million.

1:58:59

Just gave 170 million to the lawyers that sue the tenants for these people.

1:59:04

But there's no fun for the tenants to then defend themselves.

1:59:08

Jesus Christ.

1:59:10

It's so crazy.

1:59:13

So again, it's about these people coming around me that are living this

1:59:18

nightmare and be like, how do I help you stop these things?

1:59:21

And putting these people that know the game because they're living it.

1:59:26

Yeah.

1:59:27

And undo it.

1:59:28

We got to stop this.

1:59:29

Well, I'm glad we could help you get your message out.

1:59:32

And I really, really hope it helps.

1:59:34

And I really, really hope you win.

1:59:36

It will be fun.

1:59:37

It'd be fun to watch you shake it up.

1:59:40

And boy, if you could really change Los Angeles and turn it around.

1:59:45

I mean, I mean, that would be absolutely fantastic.

1:59:49

It would be a great story.

1:59:50

It would be really amazing.

1:59:51

And it would give hope to a lot of other cities that are experiencing similar

1:59:54

situations where

1:59:55

I think a lot of other people would follow your path.

1:59:58

I'm doing it.

2:00:00

All right.

2:00:01

Just give me the game.

2:00:02

Vote for mayorpratt.com.

2:00:03

Vote for mayorpratt.

2:00:04

There it is.

2:00:05

Thank you so much.

2:00:06

I appreciate it.

2:00:07

All right.

2:00:08

Bye, everybody.

2:00:20

Thank you.