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Politics Politics Politics

Who is to Blame for LA? (with Rep. Greg Steube and Tom Merritt)

Politics Politics Politics

Justin Robert Young

Election, History, Trump, White, Government, House, Riots, Mail, Biden, News, Politics

4.6870 Ratings

🗓️ 11 June 2025

⏱️ 94 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The ongoing Los Angeles protests started with ICE raids. Not a new thing in concept, but a new thing in tone and target. We’re talking work sites, immigration courts, restaurants — not jails or prisons, not the places where even the most progressive voices might begrudgingly agree law enforcement has some claim. But California law has essentially blocked ICE from accessing inmates for deportation. So instead of going after the people most would agree should be first in line, they’re now going after people in public-facing jobs and community spaces. It's one thing to talk about enforcement — it’s another when that enforcement happens where families eat or work.

And that’s the flashpoint. Trump said he’d deliver the biggest deportation effort in U.S. history. That promise means numbers, and numbers mean sympathy eventually bleeds in. I assumed it would come when a grandma running a family bakery got dragged out on camera. Instead, we’re here — people in court, people in the kitchen, being targeted. This was always going to happen. When you aim big, you eventually hit someone the public doesn't want you to hit. And in a city like L.A., that means people are going to show up in the streets.

Violence, Protest, and the California Reflex

Protesting in California isn’t unusual. It’s part of the culture. Go look at Instagram stories from anyone in L.A. or the Bay Area — if something controversial is happening, people are in the streets. It’s not performative in a bad way; it’s performative in the literal sense. It’s how people express politics. But with that comes another layer. The violence.

There’s a slice of every major California protest that’s just there for the bricks, the Molotovs, the chaos. Whether they’re accelerationists or just anarchists, they’re consistent. And that’s the problem. The damage they do isn’t proportional — it’s cinematic. It’s what ends up on cable news and social media. And if the goal is to change hearts and minds about immigration policy, burning cop cars and smashing windows makes that harder, not easier.

Where Are the Adults?

This is where leadership matters. Donald Trump’s giving about 20% of his attention to this. Maybe less. He’s more engaged with Iran and China. The ICE moves feel reflexive, not strategic. They hit resistance, they escalate. Federalizing the National Guard, deploying Marines — it’s blunt-force governance. It’s power without precision. What you really need is coordination with the local officials. Instead, we’ve got a shouting match.

Gavin Newsom says “arrest me.” Karen Bass echoes that. But neither is engaging with the reality on the ground. They’re acting like Trump is literally smashing windows. And maybe that’s useful for the national narrative, but it’s not leadership. The onus is on them — Newsom, Bass, the people closest to the problem — to take the lead in condemning the violence. But they won’t even acknowledge it. And so we spiral.

The truth is, most of these protests are peaceful. But the few that aren’t are the ones that define the story. That was the lesson of 2020. And yet here we are again, learning it all over. It’s a noble cause, absolutely. But when you ignore the violence — when you pretend it doesn’t matter — you lose the moral high ground. And right now, nobody’s looking particularly adult in the room.

Chapters

00:00:00 - Intro

00:01:33 - LA Protests

00:18:45 - Interview with Rep. Greg Steube

00:38:58 - Update

00:39:26 - BBB Provisions

00:42:25 - Recission Package

00:48:28 - LA Protest Polling

00:50:19 - Interview with Tom Merritt

01:28:53 - Wrap-up



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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

On this edition of the program, the many depressing ways that we can look at what's happening in Los Angeles

0:05.7

in a first for the PX3 program, a sitting congressman, Greg Stuby, representative from the great state of Florida,

0:15.3

joins us, and Tom Merritt to discuss the burning of Waymo's and the future of politics and AI.

0:24.0

A little K-pop at the end just for laughs.

0:26.1

It's all coming up.

0:30.0

The following is brought to you by just another pilot.

0:37.2

Politics, politics, politics, politics.

0:39.3

Hello and welcome everybody to the politics, politics, politics program for June 11th, 2025, your old pal

1:02.6

Justin Robert Young, joining you from Austin, Texas. We got a hell of a show here for you.

1:08.1

Many fun special guests, including a sitting congressman and starting pitcher for the

1:15.6

congressional baseball game. We're going to get a little inside behind the scenes peak on the

1:24.0

reconciliation process and a right-wing perspective on what we are going to talk about in our

1:31.2

monologue, which is, of course, the unrest in Los Angeles.

1:39.2

So where do we begin?

1:42.6

I'm going to go in three different buckets here. All right. I'm going to go

1:47.6

issues, then I'm going to go people, then I'm going to go politicians. It's a Neapolitan,

1:55.9

but just know that I like chocolate and vanilla more than I like strawberry.

2:05.9

It's going to be one of those Neapolitans where there's just a strawberry thing on the end,

2:12.7

because I'm not in love with how our politicians are behaving in this scenario, and we'll get to them.

2:17.6

But first, let's talk about what started all of this, of course, and that is ICE raids,

2:23.0

Immigrations and Customs Enforcement, raids in Los Angeles.

2:29.7

One of the things that we've said on this show for a very long time is that when Donald Trump won, and you win on the promise of the largest deportation effort in American history. A few things then

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