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September 24, 2024 • 35 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time. Time, time, luck and load. The Michael
Very Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
Whoever is asking to debate is losing. It's a rule
of thumb in politics. Whoever is outside your house saying, come.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
In here, come in here, come out here, come here
and fight me.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
Come out here.

Speaker 2 (00:42):
That guy needs the debate, the person inside doesn't. At
a sporting event, there's some guy's dumb enough to say, Hey,
Mike Tyson, come over here. I'll fight you right now.
He has everything to get and nothing to lose. Now,
I know what you're saying. It's gonna get his head,

(01:03):
bast him. Sure, but he has everything to gain and
nothing to lose. When Mike Tyson says now, I'm not gonna.

Speaker 3 (01:11):
Fight to you, and I need to fight you. Everybody's
got planned until you get hit in the head.

Speaker 2 (01:18):
When he says that, it's not because he's a sissy.
It's because there's nothing good to come of it. And
no matter how, no matter who you are, there's always
a one million chance you lose. Don't expose yourself to that.
Be strategic what you do. So with that in mind,
Kamala Harris is now trying to get another debate. Oh

(01:44):
and the members of the media. They declared her the
winner of the last debate.

Speaker 3 (01:50):
Girl power.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
Look at that girl, boss go, it's Brett Kamala.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
Look at her.

Speaker 3 (01:56):
She took it to that nasty old Trump.

Speaker 1 (01:59):
You go, girl.

Speaker 2 (02:02):
Worse than them, worst than the women doing that was
Chris Wallace. That all broken down. RETRD who who is
one percent the man his dad, the journalist, his dad was,
and he hates Trump because Trump has taunted him.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
This is what he said.

Speaker 4 (02:22):
I didn't think I was ever going to witness a
debate as devastating as the one that you and Dana
moderated back in June, where Joe Biden basically tanked his
reelection campaign. I think tonight was just as devastating. I
think that Kamala Harris pitched a shutout on almost every
subject I can think of. She shut Trump down on abortion,

(02:46):
she shut Trump down on January sixth and democracy. She
shut him down on national security, and turned to the
former president and said, the military leaders who served with
you think that.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
You're a disgrace.

Speaker 4 (02:58):
And then, as Dana mentioned very powerfully at the end,
made the point that she is the candidate of change
and we need to turn the page from a decade
of division and polarization. On substance, I think she pitched
a shut out. And I think she did on style
as well. I mean, the image of the debate to
me is She's there, happy, smiling, expressive.

Speaker 1 (03:19):
Shaking her head.

Speaker 4 (03:22):
In dismay at things Trump was saying, and Trump looked angry, scowling.
She was looking directly at the audience. He was looking
at the moderators and arguing with them, and something else.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
Donald Trump looked old tonight.

Speaker 4 (03:36):
And you know, somebody said on my show on Saturday,
she wins just by showing up.

Speaker 1 (03:43):
I didn't know that that was going to be true.
I think it was.

Speaker 4 (03:46):
She was the candidate's change, just from the moment the
two of them were on the stay.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
Interestingly, polling that was done in real time that night
said something very very different. Matt Mowers was on CNN
when he cited that poll.

Speaker 5 (04:12):
If you look at recording from Reuters in the New
York Times, they actually asked a number of undecided voters
in key states, how did you view the candidates going in?
How did you view them going out? Reuters, in fact
had sixty percent. I think it was six out of
ten voters who said they moved towards Trump afterwards, and
when they're asked why, they said because Kamala Harris was
evasive on her answers around the economy. And I think

(04:32):
she flubbed a really key opportunity she had in that
very first question when she's asked, are you better off
than you were four years ago? And she didn't show
a single really ability to connect with voters who are
feeling struggling right now in this economy and with the
price of goods and groceries and gas.

Speaker 1 (04:46):
And she missed a real key moment there.

Speaker 2 (04:48):
See, the media, just like with Joe Biden, when the
first debate occurred June twenty seventh, and the nation saw
how broken down Biden was, it really shocked people. The
media wasn't actually shocked. They had to pretend to be.
They knew he's been drooling on his deathbed for a

(05:09):
long time. The media when she was asked the most
important question of the debate.

Speaker 5 (05:17):
When it comes to the economy, do you believe Americans
are better off than they were four years ago?

Speaker 6 (05:21):
So I was raised as a middle class kid.

Speaker 1 (05:26):
That was the moment.

Speaker 2 (05:27):
The media is not disappointed by that because their thought
is well, yeah, we know she's a bimbo. We know
there's nothing there. She didn't do well. The media says
she did. That's the spin room. The next night, Greg
Guttveld called it the first DEI debate.

Speaker 7 (05:47):
You know, you could say, if you complained about the refs,
you're losing. Well, if the refs are corrupt, you gotta complain,
because everybody lost.

Speaker 1 (05:56):
I actually got dumber watching it. I felt like my
brain was being.

Speaker 7 (06:00):
Waterboarded by the sheer nonsense of these idiot moderate moderators.
But we were so sidetracked by the mechanics of the debate,
the muted mice, that we forgot about them. I honestly
don't know how anyone can decide who won the debate.
That's like trying to guess the price of a painting that.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
You suspect as a forgery.

Speaker 7 (06:21):
You can't objectively decide a winner in a sham competition.
This is truly the first DEI debate where one candidate
was subjected to a high standard and the other was
held to no standards at all.

Speaker 1 (06:35):
They removed the essence.

Speaker 7 (06:36):
Of fairness to achieve an outcome that.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
Could not be scored.

Speaker 7 (06:41):
You cannot score that that is why you can't say.

Speaker 1 (06:44):
Who won or who lost.

Speaker 7 (06:46):
Liberally should be ashamed that your candidate needed the odds
to be.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
Stalked so heavily in their favor.

Speaker 7 (06:55):
You know, for many Americans, Harris entered as a mystery
and exited as a mystery, and that was the goal
to keep her under wraps.

Speaker 1 (07:03):
So anyone who attributes that.

Speaker 7 (07:04):
To Kamala's skill is an idiot. Congratulating Kamala for the
debate is stolen valor you should be congratulating David Mrror
and Lindsey Davis who did the heavy lifting, and so
calling that a debate is disinformation.

Speaker 1 (07:20):
That's like me going into.

Speaker 7 (07:21):
A bar with Tyrus and inciting a brawl and then
later taking credit for all the broken jaws. You know,
it's just And by the way, you get to say, oh,
how do you know that it's a sham? Kamala confidently
and casually unloaded all the hoaxes, the Fine People hoax,

(07:42):
the Bloodbath Project twenty twenty five.

Speaker 1 (07:44):
The abortion band, these things have all been debunked.

Speaker 7 (07:47):
Would she have done that knowing that there would be consequences?

Speaker 1 (07:52):
She did that knowing there would be no consequences. No
follow ups at all. This was actually a betrayal of knowledge.

Speaker 7 (07:58):
Knowledge being the act of solving a problem, and we
had agreed to what the problem was.

Speaker 1 (08:04):
Who is Kamala?

Speaker 7 (08:06):
The debate deliberately chose the opposite path. Instead of the
opportunity to gain knowledge, they chose to cover it up
and betray the public. You know, I went by this
stupid assumption that maybe they would ask kamalas some real
questions and follow ups.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
I was tricked. Unlike the person.

Speaker 7 (08:24):
Who's foolishly assumes a partner who cheated on him would
not cheat again.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
But the media always cheats again, and.

Speaker 7 (08:32):
We have to remind ourselves they have their interests before
your interests.

Speaker 6 (08:38):
I'm talking to a friend today here reminded me of
the phrase of fred Astaire Ginger.

Speaker 8 (08:43):
Rogers had to do everything backwards and in heels.

Speaker 1 (08:45):
That's Republicans exactly what we always you have, don't I
know it?

Speaker 3 (08:50):
Kamala Harris was just officially endorsed by I R. S
Agency the Michael Berry Show. I'd rather not have that endorsement.

Speaker 2 (09:25):
If you hit that first drum, set that first mark,
and you're back, probably.

Speaker 1 (09:33):
I'm with you.

Speaker 3 (09:36):
Former JD.

Speaker 2 (09:37):
Vance Senate campaign staffer Ryan Jardowski Jurdusky is now a
CNN contributor. I don't know Ryan well, we've communicated by email.
He came very highly recommended to me by some people
in politics that I trust that are they're good minds,

(09:59):
really smart guy. There are a lot of people that
end up as campaign staffers and consultants and strategists who
frankly are not very good at what they're supposed to
be their core competency. But what they're very good at
is sucking money out of candidates. And look, just because

(10:22):
you're a good doctor doesn't mean you're a good businessman,
and that's why a lot of doctors have made a
lot of money over the years and have.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
Nothing to show for it.

Speaker 2 (10:31):
And by the same token, you can be a very
good politician, even a good leader, although usually this would
kind of blend over too there and terrible at managing
your staff, including your advisors. And so what these guys
will often do is just leech off of the candidate

(10:53):
by telling them what they want to hear, raising as
much money as possible, and keeping as much in money
as a bob is a possibly can not all of them,
but I could mention some names.

Speaker 1 (11:04):
And we have a lot.

Speaker 2 (11:06):
Of office holders out there, and they would they probably
already know who I'm talking about.

Speaker 1 (11:10):
Some of whom I'm talking about.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
There's some people who's real core competency is not winning
elections per se. It is convincing candidates that they are
the all knowing and that they're really really smart and
the candidates, it's always embedded. It's part of that is
a psychological own. They own the candidate an officeholder and

(11:38):
convince them to feel good about themselves and to spend
money on this purpose. But some of the guys, and
these are the ones worth their weight in gold. Some
of the guys are really really good and really really smart.
Jiwdusky appears to be a guy who, uh, who understands

(12:04):
and what I mean by this?

Speaker 1 (12:05):
What is good?

Speaker 3 (12:06):
What's the difference with good and not so much?

Speaker 2 (12:09):
Jiwdusky seems to be a guy who understands messaging. He
understands what matters to real people. If I were to
ask you, hey, Tony, what do people that live in Manhattan?
What really drives them? What matters to them? What's the
one button you can push to get them to vote

(12:30):
for you? Most people wouldn't be.

Speaker 3 (12:32):
Able to tell you that.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
How about this, Sam, what matters to New York Jewish
retirees that live in Miami or Palm Beach.

Speaker 3 (12:45):
Now you don't know what.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
Yesterday Trump got the Polish Residence of Pennsylvania endorsement.

Speaker 1 (12:59):
Whooped to do right?

Speaker 2 (13:00):
There's eight hundred thousand polls in Pennsylvania, little pockets of votes.
See Trump understands this because he was a Democrat for
a long time. This is what Republicans don't understand. Republicans
campaign on issues and patriotism. Okay, but a lot of

(13:20):
people consider themselves very patriotic. But they vote as a block,
as a tribe, as a community, as a collective, based
on the bond of religion, national heritage, shared ethnic heritage,

(13:40):
linguistic heritage. Ethnographers will tell you that people, depending on
the people they fell, deep connections to groups.

Speaker 3 (13:51):
Republicans don't understand this.

Speaker 2 (13:53):
This is how the Democrats get the blacks to vote
for them. This is how they get pockets of Hispanics
to vote for them. This is how they get gays
and wackos and different Puerto Ricans and Dominicans to vote
for them. Republicans don't know how to do that. Trump
knows how to do that. And part of this is

(14:13):
having been active in New York for so long, because
New York is very Balkanized. You've got the Dominicans, the
Puerto Ricans, you've got the Italians, Irish, and for many people,
particularly the newer immigrants, that's still their primary tie.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
Anyway.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
All that by way of saying, Ryan Gerdusky at CNN
is the new conservative over there.

Speaker 1 (14:37):
And look, I don't like one Williams.

Speaker 2 (14:39):
I don't watch Fox, but I listen to the clips
every morning when I get in, and I can't stand
one Williams. I don't know if he believes what he's
saying or that's how he pays his bills.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
Either way, I.

Speaker 3 (14:48):
Can't stand the guy. I think he's an idiot.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
But I'm not going to waste a lot of energy
on it because part of it is, I think half
of it is he's trolling. He's there to say the
dumb stuff so the other guys look smart. But I
will gladly let Juan william spew nonsense every night in
exchange for Ryan Jorwdusky and Scott Jennings, who's done a
phenomenal voice on CNM.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
I didn't know Scott Jennings. He has been wonderful.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
So Jiwdusky, the New Conservative contributor and Scott Jennings were
debating the situation in Springfield, Ohio, when they they tried
to paint Drawdusky as a bad person. They tried to
paint Grawdusky as he's such a you know, you're we're

(15:37):
good people because we have these views and you're a
bad person.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
And he wouldn't. He didn't stand for that.

Speaker 8 (15:44):
Or these Haitian immigrants came to to this town in Ohio.

Speaker 1 (15:48):
There were jobs there, but.

Speaker 8 (15:49):
Those jobs were open and going unfulfilled, and employers were
doing everything that they could to fill the jobs.

Speaker 1 (15:56):
No one would fill them. For immigrants resume for the
reason there were jobs. Why are you blaming them for that?
Blaming them? I'm not blaming that.

Speaker 9 (16:04):
I don't hate Haitian immigrants at all.

Speaker 1 (16:06):
It's not about them, It's about us.

Speaker 9 (16:08):
And the fact of the matter is is that in
twenty seventeen, under Trump's presidency, the reason Springfield had the
surge was because Japanese companies started investing in Springfield because
they trusted the Trump presidency and after years of declining population,
they had this huge explosion of jobs. President Trump tried
to end the Haitian Contemporary Protective Status and went into
the courts.

Speaker 1 (16:26):
Then Biden, we do have to go.

Speaker 3 (16:32):
But let me just finished.

Speaker 8 (16:35):
Let me let you finish thet here. The companies came in,
they could not fill the jobs, and that's the Haitians fault.

Speaker 9 (16:41):
Why there's not the Haitian's fault. So there's a policy
position by the government. It's not the people. I don't
blame them for coming I blame the government for some
in there and expanding TPS to three hundred thousand Haitians
when it was fifty nine thousand.

Speaker 8 (16:52):
Didn't expand they didn't expand TPS. They didn't expand TPS
to fill jobs, and no at all higher period they
expanded TPS as TPS is for people who are fleeing
countries where they are at risk of being killed or there.

Speaker 9 (17:06):
Is a temporary that's the point of TPS is now a.

Speaker 1 (17:10):
More permanent thing where we have people rolling for you.

Speaker 2 (17:13):
It is not our responsibility to house people whose countries
have fallen apart, and there is little to no work
done to research and see if those people are in
fact fleeing evil or are the evil themselves. This is
the same Kamala Harris who is responsible for this policy.

Speaker 3 (17:31):
This was back in twenty eighteen.

Speaker 2 (17:33):
She is participating in a chant which is down down
with deportation. Understand who this lady is.

Speaker 1 (18:05):
That's good.

Speaker 2 (18:06):
I was going to let that go to the break.
I forgot how irritating that is. And she's part of it.
Do you ever notice these people the cacophony that is
their chance. They're loud. You have any of these people
who live near you, and that's part of the other
thing nobody wants to talk about is some of these
people come from these other countries. They're loud, they stay
up late, and they make a lot of noise. I know,

(18:28):
I sound like I want to I don't want people
off my lawn, but you know what, I want people
off my lawn. When it comes to the economy, do
you believe Americans are better off than they were four
years ago?

Speaker 1 (18:38):
Modicael Berry?

Speaker 6 (18:39):
So I was raised as a middle mass.

Speaker 10 (18:52):
Shone jure, talented, last world and we're learnless.

Speaker 1 (19:11):
They're miss.

Speaker 11 (19:17):
I'm six feet wrong, Erg and I'm thinking.

Speaker 1 (19:22):
You're six He's so fun.

Speaker 3 (19:39):
Is it any wonder that the person responsible for the
border crisis.

Speaker 2 (19:48):
Is not polling well with key demographics because people don't
want illegal immigration.

Speaker 3 (19:54):
They feel it now it's no longer just a Texas.

Speaker 2 (19:58):
Border town problem we've been screaming about for thirty forty years.
Now it's America's problem. These people aren't stopping at the
border or at Houston any longer. They're coming into your
town in everywhere America, and people realize these are not
the best and brightest. They're not sending their best and brightest.

(20:20):
These people have serious health problems that are contagious.

Speaker 3 (20:24):
These people are not highly educated, they're not highly skilled.

Speaker 2 (20:29):
Many of them are being trafficked, which that's unfortunate, but
that means that they are like a drug being.

Speaker 3 (20:39):
Brought into a community to cause other problems.

Speaker 2 (20:41):
So if people are being trafficked into your town, that
means there is a problem with why they're being trafficked,
and that has and the people that they're traffic that
are traffic.

Speaker 1 (20:53):
Is the worst.

Speaker 2 (20:55):
I mean, those are odd Were you cleaning your gun
to tryer went off again? Those are the problems you
don't want. Some of them are drug traffickers, some of
them are child traffickers, some of them are hitmen.

Speaker 1 (21:08):
Some of them are.

Speaker 2 (21:10):
Murderers and rapists and pedophiles. And by the way, rapists
and pedophiles, the recidivism rate is almost one hundred percent.
They don't stop. That's why when they moved the priests
from parish to parish, they never stopped. When they were
when they were defrocked, they never stopped. They can't stop.

(21:33):
Those people are sick. It is a sickness they cannot overcome.
You've got to cage them. You've got to You've got
to send them out of the general population for the.

Speaker 3 (21:44):
Sake of the children. Stop thinking about the rapists and
pedophile Think of.

Speaker 2 (21:48):
The children, and in this case, think of the people,
innocent people who've done nothing wrong. And these people are
coming into their communities. These people are coming into their
communities and they didn't ask for it, and they don't
want it, and there are no resources for them. And

(22:11):
they're raping, they're murdering, they're stealing, they're defiling, and these
people they deserved better. How can this be happening. You
shouldn't have to be ashamed of yourself that you don't
want to legal aliens coming to your house and sleeping

(22:31):
on your front lawn.

Speaker 3 (22:32):
That's not doesn't make you a bad person. How they've
twisted and contorted and made people ashamed to say, this
is not what I wanted, this is not what I
deserve better. You do, deserve better.

Speaker 1 (22:45):
You do.

Speaker 2 (22:46):
There's nothing wrong with standing up for yourself. So again,
this is what we're talking about. Earlier, Ryan Jowdusky the
new conservative commentator on CNN. Here he is talking about
Kamala Harrison.

Speaker 9 (23:00):
She is the worst polling democrat against Donald Trump in
history on national polls.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
No one is performing worsener.

Speaker 9 (23:06):
No one's freen worsener among Blacks, among Hispanics, the worst
worming democrat in modern history among the demographics, worst performing
polling wise among Jews. She is losing key factions of
the Democratic based Muslim voters.

Speaker 1 (23:18):
She's that under.

Speaker 9 (23:19):
Fifty two in the latest care poll among Black Muslims.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
She is not doing well. Wow, forgive me for stuttering.
I am shocked. I knew the gist of that quote.
I didn't bother to listen to it because I knew
the gist of it. I just heard it for the

(23:46):
first time.

Speaker 1 (23:46):
With you.

Speaker 3 (23:48):
One more time, please remon.

Speaker 9 (23:51):
She is the worst polling democrat against Donald Trump. In
history on national polls, no one is performing worsener. No
one's freen worsener among Blacks on hispatics, the worst forming
Democrat in modern history among the demographics, worse performing polling
wise among Jews. She is losing key factions of the
Democratic based Muslim voters. She's under a fifty two percent

(24:12):
in the latest care poll among Black Muslims.

Speaker 3 (24:14):
She is not doing well well. That was CNN Ryan
Drew Dusky in there.

Speaker 2 (24:21):
ABC News is reporting that Kamala Harris is polling behind
Hillary Clinton in sixteen and Biden in twenty with Hispanics.

Speaker 12 (24:30):
Thirty plus point advantage for Joe Biden in the exit
polls among Latino voters. From four years ago, Hillary Clinton
won Latino voters by forty points, and of course she
still lost the presidency. So there's some real grounds to
make up across demographics, but particularly with Latino voters. Kamala
Harris has some issues that she's got to attend to.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
Interesting.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
Back in July, Bill Maher said Kamala Harris can't win.
Bill Mahr is a liberal, but him saying she can't
win is interesting, and I don't say this very often.

Speaker 3 (25:15):
I hope Bill Maher is right.

Speaker 13 (25:17):
Harris would be the first woman president, first black woman president,
and first Asian president. But I don't vote for who
will be the first. I vote for who will win.
And for whatever reason, Harris has never been popular. You
can count the number of delegate she won in the
twenty twenty primaries on one hand, as long as that
hand has no fingers. In three years as vice president,

(25:45):
she's been quieter.

Speaker 1 (25:46):
Than an electric car.

Speaker 13 (25:47):
And like an electric car, your maga uncle can't explain
why she fills him with homicidal rage.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
She just does. Some times. Life isn't fair. It's not
fair that she's not popular.

Speaker 13 (26:03):
She's intelligent and accomplished, and in fact was put in
charge of the border.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
And look at how okay? That exactly.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
The worst president, the worst vice president in the history
of our.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
Country, the Michael Ferry.

Speaker 3 (26:23):
We can't afford four more years of this.

Speaker 2 (26:54):
Some of you will remember Danica Patrick. She is a
former professional race car driver and she is recognized as
one of the most successful women in motorsports history. That's
what I read about her in the intro. Not really,
she's hot, that's really all anybody remembers. She was the

(27:15):
first woman to win an IndyCar race at the two
thousand and eight Indie Japan three hundred. She competed in NASCAR.
She became the first woman to start on the pole
for the Daytona five hundred. Women had started on the
pole before, but not the Daytona five hundred twenty thirteen,

(27:36):
and she set records for female drivers in stock car racing.

Speaker 3 (27:41):
I mean weren't a lot of other anyway. I always
kind of liked her.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
She's cute.

Speaker 3 (27:48):
I like that, go daddy, ad. I thought that was
very clever.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
Well, Danica Patrick is also a supporter of Donald Trump.

Speaker 14 (27:58):
My story starts in the December of last year. I
was going to the event in Phoenix called Amfest. Has
anyone heard of that?

Speaker 11 (28:07):
Did anyone go?

Speaker 14 (28:09):
Charlie Kirk does an incredible job with turning point Yes,
great human being, great American And the lineup of speakers
was just so stellar, and I thought this looks fun.

Speaker 11 (28:24):
I'm local. So I said to my dad, Hey, Dad,
do you want to go?

Speaker 14 (28:27):
Because my dad's been into politics forever and he said,
you know what, you should bring your sister.

Speaker 11 (28:33):
So I was like, all right, I'm not gonna say
more fun, But so my sister flew out. We had
a great time.

Speaker 14 (28:40):
I posted a bunch of pictures and I'm not gonna lie.

Speaker 11 (28:43):
Red is my favorite color.

Speaker 1 (28:45):
I don't wear it.

Speaker 11 (28:46):
Because I'm Republican. I wear it because it is my
favorite color. It just works well. So the photos.

Speaker 14 (28:52):
Definitely had a color theme. And I posted these photos
and I said, I love America. Let's make America great again.
People didn't like that. People looked at me like I
was like some radical right wing maga right like Mega's

(29:15):
got this awful connotation.

Speaker 11 (29:16):
To so many people. And you know what all it
did was light of fire.

Speaker 14 (29:25):
I was like, I will not be judged to live
in America, be an American, be a proud American, say
I love America and want to make America great again.
I won't be judged for it. In fact, instead of
quieting down, I'm going to get louder.

Speaker 2 (29:41):
Another supporter of President Trump is the wife of Kansas
City chief quarterback Patrick Mahomes. Her name is Britney Mahomes,
and like a lot of people, she was scrolling through
posts on social media and somebody said something about what
trum uncle was saying here, and Kamala was saying that

(30:02):
over there and Trump's the right answer for the country,
and she's just sitting there and thinking.

Speaker 1 (30:07):
Yeah, that's true. I agree. And she hit like.

Speaker 3 (30:10):
She didn't put her name behind it. She didn't put
a banner out front. She just said she liked it.

Speaker 2 (30:16):
That's you know, clapping or nodding your head in social
media parlance. And the media went after her as if
she killed their puppies, not Adam Ramon, not Adam, why
would she eat old. One of those media members is

(30:37):
Sonny I don't know how you say her name, Hustin Houston.

Speaker 3 (30:40):
I've never watched that stupid show.

Speaker 1 (30:41):
The view.

Speaker 2 (30:43):
She says Mahomes should know better because she has biracial children.

Speaker 3 (30:49):
And the reason Sonny Hustin says this is because she
is a.

Speaker 2 (30:55):
No talent racist who uses ray to get everything she's
ever gotten.

Speaker 3 (31:04):
That's all she has to talk about is race.

Speaker 2 (31:07):
Give her a basic algebra equation that your eighth grader
could solve.

Speaker 1 (31:12):
She can't solve it.

Speaker 2 (31:14):
Show her a map and say pick out Russia. She
wouldn't know which side it was on. Give her a
sentence to diagram, couldn't do it. Name three writers of
the twentieth century English American.

Speaker 3 (31:30):
French, you name it, couldn't do it. She's a dumb dumb.

Speaker 2 (31:35):
There are a lot of people who are not smart,
and this is why the race hustle is wrong. The
race hustle allows people who are not very smart to
be elevated to positions far above where they are to
be by screaming about racism. And what happens in the

(31:55):
mix is they get really caught up in all this
fever a fever pitch, and they become fiends over racism.

Speaker 3 (32:06):
So they see racism everywhere. It's a call.

Speaker 2 (32:10):
The problem is that's all they ever know and all
they ever talk about.

Speaker 3 (32:15):
But some people don't notice they're doing that.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
Some people want to use this to feel better about
their own failures in life. So this is Sonny Huston
insulting Britney Mahomes for simply liking a post about Donald Trump.

Speaker 3 (32:34):
How dead are you inside when you do this?

Speaker 1 (32:37):
How don't get your wild I'm sure that this.

Speaker 15 (32:40):
Fis effect will speak to more women about the true
character of Donald Trump and will turn them away. But
to your initial point, I know you said we weren't
going to talk about it, but I was. It just
seems to me that since she is in an interracial marriage.
She should have known that to support a racist is problematic.

(33:02):
Her children are biracial, and her family is one of
the families that in the seventies could not have lived
in any of Donald Trump's buildings. So it just seems
to me that maybe she's just not that politically savvy,
or maybe she's just not ready granted.

Speaker 11 (33:22):
But all we know is that she liked a Trump post.

Speaker 1 (33:25):
We don't know she has.

Speaker 4 (33:27):
She supported him, but that's fair to interpret that she
may have, but we don't know that she's a supporter.

Speaker 2 (33:33):
This was from Kamala Harris to sitting down with the
National Association of Black Journalists recently, she was asked if
she had confidence in the Sacred Service. This was right
after the second attempt on Donald Trump's life.

Speaker 1 (33:50):
Do you have full confidence in the Secret Service to
protect all of you? Did you you feel safe for
you and your family?

Speaker 11 (33:57):
I do, But I mean you can go back to Ohio.

Speaker 6 (34:01):
Not everybody has Secret Service, and there are far too
many people in our country right now who are not
feeling safe. I mean, I look at Project twenty twenty five,
and I look at you know, like the don't say
gay laws coming out of Florida. Members of the LGBTQ
community don't feel safe right now. Immigrants or people with

(34:22):
an immigrant background don't feel safe right now.

Speaker 1 (34:24):
Women don't feel safe right in here.

Speaker 11 (34:28):
And so yes, I feel safe.

Speaker 6 (34:32):
I have Secret Service protection, but that doesn't change my
perspective on the importance of fighting for the safety of
everybody in our country.

Speaker 3 (34:44):
She can't help herself.

Speaker 2 (34:46):
Nobody on the left camp, except for Chris Cromo, who
called Trump right after that.

Speaker 3 (34:52):
Everybody else is doubling down on the rhetoric.

Speaker 2 (34:55):
That got Donald Trump shot in the first place and
another attempt on his life.

Speaker 3 (35:00):
They want him to die, there is no question, and
they're not even being discreet about it.
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