Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
We played something last night. What what do you Oh? Yes,
I'm starting the show very serious today. Am I supposed
to start the show. Is it incongruous that we go
from Captain Kangaroo to me being serious?
Speaker 2 (00:18):
No?
Speaker 1 (00:18):
I thought about this a lot last night. Hold on,
want this is serious point. I want to make this point.
We talked about something. I don't know. It was a
last segment or second to last segment. It was late
in the show last night, six thirty six forty five,
right before we go off at seven o'clock. And I
got so much response that I went home thinking about
(00:39):
it last night. And what it was was ABC News
had a Kamala campaign surrogate on and this campaign surrogut
who's authorized to speak for the campaign old Kamala Harris brave?
(01:03):
Now what did she do that was brave? Well, the
only thing the Democrats will ever say is brave is
not fighting in a war because they hate the veterans.
It's not being a police officer facing down the Yaser
Arafat costume wearing pro hamas terrorists. No, because cops are evil,
except all the cops that are defending them around around
(01:24):
the venue. No, these things aren't brave. What's brave is
a dude chopping his Wiener off or a girl having
a big chunk taken out of her thigh of muscle
and meat and attached dangling down like a sausage. That
does not in any way respond to her level of excitement,
(01:45):
even if she calls herself a heat. But now at
least they've got something to fill out a speedo. But
they have a huge gaping hole in their leg that
they will call brave. So for her to call for
this person, it's hard to tell. To call Kamala Harris
(02:07):
brave for something other than that means we should take note.
And the thing Kamala did that was so brave was
releasing her economic plan. Now you have to understand she's
been the nominee for a month. There were people we've
(02:29):
got that audio. See if you can find that audio
over I'm going to play six or eleven here in
a minute, but I'll talk for a minute. See if
you can find it, or no, you know what, there
may not be audio. Politico reported on it and said
Democrat congressmen were insisting, begging, threatening Kamala not to release
(02:50):
an economic plan. Don't do it, because this is just
like with the Jewish Shapiro, this forced the question, either
you say you're going to allow the Muslim nations to
destroy Israel and then dry up the Jewish funding and
(03:14):
Christian funding, or you deny it and you get what
they're having right now without having said anything. You get
the radical elements who at any point could blow this
place up to really make a scene here. Those aren't Republicans.
Outside the gates, knocking the gates down and fighting the
(03:37):
cops and spitting on the cops and biting the cops.
Those aren't Republicans. Those are Democrat voters, but they're trying
to steer the Democrat Party in their direction. You see
all those people in the ucer arafat costume, those are
not Republicans. They're not showing up to protest because they
want Trump to win. They want the Democrat Party to
(04:00):
you even further to crazy. They're the ilhan omar Aoc Democrats.
So Kamala Harris wasn't supposed to release any of her policies,
not that they're well thought out, because doing so, according
to surrogate, would mean that people would be able to
(04:22):
pick them apart, you mean, debate them, question them, argue
whether they've been tried before and failed. So that's why
there weren't any policy positions. In fact, if you go
you pull it up here, if you go to Kamala
(04:44):
Harris's website and you look at the oh where did
I put it? I have it's an embarrassment of riches.
I have too much show prep. There are nine different pronouns.
When you are applying to work for the Harris County,
(05:05):
for the Harris Country, for the Kamala Harris campaign, you
can choose from nine different pronouns. There's he and she,
and then it gets really weird, I mean really weird,
but no economic policies. Then their polling showed them that
(05:26):
people think she's too light. Some undecided voters are saying,
you know, she's like this princess that they're rolling out
and she doesn't know anything about anything. And now I'm
starting to get scared because she's drunk all the time
and the border's wide open. I don't think she's serious.
I mean, not like Trump, but I think what he's
(05:49):
saying might actually be right. So they had to announce
an economic policy. So she said prices are too high,
things are bad, and she did what Democrats do brand
is up, meat is up. You're struggling. Yeah, you think
four years of your presidency. Look at what inflation was
(06:11):
when Trump left office, and look at what it is now.
Pretty clear. So she said, I she called it price gauging,
but she said, I'll stop the price gauging. Price gauging, gouging.
She didn't know the difference. They wrote gouging. I'm sure,
but the grocery store is price gouging at a one
(06:35):
point six percent profit. That's what grocery stores typically make.
That's standard, one point six percent. The government takes thirty
percent and doesn't give you anything. But I want you
to listen to how this really shocked people, how brave
she is for laying her policy out there. Trump's laid
(06:57):
every policy out there. This really shocked people. So I
want to share it again because I want to get
your attention.
Speaker 3 (07:05):
In fact, I think Vice President Harris has been incredibly
brave to roll out an ambitious economic agenda, because.
Speaker 4 (07:11):
We all know how this works.
Speaker 3 (07:13):
The more details you share, the more your policies are
going to get picked apart. But she's saying, I trust
the American people, I trust the journalists to explain these
policies and our values to folks, and I think when
that happens, it will be successful for Democrats. These are
very pro worker, pro middle class policies that people have
been waiting for.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
You will remember we had the sweetest old lady call
the show a couple months ago. Her name was Dolores,
and we loved her, and so many of you did
as well. And is she wanted to go for an
estate sale. Well, she didn't have ybody to take her anymore.
So our creative director Jim Mudd, who lost his own
mother who's also named Loretta, a couple of years back,
(08:01):
he said, I'll take her, so he did. They went
out to lunch at Federal American Grill and when they
were done, they sat down for a short conversation. And
here's how it went.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
Earlier, when we were talking, you were telling me that
you met your husband in a very unusual way. Can
you tell me that story.
Speaker 5 (08:18):
Yes, I was visiting a friend and I had my car.
I was driving and I come up to an intersection
that I was supposed to stop, and I kept going.
My brakes failed and I hit a young man in
his father's new car and had to call my station
(08:48):
that I always did my business.
Speaker 2 (08:50):
At the gas station.
Speaker 6 (08:51):
The gas station.
Speaker 5 (08:53):
At that time, they filled your tank, worked on your cars,
did everything.
Speaker 6 (08:58):
And I called have my car towed.
Speaker 5 (09:02):
And the young man who came to get me told
this boss, I want to go get her.
Speaker 6 (09:09):
I've been trying to meet her.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
This is your husband.
Speaker 4 (09:13):
Yes, were you?
Speaker 2 (09:15):
Were you aware of him?
Speaker 6 (09:16):
Never paid any attention till yeah?
Speaker 2 (09:19):
So how did you get your attention that day?
Speaker 5 (09:21):
Well, he drove to my car, hooked it up, and
he said, I'll take you home.
Speaker 2 (09:28):
Oh that was it? Yeah, So you liked a man
that could throw your car around? Or was there a
quality about him that day that stood out?
Speaker 6 (09:35):
He was sure of himself.
Speaker 5 (09:39):
He was not going to be working at a gas
station the rest of his life. He was going to
industrial school to learn machine.
Speaker 4 (09:49):
Repair, and that's what he did, and that's what he did.
Speaker 2 (09:53):
How old were you when you met him?
Speaker 4 (09:54):
And how old is he?
Speaker 5 (09:56):
He's four years older than me and I was twenty five.
I think it was twenty six like that.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
And what year was this?
Speaker 6 (10:08):
Nineteen fifty eight?
Speaker 4 (10:10):
Oh, okay, October.
Speaker 6 (10:12):
Of nineteen fifty eight.
Speaker 5 (10:14):
And when I had to go to court because I
hit the young man who was home on leave.
Speaker 6 (10:22):
He was in the service.
Speaker 5 (10:24):
Oh okay, and he felt terrible because it was his father's.
Speaker 2 (10:28):
New car, right right.
Speaker 6 (10:30):
And my tow truck.
Speaker 5 (10:34):
Driver said, I'll go with you to court to vouch
for you that the car's breaks failed.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
Oh I bet he did. I bet he did.
Speaker 4 (10:43):
And the rest is history.
Speaker 2 (10:45):
Now, how did it work back then? Did you have
insurance back then?
Speaker 4 (10:48):
Yes? I did?
Speaker 6 (10:49):
Okay, Yeah, I've always carried insurance.
Speaker 2 (10:52):
Yeah. I wasn't alive yet, so I didn't know when
people started having insurance, if it's always been a thing
or if it Well, I grew up in Illinois and
it wasn't what. You didn't have to have insurance until
I was already driving. We had insurance, but you didn't
have to have it, So I didn't know back then
if it was common.
Speaker 5 (11:10):
It was always common for my family. I don't know
if it was the law.
Speaker 6 (11:16):
Yeah, like I think it is.
Speaker 2 (11:19):
Now right, it's a good law.
Speaker 6 (11:21):
Yeah, well look at me.
Speaker 4 (11:24):
Yeah, took care.
Speaker 2 (11:25):
Of it for me, right, and that got you a
husband and everything. He's like, well, she's got insurance. So
how long were you guys dating after that before you
got married?
Speaker 6 (11:38):
Un till March of fifty nine.
Speaker 2 (11:41):
Oh, not long, that was a short engagement. Oh when
you know, you know, did you know right away or
after about a month or so?
Speaker 6 (11:50):
You're like just after a month or so.
Speaker 4 (11:53):
And he was already he was ready because he was
almost thirty.
Speaker 2 (11:57):
Yeah, oh yeah, he was ready.
Speaker 6 (11:59):
Oh yeah, and he had a girlfriend at the time.
Speaker 2 (12:02):
Oh and did you guys see her around after that?
Speaker 6 (12:07):
No?
Speaker 2 (12:07):
No, I don't know if you saw her around town.
Speaker 4 (12:10):
Where was this at Michigan? Oh, in Michigan, Detroit.
Speaker 5 (12:14):
I lived by myself in an apartment and he lived
with his folks.
Speaker 2 (12:21):
That's when Detroit was really happened. Yeah, not like now,
that was the.
Speaker 6 (12:26):
Right You weren't afraid to live there then?
Speaker 2 (12:29):
Yeah. Yeah. So what did you guys do on dates?
What do you do in fifty eight? Two twenty year
olds and fifty eight? What do you do? Where are
you going?
Speaker 6 (12:38):
We went to Belle Isle.
Speaker 2 (12:39):
What is that?
Speaker 5 (12:40):
It's an island in Detroit between in the Lake.
Speaker 4 (12:48):
Great Lakes.
Speaker 5 (12:50):
And they'd have music there. We'd go on the weekend.
What kind of music bands.
Speaker 2 (12:57):
Like big bands?
Speaker 4 (12:58):
Yeah, that was still pretty popular there.
Speaker 6 (12:59):
Yeah, symphony okay, and we go to the theater a lot.
We loved going to the show.
Speaker 2 (13:06):
What did you guys? What do you remember any movies
that you saw when you're dating?
Speaker 5 (13:11):
One of them I didn't like because it called the
Stepford Wives.
Speaker 2 (13:16):
Yeah, you didn't like that.
Speaker 6 (13:18):
No, I didn't like the way wives were treated.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
Then did you let him know, You're like, Okay, if
we get married, it's not going to be like the
Stepford Wives.
Speaker 4 (13:26):
Well it sort of was, was it.
Speaker 5 (13:29):
Well that's why I drove a school bus because I
started having children right away.
Speaker 6 (13:34):
Yeah, and I had to be home with my children.
He worked. Yeah, I was a stay at home mom.
Speaker 5 (13:42):
And that's when I started selling Avon so I could
earn some money, but I still stayed at home.
Speaker 2 (13:51):
How long did you sell Avon?
Speaker 4 (13:52):
A couple of years?
Speaker 2 (13:53):
Did you like it?
Speaker 6 (13:55):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (13:55):
I did.
Speaker 2 (13:56):
Did you keep any When I was a kid, my
mom would buy Avon. She'd buy like the Clone and
stuff for my dad. I remember if you remember back
then they had uh maybe I don't know if there's
still they had when you were selling it. But when
my mom was buying it, the Clone bottles were like
cars and all that.
Speaker 6 (14:11):
And I started me collecting elephants.
Speaker 2 (14:15):
Is that how it started?
Speaker 4 (14:16):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (14:16):
How many elephants.
Speaker 6 (14:17):
Do you have over a thousand?
Speaker 2 (14:21):
So when they say the elephant in the room, they
mean it at your house. Yes, yeah, I see a
picture of an elephant over there.
Speaker 6 (14:26):
Now, yeah, that's a little girl sitting next to the hold.
Speaker 2 (14:30):
Yeah on that one.
Speaker 6 (14:31):
Yeah, you'll find them all.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
Over Yeah, elephant, do you have any pink elephants?
Speaker 6 (14:37):
I have everything I promised.
Speaker 5 (14:41):
After the two front bedrooms were full of elephants, I
had elephant's shelf in there.
Speaker 6 (14:48):
And that's why I was able.
Speaker 5 (14:49):
To give those two rooms to my daughter, because I
took all the elephants out. And I promised a couple
of years ago I wouldn't buy any more elephants.
Speaker 2 (15:01):
You had a promise, huh?
Speaker 4 (15:02):
And well because it was it's overwhelming.
Speaker 5 (15:05):
Yeah, yeah, and but people still gave it to me.
I'd accept that.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
Of course. Yeah, I'd be rude not to you.
Speaker 4 (15:14):
Yeah, you don't be rude.
Speaker 6 (15:15):
But I said, except jewelry.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
No elephant jewelry.
Speaker 4 (15:19):
Oh no, I got he still, Oh you can buy that.
Speaker 5 (15:21):
Yeah, and those books are elephants.
Speaker 4 (15:25):
Oh yeah, sure, elephant elephants mm hmm.
Speaker 2 (15:29):
Oh and there's an elephant on the table. Uh huh, oh, yeah,
do you any of your kids or grandkids collect elephants.
Speaker 6 (15:36):
Nope, nobody does.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
Nobody does. How many? How many kids do you have?
Speaker 6 (15:39):
I have five?
Speaker 2 (15:41):
Do you love them? Do you have one more than
the other four?
Speaker 6 (15:44):
Do I love one more than Yeah?
Speaker 4 (15:46):
You have a favorite different times.
Speaker 2 (15:49):
Yeah, No, that's good to answer.
Speaker 6 (15:50):
To be totally honest.
Speaker 5 (15:52):
Mike, my oldest son would tease Kim because she was
my accident. Okay, totally unexpected. There's eight years difference.
Speaker 2 (16:04):
Oh yeah, and so.
Speaker 5 (16:06):
He always baby satter and he would tell her, well,
you know, mom picked you up at the side of
the road, you were full of mud.
Speaker 2 (16:15):
Were looking at elephants. You found her, and she.
Speaker 6 (16:20):
Was totally unexpected, and.
Speaker 2 (16:24):
She's what Bob Ross would call a happy accident.
Speaker 4 (16:26):
Yeah, yeah, that's right.
Speaker 5 (16:29):
And I God planned that one, of course, because it's
meant to be. In fact, I always tease her and
call her my Singapore sling.
Speaker 6 (16:43):
That's a drink, you know.
Speaker 2 (16:45):
Oh, is that how the accident happened? You're drinking Singapore
slings up?
Speaker 6 (16:52):
Uh huh.
Speaker 2 (16:53):
Good for him, Good for him. That's funny.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
The first I've been storying the black community is to
dismantle the black family.
Speaker 4 (17:01):
To Michael Verry Show, Why don't.
Speaker 6 (17:03):
We ask missus Willie Brown?
Speaker 7 (17:04):
If Kamala Harris cares about black families.
Speaker 1 (17:09):
Things aren't all bad these days. I was sitting on
my patio recently when I came across an old commercial
from nineteen sixty seven from Real Cream. My dad used
Real Cream as a young man. I've seen pictures of
him in high school and as a young man. And
he's got that hair slicked back Johnny Cash style in
a real in a like a pomperd or he's got it.
(17:31):
He's got it combback with that brill cream.
Speaker 8 (17:35):
Another important announcement from Real Cream, man, beware use one
dab of brill cream. Just a little dab makes your
hair look excitingly clean, disturbingly healthy. This man dared to
use two dabs. Now he's in trouble. We refuse to
be responsible. Real Cream and then an ave young all
(17:58):
watch out the album.
Speaker 1 (18:02):
For those of you too young to remember, And I
went and looked it up. Bural Cream is a britishman's
hair styling product. The original Brial Cream hair cream was
developed in nineteen twenty eight by County Chemicals at the
chemical Works in Bradford, Street, Birmingham, England, and it remains
(18:25):
the brand's flagship product almost one hundred years later. The
cream is an emulsion of water and mineral oil stabilized
with beeswax. If you read the autobiography of Malcolm X,
Alex Haley goes through how black men, including Malcolm X,
(18:51):
would use lye on their hair. They would do things
that burned their hair and their scalp. Many of them
would end up red hair, so they would be known
as red. That's where Red Fox got the name Red.
Malcolm X was at one point I think Louisville red
or Detroit Red. I forget, but they would be referred
(19:14):
to by their name and red because they had this
reddish hair from the lie they were putting on their
hair to straighten it.
Speaker 8 (19:24):
Well.
Speaker 1 (19:24):
I used to think to myself, man, black people have
gone to great links on their hair. White people have to.
Brill cream was first advertised on television with the jingle
brill cream. Do you know the next line? I bet
you do a bet. Our older folks do a little dabble.
Speaker 2 (19:41):
Do you.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
Brill cream? You look so debonair? Brill Cream. The gals'll
all pursue you. They'll love to run their fingers through
your hair. That was the ad. So if you've ever
heard your mom, your dad, your grandma, your grandpa, when
you say how much, they'll say a little dabble do you?
(20:04):
That's where this comes from. This is the old Madison
Avenue slogan. Writer, you know, executives at their best. Brill cream,
A little dabble?
Speaker 5 (20:15):
Do you?
Speaker 1 (20:16):
Brill cream? You look so debonair? Brill cream. The gals
will all pursue you. They'll love to run their fingers
through your hair. Who would want that? Another version was
brill cream a little dabble? Do you use more? Only
if you dare, but watch out, the girls will all
(20:37):
pursue you. They'll love to run their fingers through your hair.
Be careful, Johnny, you go putting that real cream on
and the girls are going to end up wanting to
put their hands through your hair. Promise. Handling. Norrins of
the Young and Rubicum Advertising agency created the jingle this
(20:59):
is the heyday of Madison Avenue, heyday of ad agencies.
The advertisement for Brial Cream included a cartoon animation of
a man with initially shaggy hair who happily has a
little dab applied and miraculously the hair combs and smooths itself.
(21:23):
So ladies, for those of you who had tangled or
twisted or curly hair that you hated, it was a
time when men were worried about that as well. When
the dry look became popular, partly inspired by the unoiled
mop tops of that band from England to Beatles, the
last line was changed from They'll love to run their
(21:45):
fingers through your hair to They'll love the natural look
it gives your hair. Subsequent television advertisements used the motto's
grooms without gumming, Grooms without gumming, and later in the
seventies in the UK and Canada, a little dab of
(22:05):
brill cream on your hair gives you the brille cream
bounce ramon, Did you know that Whyalon Jennings was a
brill cream man before he grew his hair out. He
was the only one of the Nashville crowd supposedly to
use it. Johnny Cash used the more popular Did anybody
(22:28):
remember what Johnny Cash used?
Speaker 2 (22:30):
Rc?
Speaker 1 (22:31):
Royal Crown? Because people remember Johnny Cash had that whip
back hair. They forget that Whalen who would later go
natural and shaggy with that great beard. That's his best look.
They forget how he had that slick back when he
went from being a radio DJ to first hit in
the stage. His hair looked like the early days of
(22:53):
Johnny Cash. Go back and look at it. It won't
look like the whalan you know. That's the thing about
a hair product. Guys find one they like, they'll stick
with it for the rest of their lives. There's no
excitement about change, like George Clooney's character Ulysses and old Brother.
Where art thou You remember what kind of palm made
he used for moon? That's it? Very good. He's a
(23:15):
dapper dam man.
Speaker 2 (23:17):
I can get the part from Bristol. It'll take two weeks.
Here's your poemade two weeks.
Speaker 7 (23:23):
That don't do me no good.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
Here's Ford Automan's Bristol.
Speaker 4 (23:27):
Hold on now, I don't want this poemade. I want
tapper dam.
Speaker 2 (23:31):
I don't care. A dapper Daan I care.
Speaker 4 (23:33):
For, but I don't want fop damn it.
Speaker 1 (23:36):
I'm a dapper dan man.
Speaker 2 (23:37):
Watch your lang with John Fellow. That's a public market. Now,
if you want dapper Daan, I can order for you.
Haven't a couple of weeks?
Speaker 8 (23:44):
Well hit this beside geographic gladity two weeks from everyone.
Speaker 9 (23:48):
Hey, this is Tracy Bird, and I tip my head
to the Keeper of the Stars and.
Speaker 1 (23:57):
Dist I'm never gonna go what happened during COVID. I'm
never gonna let go how people lost their mind, because
that's what you write about and talk about. That's why
you have a constitution. And people will say to me,
but I was scared. I know I was crazy, Michael,
(24:18):
But I was scared. That's the whole point. You're not
scared right now. You're not trying to run around and
stab people with a needle and shoot killer COVID juice
into them, inducing clots, lesions, rashes. You only did it
when you were scared. That's why they scare you. You
(24:39):
should be ashamed. It's awful, and never forgetting the people
around you who did that. Well, Michael, I agree with
you now if I know, if I know then what
I know now, My goodness, it never ends. Way back
in nineteen eighty five, Phil Donnie on what was then
(25:01):
the very popular Donahue Show, did an entire episode on
vaccine injuries. See, we've been taught that vaccines are a panacea.
Vaccines solve every problem. Vaccines are the greatest thing ever.
(25:21):
Vaccines have extended the livelihood of mankind across the globe. Yes,
vaccines have also killed a number of people. You see,
the gun can be used for good or ill, as
can the automobile, as can sugar or alcohol or any
(25:44):
number of other instruments. But it is not to be worshiped.
It is not to go unquestioned, untested. This idea of
the compulsory mandatory. Take this, or will ostracize you from society,
prevent you from going to school, keep you out of
(26:05):
the hospital, fire you from your job. There were a
lot of people who behaved in a very evil fashion
during that time, and I will never forget that because
the person who will do that, they'll make more stupid mistakes.
It's the same kind of people who believe Barack Obama's
(26:27):
lies and thought, well, i'll vote I'll vote for him
because you know, we've got to be post racial and
post political. But Rush didn't. Rush didn't get suckered in.
I hope he fails. They told him he can have
a thousand words to describe how he felt on the
(26:48):
historic inauguration, or as he said?
Speaker 2 (26:53):
What did he say?
Speaker 1 (26:59):
What's the word uh not uh immaculation on the immaculation.
It was a religious experience for this Barack Obama thing.
He said, I don't need a thousand words, I can
say it in four. I hope he fails, and it
turned out we all did because he knew what the
agenda would be. Here's that Phil Donahue episode.
Speaker 7 (27:19):
It's just that I think the public needs to be informed.
We need to be told the benefits versus the risk.
We need to know what we're facing you, the doctor's
side of.
Speaker 2 (27:28):
A polio vaccine.
Speaker 10 (27:29):
And what nobody knows is that Jonah Salk has pointed
out that in the last ten years in this country,
two thirds of all the cases of poliopen vaccine induced.
Speaker 11 (27:38):
How many odors is that?
Speaker 9 (27:40):
And and only on the cases?
Speaker 10 (27:42):
Bob, would you not interrupt.
Speaker 9 (27:44):
Me for a second?
Speaker 2 (27:45):
But I know, I know that, I know that doctors
are used to interrupting patients, but.
Speaker 4 (27:48):
Not another doctor.
Speaker 9 (27:49):
But I think, well, let's get he does make a
point that we should also say SAVAN his live and
live vaccine, and SULK is inactive, inactive as we say
in the laboratory. All right, how.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
Many was it?
Speaker 9 (28:09):
They ask?
Speaker 2 (28:10):
Well, how many people know that?
Speaker 10 (28:12):
The European epidemic of polio, there were about twenty or
thirty cases in this country. Now, of course, the American
doctors will argue that.
Speaker 2 (28:20):
The reason why polio.
Speaker 10 (28:21):
Disappeared in this country was because of the vaccine.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
But then why did it disappear in Europe in.
Speaker 10 (28:26):
The nineteen forties in the nineteen fifties without mass vaccination?
Speaker 2 (28:30):
But I doesn't it occur in the Third World.
Speaker 10 (28:32):
Where only ten percent of the people have ever been
in the nized against polio or anything else.
Speaker 9 (28:36):
So, in other words, we may be fighting a tiger
that died quite correct.
Speaker 4 (28:40):
I asked the people in.
Speaker 11 (28:41):
Great Britain, asked the people in Japan, whore I'm.
Speaker 9 (28:47):
Back here, gentlemen, if you please, I've got probably the
smartest audience we've ever had.
Speaker 11 (28:52):
I have a question, how long a delayed action?
Speaker 4 (28:55):
If any?
Speaker 9 (28:56):
Would you connect this with like MS possibility? It would
multiple sclerosis be one of the possible results.
Speaker 10 (29:04):
As a matter of fact, there's a new publication that
just came off from John Hoffman, The Closest Ocean of
Tony Morris's that gives the references linking MS in later
life to the early introduction of live virus vaccines.
Speaker 2 (29:19):
Like measles and like some of the others that are
live viruses.
Speaker 10 (29:23):
At the present time, I would at the present time,
I would recommend that anybody who has MS or amiotrophic
lateral sclerosis, or any of those degenerative neurologic conditions of
later life carefully review their vaccine histories.
Speaker 7 (29:38):
I would also like to comment to that because in
connection of my case, I've been doing some reason.
Speaker 9 (29:43):
Let me tell them once again, miss Gundi, but you're
a Keon Beret victim.
Speaker 2 (29:47):
It's abtracted following.
Speaker 9 (29:48):
The following your receipt of the swine flu vaccination.
Speaker 7 (29:52):
Yes, I am in the process of writing a book
about my experience, and in the process I've done considerable research,
and from what I have learn, it looks as if
immanizations frequently cause autoimmune diseases, not only he On Gray syndrome,
but lucas rumatorid arphmitis, multiple sclerosis, and other types of things.
Now I have no data at this point.
Speaker 9 (30:11):
We should also we should also say that there's a
good deal of evidence suggesting that multiple sclerosis may be
the result of distemper in an animal, but the victim
received during childhood. Now none of this is absolutely nailed
to the wall. But that's the problem with is house.
What's a mother to do with all of these balls
in the air and nobody really certain you.
Speaker 7 (30:34):
I would just like to also comment that we had
forty six million people vaccine a vaccinator with the swine
flu shot, and I have written to Ralph Nader's organization.
I have written to some of the government organizations trying
to get them to do a survey, a ongoing survey
to see if these vaccinations do cause autoimmune diseases or
what the reactions are. I can't even get a response
(30:54):
because I'm not a doctor, I have no cloud.
Speaker 9 (30:56):
I'm a nobody, missus rad Why were you shaking your head? Bill?
Speaker 11 (31:00):
It is known with that vaccine, it's with all vaccine.
They are not interested in the adverse reactions. As a
matter of fact, that I may I'd like to invite
anyone to write to me if they'd haven't adverse reaction.
I'd like to help the government because they don't want
to know what.
Speaker 10 (31:11):
I would like to know that.
Speaker 11 (31:12):
I am a mother of three children, and I have
been informed and I've read up on these things, and
I chose not to vaccinate my children, But when they
get to school, why is it that I have to
fight for.
Speaker 7 (31:22):
My rights as a mother and the choice I've made
me just.
Speaker 9 (31:24):
Quickly we're along, But that's a very important question. Here
are the states in which you either have the totally
free decision about whether or not to vaccinate, or we're
calling them loophole states, states where they're not going to
send your child.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
To solitary if you don't have his card.
Speaker 9 (31:43):
Do not, all right, California. Not all children must be
immunized in these states. Some require religious reasons. Some places
there is a bureaucratic kummahamma you have to go through
to prove that you're this or that, and others it's
probably easier. So just for the sake of simplifying this, Colorado, Idaho, Anda, Ioa, Louisiana, Maine, Michigan,
Minnesota and Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania,
(32:07):
Rhode Island, Utah, Vermont, Washington, and Wisconsin.
Speaker 2 (32:10):
If your state is not on there.
Speaker 9 (32:11):
It means that your child is going to be left
at the kindergarten door feeling very very much an outcast
because he didn't get his immimization shots
Speaker 8 (32:21):
And we'll be back in a moment.