
No Filter in Paradise
Two friends, one's straight one's Gay, with different backgrounds, interest, upbringing & outlook in life come together to have a Fun & honest conversation and discuss their opinions on different topics... with no filter.
No Filter in Paradise
Stephany Sevinger: Ami no ta mi tata | EP 172
Nos a sinta cu Stephany Sevinger, #4 riba lista di AVP. Stephany tambe ta e yui di Benny Sevinger. Nos a touch topico nan tokante su tata, plan nan pa San Nicolas, penshonado nan, Cannabis, su background, enseñansa y mucho mas
Mayoria di nos pregunta nan ta di boso, e hende nan di Aruba. Nos tey pa ta boso voz den e conversation aki cu e politico nan.
Danki pa ta parti di e No filter fam, Enjoy the episode ❤️
Vota pa ken: https://www.instagram.com/votapaken?i...
Face the future: / selfmakingp. .
Danki a tur nos sponsor nan cu ta support nos:
Do It Center: / doitcenteraruba
Chill Beer: / chillaruba
Magic Mango: / magicaruba
ProFrame: / proframearuba
A.T.A: / arubatourism
AHATA: / arubahata
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR CHANNEL: / @nofilterinparadise
INSTAGRAM | https://www.instagram.com/nofilterinp...
Stop pretending. You're not here to be a judge. You're here to fucking ban us. Mike makes a fine number Kiko 30, 29. He's fucking.
Speaker 2:Mike Iman. He's still gonna get more votes than anybody else on the list. What are you talking about? Be for real.
Speaker 3:If the government really wants to take over the country, they'll just continue with the vote. But you know ego plays a role. If you know that, you know that we'll continue with the election of another country.
Speaker 2:It plays a role, so you know we're going to continue the vision of another party, and that's difficult because, for those reasons, we're not in the same way, though but if you don't like Samir, you can imagine you're here the whole day with him and he doesn't like you.
Speaker 3:He doesn't have anyone to push with him, with Ricardo Cruz.
Speaker 2:Yet, Pepe Adam.
Speaker 1:Pepe Adam let's not go there. I don't have any income to support Cokie Masco, ricardo Cruz yet PPA. I'm going to push it. Did he do PPA? Let's not go there. Hey, I'm going to do the Atmos. No, that's low.
Speaker 2:Hey, fuck Brr da, da da Shots fired. Don't be on Facebook.
Speaker 1:Otmar, otmar, otmar, otmar, otmar, all right. Hey, yo what's up.
Speaker 2:LA Chemistess Guys, welcome back to the ABC Islands' favorite podcast, no Filter in Paradise, a show about anything and everything between two fucking friends. One is super fucking straight and I got my ring today.
Speaker 3:Hey, hey, hey.
Speaker 1:Shit Ridiculous.
Speaker 2:One is super fucking straight and I got my ring today ridiculous, uh, super straight, and the other one super duper gay baby. So, guys, as always and shark hates it when I say this this is not a political show. This is a show about two friends asking politicians questions that you guys ask. So we're here to answer your, you know, ask your fucking questions. That's it. So so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so, so so so you guys.
Speaker 2:Just drop the audio, but first, before we start, I want to say sorry With a butcher number On social media.
Speaker 1:But when you?
Speaker 2:message me. Oh man, I see you, I'm writing to you, I'm so happy.
Speaker 1:Not man, it's my message.
Speaker 2:Sorry, oh man. Guys, we have Stephanie. Welcome Stephanie.
Speaker 3:Hello, hello, do you?
Speaker 2:want to say hello to.
Speaker 3:Steph, Of course yes.
Speaker 2:Let's go. I think I have another nickname. I'm going to come up with a nickname.
Speaker 3:Yes, everybody has nicknames.
Speaker 1:I'm very cute. Well, okay, I'm going to come up with a nickname. I'm going to come up with another nickname this is Gisali. This is Gisali. My name is Steffi. It has to be cute, you know You'll figure it out, I'll figure it out.
Speaker 3:No nicknames, I'm Latin right, so if you call me Tefi on Tevo, don't do that in Aruba?
Speaker 1:Oh no, not.
Speaker 3:Tefi.
Speaker 2:Don't do that in Aruba, please. Oh God, what's your name? Fulano.
Speaker 3:Colombia. Oh shit, if you call my cousin please don.
Speaker 1:Oh god, no, I would punch them.
Speaker 2:Even though Lightlight Me love. What's the nickname? Hey, we have a question For the audience. We have a question, basically, icebreaker, which is About ProFrame. Can you bring A case in the room, please, one with a bag ProFrame.
Speaker 3:Okay, well, do.
Speaker 2:ProFrame Okay, window with a door.
Speaker 3:Maybe I don't hear you, but ProFrame Okay ventana no comporta Perfect.
Speaker 1:We put them on the map.
Speaker 3:Perfect, go nowhere else. I won't keep looking. Say no more.
Speaker 2:It's the first question. No, it's the hangout with oh my God, see, it's so hard.
Speaker 3:No, I hang out with two friends and I love them both. No, you don't.
Speaker 1:Okay, you gotta choose one though. No one, no, you have to choose one. You have to choose one. You have to choose one. You have to choose one. You have to choose one, you have to choose one.
Speaker 3:She's like, let's go this way, it's not right, it's not left. It's straight.
Speaker 2:Topa, you know the meme of like let them never do your next move, yeah.
Speaker 1:Well, Mike the Meg.
Speaker 2:I'll go with this one here.
Speaker 1:Mike the Chill though, so that's a good one. It was a good conversation we this one here, mike DeChiel, though, so that's a good one. It was a good conversation.
Speaker 2:We love Mikey by the way, do you know your last trip? I don't know, I don't know. Are you trying to?
Speaker 3:get inside information.
Speaker 2:Oh, no, no, we already got it. He said it. He said it, he said it. Oh, that person, oh my God, okay.
Speaker 3:Well, it's basically to teach my hobby, to make it your way to make it, your experience.
Speaker 2:That's good, that's good.
Speaker 3:Of course that's a nice teacher I like to talk to her.
Speaker 2:How old are you?
Speaker 3:27.
Speaker 2:How old are you? How old are you? I'm't know First day.
Speaker 3:Oh, it's 2017. Oh, you do the math. No, I'm joking. 19, 19, 20.
Speaker 2:And then, who was the? Who was the first, first thing you voted for?
Speaker 3:Ah, that's an easy one. Banning Zyvenger. Okay, good, all right.
Speaker 2:Now, I wanted you to answer that because this is a follow-up question. Okay, I know, right, I love that.
Speaker 3:I know, I know, I know, I know, no, uh-uh, because you're on the list. No, you're on the list. You're on the list, no, but there on the list.
Speaker 2:You're on the list, but there are other people who can respect that outside of your own party. They're like ooh Sorry.
Speaker 3:What the fuck are you saying sorry for?
Speaker 2:I feel like I'm getting eyes over here on my neck.
Speaker 3:I don't know, oh my God, I don't know if my mouth is supposed to say I vote for Miguel.
Speaker 1:Okay, nice, I vote for Miguel. Damn Alright. Everybody mentions this man.
Speaker 2:Because he's always like he's, very vocal about everything he does Like it's kind of like your attitude.
Speaker 1:It's like someone I could hang out with it's the gays. It's fun, he's fun. You like the gays? No, yeah, I like it. What's the vibe?
Speaker 2:I like the vibe. What's the vibe? I like the vibe. Yeah, I know.
Speaker 3:No, no, it's okay, it's okay. I like them straight too. Wait what.
Speaker 2:I'll leave it.
Speaker 3:Nothing gets cut here, nada, all right. So which type?
Speaker 2:of music. Do you like Music? I like everything. No, no, no, for real. Okay, give me top three.
Speaker 3:Let's say bachata, okay, okay.
Speaker 2:In different genres. I want to make something. I want to make something like comedy, oh shit, okay, stop. So I have a side Salsa. Let's do salsa, okay, who is your favorite artist right now?
Speaker 3:Micro TDAH.
Speaker 2:Who Exactly he's like a?
Speaker 3:Venezuelan trap.
Speaker 2:Very low key, but I like him. I took salsa classes, but that's pretty much it. That's not in, got a little bit of waistline.
Speaker 3:What, to be honest, I took some classes but that's pretty much it, that's not in Got a little bit of waistline.
Speaker 2:What.
Speaker 1:Never mind the fuck.
Speaker 2:How long have you been in Aruba One? Month and a half, two months Shit, yes, but it's October, but you said you've been on vacation several times. I'm not asking. I'm just asking. I'm not asking you anything. I'm not asking you anything. I'm not asking you anything.
Speaker 3:No, I've lived in Aruba almost my whole life. I went to Aruba when I was 18. According to me, I was 18. In 2016, I went Okay, no, I went to study. I went to Miami. I studied at.
Speaker 2:Miami Dade College, florida International. You went to Florida. I did college Florida.
Speaker 3:International Florida, Holland, for some reason. No, I didn't. No, I've been back. I found another place. I didn't go there. The whole thing happened.
Speaker 2:And now I'm going to Holland, oh, okay.
Speaker 3:I've lived in Holland for two years, so for him I'm not going to go back.
Speaker 2:You're saying that you're going to be in Holland by being alive.
Speaker 3:Yes, which country is the most over underrated? The place is not overrated.
Speaker 2:that's a hard one be honest like if you're like no, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not, I'm not.
Speaker 1:I'm not, because it's true.
Speaker 3:I mean now it's old, it's overly crowded. If you go to a water, it's not as it was. If you go to a water, it's overrated. Baby Beach for one, For two, you know for two. In front of Ex-Weston, you laugh a lot.
Speaker 1:For some reason you laugh a lot.
Speaker 3:Really my friend kills me.
Speaker 1:I've never even been to that beach. What torren.
Speaker 2:It's like the little thing that they keep fixing every fucking year.
Speaker 3:You don't know it.
Speaker 2:Sure, what the fuck. Where do you live, san Nicolas?
Speaker 1:Of course.
Speaker 2:Like hello. Yeah, where do you live, san Nicolas? Of course Like hello.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I can tell you about those, for sure.
Speaker 2:No like by the Rio, in front of the Rio, there's like this little big thing in the water, like a pier.
Speaker 1:I mean locals aren't really allowed to swim at Rio, so I don't really go there that much, but that's like one of the most local places.
Speaker 3:Surprisingly of the most local places. Yeah, surprisingly, yeah like for what locals? Because not?
Speaker 1:well, at least it used to be. I don't know how it is now, I've never.
Speaker 2:I'm sorry that was the last question actually, okay, no okay, underrated, oh my god.
Speaker 3:Um, no, no, no, no, no, no. Don't say that I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it, I like it.
Speaker 2:I like it. I used to do a lot of off-roading With a hiking person.
Speaker 3:No off-roading. I used to do it a lot, but I stopped at the car and went down Because there's no light pollution. I just drove around, I walked in the stars.
Speaker 2:It's a really nice place. That is nice, but you also do the Cerro Colorado, yes. Like the whole star thing.
Speaker 3:Cerro Cristal. Nobody goes there anymore and we used to love it alright.
Speaker 1:I have to tap into this English.
Speaker 3:English is my thing, but I can't make it a little bit?
Speaker 1:yeah, for sure we can make it. But it's sad. It's been a long time since the end of the year.
Speaker 2:We're going to step into it alright hey guys welcome it's the biggest audience I know. Right come to Michigan we're a gang. Michigan with a gang. Gang. Alright, that was the round for the icebreaker. Thank you to pro frame um um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um, um. So let's go into the first round. You came out of nowhere with a CD. Who does Stephanie see coming?
Speaker 3:Okay, I'm going to ask a croquette question.
Speaker 2:Croquette or pasta. Croquette With mustard or without mustard? With mustard, okay, good.
Speaker 3:Thank you. Okay, okay, she's a little water. I am over it.
Speaker 1:I'm like Jesus Christ we're always asking the same questions, but you?
Speaker 3:have to know if they don't like it with mustard. It's just criminal.
Speaker 2:It's criminal how about pão croququette with sauce and pizza? What?
Speaker 1:Thank you. I think Urso. Wait, was it Demesa or Urso?
Speaker 3:I've never heard of Demesa.
Speaker 1:Urso of Demesa, one of those two, it feels like an.
Speaker 2:Urso thing, I think it was Urso.
Speaker 1:Sorry, can you talk Sorry?
Speaker 2:Susanne, who is Stephanie Zivinger? Well, stephanie Zivinger is a mom, she's a girl she's a woman yes, she's a girl, she's a woman. She does a lot of things. Youth, a woman yes, I have a youth. Nice, I have a woman I have lots of things.
Speaker 3:I have a friend. A friend, I'm a nerd, a little bit of it, a professional, a young student, and now I have a politician.
Speaker 2:Nice, what have you achieved in the last year in America? In Aruba, what have you goals for the last year in America? What are your goals? Because I see that you have big accomplishments.
Speaker 3:Lately, I'm very proud that I won an award at the University of America to represent the University of China.
Speaker 2:Oh shit, Is that the year you want to pass? No, 2008. I'm never going to forget that year. I thought it was the best year ever.
Speaker 1:I want to know this. Okay, China.
Speaker 3:Yes, my school. I graduated with a highest honors, with a 3.7 GPA. I graduated from an honor society, and from the honor society I was invited to be part of a delegation to represent my university in China. So I was the only one from Miami to travel to represent the United States back then Damn.
Speaker 2:Nice.
Speaker 3:Yes, from Diplomacy to International Relations. So we went to a program where we went three ways we went to Beijing, we went to Xi'an and we went to Shanghai, so different universities of foreign policy that are here. We got to know the Minister of Foreign Affairs. Did you network? Yeah, of course. Okay, okay, we had friendships every day, of course.
Speaker 3:It was a solid group. I never forget people and exactly there was something that was eye-opening. I was studying politics in the West Western politics, a completely different place than the East so I was able to handle business there. It's a very important part for China and for me I don't know it's a little bit of a scary thing because I've never been there in so much time, and for me it's completely alone embark on this journey, and for me that's what I was able to do, I was able to handle. It's a sign of respect that you're going to be able to communicate with your family. So something like that is always like receiving a business card. If I receive a business card in China, I'm going to give it to two people.
Speaker 1:Two people. Yes, it's a signal of respect.
Speaker 2:That's very good, it's from the call and stuff.
Speaker 3:I have a date, I go out with him. I have a relationship with him on a personal level.
Speaker 2:I'm with him in front of him, I'm with him in the room, I'm with him in the living room. What the hell.
Speaker 1:No, but that's the respectful way to do that. No, but that's the respectful way to do that. But that's why most people's business don't last I know.
Speaker 3:I know I have to meet others. It's like a full-on dating thing, but it's not a philosophy. I have to meet people, but I have to do business with them. It's like that even in politics.
Speaker 2:So you're saying you're implementing this in your life?
Speaker 3:Of course, always For the moment. Even my friendships, people who are in my inner circle, I like to meet them, even with my colleagues in the party. Of course, great, not the past, the past.
Speaker 2:It's kind of off topic in terms of politics in America. If you were to go to America, would you consider yourself a Democrat or Republican?
Speaker 3:I think it's a little bit of a difficult question, but I feel like everyone is kind of leaning towards the same thing. It doesn't say a lot of different things, but the inner core of it is not just the same. Similar yes, it's not just the same Similar. Yes, it's kind of the same thing, so it's mixed. There are ideologies like you feel like Democrats, but there are like Conan. Like you feel like Republicans but financially like Republicans.
Speaker 2:On the human side, it's more like yes, a Democrat.
Speaker 3:But there's nothing but a liberal then. So you're both on the right side, a Democrat, but in Vienna they say no but a liberal then. So you two are a little right-sided. So politics in America, I don't want to see a difference true in. Europe, yes, no, no, yes we actually have options yes, we actually have options.
Speaker 2:Exactly, we actually have options and people have a vision, kind of like you know there's a goal but you have to go with it in a different way.
Speaker 3:Exactly exactly Like we did just then, but by left right, we choose to go straight.
Speaker 2:So Kiko, I feel like you're different Because I feel like you're new. You're not new in politics, but you're new as in being a politician.
Speaker 1:Sí, ¿qué te hace algo diferente de?
Speaker 2:la generación antigua y también de la nueva generación. ¿qué te hace algo aparte?
Speaker 3:Me gusta el hecho de que no es nuevo para mí. Me gusta que soy joven en edad. Yo estudié turco, pero me gusta la política porque ahora tengo cuatro años. Me gustó cuando est, but I studied Turkish here, but I did politics because I'm now four years old. I was 30 in 2001, so I'm very up close. So something that I want to have is what I have.
Speaker 1:I don't want to pay. I don't want to pay, charlie, come on, nothing, nothing, I went.
Speaker 3:I have a claim You're a snake.
Speaker 2:You have a late invoice.
Speaker 3:Really really.
Speaker 2:I'm hard.
Speaker 3:I'm a party flyer, I drive a car. I take a sticker no, no, no, no, no no.
Speaker 2:No, four years, dad.
Speaker 3:Four years, I'm like my first task was being cute.
Speaker 2:Which I did perfectly. I'm going to show you the back.
Speaker 3:That's it cute, which I did perfectly, I'll show you from the back.
Speaker 2:I'll send you a post. I like to give you a little bit, but I'll send it.
Speaker 3:No, but the fact that I have this experience and knowledge, because I have a knowledge database. When I was walking Wikipedia at this point Turkish I was like, hey, double check, right, I don't have any shame, no one has been knowing it all, but I study Turkish. I was like, hey, double check with him.
Speaker 3:But I'm not ashamed of it. No one has been knowing it all. I study Turkish, but you don't know everything. But I always like it. I always open up to new things and anything I don't know I open it up and I have six. Six is something that gives me an advantage of my band, which is very different, and with my perspective and vision of living in different places, of going to know Hopi and other places.
Speaker 1:Hopi, hopi. I mean the same thing as of right now. I feel like I'm going to accept everything that is linked to politics and all this good stuff, but let's take it back with it. I'm going to affect like a lot within a live stream of politics, because it's not something like hey, pa like, please go into politics, because you have to deal with the repercussions.
Speaker 1:The people will, for me, get put on blast and you have to deal with exactly people with a potato, but you have people with potatoes, so how did that affect your life growing up?
Speaker 3:no, it's weird. So how did that affect your life? Growing up, my sister basically didn't go to school. She worked hard. My dad used to bring her mom to the gym, or at night or at night, but I thought my dad had to go to school. My dad finished school so my dad would go to my mom's house to spend time with my dad. So my dad, if you don't want me, there are some meetings right. I'm working with these work bands, so for me it's all normal, it's? I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I was always there. I so I don't pay much attention to that.
Speaker 2:But I understand that you have obviously studied politics Was it always in your plan to go into politics at some point no.
Speaker 3:Seriously, then why?
Speaker 2:study politics.
Speaker 3:It's such a weird rollercoaster. I mean, everyone is young and has different aspirations.
Speaker 2:For sure.
Speaker 3:I was a veterinarian, I was a beast. If I met my mom, she would say fada, eat a beast, eat a cow Nobody likes.
Speaker 2:At some point, First of all, and then I realized, I didn't know how, at some point, as in como para cuidar, and you know, I have a little guy in the store that just walked around.
Speaker 3:I'm the new one actually. Turma hi I don't know how. At some point I was 13 years old, but my aunt, she had one in her house when she went out to the world and I was like, oh, that's cute, I wanted to have another one. And now, your mom Girl, I was like I'm going to be Animal Planet and I was like I'm going to be.
Speaker 2:Yeah, like I said, like Girl.
Speaker 3:And I was like even little birds were there with me, everything, everything.
Speaker 1:Wow, dr Doolittle and.
Speaker 3:I was like how can I make a change to maybe become a veterinarian? But now that I've grown up and I'm realizing that I'm going Okay, you stick to animals, though some change. I started with the pre-law mentality. I started with the pre-law mentality, but I realized that when I started studying law, I started with the law. I don't want to stay here.
Speaker 1:I want to travel.
Speaker 3:I want to know the world, I like languages, so for me, I started with the international. I found another course and I started with international relations. So I became an ambassador for animal rights. And then, going back to when I was in Aruba, school's trajectory wasn't 100% for me. I drove two trips so I was there by evening.
Speaker 2:Yeah, for sure, girl by then you didn't drive out for school like no judgements, and then that's the reason they told me not to become a veterinarian.
Speaker 3:I wanted the natural science that I had thinking about becoming a veterinarian, but it didn't like me. I bought a package so now now I yeah, since I'm a driver, I change my package. But other things I did and I realized, realized I had a good hobby, and then I told my mom and my dad Stop it, we're going to pay for school, we're going to start working, we're going to pay for school, yes, yes. So what happens next? I don't know. If I don't pay, I won't finish school.
Speaker 1:Oh, okay, that's it yeah, yeah, yeah. If I don't pay, I won't.
Speaker 2:It's like Girl, Girl.
Speaker 1:So now I'm like, yeah, yeah yeah, you're like no, what's going on?
Speaker 3:I was like girl, girl finish. Yes, yes, yes, yes. So now I'm a clown doctor. I decided to become a clown doctor.
Speaker 1:Oh shit.
Speaker 3:And I know there's an eye opening for me. So I work with older adults, I work with people with disabilities. I also work with people in hospitals mayor vos trajá con unos muchos con limitación, discapacidad vos trajá también con muchos en el hospital. Y esa aquí da una perspectiva, like a reality, de que está going out there, como de oh my God, it's eye-opening situations Y, with this in mind, ahora me voy a América, me di, okay, pre-law, maybe this is not it. International relations again, I was in an organization called United Nations of European Union, something like that, where they brought a stamp to make us look like beasts, with no way of making a stamp, or to make us look like minorities, with no way of making a stamp. And taking into consideration que tenía a Ayan aquí de 12 para 20 años, mi tata toda minister Y mi pora Wacky tiene vision plans de un lugar de su mente. Entonces ella hacía esa aquí en realidad Y a mi, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo, yo yo. And he made it happen. Politics can bring change. Politics can do it.
Speaker 1:That's their job.
Speaker 3:Yeah, exactly, but it doesn't always work that way, and I think that's a beautiful thing. It's like, oh, I can bring change, I can change people's lives going into politics.
Speaker 2:It's changing from the inside you know, yes, you can't do much from the outside, so okay, fuck it, I'm not going change some laws forcing it it's better if you know you don't have to wear it.
Speaker 3:You don't have to wear it, so I decided no, I'm going to study international relations and I'm looking at. I don't have any classes here, so I don't have any classes in the focus area of Aruba. I study politics in the Caribbean, latin American politics.
Speaker 2:So are you learning about American politics? No, can you apply it.
Speaker 3:No, no, no. I have the curriculum, I have the flexibility with the company. I don't have it, as opposed to if I go to the Netherlands. You just see it.
Speaker 2:you know it's like in the go to the Netherlands. You just see it. Yeah, it's like you debate the law, like, okay, I want to learn about something else.
Speaker 3:No, I don't have a list of classes that I've gone to and I don't have any more, so I don't have any more. I don't have to go to the market to get a job. I don't have a need to go there. Yeah, so eventually I want to do politics and that's something that I always have and I want to go through the election to confirm with my dad, to have the courage to go deep into it?
Speaker 2:how would you approach to even join politics? What was the first call? You got like oh shit, I'm doing this.
Speaker 3:I have so many pictures to send you. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no no no, it's about to go down.
Speaker 3:You were that kid, yeah, yeah, yeah. I was still on the podium as a grown woman and I wanted to do it, and Mike was also doing it, and that's when I wanted to go. Now I'm going to the Netherlands and that changes a bit. My mentality is like do I really want to do this? I have a job, I have a career going on. Do I really want to do this? But I'm going to do this. My dad told me that obviously I don't have to actively make a list if I'm not making a list. I'm always his supporter and he's willing to share everything I know about him and about us. So now I told him are you going on the list? And we all had doubts about it. But eventually he said Kiko, I want my political career, I'm going to do it, I'm going to give it a chance. And now he said to me do I want to really take it over? Do I want to do this?
Speaker 1:This was going to talk him out, but better. Ah, sali, I thought I thought Sali.
Speaker 3:Like no bitch, but better, you gonna do this shit. No, no, mike convinced me a little bit you just wanted to hit him like hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me, hold me. I'm going to wear a shirt, to be honest, but I'm really. I want to always, but I still want to go and pull. I understand.
Speaker 2:I was wondering it might be a little bit controversial.
Speaker 3:For me.
Speaker 2:Obviously, you're always around the cast, you're always in politics, You're always around your dad, mike, everybody. Would you expect number 4 to be your number? What number would you say? 4, yes, I would expect that she would be number 4 and if so, if not, why? And also with some people, she would react because she has been a ballerina for a long time. Damn, I've been doing this for like two elections and she comes around and gets number 4. I know it's an iffy subject, but it's questions people want to know.
Speaker 1:We asked her like four questions in one.
Speaker 3:Yes, let me process. No, I'm joking. No, it's not. I asked for a commission, so I didn't actually take this decision. I didn't ask for a new candidate. I didn't ask for a new candidate. I didn't ask for a new candidate. I didn't ask for a new candidate. I didn't ask for a new candidate. It was never upset. I want to analyze your stuff and set it in place. I feel extremely honored and happy to have a number here For me. It's a number that I want to give to my wife, my rival. I want to put sentimental value into it. It's a beautiful number.
Speaker 1:Is it a number for me, or is it a number for me and my wife? What do you?
Speaker 3:mean.
Speaker 1:Is it a number for me and my wife? It's a number for me and my wife with Volterkos. How so the number I have currently here?
Speaker 3:Put number 4. Exactly, my problem is I never get a number for myself, no, but for me.
Speaker 1:Micah puts Wendrick number 1. You have to put Schaef by a number higher. No, I have 4. Oh, you stayed Wendrick was 6.
Speaker 2:Yes.
Speaker 1:Wendrick was 6. Anybody above 6 gets 4.
Speaker 3:Okay, okay, okay, if you say it's by a bow, you get one up, correct. No, I'm good.
Speaker 2:My.
Speaker 3:Thing doesn't change much.
Speaker 1:She was like I was good, I was like.
Speaker 2:I'm going to talk to you in full equity about what you said, Mike. It was a plan of that it was a plan.
Speaker 3:Now it's no filter time.
Speaker 1:It was a plan.
Speaker 2:It was something time one night before like one night before.
Speaker 3:Everyone's like what the fuck just happened? It was like more 30 minutes before. No, there was a lot happening on that day. I didn't have anything to sign on the list. Then I didn't have anything to sign on another list. I was like, how am I going to sign another one? But my number is the same now I'm like, oh my god.
Speaker 3:And then I was like, yeah, keep it quiet. It's going to be like a big revelation. I was like, how am I going to keep this quiet? How am I going? It's incredible. I've never seen it before. I never expected to walk another number with another one. He's always been the leader. He's been with my dad since 2001. Number three, number four, then number one, number two. I've never walked another path and I never expected to walk another path. When you have a person who's capable and has knowledge of things yes, and he's young and he has composure to be a good leader, but at night he's like, no, I'm going to step down from my number two and go to number six, but there's harmony in the team and now Amy is like you know you can be a leader.
Speaker 3:No, I'm not saying there's harmony, but you can always do it. One hand wants a number, the other doesn't want a leader. No, I'm not saying I'm not in harmony, but I always try to reach a number, another number, but I always try to reach a conclusion together. If it's good, if it's good to start a dialogue, it's also good. But if it's a bolter, if it's a 30-minute pass, I'm in shock. I don't know, what's happening.
Speaker 3:But I mean, but you know what. It shows who Mike is. It really shows who he is. He is willing to step down and make the youth over, so for me it's also embracing all these youth, making them a stem. You know what he is going to lead the list, but how do you feel that?
Speaker 1:he is going to be the leader now, but how do you feel that he's not going to be safe for number two or three?
Speaker 3:No, he's not going to be safe. But what I want is too much of moving around. Instead, this moment, my head is on Kiko. He's going to make the youth completely take over. He's ready, he can do this and he's going to win, which for me, is all better, because it's better if you do it in a different way. I like when you're ready, I feel like it's true. It shows that you really have something to do, like it's true.
Speaker 1:So for me, it's a great choice, sorry. Sorry, I'm the highest and the light. Light, though. Sorry, you don't have to be honest. I think it was a good PR move, though it was a cute PR move but it was also, but just like it would have been a nice tracker for number one Understandable pretty. Well, y'all should have been voted then.
Speaker 3:I know with government the guy you gotta give it some time A mi mes aje sá comi da baire iba lista lea talak un luna pro mec u lista u arra trajá Mi dota tem dos dia pa' kissi mi da binha ruba of no.
Speaker 2:Oh, she went with the home children working doing her thing.
Speaker 3:A me raia, that's it. That's it. No contacts Nada.
Speaker 2:Shit Sent from iPhone. Jachi, do you think?
Speaker 3:I was surprised how fast the email was.
Speaker 1:I checked the email.
Speaker 3:I said, send it to me two or three days after the QQA. But I was like I'll put it up two or three days after I go to Dubai. But I was like what the hell is this?
Speaker 1:It was meant for you to see it.
Speaker 3:Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. So I was like, I was like. I was like I was like I was like. I was like don't quote me on that because I'm not sure what the hell.
Speaker 2:I just bought my house like I have a really good job no, no. Are you going to do all of that for this?
Speaker 3:Boy, I was senior compliance associate by Amazon.
Speaker 1:I've been working for two years at Amazon.
Speaker 3:It's a really big company. It's a really good opportunity.
Speaker 2:I've been working full time.
Speaker 3:I've been doing a lot of work and I thought, oh my God. And I thought, now that the Turkish government is gone, I'm going to make a video call.
Speaker 3:and my dad with a mic behind I was like from the parliament from the parliament and I had the mic behind and I was jumping and they told me, hey, the government is coming, get ready. I was like what the hell? How man? So I had to, just by chance, on a day, on a Sunday, on a day, and I had all it's your opportunity to jump in hello you know I study here. You always wanted to do this. It's your opportunity. Jump in bye where are you from?
Speaker 2:I'm from.
Speaker 3:Colombia, but I lived almost my whole life here. Ok, got it. I don't know where I'm from, but I lived 10 years in Holland, so I'm more Dutch.
Speaker 1:He's an international.
Speaker 2:Yeah, yeah, for sure, yes, yes, yes I want to jump into the first segment let's go okay let's do it, let's see, let's see, seriously okay so I'm asking Rata, what is your vision for what? What is your vision for the future of Aruba's economic pillar, tourism, considering the need to avoid over-tourism?
Speaker 3:No, my vision for it. Obviously we are not a tourist island, so it's not that close, but I want to focus more on the quality, the quality of our product, Aruba, and the quality of tourists with my island. I want to focus more on Something that I always want to repair because of my mentality is that our culture goes a little back, To return to the American.
Speaker 1:A little.
Speaker 3:I was like girl what are you talking about?
Speaker 1:I want to be a little bit conservative.
Speaker 2:No, you're not this is no filter. Say the truth. I thought you were an animal person.
Speaker 3:No, no, no, Never in my life, Never I think hello.
Speaker 2:never in my life, never I would never do that to their parents, of course.
Speaker 3:So let's go back to the quality of tourism. Agree. What's the point. What's the point? What's the point? I like it when people focus more on the conversation.
Speaker 2:I agree with conversation in terms of the part of Miami, like if you go around Miami there's so many tall buildings it's so busy. Unless you're on the 50th floor of a tall building, you can't walk unless you're on the 50th floor.
Speaker 1:It's scary, a lot of buildings going up. So, on this, let me ask you what exactly was your plan to make sure that our culture falls back in place?
Speaker 3:No, but I'm going to take a little bit of teaching. If you go back, you'll see that there's a lot of history, and not just history with the Netherlands?
Speaker 1:Who gives a fuck?
Speaker 3:No, the actual history, the roots. I had a little bit of history in school. I was surprised when I didn't have any more history. I was like, yes, of course.
Speaker 1:You had a little bit of history, but more history, more history.
Speaker 3:So since I was in class I had a little bit of history. I wish I could know more. I know more about the tribes around the Latin American.
Speaker 2:I hope it doesn't become like America, where people are like I want reprobation. You know what I mean.
Speaker 3:I mean Sí sí sí.
Speaker 2:Sí, sí, sí, I mean I understand.
Speaker 3:I understand what happened, god, if we had. Pero me esté, pero me esté, pero no todo tiene esclavitud but if there's no history, no es todo esclavitud.
Speaker 1:Exactly, it's missing. Paso bajo un corazón, por favor.
Speaker 3:They are so proud of their history and I love that.
Speaker 1:I love that.
Speaker 3:But in Aruba we can't tell a full story we need colors. We need letters. In Aruba. It's colorful Everywhere, but in Waco it's a Caribbean island, in Aruba it's beige.
Speaker 2:It's Americanized. It's not black as fuck. It's beige. In Aruba it's a typical. I hope it's Americanized. It's not blank as fuck. Fuck on beige.
Speaker 3:Man, if you go and eat a typical Aruba food, where do you go Normally, man?
Speaker 2:I always think of Zeruva.
Speaker 3:That's.
Speaker 1:Caribbean though.
Speaker 3:But after saying peanuts of Zeruva, I also think of Bajira.
Speaker 1:It's a Old fisherman, I think they say Next to Baki Wahoos. Pica next to Baki Wahoos, pika's Corner. Pika's Corner is also like Biscayfria Baki also, though Baki Wahoos is also very fresh sorry, no, no, I have a friend.
Speaker 3:What about you? Wendy's good spot, wendy's, by the way we know that means Wendy's of McDonald's working.
Speaker 1:Wendy's okay, good, I have to pass this. Hey working. Wendy's Okay, good, I'll pass it down.
Speaker 3:It's safe, not in Wendy's in the Netherlands, right? No, it's not. But I went to the airport and I didn't buy it?
Speaker 2:I don't suppose. Anyway, it's a whole legal battle.
Speaker 3:Well, yes, for you it's a typical food. You know, I have a kitchen, I have a kitchen, my bike is working everywhere. I love Asian food, I love to walk, but I love Portugal. Portugal is a very nice tourist destination and Portuguese is lit. I'm learning Portuguese.
Speaker 2:This is my fifth language by the way, you better fucking clock in how many languages. Five, five.
Speaker 3:If I'm going to walk anime without subtitles, I'm going to bring anime without subtitles. I'm working on Japanese.
Speaker 2:Let's go.
Speaker 3:Let me show you that I have two tattoos. This is one of them, let's go back.
Speaker 2:What's up there?
Speaker 3:Oh Sanji.
Speaker 2:Man, don't team me, man, we're going to have a conversation.
Speaker 3:I won't be like shit.
Speaker 1:Okay, nerds, go crazy, I'm not mad, I told you I'm a nerd, I'm not mad like I love it, I'm not mad, I love it, I'm not mad, I'm not mad, I'm not mad, I'm not mad.
Speaker 3:I'm not mad.
Speaker 2:I'm not mad, I'm not mad, I'm not mad.
Speaker 3:I'm not mad, I'm talking about.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I'm one of those people. No, lately.
Speaker 3:I've been watching One Piece.
Speaker 2:Good, of course yes.
Speaker 3:Culture yes, no.
Speaker 2:What you and I are going, no, no.
Speaker 3:Seriously, let's go Shark. You don't get it.
Speaker 2:That's hardcore culture guys.
Speaker 1:No I get it.
Speaker 3:I get your point. Hey, now you're talking to me like I'm Gohan. Now you're talking to me like I'm Awesome. Now you're talking to me like I'm Judge Nothing look, judge Shark.
Speaker 1:Judge away, baby Fucking bitch. I'm going to judge y'all back. I'm judging y'all right now, like this this type of conversation.
Speaker 3:is culture Like? You know we relate to each other based on this Look, man, we're more working in between the islands. Corso Bonero how is it that it's so expensive to buy Corso? We're right there.
Speaker 1:And other Caribbean islands. It's crazy you can buy Miami and then, or Panama and then.
Speaker 3:Yes, yes, man, our development man Corso, now that, sadly, man, in our development man, we started, now that, sadly, the project didn't go as well as it did before the last seven years, nine and a half. So we started a takeover and now we're developing. But if we're all working together, we can develop together. So I feel like we're starting to go back, our culture is starting to go back, our parents are going back, but now obviously our. Of course I'm going to have to get up.
Speaker 1:Yeah, no, baby, sorry, you lost me right there.
Speaker 2:Oh my God. Mapa next question. Yes, mapa next question. I'm a politician, I can talk, let's go, let's go, okay, by the way, we will cut you off a few times.
Speaker 3:Next one.
Speaker 1:Okay, we want to hear it. Okay, so how would your government help solve the labor shortage that exists in all economic sectors?
Speaker 3:Well, there are a couple of ways we can do that. A graying population here. I hope people are going to get a pension, but I hope people here still can work. They are willing to work. What we are doing is that we are feeling that our salary is being heavily taxed and that is better for us to receive our pension. So if you make a cut in taxation so that we can get the labor market back, that is for the help of the parties. We have a cut in taxation to help the labor market back and that's why we have a big workforce to maintain.
Speaker 3:And another workforce obviously is the people who are here, who are teaching us young people who are creating lessons in the area of a hotel, a school, to come back, because we have a hotel in the area, a hotel-vac school, and we have to come back. And we have to come back because we have to go to the place where we have to work. Sadly, in one way or another, we have to import Workforce, yes, workforce. We have to come back in one way or another. Exactly, we have to be more responsible. We have to open doors to the people who rent. I'm coming from the outside in one way or another, and I take it out of the guard in a more responsible way. When they say open the door, they'll open it in 30 minutes.
Speaker 2:But then how about? Like probably any friend, of political mentioned like 17,000 illegal immigrants working in Aruba, undocumented. Why not vet them? And then kind of like figure out, oh you actually have great skills. Like give them, like Of course.
Speaker 3:Of course. I mean that should have been done a long time ago. No, it's true.
Speaker 2:It should have been done, because you hear that he started and that takes a. But at the same time, these people get sick and they go to the hospital, hire free treatment because it's a human thing to do. So my tax money is going somewhere to pay for someone who's not registered and who's not paying his fair share, but I am and I have to finally get fucking health care but they're already here but I don't know how to do it, but I don't know how to do it.
Speaker 3:You're doing it in a responsible way, but I'm in the department and I'm doing it behind my back. I'm listening to horror of horror stories. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I want a proper education, not only for workers, but also for customer service. I want customer service in Abismal. But okay, going back to what I said, I have to be responsible in a way. We have a great community that we have established. We have cousins, relatives, family that we have established.
Speaker 2:What do you do If you sit down at the table?
Speaker 3:and say Right, exactly.
Speaker 2:You don't want to bring someone whose skills we have like 20 of them already here on the island.
Speaker 1:Yeah, it's on the island.
Speaker 3:Saudi, like they're already here. They know their people no-transcript with what housing is, so I know how to take care of my family.
Speaker 1:You know our yes, yes. So I don't know if I can vote for you, but what I want, to Okay, clear, yeah, shake, shake, shake shake.
Speaker 1:We have to. We have to. Okay, let's go. No, no, Stay there and calm down. But what I want to mention is that it doesn't take a pension to get longer. I'm thinking about it. You don't want to eventually create a social problem with a word. I don't know if you can see it, but grandparents don't really exist anymore. It's a pride that doesn't exist in a way that you can see this, but grandparents don't really exist anymore. Like I'm proud of our thing, like, oh, I'm going to go to my house, I'm going to go to school, I'm going to go to my interview. The grandparents of Awoki, they're still working. The parents of Awoki, they don't have a family, a family of their own. That aspect, it's really missing hard in our society, of a family member who doesn't want to, you know yes yes, yes, that aspect, it's really missing in society and I hope you'll find it without love.
Speaker 3:I mean, I have one grandmother, my other grandmother and my second grandmother passed away, so I don't really have a mother, but I do know that. I hope she's not forced, but I also know that it it's very high. Sadly, we don't have a reality where we can force 13 more people to enter the house. It's huge. We have a lot of people lost. It's a shame, but it's a reality that we have to work on it and we have to work on it to actually solve this issue, which I was told. If we don't lower the taxes on people who are older than 65, we're going to give them a breather. They end up working If they have to. They're already working, but they give you more space to work a little. In the Netherlands there's a law called Hoppiluk. It's a law that reduces the hours for people who are over 65 years old, but they like to encourage people who are person is fit for work. They still do it for work.
Speaker 3:You work so many years for food. Just imagine you work so many years for food. You go to the house, you don't have colleagues, nothing anymore. What is that going to do to your psyche? It's work for your mental health and that creates problems. Eventually you're saturated. It creates a problem. Eventually it's saturated. It's bad for us. It's bad Enzyme hate, which is loneliness. It's a very powerful Factor that's affecting Now that we're older.
Speaker 1:I get what you're saying, but at the same time, if again I started thinking, it still falls under A social problem. If these people Finally go on pension, as much as they would like to make this money, they're doing it, but if they don't have the opportunity to work, they can't get a salary and they can't go to the beach.
Speaker 1:There's other social activities and grandkids come over. Grandkids are in school. So now, like for having some type of activity during the day, during the day, there's none of that, of course. If you say nothing, doing nothing mentally, you go behind the scenes. It shows it really shows.
Speaker 2:But if there's something to do like a daycare center, like a exactly.
Speaker 3:I mean I bought my house in the Netherlands in a place called Bake. It's like a Nigga damn no, but exactly Wack. I mean I bought my house in the Netherlands in a place called Beek. The place is like a pension dorm. It's a small town where basically all people are retiring. I mean, not only are people in school, but also people in my family are younger than me. So I put my parents didn't mind me abandoning. So politics follows me everywhere. Politics follows me everywhere. Politics follows me everywhere. And we have a lot of programs that we have established for the grown-ups. It's just amazing. They're everywhere, they're active, they're busy, but we don't have babies in a neighborhood center and we have to organize breakfasts. So if you pay something, small babies are 5 euros, 10 euros. But if you pay and you have them for breakfast on the weekends together, exactly, it does, it does.
Speaker 1:But just imagine if you're in construction and you have to pay your pension. You have to pay your pension and you're still alone?
Speaker 3:No, but I'm thinking, if I pay my pension too, I mean at some point it's a problem At some point.
Speaker 1:it's not like. I would love to feel and enjoy what we are doing Exactly. I don't know.
Speaker 3:I don't know what to think. I expect a monetary thing that we plan and we prioritize. But addressing the issue, the loneliness, the sense of being part of something, is something big that is affecting us. But the movement is something that is sitting in a room with people. It's a day, it's not a life. It's not a life of being active but of construction work. But what does it do to your body? You know what I mean.
Speaker 1:You turn bad but I think you turn bad you take a medicine.
Speaker 3:You know you turn bad. You take a medicine, you take a medicine, you take a medicine, you take a medicine, you take a medicine you take a medicine, you take a medicine. You take a medicine. You take a medicine. You take a medicine. Slap it harder.
Speaker 2:She spares, she spares. Let's switch up the conversation a little bit. Okay, let's go. I'm reading it. I want to get to this in a bit.
Speaker 3:Yes, but first.
Speaker 2:I want to talk about.
Speaker 3:I bring goodies. Is this for us? No, it's for them, it's my homework.
Speaker 1:He's the one who fuck you. He's the one who fuck you he's the one who fuck you.
Speaker 2:He's the one who fuck you. He's the one who fuck you. He's the one who fuck you.
Speaker 3:He's the I don't know. I want this line, but I can't stop.
Speaker 2:No true, true, true.
Speaker 3:I want this line, but I can't stop. This is really.
Speaker 1:Oh, my God but to answer your question.
Speaker 2:I have a question for you. Many voters are curious about your motivation for entering politics. I feel like I'm going to overstate how to do it. I feel like you're explaining how you got into the company, but you're also in the company. You're in the AVP. To kind of like, want to rescue you, to vote for you to stay in the AVP. What is your opinion about the opinion of the people?
Speaker 3:Well, I don't want the people to say that they're going to vote for me. I'm not going to do that. I'm going to do what I want you just met.
Speaker 1:He's a jackass.
Speaker 3:I love it. So I had a bigger connection with the demographic of my father's vote. I also grew up in an area where my father was very close to me, so I was able to relate more to the people who voted for my father. And when I was there, I saw that the campaign was led by a team, a tremendous team, and I was able to tell them that the team I was in was not just a team a tremendous team, and it's like it's a team of my dad, a team of my mom, a team of my dad, a team of my dad and my mom and my mom and my mom and my mom and my mom and my mom and my mom and my mom and my mom and my mom and my mom and my mom.
Speaker 1:I was about to say what are the keys to see?
Speaker 2:They came for you. They came for you no.
Speaker 3:Me, not about the wall to say Mike, but was I a hand dish? He was a Mike. But you're all people.
Speaker 2:What did you say? Say it like this. What did you say? No, I was going to say flat six. I was going to say flat six. That's good, but hey, crazy.
Speaker 3:I look good in yellow, but no, thank you, no, but I want to say that again. It's a situation I'm in a combination of putting hands in the way I do the mic at the table is a thing that I do in my campaign. It's a guide, it's and the person here is not focused on this, this, this. He explains to me how it is. Now, when I talk about a topic, he tells me hey, by the way, don't know how to do this, this, this. I'm going to do this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this, this this he's a teacher.
Speaker 2:He's very chill. He's very chill. Yes, yes, yes, yes.
Speaker 3:Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes yes.
Speaker 2:Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, I'll say it for you. I got you, I got you, it's interesting.
Speaker 3:And another way if my wife is good, I say good.
Speaker 2:Yeah.
Speaker 3:That's it. But it's not like I'm just kidding, it's not like come on, I know you're amazing, but you have to congratulate me, You're good. And then finally, hey I feel like on cloud nine, on cloud nine, this damn man no kidding, no kidding good job, now for the other one finally.
Speaker 1:so in place? We all know like a tainted kind of reputation this in place while you're, if like a tainted kind of reputation. So what plan do you have in place to make sure that it doesn't happen while you're? No, I don't know If it ends up. No, the way.
Speaker 3:I see it, I'm going to stop with my father's innocence. That is the only reason why I'm going to start a campaign of seven months and I'm pregnant, I'm not going to stay in heat. I was seven and a half months pregnant back then. Horrible, you love that man. The feelings, the hormones. It was horrible. It was horrible. I don't know if you can tell me in detail.
Speaker 2:We'll bring you back baby. You said it on camera.
Speaker 1:So, We'll bring you back. No, no, we'll do it in half.
Speaker 3:Let's do it in two, cool 100%.
Speaker 1:We'll do it in half. We'll do it in half. We'll do it in half. We'll do it in half. We'll do it in half. We'll do it in half. We'll do it in half. We'll do it in half.
Speaker 2:We'll do it in half, we'll do. I'm going to tell you something, and I'm going to tell you something.
Speaker 3:Yes, when I go from house to house, I always have an insight. I don't know why I don't have a drug, but I'm going to tell you that's basically a combo, that.
Speaker 1:I make sure that what happens to you doesn't happen to you.
Speaker 3:No, no no, yes, okay, it doesn't happen to me. I'm always, I've always imitated his innocence and I know what happens to him. He's a really good politician and one way or another, he's an attack. He's an attack on the judicial system. How do you know that's not going to happen to me? I'm not sure, because who knows if I'm not going to be a really good politician and if I'm going to be a hit and run politician never, never in my life. A lot of politicians say that.
Speaker 2:Like in the sense of giving politics to help other people, so whatever they have. Before I was making way more money than doing what I'm doing right now. But it is, it is, but they got different benefits once they go in True.
Speaker 1:True, got a driver and everything.
Speaker 3:No, but he coined it to bring a peyote she is like don't try to lie to me with that bullshit. No, a minister with a parliamentarian doesn't earn a lot of money. Something bring it to power who signs here? But that's not what I'm trying to educate. Sorry, but if I educate and I get another job, I want another job to do more.
Speaker 1:So let me ask you this Are you a turbo education? How did you get to go up a traditional party that existed and not try something completely fresh that they give you I don't have to worry with potato and this, and that you could have easily cut all of that out there?
Speaker 3:are a variety of reasons why that happens. One is teamwork. For me, it's very important to be part of a team and unfortunately I don't feel that way about other games. I feel that there's a person in my head who's a strong leader, and there's a lot of people in my head so I don't strong leader and he's a very good person, so you have to have teamwork. And another thing is education. What do you want? It was very much. We are very. No, we're a team girl we're a team girl we're a team.
Speaker 2:What makes you say that?
Speaker 1:sorry. You can clearly tell that this election was last minute. And what does the AFP say? Almost all the parties are full. Okay, let's vote. Come on, stop Number six. Let's go.
Speaker 2:I think it's something I said a few episodes ago.
Speaker 1:You have confidentials, like really no way, not the whole ass, baby, don't do that what Everyone has something to bring to the table. Everyone I mean to say that legit they're going to bring an extra vote to make sure that the party is right. That's the job.
Speaker 3:You are evil, I. They're going to bring an extra vote to make sure that the party is right, that's the job. You are evil, I'm saying the truth.
Speaker 1:I'm not a bullshitter, baby. I say what I mean. I'm not a bullshitter. I'm not a bullshitter, I'm not a bullshitter.
Speaker 3:I'm not a bullshitter. I'm not a bullshitter, I'm not a bullsh. All I can't imagine spending the whole day with them.
Speaker 1:I don't like your time. I'm going to send you. Stop what I'm going to send you.
Speaker 2:I don't like your time.
Speaker 1:Don't get it twisted. Dude, what the fuck.
Speaker 3:No, but we have a job to do. But you know, we have a harmony. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I know, but Un colega, tu colega. Un colega tu colega.
Speaker 2:Un colega tu colega Un colega tu colega. Un colega tu colega. Un colega tu colega. Un colega tu colega.
Speaker 3:Un colega tu colega, un colega tu colega, un colega tu colega. Un colega tu colega. Un colega tu colega.
Speaker 1:Un colega, tu colega. Un colega tu colega. Un colega tu colega, un colega tu colega. Understandable.
Speaker 3:She has a name, she has a thing she will come with the votes to put me in the parliament. So the number one eventually does not go to 30, so Porta is number two.
Speaker 1:Does it happen that other people top 10 if they get there? No, oh girls, Stop For real. Hey, you're half way to Girl stop.
Speaker 3:Be for real.
Speaker 1:Okay, and he's in there, girl but stop, stop pretending You're not here to fuck. You're fucking Ben. He's the banger. Mike makes a bank number Kiko 30, walking up to 29.
Speaker 2:He's fucking Mike Iman. He's still going to get more votes than anybody else on the list at the end of the day.
Speaker 1:What?
Speaker 2:are you talking?
Speaker 3:about Be for real, but I feel like you have to work for it.
Speaker 3:You do and we're basically the same From the beginning to the end. Everyone is on the streets, Everyone is working for it. But going back to how you talk about AVP and everything else and talk to other people, but again, it's a career, it's a project that I have, a project that I have an investment and a vision. For me, it's inspiring that we're fully self-sustainable in 2020. For me, it's a clear example of what vision and perspective is. So in 2020, I want to have a completely self-sustainable country. We're going to get there In another way. We're going to start being self-sustainable and we're going to get there Whenever it happens.
Speaker 3:Exactly, I'm going to make sure that I'm doing everything I can to get there. So, for me, exactly, we have perspective, we have vision and when you have an institute in the place, like a RAC, like a Fundo, mito Cruz, when you have youth and people of the people, not precisely of politics, what politics is there? What government is there? It's not like that. It's really an educational platform. For me, exactly, it's very important. It's a party with almost 100 years of age and I know more than when did you say your birthday?
Speaker 1:When did you say your birthday Almost 100. Almost 100? Yes, but he plays too much. The reason why I asked was, like I'm 27.
Speaker 3:I take everything out of my bag and I'm like.
Speaker 2:No, it's Big party Like 100 years of this institution Celebrating.
Speaker 1:Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 3:Make sure you don't invite us.
Speaker 2:No, no, no, come on, come on If you want, we can invite you. What Come? On come on, come on, don't do it.
Speaker 1:Don't take me with a good time.
Speaker 3:You're a host, we're going to go. You can't promise me that Mike won't kill me. You had a good time. It's more. You're a host.
Speaker 2:We're going to go, but I promised Mike he wouldn't kill me. No, don't worry, I'm not a host, and if you're in the government you'll get a 400% increase.
Speaker 1:Oh what? No, You're doing fraud, no.
Speaker 3:It's taxpayer's money that I pay myself back, hey at least the.
Speaker 1:AdMob right that.
Speaker 2:Yo say what Club? That bucket? Brr-da-da-da, that's fire. Don't be like, I'm on Facebook, I'm on your hand. Sorry, dude, look at me and this person is like I'm on Facebook, I'm on your hand. What's your job?
Speaker 3:I am loving it.
Speaker 1:I don't know if you can share or comment, but I want my life oh he was going in. They were going in.
Speaker 3:I know. I know I love every second of it.
Speaker 1:Apparently, a lot of people don't like this nigga, but some people, he's just there.
Speaker 3:He's being paid for to go on Facebook and he's bashed to hand it. No tranquilo, there's really no filter.
Speaker 1:This is what it is.
Speaker 3:Mucha mangua, there's really no filter. This is what it is, you understand Gotta, be realistic, yeah, banco with a realistic answer. Be for real. So whack me the possibility. Obviously it's not working out, it's not functioning. But again, teamwork is primordial. And if you put your head on the party with a big head, with a mentality of no, the party is big with a big head, which we see. But who walks into a business deal demanding terms? Wait what I heard?
Speaker 2:that I for sure I go and listen first.
Speaker 3:I listen to what they're going to say Exactly. You have to have some type of dialogue.
Speaker 2:She's saying like you want me to do it for the first time, here's my deal. I'm like bitch, we didn't even have a conversation. In this case, it's a different type of.
Speaker 1:It's not a regular job, it's like no.
Speaker 3:But we're talking about, like governing a whole country, exactly, and you're not talking about more than 100,000 people, exactly.
Speaker 1:That's what they fought for. That's what we get.
Speaker 2:But I'm saying we don't care If you're Aveline.
Speaker 1:Or if you're Mike.
Speaker 2:Somehow. I'm very cool with that, but it doesn't matter. I'm looking cool with that, but it doesn't matter. I'm looking forward to that. Are we talking?
Speaker 3:you're not going to see Evelina yet no, she's coming up.
Speaker 2:I'm looking forward to that one too sorry people watch the show because of who we are. We're honest. We're just seeing what people think and people will watch the show because of who we are and it's not honest. And it's not just what people think. And if you what people don't think and Shark Day is similar If you don't know someone, you're not an example of someone who's from a foreign country.
Speaker 3:No, you have to know someone. Again, this goes back to Chinese philosophy.
Speaker 1:You have to know someone. That's why this is the human chair, because now we know a whole different side of stuff.
Speaker 3:Like when a person relates to them when they don't feel pain. I know politicians don't do this at home. Sorry, but I don't feel like I relate to people like that Because you're out there. But I have to listen to what people think, what people are going through. I'm not going to hear you're out there Because you're out there, I'm not going to hear you give me calls. I don't have six you. I don't have a single mom living in Baystown who says you can't coin a six you.
Speaker 1:No, but it is a reality.
Speaker 2:No, but it's not their fault.
Speaker 3:Our society has pushed it towards that, but she doesn't come down. But it's her fault. It's not their fault. Our society has pushed it towards that. It wasn't their fault. It wasn't their fault. I believe it wasn't their fault. The education system puts us in our place.
Speaker 1:Busting it wide open, bust down Tatiana it wasn't their fault.
Speaker 2:I'm pregnant. I don't know how it happened. Yeah, like.
Speaker 3:It was the vodka, okay. No, the education system. It's not their fault. Okay, what the fuck you?
Speaker 1:be doing. Thank you, god. Yeah, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but, but but.
Speaker 3:But, but, but. If you create 500 flowers for each person, no, no, let me stop.
Speaker 1:Let me stop. No-transcript.
Speaker 3:Let me stop, let me I've been saying this floor and darken the zinc, but then people say oh no, that's only like in Colombia, after world countries, no this is why I'm not critical about people, because politicians don't get sick every few years. We actually see this on a daily basis but I think, how do you want to imitate a politician without because he comes out of rancho?
Speaker 1:Rancho, rancho, rancho.
Speaker 3:Rancho, rancho.
Speaker 1:Rancho.
Speaker 3:Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho Rancho.
Speaker 2:Rancho.
Speaker 3:Rancho Star Island. Again we have a thriving tourism Billions no-transcript.
Speaker 2:What am I specifically saying? It was English, I'm going to go to the Amazon.
Speaker 3:I'm going to go to the Amazon in.
Speaker 2:English Do shit. That's good, that's good. I can't, I'm going to go to the Amazon.
Speaker 3:I'm going to go to the Amazon. I'm going to go to the.
Speaker 2:Amazon.
Speaker 1:So let me ask you this we have to go to another segment, right? No, no, have you looked at the time? Oh shit, can you extend? It, it's okay, fuck it Like. I'll just take a warning if I have to get one, I'm sorry guys, it's it.
Speaker 2:It's okay, fuck it Like.
Speaker 1:I'll just take a warning if I have to get one. I'm sorry, guys, it's whatever. It's whatever, I'm sorry, no, no no, you're good baby.
Speaker 2:I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
Speaker 1:Okay. So Fuck, I'm sorry, oh, no, sorry, okay. So so I woke up to lose confidence in AVP, so I can't talk about the other party. But I woke up to say no, no, no, no. I woke up to lose confidence in AVP and I was like okay, yo, where has AVP been like throughout the season here? But AVP always was known as a party of people, like that was always what it was known for, and it was a crucial time during the pandemic when people were like yo, people need you. Where the fuck is AVP? So even after this, I feel like the last few like very much silent. No way he doesn't pop up. Now what?
Speaker 3:Girl, then we have to get you under that rock. But no, but no On the day of the election the election starts and we stop, but on the day of the election the AFP always doesn't have employees, because the party helps people and it's a plastic ballast. It's always like you. I say always, like all year round.
Speaker 1:Where is this promoted, though?
Speaker 3:On our page, Girl On our page. Radio we're always around.
Speaker 2:Boost the call, boost the post Working people.
Speaker 1:That is my problem with the government in general. We are working citizens giving y'all our money, but they were once upon a time, after a full day of work, I was like I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 3:I don't know. Then, how do you want to know if you want to listen to the radio, if you want to read the news?
Speaker 1:Girl. We're all on socials. Why is it not there? It's a new age.
Speaker 3:I want a young generation to make sure that we're really blessed on socials Somebody.
Speaker 2:Yes, 100%, but so how are we going Into innovation?
Speaker 3:We're gonna do that.
Speaker 1:Old school media.
Speaker 3:It's new age. We are transitioning.
Speaker 2:I got a few more questions.
Speaker 1:Go ahead.
Speaker 2:So keep them with stance on what's the pro of Legalization Of cannabis. You are In, so I'm In.
Speaker 3:I don't have A party, damn. Why not Personally. I don't have A party Contra. I'm not a Christian Democrat.
Speaker 2:I don't have Values.
Speaker 3:I don't have Turkish, so for me I don't know. I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know.
Speaker 2:I don't know, I don't dare. Yet you know the idea. If you want to learn how to swim, toss the fucking thing in the pool, like how did we ever learn? Ppa.
Speaker 3:PPA, let's not go there.
Speaker 2:I know, but listen, the thing is like.
Speaker 3:No, no. But I thought, but why not educate these old motherfuckers?
Speaker 1:on it as well. That's a crucial point.
Speaker 3:I think we use education as a tool.
Speaker 1:But what do you mean by start with me Are?
Speaker 3:we there. Yet I thought, if I start with education for the day, Girl.
Speaker 1:They've been saying we'll start from since five years ago I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't. Yeah, he said it, he said it.
Speaker 3:My man, it was your fight, I know.
Speaker 1:Where's those fundings coming from?
Speaker 2:Welcome to the conversation. Damn, we're not talking about the topic of the day. We're not talking about the topic of the day. We're not talking about the topic of the day.
Speaker 3:We're not talking about the topic of the day. It's fascinating. It is. It's fascinating. We're not talking about the topic of the day.
Speaker 2:We're not talking about the topic of the day, the agent is.
Speaker 3:He's pushing it real hard. He's pushing it real hard.
Speaker 2:He's pushing it real hard.
Speaker 3:He's pushing it real hard. He's pushing it real hard. He's pushing it real hard, he's pushing it real hard.
Speaker 2:He's pushing it real hard, he's pushing it real hard.
Speaker 3:He's pushing it real hard. He's pushing it real hard. He's pushing it real hard. He's pushing it real hard. He's pushing it real hard. He's pushing it real hard. He's pushing it real hard. Knowledge economy is something that AVP tries to push over time, but in which it explains sustainability. We don't have alternatives, we don't have a system that starts pushing more, but it's there. It's there.
Speaker 1:We ain't pushing hard enough. Okay, let's go next one. Sorry, sorry.
Speaker 2:What's your plan?
Speaker 3:Okay, let's dive into this this is my homework, but it's been three years. It would be wrong If I don't.
Speaker 1:This is my homework, okay, so what is this First one?
Speaker 3:Okay, so what is this in the government to buy?
Speaker 2:and there are reports on them, so we plan to stop them in seven and a half years but they're not outdated as in like, oh shit, it's past its time. Obviously we have to revise them, but the vision is ahead of its time, so we have to revise them.
Speaker 3:and what's behind? We have to obviously update them, but you know, it's a 2020 vision that I'm talking about, dj, obviously For sure.
Speaker 1:That's fucking needed.
Speaker 2:It was in the works. We did this like three days ago.
Speaker 3:It was in the works. It wasn't the works and it was like laid out completely. But you know, ego plays a role.
Speaker 1:This is the same way, though like this is a 2020 vision.
Speaker 3:And these moves Are the urban designs that we have, like a vision that we have, and this is what's going to happen.
Speaker 1:To Okay, so what's the plan For the party that will happen To Nicolas? Let me hear this shit. Well, you're looking at it.
Speaker 2:I don't want to hear it From you. I don't want to hear it From you, I mean Obviously I want to hear it from you? I want to hear it from you, but I have to be a high-spirited no I mean, obviously we want to retake again what we know about San Nicolás.
Speaker 3:I want to know what San Nicolás is like as a cultural center Damn right.
Speaker 2:But the thing is, you're going too far when it comes to developing it, but wait it's a feeling game For damn right.
Speaker 3:So that's the job of a government. You have your people at the table. You have your people, you have your vision. Do you agree with it? I guess?
Speaker 1:one of the biggest problems with TIN is that Nobody's doing shit forever. I love it a lot, no, but come on.
Speaker 3:AVP no no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no no.
Speaker 1:No no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no no.
Speaker 3:No, no, no. Or in Carnival Village? Our father is from Iguana. Carnival Village is not clear. But because they didn't keep going with it, the foundation was laid out. But I'm telling you it was a good thing for St Nicholas. It was in the making. It was a wall. It came from a vision that Mike Tata had when he met Wynwood. He actually brought the person from Wynwood here.
Speaker 2:When was this? No, he actually brought the person from Wynwood here.
Speaker 3:When was this Nah?
Speaker 2:I was reading, I was listening to Wynwood and I'm back in the conversation. No, no, no.
Speaker 3:So back then Wynwood was actually I love Wynwood, everybody knows Wynwood by now but Wynwood was actually a dangerous neighborhood and the person here had a vision to make a hop, to call a kind a target audience. So he does this here. He uses culture as a magnet to bring an audience in. So he brings in young artists to paint the walls, he buys the building and he revitalizes this whole place into his vision. Mike knows the person here. He's the one who revitalized completely in Wynwood. He's the third one. When I showed him San Nicolas he said I want to do that here, like I want to bring San Nicolas culture and like put it on the walls. We want to do that and that's why we have that now Exactly A plan with the government and time is Otmar.
Speaker 1:Otmar is campaigning to make it harder, but Otmar is also from AVP.
Speaker 3:It's a vision of AVP, not Otmar, of course, of the party. With Otmar, it pulls hard, of course, because the water is working and it is working. It's something that is obviously successful and I want to recognize that the team is here and will go further, without affecting, obviously, the culture that we have established, without affecting the demographic. But is this a plan that Otmar has come up with? No, is this a plan that AVP has come up with?
Speaker 1:I want to empathize with you. Let me just get this shit up real quick.
Speaker 3:No, it's not Otmar's plan, it's a party plan. It's not my business, otmar Sussó, it's a plan of the party. It's not like my father and my grandmother had a plan of the way that Sussó did. I had the idea that this was the minister in charge. Of course, sorry. Of course it gives him a little bit of credit, but it's not like a man who it was just one man job. I think it's empty promises in some sort.
Speaker 1:I feel like everybody says they're going to do something, but they didn't, but they didn't, but, they didn't, but, they didn't, but they didn't, but they didn't, but they didn't, but, they didn't, but, they didn't, but, they didn't, but they didn't.
Speaker 1:But they didn't, but they didn't, but they didn't, but they didn. Even Mike De Mesa even said he was like it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy, it's not easy.
Speaker 3:It's not easy.
Speaker 1:I'm a little more a rebel representative, but I'm thinking about the reality of it. I woke up and I said something like whoever does it, I'm happy with what they did, but with San Nicolas, your income is going to be okay.
Speaker 3:you don't have to have a person who can. I'm going to go to Green Corridor. I'm going to think about something big for San Nicolas. I'm traffic forever to like reach one spot to the other. It's not like you're going to connect with Nicolas in the north of Aruba where you can get to him. You can get to him directly, on a straight line. You're going to keep Nicolas in mind. So, if not, we're not going to have a project like that.
Speaker 1:Let me tell you it's not traffic, but it's not going to be Nicolas, it's obviously more expensive there, but it's a plan.
Speaker 3:If you don't like the hotel industry in the north, trust me it's not good. If you don't like it, you're not a green card.
Speaker 1:I used to work. Hello, every day, every day.
Speaker 3:Do you even remember the days before?
Speaker 1:this road. Bye Mita, bye, cool of seeing. Bye Mita, bye.
Speaker 2:All right, we're going to come to an end, okay.
Speaker 1:Yes.
Speaker 2:No no, I like this conversation and we're going to hold you.
Speaker 1:It's okay, it's okay.
Speaker 2:It's okay.
Speaker 1:It's okay, stop.
Speaker 2:Release your. You're not who you are, but anyways, this is Holden Bobcant. Well, this is part of the. Well, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
Speaker 1:I'm so sorry, I'm so sorry, okay, so Very much avoiding media. And interviews and all these type of things.
Speaker 3:That's what I'm saying. I'm just saying what the people said.
Speaker 1:So what is your take on this? A lot of people feel like you're kind of like avoiding and it's like not working out.
Speaker 3:No, no, no. I know the topic of my talk and I'm very comfortable talking about that. I want to know where there is a more comfortable food to drink. I don't avoid media, I'm a player, so I don't know. We have a short-term memory thing going on. No-transcript, I know. Do you even remember what I said back then? No, I do.
Speaker 1:I hold everybody accountable. I have to remember shit.
Speaker 3:Exactly, you gotta play it smart.
Speaker 1:It's politics I'm not mad at that, though it's politics, you have people wondering, so I wanted to ask you.
Speaker 3:I have an interview, so you have people wondering what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what.
Speaker 1:What, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what, what what.
Speaker 3:What.
Speaker 2:What, what, what, what, what, what, what you know I get it.
Speaker 1:She didn't say that.
Speaker 2:No, stephanie is Stephanie. She thinks Stephanie is Stephanie and Benny.
Speaker 3:No, Stephanie has another perspective. Stephanie is the clash when she's with Benny.
Speaker 2:Stephanie is your daughter.
Speaker 3:Just say it officially.
Speaker 1:Please. I'm the Stephanie.
Speaker 3:And I approve this message. So, I'm like this you better plug yourself. At this point. I love it.
Speaker 2:I'm half Bonar, this show too.
Speaker 3:No, I mean at this point you know being being realistically. I don't want you to have nothing more like a basic mask to clean it up, I agree. So the ruins do not work, it's just, it's the best food to rust it?
Speaker 2:it's no, but.
Speaker 3:I just clean it up and then it's not contaminated. It's. It's a long-term process.
Speaker 2:I agree it's not gonna happen and then Mike said this, but Demesa said the same thing it ain't gonna happen, it's not gonna take a long time, but Mike Demesa knows this.
Speaker 3:I know that's why it's your stuff, so I asked him about.
Speaker 2:I mean, I remember, I remember a man, richard Branson who he installed. I thought it was cool, but it's just. I never saw it again. I thought it was cool, but I never saw it again. The message reminded me yeah, it's still there. It's somewhere behind Lago Heights or some shit.
Speaker 1:Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm pro for it. Communism in the back there, oh yeah.
Speaker 2:I will actually do it. What do you think If you're in?
Speaker 1:the government.
Speaker 2:The VP is going to take your seat. What?
Speaker 3:wallet, do you want? It's not something like focusing too much on Jefferson.
Speaker 2:Again, it's a parliamentary election.
Speaker 3:I know, I know, but still.
Speaker 2:Let me rephrase the question. If you had the opportunity to choose a portfolio, what would you say to your team?
Speaker 3:I study politics so I feel like I have the capacity to do it At the end. It's a managerial job. It is, but you're a manager. You don't have to be a doctor to handle health. You're a manager. You don't need to be a doctor to handle health. But what do I have to give to my heart to teach social If I don't get to that integration? I have to endure Labor. I can do Tourism too.
Speaker 2:It's about surrounding yourself with the right team.
Speaker 3:We're a complete team, we're a tour Tour, we're candidates, we sit at the table and we're told okay. Thank you for being on the show. Thank you for having me 100%.
Speaker 1:I was like damn.
Speaker 2:I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry. What do you think about the team that voted for Stephanie Zivina?
Speaker 3:Well, I think it's going to be nice, you are surprisingly nerdy you like anime, so that's something to watch.
Speaker 3:Anime look. No, I feel like I'm a professional young person who's going to win for my country. I think it's going to be an easy, light decision, with a lot of effort, and I'm part of a team that is really willing to work. We have our priorities straight, our visions straight and I'm going to push myself. If there's something that I have, or if I have focus on one path, I will give it my best and my all to reach that. And I'm listening to what they're saying. I'm everywhere In the inbox, my phone, my phone. I was actually answering calls from people because I was in a car. I was in a car, thank you. Yes, you don't bring a representative of the people if you don't enter the people, if you don't listen to the people, and that's what I like about Stephanie I'm a friend, I'm willing to listen to people. You don't listen to people, and that's what I like about Stephanie she's a friend, she's willing to listen to people.
Speaker 3:I don't know my dad. I don't know my dad never. I don't know him. He's my door, never and never. So it's something that it runs in the family. We're nice like that. We don't know. Being the. I'm from a lot of people. I relate to a lot of people. I relate to my struggle. I work here paying a lot of money. I'm very lucky when I relate to that. I want a fresh perspective. I have the capacity to go to the island and I want to go to the island. I'm three years old. I want to make sure that I'm alive in a decent place to live in. I'm giving my all Not only me, but everyone's children. They have to have a nice place to live in. I want to live in a place where I can have my culture, my island, my beach, my amazing. So I have an opportunity. That's my main reason.
Speaker 2:This is like a mother feels you so? Yes, please vote Stephanie, number four on the list of green on December 6th special special, special, special, special, special, special, special, special, special, special, special, special, special, special, special special effects, special effects, guys, special effects. I don't have an audience at all.
Speaker 1:I was like whoa, this is the first we've never gotten this, let alone.
Speaker 2:Alright, thank you for being on the show guys.
Speaker 3:Thank you so much pleasure to meet you guys. Finally, it was a pleasure staying for here guys if you enjoyed this episode, subscribe.
Speaker 2:If you have more politicians coming on the show, like the video, leave a comment. If you have something you want to agree with Stephanie, comment. If you want to disagree, leave a comment. If you don't have a comment, leave a comment. Constructive criticism, please, please, on your Facebook. Leave a comment everywhere. Follow us. Thanks for watching and we'll see you guys next time. Peace, bye, bye, bye, bye, bye, bye, bye, bye, bye, bye.