Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time time, luck load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
So Michael Verry Show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
It's Charlie from BlackBerry Smoke.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
I can feel a good one coming on.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
It's the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 4 (00:27):
Any attempt to restrict drinking and driving gear is viewed
by some as downright fun democratic.
Speaker 5 (00:32):
Two six packs, shiner not a nine, sid Putaine ladder,
look as track center, fifth of patrol, pass down, Eddie
Lue cooler, take a guess at all to do?
Speaker 2 (00:50):
I can feel a good one coming of.
Speaker 5 (00:55):
Throwing Rey Wild Hubbard sing along to mother any blues I.
Speaker 2 (01:03):
Had before.
Speaker 5 (01:07):
Another working week is over, No cheers over.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
I can feel a good one come.
Speaker 6 (01:15):
I came across some audio, as I often do, looking
through our our archives we go and it was great
audio of Ronald Reagan. And I always think it's a
great time to play Ronald Reagan or Johnny Carson for
that matter, And that's what makes this a perfect clip.
(01:35):
If we can get them both in the same bit
of audio, we got to play it. It's in our
by laws, in our show by laws, I ain't nothing
we can do about enjoy.
Speaker 7 (01:46):
Do you hear intelligent people from both political parties or
in the middle conservatives and liberals, and they all seem
to have different answers as to what is going wrong
in the country. Some people say, well, let's let the
government spend billions of dollars, and then some other people say, no,
no more federal spending. Let's give the tax rebase, and
the other intelligent people say, no, tax rebase.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
We've got to do this and do that. So everybody
is confused. How do you see the thing? How are
we going to get out of this?
Speaker 8 (02:11):
Well, Clainny, I think one of the things is that
people keep looking at government for the answer, and government's
the problem. A moment ago you asked, you know, about
people and feeling not only confused.
Speaker 2 (02:27):
But low and down in America.
Speaker 8 (02:29):
First of all, the American people, if they would just
take a little inventory and look around, you triple our
troubles and we're better.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
Off than any other people on earth.
Speaker 8 (02:39):
And we've asked so much of government, and we've gotten
in the habit over the last forty years of thinking
that government has the answers. There's very little that government
can do as efficiently and as economically as the people
can do themselves. And if government would shut the doors
and sneak away for about three weeks.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
We'd never miss them.
Speaker 6 (02:56):
We have had Cali Means on the show a few
different times. He and his sister, Casey, she's a doctor,
both sat down with Tucker Carlson. They talked about their
parents and what was important to them. They passed those
values down to both of their children, and Casey says,
the most important thing you can do in life is
(03:18):
to raise healthy children. Folks, I want us all to
focus on what matters. The political process gets caught up
in things that don't matter to your life, and then
you come home to close that need to be washed
and folded, and kids that need to be fed and
their homework done and put to bed and brought to school.
We've got to focus on what matters in this country.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
Simple.
Speaker 9 (03:43):
We can impress you just a tiny bit. Why did
you come to that conclusion? And none of your colleagues did.
I just I think it's really important ye to understand
why certain people see obvious truths while everyone else is
opinioncluding smart people are blinded to them. What about you
allowed you to connect these pretty obvious thoughts?
Speaker 10 (04:06):
Parenting?
Speaker 2 (04:07):
How what did your parents do?
Speaker 11 (04:08):
My parents? Our parents focused on incentives. Incentives are everything.
Incentives are why Americans are sick right now. If we
change the incentives, we'd get healthy.
Speaker 10 (04:16):
In two years. Our country would be the most competitive
country in the world.
Speaker 11 (04:20):
My parents incentive in our family was to ask questions,
not to have any stars or marks or anything, you know.
So what was celebrated in our family was sitting down
at the dinner table in DC and asking questions and
poking at ideas. We were celebrated for thinking about things
in a bigger picture. That is not you talked about
(04:41):
this with Tim Dillon on your recent podcast The Boomers.
You know, they just want the stars for their kids,
you know, to just write, to get all these little badges.
But that was not what was celebrated in my parents.
We developed our own compulsion to climb up the ladder,
but it was always instilled like.
Speaker 10 (04:56):
Ask value ever fell yourself?
Speaker 11 (04:59):
Actually, like our parents were that happy with rising up
and it was like are we being good people?
Speaker 3 (05:03):
Ask?
Speaker 10 (05:04):
And that was really instilled in us.
Speaker 2 (05:06):
So they have like a moral explicit moral center, like
this is right. I think they were.
Speaker 11 (05:11):
Very spiritual people. You know, we were raised with spirituality.
We were reading, you know, sacred texts, and the Bible
and Roomy and ann Rand and all these different things
from a young age, discussing it at the dinner table,
thinking about philosophy, and so that was what was celebrated.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
They were not conformists.
Speaker 11 (05:28):
When I quit my surgical residency in my fifth and
final year, after hundreds of thousands of dollars in my education,
my parents threw me a party.
Speaker 10 (05:37):
They were act I am. They came.
Speaker 2 (05:40):
No a parent would do that.
Speaker 10 (05:41):
No parent.
Speaker 11 (05:41):
They they were and they never told me to quit.
Understand absolutely, they were so proud of me for coming
to my own conclusions and seeing it.
Speaker 10 (05:51):
And there's a lot of.
Speaker 9 (05:52):
Even though, so the incentive for parents in list in DC,
where I raised my children is to tell people in
your neighborhood, your friends, oh yeah, that you have a
daughter who's the Stanford.
Speaker 11 (06:00):
It never pushed us to go to Stanford. They never
pushed us to even They never, I never, once, ever
in our entire childhood they said you need to go
to your college counseling meeting.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
Ever.
Speaker 11 (06:10):
Ever, they were about having fun and thinking we were
you know, they were in They were older parents too,
you know, my parents were in their forties when they
had us. They lived lives. They were not living through us.
They were spiritually grounded. They're not afraid of death, you know,
they don't. They aren't driven by the materialism that just
makes you rack up a wall full of you know, awards.
(06:30):
It was about our emotion. Yeah, so that is the reason.
That is the reason. And I mean there's privilege involved
in it too, of course, Like we had financial backstop.
You know a lot of my friends going to medicine,
they were supporting their families, right, and I have so
much respect for that and the fact that people's options
are limited. But doctors are in a trap. You know,
it's five hundred thousand dollars of education. You have this
(06:53):
guaranteed salary, and all you have to do is drink
the kool aid. All you have to do is stay
heads down and not ask questions, not ask why, and
you can really feel good about your work.
Speaker 3 (07:03):
Right.
Speaker 11 (07:03):
People are sick as hell in this country, and we
do need people to be doing heart surgery or else
people will die. But the thing that is so imperative
for people to understand is that the reasons we're having surgery,
the reasons why we're getting sick, the reasons why American
competitiveness is plummeting. The reasons why our kids are chronically ill.
(07:23):
Half of the kids in America are chronically ill, are
all from preventable issues. So if you're a doctor who's
not spending any time on focusing on that, then unfortunately,
for better or worse, you are bankrolling on the problem.
Speaker 2 (07:37):
Do you remember what, I honestly think you're going to
change the world.
Speaker 11 (07:40):
I mean that, I mean that, thank you, thank you,
say that, thank you, thank you for having us here
oh so much.
Speaker 2 (07:49):
Your description of your parents is, oh, it.
Speaker 10 (07:52):
Brings me to here.
Speaker 2 (07:52):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 11 (07:53):
I cannot wait to have children. There is no greater role.
There is no greater role in this world. And you know,
I was sold such a bill of lies, like climb
the corporate climb, the medical ladder, become the chair of
an institution. I can think of no greater thing that
we can do than have children and keep them healthy. Right,
And I just you know, up until a couple years ago,
I didn't even want to have children because I thought
it was a liability to this value system of just
(08:14):
like rise the ranks, you know, make money. But I
don't think there's anything more important we could be doing
and than creating healthy children who are thinking for themselves,
who are eating healthy food.
Speaker 10 (08:23):
And I cannot wait for that role.
Speaker 11 (08:24):
And I think it's a spiritual corruption of our society
right now that we have forgotten that this is the
most important thing that we can do.
Speaker 10 (08:32):
You know, it's unbelievable how far off we are.
Speaker 11 (08:36):
And I think it is deeply a spiritual crisis because
we have lost sight of what really matters in our
in our lives.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
And you were singing my song and much better than
I ever could. So that is.
Speaker 9 (08:45):
Sorry, so completely carried away.
Speaker 2 (08:49):
It's another work week in the books. Getting you geared
up for the weekend.
Speaker 1 (08:54):
It's the Friday drive home on the Michael Barry Show.
Speaker 6 (09:00):
Everything has to work out perfectly for us to win
this election.
Speaker 2 (09:04):
And I got to tell you things are It's amazing.
Speaker 6 (09:08):
The President getting shot went from being potentially the worst
moment in modern politics to giving him a bump. He's
reconnected with the Governor of Georgia, Robert F.
Speaker 2 (09:22):
Kennedy.
Speaker 6 (09:23):
My goodness, what a gift. Things are looking good, folks.
Now we've got to do our part. We've got to
be a part of helping to win this darned thing.
Catherine Engelbrecht founded an organization called True the Vote. She's
from Houston. She's been on the show numerous times. She
(09:44):
was a small business owner and a PTA volunteer. Very
attractive woman, tall, great stature, and kind of a strong personality,
but not an outspoken person necessarily before that, and then
Barack Obama won the two thousand and eight US presidential election.
(10:05):
She had volunteered that year and she started noticing problems
with our voting system. And that was about the time
starting in two thousand and nine, when the Tea Party
movement was starting to build. In two thousand and nine,
she founded King Street Patriots. It was an organization named
(10:26):
after the seventeen to seventy Boston massacre. Catherine Ingelbrecht and
several members of the King Street Patriots, where she was
the president, were worried that the voting process in Harris
County during the two thousand and eight election was compromised.
Speaker 2 (10:43):
There was a lack of poll workers.
Speaker 6 (10:45):
And they believe that that led to fraud and other
issues at the polls, particularly as it related to Sheila
Jackson Lee's district. Later that year, she co founded something
called True the Vote. She would come on our show
back then and talk about it. This was groundbreaking stuff.
(11:07):
In fact, it was so groundbreaking and so effective that
they would become an IRS scandal that Lois Learner would
not give her her that would not give the organization
in twenty twelve, when Obama was running for reelection, would
not give them their tax certification so they could raise
money as a tax free nonprofit organization. They were targeted.
(11:30):
Now the government lied about it, but it later turned
out to be true. And who was the guy advising
Lois Lerner or Larner, the head of the IRS at
the time, none other than Jack Smith, the very guy
who they thought was going to bring these charges against Trump.
Right now anyway, here's Catherine Ingelbreck. They sat down with
(11:51):
Tucker Crosson talking about illegal aliens voting in our federal elections.
Speaker 2 (11:57):
And it's happening for political reasons.
Speaker 9 (11:59):
It's happening because the Democratic Party has ceased making the
case for itself to Americans, and so in order to
keep power, in fact, to expand their power and to
preside over the one party state that they desire, they're
going to need a brand new electorate. And this is
their electorate. Foreigners will choose your leaders. You're not allowed
(12:21):
to choose the leaders of foreign countries, but foreigners will
choose your leaders, including in this election, this twenty twenty
four presidential election.
Speaker 2 (12:29):
Well how would that work.
Speaker 9 (12:30):
It's illegal, you say, for illegal aliens to vote in
a federal election.
Speaker 2 (12:35):
Well, actually it's not illegal.
Speaker 9 (12:38):
It turns out Congress passed something in the US Code,
the Federal Code, a line that, unbeknowns to the rest
of US, makes it legal for illegal aliens to vote
in federal elections if they believe they are citizens.
Speaker 2 (12:52):
It's a state of mind. Did you know that? We
didn't know that. Most people didn't know that.
Speaker 9 (12:57):
Catherine Engelbrecht just found this provision in the US Code.
That's the kind of thing she reads because she's the
founder of True the Vote and has been working on
these issues for a few years now, and she joins
us to explain what she's found. Catherine Ilberg, thank you
so much for coming on.
Speaker 10 (13:12):
Oh thanks for having me.
Speaker 9 (13:14):
So would you mind explaining what seems, at first blush
a very far fetched idea that the US Code, as
of right now, as of our speaking, would allow illegal
aliens to vote in the upcoming presidential election.
Speaker 2 (13:27):
How would that work?
Speaker 4 (13:28):
Yeah, well, true, The Vote, the organization I founded some
years ago, has been long involved in looking at the
accuracy of the voter rules, and we've long maintained that
inaccurate voter roles lead to inaccurate elections. So with that
as a backdrop, we've been very concerned about the lack
of availability to determine citizenship status, not just by groups
(13:52):
like ours, but by states themselves. They can't get close
enough to a citizenship status database to make good determine
as That then led me to look a little deeper because,
as you rightly lay out, there's a motivation here, So
what might that be. We've seen many, many videos of
people coming across the border who are talking about their
(14:15):
excitement about voting for Joe Biden and claiming that they
are citizens. But yet we hear debates in Congress where
the congressmen will say, you can't. Don't worry, the non
citizens can't vote. It's a crime of perjury. It's a felony. So, okay,
we took a deep look at the Criminal Code and
(14:35):
Title eighteen left us just gobsmacked because when you read
all the way through it, as it lists all of
the stipulations against non citizen voting in federal elections and
lays out the penalties. Therefore, scroll all the way down
to the fine print, and what you read is that
(14:56):
citizen non citizens can vote without penalty if at the
time they are voting, they believe themselves to be US citizens.
Speaker 6 (15:06):
And here is a profound point, Catherine engelbrektmes, we need
to decide if citizenship in America is a state of mind?
Speaker 9 (15:15):
Is there any other crime Like if I can show
that I didn't know I was robbing a liquor store
at a gun in my hand, I was demanding money,
but I didn't really think it was robbery, does that
shield me from being prosecuted for robbing a liquor store?
Speaker 10 (15:27):
Oh, certainly not.
Speaker 4 (15:28):
But I will say that this state of mind idea
is something that we've come up against in the past
related to domicile as we've done reviews of the voter
roles and you see people that are registered, but they're
registered to vacant lots, they're registered to fast food restaurants,
and the press, the press you get back from the
state as well. But you know, residency is a state
(15:51):
of mind. This takes that to an entirely different level.
And I'll tell you what I'm really concerned about, Tucker,
is that when we lived through twenty two Funny and
we saw the landscape changed, lawlessness take hold, we just
we watched on the sidelines and said, surely this can't
be what it looks like is happening. Surely this move
(16:13):
to the mass mail of ballots and unmonitored drop boxes
and third party election workers that have no proper training
to support all of the ebbs and flows of process.
Surely this can't be what's about to play out. And
then when it did, you're left with scant few days
to try to pick up the pieces and prove what
really happened.
Speaker 10 (16:34):
I'm seeing this.
Speaker 4 (16:35):
Now play out in twenty twenty four on this issue
much the same. And so it's my hope that we
can awaken Americans to this problem and demand accountability before
November so that we can decide if citizenship is truly
a state of mind.
Speaker 6 (16:54):
This is Catherine Engelback talking to Tucker Cross and we
think Tucker's doing some of the most important works out
there today. We are proud to amplify the work he's
doing to spread it to more people. We think he
is on point and fantastic.
Speaker 9 (17:09):
Do you think that that suggests that the foreigner because
the proposition here is that we're allowing foreigners to choose
our leaders, which is insane, of course. But is the
law written in such a way that that foreigner will
not be punished for voting in our elections?
Speaker 2 (17:25):
But will that vote still count? Is that clear?
Speaker 4 (17:28):
Well, it's a great question, but you know you, I mean,
the ballots are anonymous. So once that ballot has been
cast either by mail and it's been separated from the
envelope with which it's carried to the central count so
you can't tell who voted, if that's if that's been separated,
the envelope from the ballot, and certainly by a machine,
(17:48):
you can't tell. So no, there's no way, there's no
way to pull this back. It's why it is critical
that we get on the front side of this and
have a very national discussion about the tracks were heading down.
Speaker 3 (18:03):
Baby.
Speaker 12 (18:04):
This is a stir of success brought up in arntsas
broke ass whole scholarship his way to two law degrees,
including one from her Majesty Quinney elected three or four
times a lawyer, A hub a father, but most of
all are Igland asked asking your seat there, pop your
(18:27):
cod when they get ready for more of them, mister Michaelbert.
Speaker 6 (18:33):
The Democrat convention did not give them the bump they
hoped for. They had to bring Biden out. That was awkward.
He's actually still the president. They're going to have to
elevate Kamla to the presidency, but what will be the reason,
because that will be awkward.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
That'll give her a little bump. The convention didn't.
Speaker 6 (18:54):
The freak show that is the Democrats doesn't appeal to
Middle America, and that.
Speaker 2 (18:59):
Was on display this week. We got Bobby Kennedy, Robert F.
Kennedy Junior.
Speaker 6 (19:03):
We've got Trump reconciling with the governor of Flora of Georgia.
Things are going well, folks. Former NBA player Kwame Brown
posted a video on social media calling out black celebrity
gatekeepers for shaming people into voting for Kamala Harris.
Speaker 2 (19:21):
This is so good. It is so good.
Speaker 13 (19:24):
I heard the rest of what Ricky Spallely said, and
I thought that would downright club hilarious. I thought it
was hilarious, Like, wow, man, you mean to tell me
she's an Akhit she's about to have whatever sorority the
other lady is belonging to. She could be sworn in
(19:47):
by this lady. Supreme Court justice don't even know how
to define what a woman is. So a black woman
that used to be an agent that gave twenty six
billion dollars to Asian Americans, Well, she can't do nothing
directly for black people, but she did something directly for
(20:10):
her people, which is Asian Americans twenty six million dollars
in twenty twenty three.
Speaker 3 (20:16):
Yeah, she can't do nothing for age.
Speaker 13 (20:18):
She can't do enough for Black Americans, but Asian Americans
can get twenty six billion, not million, twenty six billion
in the forms of government funding and government grants, contracts.
Speaker 3 (20:34):
Yeah yeah, Patty.
Speaker 13 (20:35):
Meanwhile, mothers and fathers can't afford groceries. And I got
a video of a black woman saying exactly what he's saying.
Speaker 3 (20:43):
She likes it matter that she's an AKA.
Speaker 13 (20:45):
What does it matter that she about to get sworn
in by some woman that was a justice, woman that
don't even know how to define what a woman is.
What does all that stuff matter at the grand scheme
of things? She said, I got a make a decision
off if I could afford groceries, enough groceries and enough
(21:06):
gas for the week.
Speaker 3 (21:09):
Well, you talk.
Speaker 13 (21:10):
When you talk about real situations, people are not concerned.
But if somebody being black or not, you're not paying
nobody bills with your skin color. Kamala Harris is not
gonna help get your.
Speaker 3 (21:21):
Bills paid just because she's black.
Speaker 13 (21:25):
Inflation is at an all time high. And when you
go and look at the policy, and this is what's
sad about Ricky Smiley, D L.
Speaker 3 (21:33):
Hubley, Steve Harvey.
Speaker 13 (21:36):
Is that nobody calls these gatekeepers out. Like I said,
I came here to expose, to go along, get a
long game. And Steve Harvey, Ricky Smiley, d L. Hubley,
they are definitely go along, get along game.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
Just think about it.
Speaker 13 (21:55):
They don't give you anything intelligent that they say. Steve
Harvey just basically sound. I was like, he's shucking the driving.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
You know what it is. You know what's going on
out here.
Speaker 2 (22:06):
We're black out here.
Speaker 3 (22:07):
We can't do nothing.
Speaker 13 (22:09):
And come on, hair just sitting there like, yeah, you
kill him. I'm not gonna do nothing for them. You
tell them, Steve Harvey, this ain't Alley who?
Speaker 3 (22:18):
What you mean? Ali Who?
Speaker 13 (22:20):
You alli ooping Americans to this dummy that's not gonna
give them anything, but gave Asians twenty six billion dollars.
Speaker 3 (22:28):
This ain't basketball, Steve Harvey.
Speaker 13 (22:31):
This is politics, and politics decides people life. Politics decide
where you're gonna live, how good you're gonna live in
that area, the rules you're gonna live up under, and
the school system. Everything is decided by politics. But you
want us to go off both your mama black, she
(22:53):
can't do nothing. You know what's going on. You know
what it is. Ain't nobody get elected with a black agenda,
So why are we voting for it? To vote for
somebody that can't do that for us? Tell us why,
Steve Harvey, that they were able to give twenty six
billion dollars to the agents in twenty twenty three. But
(23:15):
black folks, somehow, if we offer for anything, if we
ask for anything, reparation, it anything, we just some begging
agd crying ass need to pull ourselves up out of bootstraps.
As like, come on, man, I know y'all don't want
to give me the credit because I'm just the right game.
Speaker 9 (23:33):
Wrong.
Speaker 13 (23:33):
I get it, I'm the wrong messenger. I was told
you was told I'm a bus, but a bus is right.
Get a credit to Cat Williams.
Speaker 3 (23:41):
I don't care, but these are going along get along games.
Speaker 13 (23:45):
Anytime you have a man jump on TV or jump
on his radio show and coherst or tell his followers
to follow or unfollow black people that don't Kamala. What
if the black people was the voting for Cornell West. Oh,
(24:06):
that don't fit his narrative.
Speaker 6 (24:09):
You remember when Joe Biden said, if you don't vote
for me, you're not black. Remember when he told blacks
Mitt Romney would put them back in chains. Well, this
is a view that white liberals have. CBS News went
to a barber shop to ask black men about Kamala Harris.
(24:34):
When one of the men asked the other men in
the shop if Kamala was actually black. A white liberal
idiot talk show hosts now on CNN, Michael Smarconish played
that video on his program and he calls these voters
low information voters. See, you're a stupid black person if
(25:00):
you don't do what the white liberals tell you to do.
Speaker 9 (25:02):
There's some people in your orbit who are either voting
for down Trump considering.
Speaker 14 (25:05):
It for sure, A lot of my friends are obviously
my so we're a little younger.
Speaker 2 (25:10):
We've only voted once, you.
Speaker 14 (25:13):
Know, for actually for a president, and Trump is kind
of all we know. And they're kind of Trump and Biden.
They're like, well, we were broke with Biden. We work
with Trump. And that's kind of the only thing that
I'm hearing over and over again, over and over again
is that, well.
Speaker 2 (25:30):
Trump, we had money.
Speaker 6 (25:32):
Wouldn't the world be a better place if every grown
ass man and lesbian woman pop the top on the
drive home?
Speaker 2 (25:39):
You bet it would.
Speaker 15 (25:41):
It's the Friday drive home on the Michael Arry Show.
Speaker 2 (25:47):
So the Democrats yesterday we're teasing this whole special guest
Special guest Don Lemon said it was gonna be George W. Bush.
Speaker 6 (25:56):
Someone else said it was going to be Beyondce. Someone
else has me Taylor Swims is gonna be all of them.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
Do you know why?
Speaker 6 (26:02):
Because the night to unveil Kamala Harris was not a draw.
Americans don't like her, they never did. She ran for
president before, she didn't make it all the way to Iowa.
That tells you everything they needed. They needed a pop
star because they've got a flop in Kamala Harris. Let's
(26:24):
get to work to win this thing. There was something
very weird that happened right after Kamala Harris became the
nominee by coup, and they had the white dudes for
Harris and white women for Harris or white women for Kamala,
and then there was comics for Kamala. And one of
(26:45):
the comics on the Zoom call was Ben Stiller, who
announced that he was donating one hundred and fifty thousand
dollars to Kamala Harris. But I want you to listen
to his reasoning why. This is why, even if you
think someone's funny or a good actor or a good
athlete or what, the way these people come to political
(27:05):
conclusions is whack.
Speaker 1 (27:07):
I just want to let you know I'm going to
match your one hundred and fifty thousand dollars donation. Everybody's
got to get out and vote and donate. And she's
also a historic candidate. You know, it's going to be
the first woman president and that's incredibly exciting. And you know,
she's Indian, she's black, she's everything you could be, more
than one thing. It's incredible. You know, I'm Jewish and Irish,
(27:32):
I wish I was black.
Speaker 2 (27:33):
Every white Jewish guy wishes he was black.
Speaker 1 (27:37):
You know. It's it's get out there and vote and
donate and like take advantage. This is such an important
time right now, and this wave of energy that's happening,
we've got to keep going with it. So please do
everything you can.
Speaker 6 (27:50):
And if you're not sure who Ben Stiller is, so
you're not sure why you should care what he thinks.
Speaker 2 (27:55):
He's the guy in the there's.
Speaker 6 (27:56):
Something about Mary who got his tally whacker stuck in
his zipper, said, bubble there, what.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
Do you think it's? How did you get to beat
about the fright?
Speaker 13 (28:04):
I mean, I don't know, It's like it.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
Was a one phone out.
Speaker 3 (28:09):
You know.
Speaker 16 (28:10):
There really does seem to be an awful lot of
skin coming through this.
Speaker 10 (28:13):
I'm gonna find some vactine, honey.
Speaker 2 (28:15):
No, you know what, I don't need any really.
Speaker 3 (28:18):
Oh, there the hell's going on here?
Speaker 2 (28:20):
Neighbors said they heard a lady scream. Well, you're looking
at him. You got to take a look at this thing.
Speaker 3 (28:27):
Oh geez, ain't interview.
Speaker 2 (28:29):
What the hell were you thinking?
Speaker 15 (28:33):
How the hell did you get the zimber all the
way to the top.
Speaker 12 (28:35):
No, there's only one thing to do here. You know what,
I got an idea, I got what I can just
we don't have to do anything because I can just wear.
Speaker 3 (28:44):
This over the look.
Speaker 2 (28:45):
I'm going to problem doing it later. You already laid
the tracks. That's the hot potch. Now we're just.
Speaker 10 (28:51):
Gonna back it up.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
Teddy, be brave.
Speaker 3 (28:54):
It's just like pulling off a band aid one too.
Speaker 13 (29:01):
And U we got to play art take a pressure.
Speaker 6 (29:06):
We're gonna keep playing this audio between now and the
election because it just goes to show what a fraud,
how hypocritical the whole thing is. You're supposed to believe
that Kamala Harris is the best choice to be the
Democrat nominee, but it was only a matter of days ago.
(29:27):
And May's Moore created this on Twitter and it's fantastic.
A montage of the media. This was at the beginning
of the summer talking about Kamala Harris, before she became
the beneficiary of the coup.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
They thought she should be dumped from the ticket.
Speaker 11 (29:46):
There are of courts to say that you have the
lowest approval rating of any vice president.
Speaker 10 (29:50):
Well, there are polls that also said I have great
approval rating.
Speaker 2 (29:54):
World oughters don't like Harris. How big a drag is
Kamala Harris on the ticket? She's a pretty big jag.
I think she was arguably Biden's worst political decision.
Speaker 10 (30:02):
They don't like her. There's lots of reasons they don't
like her.
Speaker 9 (30:04):
Kamla Harris's approval rating is now at twenty eight percent,
which is an historic low for any modern vice president.
Speaker 15 (30:11):
We're hearing it from mainstream media, one outlet after another,
one league after another. The Kambla Harris is the worst
vice president ever, the worst Polish distradition ever.
Speaker 2 (30:23):
We don't see the vice president. What people are saying
to me, I'm sure they're saying it to you. Where's
the vice president?
Speaker 9 (30:29):
Someone US officials feeling that she came off looking unprepared
for inevitable.
Speaker 2 (30:33):
Questions about when she might visit the southern border. We've
been to the border.
Speaker 3 (30:37):
You haven't been to the border.
Speaker 16 (30:39):
And I haven't been to Europe. I don't understand the
point that you're making.
Speaker 17 (30:44):
The point that lester Holt was making was obvious to
anyone else who was watching this interview, which is that
the issues at the border are inextricably linked with the
portfolio that she's been given.
Speaker 2 (30:56):
The border is secure. We have.
Speaker 10 (31:00):
It's a cure. Border bidis is working.
Speaker 2 (31:05):
Prices have gone up.
Speaker 16 (31:08):
And families and individuals are dealing with the realities of.
Speaker 18 (31:16):
That.
Speaker 2 (31:16):
Bread costs more, the.
Speaker 16 (31:18):
Gas costs more, and we have to understand what that means.
That's about the cost of living going on.
Speaker 2 (31:25):
He picked Kamala Harris to be his running mate. She
was right, It is right. That's the most liberal senator
in the United States.
Speaker 3 (31:32):
Center So he could have gone the other way, but
he went. He went to the left.
Speaker 16 (31:36):
Joe Biden is running for re election and I will
be his ticket mate.
Speaker 2 (31:40):
Full stop, full stop sid.
Speaker 6 (31:43):
Phil Donahue died recently, and we devoted a lot of
time on the morning and evening show to Rush Limbaugh's
early appearance on The Phil Donahue Show. I got a
lot of feedback from a lot of you. Some of
you had watched it originally, some of you had never
seen it, but quite a few of you also mentioned
(32:05):
when Phil Donahue went after Milton Friedman, the great Milton Friedman,
and Milton Friedman is defending capitalism here and I'm just
going to let this I'm enjoy.
Speaker 9 (32:19):
Did you ever have a moment of doubt about capitalism
and whether greed's a good idea to run on.
Speaker 18 (32:25):
Well, first of all, tell me, is there some society
you know that doesn't run on greed? You think Russia
doesn't run on greed, You think China doesn't run on greed?
Speaker 2 (32:34):
What is greed?
Speaker 18 (32:36):
Of course, none of us are greeting. It's only the
other fellow who's greeding. The world runs on individuals pursuing
their separators. The great achievements of civilization have not come
from government bureaus. Einstein didn't construct his theory under order
from a bureaucrat. Henry Ford didn't revolutionize the automobile industry
that way. In the only cases in which the mess
(33:00):
as have escaped from the kind of grinding poverty you're
talking about, the only cases in recorded history or where
they have had capitalism and largely free trade. If you
want to know where the masses are worse off worst off,
it's exactly from the kinds of societies that depart from that.
So that the record of history is absolutely crystal clear
(33:21):
that there is no alternative way so far discovered of
improving a lot of the ordinary people that can hold
a candle to the productive activities that are unleashed by
a free enterprise.
Speaker 8 (33:34):
So it seems to reward not virtue as much as
ability to manipulate the system.
Speaker 2 (33:38):
And what does reward virtue?
Speaker 18 (33:40):
You think the communist commissary rewards virtue?
Speaker 2 (33:43):
Do you think a Hitler rewards virtue?
Speaker 18 (33:46):
Do you think, excuse me if you'll pardon me, do
you think American.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
President's reward virtue?
Speaker 18 (33:51):
Do they choose their appointees on the basis of the
virtue of the people appointed? Are on the basis of
their political clouts? Is it really true that political self
fitters is no better somehow than economic self htters? You know,
I think you're taking a lot of things for Granta,
And just tell me where in the world you find
these angels who are going to organize society for well,
(34:13):
I don't even trust you to do that.