reSee.it - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey has announced plans to phase out centralized housing for migrants, like hotels, and instead allocate a budget of $21,100 per month for housing them in scattered apartments across the state. This decision follows Donald Trump's presidential victory and his plans for mass deportations, which Healey and Boston Mayor Michelle Wu have publicly opposed, pledging not to cooperate with such actions. The timing has led some to speculate that Healey aims to complicate Trump's deportation efforts in Massachusetts. The state has been in a state of emergency regarding this migrant crisis for over a year, with no resolution in sight.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Undocumented immigrants are currently ineligible for Medicaid, ACA exchanges, and SNAP benefits. No undocumented immigrant receives any federal taxpayer dollars for comprehensive Medicaid coverage.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
California is repaying $1.6 billion previously charged to the federal government for health care services provided to illegal immigrants, and a larger program integrity issue is claimed to exist in the state’s health care system. The speaker instructs Governor Newsom to produce within three weeks a comprehensive program integrity action plan to address major fraud. Three examples of alleged embarrassing fraud in California are highlighted: 1) In-home supportive services (which California shares with Minnesota) include personal care such as bathing or grooming, household tasks, cleaning and cooking, shopping, and transportation. These are tasks that families could perform, but government funding is said to have generated significant cash for unethical people. California spending for these services increased from eight to twenty-eight billion dollars over the past decade, with a claim that federal taxpayers are paying 250% more for California, an affluent state, and that the program is still growing by double digits annually. 2) In 2024, spending for home health care in California purportedly rose by more than 21%, representing the largest growth rate for any major health category nationwide. The number of home health agencies in California reportedly almost doubled between 2019 and 2024. Los Angeles County alone is said to account for $1.4 billion, representing almost 9% of total fee-for-service home health spending for the entire country, despite having just 2% of national enrollment. The assertion is that this concentrates home health funds in L.A. County, limiting access for other Americans who could benefit from these services. 3) The 2022 California state auditor report is cited as showing that the number of hospice agents in Los Angeles County increased by 1,500% since 2010, a growth rate that allegedly far exceeds the 40% increase in the senior population over the same period. The speaker questions how a sevenfold increase in hospice could be defended, noting reports from seniors who claim they were duped by fraudsters and that California is not stopping these criminals. The speaker reiterates that Governor Newsom’s deadline for a comprehensive program integrity action plan is approaching and urges action to save American lives rather than enabling criminals.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
We aim to provide Arkansans with a hand up, not a handout, ensuring everyone can live their best life in Arkansas. Today, we're announcing our intention to seek a waiver to implement a Medicaid work requirement. This means that able-bodied working-age adults must work, attend school, volunteer, or care for their children to receive free healthcare funded by taxpayers. Currently, 220,000 able-bodied adults in Arkansas benefit from this program, costing over $2.2 billion annually. Notably, around 90,000 of these recipients are unemployed, while many hardworking Arkansans pay for their own health insurance.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
California is facing financial troubles, with a $68 billion deficit and projected future deficits of $87 billion. The state wasted a $100 billion surplus on various projects and failed to account for a tax filing delay by the IRS, leading to further debt. Only 200,000 taxpayers out of 20 million now fund half of the state's $640 billion budget, and many productive individuals have left the state due to high taxes. California's largest cities are experiencing problems, including tech layoffs and declining home sales. The state is also welcoming a large number of legal migrants who become a burden on taxpayers. This situation serves as a warning for other states.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Californians are paying billions for a health care initiative to help vulnerable groups, but in Contra Costa County, the program may be neglecting medical needs. A whistleblower claims the system is harming patients by focusing only on social needs, not medical care. Patients have suffered, with some even dying due to lack of proper medical attention. Contra Costa Health denies these allegations, stating they don't need to provide clinical care as it's handled by their clinic system. Despite state audits revealing shortcomings, the county continues to receive millions in funding. Other health systems address both clinical and nonclinical needs in their programs. Contra Costa Health is working to address the issues highlighted in the audit.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In 2008, Gavin Newsom promised to end homelessness in San Francisco within 10 years. He believed that food, shelters, and housing were the solutions to hunger, sleep, and homelessness respectively. However, today, California is home to one third of all homeless people in the United States.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker asserts that last year California spent $9.6 billion on health care for illegal immigrants. They claim the media has misled people by saying that no federal dollars go to undocumented immigrants, stating that this is fundamentally wrong. The speaker points to Governor Newsom, who allegedly announced that California is the first state in the nation to provide health care to illegal immigrants. They also claim that San Francisco operates the only universal health care plan in America for all undocumented residents, expressing pride in that status. According to the speaker, a key mechanism behind federal funding for care provided to undocumented individuals is the expansion of medical access through emergency departments. They contend that emergency departments are backfilled and funded at a rate of one dollar from the federal government. The implication is that any time an illegal immigrant uses the emergency room, federal dollars are brought in to cover or support that care, effectively meaning there are federal dollars being spent on illegal immigrants. The speaker asserts that the statement that there are no federal dollars going to illegal immigrants is a lie, arguing that California is facilitating this funding. They also claim that the media is lying about this issue as well. Throughout the statement, the overarching themes are the existence of substantial state spending on undocumented health care, the involvement of federal funding through emergency department backfill, and the portrayal of these facts as being misrepresented by the media. In summary, the speaker emphasizes four main points: (1) California’s reported $9.6 billion expenditure on health care for undocumented immigrants, (2) Governor Newsom’s assertion that California is leading the nation in providing health care to illegal immigrants, (3) San Francisco’s universal health care plan for all undocumented residents, and (4) the mechanism by which emergency department funding from the federal government allegedly backfills care for undocumented individuals, leading to federal dollars being spent on them. The speaker concludes by asserting that the claim of no federal dollars supporting illegal immigrants is false and accuses the media of lying.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript presents a long-form exposé-style investigation into what the speakers describe as widespread fraud in California’s caregiving sectors, focusing on hospice, home health care, and daycares, with emphasis on Los Angeles and Van Nuys. - Opening claim and context: - Speaker 0 asks why there is a thousand percent increase in hospice care in Los Angeles and whether paperwork exists to enroll a child named Joey. They claim California has the largest fraud risk, with Medi-Cal spending rising from 2022 to 2026 (from $108 billion to a proposed $222 billion) while population growth hasn’t matched spending growth. They allege “one out of every $10 of home health care in America is spent in Los Angeles.” They argue government-funded daycare programs are “filled with violations,” and that fraud could be “hundreds of billions of dollars.” - Daycare fraud focus: - The video claims daycares are used to receive government money (CalWORKS) by enrolling children on paper while not having real enrollments. They show various locations and describe conditions as suspicious or unsafe (graffiti, boarded-up buildings, dumpsters, a homeless person near a daycare). - Medina Learning Center is described as “now enrolling,” with “as their backup facility, the UMI Learning Center,” which was “convicted in federal court in 2024 of having a 150 ghost kids.” They seek paperwork to enroll a child named Joey. - Hayden Sarah Family Child Care is described as having “14 children enrolled” per state records but “zero present” when inspectors arrived; the facility roster and missing children records are cited as violations. - Jama Shukri Family Childcare is described as a daycare located in an apartment building (one-bedroom, eight capacity) with two children outside and no adult visible, raising concerns about supervision. - The video notes California allocates $6 billion to childcare, “over 39,000 facilities,” with a state audit error rate of 1.6%, and conservative estimates suggest “upwards of a $100,000,000 in fraud lost each and every single year.” - A recurring theme is “shell registrations” and unregistered CMS (Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services) entities; seven of the four entities shown have “zero SMS data,” implying shell companies or fraud networks possibly connected to Armenian/Russian gangs. - Hospice and home health care fraud focus: - The group shifts to Van Nuys, California, claiming “home health care and hospice fraud” is pervasive there; they assert “one out of every $10 that goes towards home health care in the United States goes to a business here in LA.” They visit numerous hospice centers in a single plaza, naming Gardens of Angels Hospice and Blossom Hospice as examples of high billing with few services performed (e.g., Gardens of Angels: “billed $4,800,000 per beneficiary,” “$5,807 per claim,” 28.6 claims per patient, only two codes). Blossom Hospice is described as “$3,400,000” billed with “$927 per claim,” again with only one code and minimal services. - They claim “seven of the four entities have zero SMS data” and label some facilities as shell registrations; some locations appear “registering for hospice but not actually providing care,” with claims of “shell buildings” or storefronts that are empty or only used for billing. - The video notes the presence of luxury cars at these sites (Mercedes, Teslas, BMWs, a Cybertruck) and references a pattern of wealthy vehicles associated with hospice sites, suggesting profits from taxpayers’ dollars. - Miracle Healing Hospice is described as having billed $1,300,000 in 2023 with 38 beneficiaries: “$32,000 per beneficiary,” but the location was reported as an empty building when visited. - The presenters also describe finding a location that “received $19,000,000” over the past years for Healthy Life Adult Daycare, yet the building appears dilapidated and shows no adults present during visits. Phone lines and mailboxes are reported as failing to provide information or contacts. - Interviews and expert commentary: - A professional in the medical industry is interviewed to explain how fraud could occur: someone could obtain a Medicare number and use it to bill Medicare for hospice services; fraudsters reportedly can open a hospice license without being a physician, then bill the system and receive payments quickly. - The interview suggests Medicare numbers can be stolen or purchased; the speaker emphasizes that “anybody can get a hospice license,” and that the process enables easy billings to Medicare/Medicaid. - A participant describes a trend of these facilities opening and billing, with the implication that people exploit the system for swift returns. - Overall framing and conclusions presented: - The speakers argue that there is a thousand percent increase in hospice openings in California, a surge in fraudulent activity across daycares and hospice/hom e health facilities, and that tax dollars are funding these entities with little-to-no accountability. They juxtapose luxury cars and upscale appearances with empty or non-operational facilities to illustrate alleged misappropriation of funds. They advocate scrutiny, data-backed investigation, and accountability for what they describe as widespread fraud affecting taxpayers and vulnerable populations. - Closing sentiments: - The narrative closes with a call to action against fraud, emphasizing the impact on ordinary Americans who face rising costs and debt, and claiming that exposing fraud is essential to protecting taxpayer dollars and national financial health.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
California is considering implementing a wealth tax, which would impose a 1% tax on individuals with over $50 million in assets and a 1.5% tax on billionaires. The tax would also fund private attorneys to sue wealthy Californians for allegedly underreporting assets. The state is facing a $68 billion budget deficit and has recently announced free healthcare for all illegal migrants. While a 1.5% tax may not seem significant, it effectively confiscates almost a third of rich people's money. This could lead to an exodus of wealthy Californians to states like Florida or Texas. Other progressive states may also follow suit with similar tax measures.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Undocumented immigrants can receive government assistance without a social security number through state and federal funding. State funding, especially in California, requires minimal identification, such as an address or consular ID. California offers undocumented immigrants free healthcare through Medi-Cal, food assistance through the CFAP program (providing over $2,000 a month to those over 55), and WIC. New York also offers food assistance via state funding. According to Speaker 1, 59% of illegal alien families utilize welfare programs, costing $42 billion annually.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Governor Pritzker allocated $629 million to the Healthy Illinois campaign, providing healthcare to immigrants regardless of status. This includes $440 million from the general revenue fund and $189 million from federal reimbursements, a 15% increase from the previous year. The program aims to eliminate co-pays for participants. The speaker contrasts this with the struggles of Illinoisans, including her grandmother, to afford healthcare despite a lifetime of work. She argues that the government prioritizes non-citizens' healthcare needs over those of legal residents, particularly regarding access to dental and vision care. She urges listeners to remember this when voting in 2026 and to hold elected officials accountable for neglecting the needs of Illinoisans.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Gavin Newsom is being called out for hypocrisy regarding gender-affirming care. An ad used a clip from when he agreed with Kamala Harris on the issue. California has allowed gender transition care for prisoners since 2017, but Newsom only spoke out against it recently when it became a political liability. He signed a transgender rights bill for prisoners affirming their right to this care and approved a Medicaid expansion extending gender-affirming care to undocumented immigrants. His record doesn't match his recent rhetoric.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
California has recently expanded health care benefits for migrants aged 26 to 49, which will cover an additional 700,000 individuals at an annual cost of $2.6 billion. This decision adds to California's existing deficit, which stands at $68 billion.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Modernizing American medicine will address waste, fraud, and abuse. Last year, 230,000 Americans on Obamacare plans were unaware of their enrollment; brokers profited by enrolling them without their knowledge. California has taken millions of dollars from the federal government to provide free health insurance for illegal immigrants. The government intends to recoup this money. Medicaid patients are also being enrolled in multiple states, resulting in the federal government paying multiple states for the same individual without ensuring they receive adequate healthcare.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In Downtown LA Skid Row, the speaker discusses funds allocated to help the homeless that are allegedly unaccounted for. In 2023, Gavin Newsom set aside $750,000,000 to build tiny homes, and in 02/2019, $24,000,000,000 was allocated towards the homeless. The speaker questions the wealth of politicians like Nancy Pelosi, who has served since 02/2007 and has a net worth over $120,000,000, and Maxine Waters, who has served since 1990 and has a net worth over $10,000,000. Gavin Newsom is reportedly building a $9,000,000 home in San Francisco. The speaker claims California's leaders have failed the people of Los Angeles and California, and over 66,000,000 people have left the state in recent years. The speaker criticizes Newsom for doing a podcast and suggests he may be planning a presidential run in 2028.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In Downtown LA Skid Row, the speaker discusses the homeless situation, stating that in 2023, Gavin Newsom allocated $750,000,000 for tiny homes, and in 02/2019, $24,000,000,000 was designated for the homeless, but the money is unaccounted for. The speaker mentions Nancy Pelosi, who has served since 02/2007 and has a net worth over $120,000,000, and Maxine Waters, serving since 1990 with a net worth over $10,000,000. Gavin Newsom is reportedly building a $9,000,000 home in San Francisco. The speaker claims California's leaders have failed the people of Los Angeles and California, and that over 66,000,000 people have left California in recent years. The speaker criticizes Newsom for hosting a podcast and suggests he may be planning a presidential run in 2028.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
As part of the California Department of Finance, I'd like to clarify the current budget allocation for covering undocumented individuals in Medi-Cal. We're currently spending a total of $9.5 billion, not the $6 billion figure often cited. This $9.5 billion is the revised number from the governor's budget, reflecting updated estimates. Of this total, $8.4 billion comes from the general fund.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
California provides state Medicaid to all illegal migrants and has allegedly created a system to siphon Medicaid dollars. Governor Newsom initially estimated free healthcare for illegal immigrants would cost $6 billion, but it's now $10 billion. This incentivizes illegal immigration. The governor claimed the federal government would reimburse the cost, but it's hitting the general fund, with one in four Medi-Cal dollars going to illegal immigrants. Newsom admitted Medi-Cal is broke and can't pay healthcare providers. Providing free healthcare to illegal immigrants risks health insurance for the neediest. The Medi-Cal system should be audited. It is illegal for federal Medicaid dollars to cover illegal migrants.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
We can eliminate debt, provide childcare, elder care, and strengthen healthcare. Everyone should have access to the same benefits as during COVID. President Biden is thanked for beating Medicare. President Trump is criticized for destroying it.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript presents a speaker arguing that Gavin Newsom’s welfare fraud problems are far worse than those attributed to Minnesota Governor Tim Walz, and that the liberal media is not addressing these issues. The speaker states that Newsom “allowed $30,000,000,000 in fraudulent welfare payments to be issued by the unemployment agency,” and that as a result, small businesses in California must pay off all of that debt through higher payroll taxes. The speaker contrasts this with Walz, who is “accused of allowing $250,000,000 of food stamp fraud to occur to Somali organizations.” The speaker asserts that Newsom’s food stamp fraud is at a multi-billion-dollar level and claims Newsom’s food stamp fraud rate is “thirteen point four percent,” describing it as “three out of every 20 benefits managed by Newsom's administration for food stamps completely fraudulent.” Additionally, the speaker contends that California funds “left wing NGOs,” including various Somali community organizations in Minnesota, and asserts that “a lot of those NGOs are using taxpayer money for politics.” The speaker claims that the liberal media is not covering any of these scandals and asserts that people should know these alleged facts because they are not being discussed by the media. In summary, the speaker asserts: - Newsom’s welfare fraud is exponentially worse than Walz’s, with $30 billion in fraudulent unemployment payments allegedly issued by California’s unemployment agency. - As a consequence, small California businesses must bear the cost via higher payroll taxes. - Walz is accused of allowing $250 million of food stamp fraud targeting Somali organizations. - Newsom’s food stamp fraud is claimed to be multi-billion in scope, with a fraud rate of 13.4% (three of every twenty benefits). - California is funding left-wing NGOs, including Somali-related organizations, with taxpayer money used for political purposes. - The liberal media is not covering these alleged scandals, and the speaker asserts these are important facts that should be known.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A massive investigation has uncovered that California may have committed major fraud against the US government by exploiting a complicated loophole that allowed them to steal billions in federal taxpayer funds. The findings emerged during a review of California's medical financial records, revealing that under Gavin Newsom's leadership, the state has essentially been funneling taxpayer money from across America to prop up California's finances. The investigation describes an ingenious plan that started in 2022 and centers on the concept of intergovernmental transfers. In simple terms, intergovernmental transfers occur when a local hospital or county makes a transfer to the state's Medicaid agency for payments of medical services such as ambulance rides. After these transfers are made, the state can then request a matching amount of money from the federal government. However, Newsom's California is said to have abused this system by raising the price of a simple ambulance ride by nearly 300%. According to the report, once local hospitals transferred funds to the state and the state received the federal matching funds, they then paid a private ambulance service, which cost only a fraction of the original price, pocketing the difference. The narrative emphasizes that, according to the investigators, this sequence allowed a large gap to be exploited, enabling the state to divert funds that originated as federal dollars. The summary asserts that this scheme, if accurate, involved transforming ordinary intergovernmental transfer mechanics into a vehicle for disproportionately inflating payments for ambulance services and then routing the excess to private providers, rather than to the intended public accounts. It notes that the transfers and the subsequent federal matches occurred within the framework of existing programs, but the practice allegedly subverted the intended use of those funds. Crucially, the report concludes that the entire procedure is lawful within current rules, and it asserts that the government must find a way to close this loophole. The overarching claim is that, by manipulating the pricing of ambulance services and channeling payments through a private ambulance provider, California essentially diverted federal resources through a system that was not designed to support such a practice. The investigation thus frames the situation as a significant example of how intergovernmental transfers can be leveraged in ways that impact federal funds, highlighting the need for reform to prevent similar occurrences in the future.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
In Los Angeles, there are 42 hospices within a four-block radius, with Cyrillic and Armenian/Russian writing on buildings and little visible patient care activity. A major case involved $16,000,000 stolen, with the main organizer going to jail for two years. The area had an apparently empty hospice center and claimed services for people at home that were not actually provided. The speaker asserts roughly $3.5 billion in fraud is taking place in Los Angeles hospice and home care, run largely by the Russian Armenian mafia. The narration notes the presence of language and dialect behind the speaker as indicative of this organized crime. The operation allegedly recruited hundreds of doctors to write false prescriptions and paid or tricked 100,000 patients into giving them their beneficiary numbers to perpetuate the fraud. Criminals allegedly run the organization and quickly evade when law enforcement prosecutes them. California has not given much attention to these problems, but that is changing, according to the speaker. The US attorney and FBI are now focused on the issue in a state with about $30,000,000,000 worth of home and community-based services, most of which, the speaker claims, might be fraudulent. The statement concludes that the President is not going to tolerate this anymore.

Shawn Ryan Show

Nick Shirley - How Did a Dog Vote in 2 California Elections? | SRS #297
Guests: Nick Shirley
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Nick Shirley, a young independent journalist, discusses his investigations into widespread fraud in the United States, emphasizing how he moved from Minnesota to California to pursue larger schemes involving improper payments through Medicaid-like programs. He explains that California’s medical program, which functions as the state’s Medicaid, has seen enrollment and spending rise dramatically—from about 3.9 million enrollees and 108 billion dollars in 2022 to a proposed 222 billion and roughly 40 million enrollees in 2026—without a matching population growth. The interview details how fraudsters exploit hospice and home health care billing, often using stolen Medicare beneficiary numbers to enroll elderly patients and then bill for services never delivered. Shirley highlights how patients and doctors can be unaware they are enrolled in hospice, which allows suspicious offices—sometimes clustered in a single building with dozens of hospices in one place—to siphon funds and assets, including luxury vehicles and expensive properties, while the patients’ medical needs are neglected. The conversation underscores the difficulty of policing such fraud when the systems and bureaucracies involved are sprawling and opaque, arguing that if lawmakers truly wanted to stop the bleeding, they would implement thorough verification and accountability mechanisms rather than issuing statements or token reforms. Shirley also recounts the reaction to his Minnesota findings, including death threats and political pressure, and notes that the subsequent creation of a cross-agency fraud task force could lead to prosecutions only if authorities follow through with real enforcement. He expands to voter fraud, recounting lax ID requirements in several states and describing a perceived pattern where signatures and rolls can be manipulated, even recounting a dog voting incident to illustrate how easily registration and voting could be exploited in practice. The discussion touches on the broader political and social environment, including homelessness in California and the “homeless industrial complex,” suggesting that money at stake in anti-homelessness programs has fostered financial incentives that propagate the crisis rather than solve it. Shirley argues that journalism can illuminate systemic problems that affect taxpayers across the country and that accountability will depend on whether prosecutions occur and reforms are implemented, not merely on sensational coverage or political grandstanding.

Keeping It Real

Free Healthcare for Illegal Immigrants?!
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The episode examines how undocumented immigrants access health care in the United States, arguing that while no federal statute explicitly provides government subsidies to illegal immigrants, multiple mechanisms funnel taxpayer dollars into their care. The host outlines a 90-day “reasonable opportunity period” during which Medicaid enrollment begins before immigration status is verified, a process that can leave undocumented individuals covered while verification proceeds. She details how the SAVE system and manual reviews can create a window where payments are made for people who may later be found ineligible, describing a practice she labels cycling through the system and noting that recent policy changes have extended opportunities for individuals to reapply after denials. The narrative emphasizes that the problem is not only the law, but how regulatory definitions and enforcement discretion effectively broaden access to benefits beyond strict statutory language. The discussion then traces the evolution of eligibility from the 1996 Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Act, which excluded undocumented immigrants, through ACA-era expansions that allowed broader interpretation of who is considered “lawfully present.” The host highlights objections to these expansions, citing examples such as DACA recipients, asylum seekers, and temporary protected status holders, and she explains how policy shifts have left the definitions vaguely defined, enabling different administrations to reinterpret who qualifies. A subsequent section explores four channels through which costs are borne: fraud and misrepresentation, emergency-room care under EMTALA, state-funded programs that blend with federal funding, and the use of waivers or administrative layering to move costs from states to federal pools. The segment concludes with a call for clarity in law, noting that only a congressional redefinition of “lawfully present” would definitively close the loopholes, while urging voters to scrutinize how policy shapes access to care and who ultimately pays for it.
View Full Interactive Feed