Farmers problem in central california

 you're going to want to stick around to the end of this video what I heard about the future of our food supply is terrifying I didn't know anything about it beforehand but I'm glad I picked the right guy to talk to just wow well here's a typical farmer one of the men are armed forces and we at home depend upon for food and boy oh boy is he busy is Machinery scarce is gasoline is racing the tires on his truck are wearing down the good old American Farmer folks were tough and Macho and had no excuses sun up to sun down and all it was a very honorable profession to work hard on the farms and provide some would say that's what made us such a great nation this is what your typical Farm worker looks like now they're still tough and Macho and work all day the difference is just about everyone out here is from Central America did you know there's a place in the United States where 97 percent of the population's Hispanic it's true we are in it right now but by the way things are going this place might not even be here one day foreign you know what that is that's a machine picking crops one day this here machine will probably replace a lot of Migrant field workers currently these dudes can Harvest certain crops but one day machines like this will be able to plant pick and sort just about everything we grow but that's a long time away or is it we're here in central California this region is by far the country's biggest producer of agriculture it's not even close they could probably feed half the world if they needed to all but eight percent of the field workers out here are Hispanic it's been like that for like 50 years now this is Huron population 6000. this is Fresno County which is just about smack dab in the middle of California's agriculture country as you can get if you look at a chart of the poorest cities in California you'll see at the top Huron 40 of the people who live here live in poverty that means the average employed person here makes less than 20K a year most of their expensive possessions are just their cars and their wedding rings but I don't think they're going to be here forever almost every single person in this city is a temporary field worker they can make about 20 bucks an hour and I don't know if they limit the number of hours you can work these days but it's tough work you knew that already every little bit of money these farmworkers can save they do they send some back home but their biggest goal is to try to buy a house of their own and maybe transition out of this type of work a lot of the kids who grow up here wind off going to college too but are these people in Huron unhappy do they even care that they're considered poor this all sure does look different than an Atherton where I was just the day before that's the wealthiest place in the country where people earn more in a year than many of these people will ever make in their lives of course as we watch this video there's thousands of migrants at our Southern border hoping to gain entry so they can find some respectable work some of them will probably wind up here in Huron robots aren't the biggest threat to the future of farm labor wherever you go in California there's drama and here is no exception in Fresno County their drama is all about water there's been a drought here and agencies have been cutting off water access for Farmers all over this County that means a lot of the lettuce onion and tomato fields nearby are in jeopardy you only have to go back 10 years for the last Water Crisis here back then a lot of farmers had to let their crops just rot in the fields and by the end of it all almost half of all field workers had no work there were signs all over here on that said Congress created Dust Bowl at one point it looked like this entire city would become a ghost town well it's kind of happening again all over the Central Valley there are once again fields that are being left to rot there's just not enough water plus uh oh we've seen this before America we're starting to import more food from other countries now that'll put people out of work that's why a lot of people in Huron save their cash they never know when there's going to be another fork in the road it used to be during harvest season here the population in Huron would triple there'd be 20 or 30 people crammed into these small houses today there's families leaving here on trying to see if they need to find another line of work but let's just put aside the notion that these folks take government Aid these are good hard-working honest people the last time the Water Crisis hit a lot of the residents here were too embarrassed or proud to take free food and clothing we don't want handouts we want work they said I wish our citizens thought that way did you have 75 of a household's water usage is for lawns oh man Mappy I water my front and backyards every day do you think I should stop so that the city won't go bankrupt I don't think one person matters that much we all need to okay I'll stop anybody else want to stop watering their lawns too no laughs it doesn't take very long to drive around here on it's just a few neighborhoods really it's a very beige basic place simple homes that are well maintained some parts of town look like something you'd see in Mexico the average home price here is 250k which is an absolute steal in this state this house sold for fourteen thousand five hundred dollars not too long ago not too shabby here's what the most expensive home in town looks like this place sold for 300K a bit ago just a nice quiet house on the edge of almond fields it's very quiet here I was actually really surprised when I saw the crime numbers in Huron apparently it's three times more dangerous here than in the average California City I read about stories of gangs and Drug trades taking hold here one mayor had his car shot up by a machine gun and a council member had her home bombed and another mayor's son was assassinated my god well we're going to get to the bottom of that when we talked to huron's current mayor in a bit who I have to say is maybe the coolest politician I've ever talked to you actually might be surprised to hear that huron's pretty Progressive in his growth it's definitely not stagnant here there's a medical center here now and they have a fire department here and a police station too Huron has a newish elementary school the high school kids here have an hour-long bus ride though that sucks it's 90 minutes to get to anything that might be considered somewhat entertaining there's 10 Mexican restaurants and a park in town that's just about it but I don't think the Huron adults have a lot of time for fun anyways and since I was here I had to try the tacos it does not get any more authentic than that people you know they were pretty much the best tacos I ever had and there's some cops back there and I'm drinking my cerveza in the parking lot and it said I'm gonna get in trouble so I better go and we're going to talk about the town's tacos with the mayor too tacos foreign everything in California is political the whole water shortage problem is leaving entire cities here worrying about survival the higher ups in Sacramento they think the water shortage is being caused by a change in our climate so by 2035 every car sold in this state will have to be electric though it's actually debatable whether or not electric vehicles are actually better for the environment or not since you know making the batteries is so extensive and check out this transition Huron is the greenest migrant Farm worker community in the country the city bought a bunch of electric cars that residents can borrow and go wherever they want for free what that's just crazy a place where just about half the place is in poverty and everybody's from South of the Border they're leading the way to be 100 Green in California there's a commercial about it and everything he likes like a superhero it's a California with the reason I'm sure there's some strange looks when a migrant Farm worker and a cowboy hat climbs out of a Tesla and downtown Bakersfield there's another interesting twist to the whole green thing the drought's making land unfarmable so the state's now putting in solar panels in former Fields well somebody has to make those solar panel Parts Huron people are being trained to do just that so in an ironic twist the sun is taking away jobs but giving jobs right back in return folks South of the Border are very hard workers they take pride in their work and they don't cost a lot of money they're just nice people most of them are just friendly good-natured folks who go to church and love their families it's too bad a lot of our population isn't as innocent and honest humble and hardworking as folks out here in Huron I have to say this is way nicer than a lot of places in San Bernardino it's way better here than a lot of Los Angeles there's no homelessness and ghetto people walking around you'd have crackheads everywhere you have to worry about your car window getting broken people aren't rude and blowing weed smoke at your kids inside the gas station what the hell California take a lesson from here on I say but it's all very odd so much wealth is generated here but the residents hardly see any of it they just patiently Keep Their Heads down hoping for a little piece of the American dream that is unless the drought runs them out of here or this does then what will they do now normally some of you skip the interviews at the end of these videos but you need to watch the upcoming conversation I'm not gonna lie it paints a really scary feature for our nation's food supply so Manuel you told me on the phone that big cities like LA and San Francisco don't care about field workers what did you mean by that well They Don't Really Care by the farmer or the field worker that produces the food for this country this world they don't because they don't worry about any of the things that are happening to Farmers and the Farm Workers around this country case in point we have Farm Workers that have been waiting to get their work authorization card their green card for 30 years 30 years and the farmers and the Farm Workers have been paying into the Social Security Administration and this Congress and this Senate have not at all concerned themselves about their status in 30 years we haven't done any immigration other than what Ronald Reagan did called irka and those workers every day go to work at four in the morning three in the morning or five in the morning because of what they have to do with the farmer and they prepare the food irrigation tractor work harvesting packing you name it these workers are preparing all this food even during covet nobody worried about the farm worker during covet the people in these large metropolitan cities don't really worry about even where the water they they say that the farmers are using all the water how can a farmer use the water if he's producing the food the water that he's using is to produce the food for you people to eat that you go to the grocery store and you buy it that the farm worker irrigates harvests cultivates processes packets puts it on a truck and sends it off to the store yeah you're with the Nissan Farmers League what what is your organization it's a farm worker grower organization that was developed in the 1970s okay to deal with the unionization under Cesar Chavez who's the okay so why why have these people been waiting 30 years to get their Green Card why why the delay on that because Congress doesn't want to vote on it Congress doesn't want to deal with this type of issue I mean even today under this Administration we have next week to finish out a senate version of the immigration bill that's went from the house to the Senate and it's been sitting there now for a year and a half why won't they vote on it I don't understand just because they don't want to deal with immigration because they want to use it for their election per for their re being voted into office so they use that as The Leverage oh we're going to deal with immigration this year we're going to really work hard on getting immigration done fraud we're gonna we're gonna do immigration we're going to do border uh safety we're going to do a bunch of good things and never happens never happens yeah what what percentage of so at the border there's thousands and thousands of people waiting to try to get in um what percentage of the people that come into the country from South of the Border go out and work in fields do you think we have not had an increase into our agriculture over the past um probably five to six years even if they're coming in they're not coming into agriculture why why not because of the drought and the cutbacks in production and all the stuff on here just all of that stuff combination yeah and um knowing that there's no work authorization and that um they come in here for maybe amnesty or not amnesty but for Asylum they come in for that and then they're being held and waiting for their court date or whatever it is so for them and agriculture is very seasonal so so they're going to go to where there's a job that could be more full-time which could be now that covet's opened up um they are now going into the restaurants they're going into Construction uh light duty Manufacturing in those areas but in agriculture we have not had an increase from workers coming from the border that have been coming in over the past five years what's the future of farming in California I hear drought I hear robotic picking I hear water issues I hear that we're buying produce from overseas now I Farms are clearly going to rot there's less production in California and Central Valley right now are you worried about the future of Agriculture production in California I'm worried about the communities in these rural communities we probably have about maybe a hundred small rural communities maybe even more in the in the state in the San Joaquin Valley we've got uh probably 48 rural small communities they are the ones that are going to hurt dramatically not Los Angeles not San Francisco or even Sacramento they're not going to hurt at all they ain't going to be an impact the only thing they care about and that is to go to the grocery store and go get it that's all they care about but agriculture as small farmers in our state are Sacramento speaks forkedly out of their mouth okay and that they want to protect the small Farmer they say that we're going to protect the small minority farm and all that no they craft legislation and regulations we're not even talking to agriculture other than just the union just the union okay but that's not agriculture and we've lost more small farmers I've lost more small farmers in my organization 40 acre 50 acre 80 acre are gone and they're in their 70s and 80s is there like a percentage that you could prefer frame of reference on how percentage that of Farm Workers and Farms that we've lost and what you think it's going to be in the next 10 years oh I would say um we used to be about close to 800 000 in 2000 probably in the whole year even with the migrant stream and today probably have oh I'm going to say when the west side goes out probably 450 farming pit so almost half of the field workers are now gone where do you think we'll be in 10 years how many of that 450 you think will be left half so half wow so what we're gonna lose just to give you uh Nick an example I have about four and a half million acres in the San Joaquin Valley okay under Sigma the Water Crisis issue where the water goes to the fish and not to the workers not to agriculture not to the consumption of food I'm going to take out a million acres by the year 20 25 26 27 year I'm going to take out a million Acres on the west side of the San Joaquin Valley that means that the town you went and saw Huron will probably be very much three or four times maybe even 70 percent smaller than what you saw and several other smaller towns will probably pretty much start to dry up so it's not a good picture for the small rural community because of what the Water Crisis has happened and the behavior of the state and the state legislature that have demonized Agriculture and the Farm Workers in the sense because they have blamed Farmers for taking the water but how do you take water if you're growing food you have to get the water somewhere to grow the food don't you well you know they make a lot of silly decisions in Sacramento you're you're just one of the victims of of the of the lack of uh sensibility coming out of Sacramento I I guess the question is um where are we going to get our food well let me ask you this question Nick when you wake up in the morning you know that your food was grown in the United States and you know that your food was growing in California one of the most stringent food safety food producing countries or States but Nick wakes up and here's the ships Out on the Ocean unloading in Long Beach or Mississippi or New York Harbor containers coming from foreign countries with food in them kids they drink milk don't they most likely how would you like to have your milk coming in from a third world country milk look what happened in China in 2004 with all those kids that died in China because of the contamination of what happened with milk canned milk so we're Outsourcing our food now we're going to be Outsourcing our food that's what's going to be happening and shame on us and I hope that when we do that that there is a real slap in the face of the Congress Sacramento and the large metropolitans that have demonized agricultural farmers and Farm Workers because we could have taken care of and we can't take care of these workers they are an integral part of everything we do if it wasn't for the farm worker we wouldn't have the food we have at all and when you when you went through that small town you went through a town that has a great family heritage for for Generations and if you went through Avenel or if you went through um Farmersville or you went through a roasty Cutler or Orange Cove or even Patterson is disappearing up north going in with houses and houses for the Bay Area good land great land and the governor now was putting solar on good Farmland solar you'll never be able to put it back into the farming and mechanization can only be so much you can't make a nice and pick grapes with a machine not in not in your lifetime even I've seen videos that show it that they're making them they're picking grapes yeah yeah I've seen it I guess the question the the final question is what where are all of these 400 000 field workers going to go what are they going to do if farming in California is slowly put out of business well the question is we took advantage of the farmer and the farm worker to get free food in the sense and so what you did is that now those workers are going to lose their social security because they're not eligible to get it now they're going to be 65 years old in 10 years they'll be 70 years old and we will have not allowed them to get their social security at all so they're going to end up going back to the country of origin Honduras Mexico whatever you know they're going to be going back to those countries because they won't be able to draw any Social Security here how do they live you don't think that there's another they can't get another job doing something else is there anything they can do that to transition from farming is there something else that we could use them for that's their whole life and that's their knowledge pruning irrigating tractor work now will there be some yes there's going to be some but the Farms will no longer be a family farm the farm will be a corporate Farm owned by investors who only care to invest in the land for X period of time and then dump it not really caring about the land or caring about even the workers get in to make money and get out because the small farmer is gone the medium-sized farmer is going to be gone and then a large farmer what is a large farmer Thousand Acres that person is going to be gone can you imagine you can't make it on a thousand acres in this state in this state and you're going to and it's going to get there I manual I gotta say this is a very depressing conversation I I didn't know it was going to be uh like this I I think that people need to understand what's happening and um I don't know if there's anything that anybody can actually do to stop I think so there is but is that I hate to say it like this I think it's time that the farmers in this country but especially in this state and the Farm Workers strike against California and and don't work and don't produce food for a period of time and let the stores dry up I'm sorry until they see the importance of a farmer and a farm worker and what they do their families I think it's the only answer at the end of the day is that when you hit their pocketbook and you take away the food out of the stores just like when would you ever have believed in your lifetime that you would have saw a shortage of toilet paper during covet toilet paper of all things not food huh at the kind and now there's a big concern about food yeah there is so um I think if agriculture is going to survive it's going to have to change its ways and the people of this country and especially in this state in Sacramento are going to have to respect farmers and they don't and they don't re they don't respect the farmer and the farm worker they say they do they lie they absolutely lie it's sad and that's all I can say is that and it's sad for you and your generation to have to be put through that we my generation and even younger ones have caused this problem in Sacramento and in Washington D.C and then suddenly Sacramento has gotten into a virus a disease you know the governor of this state has never met with the farmers the farm groups he has not and he's come to Fresno probably 50 times 40 times and never said hey I want to meet with the AG leaders I want to talk with these farmers to see what can I do to help make things better it didn't happen did you just eat did you eat some of that amazing food I made some boil right now man but Robert cleaned a bunch of stuff downstairs did that the the tacos at the jet shop are the best tacos I've ever had Ray I believe it you know what the jetstop just close their doors so these guys um they re-relocated to the liquor store uh right in the liquor store so next time you can they'll be at rhinos yeah I bet that it's hard to compete you got to be really good in Huron or you're gonna go out of business man yeah because uh we're all we're all Taco eaters bro we don't we we know when people are trying to [ __ ] around you know well talk to me about Huron man uh it seems like a really nice place with nice people um I what is it like there right now currently in Huron right now it's extremely cold man and uh it's a crazy um cold spell coming through from up North and it's hitting us as well and I've been giving out some of those uh mylar blankets to some of the homeless folks we probably got about 10 homeless folks out here and um and so here on right now it's pretty dead in terms of work I think there's some lingering work in the pomegranate finishing up uh some organic cotton that they're trying to harvest but if it's foggy they can't do it so my brother uh he works in that uh and and that the company that Harvest cotton so that aside because it was too foggy but um but really in the winter time it's pretty dead in terms of work maybe there's some folks uh uh working in Orchards or they used to be none of the machines pretty much uh trim all the trees but um but no it's uh it's it's it's it's it's pretty rough out here and you're not with the drought you know there's not as much farm jobs but there are uh many gigawatts of solar power that are being uh uh solar parks that are being installed and we got about 18 years worth of solar Park uh development and so uh one thing that I'm doing I'm also a founder of the leap Institute it's a non-profit I brought it uh to Huron with me when I moved back I still have my office in Fresno but I opened up a shop here and we do a number of things uh but one of the things that we do is provide solar uh installation uh uh uh trainings certified trainings for uh for folks to transition them from uh from the farm from harvesting crops to harvesting the sun yeah because I mean it seems like a lot of the people there are gonna have to worry about their future because the Farms are not maybe be going to be as plentiful job wise as they were so I was going to ask you there is a transitional opportunity for them then that's good yeah and that's one of the things that we're doing in uh in our what we call the uplift the Valley Green Workforce Development program uh we also we also train the electric vehicle operators we have a fleet of 11 electric cars and we transport farmworker families to their medical appointments we're going to be starting up a new system to transport students to college and university and uh we're in this 2023 we're going to start providing a training for folks who get certified in the electric vehicle charger maintenance and insulation so we're doing we're doing a bunch of stuff out of this little shop we I got here my hometown doesn't even isn't even doing any of that stuff see I'm from San Bernardino you know I don't think they have any of that stuff going on so that's yeah a fun fact is uh my city it's a small City a little over 6 000 on paper in reality I think we have more like closer to nine ten thousand but uh we're the city in the country with the most TV Chargers per capita I got we got 30 level two Chargers and four DC fast Chargers uh here in the community uh we just need uh the for the you know we have farmworker families average uh median household income million household income of about 23k uh probably a little more than that but uh but the electric vehicles are still not not affordable enough you know uh one study that was done a number of years back shared that about 60 at least 60 percent of Farm Workers were using 40 of their monthly wages for Trans transportation so uh so yeah so you know and that's being able to provide the service to transport them uh and then we we get the insurance to pay and it it saves them 100 bucks a trip because otherwise they would have to pay 100 bucks for somebody to give a ride to Fresno or or somewhere else and you know it's uh there's a lot of elements that are that have been uh hitting my families you know who earn a very uh modest wage if I could put it that way uh hit them with different costs at really I mean just perpetuate poverty in the area so trying to change that that's great man so when when it's off season do most of those people still live in Huron what or do they take yeah right now yeah that is the case I mean in terms of Migrant uh migrants uh migrant Farm Workers it's way less nowadays you know all those homes like does somebody own all the homes and then they rent from them or do they own them they there's some families that have settled but there's a lot of families that rent and um and there's not enough housing in my community but we are building two uh two multi-family developments about 60 something units per per development and uh we're working on we just finished building the development of single-family uh homes and we're working on another 55 to 80 single family homes so it's uh you know there's uh there's people that are in apartments right now that are ready to buy a house and and they don't live here on they don't want to leave Iran you know they they prefer the kind of like uh wait till the homes are built you know uh once you grow a community once you are you know part of a community it's it's not something that it's easily easy to to to grow anywhere else you know it takes a while to grow Community where where your families have known each other for two three generations you know yeah that's that's great um I hear the crime is surprisingly rated higher than what it feels like when you're there I drive around up hills like the safest place um I heard about former mayors kids dying and houses getting blown up is is there like a game are you worried about your safety what's going on there dude no I think uh back in the days uh you know about 10 plus years back there was a lot of conflict you know um and and that pretty much has died down I mean the conflict that exists is more uh more um idea wise rather than you know threat wise and so so it's I think it's calmed down a lot and in terms of the gangs that we used to have you know a lot of uh the shock collars are basically you know stored away right now on vacation and some of them on vacation for good but uh color the what the bad people well the the shock collars of uh some of the gangs you know they're basically locked up well not basically they are locked up uh or have uh left the city and so uh so the that activity has uh has uh has gone down a great deal uh but what's more important and the way I see it is uh you know early on when I was still in college I started a youth group here mentored a lot of young people with the hopes that they had some of them stick around and do the continue the organizing uh that that didn't happen and when I came back you know and people complained about the violence and uh and and the on one end they'll complain about the violence or the youth gangs on the other end they don't volunteer one hour or you know any time of their life to advance a youth uh programming there's a lot of work you know and I continue to try to convince people you know yeah uh if we want to see a community that is thriving we got to understand that it doesn't fall onto our laps you know and it's something that we got to sacrifice time we gotta sacrifice energy and sometimes we got to sacrifice resources you know how did you end up in here um my father ended up in Iran in 1951 there's an orphan Farm worker uh from Michoacan undocumented and there were people here from uh the cluster Villages from where we're from after Michoacan and so I was born in Fresno I grew up here and then the neighboring City and uh and so I've always had a you know that that that special place in my heart for euron you know because this is where I kind of started growing up and I would be here every when my parents split up uh I had to grow up you know out there where my parents was at where my mom was at but I would always come back home or come back to here with my dad and my original friends that I've you know some of which I've don't even remember when I when we met because we're like infants you know and uh they're still my friends to this day and so uh just I don't know just the vibe the story and the fact that this is a community that has so much potential and I want to be be part of the unlocking of that potential and taking it to the next level so if we're going to survive this it's going to have to be together otherwise it's going to be disaster yeah I have to say for a small field worker uh Community way out in the middle of Central Valley I I like it a lot it's not what I expected and I think a lot of people should be inspired by the amount of work that you guys are doing to change your your future and take hold of of what you guys need to do to exists the way you want to and not not be holding to the state and and keep keep fighting and it's a great place so hopefully everybody can continue to make your own grade and and I I'm worried that you guys are gonna possibly not have a lot large population one day um so hopefully that doesn't happen yeah you know and that's part of the struggle right you know the drought is no joke and uh The Orchards and the the solar parks are not labor intensive initially to build the solar park because there's a lot of jobs but the maintenance of one there's not so there there needs to be something that exists uh some policy where uh it's kind of like being a village next to a diamond mine right and then the villagers still have to walk two miles to get water you know that's unjust right and if all these riches are next door so that seminar in this case where there's uh there's uh many gigawatts of power uh tens of millions of dollars being generated per year well there's no reason why there shouldn't exist a community benefit uh uh uh agreements or programs in place where the people are benefiting from from that uh richness because it's displacing the jobs that otherwise could have existed on the C season by season bases understandably that drought is is impacting and kind of helping Advance some of that but it's it's it shouldn't matter because the people that have been here and continue to be here are part of that population that has helped maintain the food chain in the country in this nation and has uh because they've sacrificed and done the labor which is is a skilled labor not anybody can get out of the out of the home off the street and jump into the field and think they're doing a good job they'll get fired right or hang in that hot sun at uh 90 degrees or more you know uh and during the summer during the pandemic Farm Workers are still traveling in a van you know soldiers Soldier buses the same and carpooling to get those fields to make sure that America had food to eat affordable food to eat you know not so affordable to them because of the wages that they earn right and the lack of benefits that they uh that that they they have to deal with but they've been keeping the food chain connected during the pandemic during forest fires there's pictures countless pictures where they're working the fields with a handkerchief over their their face and with a red sky you know and so the sacrifice has been tremendous and it's it's now they're calling Farm Workers essential workers they're calling us essential workers you know and we've been essential forever and more than essentially we've been critical you know so uh these projects that are ranting that we beat a clean energy State and that are providing uh millions of dollars to investors corporations and so forth should be also monies that should become available to help transition Farm Workers into uh green economies and help ensure that the education of their children is one that provides them the science and technology and math education to to be in the field as inventors and Engineers attorneys professor is Teachers you know professionals you know that's what should follow well cool man well thank you very much Ray um I'm a big fan of Huron and the reason I went there was kind of check it out um and uh I think it's going to be a lot of people will be interested to see it I'm a big fan of yours I'm a big fan of your city so you keep up the hard work and leading the way out there and keep doing your thing man okay you got it man and so next time you come to town let me know and I'll get you one of these oh what is that uh is that a free pass in case I get pulled over just in case City if you're on the pal pin heart of the valley all right I'd like that yeah man I'll put that on in case I'm drinking my cerveza in the parking lot again and the cops come over I'll just be like hey look right right Leon gave me this pin I'm good yeah now we're really gonna take you in are you looking to move and need advice I do Consulting that's right I'll sit down and talk about where the next perfect place for you and your family should be I do it all the time together let's find you a new home that's safe and checks all your boxes and I can also help you find your new house too email me and I'll work with you on not just helping you figure out where to move but I can help you find your perfect home too that's right I know awesome reliable agents all over the country and I'd love to connect you to somebody who can help you search for that perfect home hey guys if you learned something new about America or what it's like to live in America great you should think about subscribing and turning on your notifications you can also click one of these videos or playlists for more this is Sage Nick's manager this has been Corner House action

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