
Mon May 4, 2026
46:10
Homer and Dame open the hour with a sobering look at ongoing youth violence in Milwaukee, centered on a fatal shooting involving an 18-year-old near 62nd and Harrison. They share community frustrations over a property tied to repeated incidents, raising questions about why earlier warnings and intervention efforts failed to prevent tragedy. The discussion highlights the emotional toll on neighborhoods and the consequences of reactive, rather than proactive, policing. They then turn to the growing presence of modified firearms, including weapons equipped with switches that enable fully automatic fire. Referencing recent incidents, they describe how the sheer volume of gunfire is reshaping both the scale and fear of violence, with residents struggling to process what they’re hearing in real time. The conversation expands to include the role of the gun industry and the broader national implications of increasingly accessible high-powered weapons. The hour shifts toward solutions, focusing on a proposed “all-hands-on-deck” initiative aimed at reducing youth violence. Homer and Dame stress that while many programs serve well-intentioned youth, real progress requires engaging those already involved in criminal activity. They emphasize the importance of listening to these individuals directly to understand root causes and prevent future violence. They close by outlining a more targeted approach—pairing at-risk youth with mentors, integrating court diversion programs, and maintaining consistent support systems that extend into daily life. The conversation underscores a central theme: meaningful change depends on reaching the small group driving much of the violence, not just those already on the right path.