Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Very Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
So we're at the Alabama Georgia game. My wife said,
help me understand why the president is there. Isn't he
going to win Alabama and Georgia already? And I said, well,
you know, that's a very good question. Let's talk about
why he was there. He's going to win Alabama already,
(00:55):
but let's win it in a route. See, the problem
on our side is everybody likes to overthink it. I
will have people between now in November who will tell
me in Texas, hey, I'm not going to vote. How come, Well,
Trump's gonna win anyway. I saw the pole and then
I go, well, where do you live again? And they
(01:17):
live in an area with the blue congressman with a
Democrat congressman, and that congressman wins fifty one to forty nine.
You know why, because Republicans will say, I'm not going
to vote. Trump's already gonna win. So we could have
sent another congressman. We have a Democrat congressman in Texas
in some of these districts that we could win.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
But our people who understand the.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
Stakes of Democrats winning They fully understand that, but they
get so clever that they figure out ways they're not
going to vote. It blows my mind blows. And then
they wonder why things are so bad. You know, Congress,
you're part of the problem. But you are part of
the problem. But back to the issue. So, first of all,
(02:03):
Trump goes to Alabama for the same reason he goes
to New York, to get the maximum number of people
to show up there. Trump will never admit this, but
he really wants to win the popular vote. A Republican
hasn't won the popular vote since two thousand and four.
He'd really like to do that, and there's a good
(02:23):
shock that he will. There's a real chance. Now the
Democrats aren't going to sit lightly. We're going to see
some shenanigans between now on election day. It's going to
be crazy. If they don't kill him, and yes they
are trying. If they don't kill him or drag him
to prison or a level of fraud that we can't
(02:49):
even overcome, it's going to be a route they're going
to accuse jd. Vance and being a pedophile and a rapist,
and you know, any number of other things they have
to By the way, the VP debates smart night, and
we'll be talking about that on.
Speaker 1 (03:04):
Wednesday. So back to it.
Speaker 2 (03:10):
He yeah, he's gonna win Alabama, and but Georgia is
a swing state.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
It shouldn't be, but it is.
Speaker 2 (03:22):
And because of the fraud, and the governor and Secretary
of state there have chosen not to confront him, and
that caused Trump to call him on the carpet and
that created a nasty little fat and uh, it.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
Cost us a Senate seat there.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
That's why that that socialist Raphael Warnot defeated Hersha Walker.
But Trump should win in Georgia, but he needs that win.
He needs to overcome the cheating in Fulton County in Atlanta,
and they will be cheating in big numbers. And the
question will be there have been some measures put in
place now in Georgia that will help, some measures put
(04:03):
in place in Pennsylvania that will help.
Speaker 1 (04:04):
There have been some court wins.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
A lot of this stuff is won before the election
in the courthouse, so that's a good thing. We've had
some successes. So both of those states, Trump will pick
up votes by being there, no doubt. But it's even
bigger than that. Trump represents a part of America that
(04:30):
feels like our politics and our corporations have forgotten them.
And that is real men and real women who can
change the tire on their vehicle, who get married, who
are men and women they were born that way. People
(04:51):
who have a wedding ceremony and take a honeymoon. People
who go into the military and come home. People who
are police officers and firefighters, small business owners. People who
gather at Thanksgiving, nobody pulls out their wiener and no
men stand up, and you know, do the Richard Simmons
Tim Wallstand says, I'm a girl now. People that are
(05:15):
not creepy, and they feel like Washington, d C. Has
forgotten them. They watch the craziness. They see what the
left is up to. They see it in the schools,
they see it on TV, they see it everywhere, and
they're sick of it. And those people love college football.
And there's Trump. There's Trump performer professional football team owner.
(05:43):
He's hanging out with Herschel Walker, who is, without a doubt,
one of the greatest collegiate athletes of all time. You
look at his years at Georgia. My goodness alive. He's
there with Kid Rock. Everybody loves kid Rock and he's
(06:03):
there with John Day. Who doesn't love John Day. If
you want to hang out on my porch and have
cigars and bourbon with me, you damn well better love
John Day.
Speaker 1 (06:14):
And every one of my friends does.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
There's a cool there's a connectivity. It was great branding.
It was a reminder that if Kamala was there, she'd
be cackling. It was a reminder that Kamala is creepy anyway. So, uh,
Clay Travis, our buddy is talking to President Trump and
(06:42):
Minnesota's Governor Richard Simmons is attending the Minnesota Michigan game
at the time, and the audience booed him. Despite that,
Walts insists that Democrats have reclaimed football from Republicans.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
Yes, you big sissy, sure you have.
Speaker 2 (06:58):
So Clay Travis asks Donald Trump about this Tuesday, JD.
Speaker 3 (07:04):
Van's going to take on Tim Walls and the vice
presidential debate.
Speaker 1 (07:07):
I don't know if you saw it, but Tim Wall said.
Speaker 3 (07:10):
Democrats have taken back football from Republicans this stadium. I
saw him put you on the Jumpbotron. I would dispute
that pretty aggressively. How do you think JD's going to do?
Speaker 1 (07:21):
And what do you.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
Think about the argument from Tim Walls that Democrats are
the ones who are football fans.
Speaker 4 (07:27):
Well, first of all, I don't know if you saw it,
but he was at Michigan today.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
He got booed out of the stadium.
Speaker 4 (07:32):
Yes, and if you saw the hand that we got,
it was a little bit different. Wouldn't you say, Now
he's this guy that was a big mistake. I think
it was a big mistake. Then we'll see what happens
on November fifth. I think it's going to be the
most important day in the history of our country. That's
going to be the biggest election we've ever had.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
Because our country's going bad.
Speaker 4 (07:50):
They have you know, I used to say they are destroying.
They've destroyed our country and we're going to bring it back.
Speaker 2 (07:57):
Now what the Democrats love to do, And this happened
in the debate Kamala Harris when he says our country
is going to hell. Our country's trash. She says, he
says it, this country's trash, but this country is great. Well,
first of all, you've never said that before. And secondly,
people understand exactly what he means. We can't just be
(08:21):
patriotic and say despite all the horrible things that have happened.
We love this country and everything is great. We love
this country so much that we need to take it
to an AA meeting. This country has hit rock bottom,
and the first step to fixing it is admitting the problem.
(08:41):
And Kamala Harris is exhibit A, and Richard Simmons or
vice presidential candidate.
Speaker 1 (08:47):
Is exhibit B. And that has to be fixed. What
is he top countries? We think sweets tea. We don't
think socialist cool.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
In the fiscal year of twenty twenty, the US Border
Patrol apprehended over four hundred thousand people four hundred thousand
and six fifty one is their official number trying to
cross the southern border into the United States.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
Four hundred that's in your mind.
Speaker 2 (09:19):
By way of comparison, a new ICE report reveals the
Biden Harris administration has let in four hundred twenty five
thousand illegal aliens who are convicted criminals, who they then
released into the country. They are letting more people in
(09:42):
who are convicted criminals than were allowed in during the
Trump administration, and he was limited by what he could do.
This is bad, bad stuff. The data says that among
those not in detention. There are four hundred twenty five thousand,
(10:05):
four hundred thirty one convicted criminals, two hundred twenty two thousand,
one hundred forty one with pending criminal charges. This is
according to ICE. This is't some right wing conspiracy. You know,
the numbers are higher than this. This is what ICE
is releasing. Those include sixty two thousand, two hundred thirty
one convicted of assault, fourteen thousand, three hundred one convicted
(10:28):
of burglary, fifty six thousand, five hundred thirty three with
drug convictions, thirteen thousand, ninety nine convicted of homicide.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
None of this had to happen.
Speaker 2 (10:40):
Americans are being raped, murdered by people who were never
supposed to be here. An additional two thousand, five hundred
twenty one have kidnapping convictions and fifteen thousand, eight hundred
eleven have sexual assault convictions. There are another eighteen hundred
(11:01):
and forty five with pending homicide charges, forty two thousand,
nine hundred and fifteen with assault charges, thirty two hundred
and sixty six with burglary charges, forty two hundred and
fifty with assault charges.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
Ramon do me a favor I guess it's too long
to do that.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
I guess it's you know what, save this segment. We're
going to play this segment again in the next hour.
I'm tempted to just play this segment again and again
and again and again and again. When people understand you
rush to your abortion rally, Okay, rush to your abortion
(11:49):
rally and say, I'm voting for her because I'm for
her story. Because abortion, your baby's going to be killed,
and you too, by these people. Your economy has been killed.
You're going to be killed, Your child is going to
(12:10):
be killed. And this is this is what people signed
up for. This is apparently what people want because the
only reason, the only thing she is running on is
more abortions. And if you listen to the idiots, by
the way, it's a lot of women. And then it's
(12:34):
cissy men, which which is what Tim Watts is, which.
Speaker 1 (12:38):
Is what.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
Doug m Hoff, Kamala Harris's husband or whatever, whatever his
relationship is, it is cissy men. That that's in fact,
there's an interview we're going to play it for you
later that Doug m Hoff is doing where the reporter says,
you have redefined masculinity for American men. That's not masculinity, touts.
(13:01):
I got news for you. He hasn't redefined masculinity. Him
and Tip. You know what him and Tim Waltz have
done since Richard Simmons died. They've made us think of
Richard Simmons. That's about all they've done. They've not redefined anything.
And I got news for you. If you live in
an area like North Carolina that's been hit by a
(13:22):
big storm, you don't want those those sissy men aren't
coming to help you.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
I can guarantee you that. I can guarante you that.
Speaker 5 (13:31):
Fox News with the story. We just got these numbers
moments ago. But it's a jaw dropper, to say the least.
So to set the stage here, let me just explain
what these numbers mean. ICE has something called a non
detained docket. Essentially, what that is is it means migrants
who were encountered by DHS but are no longer in
federal custody. So who's on this non detained docket. It's
(13:53):
illegal immigrants who were caught and released at the border,
released with the court date years away. They're in immigration proceedings,
combined with illegal immigrants who have already been ordered deported
from the country by a judge, but are still here
roaming the country, So keep that in mind. This non
detained docket. According to a letter that the acting Director
of ICE just sent to Texas Congressman Tony Gonzalez, on
(14:18):
ICE's non detained docket, they're currently tracking four hundred and
twenty five thousand non citizens who have been convicted.
Speaker 1 (14:28):
Of a crime.
Speaker 5 (14:29):
Of that number, over thirteen thousand non citizens have convictions
for homicide and are on the non detained docket, meaning
they're roaming the country right now. On top of that,
there are another fifteen thousand, eight hundred and eleven non
citizens convicted of sexual assault who are roaming the country
(14:49):
right now on ICE's non detained docket. It doesn't stop there.
Those are convictions. The ICE director also says they're currently
just under nineteen hu one hundred non citizens on the
non detained docket who have pending homicide charges who are
roaming the country and another four thousand, two hundred and
(15:10):
fifty non citizens who have pending sexual assault charges who
are roaming the country on the non detained docket. So
people's eyes might be glazing over right now with all
the numbers we just threw out you, just to put
it in a nutshell. Right here, what we've learned from
the acting ICE Director via this letter to Congressman Tony
Gonzalez is, right now there are over thirteen thousand illegal
(15:33):
aliens convicted of homicide who are roaming the United States
right now. There are another fifteen eight hundred and eleven
illegal aliens roaming the country right now who have been
convicted of sexual assault, and there are even more who
are facing charges for homicide and charges for sexual assaults.
So this just goes to show, guys, the non detained
(15:55):
docket has exploded under the Biden administration to over I
believe it's seven point three million.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
They're anticipating it could hit eight million by the end
of the years.
Speaker 5 (16:04):
But looking at the numbers on this letter right here,
there are currently over six hundred thousand non citizens on
ICE's non detained docket who are either convicted excuse me,
six hundred thousand non citizens on this non detained docket
who are roaming the country right now. Of that, four
hundred and twenty five thousand have already been convicted of crimes,
(16:25):
two hundred and twenty two thousand are pending crimes, and again,
the most serious crimes we just told you about, over
thirteen thousand convicted of homicide, over fifteen thousand convicted of
sexual assault. And honestly, that is not a surprise to
hear given these horrible headlines we keep seeing popping up.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
In multiple parts of the country.
Speaker 5 (16:44):
Almost every day now of a horrible sexual assault or
a murder or another violent felony committed by an illegal
alien who is often caught in release from custody. And
the jaw dropper here too, guys, is all these numbers
we just rattled off, they don't even account for the
nearly two million gotaways who have crossed our border under
the Biden administration. Those almost two million gotaways, they were
(17:06):
never encountered by DHS. They snuck in, they were never
caught by border patrol, they were never encountered by ICE.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
There's no record of them.
Speaker 5 (17:13):
So they have nothing to do with the numbers I
just rattled off to you. These are just the numbers
of people that ICE has already encountered, that border patrol
has encountered, that DHS knows who they are, and we
just saw those horrible stories in Nantucket the other day.
ICE ran a week long operation in Nantucket, and in
a single operation in a forty eight hour span, they
(17:34):
arrested two salvador and illegal aliens who came into the
country as got aways and were arrested for child rape.
On Nantucket, they got a Brazilian guy who was arrested
for sexually assaulting a Nantucket resident, and then a Guatemalan
guy who was previously deported who was arrested for sexually
assaulting a Nantucket resident. So we keep seeing all these
(17:55):
headlines about migrant crime popping up in different cities all
over the country. This right is the first time we
have ever seen specific numbers as to who and what
ICE is tracking when it comes to convicted criminals who
have crossed the border at some point and are either
supposed to be deported or are going through their immigration
proceedings but are not in nice custody right now and
(18:16):
are roaming the country.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
So I'll ping it back to you.
Speaker 5 (18:19):
Guys, But some pretty some pretty jaw dropping numbers that
we are still going through as we speak right now.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
An undocumented immigrant is not a criminal. The Michael Berry Show,
we have to correct course.
Speaker 6 (18:31):
In this conversation, Shamala Harris's husband, Doug Imhoff was on
MSNBC with Jin Posaki, Who's Who's.
Speaker 2 (18:44):
A step and fetch it for the Democrats?
Speaker 1 (18:49):
And you know what they do.
Speaker 2 (18:51):
They take their weaknesses and try to put a bow
around them like they're proud of them. So Doug Imhoff
is the most effeminate man you'll ever see in public
life other than Richard Simmons. Tim Waltz tamp on Tim.
So she decides to act like he is somehow an
inspiration to man.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
Listen to this important part of.
Speaker 7 (19:12):
An interesting part of how people have talked about your
role here is how your role has reshaped the perception
of masculinity.
Speaker 8 (19:18):
And I'm not sure you planned on that, but you
are an incredibly supportive spouse.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
Has that been an evolution for you? And do you
think that's.
Speaker 9 (19:24):
Part of the role you might play as for gentlemen's funny.
Speaker 1 (19:28):
I've started to think a lot about this. I've always
been like this. My dad was like this, What is
like this?
Speaker 2 (19:36):
Maybe get some testosterone. Maybe you shouldn't have been playing
with dolls as a kid. He looks and acts like
he's ready to transition at any moment. You realize if
she gets elected, he will transition and the media will
fall over it.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
You think I'm joking.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
You know, the first lady they always have a cause,
or even the second lady, Nancy Reagan had just say no.
Laura b had reading, or Barbara Bush had literacy. You know,
they have their thing. Tipper Gore had censorship. Remember she
wanted she wants you to better watch movies or listen
to music. Hillary Clinton had suiciding people.
Speaker 1 (20:14):
They all had something. Doug Imhoff has his cause too.
Speaker 2 (20:18):
He fights against toxic masculinity.
Speaker 10 (20:21):
To talk about masculinity for a moment, as being second
gentleman changed your own view of perceived gender roles of
what it means to be a man.
Speaker 8 (20:33):
This is something I've thought about a lot and something
I've spoken about a lot. There's too much of toxicity,
it's masculine toxicity out there, and we've kind of confused
what it means to be a man, what it means
to be masculine.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
Where you've got this.
Speaker 8 (20:48):
Trope out there that you've got to be tough and
angry and lash out to be strong. It's just the opposite,
you know. Strength is how you show your love for people.
Strength is how you are for people and how you
have their back, and how you stick up for other
people and pushing up and pushing out against bullies. I mean,
that's what I believe it is. So every time I
(21:10):
can speak against this toxicity.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
We're seeing it with our younger people.
Speaker 8 (21:15):
We're seeing it in our discourse and our politics and
the media. You're seeing it as it relates to so
many of the issues that we're pushing back on. So
I think it's a problem, and I'm going to continue.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
To use this platform.
Speaker 8 (21:28):
Every time I get to speak out against this toxic
masculinity that's out there.
Speaker 1 (21:33):
Doug m Hoff has found his cause. You men are
just being too manly. You feel us out there now.
Speaker 2 (21:42):
I love you, don't get me wrong, but you're just
being too darn manly. I tell you, we're just too manly.
You need to tone it down a little. You so manly,
don't you agree? Tim Waltz Ramo's still haughing. I'm telling you,
if she wins, Doug Emhall and Tim Watts will transition.
(22:05):
Maybe they'll go through it together and then they'll announce
their lesbians in.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
A couple together.
Speaker 2 (22:09):
You think I'm kidding, You think don't test me on
this Charlie Kirk made an excellent point recently. I think
this is very very well said. Listen to this and
repeat it often. He said, you're not voting for Donald Trump,
You're voting for the five thousand people who run the government.
(22:32):
You're just voting for the guy who's going to decide
who those five thousand people are going to be. It's
a very very well made point. I give him credits.
Young guy's got some good ideas. This is one of them.
Speaker 7 (22:43):
You're not voting for Trump, You're voting for five thousand
people that will.
Speaker 1 (22:47):
Run your government. Do you think that.
Speaker 7 (22:48):
Donald Trump will assemble five thousand better people, more in
line at your worldviewing, not perfect or Kamala Harris. That's
what's on the ticket. It is a team of five
thousand people, and that goes from everything from the Department
of Defense to the border to all these issues.
Speaker 1 (23:02):
And they want to.
Speaker 7 (23:03):
Try to personalize this election in the media. They want
to try to make you feel emotional about something Trump
said or did not say. But we will win if
we can rise above that and say, hey, you have
Bobby Kennedy involved in a presidential transition team of who's
going to be at the FDA, the CDC, the NIH.
Speaker 1 (23:20):
I mean, that's a game thing. This is the Avengers team.
Speaker 7 (23:24):
Tulsey Gabbert Pulsey is the former coachair of the DNC.
Just a couple of years ago, you got Elon Musk,
who is the world's wealthiest man and is a freethinker,
and you used to be able.
Speaker 1 (23:34):
To Obama support.
Speaker 7 (23:34):
Of course, Bobby Kennedy and I think it's really something
for those of us that can see what's really going
on in the country beyond just the media news cycle
and the chatter on cable TV. We know that we
are at risk of losing our country because there's an
unelected oligarchy that is making decisions for health, for border,
for war. And this is our opportunity. Our framers gave
(23:55):
us this, especially here in Arizona, because these electoral votes
are going to matter a lot. We're going to say, hey,
you could take back those five thousand positions. You can
all of a sudden say no, Anthony Fauci, all of
your minions are gone.
Speaker 1 (24:07):
In the FDF, They're gone.
Speaker 2 (24:10):
Scott Jennings at CNN has been one of the stars
to emerge from this cycle. He is a Republican who's
kind of a counterbalance to their liberalism, and he has
just been fantastic here he is talking about how absurd
Kamala's trip to the border appeared to voters.
Speaker 9 (24:27):
We know love for Meia, Republicans for Kamala Harris today.
In fact, I think the Trump campaign line today ought
to be Arsonist returns to scene of crime. I mean,
look at the last three and a half years we've
got the border has effectively been open, people flowing across Ice.
Ice today released information that there are thirteen thousand non
citizens convicted of homicide and almost sixteen thousand non citizens
convicted of some kind of sexual crime who are in
(24:50):
the country right now.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
Only because we're.
Speaker 9 (24:53):
In the shadow of an election. Is Kamala Harris trying
to rush and pay some lip service to this issue
as a tactical matter? Anderson, I don't think har should
be trying to elevate this issue because this is the
best ground from which Donald Trump has to fight. So no,
I think the Harris campaign is making a tactical mistake,
and I think they have very little to say that
the American people are going to buy on this today. Anderson,
it's worse than that it's not that it took them
(25:13):
too long. It's that they actively work to undo everything
Donald Trump had done during his time in office. On
the first day they rescinded all of Donald Trump's border
executive orders, the floodgates opened, all these people come rushing across.
Then it becomes a political problem, and now at the
end of the election, they want to blame it on
Donald Trump. For her entire career, she has wanted a
(25:34):
more permissive immigration structure when she ran for president before,
she wanted to decriminalize border crossings.
Speaker 1 (25:40):
In her heart, in her heart of hearts, she.
Speaker 9 (25:42):
Wants a more liberal, permissive immigration structure. And in his
heart of hearts, Donald Trump wants to crack down on
the border. That's why when you look at the CNN
polling this week, Trump is far more trusted on immigration
than Harris. That is not going to change because of
this visit today or anything she says today.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
The die is cast on this issue.
Speaker 9 (25:59):
If I were her to bury this issue, not make
it more prominent. But hey, if she wants to have
border events, I think Republicans will rejoice because it'll increase
the prominence of this issue for the last month to people.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
One and today of everyone thinking they can actually live
the American truth. The Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
I told you earlier the President Trump is doing better
than Republicans typically do with Hispanics, way better, doing better
with blacks than Republicans typically do with blacks. Republicans also
struggle with young people because young people are very naive
(26:35):
and they're coming out of the school system that's been
indoctrinating them. Now, once they've been out in the real
world for a while, they go, oh, oh okay, I
got it. They lied to me. So Clay Travis is
talking to President Trump at the Alabama Georgia game, and
President Trump made the point, which the numbers back up,
(26:55):
that he's doing well with younger voters. And she's very true.
Speaker 3 (27:02):
Today we had kids Alabama Georgia. We gave them a
Kamala hat and a Trump hat, like they do when
they decide when they're recruits. Everybody we asked was putting
on the Trump hat.
Speaker 1 (27:12):
I think you're going to.
Speaker 3 (27:13):
Kill it with young kids, college kids in a way
that you haven't before.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
Do you feel that momentum?
Speaker 4 (27:17):
Well, we see it, and we see what we're way
up with young people, and generally Republicans, including me, And
the last time I was okay, but I wasn't great.
We're up by like thirty points with the young people,
so that's an honor.
Speaker 1 (27:30):
Look they see what happens. They're very smart.
Speaker 4 (27:32):
And look at the way she'd berated them, she said
they're not smart.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
They're much smarter than her.
Speaker 4 (27:38):
I'll be honest, but I think we're gonna do really well.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
There's an energy.
Speaker 4 (27:42):
We did great in twenty sixteen, We frankly did better
in twenty twenty the most smokes ever gotten by a
sitting president. By far, there has never been energy like
there is now. And I guess it's me, but you
know what it is. It's also when they look at
what's happened to our country.
Speaker 1 (27:59):
Our country's going bad.
Speaker 4 (28:00):
Our country is a very dangerous place right now. When
you look at what she's done at the border, it's
a very dangerous place. But we love our country and
we're going to turn it around and we're going to
make America better, greater than ever before.
Speaker 2 (28:13):
While out on the campaign show, and this is an
issue where even some Republicans are misguided, and that is
school choice. You've got people who are so tied to
the public school system, particularly rural school districts. They are
so scared of competition that they are against school choice.
(28:37):
What they don't understand is in a rural district, your
kids are still going to go to your school. At
Orangefield High School, where I went, that was our identity.
I keep up with people I went to high school with.
We are Orangefield High School graduates. We are proud to
be so. I was a year ahead of Jeff Granger,
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who went to A and M and had a phenomenal
career there as a starting quarterback and as a star pitcher.
Speaker 1 (29:07):
Still holds to this day holds.
Speaker 2 (29:09):
The strikeout record in the Southwest Conference and always will
because there's no Southwest Conference anymore.
Speaker 1 (29:16):
He beat Roger Clemens' strikeout record.
Speaker 2 (29:19):
I have a level of pride in him because he
went to Orangefield High School, because we went to school together.
That school bond, that pride you drive. I will speak
for Texas for a moment. Maybe it's not like this
where you are, but you drive through small towns and
(29:40):
you drive through Gettings, Texas, and the water tower says
Gettings Buffaloes or the stores there.
Speaker 1 (29:46):
People painted on their windows.
Speaker 2 (29:48):
On Friday Night these towns shut down for their football team.
People have a bond with their public school, and those
public schools are good schools. They don't need competition. They're
representative of the community. But why not give kids an
(30:09):
opportunity who are stuck in a dead end public school
in a bad neighborhood.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
They didn't choose to be.
Speaker 2 (30:18):
A poor black kid in a poor black neighborhood with
a poor school system where they could be knifed every day.
Speaker 1 (30:27):
They didn't choose that. Why not let them.
Speaker 2 (30:30):
Choose a school that is not corrupted, that they can
choose to go. Why be so selfish for fear of
your local school, which is going to be fine, that
you're against school choice. You are saying to that kid,
and they're mostly minorities, no, go to that same crappy
(30:52):
school you've gone to forever because your mom's too poor
to be able to move.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
To a better district. That's horrible. We should be better
than that.
Speaker 2 (31:04):
So here's President Trump saying that he supports universal school choice, and.
Speaker 4 (31:08):
I will support the universal school choice, and I believe
the Lifeline Scholarship bill would be a great start for
those students trapped in the worst performing schools. In Pennsylvania.
A lot of people want to see that happen. I
understand it.
Speaker 1 (31:22):
Right, you know that, Oh, you do know that?
Speaker 4 (31:24):
Good. It would provide financial assistance to empower parents to
take their children out of a failing school and send
them to a public, private, religious, or charter school that's
really right for them. You know.
Speaker 1 (31:38):
School choice is a very big deal.
Speaker 4 (31:40):
A lot of people don't know that, but it's a
big deal.
Speaker 1 (31:43):
It'll be great.
Speaker 5 (31:43):
You know.
Speaker 4 (31:43):
I'm going to take the Department of Education close it
in Washington. Let the states run their own education.
Speaker 1 (31:55):
Very important.
Speaker 4 (31:57):
Because we spend more money per pupil than any other
nation in the world by far, and yet we're ranked
at the bottom of every list. So you know the expression,
what the hell do you.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
Have to lose? Right, that's right.
Speaker 2 (32:16):
Kamala Harris keeps repeating the story that she worked at McDonald's.
Speaker 1 (32:21):
Well.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
I always enjoy when a scandal plays out in public
and there is the moment, whether it's Lacy Peterson and
Scott Peterson, there's always that moment where you go from
not being sure what happened to realizing the person is
lying because a new detail has emerged. There is always
(32:47):
that moment, and now we've reached it with Kamala Harris
because she can't produce a shred of evidence that she
worked at Donald's, and McDonald's says she didn't work there.
This isn't the media where they'll lie for you, President
(33:10):
Trump says. And I hope he's right that a major
newspaper is working on a story that will expose her
lie that she worked for McDonald's.
Speaker 4 (33:22):
Kamala is I always get criticized because they agree that.
Speaker 9 (33:27):
Up to you.
Speaker 1 (33:27):
But why would I bring it up so much? Because
it's so simple. It's not a horrible plot.
Speaker 4 (33:32):
It's not a complex thing that people get bored with.
Speaker 1 (33:35):
Uncle Sam.
Speaker 4 (33:36):
It's just basically, she said she worked so hard she
sweated over French fries at McDonald's, and she.
Speaker 1 (33:43):
Never worked there.
Speaker 4 (33:45):
It turned out to be a lie, and the fake
news doesn't want to talk about it, although I heard
a major newspaper is doing a big story on it.
Speaker 1 (33:54):
It's a lie. It's a total life.
Speaker 4 (33:56):
She never worked at McDonald's, but she lies about everything.
We can't let her get into office. And that's why
I'm a little bit rougher than I would normally be.
Speaker 1 (34:04):
I love the lady in the crowd.
Speaker 2 (34:06):
About halfway through that cut, she just yells out liar,
and it comes in loud and clear.
Speaker 4 (34:11):
It turned out to be a lie, and the fake
news doesn't want to talk about it.
Speaker 1 (34:16):
She hates Kamala Harris, and she makes it clear. The
way she says.
Speaker 2 (34:19):
Liar sounds like Carol Kine and The Princess Bride play
that first one again, Ramone.
Speaker 4 (34:25):
It turned out to be a lie, and the fake.
Speaker 1 (34:28):
News doesn't want to talk about her.
Speaker 2 (34:30):
That woman has clearly watched her share her fair share
of Ted Cruz's favorite movie, The Princess Bride.
Speaker 1 (34:35):
That was spot on.
Speaker 4 (34:37):
It turned out to be a lie, and the fake
news doesn't want to talk about her.