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Left, Right & Center

Trump bargains between power, safety, freedom

Left, Right & Center

KCRW

352865, News

4.24.8K Ratings

🗓️ 29 August 2025

⏱️ 51 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

National Guard troops have been on the streets of Washington D.C. for about two weeks, and in June, they were deployed to Los Angeles during anti-ICE protests. Now, President Trump is threatening to send them  to Chicago, which he calls a “killing field.” Some Americans are embracing Trump’s expanded use of the National Guard, while others call him a dictator. According to the Chicago Police Department, homicides have dropped by 31% and shootings by 36% compared to last year, but do lower crime rates actually make Americans feel safer? Will militarized streets bring more security or just the semblance of it? 

People in Eagle Pass, Texas, say they feel safer after state and federal officials worked to limit illegal crossings in the border community. But in places like Los Angeles, ICE raids have left some Americans anxious and worried for local immigrants. As President Trump brings his promises on immigration to fruition, will the idea of safety be different in communities like these? 

Transgender athletes competing in amateur sports became a lightning rod for debates on LGBTQ+ rights and inclusivity. President Trump captured the fervor of those debates during the election and with several executive orders upon his return to the White House. His administration has sought to sort competitors by their biological sex rather than how they identify. Those who support the ban see it as a way to protect children, but does one group’s sense of safety have to be at the expense of another? 

Transcript

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0:00.0

Welcome to left, right and center, everybody.

0:04.1

I'm David Green.

0:05.0

As you all know, Chicago's a killing field right now.

0:08.0

And they don't acknowledge it.

0:10.3

And they say, we don't need them.

0:11.6

Freedom, freedom.

0:12.4

He's a dictator.

0:14.3

A lot of people are saying maybe we like a dictator.

0:17.0

I don't like a dictator.

0:18.5

I'm not a dictator.

0:20.0

I'm a man with great common sense and a smart person.

0:24.1

And when I see what's happening to our cities, and then you send in troops, instead of being praised, they're saying you're trying to take over the republic.

0:33.0

All right.

0:33.2

I want to start the show today by saying that I would also not like a dictator here in the United

0:37.7

States of America. So I agree with President Trump on that point. But I really do want to think

0:42.4

more about what he said in the Oval Office there a few days ago. He was talking about expanding his

0:47.9

use of the National Guard to fight crime now in the city of Chicago. He called that city, as we

0:53.2

heard, a killing field. He said some people

0:56.4

may want a dictator. He said people are accusing him of taking over the republic, but that he's just a guy

1:02.7

with common sense trying to make our cities safer. You know, this sounds to me like a bargain that

1:09.1

people in other countries of the world over time have sometimes made with

1:13.0

their leaders. We need you to keep us safe. And to let you do it, we understand that means

...

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