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September 18, 2024 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time time, time, luck and load. The Michael
Arry Show is on the air. Tucker Carlson is in

(00:29):
Houston tonight, so for our vast Houston audience. I don't
know if there are still tickets available or not. Let's
figure that out on your own. There is a place online.
I think it's Tucker Cross and Live. You can look
it up, you can google it. Don't ask me. I

(00:49):
can't help you with tickets. Not my event. But Tucker
will be sitting down in Rosenberg, which is southwest of Houston,
with our good friend Jesse Kelly, who's also a talk
show host and a dear dear friend of mine and
a veteran and a reader and a thinker and now
an author. Smart guy, very witty in a cool cat,

(01:13):
great family, just a good dude in.

Speaker 2 (01:17):
A dear dear friend of mine.

Speaker 1 (01:19):
So Tucker will be with Jesse Kelly and Nicole Shanahan.
I'm going to admit this is not a knock on her.
This is a confession of my own ignorance. I didn't
know who Nicole Shanahan is or was until Robert F.
Kennedy started picking up steam and he named her his

(01:40):
vice presidential running mate. She is a person who ten
years ago I would have thought was a nut. She's
a person who has been questioning what's in our food supply,
what's going on with medicine, what's going on with pharmaceuticals.
She's a person who much liked my wife, is very
concerned with our overall health, what she puts in her body,

(02:04):
where it comes from, how to feel better. And I,
as I've gotten older and I've come to learn, I
guess I'm a conspiracy.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Theorist or a realist.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
So Nicole Shanahan was a person who stood up and
helped Robert F. Kennedy Junior get on the ballot in
a number of states, and then she spent her own
money to get him off the ballot when he didn't
want to be on the ballot.

Speaker 2 (02:31):
She's his vice presidential running mate.

Speaker 1 (02:33):
In any case, she will be along with Jesse Kelly
Tucker Carlson's guest tonight if you are in the area
right about and now our friends at another time, Soda
Fountain and Diner Joint are staying open late. They normally

(02:54):
close it fi they're staying open till seven tonight.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
Or maybe even a little later.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
For the folks who are going to Tucker Cross an event,
so stop in and see Renee. She did that as
a favor to us because we asked about it this morning.
So for our Houston audience, go check out Another Time.
It's in Rosenberg, Swit's right around the corner from where
you're going to be tonight. Anyway, it is Another Time
called Another Time because it feels like an old soda fountain.

(03:19):
They got phosphates, they got malts, they got food the
way it used to be a very long time ago
by a lady who has a passion for bringing that back.
She's been doing it for twenty years. She was a
guest on our show recently. So if you don't know
where you're going before the event, go there. It's called
Another Time. It's in Rosenberg. You can find it on
the square in an old building that's been there forever.
All Right, we get to it now. Congratulations to our

(03:43):
friend Jesse. Kelly Tucker appears to be a big fan
of his. He went on Tucker's show, and Tucker was
on Fox and he was always a very popular guest there,
and I'm proud of him. I like to see my
friends do well. News Nations Chris told his viewers that
he called President Trump after the second assassination attempt. Now,

(04:09):
Chris Cuomo has been wrong on many, many things for
a very long time. But I admire what he did here,
even if it might seem self serving, because Chris Cuomo
has been kind of sent to pasture by the liberal media,
even if it might seem self serving. Piers Morgan a

(04:31):
number of folks. I'm willing to hear people out if
they want to apologize for the error of their ways
and help to restore the greatness of this nation.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
I don't need to sit around saying I told you
so and you were an idiot.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
I'll still say I told you so, But I want
to give them a landing strip to turn it around.
And that's for blacks and Jews, that's for college kids,
everybody who was on the Democrat plantation.

Speaker 2 (05:08):
And really really struggled to get off.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
When you're ready, I want you to have plenty of
space to come out to all of us and go
I was wrong. Come on, let's hug it out and
bring you in. Let's fix the country. Yes, let's get
you leading and let's fix the country. And why don't
you talk to other people that are where you used

(05:32):
to be and explain to them the error of their ways,
just as you two have left the cult as well.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
So anyway, I'm very happy to present this.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
It's Chris Cuomo talking about calling Donald Trump to check
on him and his family, talking about reducing the violent
rhetoric that has led to multiple assassination attempts against President.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
This is what we need more of. I am worried
about us.

Speaker 3 (06:08):
I am ashamed of what's happening around us right now
and the relative lack of concern about it. I just
don't see how we get anywhere better than where we
are right now. Look, I'm not blaming democrats, I'm really not.

(06:29):
I blame the guy and whatever disease he has that
the people around him either knew about and did nothing about.
The guy was arrested twenty years ago for barricading himself
in a room with all these weapons.

Speaker 2 (06:42):
Why are we caring about one another? Where are we
taking care of our own?

Speaker 3 (06:46):
Where are we pushing to get help. We're leaving people languishing,
dying on the streets.

Speaker 1 (06:55):
What is going on with us?

Speaker 3 (06:58):
I don't get it. That's why I reached out to Trump.
I wanted to just say, listen, I'm really sorry that
this is going on and it's being dealt with this way,
not because I'm in favor of his politics or what
he says. I criticize him all the time. That's my job,

(07:19):
and he deserves it.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
But he doesn't deserve this.

Speaker 3 (07:23):
A guy point in eight K forty seven at Hi
while he's playing golf, and we take solace in the
fact that the guy didn't.

Speaker 1 (07:30):
Get any rounds off.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
That does not work for me.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
If I had been through what that guy's been through
in the last two months, you would not know where
I am. You would never see me on TV again.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
No way I would do that. I don't know how
he does it.

Speaker 3 (07:47):
He's got kids, they're adults, but he's got grandkids.

Speaker 2 (07:50):
He's got a wife.

Speaker 3 (07:51):
People giving crap to Milanya Trump worrying about whether or
not there was a plot around his husband.

Speaker 1 (07:58):
How could she not?

Speaker 3 (08:00):
I don't think she's right, but I totally get why
she feels that way when people mock her and then
her husband. As a guy pointed with an AK forty seven,
where are those people apologizing? That's what it's time for.
I should not have come at you, Malanya Trump for
suggesting that maybe there was something more afoot. I get

(08:21):
your paranoia, I get your feelings.

Speaker 2 (08:25):
You have a right to that.

Speaker 3 (08:29):
There's nothing wrong with saying that, with being a basic,
decent human being. It has gotten too out of control,
too far from where we need to be and how
we need to be, And I don't know what to
do about it.

Speaker 2 (08:48):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
The first I've been destroying the black community is to
dismantle the black family.

Speaker 4 (08:55):
Why don't we ask missus Willie Brown, if Kamala Harris
cares about black families?

Speaker 2 (09:00):
And laughter really is the best medicine.

Speaker 5 (09:02):
You know.

Speaker 1 (09:02):
The Reader's Digest used to have a segment. Maybe they
still do much haven't read him forever. We don't laugh enough.
One of the things I've noticed about Tucker Carlson is
that he laughs a lot. And it's a real laugh.
It's kind of a shrill laugh goes it goes up.
And I don't think if you were trying to make

(09:23):
the laugh that was most in keeping with your brand,
you would laugh in his very shrill way. That means
it's I don't know about you. My brother, my brother,
my late brother. The cop used to laugh. He would
screech real high, real high pitched, and then he would
lose his breath for a while and he would heave.

(09:44):
And it was one of my favorite things to watch
because you couldn't help but smile watching him laugh at
whatever's making him laugh so much. And my wife used
to say that he was a person who could most
consistently make me laugh. Laughter is very important, and I've
found that Tucker Carlson laughs often and very naturally, and

(10:11):
I think that is revealing because when you're happy with
who you are, when you're content, when you found your
purpose in life and you are fulfilling it, you're not
mad at everybody else. Most people who are these activists,

(10:31):
you know, protesters, it's really a function of they hate themselves,
and they project onto Donald Trump their hatred of themselves,
and so you wonder, why are you so fat, Why
are you coloring your hair this way? Why are you
putting tattoos on your face? Why are you defiling your

(10:55):
body to such an extent. And they want you to
think that it's because they don't care. They do care,
they hate themselves, and so this is simply a manifestation
of their hatred of themselves. I don't take joy in
that I don't delight in that this does not make
me happy. I wish people could find contentment. I don't

(11:20):
think contentment and what we call happiness is found in
a bottle or food or money. I think it's found
in purpose. When you are engaged in something that you
feel to you is meaningful, there is if not joy,

(11:43):
then there is contentment. In economics, we'd call it utility.
You don't have to be smiling all the time to
be happy. You don't have to be happy to be happy.
You can be contented and you could be fulfilled. Many
people are fulfilled that are not giggling all the time,
whether that be an NFL player or a warrior on
the battlefield. But what I find interesting about Tucker, who's

(12:06):
speaking in Houston tonight with my good friend Jesse Kelly
and with Nicole Shanahan, who I don't know, but.

Speaker 2 (12:10):
She was Robert F.

Speaker 1 (12:11):
Kennedy Junior's running mate. What I find interesting about Tucker's presentation,
and I think part of the secret to his success
is he's first ofw He's whip smart. He's probably the
smartest guy on the scene. He has a very insightful
analytical mind to start with, and he has that thing

(12:36):
that you must always have to be great at what
he does and what we do, and that is he
is curious. In fact, it makes people uncomfortable. They'll say
that he's platformed this person. He shouldn't have platformed this.
He has people on with whom he doesn't agree. He
has people on who have kooky opinions. He has people

(12:56):
on who have conspiracy theories. That doesn't mean he endorses them.
He's curious. He is confident enough to be able to
have someone on his show without having to stand behind
what they say. I think he puts on his show.
And I tell people this all the time about our show.

(13:18):
I do the show I want to do. I do
the show I want to do for me. And if
you hang around long enough because you enjoy it, it's
because you also enjoy the show that I did for me.
But I did it for me. I want to be
very clear, I'm not doing it for you. I'm talking
to people. I'm thinking through things, I'm offering theories, some
of which change over the years, in my opinion, another

(13:41):
sign of strength. So anyway, I find Tucker's laugh very endearing. Well, Michael,
you say that, Kamala laughs and you don't because she
first of all, she cackles, but secondly, it's not natural.
She doesn't cackle because she finds humor in what she's
just said. She often cackles at the end of the

(14:03):
most awkward statement, I'm gonna take away all your money
and your job and you're gonna be left in a
sight of hell. That's evil. She's evil. But anyway, so
I want you to listen to Tucker Carlson and his laugh,
but he's making a very very deep point. Don't get

(14:24):
lost in that laugh at how much at how much
good you can get done while you're making someone laugh.
Trump said about people eating pets, and.

Speaker 5 (14:34):
There were two levels on which to enjoy this. Well,
the first one I literally enjoyed it. People like I
can't believe Donald Trump accuses people.

Speaker 2 (14:40):
Of eating pets.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
I was like, I love him. It's just hilarious.

Speaker 5 (14:43):
Whoever say that they're eating all the pets?

Speaker 1 (14:45):
So great?

Speaker 2 (14:47):
Thank you Donald Trump.

Speaker 5 (14:48):
That was awesome because, first of all, it makes all
the great people mad, Like anyone getting red in the
face over pet eating.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
That's not true.

Speaker 3 (14:55):
That's ever happen.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
No one's ever reading a pet punk check. You just
outed yourself. You're a liar. So that's the first thing.

Speaker 5 (15:01):
The second thing is now we're talking about eating pets,
and so now we are.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
Let me just count myself as opposed.

Speaker 5 (15:07):
Note that if Peter doesn't endorse Trump in the next
twenty four hours, they're totally fraudulent.

Speaker 1 (15:12):
I'm serious.

Speaker 5 (15:13):
People have run for president in this country.

Speaker 2 (15:16):
Since the seventeen eighties.

Speaker 5 (15:18):
Has any presidential Canada ever taken an unequivocal stand against
pet eating. None. Pete's been waiting its entire life for this,
and they still won't endorse.

Speaker 1 (15:28):
He's right, He's absolutely right. And it's not just the
Haitian migrants who are eating animals.

Speaker 2 (15:35):
They shouldn't be.

Speaker 1 (15:36):
Sheriff Mike Unger was on Fox News when he said,
Honduran illegals shot a bald eagle for food. Are we
supposed to pretend this isn't happening because it upsets people
to hear about it?

Speaker 6 (15:49):
O well, Lybrants are now being accused of killing a
bald eagle in Nebraska with plans to cook it for dinner.
The Sheriff's department says these are the rifles they used
to kill it, But federal authorities this US my scho
after charging them with mistmeters and are no longer returning
to the returning the sheriffs.

Speaker 7 (16:05):
My Junger is the sheriff of Sand County working this case.

Speaker 2 (16:08):
He's here now.

Speaker 7 (16:09):
This is one of those story, Sheriff that you got
to like reread it?

Speaker 2 (16:11):
Am I reading this right?

Speaker 7 (16:12):
Did? That's a bold eagle eating it? From a sheer
symbolism perspective? Can you get a more stark example of
an attack on American sovereignty and all that it means
to be American than the killing of.

Speaker 2 (16:23):
A bold eagle?

Speaker 1 (16:24):
No, I can't.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
We find this very alarming.

Speaker 4 (16:27):
I'm sure nationwide, but locally it's been very alarming to
the citizens.

Speaker 7 (16:30):
Think that based upon the facts of this case, killing
of our nation symbol illegal immigrants to the Feds, you
think they would prosecute something like this.

Speaker 2 (16:39):
Yet nothing.

Speaker 7 (16:40):
What are they doing about this case when you've tried
to reach.

Speaker 3 (16:43):
Out to them.

Speaker 4 (16:45):
I have tried numerous times and I've yet to speak
to a human the Nebraska Field Office and Grand Island
in the regional office in Colorado.

Speaker 6 (16:55):
So you said they're hampering your from you doing your job.
Is it just because they're not answering the calls.

Speaker 4 (17:02):
Well, they're not answering the calls, and I think there's
an upwar at least again locally, that they have not
taken action federally is a federal violation to Kila, North
American called Eagle.

Speaker 7 (17:14):
So to be clear, in addition to not responding to
your calls, you're not aware of them doing anything outside
of dealing with you on this case at all. I
am not the people in the community. I know if
this happened where I lived, I would be sad. I
think is the major emotion. Probably a little bit fearful,
probably a little bit angry.

Speaker 2 (17:33):
What's the reaction?

Speaker 1 (17:35):
Again?

Speaker 4 (17:35):
People locally that I've talked to are quite upset. Can
they wish something to be done? And the federal government
is the one that really has the authority and the
ability to prosecute these gentlemen to the highest degree.

Speaker 1 (17:48):
It upsets people when other people get their feelings hurt, right,
But would it upset you if somebody grabbed your cat,
snapped his neck and ate it, Yeah, it would upset you.
So somebody's going to get their feelings hurting, either the
cat owner or the people doing it. If you say
a Haitian is eating people's cats. That doesn't mean that

(18:09):
all Haitians are eating people's cats. But if a cat's
being eaten by a Haitian, are we supposed to pretend
he's not because we don't want to upset Haitians. That's
not truth, that's not honesty. There are Haitians eating cats
in this country and in Haiti.

Speaker 2 (18:25):
It's a fact.

Speaker 1 (18:28):
The Michael Berry Show, Michael Berry Show. I like to
talk about my doctor in just a moment, but first
I got an email from a woman named Carol spelled
funny c A r Yl, and she says, if the
three top concerns as keeps being reported are the economy,

(18:49):
illegal immigration, and inflation, how is it possible so many
states show President Trump and Kamala Harris tied. Well, let's
start with whether we believe those are the three top issues.
Do you notice that when Kamala Harris is not at

(19:11):
a rally, but when she's doing one of her rare
interviews or during the debate, she doesn't appeal to the
extremes at that time. She appeals to Middle America, to
the voter that she might be able to peel off
from Donald Trump and dupe into believing that she's moderate, serious, compassionate, competent,

(19:36):
and notice what she talks about. She says that she
has focused on people's economic pain. That's her answer to inflation.
Democrats are very effective at emoting, and sadly, many people

(19:57):
need that. Many people need to know that a famous person,
a celebrity, a rich person, a person they view as
above them, that that person feels bad for them. They
want that it gives them sucker. It gives them one
of my favorite original sucker, sucker succ r. You have

(20:20):
to overaccentuate it so people don't think you're talking about
a sucker like we used to get as a kid.
Do you remember the little rings sucker had a little
white cardboard y papery thing and it would have a
little cheap certain you get at the doctor's office.

Speaker 2 (20:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (20:32):
Yeah, it's just straight sugar, but it was delightful. So
we didn't eat straight sugar in our household my parents.
My dad's a diabetic, very serious diabetic, so sugar was
at a minimum. We didn't just eat sugar for the
sake of sugar. So when you got a chance to
get that sucker because you're at the doctor's office, I
mean it couldn't be bad for you. At the doctor's office.
When Kamala Harris talks about feeling your pain, remember Bill

(20:56):
Clinton said, I feel your pain. Low information voters are
not all idiots, but some of them are. Look, why
do certain women have a string of men in their
lives for whom they have babies and that's how they
view it. They're doing that for him, even though they're

(21:19):
the one raising the kid afterwards, But they do I'm
having a baby for you. And they just keep going
from one bad relationship to the next bad relationship. Well,
after a while, you start noticing that the things that
attract them are the things that are bad for them.
They're not a good decision maker. We would like to believe,

(21:40):
we would We would like to believe that people only
end up poor because of bad luck there but for
a couple of when in fact, that's usually not the case.
Usually it is the consequence of bad decisions. And unless

(22:02):
we're willing to say that and make people take ownership
of bad decisions, then we're not going to solve these problems.
We're not going to we're not going to teach people
as a culture. You see, the time that you learn
is not just as a child, you should have a
lifetime of learning. And part of how you learn is

(22:25):
that influencers, cultural market makers talk about these things and
you hear it as an adult and you may not
even realize that it's transforming your mind, but it is
because you're realizing, Yeah, I should be a better dad,

(22:45):
Yeah I should be a better mom. That's the single
greatest thing I can do to make this country better
is raise better children. I can't raise anybody else's children,
but I can raise my own. And if everybody does
what I'm doing, and I can't make everybody do what
I'm doing, but what I can do is I can
be the best parent possible. That doesn't mean spoiling your

(23:09):
kid the most. It means disciplining your child. It means
teaching your child, It means loving your child. All of
these things are important. We are in a crisis in
this country because too many people have never been taught this.
Too many people have never been taught that if you
make a baby out of wedlock, it's going to be
very difficult for you, for the mother, and for the child.

Speaker 2 (23:34):
That's not a pro abortion argument. That's a make.

Speaker 1 (23:38):
Good decisions because you do understand how babies are made right,
There are consequences for actions. Making a baby is a
beautiful process, not just the making, but a baby coming
into this world. It's the sort of thing that should
be planned. It's the sort of thing that you should
make arrangements because it's a big process. It's a suck.

(24:00):
It's all the things go into this. But you'll find
that the people who don't plan this also don't plan
how they're going to make a living. They also don't
plan where they're going to live. They also don't plan
for their health. They don't plan for contingencies. You see
these articles come out that say X percent of people

(24:22):
are living or two weeks, have fewer than two weeks
worth of savings. If they lost their job within two weeks,
they'd be broke and they've been working there for ten years.
Why is that because they spend every penny they make. Well,
damn it, you're not a victim at that point. You're
an idiot, and we need to teach people that be

(24:45):
smarter make better decisions. It's not that we don't love you.
We do love you enough to tell you that you're
making bad decisions. Save ten percent of your paycheck, put
aside some money. I mean, Dave Ramsey's not telling people

(25:07):
anything dramatic, but boy is sure is shocking for people
to hear it. And I'm glad he does. I like Dave.
I consider him a friend. It's great advice. I wish
more people would take it, I really do. We're talking now. Oh,
I got to tell you about my doctor Mary Tally
Both all right, we get that you're listening to you, Michael.

Speaker 4 (25:30):
Bud lifeless eyes, black eyes like a dollars.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
Before I talk about it on dot com. Back to
the point I was making.

Speaker 1 (25:44):
Carol had asked a a fair question, which was if
the three top concerns which we keep being told there
are are the economy, illegal immigration, and inflation, and yes,
those are the top three concerns. How is it possible
so many show states show President Trump and Kamala Harris tied.

(26:06):
It's a fair question and a good question. Let me
try to answer that those three issues are the top
three issues for Trump's supporters. Let me back up, those
three issues are the top issues for half the country.

(26:35):
And when those three issues are your top three issues,
you recognize that we don't need to worry with the
first black this and the woman this and feel your
pain the mean tweets. You recognize that you have a
problem and you need to solve it. It could be

(26:55):
depressing if you start thinking about it too long. But
not everybody is smart. Not everybody makes good decisions. You
can see that in so many aspects of life. Our
prisons are full for a reason. People end up in
dead end jobs. People don't. People walk out of a

(27:16):
job because they can't control their temper and then they.

Speaker 2 (27:20):
Put themselves in a pickle.

Speaker 1 (27:22):
People get addicted to illegal drugs because they were going
to try it and never get hooked because they were
the one. There are lots of ways. You see somebody
driving one hundred and twenty miles an hour on the freeway,
which is not cool.

Speaker 2 (27:34):
It's not a sign.

Speaker 1 (27:36):
It's a sign that you want to get killed, which
is fine, kill yourself, run into a wall, but you
might kill somebody else that was innocent, that didn't want
to die.

Speaker 2 (27:46):
And that's where I have a problem.

Speaker 1 (27:48):
So you got the kinds of people who care about
what matters in this country and they go, well, I'm
for Trump because Trump's the guy that'll do the most
for that, and common as the one contribute to the problem.
And then you have people who say, I care more

(28:08):
about whether Trump is mean or not.

Speaker 2 (28:14):
Okay, so they're going to come on. And then you've
got a number of.

Speaker 1 (28:17):
People who don't want to admit they were wrong.

Speaker 2 (28:26):
This is a large number of people.

Speaker 1 (28:29):
They don't want to admit they were wrong, so they
stay the course and double down. I think this is
a lot of blacks. Many blacks have left and are
voting for Trump. But you've got a lot of blacks
who are embarrassed that they've supported Democrats and how it's

(28:49):
ended up for them, and so rather than admit they
were wrong, which is very what Elton John say. Sorry
seems to be the hardest word, and he was right,
and they don't want to admit they were wrong. You
got a lot of blacks that don't want to admit
they're wrong, so they'll still vote. You got a lot

(29:11):
of Jews in America who the stakes are have never
been higher in modern America for Jews. You've got a
very very aggressive, violent wing of the Democrat Party.

Speaker 2 (29:31):
These aren't just jew haters.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
These are people who want to kill Jews, and they've
become powerful. This is not just some random protester This
is not just some random beheader.

Speaker 2 (29:48):
These are people who now have access to.

Speaker 1 (29:51):
Money and power and influence, and they are driving the
Democrat Party. And they've got very outspoken and very radical representatives.
And that's the ilhan Omars and the AOC, and frankly,
that's Kamala.

Speaker 2 (30:09):
Harris and has been for a long time.

Speaker 1 (30:12):
So people will say to me, how can you say
that her husband's Jewish. The most dangerous thing you can
be in today's America is naive. You don't think that
Kamala Harris would sew you down the river for power.
You don't know the powerful Muslims they've put into Kamala's

(30:37):
campaign that will be going to the White House with
her should she win. Not because she keeps company with them,
but because she feels like she needs them to win Michigan.
The Biden folks same deal. They feel like they can't

(30:58):
afford to lose the most in Michigan and so they're
willing to do anything. And look, if the hostages had
to be left to die, so be it. Democrats want
to win. Jews should be flocking to Trump and a
number are, but a lotter holding out because they don't

(31:22):
want to admit they were wrong. That's a tough tough
place to be in. That is a tough place to
be in, but that's where we are. I came across
this audio from it's actually video, but all I can
play for you is the audio of my doctor, doctor

(31:43):
Mary Tally Boden, who started as my E and T
and then COVID came out, and she had very strong
opinions on COVID that you didn't need to get a vaccine,
that the vaccine wasn't a vaccine, that it wasn't helping you,
that I ever met and did help you, And they
tried to destroy her, and they tried to destroy her career.

(32:06):
She's spoken before Congress, she's become nationally famous, she's been
all over television and radio, and she was just a
doctor when I started with her just a few years ago.

Speaker 2 (32:17):
But she is fearless.

Speaker 1 (32:19):
I mean, she's absolutely fearless, and she won't brag on herself,
so I'll do it for her. This video is a
clip of an interview she did where she explains why
she left the medical establishment and went out on her
own to practice medicine in a way that serves the

(32:42):
patient and the patient only and this might not sound
like a big deal, but this is a unique way
to do what she does today, and I hope other
doctors will follow this lead.

Speaker 8 (32:54):
So I call myself third party three. I worked in
a traditional small practice my residency and then started having
children and I ended up having four boys in five years, and.

Speaker 2 (33:06):
That became overwhelming.

Speaker 1 (33:07):
So I took some time.

Speaker 8 (33:08):
Off and I wasn't even sure I was going to
go back, but I decided, Okay, if I go.

Speaker 3 (33:12):
Back, I'm going to do it on my terms.

Speaker 8 (33:14):
I didn't care about the money. I just wanted to
be a happy doctor, and I wanted to be you know,
me and the patient and no one else. Don't contract
with insurance companies, I don't contract with hospitals, I don't
contract with the government. The only people I work for
are my patients. And it was risky because most specialists
don't do their practice this way.

Speaker 1 (33:32):
I talked to a group.

Speaker 8 (33:33):
About it and they said I was crazy. But it
served me very well during the pandemic because I was
able to practice independently without the government or a hospital
telling me what to do.
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