Left-Wing Judges: The Gangsters in Black with Ken Paxton and Stephen Miller
Ken Paxton has survived his sham impeachment scare, and now he's back on the warpath. Charlie talks to the Texas AG about his plan for slowing Joe Biden's illegal migration flood, checking voter fraud, and making Texas as red as voters want it to be, despite constant sabotage from the court system. Plus, Stephen Miller makes the surprising case for why there is a 2024 candidate who should be disqualified for insurrection against the United States...and that candidate is Joe Biden.Support the show: http://www.charliekirk.com/supportSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcriber: nvidia/parakeet-tdt-0.6b-v2, sat-12l-sm, and large-v3-turbo
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Republicans Aid Illegal Entry00:14:57
Hey everybody, Tan the Charlie Kirk Show.
Ken Paxton, recently acquitted in Texas, is telling us about what he plans to do to get to work.
Then Stephen Miller, as we have a very in-depth, extremely detailed and important conversation about immigration.
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Here we go.
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He's back to work and he's more motivated than ever.
Joining us now is the Attorney General of Texas, Ken Paxton.
Ken, welcome to the program.
Been a couple months since we have chatted.
We tried to do our part.
I'm glad that you got through that clown show and that nonsense.
First of all, how are you doing?
You know what?
It's just really great to be back.
I appreciate your help.
And we have a lot to do.
And believe me, you're right.
I'm very motivated.
Well, good.
And we're going to go through some of the specifics because what happened is that you were put on the sidelines for what, three, four months.
You weren't even allowed to do your job because you had to fight all this crap.
I want to go through some of the specifics, though, for our national audience.
Texas is being invaded.
Texas is seeing a crime wave in certain parts of the area.
We have major issues.
We have these illegal cities that you're going to go after.
But why is it that the insiders in Austin felt the need to go out of their way to try to derail you?
What was really driving this?
It's perplexing as a non-Texan to witness.
It doesn't look like it makes any sense, but it really makes a lot of sense.
If you understand how the Texas House works, then you understand why this happened.
We have 150 members of the House, 65 are Democrats.
The 65 Democrats block vote for Speaker, and it takes 76 votes to become Speaker.
The Speaker controls everything.
All the legislation getting through, committee assignments.
What happens is completely controlled by that one person.
And so what happens is the Democrats will pick the Republican that gives them the most for their money.
And they pick Dade Phelan.
And Dave Phelan got a deal with the Democrats.
And the Democrats, House Democrats, I believe, did this for Joe Biden and the Washington Democrats to take me out because we filed 48 lawsuits against him.
And so it looks like the Republicans did it.
The reality is the Democrats motivated it.
Dave Phelan is controlled by the Democrats.
Yeah.
And so, I mean, I was in Texas a couple weeks ago while this whole thing was unfolding.
And someone came up to me.
They said, hey, Charlie, you know the Speaker of the House is like a really, he's a drunk.
I was like, oh, come on.
Like, that's.
But then there's this piece of tape I saw that I just, I have to play.
Play cut 124.
You guys be the judge.
Is Dade Phelan a low-functioning alcoholic?
Play cut 124.
Speaker, I'll move adoption.
Mr. Campbell, send an amendment.
The amendment is acceptable to the author.
Is there objection to the opposite amendment?
And the chair has done the amendment.
Members adopt it.
The chair recognizes Mr. Johnson of Harris.
Mr. Johnson of Harris to speak in opposition to the bill.
So, so Ken, I have to play that because that's the guy who made you go through hell.
That's the guy who impeached you.
I mean, so just to go, you could comment on that if you want, but I have to do that because it's just hilarious.
So, this guy's obviously either on pills, drunk, or having a stroke, which I don't think he was.
But then he sided with Democrats.
Why is the great state of Texas, the red state of Texas, having Democrats choose a speaker of the House?
Who designed that system?
So, it's we're getting outsmarted in the House.
The Republicans should block vote themselves and decide which Republican they want, but that's not the way it works.
The Democrats get together, they align all of their votes.
And if you think about it, you need 76 votes.
The Speaker's going to vote for himself.
He only needs 10 Republican votes with the Democrats.
And so, it's pretty easy once you have 66 votes to get there because then he tells 10 Republicans, hey, I'll make you chair of this, I'll make you chair of this, and it's a done deal.
So, it's control, it's stupid, but we've let the Democrats do this for over a decade where they control.
And you can see the difference between the Texas Senate and Texas House.
With Dan Patrick in charge, the Texas Senate is very conservative, does really good things for Texas.
The Texas House, on the other hand, has Democratic chairs.
They don't get a lot of good things done for the state of Texas.
They block a lot of good legislation, both by Governor Abbott, who's trying to get school choice done, and they've been blocking many things done by the Senate that Governor Patrick's tried to get done.
So, Ken, just one final thought on this, and I want to get to the work that you're doing because that's the most important thing.
Can you just add more?
You said this with Tucker Carlson, but it's worth repeating: how this was really a Bush family-driven operation and how the people spoke and they were able to push back against it.
Add a little bit more to that, more context, please.
So, we in this process, we were getting information.
We they finally had to disclose emails, and there was there were definitely connections between Karl Rove, George P. Bush, obviously, pushed by Karl Rove in the last election against me, and a group called Texans for Lawsuit Reform, which is supposedly a Republican group, but they've aligned in the Bush camp.
And that's two guys named Dick Victor Bolshe and Dick Weakley, who have spent millions of dollars to take people like me out.
Carl Rose participated in this, and George P. was supposed to be their guy.
And it's interesting because he went to get his license literally the day that these guys turned me over for supposedly violating the law to the FBI, who I was investigating, by the way, for breaking the law.
And there's no doubt that there's a connection between the ex-employees who also got emails and text messages from Carl Rove, Carl Rove, Texans for Lawsuit Reform, the Bushes.
They're all aligned.
So, Ken, let's now get to the work that you're doing.
What are the top priorities?
What are the lawsuits you're filing and the things that you want to bring to completion?
Well, everybody can see what's going on in the border.
It's not gotten any better since I left.
Unfortunately, you know, with the four months out, we were stopped in our progress, but we are looking at many things along the border to try to fight back the Biden administration's unlawful activity.
We're also going down to look at Liberty County, which is where this village or city has been set up that's been growing like crazy.
And there's all kinds of crime there, there's all kinds of difficulties there.
We're going to try to figure out how we can stop that.
Obviously, I've only been back for a week, so I've got a lot of catching up to do.
I can promise you this: whatever we can do in those situations, we are going to do.
And we're going to continue our investigation of big pharma.
We had an investigation of some of the vaccine manufacturers potentially lying to Texas consumers and to the world about the efficacy of their vaccine.
So, we've got a lot to do along with finishing our lawsuits against big tech.
And look, this is Ken, can you just remind our audience the size of your office?
It is the largest AG's office in the country, isn't it?
It is the largest Republican office.
I think New York and New Jersey and California may have larger Democratic offices.
It is the largest Republican office.
We have about 4,200 employees.
We have close to 800 lawyers.
Our budget's about 1.8 billion for the biennium.
And so we do a lot of things that a lot of people don't know about.
And we're very active in really trying to defend Texas and defend the Constitution.
Yeah.
And with that sort of enormity, you can now defend the rule of law.
And like, talk about this, though.
This is what I'm a little confused about.
There's this local DA AG office tension where you can't bring criminal cases.
Can you just talk about that a little bit?
Because it's confusing to some people in our audience.
Well, and I'm glad you brought that up because this is the riskiest thing going on for Texas for since 1951.
The Attorney General's office, I'm not that old, so I wasn't around then.
But we've been authorized or directed by the legislature to prosecute voter fraud.
Well, we have a dual court system.
We have the Court of Criminal Appeals that is the final say on criminal matters, and we have the Texas Prime Court that is the final say on civil matters.
The Court of Criminal Appeals is Republican, but largely unknown.
And I'm very suspicious of them now.
And I think we need to change that court because they struck down the only statute that allowed me to prosecute any type of criminal activity, which was voter fraud, which we were doing.
We had over 900 cases of real voter fraud that we were investigating or prosecuting.
Now all of that is stopped and it's up to the local DAs, who again are largely Soros funded in the bigger cities.
And so voter fraud now is not being prosecuted.
That is a huge risk to my state in the future.
And we will lose the state if we don't stop voter fraud.
Are you then able to do the investigation and hand it off to a local sheriff or DA?
Are you able to do the legwork and say, hey, you know, we believe there's a crime here and then work in harmony?
Because that's similar to what a lot of the Democrat states are doing, New York being one of them.
We're trying, but a lot of these DAs won't prosecute it.
So we used to have the authority both to investigate and to prosecute.
And by the way, they struck down the law saying that because I was in the executive branch, the Attorney General is an executive, that I didn't have the authority to go to court because that is a judicial function.
Now, that is insane.
And if that's true, then every state attorney general is doing something illegal under their Constitution as well as the U.S. Attorney General.
I hope everyone understands that.
They basically turned the AG's office into a civil lawsuit organization.
You could still sue civilly.
You can protect the people of Texas, but to actually investigate crime, they've neutered you.
I want to explore that more because it's very unusual and it actually puts you at a disadvantage versus other AGs in other states that have that kind of criminal investigative authority.
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Let's just play cut 126 just to show this illegal invasion of Texas.
Play cut 126.
In Eagle Pass, Texas, where just moments ago, customs and border protection cut a hole through the Consentina wire that has been stretched by Texas DPS along the border there to allow migrants to come through.
It was initially a group of about 60 to 70 people.
It swelled to some 300 very, very quickly.
Okay, so Ken, let's just get into some detail here.
You have the largest Republican AG's office.
It's complicated because you don't have all the investigative powers of other states.
But just to kind of go back through this, what specifically are you now going to do with the authority granted to stop the invasion of the great state of Texas?
So I just, that clip, I is shocking to me that the federal government would clip our wire to allow people to come in illegally.
In other words, not only are they doing their own thing, but they're actually stopping us from protecting our border and our lands in Texas.
We're looking at every available angle.
We've got about two or three lawsuits that we're looking at, and specifically one related to them damaging our property and forbidding us from keeping illegals from coming into the country.
So I can guarantee you we've got more lawsuits coming as it relates to immigration, and we're going to do everything we can to stop this.
Yeah.
And so let's, this is, I'm able to, I'm a talk show guy and you're a lawyer, so you have to be more focused or very careful when he says, I think this is treason.
I mean, the federal government is actively co-sponsoring the entrance of non-citizens into the country, and it's not getting any better.
And so, Ken, is there any precedent where the federal government willingly doesn't do its job and it damages a sovereign state?
And if so, how can you deal with that?
Because your duty is to Texas.
They are just saying we don't care about Texas.
We don't care about all the damage that's being done.
I've never seen LinkedIn.
I've never seen the federal government, our country, affirmatively help basically the cartels because that's the business model, right?
The cartels bring people to the federal government.
The federal government transports them and they also aid and abet their drug trafficking, fentanyl trafficking.
I've never seen them actually damage our property to allow illegals to come in.
And so this is a new thing for us that we're looking at, trying to figure out how do we stop the federal government from one, aiding and abetting, but also actually damaging our property to help the illegals get in.
It's insane.
Arizona v. United States00:03:47
Yeah.
And so this is what is frustrating us in Arizona and others is that where, Why is the state government not doing more?
And that's where we're confused.
And the federal government, they're actually going through and cutting the wire, Ken.
That's what's insane, is they're actually cutting the wire to allow the foreigners to come in.
Talk about how you are taking aim at this illegal city that's been created in Houston.
It's a bizarre story, but this seems to be a primary focus of yours.
Yes, let me go back to real quickly this case, Arizona v. U.S., that you know about is fundamental to changing this because part of the reason we're in such a difficult spot is, you know, 10 years ago when Arizona tried to protect themselves with state law because the federal government wouldn't, Obama sued the state of Arizona and they came in and said, basically, the Supreme Court under Justice Kennedy, right, in the opinion, with Justice Roberts joining the liberals,
said that the state could not pass their own laws if the federal government had laws that were similar.
That cannot be right.
It cannot be right.
The federal government can pass a law, then ignore their own law and say, well, you can't enforce your laws because we have laws that we're not enforcing.
None of it makes any sense.
I want another shot at that.
So I've encouraged the legislature or the governor to do something that would violate that and let us take another crack at it now that the court has changed.
Back to your other question.
We are definitely looking at that Liberty County issue.
It's insane.
It's been growing for years.
It is a hodgepodge of people from all over the world.
And it's also creating all kinds of crime issues.
And it's creating an incentive for people to move into this county who are illegal.
And we're going to figure out some way to stop it.
It was a state creation, this sort of mud district, this development.
And we're looking into how it got created and what we can do to undo it.
And we may have suggestions for the legislature because they're going to go back into special sessions.
I know.
I'm glad.
Finally, special session.
I mean, your state's being invaded.
I'm pleased.
Hey, if you didn't spend 90 days impeaching Ken Paxton, you wouldn't have to go to special session.
But, Ken, let me just end with this, though, which is that I want to empower you and tell you the audience is with you.
You are one of the few fighters we have on the entire country.
Please be as aggressive as you can be while following and enforcing the law.
We need you.
And so we're here for you, Ken.
Thank you.
Glad you got through that.
And now it's time to uphold the law and protect Texas.
Thank you, Ken, so much.
And thank you.
I'm inspired and I'm ready to go.
So thank you.
Thank you, Ken.
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Joining us now is Stephen Miller.
Stephen, thank you for taking the time.
Judicial Process vs Invasion00:11:45
You know, Stephen, we're seeing an invasion of our country.
Let's start there.
That's not a controversial statement.
How and why can this legally be described as an invasion and why does that categorization matter?
Well, the invasion clause primarily matters in two contexts.
The first would be in Article 4, Section 4, and the ability of states to, in the invocation of that clause, to demand relief from the federal government, and then the constitutional principle would flow from that,
that if the government declined, it's actually called the guarantee clause, that if the government declined to fulfill its guarantee under the U.S. Constitution, that the state would then be authorized to unilaterally defend its territory and to stop the invasion.
It also matters in another context, which is the 14th Amendment, Section 3, and that would be that Joe Biden is actually ineligible to run for president because he'd be disqualified for aiding and embedding an insurrection against the United States.
So it has significant legal meaning for both of those reasons.
Yeah, and so Greg Abbott declared an invasion in November of 2022, just about a year ago.
But Stephen, he's done really nothing to stop it except some razor wire and some things in the river.
Talk about how and why the states need to step up and take this into their own hands and tell the federal government to get out of the way.
Yeah, so I'll be blunt in saying that if Texas were to act unilaterally to repel the invasion, it would be the action that would be required would be of a scope and scale beyond what I think many people realize or appreciate.
Because what you'd really be talking about having to do is switching from a blocking strategy, which is what they're doing right now.
So, you know, put up some razor wire here, put a show of force over there, put cars and trucks where applicable, make trespassing arrests and so forth, to a detain and remove strategy.
But because of the logistical challenges involved in removing, you would need to build, which of course I would support doing, you would need to build an extremely large holding area for illegal immigrants that at any given point in time, you know, could hold upwards of 50, 60, 70,000 illegal aliens while you are waiting to send them someplace somewhere that would be willing to accept them.
Even if you push them across the border, they're going to run back across, so you have to have some place to detain them.
So that I presume on the third or fourth attempt of a legal immigrant to cross, who's then pushed back, who ends up in a detention center, they would stop trying.
But that is the kind of infrastructure that they would have to build.
The other issue is that they would then have to make sure to protect their own law enforcement officers from arrest and prosecution.
Because my presumption is that the DOJ would begin prosecuting state officials for deprivation of civil rights and the other kinds of exotic federal charges that you've seen Garland's DOJ bring up to go after conservatives.
I could even imagine them charging state troopers with kidnapping and things of that nature.
So obviously, in the event where you invoke the guarantee clause and the federal government disregards that invocation and then you take action unilaterally as a state, you have to be prepared to do the full suite of activity that I've described and be aware of the fact, again, that the Department of Justice, presumably, that has been unwilling to use any kind of force to stop the border invasion, would indeed use force to try to arrest and incarcerate your state law enforcement officers.
Yeah, and so is there anything, so first of all, that's really well said.
And you're right.
And the Department of Justice, Merritt Garland, Joe Biden, they wouldn't arrest the drug traffickers, the child sex traffickers, the fentanyl traffickers, the gun traffickers.
They would arrest the Texas sheriffs that are enforcing the law.
Texas was once its own sovereign country with its own constitution.
Does that play into this argument?
Because they'll say, oh, it's supremacy clause.
But Stephen, just from a moral standpoint, putting the legal issue aside, when your own state is being invaded and the federal government is co-sponsoring the invasion, don't you have a moral right to act and figure it out?
Well, I think as others have said before, there's no such requirement in the Constitution for a state to commit suicide.
And so while it's true that there is federal supremacy, and that's, of course, a bedrock principle of the U.S. Constitution, again, in an environment in which a state is being invaded and the federal government declines, not only declines to stop that invasion, but in fact does the opposite, marshals as resources to perpetuate that invasion, then the state at that point has the legal and yes, the moral right.
So to...
Yeah, let me interrupt, though, Stephen, while this is on my mind.
I'm sorry to interrupt.
I just want to keep the pace going here.
When you were in the Trump White House then, what was the argument that San Francisco and Chicago used to not allow federal agents into their city for sanctuary cities?
Isn't that a challenge to the supremacy clause?
Why was San Francisco not, for example, or LA, saying feds are ICE not allowed, but Texas can't say we're going to secure our own border?
What am I missing here?
Well, yes.
I mean, indeed, when we went to court against sanctuary jurisdictions, most notably California, if my memory stories mean correct, one of the arguments we made is that their refusal to turn illegal aliens in custody over to the federal government violated the supremacy clause.
Because again, we weren't talking about asking the state to go out and make arrests.
We were asking states to engage in what are known as custody transfers, where they arrest an illegal alien in the context of committing a local crime, and then we find out that they're here illegally.
And so we asked them to be turned over.
And so they were actively harboring illegal aliens.
In fact, they would go to great lengths to make sure that those illegal aliens could be released without us ever knowing when and where.
And so they were concealing these criminal aliens from the federal government.
And we argued that it violated the supremacy clause.
But the judiciary, such as it existed at the time, again, if memory stories me correct, did not favor those arguments.
Now, if you remember, well, as you remember, of course you remember, by the end of 2020, the Supreme Court, of course, went from a four-conservative minority to a five-conservative majority.
So one would hope that if these questions were raised again in 2025, they would have a very different outcome.
So, I mean, Stephen, but just to think a little creatively here, wouldn't Texas be able to say, well, we're a sanctuary state for the Constitution?
I mean, this is, just use their own standard that has been set by these left-wing gangsters in black dresses.
Why would that be flimsy, if at all?
Because, and by the way, it's not just that.
It's also on the marijuana issue.
States defy federal guidance and federal law on the marijuana issue.
They did this on gay marriage against DOMA, the Defense of Marriage Act.
So it's not the first example where the left finds wrinkles and state dissension against federal law or federal practice.
Why don't we start to embrace some of that spirit when it comes to, I don't know, enforcing our border from an invasion?
Well, I think that you could and should.
The sad reality is that judges really don't care about consistency.
A very large percentage of them care about outcomes.
And so the Ninth Circuit judges ruling on questions related to California, of course, are completely outcome determined.
And then the Fifth Circuit judges who would rule on issues relating to Texas would bend over backwards to try to appear neutral or to try to appear objective.
And so as you know, better than most, oftentimes trying to appear neutral means, in fact, issuing the wrong ruling just to make a point.
So I don't think that the judiciary is going to save us at this particular moment.
I think that, again, Texas has sovereign rights that it can exercise.
They should go into that, of course.
And I don't think they're going to, so it's a hypothetical.
I don't think they're going to, but they should go into that if they do, clear-headed, understanding about the nature of the challenge they're going to have with the federal government.
And then if there is a president in 2025 who is not of the left, then they would need to, of course, be issuing a number of pardons to a lot of people who may get caught up in various DOJ prosecutions in such a circumstance.
Yeah, it's just basically what you're saying is that judges will make up whatever they want to get the outcome they want, but then they're going to rely on process to not stop the invasion.
So, Stephen, what you're talking about is that the Texas House, the Texas governor, the entire Texas leadership Republican need to come together and say, we're doing this.
And that might require a standoff with the federal government.
This is where the U.S. House could actually come in and apply equal pressure, right?
The United States House could have a top-down, bottom-up, almost a pincer movement where you have the Texas standing up to the federal government and the U.S. House of Representatives standing up for Texas, cutting off funding, cutting off the special projects of Joe Biden.
But Stephen, that would require a serious Republican Party.
We don't have such.
Stephen, summarize it all.
Yeah, I mean, the bottom line, as you said, is that conservatives rely on process to protect themselves from criticism, thereby often arriving at the wrong result.
And the left ignores process and is silly focused on arriving at the correct result.
When those two forces meet each other over time, it ends predictably, which is that the right will lose almost all major legal disputes with sufficient passage of time.
And so it is going to be incumbent upon the elected representatives of the state of Texas to assert their fundamental sovereign rights as a state and to understand that the constitutional crisis is not the implication of those rights.
The constitutional crisis is what's happening right now, which is the absence of invoking those rights.
Stephen, stay right there.
We are not a serious country.
10 million people will waltz into America.
We're worried about legal process.
It is how you lose America.
Hey, everybody, Charlie Kirk here.
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Mobilizing Military Deportations00:04:03
One of the things that has infected center-right Vichy French Republicans is that deportation is radical.
It's not radical.
Israel deports people all the time.
I want a immigration system that Israel has.
Why does Israel get a wall, get borders?
Why do they get to deport foreigners that commit crimes?
Well, we don't because we are not a serious country and we are a suicidal country.
Stephen, when I see the people come across the border, it demoralizes me.
It's like this daily slit of my wrists.
Every day somebody is like slitting my wrists to slow bleed of the Republic.
Stephen, when Trump is president again as the 47th President of the United States, how do we deport 30 million people?
Well, your first priority for deportation needs to be to send a message to the world and for many other reasons.
It needs to be all of the illegal aliens who entered the country under Joe Biden so that you immediately send the message to the whole of the planet that because someday there of course will be another far-left president and that far-left president will open the border.
And you need to send a message to the world that even if you come here, even if you get in, you're still going to be deported from the country.
And we don't know how large that number is going to be.
Of course, you'll pick up an enormous number of what they call collaterals when you're making those arrests.
So you'd have to imagine, you know, if you went to, say, you raided like an agricultural plant that had, say, a meatpacking center that had one Biden illegal, you'd probably pick up 10 other illegals at the same time.
So you'll get an enormous number of collaterals.
But that number, and it's unknowably large because it's, of course, your releases, your gotaways, and then all of the people who are overstaying their visas, which nobody even talks about.
But since ICE has been disabled from deporting visa overstays, there's millions more illegals that no one is even aware of or thinking about or even having a conversation about.
In order to carry out a deportation operation of that scale, you would need to involve the U.S. military, which is why President Trump often talks about the Eisenhower model, where the last time the U.S. military was involved in a large-scale deportation operation.
It's also the reason why President Trump has talked about invoking the Alien Enemies Act, which is a law that was passed in the late 18th century during the Adams presidency that allows you to instantaneously remove any non-citizen foreigner from an invading country age 14 or older.
So it doesn't apply to the entire all the demographics of illegal alien groups, but it applies to those 14 and older.
And so it would be particularly useful in contexts where you have large amounts of gang members and drug dealers and other criminal offenders who are overwhelmingly going to be over that age threshold.
And so that allows you to suspend the due process that normally applies to a removal procedure.
Most people don't realize who haven't worked in immigration enforcement how bureaucratic that process is or the fact that all illegal aliens have the ability under current practice and procedure not only to appeal their deportations, but if they get the right kind of lawyer and they get the right kind of judge, they can even get their deportation appealed into federal Article 3 appellate courts.
In other words, out of the immigration courts, which are under DOJ and into regular federal court.
And so you can have a single deportation for a single alien.
Get all the way to the United States Supreme Court.
That's how bureaucratic the system has become.
And so you need to then invoke extraordinary powers to overcome that.
And then you need to mobilize the U.S. military, state, federal, and local law enforcement to then carry out large-scale deportations across the whole country.
Staging Facilities for Removal00:01:19
And then you would need to build very large staging facilities to carry out the removals.
Because logistically, what a lot of people don't think about or realize is that if a deportation team goes to a particular house and arrests an illegal alien family, so say a mother, a father, four children, there's not like there's a plane on a tarmac that's just like 10 minutes away ready to take them.
And even if there was, it wouldn't be a very efficient use of resources, right, to have an entire chartered aircraft for a single family unit.
So you have to then build massive staging facilities that you can efficiently remove people plane full at a time or where applicable bus load if it's going to go back to Mexico at a time.
And so it would be an undertaking that would be greater than any national infrastructure project that we've done to date, but that's what we have to do.
But look, we live in a modern era.
We have a lot of people that want to go to work.
Round them up.
Kick them out.
Go home.
Go make Honduras great again since you're such a blessing to America.
Stephen, thank you so much.
Wonderful work.
We'll have you on again.
Thanks so much for listening, everybody.
Email us as alwaysfreedom at charliekirk.com.
Thank you so much for listening, and God bless.
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