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[INAUDIBLE] The Joe, Rogan, experience.
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[MUSIC PLAYING] Let's go on, Mr. Mayor. I'm so thankful to be here. My pleasure. So first of all, how did this idea even get into your head
of running for mayor in LA?
To be clear, I never wanted to run for any political office
or have anything to do with politicians. What happened was, after spending a year uncovering how my parents' house burned down and my neighbors burned alive and 7,000 houses burned. And then I realized there's a cover-up going on,
all the negligence, and I keep posting about it. And I have all the facts. I have all the whistleblowers. I have all the evidence and businesses usual. And I see that nobody is stepping up to run
against the mayor who's responsible for this disaster and so many other disasters. So it became to the point where I got so sick of just being as the younger people say in the comment section.
“A yapper, I felt like I was just yapping.”
Making these videos, I'm telling the truth. I've got a congressional investigation. I went to Washington.
I met with everyone possible that I could do
as just a citizen. And I was like, OK, well, game on now. I'm going to go into your headquarters and just take your job. And then remove all these toxic entities that
are destroying our way of life in Los Angeles. So let's start from the fire. So the narrative was-- there was a lot of terrible stupid fake narratives and one of them was climate change.
That was the craziest one. The climate change is causing the fire. The guy lived in LA for 29, 30 years, whatever it was. And I guess it was. Yeah, somewhere around there.
Maybe even more. Whatever it was. When I lived in LA, fire season happened every year. This is not climate change. This is that some new thing over the last couple of decades.
I was evacuated three different times. I used to live in Bel Canyon and my neighbors three of the homes right across the street from my house, burnt to the ground in 2018.
There's always been fires in Los Angeles.
But the lack of preparation for the palesates fires was astonishing. The fact that the reservoir was empty was criminal mismanagement. I mean, it was just insanity that everybody knew
that we had fires, like massive fires, that it was a dry place. And when the sandan and winds would blow, if something caught fire, it was a real problem. We had known that forever.
And when you see all these people that are passing the buck and moving the blame, and then the fund, when they had that big charity thing for the fire, and you found out that hundreds of millions of dollars was raised, you know, if you're looking at it,
like a rational person, a rational person would say, "Oh, this is great. "All these people lost their homes. "We'll have some funds from this "and they'll be able to rebuild."
And then you find out that the money was given to,
“what was it like, a hundred and eight different NGOs?”
- 200 plus. - 200 plus, where that money got distributed to these organizations, these supposed non-profit organizations, and most of that money goes to overhead. And almost nothing goes to the people who lost their homes.
- Sort of rewind, let's start with what we thought. We were told climate change. And with the climate change, because I've spent hours and hours arguing with people that will argue with that, I go, okay, great.
The climate changes, right? So we're aware of this dry weather. It hasn't rained. So what should we actually be doing? Should we just say, "Oh, everybody should burn alive
"and houses burn down?" Or should we clear the dead brush? Should we pre-deploy? Should we make sure that both reservoirs have water in it? So the idea that climate change is the get out of jail,
burn everything down, excuse. It doesn't even add up, so we know that. So let's make a difference. And I want to met with the Chief of the US Forest Service and talk to him for a few hours.
This guy, Chief Garcia is one of the most famous fire chiefs from the hot shots, and I quizzed him. And he told me, this was not a surprise. He said, "They all have a map." I don't forget the name of this map
that it goes to all cities and emergency personnel. They have photos, you look at 'em, he showed 'em to me. Everything is bright red leading up to January 7th.
Bright red, they knew this was coming to the point
where Chief Garcia had all of his firefighters on the tarmac, kidded up in their helicopters. He said his whole team was standing by their computers because it was so obvious this fire was coming
“based off of, if you want to say, the climate change.”
Because it had not rained, it was record dry. So this idea that they use that, it's just an excuse. And then the big one that everyone falls for to this day that is the best propaganda ever is hurricane winds. We were told, you know, new some's doing the thing
and he said, the winds were coming, the hurricane, and he lit his hair on fire. There was no hurricane winds in the Pacific Palacades. The max wind speed was 40 miles per hour. And for the first six hours, when the helicopter
is the initial attack, when you put out the fire, it was max, I think, 27 miles per hour. So they got everyone with its unprecedented, its hurricane winds, its climate change, no responsibility. So now we go to fire rate.
And this is another thing that just woke me up to,
we always heard about the homeless NGO scam
and the homeless industrial complex. But living as a fire victim and watching all these celebrities go on stage, they actually took fire victims from Altadena on stage whose houses burned down and they raised this $100 million.
And as a victim, I'm thinking, okay, we're gonna get $1,000. That's nice, you know, you break 100 million up. This should be a grant, you know, even FEMA in these places when you get that $1,000 check, it's helpful. Here I go, I just lost everything.
Every little thousand adds up. So when that happened and nobody, I know anywhere, got money and sue Pasco from circling the news, a local journalist whose house burned down. She spent months investigating,
“calling up every single NGO, who did you give money to?”
Which victim, nobody got money. And even the law firm that they hired to do the cover up for the fire aid, the law firm says in their own little three-page document, whether they're defending fire aid.
They say, several of the money went directly to fire victims while I Google just to see 'cause I know the definition of several, I want to see what his Google say several is. It was definitely under 10. So out of 200 plus NGOs, their own lawyers
are saying several gave to fire victims. And then you look at the three that they name, like we gave gift cards to victims, which victims? Which, you were just handing out, if you were, but it was that that woke me up to,
they stole the money. Yeah, and if they'll do that to people whose house is just burned down, of course they're gonna do it to our tax money
“with the homeless industrial zombie complex.”
So that was a real wake up that put me into, oh, here's where the $25, $30 billion goes. It doesn't go to solving anything or fixing it. It goes to scams. - Well, I don't think before Elon started investigating
into a lot of these NGOs, I don't think anybody was really aware, most people were not aware of how this all works. And how there's a whole bureaucracy, like a business that's set up where a bunch of people
get paid from this money to essentially make no improvements
whatsoever and whatever the problem is.
Whether it's homelessness, the homelessness is one of the biggest ones in LA, because there was 24 plus billion dollars spent on homelessness. And when people, when representatives have tried
to do an audit to find out where this money went, Newsom has blocked it, he is vetoed this audit. - So it's even worse in the sense that it's not going to just their salaries. There's actual cases now with the DOJ
and the fact that they're arresting people who are just stealing $30 million, $20 million, buying bent leaves, mansions in Brentwood. So the idea that it's just going to salaries and people are paying themselves out, that's one,
but there's also people just straight up stealing money. And you can't even figure out how they steal it. For instance, this lovely lady came on my podcast, and she created her own charity type thing, the integrity project to expose NGOs,
because she lives in Westwood. And all of a sudden one day on her block in this, you know, she invested with her husband, have a nice single family house on this nice, street in Westwood and the old person home,
they're kicking all the senior citizens out, which is what's going on here. And then next thing you know, the buildings on the market for sale,
and it's for $11 million, six days later,
that building sells to a developer for $27 million.
Up this NGO winegart, who's one of the top,
I think there are maybe $100 million just this year.
They haven't turned in their audit to the feds. It's late right now, but for instance, no one knows why it went from $11 million to $27 million over the weekend in three days. So people pocket that money, here's the craziest part.
Guess who, so you, the grant, you know, winegart gets a grant from the city of the state. Guess who owns that building, not the city of the state. Winegart. So our tax money buys for $20 extra million a property
to have it as a homeless housing.
“Each of these beds, 'cause I think there's maybe only 70 beds in it.”
It's now six years later, approximately. Totally not finished, not done. More, you know, construction this or that, they still get paid as operators. So these NGOs not only get the money for the grants
to buy the building, then they get like a million dollars a year to be operators. And here's the best part. There's no mandatory that they have to actually put a body in the beds.
So, you know, so the scam is, like I keep saying, this is a cartel. This is mafia, this is real mafia criminal stuff going on.
And the problem is, so, one thing I'm so excited to do
when I'm mayor and people in the comments section like, oh, he's so stupid, you can't do that. I've met with the IRS Criminal Investigation Team three times in L.A., twice in Washington, D.C., and they are so excited for me to be mayor,
because all they need is one document from each of these NGOs and these grants
“and they can open these investigations on fraud.”
Right now, they know the fraud and the crimes are happening, but if the city doesn't hand over the document and NGO doesn't, they say they can't just open up these cases without that one document. So, first week, sorry, sorry, so first week as mayor,
I'm bringing in the Criminal Investigation Team and I ask, here's all the NGOs we're working with. I guarantee you, 95% of them already just call. And I go, Mayor Pratt, we're good.
We're actually going to Seattle.
We don't want to work here. Once they know someone's coming to stop the cookie jar stealing and then we'll be like, oh, L.A. it has no money, how you get to do all this stuff. L.A. has plenty of money that we're just letting our tax money
just be stolen and to increase a problem. Homeless, since our current mayor, Karen Bass has joined the city power, she's increased homeless. They referenced numbers, they referenced numbers that should be like, oh, we remove 1500 people this year,
but she doesn't say, oh, 1500 were removed into the cemetery because they, oh, deed. Not to mention how much tax money we're spending on just keeping zombies alive. I met with firefighters a few days ago
at the Hollywood station and they were telling me the amount of Narcan they go through. So in one night in the, I talked to a MacArthur Park, their fire station, he did 17 overdoses in one night. - Jeez.
- So if they're not there, given the Narcan, the amount of people dying is even more insane, right? Now six people are dying a day in the street. And then they say, oh, this is compassionate. These people have rights.
No, these people do not have rights for it to just die. We need to protect these people as humans.
“And again, that's why my whole thing is enforce the law.”
It is illegal to just be doing fentanyl on the street. So if we come in and we give you mandatory treatment, not jail, if you're not, you know, some of these people are just straight going to jail for animal abuse, they're torturing animals all day long
on Skid Row, the videos that I get sent. Once you see them, you can't unsee them. Not to mention now, I'm working with all the rescue ones. The ones they text me and they're just like Spencer. We have to stop this and the city knows.
They call the cops all day long. The cops come and they say, I mean, LAPD's hands are tied. If the mayor and the city attorney, they don't have like enforce a law. They just get away with it.
So we're in Mad Max life in Los Angeles. And people like to say, oh, it's not this, I'm from LA. I've grown up and I keep saying, I'm fighting to get LA back to what? I grew up. It was beautiful.
It's why I wanted to be on a TV show and be famous and be part of Hollywood. It was magical. Not even mentioned Hollywood is now gone. The fact that Hollywood Boulevard
should be the greatest tourist attraction in the world. You couldn't pay me right now to go on Hollywood Boulevard. Step on human feces, the smell of pee, inhaling fent. There's everyone to get a smoke fent on the streets now. It's psycho.
So again, why did I, once you start digging in and you spend all your life now exposing this because again, they burn my house down. They burn my mom's house down. I have to, they put me in the game.
And once you, the bubbles gone, I just all have as this energy to stop this.
Not to mention now, the amount of thousands of messages
I get every day from every part of the city sending me photos.
“There's parents that when they drive to school,”
all across the city, this is not just one unique area. They have to have their kids in the back seat, staring at an iPad, not to look out the window because methatics will just be having sex on the side of the street.
There's just naked people everywhere now. And when I say people naked zombies. And the DEA will tell you, 90% of these homeless people have a drug problem. We have a drug addict problem.
These aren't people that just like miss the paycheck and we need to get them help and get back. This is a drug problem that needs mandatory treatment. Not handy people, needles and pipes and saying,
oh, here's a million dollar bed.
If you're a fentanyl zombie hanging upside down, you don't care about a million dollar empty bed 'cause you're just high, you sober up and you go get high again. But, what were you talking about?
I'm pumped up. It's good to be pumped up. I mean, there's no other explanation other than extensive fraud.
“There's no way they could be getting that much money”
from our taxes and have this big of a problem with crime and with homelessness. And it's almost like they want everybody to feel helpless. They want you to feel like there's nothing you do so that it justifies throwing more money at the problem.
Pull that article up again. So here it is. This is an LAist homelessness deal now under federal investigation. So, even in LA's famously overheated real estate market,
the profit and quick turnaround on senior housing complex. And what's that word? Sheb Yacht. Sheb Yacht?
How do you say that word? Sheb Yacht Hills, do you know where that is? Uh-huh. Neighborhood seems extraordinary. Man at the center of the deal,
since identified by federal prosecutors as Brentwood, Landlord and developer, Stephen Taylor, bought the property on Shelby Drive in 2023
for 11.2 million purchase record shows.
Okay, so this is exactly what you're talking about. 27.3 million to pay for that acquisition. Came from taxpayer grant funds authorized by city and state officials according to grant documentations. LA Mayor Karen Bass and Governor Newsom
touted the purchase as a key tool in the fight against homelessness. The fight against homelessness, they're losing. The deal called for Taylor's involvement
“to be kept secret according to a confidentiality clause”
included in the purchase contract, obtained through a public records request that changed last month when federal authorities announced criminal charges against Taylor. He's accused of submitting fraudulent documents
to borrow money for private lender from private lenders when he bought this end or end other properties. So, news conference, regions, top federal prosecutor, Bill Assayley, Assayley, said the investigation is ongoing.
Taylor was arrested in August when the case was under seal and pleaded not guilty court record show.
It's the first of the two known criminal cases
brought so far by the federal task force. Assayley assembled an April to investigate fraud and corruption around the use of billions of dollars earmarked to combat homelessness in Southern California. See, these people are just buckiniers.
They're just buckiniers. This is just a gigantic criminal enterprise that exists under this guise of being kind. So, that case only exists because of that, moms, Manta, spent $7,500 of her own public records request
on that senior citizen home. That, and then the FBI came, she's our posting in FBI, knocked on her door and said, can we meet with you and she gave them all of her files? It's back to what I was saying, if Ed's wouldn't even
got that story, if this woman Samantha from the integrity project didn't do 7,000 public records request and build this case on her own because she was, what's going on in my next door neighbor. This episode is brought to you by ketone IQ,
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That's how confident they are that you're gonna love. The increased focus you get from ketone IQ. - So this has got to be just one piece of the puzzle.
- That's 30 million up, 25 plus billion dollars.
- So this is an extensive coordinated effort to siphon money. - 100% and again, there's plenty of money to stop homelessness. Karen Bass will tell you, let's use her low number
and made up number, they go around and they count. They drive, there's a real thing. They drive around and they do the homeless count. You can volunteer and you just count. I go wonder, so that's how they do it?
- Yes, they just had a count recently. So that count supposedly is, let's say 45,000. The ran corporation will say that count is 30% low. I'll say that counts 100% low. But even so, let's say there's 100,000 homeless people
in Los Angeles. 20 billion dollars, okay, that's California. Let's bring it down to the last year to a couple billion dollars.
“We can't get people off the street without much money.”
Just today, this DSA city council member who's doing a video, she's bragging about, oh, I just secured $16 million grant. I love it, I use the grant. I just got $16 million more of our tax money.
And she is putting in little tiny homes next to somebody, like just next to a normal street where again, this shouldn't be where that is. And it's housing approximately, I say, 60 people. Whatever, I did, it was a quarter million dollars per person
that they're bragging about. 250,000 dollars a person can get anybody sober, a nice little condo or apartment for a year, potentially whatever job tools you need. So this idea that takes a quarter million dollars
to put a tiny, it's everyone's getting a cut. It's like, again, it's like the mafia. Who's the, there's a bunch of things going on. There's a bunch of employees that are getting paid. So, and getting paid substantial amounts of money.
You know, my friend Koli on the war found this out about San Francisco. So he went up to San Francisco. He saw this homelessness and he's a lawyer, but he's also, he doesn't know what's going on over there.
He's like, wow, what's going on? Do they need more money? He's like, no, no, no, no, no, no. What's going on is they're actually incentivized to have more homeless people.
'Cause the more homeless people, the bigger the bureaucracy grows. The bigger you can have your homeless foundation, your homeless task force, whatever it is.
And these people are making quarter million dollars a year plus. Which is insane, he showed the list of the salaries of all these people like, how are you getting paid when the problem keeps getting worse? And all you're doing is hiring more people
and they're getting paid more money and more projects and more grants and more homelessness. And it's not getting any better, but the money keeps coming in. So you're incentivized to keep the problem.
And increase it, yes, more money.
So business, and people always talk,
I grew up and I was well aware of the military industrial complex, but even with that, they track the bombs and the fighter jets. This, it's even, it's even crazy because there's no, I think we serve.
These are the words serve and cared for. They don't track results, they say, oh, we house 1400 people for a night, two nights. It's not like we're getting people at bracelets and we're tracking them and they're getting air tags.
We have no idea what's going on. So again, I keep saying as mayor on force the loss because you cannot be a crazed drug addict zombie, just running up and up naked on the street.
“That is why I think our amazing Democrats”
in California made this year, SB 43. And that means if you can't manage your own mental state, you can come in and have a hole, the cycle for 72 hours. And if it seems like, oh, this person needs real treatment, it can go to 45 days.
And then it can go up to a year conservatorship. And as mayor, what I keep telling people is once you start enforcing a lot first off, people who just want to do drugs and live on the streets, they will leave LA because they'll see, oh,
this mayor is not playing around. We need to go somewhere else or they're so crazy and we're gonna help them get medical treatment or they're one of these dog abusing type people. And I'm gonna put them under the jail
to the point where once they get from under the jail,
somehow if they ever get out, they will never come back to LA
because now they've been under the jail and they're gonna go under two times more till they end up in prison because if you abuse animals, once again, once you see what I've seen, we're talking in their stapling dogs, eyes closed,
I mean, yeah, it's insane. The shelters alone where it's the city is doing mass murder because they're not giving these people enough funding
I'm convinced now they must make money off
of utilizing, so there's the street issue
“with the zombies abusing dogs and then the city”
just mass murdering dogs because they're not getting the proper funding and facilities and they're not spaying and neutering and enforcing all the laws to keep street breeders from just flooding the streets with the dogs.
So back to you enforce a law and this isn't impossible. I met with a lot of people that have real estate in Los Angeles and they have real estate in San Francisco and Mayor Lurrie came in and he started enforcing the law and just saying you can't do this
and he is cleaned up the city pretty well. You know, there's obviously people that say he's not doing enough and again, I'm sorry, what's it is? San Francisco and so he took the call from the feds
and he said I'm gonna do this and he's doing a solid job. Again, I'm going whole next level because I'm not concerned about optics, I'm not concerned about oh, Spencer's doing this. He's so mean.
No, what's mean is letting people live on the street in human poop and dying on the street and these people I run against, they're all the same. They go, oh, we need more housing. We need more affordable housing.
We need more beds. This isn't working, they just keep doubling down. - Well that's a false narrative. - Yeah, everybody knows it's not a housing problem. It's not, that's not what it is.
It's a drug abuse and mental health problem. That's all it is. It's not a housing problem. That's a flat out lie and anybody who says that should be shamed. When they say we need more affordable housing,
well you're fucking lying and you're a part of the problem. If you're saying it's just an affordable housing problem, that means either you are a part of the propaganda narrative and you've been told to say this or you're in on it. - 100% and at this point it's fucking nuts.
- No. - Skid Row is 50 blocks. It can't even be called Skid Row anymore. It's called Los Angeles. We're every community.
But for my house burned down in the palaces, my wife was ready to move because every morning front of palaces elementary that then burned down and across three to my sons preschool and Methodist. There was a lady cleaning her private parts in front of kids
at 7.45 in the morning. You call LAPD, they pull up and they go, you don't know, 'cause they can't before saw. She'd go around the corner and she'd go number two in front of Joe's barbershop.
I would know, 'cause I'd just step over the number two
'cause I'd always park right near Joe's barbershop.
So it's not Skid Row, it's everywhere. - So the police are told not to do anything about it as I would it is?
“- If you don't enforce a law, what are they gonna do?”
- Right, so this comes down from the mayor. - Of course, and the mayor and the city attorney, if the mayor is not telling the city attorney to prosecute all his mismeters, put these people in mandatory hold.
If you're cleaning your private parts of front of kids and you're a normal citizen, you are going to jail, you're gonna get beyond the citizens app as a sex offender. But the consequences for zombie people, they don't have 'em.
- That's crazy. - It's not fair for all the normal tax paying people in Los Angeles that we have to abide by laws and then there's a whole class, it's like anarchy, it's like, it's psycho.
It's so weird to see, 'cause I lived in LA for so long and when I first moved there in the '90s, there was nothing like this. It was nice, you know? I mean, it was a lot of traffic, but that was it.
There was some crime, but it wasn't that bad. And everything just keeps getting worse and worse and worse. And it didn't seem really bad until,
well, Skid Row was always bad.
And Skid Row was bad on purpose. So for people that don't know and we looked into this because I found out about Skid Row, I knew it existed, but I found out about it when we're filming Fear Factor. So one day, 'cause we filmed a lot in downtown LA
and a lot of these abandoned warehouses and buildings. And we were in one of these warehouses and we left the set and I drove home and I took a wrong turn and I went down near the outskirts of Skid Row.
And it's hard to believe that it's real if you haven't seen it. When you're talking, just blocks and blocks and blocks where there's nothing but homeless people. Just people on the streets, camped out,
wandering through the streets, there's no cars, driving whatsoever, garbage everywhere. And the idea that that's never been cleaned up is fucking insane. So what we found out is that that was an area
a long time ago where they started moving people. I don't know when was this, this is the Jerome Hotel, right?
“That's what we talked about, that's what it was.”
So there was a documentary on the Jerome Hotel. And when we looked into it, it turns out that what they would do is they would find vagrants, which is the old school term for it. And they would find them in Beverly Hills or Hollywood
and they would just move them to downtown LA
To Skid Row and leave them there and keep them there.
The idea was to keep them there. They had food there for them.
“They had catches and they let them camp out on the street”
just stay here. And it ruined all Cecil, the Cecil Hotel, that's right. So this is where they is. So Cecil Hotel was like this beautiful hotel that existed in downtown LA.
And now it's just like it's in zombie land. And the whole area is filled with fucking just everything around it is homeless. Like the sheer volume of it is impossible to describe unless you go there and see it.
And the fact that that's never been addressed
that no one does anything about it. And it's gotten to 50 entire blocks of nothing but homeless people, no businesses, no nothing, nothing's functioning. It's all just taken over by zombies.
- I went to USC and I lived in a loft on Skid Row at the top of the old bank district. So in 2003, that was my street that would pull in and park very good deal. That's why I was like this.
I got a tire of penthouse, the way I didn't get, that's why he was so cheap. But so I've seen the progression to the point where it's insane. And again, this is fixable.
There's so much money. We already paying for it. These people in charge don't want to fix it's clear. And they'll continue doubling down. They need somebody to come and say,
oh, we're done with this.
“And that's why I'm excited to actually be a mayor”
that's in these streets. And here's where they keep saying, oh, you can't do this 'cause the city council, they're all in on it, you know, 90% of them, 'cause they have four of these socialists,
DSA members on the city council that actually wanna destroy our way of life in Los Angeles. - Why do you think they wanna do that? - Because they're socialists. Go on the DSA, Democratic,
Socialists of America's website, and they're not Democrats. They hate Democrats. They use the word to hide their true agenda of socialism. So they wanna keep taking as much of our tax money
and the main lady I was talking about with that 60 million, she's one of these DSA people. She's bragging about taking $16 million of our tax money to give 40 plus people or 50 people 250,000 each to live in a tiny home.
That is not a working solution. We need to have a plan to get these people back into society, not bankroll an entire existence of Los Angeles where we're like, oh, you can just be a drug addict and we're gonna pay for you because...
- Yeah, this is the problem with that narrative that the rich people aren't paying enough. And this is one of the things that I've seen progressive podcasters talk about the wealth tax and they were talking about imposing a wealth tax on billionaires.
And they're like, stop being greedy, pay your fair share. Like, what is your fair share and where is it going? Like, if you could show me that an increase in taxes would fix all the problems, I said this when I lived there. I wouldn't mind paying more taxes if they fixed everything,
but it doesn't seem like it fixes anything. Not one thing gets fixed and they keep asking for more money, which is crazy.
The solution is, cut it all off.
One of the things that Texas has, no state taxes. There's no state taxes. You don't pay state taxes in Texas. In California, you pay 14%. So they're incentivized to take that money
and do with it whatever they want. So the more they can come up with, like building tiny homes or whatever the fuck it is, it's just incentives for them to siphon money. And again, as mayor, I want to have full accountability
“and transparency where that's what everybody is paying.”
If there's a lot of good people that are fine with paying as much tax as they want, if you're helping people get off the street, if the lights work, if the streets work. If the streets work, all safe, if the society's clean. So when you track every single dollar and make sure
that there's no waste and abuse and with that type of live dashboard, not track it with these weird data. I'm talking, anyone can understand this money goes here and we're talking real accounting. They don't want to do this because everyone's eaten.
Everyone's getting to cut. All these people are living off of the scam. So you need to come in and really just say no more of this. So let's talk real world practical application. So you get into office, now you have all these council members
that these democratic socialist people, how do you handle that? What do you do? How do you keep them from blocking all these things you're trying to do?
So that is what excites me because there's never been a mayor
that comes in and literally goes to each of their constituents of these districts. For instance, this DSA member wants to keep giving the fentanyl needles and the pipes. Then I go to that district.
I have a press conference. I bring everybody I say this so-and-so wants to keep these zombies going number two and having sex in front of your kids
Put the heat on the city council members.
Right now, they care about their jobs. They get 238,000 a year salary.
“They get not even including their entourage.”
Then they get our grants and our tax money for all their little scams they're running. So they actually want those jobs. If a mayor comes in and is like, oh, I'm going to put the heat on each one of you because right now, the mayor,
care and bass isn't calling out each district in their failures. This constituents, the taxpayers need somebody to come in and expose each of these districts and go into their communities. Be like, this is what you're voting for.
So at least at the next election they're out. So then once they start feeling the pressure, somebody on their neck, they're going to start, oh, I don't want to keep my job. I like this power.
Well, there's been a concerted effort to put those people in the government, right? And a lot of people point to George Soros and he's one of them and his open society foundation is one of the people that likes to do that, particularly
for very progressive prosecutors and DAs. But there's more than just him. There's a whole machine behind it. And this is what I don't understand. Because if you wanted to destroy a city,
if you wanted to destroy a society, you would do it exactly the way they're doing it.
“So what is their incentive and why are they doing it this way?”
Well, they want to destroy it to then rebuild it in their vision. The second, my town burned down and it's all dirt, who's coming in with ideas. Oh, we got a hundred million for affordable housing. We're going to do this.
They have a plan. They have a vision that's not going to work, but they have there Utopia that they would love to then read how they say it's not going to work. We can stop them from doing this, because socialism is failed everywhere.
Well, it's certainly going to fail. But what's the stop them from ruining the palaces? Well, I did. I stopped them. They can say that SB 79 or whatever they're housing thing
was never going to apply to palaces.
But after me attacking it all day for weeks, they added 13 notes and made the palaces. A fire hazard area where you couldn't build the high density, because what they do, there's a new state law that just got passed.
And if you're, again, these aren't exact. All the Yimbees are going to go nuts. I'm saying it wrong. So Yimbee, you're something about your back yard. Now, who knows?
I don't, you know, they're, I have to block them. Usually I'm on social media. But they have a vision that everything in California and Los Angeles should be high density, out there, and we need to build these seven nine story structures
to have more affordable housing. So they want to get rid of single family homes and put seven story buildings on. So the Nimbees, not in my backyard. They fight these people on X.
So, you know, to be honest, I'm not either of them. They try to, I'm fine with more housing, but I also want people to have single family homes.
“And I think the fact that we lost the idea”
where we can't fight for the California dream to have a front yard would grasp. And it's gotten so expensive and impossible. That should be the problem. Not that, oh, we've given up.
Nobody should ever get that. We need to build these seven story prison-like structures and give anyone who can't afford just a box to live in. Let's fight to get the California where people have a front yard.
And we're also saying to try to do that with the pal says,
'cause the pal says it's always been a wealthy neighborhood
where people with a lot of money spent a lot of money and also paid a lot of money in taxes and had these beautiful homes. And the idea that you're gonna take that over with low income housing,
well, those people are gonna move out of there and there goes the tax money from those people. Not only that, those people lost their homes. Their homes were taken from them by the fire. And that's not fair.
It's not fair at all that you would just do that. It doesn't make any sense. I like to use the word stolen. The houses were stolen from all these people. At a misconception though,
'cause I'm from the pal says, and I grew up, the pal says just became this wealthy or wealthier, you know, famous people in the last, let's say, 10 years. But growing up, really, you know, like 10 years? Where we're talking big, you know, $40 million type.
Big houses.
When I grew up, I was always like that.
No, it was always nice, but, you know, lawyers and doctor, you know, not Silicon Valley. And we'll be starting, you know, hardworking people pass these houses down generation. So there were nice houses, but, you know,
your great grandfather, probably passed the house down and, you know, my dad's a dentist. He came in, he was a surfing dentist and was able to get a house in the pal's aides. And that's a beautiful area.
Yeah, it's gorgeous area, amazing weather. So, and the people shouldn't should know that an area bigger than the size of Manhattan burnt to the ground.
Let's go back, let's do the fire.
Because that's a great, we haven't even, you know,
we just touched on it.
“But nobody's really talked about what happened,”
how this fire started, you know, why we're on the fire. So people would think about the palisade's fire and they go, oh, January 7th. Well, what happened? The fire of our January 7th actually started on New Year's Eve.
So there's a case right now. It's kind of fallen through the cracks. It may not go forward. There's arson cases, supposedly, allegedly. This guy lit a fire at New Year's Eve with a lighter or cigarette
and there was eight acre fire. Now, according to witness testimony, it's about 30 people that saw fireworks go into this site called Lockman, Skull Rock. So at New Year's Eve, eight acre fire starts,
LAFD responds, but the issue of people don't understand when they respond, they can't come up there with heavy dozers. So dozer, like a bulldozer, has a rate types thing on the front and they clear around the fire and they make a fire break even when the fire is going.
Ideally, you'd want the fire break before,
“which, because of California state parks”
and plant over people policies, we don't have fire breaks. So dead fuels, dead brush, has been growing around lots of communities for 50, 60 years. So right now, the palisade's burned down, but what's next is Brentwood, Hollywood Hills,
Sunland, to Hunga, what else, bell air? All these are going, I'm sorry, people, you live here. They're all gonna burn down. If we don't come in here, make fire breaks up 300 feet, because when I met with Chief Bobby Garcia
and I asked them about fire breaks, the purpose of the fire break is to give fire fighters a chance to dig in. And when they drop the retardant, if there's not a 300 foot break, then all the retardants falls through the different levels
of the foliage and it doesn't make a moat. So when you have a break, it creates a moat-type situation and the firefighters have a chance to get up their respond. So back to January 1st, they couldn't bring their dozers up. We now have text messages, because again,
I'm one of the lead plaintiffs suing the city L.A. L.A. D.W.P. in the state of California state parks. So I have all the text messages public now, but we have the texts from the park rangers, the L.A. F.D. and they're joking about,
of course, I'm not bringing any dozers. I know the rule protected plants.
Keep in mind, I never knew about this plant.
It's called milk vetch. Nobody respectfully cares about milk vetch, but somebody in the environmental world cares more about milk vetch than 12 people burning alive. 'Cause the plant that was protected is the reason
pretty much these people burned alive. So they do their best, L.A. L.A. F.D. puts it out, but now we know that the fire was still smoldering. We have hiking footage of the next day and the day after in the state park to pangestate park.
Hikers, tourists, we have a guy lived down the street. Of course, he had his own drone that had not only a regular drone, he had a thermal in-imaging drone. So the whole hillside is just smoking.
And we now have a firefighter Pike on his subpoena video. He says that he clearly saw smoldering pockets of coal that he didn't even want to touch. And he informed his chief, "Hey, we can't pull the hoses."
And the chief said, "Pull the hoses." Not just Pike, multiple firefighters have now said
“that it was all smoking, but why would they pull the hoses?”
After meeting with so many firefighters since, I've realized the fire department is so understaffed, so underfunded, they're operating a fire department from the 1960s with 50% more calls now. 80% of them are for zombies to overdoses.
30% of the fires are zombie encampment fires. So to me now, I'm trying to get in that chief. I spoke with that chief on the phone. And in my mind, it's a budget thing. Everything's just like, oh, we don't have clocks ticking.
We don't have the money to stay up here with the hoses. Because three years earlier, the same area in the Highlands, think they left the hoses up in the palaces for 18 months. You leave the hoses up because it stays hot and they have them up. They pull them the next day.
So I think it's a funding thing. I mean, the chief, chief Crowley, who mayor-bass fire in retaliation for telling the truth, seven weeks before the palaces fire, she wrote a memo to Karen Bass and said, "I am dangerously underfunded.
I cannot keep Angelina safe. What is mayor-bass do?
Cut's another 17 million from the fire department."
So in my mind, the chief's like, I can't, I don't have the money to leave guys up here. We gotta go, so has anyone asked her, what was her justification for the cuts? - Well, the city's broke.
The city has no money. - But how do they have so much money to buy homes and homeless shelters and spend all that money? - Here's the best part. I've now found out since then.
There was $400 million just in an account
That they hadn't even touched for homeless, literally.
At the time, she cut the 17 million.
“There's 400 million that right now is still there”
that they haven't used, allocated 400 million. So it's, they got over the zombies not for the tax paying citizens public safety. Not to mention, back to the taxpayers. The Palisades probably is largely at the time of the fire.
It was probably the most money in taxes was going to the city from the Palisades. - Right. - So you don't back to lockments. So they leave, because if you listen there,
testimony, the state park rangers say, "Oh, we got this. We'll keep an eye on this, duh, duh, duh, duh, duh." In the subpoena, the depositions that asked one of the state park rangers,
"Well, did you see this smoldering hill?" They say, "Oh, yeah, what'd you do?" "Oh, I took a photo, what'd you do at the photo?" "Nothing, what do you mean? "Well, I'm not a firefighter."
So the state park's own manual says they're supposed to close this park to make sure it's not a dangerous condition, obviously, and to monitor it. Did they close the state park? No worse.
Yes, what the state park rangers asked the firefighters to do. And there's photos, it's mind boggling. They asked the firefighters to take dead, brush, and fuel, and they carry it, and they put it over the firebrake from a day earlier around where they made the firebrake,
around that, January 1st. They take the dead, bushes, and they cover up the firebrake. There's photos of it. It's the craziest thing you ever see. Right.
Because they didn't want people to go on the wrong trails, because they look like hiking trails now. So they take, if you wanted to be cynical,
do you think that the having this $400 million
and keeping it in there, and keeping funneling money into homelessness, and not into the fire department, is simply because the fire department is not profitable. You can't siphon money off of the fire department. The fire department basically just goes to fight fires.
It goes to equipment, people's salaries, maintaining the fire departments. You can't steal that money. You want to know how sick it is right now? The fire department, LFD, their union, all the members,
get choked up, I feel so, because I met with these, keep meeting with these guys and you hear from their heart, you're like, "Oh, this is so heavy." They had to take their own money to get on ballot measure, a million dollars, they all pooled it together,
to get a ballot measure, this coming election, to get a half cent on sales tax in LA, so that they can have money to fund actual things they need to keep a cent. I have a cent on all that, but the point is that they need
to go out of their own pocket to get a ballot measure
because they know they will never get funded by the city
to keep Angelina safe, that they got to go out of it. But there's only one way to look at it. You would look at it like, well, it will be the logical reason why they would allocate so much money towards homelessness and so little towards the fire department.
When the fire department is, I've said this before,
“but if you want to talk about socialism that works,”
the fire department is socialism that works. If you really care about socialism, and that's the thing that you really believe in, there's certain aspects of socialism that are applicable in a healthy community.
One of those is the fire department that your money should go, we should pool some of our taxes to go to make sure that we're all protected. The fire department doesn't just protect the rich people, protects all people, fires break out,
the fire department comes in, regardless whether you have any money or not. We all pool our money together for the fire department. It makes sense, but if it's that, you can't steal that money, so there's no way you can fake, the homelessness is,
it's vague, it's weird, you could hide it. It's like, you're counting bodies in the street or one, two, three, let's write 5,000. Like, you don't have really counting these people because it's so chaotic, but fire department,
you know the employees, you know the fire department, you know where the trucks are, you know where everything is. You can't steal that money, but that homeless budget, boy, there's a lot of wiggle room in that homeless budget.
“And if you wanted to be cynical, you would say that's why”
they fund the fire department so little and they fund the homeless so much. - Well, also, these DSA, socialists, they don't want to fund the fire department, they don't want to fund the police department,
they want these type of entities to be defunded. They don't even want them to exist. - So what do they expect when fires happen? - To let us, right now they want things just to burn. Go, if you look around and see the fuck
do these people get it off this? Like who's voting for them? - They're tricky. They have these ground teams, and they go around, they got a real ground game, and they go knock on all
people's doors, and they say, "Oh, we're Democrats, we helped it." They have nice words, and they got a strong, like in LA, I think there's 5,000 at least members that can hit the street, whereas a normal, you know,
for instance, Spencer Pratt, right from here, I don't have 5,000 people on deck to go knock on doors,
Not to mention, they're funded.
They have 100,000 plus members across the US.
They have outside entities that give them money, and again, they're sneaky. If you go watch on YouTube videos, they talk so much, SHIT about Democrats, they hate all these people.
So they don't want either party, they want them. Here's a crazy part, this should be legal. Right now, the one who's running against me, they're Democrat, you know, socialist, champagne, queen. She, when you sign up with the DSA,
you sign it like a contract to co-govern with the DSA. How is it legal when you are-- What? Yes. Wait, I'm explaining that. So when you become, you get your DSA member.
So right now, she's a city council member. And when the DSA gives you an endorsement, you sign a contract with them to co-govern. So right now, she's not representing her district as an American citizen, a Los Angeles.
She's representing the Democrat, Socialism America. Yes. And that should be co-governed. That should be illegal, I mean illegal. And so they can just go full ham with all these radical ideas.
Yeah, and their idea is to just come in, take all of our tax money, and keep trying to invent this. They've, like, for instance, that lady has had six years in charge of her city council. Her thousands of her constituents,
message me, photos, it looks like, again, Mad Max in her era. So we're going to put her in charge.
“The only thing worse, actually, than the Cuban communist”
care and bass, is actually a socialist DSA. So I'm running against worse and worse. It's truly-- It's care and bass running for reelection. Yeah, that's why I stepped in.
When I saw her announce, I was like, oh, no. You don't get to burn my house down. Do people-- Like, what is the general population? Like, I think most people have jobs and families.
And they're busy. They're very busy. So it's very difficult to be completely informed about all this. What is the general perception of care and bass?
Like, what is her approval rating in Los Angeles? So she has the record lowest approval rating in the history right now. So UCLA just said a poll about a week ago. I'm number two to care and bass.
She has approximately 20, something per cent.
“I think I have 13 per cent with 40 per cent undecided.”
Those 40 per cent, I keep saying, those are my voters. Those are people that are fed up. They know they're not voting for care and bass. They just don't know there's a guy named Spencer Pratt that's saying, when you come and sense, we need to clean these streets.
No more fentanyl at the park. Parents need that fuel comfortable taking their kids to school without seeing met zombies having sex on the side of the street. We're talking common sense. This is not political what I'm running on.
Not to mention, the mayor is a non-partisan race. There's no letters on it for a reason. The mayor's supposed to represent all of Los Angeles period. It's not up.
You'll never get me ever doing these performative politics, talking about national issues,
doing the bait and switch stuff where, oh, talking about over here. Why I destroy your actual local government. That's the problem. Everyone gets caught up in the media and they follow what's going on in different states and different politics and the federal government when the people that really affect
your life, who are destroying your way of life, are your local government, your mayor, your city council, your fire commission, your police commission. When I'm mayor, I'm wiping out this fire commission. We're putting actual experts that know what they're talking about. Not these Rando political pointing wound to take, same with the police
commission.
“You need to have people that pride themselves and law enforcement and”
want accountability and what the best from the police department. You know, the police department is the lowest it's been in 30 years in Los Angeles. And here's my favorite thing. In terms of staff. Yeah, in terms of police officers 30 years, 30 years, here's the best part.
They'll tell you the mayor said crime is down. I have truly, because I spend all day long just reading DM's read. It's down in terms of it's reporting. Thank you. Every message I get, they say call 911.
You'll be on hold for God knows how long if they ever pick up. If it's literally not like somebody's getting shot at that moment, you know, if you're trying to report crime or this, they're not coming. Nobody's filing it. They don't have the staff to be doing that.
So the real crime numbers are so insane. Not to mention, care and bass will brag about homicides or down.
First off, that's a national trend.
She's taking credit for the whole United States down. But I even have another angle on that. I'd have to go, probably, to some emergency hospitals. But I think Los Angeles has such good trauma nurses and trauma doctors. The amount of stabbing and shootings they probably keep people alive, that's the real
number. You know, maybe 30 years ago before we were so good, a quick clot and, you know, and you know, we have so much stuff now that keeps people alive. Just on the Metro alone, the stabbings are everything is double last year.
These people are living, but everyone's getting stabbed ever.
I keep joking that everyone loved that guy in New York, Montgomery or whatever his name
“is, because he said, everything's going to be free.”
Well, as Mayor, on on the Metro's in Los Angeles, Mayor Pratt will make sure you're going to be free from stabbing. So there you go, you're welcome. Yeah, that's a, that's a good point. It's like just because the actual murders are down.
It doesn't mean that the actual violence is down, new analysis by L.A. City Controller says
that at least 513 million men to help homeless went unspent.
This was just 2024 that's so about 400 plus and 2025 also. Good Lord. Yeah, the, the 400s for sure, like, and just as, where's that money go? Yes. Just last week, the federal government paused a $400 million payment.
It was coming because they said, all these federal audits aren't, you're not showing the book. So just the money is just, combing. And that's, we're just talking to L.A., which is the epicenter of the whole state of California. You know, all this fraud that you keep hearing about everything.
It all comes from L.A. and then goes out to California.
“It's like L.A. is the death star, you know, and that's why I'm coming in, Luke Skywalker,”
I'm like, well, Nick Shirley started doing investigations into all sorts of other fraud that's
all around Los Angeles with hospices and all these different things.
And they're finding hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars of fraud. But not that much longer because he could be facing a $10,000 fine. Isn't that crazy? According to the new Calverna bill yesterday. So this is a new bill instead of saying, wow, thank you for uncovering this fraud.
They passed a bill that if you film things and you go to a place and identify that place and then somehow or another, those people, what get harassed or something because of it, you could get fined. Yeah. So I was already saying on my own podcast, my plan is mayor because everyone kept being like,
oh, you need Nick Shirley, know what I need is all of Los Angeles to be a Nick Shirley. I as mayor, I'm going to offer cash bounties. If you film any fraud, city workers doing something suspicious, any type of scams, and you bring it to the mayor's office and we check it out, I'm going to pay you. So now I got to deal with the state, you know, if that passes.
But I was already going to just make the city become these Nick Shirley. Everybody has iPhone. What did it in say? We're response. We're in same response, instead of thanking someone
“for uncovering criminal fraud, you make a new law, will you turn them into criminals?”
These people are laundering more money than El Chapo. Yeah. Oh, yeah. That's what I keep trying to say. Oh, it's Billy's.
Billions and Billions. Billy is a dog. You owe criminals.
Like, the God, he always people used to think were mobsters at the Italians' chops back
in the day. They couldn't even comprehend what's going on right now. And then even on the city level, like when I went mad in a fire station, they were telling me about how, if a refrigerator, this is Mafia stuff, if a refrigerator breaks, you know, firefighters, they know how to take the refrigerator and they put it out.
The city person comes in and they go, oh no, put that back in. You can't have that taken in. So they make them put the broken thing back in before the next person comes. And then it costs like $50,000 in this only this one city contract can fix it. It's not for, you know, up for bed.
And that is where all this extra money that isn't going to actually getting these firefighters with me. The fire station I was at, they had a fire truck that should have been in retired a Mexico 10 years ago. And instead they like paid to put a new back bumper on it.
And they just, these guys have to pay out of their own pocket for the blinds, the pain. And they do it because they live here. It's so sad where LA have to be used to be the symbol of great like the goat firefighters and everyone looked to how we've just let it fall apart, same with LAPD. We have just no pride in what's happening is the Olympics are coming.
And what I keep telling everybody is we are going to have a terrorist attack, because we're not even safe for our streets right now. They're not even protected. If we do fires alone, all a terrorist cell needs to do is get five of those blinds. Black e-bikes, and they need to go on a windy day, leading up to Olympics, go around with
road flares tossing them out on all the 50 years of dead brush. The entire city will look like a nuclear bomb one off. Look at the palaces, one area, all five bad guys, bad actors, go around and do that. It's, it's done. And by the way, there's a lot of evidence that a lot of the fire in the palaces, not just
the initial fire, but subsequent fires were caused by arson. In fact, my friend Andrew filmed some guys doing it. He filmed guys lighting things on fire. He filmed it in his car. He was watching these vagrants filming them lighting things on fire.
Two days ago, there's photos of a vagrant homeless zombie in the palaces tryi...
a fire right now.
“Thankfully, the area has no, hasn't grown back yet, but there are two days ago.”
These peeps zombies, people don't like the words zombie, but they are zombies.
But yes, there's different boxes of homelessness. There's, there's people that need help and they don't want to look. Down on the look, they're lost their job, quick, boom. That is one box is a very small box, but we, I am aware of those. Then there is a 95% box that are people that are just fence and all zombies met.
Just want to live on the streets and be a drug addict right now. Maybe some of those people get help, they get sober, get proper treatment, now they get a new chance of life. Then there's another box that are just people that want to do drugs and be a bad person. We have to acknowledge there is actually just bad people that are in a different box.
So there's also people that want everything else to fall apart because their life is in the shit.
“They live in shit, their life is hell and they don't want to see you dry by an Alexis.”
They don't want to see you go to your nice house. They don't want to see any of that. They want to light things on fire. Well, that's how also these DSA people get support because they've destroyed the city so much you look around and you think, oh, the American dream is broken.
Capitalism is broken, but they are the ones that broke it. So if you're just like a young 20 year old looking around like, oh my God, there's zombies everywhere, rent so much, all the restaurants are closing. This system doesn't work, but what they're not looking at is who's breaking the system that did work, the one that I grew up in, there was so beautiful, over a hundred restaurants
in LA have closed this year, over a hundred. And these aren't chains. These are people that put their life into this, these are chefs, and they can't make
“it in a place that was a go-to food spot.”
Well, where I used to do comedy in Los Angeles on sunset at the Comedy Store. If you drive down sunset now, everything is for lease, it's fucking nuts. It used to be very difficult to get a property on sunset because it was so valuable. In the '90s and the early 2000s, like everybody wanted to have a restaurant on sunset. Everybody wanted to have a bar on sunset because that's where everybody went.
There was always cars and it was nice and you could walk on this street.
We would walk down to get food, we would go to the stand after we would, the standard rather after we would go to the con, I would fucking never walk down that street now. It was normal. And that's you, trained up, you know, ready to go with the sidekick, imagine a lovely lady that would just want to walk her, little dog, amount of people that just are just dog
walkers. They're like, I am scared to walk my dog. I had, I won't say which newscaster, but I had a newscaster, off camera recently and said everything you're saying is true, she goes, every morning, I have to get up at 5am because it's the safest time for me to do my morning run, every day naked zombie.
She said I'm running by and naked zombie trying to, can you imagine not, you know, you and I don't want to go walk this street, but just like a woman with their little dog or a mom's with strollers and it's not, it's across the entire city. I watch news in Spanish where these underpasses in South Central or East LA, these families have been coming to the news and they're like, please, because they're having to take
their kids under these underpasses within chemistry to get to the schools, it's not just like a Hollywood thing or a valley that it's everywhere, and I don't think people understand it. Can we show some videos, let's show some videos of some of the real chaotic homelessness in Los Angeles, so people can get a look at it because, you know, I've had some friends
send me videos like my friend Whitney Cummings, she went through Los Angeles a couple of months ago and she sent me a video and I was like, this is fucking nuts because I have a bit, I don't go there anymore, man, I fucking avoid that place like the plague.
I still love it, I just love it, I never even thought until the pandemic hit, I was like,
I'll be probably here forever and now it's just nuts, the street people of Los Angeles in South Chicago, they show just stuff all the time, street people of Los Angeles, Instagram accounts, they're bad in the sun, walking by, yeah, well this is a small, that's in the valley, no, but yeah, the point is, yeah, I posted this also in the sense that we're going to look at this little kids, they gotta go buy this, some of you stuff our studio
in Woodland Hills and we used to have guys that were camping out right in front, look at that, even Perez Hilton is on your side, Pratt is the path, what Los Angeles needs, he's, he's, he's, he's, press, god bless, press, you might be the only person saying that. No, he had, he had near death, experience and came to Jesus and he, oh, he's all, he is locked up, oh, he sticks, oh, is that so many dogs, he died twice, pretty much, what happened? Yeah, he took antibiotics without
food when he, which I didn't know was a thing, that's why I say to take food and then again,
I'm going to say this wrong, but whatever that creates some situation, boom, ...
sepsis and he's next to death for 30 days and then we just got out of the hospital, then he has a blood clot, no, so he's like, Bible all day, he had, he talked to God when
“he was like dad, so I think he's for real for real. Okay. Well, that will be nice.”
Oh, he's, he's not a nice person in the world. He's a powerful prayer warrior now, so,
show me some skid row, some skid row footage is the nuttyest, okay, skid row footage is the real, that's the real red pill, where you go. You're like, how? It's just, there's no better way to describe it than how you described it earlier, it's literally a criminal cartel, it's a criminal cartel that's siphoning money off of people, look at that guy, just needs a job, these are at least people just need a home, come on man, this is, this
is not that bad, this is very nice, this is very minor, like if you, there's certain areas of skid row, I love how they have tents, which is so crazy, what you paid for that, and you didn't hide it, oh, this is guys protecting against vampires, yeah, these are nice clips, because just needs a job, dude, relax, poor dog, I know, I see dogs with homeless people, I just want, I'm, I'm such a dog lover, I can't go to the dog
pound, if I went to the dog pound, I'd have a hundred dogs, and my wife would never
let that happen, but that, so back right there, in the fendolies, fendol hangs, they don't need beds, right, that's not a bed is, no, it's not a house, and for people that don't know, this was not like this, this was not like, this is a decade ago, this is a rapid decline in what this city looks like, it's just crazy, this is not as radical as it could be, skid row is really, if you could find, I mean, there's a number of
videos I can't click on check them all fast enough, let's try this on skid row, right there, it's gonna be, I was gonna try to find one, so what's going on right there, that one, I spent a day on skid row, there was a comic in the early 2000s that went undercover and
lived on skid row for a couple of days to film things, and it was pretty astonishing even
back then, but again, this is a created environment that they created because they didn't want to deal with the homeless people, and they're like, you know what we should do? We should just take these people and put them in one spot and don't let them leave, and
“that's how they created skid row, and you know, decades later, you have 5-0, 50 blocks of”
nothing, but this kind of shit, where it's just fucking chaos, it's just homeless people everywhere, and it's so sad, all lost lives, you know, as a father, you know, you're a father, these are, this is someone's children, this is someone had a baby, and that baby they loved more than anything like, oh my god, they're just so precious, that precious person is now in the middle of an intersection hunched over on fentanyl.
Well, they amount of people, the message me and say, thank you, my so-and-so brother, daughter, son, died of fentanyl overdose, these people need mandatory treatment, they don't need just, oh, if you want, we have these needles for you, we have street med teams where we can come and, you know, it's, it's crazy, and it's back to being a dad, I'm only running for mayor to, through one last hill, Mary, to try to save the city, I love and grow up, so God's worthy.
“Wow, they're to burn my, down my house, that's what the LA Times was, that's the funniest,”
did you see this? So they tried to do a hit piece, LA Times, and say that I was an eligible to run for mayor because my house burned down. This was, this was last week, no, I'm not, I'm not kidding, this is real. So, and they were like, oh, he's living in Santa Barbara right now. I thought the LA Times had become more reasonable when that guy owned it. That was completely not true. And the funniest part is, the LA Times is in El Segundo for the last eight years, so they're the ones
that should be worth it. So what happens is they say, oh, it's up in the air because he's in service. I call the city clerk, and I say, hey, the LA Times reporting that I, I'm not, I know I'm eligible, everybody knows it's like saying that 7,000 people's houses burned down, now can't vote. Right. They can't vote because you have a house. Because Karen Bass, who you're not supposed to vote for, because she burned your house down, you can't vote for her. So I said, of course,
you can run. I said, anybody can call and ask this, like, yes, it's on our website. So it was just, I only hit LA Times, who is the person who wrote that story? Just got Noah Goldberg, and why is because he's pushing the Nithia Rom, and there's a video of him at the bar with her, like, yeah, they, they want. She's the Democrat socialist. Yes, and LA Times, once their own click baby, Mondami, they try to make their, Mondami is a custom built, Manchurian candidate, 20 years in the
Making, he's a star.
and try to cook her into it. So they drop this fake hippie saw me, the day the UCLA poll comes out that has me in the lead and not the one that they had just run some fake DSA, you know, BS poll that nobody believed. It was movie scene. How is this person doing in the polls, this person that you're
“running again? There are nine percent, I think, but again, the polls, I'm in number one. Anybody,”
they know this, she's in charge on the city council. She's the chairperson of the homeless. Help the homeless plan. Okay. She wants, what's she going to change? She's had six years. So we're going to, we're going to put, and then she's tweeting her ex in her recall, like, my new plan, homeless is not working. Oh, so you just announced you're running for mayor. The best part is, she said six years to not say any of these problems and tell us she's running for mayor.
These politicians are just, it's the problem back to me. The problem is people have jobs.
People aren't paying attention like me. They just hear the little fake. I care. This isn't working. Oh, she's a city council member. Oh, she's a Democrat. No, she's not. She's not a Democrat. I'm the one who's been fighting for Democrats for the last year and a half to expose all of this fraud, our literal city letting our town burn to the ground. So that's when I really stepped up. So I watched this movie, hot shot, a documentary on, you know, fires and I see in this documentary,
“a hundred mile per hour. I think it's the oak, the oak fire, I don't know, in the, in the film.”
And you see a hundred mile per hour wind and the firefighters just standing there with, like, garden hoses and you're seeing that a hundred mile per hour wind does not mean everything burns down because this community have fire breaks. So then I like see who this guy who, like, live with these, these hot shots for six years. So I find him on X and he's live streaming talking about how
the policies fire before anybody was not started on January 7th, but a rekindle from that first fire.
When the LAFD, this is where it gets so conspiracy China town movie type, shit, um, they hired a crisis PR firm, the lead company. Here's the best part. Guess where they got the money, the mayor's office where they got the money to hire the crisis from the LAFD foundation. They use charity money to hire a crisis team to alter the after-action report that says all these things that went wrong to make the mayor care and bass look good. Oh my god. I find this out because I
start, you know, posting about what this, this director, Gabriel Man is saying about, you know, the policies fire, it's a posting now I got info. So now firefighters start coming in my DMs as whistleblowers. I say, hey, just so you know, the after-action report that went out, that was the ninth version and the battalion chief that wrote it wouldn't put his name on it because they changed it so much. I do a post about that three weeks later, the LA Times. Everything I post three weeks later,
they would steal my thing and I'm like, "Poltz or a prize, guy." It's like, I posted that three weeks ago because the firefighters were coming to me and telling me what was going on behind the scenes. So also, as mayor, I'm going to make sure that the fire department, the fire chief, has civil protections again. So right now the fire chief is like a puppet. They have to do whatever the mayor says, cover up for the mayor. They're just another politician. They need to be responsible
for the Angelinos, the public and they don't have that protection. The mayor can just get rid of them. So you've got to give them these civil protections back like they have. The mayor can't just get rid of the police chief, for instance. But that's when I was like, "Oh, these people are." It's all gone. It's crying. Thank you. Like, oh my God. And he sounds like the mob.
“Here's where the best part. You know when the mayor was in Ghana, as everything was burning down?”
Do you know who she left in charge? Per deputy mayor? Do you know where the deputy mayor was? The deputy mayor, mayor, care and bastard, deputy mayor was on house arrest because he was arrested for calling it a bomb threat to city hall. This is real life. This is the person that's supposed to take the call because she's an opportunity calling a bomb threat to city hall. Great question. I was. So that's when they're like, "Oh, Spencer, you don't have the experience
to be mayor. Well, I promised my deputy mayor's that I have on deck. They aren't calling in any bomb threats to city hall." So we're already starting ahead of the curve. Also, I'm not going into steel taxpayer money. I'm going into stop all this. Again, I really believe there's enough common sense people that see that I'm not doing politics. I don't want to do any of this politics
are. It's a job. These people are career politicians. I never want to be a career politician.
Before my house burned down, I was selling my healing crystals.
no magical powers. They all burned in my house. So anybody, you know, you're buying them. They
“you don't, I thought that protection energy. They don't. So, you know, and feeding hummingbirds,”
and taking my kids to school, that was my dream life. And they burned it down. And now they have their worst nightmare coming to just undo the whole thing. Former Los Angeles Deputy Mayor Public Safety agrees to plead guilty to threatening to bomb L.A. City Hall last year. Now, what was the reason? Brian K. William 61 of pasting his charge in a single count information with threats regarding fire and explosives. It doesn't have a reason, but it says what he did.
You know, I don't think there's ever a good reason. I mean, I would like to hear his reason.
Bomb threat. I received a call on my city cell phone at 10. 48 this morning. The mail call
are stated that he was tired of the city's support of Israel. And he's decided to place a bomb and city hall. So that's it. It might be in the rotunda. I immediately contacted the, so it was about Israel. Wow. I think he made it up here. It says that he uses Google voice application on his personal cell phone to place a call to a city issued cell phone. Wow. He didn't left the meeting and called the Chief
“of staff. That's why. What a fucking idiot. I will say Mayor, but I still employed.”
Find out that guy's still employed. I would think not. I would imagine. Oh, no. I mean, thinking 10 years. I think he's gone to federal prison. Oh, he's facing 10 years. Yeah, I think so. What if he has paid leave? Probably. He's very good. But notice he at least was Mayor Bass with herself on the whole week of the policies fire. She deleted all her text messages where I wonder why. Oh, what, you know, this is they're like a terrorist cell. Oh,
like a breaking burner phones. How do you, are you an allowed to do a former LA deputy mayor sentence to probation? And $5,000 fine. That's it. Just probation. Well, in his defense, his mayor was spending, I think she went to Cuba 30 times to learn how to bill bombs and bomb America when she was part of the Vanessa Romo, Vanessa Ramos Brigade. So care about when
the 1920 and she never ever said she had any problem with being like a Cuban communist terrorist
until Biden was going to pick her as the VP. And then they made her say, I denounce that I was trying to blow up the capital with my, with my terrorist cell when I was younger. But for all those years, she never said anything. They went for Dale Casser died. She said something like rest in peace, L. Comma Dante. What? Yes, no. Yes, you can find it. And then it gets even better. So, wait, hey, guys, relax. Williams was just suffering from stress and anxiety when he called
the press in a poor guy over. Stress and anxiety and somehow or another, it was about Israel. Not to mention these people would just get away with all of this. They keep getting away with it. That's the problem with the media. What I've learned from being part of the television world. You notice why do they let the mayor and the city councils get away with all of, you know, talking about this at the end of the day, that's their talent. It's like a soap opera. They got
to keep filming with the mayor and the city council. If they just air them out, they're not picking up the call. It's like a production. Exactly. They don't have content anymore. Exactly. So, the local news needs to like keep it. Right. Right. They don't have access anymore. Yeah. So,
“that's why I'm like, why? Because I talked to these people off camera and they're all like”
an organized crime organization. They're like, please, you know, I'm like, why aren't you, you know, but I'm talking about this crime. I mean, it's like they pay people off. They've got little deals. You washed my back. I washed yours. Good man. Yeah. So, thankfully, just people, are you scared of these people? I'm like, what are they going to burn my house down? Again, they're going to burn my mom's house down? Again. So, it gives you a confident, what are they
going to do? I mean, the crime in Los Angeles, when you talk to average people, like the people that I know that live there, they're fucking terrified. They say break-ins are just commonplace now where they used to be very rare. You get home invasions constantly. I mean, Ted Serendos is mother and law was killed in home invasion. And they're happening all the time. It's because there's no police response and they know there's not going to be a police response. So, more
people are hiring private security. It's very difficult to get a gun or at least you can see the carry permit. It's very difficult. Indefense of LA County Sheriff and LAPD, they have gotten better at CCW's now because of the law. Because of the crime. I mean, it's not the sheriff's fault.
The sheriff wants it.
up to a year. But I know they all, that's the thing. I talked to so many sheriff, so many LAPD,
“so many firefighters. Everybody is just broken. Their spirits are broken. Why are we doing this?”
Why don't we just go to Newport Beach or honey? There's more Florida or anything. Yeah, just leave the story. What am I doing? They keep saying. Well, this is a thing that new semua is chimed in about how much money a California brings in, how much of many venture capitalists are in California, how much money a tech is in California, right, but that's nothing to do with your government. It has in spite of your government. They're doing
that. And they're leaving. Hollywood was the greatest thing. The amount of money Hollywood made for Los Angeles from the grips to the camera operators, to the glam people, to the costume. You don't understand, like, you know, people hate like all, like Hollywood, you know, stupid movie stars are so rich. They forget about the ecosystem that connects to that same Tom Cruise, that makes them the amount of money is gone. And for instance, just last week, they finally got
Baywatch to come back to LA. Baywatch starts shooting for like two days. And then they kick them off the beach. There's all these permit problems. So I write a sub stack calling this out, calling out the mayor. Next to you know, they come back and the mayor makes a deal. What's funniest thing right now is whatever I post and do, the mayor is now doing like I said the other day. I'm getting rid of the whole
“fire commission. This fire commission has been there for like 10 years. I think after I do this”
post or whatever, boom, four out of five of the fire commission resigned. So they're trying to just get ahead of all the things of what I'm saying, which is fun, because it's already. I'm like the mayor. So I'm like, this is great. Well, it's also they can't possibly do enough without completely
undermining their entire organization. They're always going to have so much fraud and waste that
your case will always be solid. There's no way. There's no, they would have to literally like tank everything they're doing. They got them in the position. And if they talk about how much of a failure, then they're definitely not keeping their job. Right. Which is that's the problem with all of they're all ready for this. The lady, Janice Quinionus, that was in charge of the LADWP that drained. So in the pursuit palaces, there was the Sanyan as reservoir. It had 117
million gallons of water. When it was created, the engineers on the cover LATimes back in the day and he's talking about, he built this for wildfire protection now in their defense, the city and LADWP says, that was drinking water. It was drinking this water. I promise you. So there was a tear on this drinking water. They allegedly, the firefighting water. So they drain the entire reservoir because of a little tear that would have cost $120,000 a repair for over a year. This
woman was making $750,000 a year as the head of LADWP twice her predecessor that Mayor Bass brought in. Keep in mind. If you make that much money, do you know what the people below are making $500,400? These people get so much money and they spend over a year to fix a tear and it's back to the mafia thing. Oh, I'm sure it's like, oh, we got to use this contractor because we don't have an open bid. Oh, that's too cheap. Who knows the conspiracy to why they're in
tear? So while that's drained, next door to my house that I watched weekly the local LADWP would do
training that hook up to it. I had a 5 million gallon reservoir for firefighting. So while they're
doing that one, they're like, oh, we should fix this one too. They drain that one and they're like, oh, we drained it. When we refill it, there's some issues. We can't refill it. They leave two reservoirs empty back, rewind what I told you. In a season that's the driest ever that they've
“actually had a fire. I think in 2019 where there wasn't water in the reservoir. And thankfully,”
there was no wind and they had to drive 10 water tenders up onto the hillside for the helicopters to dip because that's the key. What people don't understand is like, oh, this nothing could stop this fire. You know, the people that defend these people. If the reservoir had the water in
it, the helicopters, the 17 million dollar helicopters that knew some loves to do the photo shoots
in front of, how fast they are, would have had to fly less than 30 seconds from the origin of the fire. Again, when the winds were fine for six hours in the initial thing. But instead, those helicopters had to fly all the way to Malibu to Pepperdine, College, and all the way to Insino to get the water for the helicopters to fly all the way back to where the fire was next door to where the empty reservoir is. So they spent 66% of their time not fighting the fire going to get the water.
It's back to like why I say it's Chinatown, which I'm going to say, we have t...
that these people get all this money, they increase everyone's rates. This year, everyone's rates
went up 70 or 11%, they're going to go up 7% annually for no reason. You're not getting alkaline water out of, I'm convinced we used to joke like, oh, there's Florida in the water. How much fentanyls in our dam water right now? I mean, we're not getting better water for that 7% increase. They're doubling everyone's trash even though the entire city has more trash. I talked to this guy Juan from Clean LA, he goes around. He's from Ecuador. He does these mingas, where he moved here
from Ecuador, and he said, as the dirtiest thing he's ever seen is whole life. So he just started cleaning up trash and posting it and now people will give him GoFundMe money. And he cleans more of
“the city than the city. And I had him on my podcast. I said, what's the problem here, Juan?”
And he said, people don't care, Spencer. And I said, so I'm, well, I'm mayor, I hire you.
Or we're going to get the city clean. He's expensive. They want a billion dollars next year
for the trash. He's like, I can do this for easy $500 million. Is that okay, your hire, Juan. I said, what we're going to do with them. He said, we got to fire all these people, Spencer. They don't care. He said, it's dirtier than any third world country he's ever been. So they're doubling our trash rates. They're doubling our sewage. So more money, more money. It's back to taxes. Oh, though, the rich need to give more. If the quality of life just keeps getting worse and worse,
why would anybody with money stay in California or Los Angeles? Exactly. When they know the fraud, the waste, the corruption, people that are rich, billionaires, whoever they are, if the city lights all work, right now, the two mayors I'm running for, let, you know, what about the copper theft? There's no working lights in the city of L.A. because they let, they got rid of the copper task force because they obviously have camp fund the L.A. P.D.
So they let everyone steal all the copper. So there's everything's dark in the whole city.
So mayor basketballs last week and makes a press conference. I solved it. I'm going to spend $200 million
and we're going to do solar power lights. You think these thieves aren't going to then pivot to stealing solar batteries and slaying in those? No, we got to stop the criminals. The best video right now,
“I think is a couple of good ones. This Nithia Rom and the Democratic Socialist is running from there.”
She is asked about all the Cadillac converters that are being stolen. She said, "Well, Toyota is making these two easy to steal. It's like leaving your, your MacBook on the front seat." This is real talk. I'm not kidding. This Toyota is fault. The Toyota is fault. The people who is stealing Cadillac converters. Yes. Here's a gift. That's hilarious. Every fucking car has a Cadillac converters just sits underneath. You get a soft exhaust and take it out. If you know anything
about cars, stop fucking Toyota. It's every car. Oh, here's another great one of her lines. She's at our city council meeting. She's the city council member. All these moms and parents are saying we don't want these encampments where there's two known gangs selling fentanyl through holes in the tents. The zombies are everywhere. These parents are saying we don't want these encampments. Which are illegal? They're asking them the city council member to enforce a law. And she argues
“what the parents said. There's no difference. The encampments. One foot or 500 feet from the school.”
All the parents boo her and she goes whatever and rolls her eyes. These are the people that are going to show up and vote for me. These moms. And you. There's a giant amount of people in California that have been readpilled that this just realized. Like whatever you thought your government was when you thought you were voting for a progressive kind, compassionate government, that is a sheep outfit over a wolf. It's not what you have. It's not what you're getting. What
you're getting is organized crime. What you're getting is organized crime that is using this filter of compassionate caring, inclusive government. And it's not real. It's not real. What you're getting is more homeless, more crime, more murder, more chaos, more maybe not more murder. Maybe it's almost human. Almost human. Yeah, maybe on more shootings and stabbing. But better medical care is keeping them alive. But the idea that crime is down. It's like anecdotally you ask anybody
in LA. They would not agree to that. Most people think crime is up. Home invasions are fucking ubiquitous. It's everywhere. So I spoke with these swap guys the other day. And I said, you know, you guys having a lot of, you know, gang stand out. He said, actually, know, the gangs business is usual. They know when we show up that, you know, the hands up, they're going to get out in the week. They're professional. They're just for the money. He says,
our biggest callouts now are mental health, you know, episodes that the person doesn't know where they are or whatever. And I said, but what about all these like home invasions, crews, and that are coming in, robbing everyone says, there's nothing we could do. He says, these people all know
They're getting out in two weeks.
guns. You said, nope, you can go break into house with the gun. While people are there,
families rob them, tie them up and get out. No, if you shoot those people while they're in your house, you'll be prosecuted. Yeah, you've got to prove you are fearing for your life. You're supposed to leave your house rather than defend your house against people with weapons and into your house. I personally would advise to lock yourself in in a closet and have your firearm and have a strong point. Yeah, but even that, like what you're going to just let someone break into your house and steal
your childhoods, you know, whatever, whatever they're stealing, whatever, steal your fucking
“jewelry and you have to air looms and whatever you've worked your whole life to earn. Yeah, that's”
fucking insane. It's insane. And the fact that you have this no cash bail situation, you're just
letting these people out on the street that are violent criminals repeat offenders. It's like if you
wanted to destroy LA, that's how you would do it. They're doing it. And that's why I get so my hardest thing every day now is just staying not too pumped up because now that I'm in this fight and I have all the messages all day long, everywhere I go on the street people, old ladies, hugging me, crying like, please, I'm skip the pressure I feel to get in here and just undo this unplug this. And I met with a lot of business owners and they said, the mayor, the city council, they all know
what needs to be done, but they don't want to push the buttons. Somebody needs to just come in and push them. If there's one thing I know, I'll push these buttons and we're going to get the city under control because it just starts with enforcing a law. So I have a deputy mayor that I can't say who he is because of fear of retaliation at this point because of issues with the city right now who's in power. But this deputy mayor who will help me enforce a law made it very clear. Once you
start enforcing a law, criminals leave, they know, oh, it's the gigs up. They will go somewhere else. Once you start or making arrests, people will leave this idea. Oh, there's no room in the jails. Where are you going to put all these people? Once you start enforcing a law, they will leave. And it's as simple as that. He was suggesting for two weeks, you go around the city, you put up signs, no more fentanyl at the park, no more open drug use, no more encampments. You have two
“weak counting. You tell every you give them a warning. So if you want to leave an advance, you know,”
most of these people, which is what I hear the most from law enforcement are not from Los Angeles. They have been flown in, bust in, back to the business. There's a body business where they bring homeless people to the city to make the money off them. They're from all over the country. They're brought here because this is the epicenter where they're making all the money. So you don't think these NGOs when they hear Professor Pras the new mayor. He's got the IRS criminal
investigation team. They're going to take this scam. I'm sorry to other states in the cities. All the show is going to go on the road. And they're going to open up shop where there's a mayor that lets this go down. And it will stop in LA. And this trickle down effect when restaurants don't have zombies in front of them. You can go back to having outdoor seating because it doesn't smell like human poop. The whole town smells like the whole city smells like human poop and pee.
It's crazy. So when you get rid of that, not to mention, you're in my best plan. -Yeah. -I'm bringing in the CDC. Los Angeles love the white suits and during COVID. They love they love CDC. I'm bringing in the CDC because you know how much typhoid and medieval diseases are in these encampments that nobody's swapping. Mayor Pratt is bringing the CDC and we're going to swab all of them. And once we get those test results back, I promise you the federal government
will be shutting down streets where white tents and just hose and things down with chlorine. God knows what because people are living in the sewers. I don't know if you saw last week, that lady pops out of the sewer that wand from clean LA to the video and went viral.
“She's living in like in the sewer. A whole full thing. What is with poop and pee?”
You know what type of diseases are going on in there? CDC will clean these streets. Again, people like all of Spencer is not going to have the resources with the Olympics coming. We have Homeland Security. We got DEA. Another thing. We're just letting. I talked to the dog rescue people. They say you stand on Skid Row or any street in LA. You could watch the drug dealers just pulling up and escalates. Tesla is all in nicest cars. Just slang and no problem.
Mayor Pratt DEA is coming in. We have so much funding when you bring the feds in to enforce the law to get the streets ready for the Olympics. The current administration, they want to play pretend,
get that money to launder. Oh, we need that billion dollars. We'll clean the streets.
Not at all. You come do it. Help me out. It's not like I won't be able to do this.
People when they hear me say they're like, sorry guy.
Jitsu. We're going to put on keys or what? Let's talk about day one. So day one,
“realistically, what can you do? And how do you implement all these ideas that you have?”
So right now what I've learned is all the smartest brightest people would never want to come work in LA
because they know any of their ideas are not going to be used. The system is in play. The amount of private industry, unlike for instance, a CEO's house per noun who sold his company to Warren Buffett. We're talking big legit CEO. He said, I'll come in. I'll work for a dollar a year. You know, there's people like this that want to get LA back that I'm going to surround myself. People like Recruiso. He wants to get building. You lean on these people that they talk about it.
They just don't want to go into this toxic environment that you can't a cartel. They know there's only so much they can do unless there's a mayor like me that's going to let them do it.
I just got a phone with Steve Moscow. He was the president of multiple studio Sony.
“We're going to bring him in within a like a vendors team for Hollywood. How we clean up all these”
permanent issues and get Hollywood back and make the incentives. Make it. My idea is literally not charge. You want to shoot in LA. There's no we need we're going to charge you. No work. We need work. And then we get six years we can come back and worry about that. But bring the business back. So meeting with the Ted Sarando's putting these actual commissions. Not to mention already met with the there's the community budget advocates. They're like LA budget experts. They presented seven
budget initiatives to mayor bash it and do one. I'm going to do all seven. These type of budget things where you don't just increase all these payments to city unions or whatever with if the budget doesn't have the money. There's going to be a commission that looks everything publicly for 30 days. Right now it's just her CAO. It's like having your accountant and and check your
“taxes like from the IRS. It's all we need to have outside independent people checking all this”
stuff. So it's more of again I'm talking with Chief Garcia who's retiring. Who's the go fire fighter to be one of my deputy to be one of my deputy mayors of fire and public safety. Not a deputy mayor that calls bomb threats into the city. So just using experience people that want to get LA is surrounding myself. One thing I know I have is common sense. Now all the things that I need the professionals. You bring them in and they'll want to work with me because they know they
hear my message. Oh, he's going to undo all this. You're telling me for $750,000. I couldn't find a better LA DWP CEO to make sure there's waters in the reservoir. Figure out how to get rates down. We have plenty of money. We're paying these jobs. We're clearly not getting the proper talent. Obviously look at the city. So you're getting talent that's ideologically aligned. That's yeah. Exactly. And it's a part of this whole cartel. Exactly so. And they know what they're
doing. They know the game. They play the game. They listen to whatever the top dog say and they follow businesses usual and the money keeps getting moved around. To the point where I can poach talent from other major cities that are successful at these jobs. I can pay them more clearly than other. But you're like, wow, you did this here. Come out to LA. Don't worry. The zombies will be gone by the time you get here. But there are these people. There's tons of cities around America
that don't look like LA. This is not some rocket science. I have to figure out. You're in one of them right now. There we go. Yeah, driver on Austin. There's a homeless problem. But it's minor. It's very small in comparison to Los Angeles. Again, there will be homeless problems all over
anywhere. Always. But the drug addiction crime where they run the streets, that's a problem that
can be and enhancements can be fixed. Yeah. Look at what they didn't San Francisco when Xi Jinping was visiting San Francisco and Gavin Newsom literally said when someone comes to your house to visit, you clean up your house. How much does keep your fucking house clean? Like, what are you saying? If you have the resources to clean it up when a foreign dignitary comes into town, why don't you just keep your town clean? And where are the ones that own the house? The taxpayers.
Yeah. We already paid to keep the house clean. No. Back to Newsom and fires. One of the things we need to touch upon, back to climate change and him going to Munich and he talks about the fires. It's 365 days a year. It's climate. That's interesting for somebody who's fire service, the calfire, he only pays them seasonal when the policies fire hit. All of most of calfire was down for the season. If it's a 360 force and that's why the only reason Brentwood exists and didn't burn all the
Way.
fought the feds to make sure he has a real fire service. It's 365 because he understands it can pop off whenever. So he had all his tankers and helicopters. They came to palaces and saved the day. So this idea, they just top, top. Oh, I spend all this money on all these things, but then you don't. And then he cut their salaries. I mean, we can do a whole episode on Newsom. I got to stay focused.
And it's back to it's amazing that that guy thinks he could be president. Not when I'm
mayor of L.A. because I'm an actor. I just don't understand how anybody could think that he was he would do a good job. He ruined San Francisco, then he ruined California. And now he wants to ruin the country. Like, what? How the fuck do they think? Because he talks well. And he doesn't even talk well. He just talks well for people that are in that position. There's just a lot of people
“that talk way better than him that aren't interested in the job. Well, that's what we need to get past”
and the audience, the taxpayers, audience, whatever you look on, we need to stop falling for performative politics. The mayor L.A. she's so good at it. That's she gets everyone riled up like she's Che Guevara fighting for freedom, just what she can do. Nothing. She literally as mayor cannot
stop anything with the federal government. It's all just act and same with Newsom. They're like
in like social media influencers. Do your job. We're paying our tax money for you to make sure our houses don't burn down. Zombies aren't attacking our families on the way to school. Everything that's the basic quality of life. You're failing out. But what you're good at is just yelling on social media. Now is back to why I ran. Is that anyone to be one of these? Just they're just yappers. It is, yeah, you don't do anything. Yeah. Well, it's refreshing. It's refreshing seeing
something. But I think this is how it has to be done. I think it has to be someone from the outside that all these people that have a career in politics, they know what feathers they can't
“ruffle. They know that if you want to make it, you have to be aligned with whatever the party's doing.”
And if you go against them, you get in trouble. And everyone knows this. So they all just sort of stay the course and hope that their time comes. Hope that they'll look the right way and say the right things and somehow and other it'll allow them to elevate their career and become a mayor somewhere, become a governor somewhere. Well, if you look smart people come up to me and they'll be like, you're doing what the founders of America wanted. Real people, part of the communities,
getting into politics, not this job where I'm going to do this for three. It was supposed to be your neighbor. Somebody who understood what everyone was going through. Exactly. And I feel that. And again, I'm going in there to stop these people. Not, I don't have a new utopia of what L.H.B. I want L.A. back. I want L.A. I grew up in. I want my two sons to be able to once we win all our lawsuits against Gavin Newsom and his state park to rebuild in the palaces and grow up
in the city of L.A. that I grew up in, that it was, you could dream. Have you thought about a time line of how all these ideas that you have like how long it'll take to actually implement them? Once you start enforcing the law, things are going to move quick. It's, it's as simple as, okay, I may have L.A. I got my new, my new deputy mayors. We have my new police commissions. We're going around and we're just arresting people and the people that aren't getting arrested. We're
getting to mandatory medical treatment and we're just going to start clearing the streets,
clearing the campments. And then from that, it's just everything's going to come to, first off,
imagine the communities like the how pump people are going to be in these neighborhoods when I come in. And I, this is done. People are, this other person, this Democratic Socialist lady, what, what is her solution to all these problems? Crime, homelessness, all these things? What is she saying? She, is she admitting that they're issues? And does she have a solution that she's proposing? And she does grow city. Yes, you're not in read. Somebody just tagged it was so funny.
One of the quotes was, we're going to have a street medical team, a street medical team. We already have that. It's called the LFD and they're spending 80% of their calls responding to these overdoses. And we're also paying for that. No, they, because they're so deep in it. They can't say mandatory treatment. Because these people have rights to die on the sidewalk. They have rights to attack. So we need more housing. This is, these beds aren't working. We need to get more beds. So,
yes, she needs more affordable beds. More, it's not working as she's running it. As she's running it. Yeah. So, she just wants to keep business as usual just with more funds. No,
“she wasn't even running until three hours before the last where you have to fill it out. But when”
everyone saw, I was going to win and be the mayor. They, so the real conspiracy is is my conspiracy.
I don't know, it's real.
because it's a jungle runoff. So June 2nd, the top two numbers go to November. I was one billion
“percent going to November until one hour before she just pops up. After she's already endorsed”
Mayor Bass, they were doing photo ops together a week before their close. Mayor Bass endorsed this Nithia Lady. They're like a team. So, two hours before that last minute, we have to sign to where they announced the final candidates just had a year to run for mayor. Plus, you could have announced it's just to block me from going to November. But what they don't understand is
people that will vote for me would never vote for her or Karen Bass. They're actually picking off
their own stats. If anything, what they're doing is making me the mayor on June 2nd because if you have 51 percent of the vote, I just become the mayor on June 2nd and I think they're in for a big surprise and they're underestimating how angry everybody is in the city of LA and I think I'd become Mayor June 2nd and it won't even go to November. I think they really are underestimating how angry everybody is because there's people that I talk to that used to be just hardcore Democrats,
hardcore leftists, progressives that are really saying like a hush tones, we really need a Republican. We really need like some no nonsense, Rudy Giuliani person. I hate to say that. I hate to say it,
“but that's what we need. We need someone who's going to be really tough on crime and clean everything”
up and stop all these people from having tents on the street. There's so many people like that that are just quiet about it. They don't want to talk about it openly and publicly because they're afraid of being shamed. I grew up in palaces. I went to Crossroads High School. I don't think I've ever met a Republican. I mean, for real, like all the people I know, all my family and for everybody I know is a Democrat and all the people that are supporting me, all the people I talk to. They're Democrats.
We are, this is not the Democrat party that's running LA. The other day I posted the like the commandment list of I think it was 1996 Bill Clinton's Democratic Party. It looks like what I would say right now. Yeah. That's the, no, this is socialism. This is communism. This is cartel. This is mafia. This is not Democrats. Love me. They want all the same things. They want to feel safe. It's really amazing how they can hide it, but just pretend to be compassionate. They can hide
all this money that they're just siphoning off because it really is just organized crime.
“Well, they say to people, there's nothing we can do. That's, that's, that's why people will be my”
comments section be like, there's nothing you can do. It's like they are so good at just keeping this. These people have rights. First up, it is illegal. Just, this is below people's mind. It's illegal to live on the sidewalk. Right. It's, it's a, that's a Democrat law. All the laws I want to enforce are Democrat laws. I am the Democrat law enforcer mayor. I should be every day. It's, I'm actually excited because I, I finally feel like there's like
hope because when your house burns down and your mom's crying because her house burn out every single day, everyone you know is house burn out. You go through a dark just all my tax money. Like,
I should be a millionaire. They're not, you know, because I have some big checks. People always say,
oh, he burned all of his money. They don't understand living in LA in entertainment business with a manager and agent of business manager. Your taxes in LA. Your state taxes is very hard to keep all that money. So they're like, oh, he burned the, no, I regardless. The amount of money I put in to the city of LA and the state, my house should still be here. So it's very sad moment. And then it, then you start uncovering. Oh, no, this is almost strategic. This is, you know, a lot of people
reached out after with the line and they're like, oh, they line at you. This is a land grab and I was like, no, no, and then you start going down and they're like, I'm not even argue with these people anymore, because of how the writing was so on the wall. It's so on the wall, the entire insurance industry dropped everyone in the palaces leading up to the fire. It was that flagrant. There was 70 year old people, 70 year old plus. I talked to 80 year olds that got dropped by their insurance January 1st
been paying 40 plus years. Didn't even get to re-up lost everything, no insurance. If all the insurance companies are dropping an area, it's very clear that they know what's about to happen. So your city leaders, your mayor, everybody, your state, they should be getting ready or it's saying, oh, wow, everyone's dropping this. What can we do? Oh, we need to clear the dead brush. We need to make the water and the reservoirs there. Just obvious things. So I don't even argue with the land grab
things because here's a crazy thing that I never did the math for. This hurts. So your house
Burns down.
sales tax. So the people who just let your house burn down, now you're giving them tax to
rebuy, underwear, rebuy shoes, rebuy. So they're making money now off of your house free now. Not to mention, you got to start buying things to actually maybe if you're lucky, not only 14 people in 15 months have built the house. So it's only 14 people have built it. Let's max out at 16 just to be like, oh, no, it's 16. He's a misinformation. Yeah, like it's less than 20. Yeah, less than 20. Which is crazy. And then how many houses burnt down? 7,000. So now you got the sales tax.
God, that's so crazy. That's such a crazy number. 7,000 houses is so crazy. What's even crazier is most of these houses burned down on January 8. When now there's no wind and they just didn't figure
out, let's drive water in from all again. When you're on the Hina, you're on the island. I'll
start arguing, oh, it's hard to get resources. When everything's burning down on January 7th
“and you already realize you have to up and now you're hearing the fire department saying,”
all the fire hydrants are empty. There's no water. It's red alert. Get enough water tankers from the whole state, every city drive in water. I have videos from January of moms walking in front of my son's elementary school. It's totally there. My son's preschool, 12 o'clock, totally there. By the afternoon, all this is gone because there's no, they didn't bring water in. It's crazy. So back to the, the land grab thing. So for instance, all these properties that burned down,
like I said, it's years of passed down family properties. So when you pass that, you pay that
old tax rate. Now these 7,000 dirt lots in the next couple of years, guess what the new tax rate is, they're going to have when somebody buys that and they're now paying 20, 20, 27, 20, 28, three palaces, tax rates, not 1970, you know, your grandfather's tax rate because, you know,
“you still lived in the house. So there's like a hundred plus billion, they're going to make just”
in taxes. So the idea that, oh, why would they ever let that happen? You start thinking, oh, well, they don't care because not only do they make a lot of money, they can rebuild it, they can try to put affordable housing and do this. These complex, it just gets, it gets fishy. And it does get where it looks. It's don't want to use people of land grabs, but at the very least, they're capitalizing on a tragedy. Well, you know, the number one buyer right now of
palaces, dirt lots, China. No way. Yeah. Really? Yeah. Well, they do it through New Zealand or it's a New Zealand business owned by the Chinese. So, you know, it's, it's all movie stuff. I keep saying to people watch the movie, try it down. I watch it once a week, just to like stay locked in, you know, but it's, it's exciting because I feel this window of change where, you know, stars are lining where outside or comes in, it just blows up their whole spot, not the way the deputy mayor
calls him, bomb threats, but energetically. And so it gives me hope. And then again, if it goes, if it's not God's plan, my wife is very on the, you know, prayer warrior, Bible, Jesus. So, you know, I checking with her, I'm like, oh, what's Jesus saying, honey? And, you know,
“I talk, I think she's a better her path. And the other thing is, if it's God's will,”
it's going to go down. And if not, then I'll probably end up with some of my former palaces, it moved a Bentonville, Arkansas. And it is what it is. But I, well, there could be no doubt that Los Angeles needs a radical shift. They need a radical change. And it sounds like that's exactly what you're proposing. Big time. And it's exciting, you know, because most people are scared. They have fear of the system. They're fear being attacked. I get why a normal person that's just has a
good heart. The smart doesn't want to go into politics. They will, you have the L.A. times writing hit pieces. They got machines to keep the system. You got the comment sections. You got people making videos, electronics, sports, positive. You feel that. But thankfully, I have experience from being hated in television for many years that, you know, now at the flip is, I have so much love energy. I was able to maintain with negativity for so many years and just stay in the game,
because it was business as usual. And I knew they wanted a villain on all these shows. I will, you know, shout out David Foster, put me on this path many years ago. He said, "You got to be like Simon Cowell." And I leaned into that and it worked for many years. But the point is, being hated for so many years, now having so much love, obviously, I have much rather be loved. Let's be glad anybody who wants to be loved is a lot more fun. For sure, for sure.
Well, listen, man, I'm voting for you.
I mean, if I lived in Los Angeles, no question whatsoever, I would vote for you. You have time to get one of these affordable beds. I can put you, I can recognize you one of these
“beds. You know, I don't think that's legal. I think that text is resident.”
Okay, I don't know. Yeah, I'm going to text this resident. I think I can only vote. Did you see what they're doing right now with the cigarettes and the ballots in LA, seeing this? What? They call these people with signing ballots, trading the zombies for cigarettes. I did see that. I need the DOJ if you're watching the fast. We need, no, we need to come to LA for my lecture. We need to make sure we get a real election. I can't believe we didn't do an hour on
your job. Yes, that really is gross. What they're doing with giving people cigarettes to sign up for things. Do you know how many people are like in the GG2 game? If you don't shout me out, like, I need to just like end with like a list of people. No, not just kidding. Guys,
“we need to talk to GG2. I talk to GG2 so much. I know that. I just have to”
think like flavored nicotine is illegal in Los Angeles. Just think about how many people are camped out on the streets, how many people are intense, open, fentanyl use, you can't buy flavored zins. Well, even the cleanest ones that like my health, biohacker friends allegedly may not access it. You can't have those. Like fitness people keep it in like athletic peptides are technically, you know. Yeah. Well, they're working on that nationwide. And hopefully that'll
get past soon. But there's so many regulations in California that make fucking no sense. Like no sense, particularly in Los Angeles. They make no sense. And it's just they just want to keep you like a child. And they are the people that are supposed to be the overseers of everybody. And they're looking out for you. And it's gross. And it's just businesses usual. They want to keep moving in a direction of more regulation, more rules, less rights, more restrictions.
One last thing that's speaking is this is so crazy. Do you know right now in LA, if you're just
a mom and pop landlord, not, you know, not, they always like to say landlords are like cruel
a divine level. Like, you know, just like a mom and pop, maybe you're on one apartment building with units. If you have like a drug addict, crazy person living in there, most of them now also with
“their section eight scammer and rain drovers have two cars. If you want to get them out, they can”
go whole year with not paying these landlords. And then they have to pay 100 grand illegal fees to try to get them out. So then they settle with this criminal that's just abusing this loophole, this system, they'll give them 50, 40k to just leave. That person's not put on any list. And then they go do it to another apartment building. So a lot of these apartment buildings, they don't even want to rent out to people because they can't afford to then have one of these people. So again with this
housing, and then ready for this, the city council. If it was not 170 million, it's 200 million,
just gave 170 million to the lawyers that sue the tenants for these people. But there's no fun for the tenants to then defend themselves. Jesus Christ. It's so crazy. So again, it's about these people coming around me that are living this nightmare. I'm like, how do I help you stop these things? And putting these people that know the game because they're living it. Yeah. And undo, we got to stop this. Well, I'm glad we could help you get your message out. And I really, really hope it helps. And
I'll really, really hope you win. It'll be fun. It'll be fun to watch you shake it up. And boy, if you could really change Los Angeles and turn it around, I mean, I mean, that would be absolutely
fantastic. It would be a great story. It would be really amazing. And it would give hope to a lot of
the cities that are experiencing similar situations, worth it, a lot of other people would follow your path. I'm, I'm, I'm doing it. That is all right. Just come here in the game. Vote for Mayor Brad Doctor. Vote for Mayor Brad. Thanks. Thank you so much. All right. Bye, buddy.

