Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time. Time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael darry Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
Well, Hunter Biden is apparently planning to enter an offered
plea to the charges against him. And let me explain
as simply as I can what an offered plea is.
(00:43):
It is when a defendant who has been charged says,
I didn't do it.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
You got the wrong man. I didn't do it.
Speaker 2 (00:56):
But I also realize you got a lot of evidence
against me, enough evidence that a jury would pretty certainly
convict me. Now I know what you're saying, Michael, that's
(01:20):
the dumbest thing I've ever heard of. It might seem
to be, I understand that, but it's still it's still
an available defense. And what it allows a defendant to
do is to basically plead guilty and then you let
(01:49):
the judge issue of punishment. But you have preserved for
the record your innocence, which has some benefits down the line.
And and so it's it's a machination or machination, however
(02:10):
you pronounce it.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
It's a it's a it's a it's.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
A little it's a clever little game you play. But
you don't do that if you think you can win
the trial. You're basically saying, yeah, go ahead and sentence me.
It's it's as close to pleading guilty as you can get.
So Hunter knows his goose is cooked. Now, why is
(02:38):
he willing to do that now? Because the president is
his father and he's going to get a pardon Now,
you may say, and rightfully so, Well, what was the
point anyway? If he was going to make him pardon him,
make them go through the steps.
Speaker 1 (02:58):
It matters. We'll talk about that later.
Speaker 2 (03:00):
There was supposed to be a debate between Donald Trump
and Kamala Harris on Fox News last night. But as
you know, Kamala Harris can't debate, she can't do interviews,
she can't do anything. She's a dumb, dumb She is
what happens when you start picking people for jobs based
on their.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
Sex and race. And that's exactly what happened.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
Biden announced he would have a black woman because that
made the Democrats very happy.
Speaker 1 (03:27):
She was the third best choice. She wasn't even one
of the top two.
Speaker 2 (03:31):
She dropped out of the Democrat primary before even Iowa
in twenty twenty, and here we are. So Donald Trump
participated in a town hall with Sean Hannity, because if
you're not going to debate, I'm going to talk to
the people. And this first segment, I'm going to spend
a few minutes on what happened. If you saw that
(03:52):
and you say, Michael, I don't need to see that again,
I understand.
Speaker 1 (03:56):
Just hang with me for about five minutes and then
we'll be back. We got a lot more to get to.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
So here was President Trump talking about Kamalist price controls,
which are a hallmark of socialism.
Speaker 3 (04:11):
Price controls that's been tried in many times, the former
Soviet Union Venezuela, even in this country in the seventies
was a disaster every time it's been tried, no matter
over hundreds of years, not just over hundreds of years
price controls.
Speaker 4 (04:26):
You end up with no product, you end up with
massive inflation, and you end up with the destruction of.
Speaker 3 (04:32):
A How does this impact? How to high interest rates impact?
How does inflation impact everybody?
Speaker 1 (04:37):
This year?
Speaker 4 (04:38):
They can't buy a home, they can't do anything, Your
business is stopped up. You can't borrow money. By the way,
I had interest rates at two percent. Now they're ten percent.
But you can't get the money.
Speaker 5 (04:49):
You can't get the.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
Money saw a speech that Thomas Soul gave one time,
the great economist Thomas Soul, and I highly recommend his
book Basic Economics. It's an intro to economics, politics, culture
all in one. It's beautifully written, beautifully written, and it's
a book on tape for those of you who.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Drive a lot and you're out of podcasts and all that.
Speaker 2 (05:12):
It's really wonderful Basic Economics, it's called. And then you'll
get hooked because he's got all sorts of other stuff.
But he talked about price controls and that price controls
are always the first stage of socialism because they're very
seductive telling someone, Hey, you think stuff costs too much,
(05:36):
and they say, ah, yeah, things cost too much. Well,
vote for me and I'll make them not cost so much. Really, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Ill four, your rent keeps going up every year, I'll
make your rent go down, and I'll force your landlord
(05:58):
to never raise your rent. It'll be insanely low for
the rest of your life. I'm for you, and I'm
for you. But you know what happens as a result
of that sold The Great Economist points out two things happen.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
You get a reduction in supply.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
Because, for instance, rent controls in New York, one of
the great examples of price controls going way wrong, nobody
built any new housing because why am I going to
build housing if I can't get paid for it.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
I don't know about you.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
I love what I do, and when I started in radio,
I did it for two years with no compensation, no
base salary anyway. But most things that I do I
need to get paid, even if I enjoy doing it.
Would you get up tomorrow if they stop sending you
a paycheck and go to the office, go to the
job site, go to the school, go to the hospital.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
You wouldn't.
Speaker 2 (07:01):
You might enjoy what you do, but you'd go somewhere
else that paid you, because you couldn't get the baker
to bake bread and give it to you, or the
butcher or the candlestick maker or anyone else out of
the goodness of their own heart. It is the desire
(07:21):
for self gain. Using a currency. We didn't always have
a currency, used to be a barter system, and then
we began with currencies.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
And whether that was a shell or a shakel.
Speaker 2 (07:34):
Or a piece of gold or a rock, there were
lots of things we used as an exchange mechanism, a
monetary unit to help us trade more freely.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
But they all come down to the same thing.
Speaker 2 (07:50):
President Trump explained that very effectively, because almost like because
unlike almost everyone else in politics in America, he's run businesses.
He's run businesses in the ground. He's been very successful.
He's had success and failure and everything in between. And
(08:11):
you know what, both of those are very important lessons.
When people will say, of a businessman, and I don't
care who it is, Ahi must not be so smart.
He failed on that one over there. If you never try,
you never fail. And a true entrepreneur, a true entrepreneur,
(08:38):
will try things, and that will mean occasionally, yeah, you
will fail. Michael Jordan missed shots. Tom Brady missed his receivers.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
It happens.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
We're gonna talk about Kamala Harris's grandmother in the village's.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
Business coming up.
Speaker 5 (08:55):
Very show.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
Married and unmarried men tend to vote Republican. Married men
vote in large numbers Republican. Unmarried men. Still the majority
of unmarried men vote Republican, but not as many as
married men. Married women vote majority Republican. The only thing,
(09:24):
the only of the four boxes. And remember everybody fits
into the four boxes. And if you catch yourself saying no,
because as a way of mocking the left, understand that
you are normalizing that behavior by forcing everyone else to
hear it discussed.
Speaker 1 (09:46):
The truth is not movable, The truth is real.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
You can say anything else you want to be the
truth that is not the truth, but it does not
make it the truth. Everyone fits into four boxes. A
married man, an unmarried man, a married female an unmarried female.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
It's just that simple.
Speaker 2 (10:19):
So we've got the three boxes that vote Republican, and
then you've got that box where the Democrats dominate with
sixty eight percent of the vote unmarried women.
Speaker 1 (10:30):
And it doesn't happen by accident. This is a group
of women.
Speaker 2 (10:34):
It's a group of people that they are constantly talking to.
They are making them very aggrieved. They're making them crazy. Frankly,
if you see these women going off and raging, now
this is a new phenomenon. This is brought on by
constantly being told they're under attack.
Speaker 1 (10:55):
Everyone's out to get them. They're a victim.
Speaker 2 (10:59):
And that's why you see so many of these videos
of women just raging like.
Speaker 1 (11:05):
Banshees. Well because unmarried, because.
Speaker 2 (11:11):
They need sixty eight percent of unmarried women to vote
for them. They focus on things that they tell unmarried
women that they care about, and that is abortion. Women
don't care about abortion to the extent that Democrats talk
to them about abortion.
Speaker 1 (11:31):
You know what women care about.
Speaker 2 (11:34):
Being able to pay their bills, being able to make money,
being able to travel, to eat, to have a nice
place to stay, to have a vehicle to travel around,
to have an iPhone that they can be stuck to,
glued to all day long. That's what women care about.
The cost of gasoline, the cost of their phone bill.
(11:58):
Women care about those things. The Democrats don't talk to
them about that. They talk to them instead about abortion.
And they convinced them that they have to stick with
the sisterhood of pants and they have to have to
focus on protecting fellow women because they're all under attack. Okay,
(12:22):
all right, And this might explain why Kamala Harris is
working so hard to establish her abortion street.
Speaker 6 (12:34):
Cred I come from a long line of tough, trail
blazing and phenomenal women. My grandmother would go into villages
in India, and because she was Indian and lived in India,
and she would go to the villages in India. It
(12:54):
was a famous story in our family. My grandfather would
say she was going to be the end of his career.
But my grandmother we would go into the villages with
a bullhorn talking with the women about the need to have.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
Access to reproductive healthcare.
Speaker 2 (13:07):
Wait a minute, she's trying to convince us that her
grandmother roved from village to village with a bullhorn talking
to women about abortion. This is the creepiest thing she's
(13:28):
ever said. Can you imagine what that sounds like.
Speaker 7 (13:34):
Hello, Indian villagers, my name Nana Harris.
Speaker 1 (13:40):
I am here to talk about abortion. You should be
able to get abortion. What is abortion?
Speaker 7 (13:47):
Well, very important, reproductive health care for women's No abortion,
not contraceptive, not abstinence.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
No.
Speaker 7 (13:56):
No, abortion is termination of pregnancy.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
Kill the baby.
Speaker 7 (14:02):
Hey, now you're right, it doesn't sound like health care
for baby, but trust me, it is health care for
mother to kill baby. If she doesn't want it, you
do hanky panky bang bang with boy and then you.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
Say I don't want baby, so you kill baby.
Speaker 7 (14:17):
There are a lot of reasons why a woman wouldn't
be able to kill baby. Maybe she was ripped by
brother or trans sister, no, not transister, not radio you
are come on her trains sister trans sister. That is
when brother wants to be girl and transitions. She then
(14:38):
uses female wiener to rap sister. No, she's not boy,
she's a girl. Girl can have tallywacker two. Why is
your sister has wiener and reaps you. You don't want
to keep baby? That is what happened.
Speaker 1 (14:51):
So we're trying to do abortion.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
Now.
Speaker 7 (14:53):
Listen, people don't ask so many questions when I'm talking.
This is Nana Harris here. Tell you a portion of
portly vote for. I tell you to him the vote for.
Speaker 1 (15:02):
Now.
Speaker 7 (15:03):
I am going to next village to tell them also
about abortion.
Speaker 1 (15:07):
Thank you for your.
Speaker 7 (15:11):
So am.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
I really supposed to believe that that's what her grandmother
did because guess what, Kamala, I've been to Indian villages
a time or one hundred and uh.
Speaker 1 (15:27):
I don't believe you. I don't believe you.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
And I'm tired of hearing these reasons from these people.
I'm tired of hearing these reasons from these people. They
all have to have a backstory of why they take
these certain positions. See, she needs a reason that she's
a big abortion advocate. But we all know the reason
(15:54):
because she's probably had a bunch of them.
Speaker 1 (15:57):
During her years of.
Speaker 2 (16:00):
Being a comfort woman to Willie Brown while he was married.
But there's more than that. This is an issue that
Democrats have targeted to hook dumb dames. They're not dumb
because they're dumb, they're dumb because they fall for it.
There are some things Republicans will use to hook dumb
(16:23):
people too, and the consultants know the buttons to push
to get people out to vote. But this is what
the Democrats do. And you can't be a pro life Democrat.
It's not allowed. You won't last. So she has to
(16:43):
tell you that her grandmother was, you know, an abortion
rights activist in the villages of India, and.
Speaker 1 (16:54):
That's what inspired me.
Speaker 2 (16:56):
See, they always have a story pepall did this, or
mamma did this, or my parents were civil rights activity.
Speaker 1 (17:06):
It's all bunk.
Speaker 2 (17:09):
Take a position that you believe in, stand by it,
advocate for it, or take a position because that's what
you have to do because you're in that party. But
stop with the nonsense on Nana Harris, your grandmother.
Speaker 1 (17:27):
Stop with it because nobody believes she's out there.
Speaker 7 (17:31):
Hello, I'm back from visiting other villages having having abortion.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
I'm back.
Speaker 7 (17:36):
Tell everyone have abortion. You can have abortion. I'm here
for it. I'm big advocate for abortion. Keep baby, because
sometime you do a bang bang you don't want baby.
You know baby loud.
Speaker 1 (17:47):
So I am here at the help. Nana Harris signing
off God listening to Michael Barry Show.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
Jamala Harrisman's this election, President Trump's tax cuts will expire.
This is a very difficult thing to campaign on because
the Trump tax cuts. President Trump took office January twentieth.
Those tax cuts I remember passing in December of seventeen,
(18:21):
so at the end of his first year, and a
great deal of credit to Senator Ted Cruz who shepherded
those tax cuts through the Senate. He displayed a great
deal of leadership and it was a demonstration of.
Speaker 1 (18:40):
His intellectual rigor. I don't have to.
Speaker 2 (18:44):
Tell you there are some guys in the US Senate
who are just glad handers, and they hung around glad
handing Chamber of Commerce events and how you're doing. But
they're not very smart. And you don't need to have
degrees to get smart to be smart. They're not able
(19:05):
to understand to grasp the concepts of economic policy, monetary policy,
physical policy, foreign policy, military policy. They're not smart at all,
which is why they retreat to canards and slogans. This
is all they can handle. By the way, Kamala Harris
does the same because she's.
Speaker 1 (19:26):
A dumb dumb.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
She's not a dumb dumb because she's a black female.
She's a black female who happens to be a dumb dumb.
Speaker 1 (19:34):
There is a difference.
Speaker 2 (19:37):
Those tax cuts spurred an accelerated economic abundance, prosperity, and
we are enjoying them to this day. You may say
not me, no, no, no. As bad as the Biden
Harris administration has been, it is despite them that these
(20:05):
tax cuts have helped Lesson to blow. If you pile
on the expiration of these tax cuts to everything else
Kamala is going to do and has done for less
it will be. As President Trump said last night Townhall,
(20:26):
was sean the largest tax increase in history.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
That's not an exaggeration.
Speaker 5 (20:30):
She wants to raise corporate taxes.
Speaker 3 (20:32):
She wants to raise small business taxes, capital gain taxes,
estate taxes, the international corporate minimum tax, to the point
where America won't be competitive anymore. And your tax cuts
are about to expire in twenty twenty five.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
What is this?
Speaker 5 (20:47):
Ameacy economy? What does it mean for everybody here struggling?
Speaker 4 (20:49):
So I gave you the biggest tax cuts in the
history of our country. If you let them, if you
let the Trump tax cuts expire, what she wants to do,
she wants.
Speaker 1 (20:59):
To minute them.
Speaker 4 (21:00):
If you do that, you will suffer the biggest text
increase in history. There's never been a text increase like it.
On top of which she wants to add a lot
of texts. This country will end up and I've said
this a lot, and I mean it, This country will
end up in a depression if she becomes president, like
nineteen twenty nine, This will be a nineteen twenty nine depression.
Speaker 5 (21:21):
She has no idea what the hell she's doing next.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
President Trump began speaking about something that I really like.
This is one of my favorite themes he has focused on.
We're talking about the forgotten man and the forgotten woman,
which was a big focus of his campaign in twenty sixteen,
(21:49):
And Sean asked him, what is twenty twenty four about.
Speaker 1 (21:53):
Give this a listen.
Speaker 3 (21:55):
Twenty sixteen was about the forgotten man and forgotten a woman.
Speaker 5 (22:00):
What is twenty twenty four about. So it's not that different.
Speaker 4 (22:04):
It's still about the forgotten man and the forgotten woman.
The people are being treated horribly in this country, where
a country that's being left at all over the world.
And I'll be honest, if Joe Biden would be a
great president, I would be happier than being the worst
president in the history of our country because.
Speaker 5 (22:25):
I want to see what's good for the country. And
I would have been very happy. I have very nice
places I could be. This is not easy. I got
shot at you know.
Speaker 4 (22:32):
I mean, if I got hit, I got hit, it
would have been all over that place I could have.
But you know what, it's very simple, and it starts
with make America great again.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
That's all we have to do.
Speaker 2 (22:48):
This concept of the forgotten man and the forgotten woman.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
I really like this.
Speaker 2 (22:57):
Because I get a sense that I'll lot of Americans
feel this way. My country has abandoned me, My country
has forgotten me. This is the veteran who comes home
from war. And Dona Shalela, the then Health and Human
(23:19):
Services Director, says.
Speaker 1 (23:22):
White male veterans returning from war to one of the
greatest threat to this country.
Speaker 2 (23:30):
He's coming home, his body broken, his mind busted, his buddy's.
Speaker 1 (23:40):
Gone, and you're gonna say that about him.
Speaker 2 (23:45):
He's coming off the battlefield and you're gonna say that
about him when I was young.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
Then he comes home, the VA has no time for him.
Speaker 2 (24:01):
If he ever does get in, they give him a
bunch of pills to make the pharmacy industry happy. I've
had veterans that what can't hope tell me that they've been.
They'll tell me how many pills are on. One of
was on thirty six pills a day at one point.
Can you imagine here, here's a bunch of pills. Pills
(24:23):
aren't helping me, Doc, I want to kill myself. I've
been in war, have you. I want to kill myself.
I can't control my rage. I wake up in the
middle of the night from a dream and I want
to die, and you just keep writing another script. It
ain't helping. And by the way, I was waiting outside
for four hours. That's what our veterans are saying. Yeah,
(24:48):
they feel forgotten. People's money's being taken and given to
illegal aliens. Yeah, you feel forgotten. You're right too. It's
time to be remembered. Now time to have a president
who cares about you. One of the criticisms of President
Trump has been the unabashed way he communicates. Ramon, do
(25:10):
you say unabashed or do you say unabashed? I like
unabashed too. I don't know why I changed that. I'
let me start over. One of the criticisms President Trump
has been the unabashed way in which he communicates.
Speaker 1 (25:26):
Do you know why that is?
Speaker 2 (25:29):
Because people say they don't want you to be s
They say they want you to be truthful and honest
and straightforward.
Speaker 1 (25:38):
But it's it's the old Jack Nicholson line. You can't
handle the truth.
Speaker 2 (25:44):
Don't ask somebody how this dress makes you look unless
you actually want to know. And it is dishonesty that
parades around as political correctness that has made a nation
of crybabies, a nation of pharmaceutical ethics, a nation of
people constantly in therapy, popping a pill, crying, whining, expecting
(26:13):
accommodations for your weakness, thrive, overcome.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
The world is a cruel place.
Speaker 2 (26:21):
It's not our job to fluff up the pillows for
you in your crazy padded room. So President Trump, who
tends to speak very directly, as most successful business owners do.
They don't have time for all that. Give me the facts, man.
(26:43):
He doesn't pull any punches, and you should appreciate that.
That's how he speaks. It's direct and it's a welcome
change in a political world of nonsense and silliness and
fluff and tomfoolery. But for the left, the truth is
(27:03):
a cardinal sin because the truth is their enemy, because
the truth indicts them, the truth exposes them. President Trump
told Sean Hannity, we cannot be politically correct anymore. And folks,
this is the type of statement that made people fall
in love with Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (27:26):
Now you just heard Kamala Harris, our country stail borders
are talking about her commitment. You need to courage to
never say the word radical Islamic terrorism or illegal eliot cousident.
Speaker 1 (27:39):
Trump is back with us.
Speaker 3 (27:40):
What is your reaction to that, because we'll tack us
on nine to eleven and who's crossing our border?
Speaker 4 (27:44):
So she wants to be politically correct, and we can't
be politically correct anymore. Look, look, we have we have
October seventh. People saw it.
Speaker 5 (27:58):
We have things going on in the world right now.
Speaker 4 (28:00):
Now where with Israel, and with the Middle East is
blowing up, it's blowing up. We have Ukraine and Russia
that would never happen. That would have never happened. October
seventh would have never happened. If I were the president,
they would have never happened.
Speaker 5 (28:14):
And everybody knew it. Iran was broke.
Speaker 4 (28:17):
They didn't have the money for Hamas and for his beloved.
They didn't have the money for anybody. They wanted to
get by, and we would have made a fair deal
with them. I was only looking to make a fair
deal with them, you know. I wanted to say it
so much. During my term, we went four years without
any blow ups.
Speaker 5 (28:35):
We had no world traits ever blow up.
Speaker 4 (28:37):
We had no radical Islamic terror. We had no radical
Islamic because we were very tough at the borders that
we were very tough with our statements, and we had
no The whole world was a safe place. That was
the question they asked Viktor Orbano's really are very considered
(28:58):
a very strong They said, he's a strong man.
Speaker 5 (29:00):
Sometimes you need a strong man. He's a strong man.
He's the Prime Minister of Hungary. And he said, you
bring back Trump. Everybody now I'm not.
Speaker 4 (29:09):
Saying it, but he said it, because I'd rather say respects.
Speaker 5 (29:14):
But he said.
Speaker 4 (29:14):
Everybody was afraid of Trump. You bring them back, You're
not going to have any problems. It's all going to
go away.
Speaker 1 (29:20):
The world is blowing up.
Speaker 5 (29:22):
The world blowing up.
Speaker 2 (29:25):
We have lots more to get to from this interview,
and in the next segment we're going to talk about
Ken Paxton and our attorneys general in Texas and what
he's doing just try to stop the voter fraud. I
wish more folks would be bold enough to do what
he's doing. But I want to take a moment and
make up for something I flubbed yesterday. I had intended
(29:46):
to pay tribute to Paul Harvey yesterday.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
Paul Harvey was a radio.
Speaker 2 (29:51):
Titan and I learned a lot from him, both his
content and his delivery style. I think storytelling is very important,
and I meant to pay tribute to him yesterday and
I didn't, and Ramone just reminded me, so before I
forget and finish the show today, I would like to
do that now.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
It is my.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
Favorite Paul Harvey, and for somebody out there, this will
be the first time you've ever heard it enjoy.
Speaker 1 (30:16):
If I were the devil.
Speaker 8 (30:20):
If I were the devil, if I were the Prince
of darkness, I'd want to engulf the whole world in darkness,
and i'd have a third of its real estate and
four fifths of its population. But I wouldn't be happy
until I have seized the ripest apple on the tree
the So I've set about, however necessary to take over
the United States.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
I'd subvert the churches. First.
Speaker 8 (30:43):
I'd begin with a campaign of whispers. With the wisdom
of a serpent, I would whisper to you as I
whispered to Eve, do as you please.
Speaker 1 (30:51):
To the young, I would whisper that the Bible is
a myth.
Speaker 8 (30:53):
I would convince them that man created God instead of
the other way around. I would confide that what's bad
is good, and what's good is square. And the old
I would teach to pray after me our father, which
aren't in Washington.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
And then I'd get organized.
Speaker 8 (31:11):
I'd educate authors in how to make lurrid literature exciting,
so that anything else would appear dull and uninteresting. I'd
pretn TV with dirtier movies, and vice versa. I'd peddle
narcotics to whom I could. I'd sell alcohol to ladies
and gentlemen of distinction.
Speaker 1 (31:25):
I tranquilize the rest with pills.
Speaker 8 (31:28):
If I were the Devil, I'd soon have families at
war with themselves, churches at war with themselves, and nations
at war with themselves until each in its turn was consumed,
and with promises of higher ratings. I'd have mesmerizing media
fanning the flames. If I were the Devil, I would
encourage schools to refine young intellects, but neglect to discipline emotions,
(31:51):
just let those run wild until before you knew it.
You'd have to have drug snipping dogs and metal detectors
at every school house door. In the decade, I'd have
prisons overflowing. I'd have judges promoting pornography. Soon I could
evict God from the courthouse, then from the schoolhouse, and
then from the houses of Congress and.
Speaker 1 (32:12):
In his own churches.
Speaker 8 (32:13):
I would substitute psychology for religion and dfy science. I
would lure priests and pastures into misusing boys and girls.
Speaker 1 (32:21):
And church money.
Speaker 8 (32:22):
If I were the Devil, I'd make the symbol of
Easter an egg, and the symbol of Christmas a bottle.
If I were the devil, I'd take from those who
have and give to those who wanted, until I had
killed the incentive of the ambitious.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
What will you bet?
Speaker 8 (32:38):
I couldn't get whole states to promote gambling as the
way to get rich. I would caution against extremes in
hard work, in patriotism, in moral conduct. I would convince
the young that marriage is old fashioned, that swinging is
more fun, that what you see on TV is the
(33:01):
way to be. And thus I could undress you in public,
and I could lure you into bed with diseases for
which there is no cure. In other words, if I
were the devil, I just keep right on doing what
he's doing.
Speaker 1 (33:18):
Paul Harvey, Good Day,