Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
So Michael Arry Show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
The Democratic nominee for Vice President, Governor Tim Walls side.
Speaker 4 (00:23):
I feel pretty, oh so pretty, I feel pretty witty.
Speaker 2 (00:30):
Governor Walls.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Are you a progressive or are you a centrist?
Speaker 2 (00:34):
I'm a progressive. I'm a knucklehead. At times, I.
Speaker 4 (00:37):
Feel charming, Oh so charming. It's a love how charming?
That's so pretty line.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
Somebody said, what's next?
Speaker 2 (00:52):
Child labor? Hell, yeah, it's in there. That's what they've
got in there. You see states doing that, putting our
children at risk. That's what they'll do. I think we
need to push back on this.
Speaker 5 (01:02):
There's no guarantee of free speech on misinformation or or
hate speech.
Speaker 4 (01:07):
Feels stunny and entrancing. You like and dancing.
Speaker 2 (01:20):
She's always done it with energy, with passion, and with joy.
Don't ever shy away more progressive values.
Speaker 5 (01:30):
One person's socialism is another person's neighborliness. The Vice President
has made it clear that she has policies that make
a difference. Her border policies are the most strongest, the
fairest we've seen. You previously oppose an assault weapons van,
but it's only later in your political career, did you
change your position?
Speaker 2 (01:49):
Why so? I've become friends with school shooters.
Speaker 4 (01:52):
I feel stunny and in truancy. You like running and dancing.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
I use.
Speaker 6 (02:13):
A CPA firm in Houston called Duroche Partners, and I'd
been with the same CPA for thirty years. And I
know that at some point he'll retire, and he's a dear,
dear friend, and so my business has expanded and I
wanted to start fresh with a firm that a bigger firm.
(02:37):
He's a one man operation. Wonderful, wonderful guy and friend,
very good at what he does. But it was time
for me to step up. I have a more complicated
tax liability and tax and need an advanced strategy. And
so I did it, and they send me things and
we talk about them related to who tax changes. If
(03:03):
you don't own a business, you don't understand how important
this is. Businesses in America right now are on uncertain
footing because who wins or loses this election is going
to have a dramatic impact on most businesses. And not
(03:25):
just the rich major corporations and not just the fat cats.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
A lot of small businesses.
Speaker 6 (03:34):
Many Americans are working for a business that could go
from profitable to unprofitable with a minor change. You go
from twenty one to twenty eight percent corporate tax. And
you know, dumb dumbs out there think, yeah, yeah, who's
gonna stick it to the rich guys?
Speaker 7 (03:55):
Who?
Speaker 2 (03:56):
Who?
Speaker 6 (03:56):
Who are you going to stick it to? I got
news for you. Seventy percent of billionaires support Kamala Harris.
You really think you're gonna get your money from the billionaires?
Do you know they have entire legal teams to fight.
Do you know they have loopholes that were written for
(04:17):
that guy individually. Foolish, foolish that you can be tooled
and toyed with like this. People that are gonna hurt
are the people who don't have lobbyists. The business you
work for that has three employees or thirty or eighty, that's.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
Who's going to be hurt.
Speaker 6 (04:41):
That's who's going to get pinched, and they're gonna get
pinched bad. So I get this email, and it's a
reference to an article that says new IRS unit begins
targeting pass through businesses. The agency says the initiative will
quote increase fairness end quote, and its enforcement activities anytime
(05:04):
the government and the Democrats talk about fairness and equity,
you do understand that means taking from you and giving
to them. So my CPA's were explaining this the quote
unquote Inflation Reduction Act. Remember they they said, oh, y'all
(05:28):
are upset about the inflation we caused by pumping of.
Speaker 1 (05:30):
Some money into the economy.
Speaker 6 (05:32):
Well we'll pass this bill, this omnibus bill, and that'll
reduce inflation. Well we'll spend trillions of dollars and that
will reduce inflation. I'm gonna tell you something, there's some
really dumb ideas out there. Taking your four oh one
k going to the casino and plopping it on one hand,
(05:57):
that's a dumb idea.
Speaker 1 (05:59):
This is even dumber. It's in that realm of dumb.
Speaker 6 (06:05):
So the Inflation Reduction Act, which did not reduce inflation,
it rewarded with trillions of dollars their supporters, their green
energy groups and all that and what else it did.
And you wonder what people ask me all the time,
why is Kamala able to spend? Why is she able
(06:26):
to raise more money than Trump? Do you realize how
many people got money out of Inflation Reduction Act? How
many of their personal friends and industries got money that
they're now going to give.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
Back to her.
Speaker 6 (06:37):
So my CPA's deroached partners told me about this article
and what it means if she wins.
Speaker 1 (06:45):
This is going into effect.
Speaker 6 (06:47):
They're going after they've set up a whole new unit
to go through what are called pass through entities, which
would take their qualified business income deduction, which is Section
one ninety nine A, which is a twenty percent direct
deduction to qualified business income reducing the amount of possible
taxes to the individual shareholder level. That deduction was put
(07:09):
into law by Donald Trump in twenty seventeen. Is that
an evil Trump? Is that an evil tax deduction? Is
that a case of the rich getting richer? Absolutely not.
These are tax deductions that reflect how businesses are established.
(07:29):
Do you know most businesses go out of business. They
don't survive. The only folks that survive are major corporations,
small toess mid sized business, which is most business gets
gobbled up or closes. These types of deductions are what
(07:49):
allow them to survive.
Speaker 1 (07:53):
And yet.
Speaker 6 (07:56):
This is what they're spending all the irs money to
go at after this election matters. See, they don't tell
you about this She doesn't say we're gonna go after
and we're gonna take all the money.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
She says abortion, abortion, abortion, and.
Speaker 6 (08:10):
Stupid young women go, I just want abortions.
Speaker 1 (08:13):
I don't care how many more rapists you let in.
Speaker 5 (08:17):
Kamala Harris was just officially.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
Endorsed by I R. S Agency. Believe the Michael Berry Show.
I'd rather not have that endorsement.
Speaker 6 (08:28):
There was there was a little span there that every
white person was really really into the Gypsy Kings. They
were really into how really into the Gypsy Kings they were.
They didn't they didn't really know what the words meant,
(08:48):
but they knew like, play a Bob Yo, you got this,
you got the play.
Speaker 1 (08:54):
The play the Gypsy King.
Speaker 6 (08:55):
They got the Hotel California, play that one, play that
one played, play.
Speaker 1 (08:59):
The I mean Minetta. Well, yeah, my way, the one
were to do my way.
Speaker 6 (09:04):
I really like the Gypsy Kings. It was a funny thing.
And if you went to a tex mex restaurant, which
is now, if you're not from Houston, what I'm about
to say, You're going to think I'm making this up,
but I'm dead serious. The most popular restaurant concept in
(09:26):
the Greater Houston area is tex Mex And this might
be an exaggeration, but I'm not sure it is. There
may be as many tex Mex restaurants as there are seafood,
and we are on the Gulf coast, So don't try
to don't try to tell me we don't have seafood, seafood, steakhouse,
(09:50):
burger joint. Tex Mex is the cuisine in Houston now,
and if you're not from here, hadn't been in a
long time, you won't believe it is. And by the way,
I'm not saying Mexicans have taken over Houston.
Speaker 1 (10:10):
And they've brought their restaurants.
Speaker 6 (10:13):
These are tex Mex, which is white people Mexican food,
which is different than what we refer to as Mexican
interior food. So people that don't know any better that
think that tex Mex is Mexican food because that's what
it's often called here. And then you go somewhere else
and you order and you go, oh, let's go out
(10:36):
for Mexican tonight. You take your clients out or they're
taking you out, and you get there and there's molet
and it's dry, and there's no cheese, and there's no
red sauce, and they.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
Don't even bring chips out at the beginning.
Speaker 6 (10:50):
If you don't bring chips out, even Ramone, who's normally
taken a nap during our show, Ramone just woke up
over the idea of chips. Every few years in the
greater Houston area, some little hipster will start a elevated
text mex Is this is all the food reviews. This
(11:11):
is our take on a historic tradition of textmes, modernized
and elevated with a twist of la and and.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
They go, it's gonna be so great.
Speaker 6 (11:23):
And what it's going to be is instead of what
we love, which is our rundown text Max restaurant with
greasy cheese enchiladas, what they're gonna do is really really
high priced, not nearly as good, not nearly as comfort
comfort food ish. They do all that nonsense, and they
(11:46):
last about a year. The first they get a bunch
of great reviews, and then they go out of business.
Speaker 1 (11:51):
Every time.
Speaker 6 (11:53):
Well, anyway, we were talking about this before the show,
which what made me think about it. Kamala Harris continues
her terrible media tour, digging herself deeper and deeper.
Speaker 1 (12:02):
Into a hole.
Speaker 6 (12:05):
She's going into interviews that were set up to help her,
and she still screws it up. First, she went on
Telemundo where she was asked what comes to mind when
she thinks of Latinos.
Speaker 8 (12:18):
What comes to your mind when you think about Latinos
in the United States?
Speaker 3 (12:23):
A lot. I'll start with the fact that on so
many of the biggest issues, we all have so much
more in common than on separates us Latinos, Like everyone
care about bringing down costs of groceries, the everyday cost
of life.
Speaker 1 (12:43):
Okay, let's deconstruct that.
Speaker 6 (12:47):
So she was handed that question and they scripted her
an answer, what comes to mind when you think of
those brown people over there?
Speaker 1 (12:57):
Oh, first of all, let me be very clear. A lot.
I think about them a lot.
Speaker 8 (13:04):
You know.
Speaker 6 (13:04):
I know there's a bunch of people in America, but
I'm thinking of people named Gomez and Martinez and little
But I'm thinking about them all the time, all the time.
I'm like all the z ending people, I'm thinking about them.
You know, what are they doing right now? You know?
I wonder what's going on with them? Or are they
getting a good night's sleep? You know, like like when
your kids go off to college. She doesn't have kids,
(13:25):
never has raised a child. So you wonder your kids
off to college.
Speaker 1 (13:30):
You're like, hope he's okay, Hope he got back to
his room. Hope, hope he Hobe he didn't need money.
Speaker 6 (13:39):
Maybe he didn't break down, Mabe didn't get into wreck,
Hoby wasn't mugged.
Speaker 1 (13:42):
Right.
Speaker 6 (13:43):
Every parent knows this when your kid goes off to college.
And I don't think that ever changes. You know, you
always want you always worry about your kid. Right well,
Kama is saying, you know, what do you think about
a lot? I think a lot about them. I think
does a lot mean many things or off or both?
I think many things about them, and I think it
(14:04):
much of the day. Many times I'm taking a poop
and I'm like, you know what those Mexicans. I wonder
what they're up to right now. I hope they're okay.
And then she moves to the second phase of this answer,
and that is because you know what, there's more that
unites us than divides us. You know some of my
(14:28):
best friends are Mexicans, yep, And I want them to
all vote for me.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
I really do well. This is going swimmingly, Kamala. Listen
to this answer.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
Again.
Speaker 1 (14:36):
I mean, it's just awful.
Speaker 8 (14:39):
Cur repeat, and there's nobody, no Democrat talking about the
pathway to see this In what comes to your mind
when you think about Latinos in the United.
Speaker 1 (14:46):
States a lot?
Speaker 3 (14:50):
I'll start with the fact that on so many of
the biggest issues, we all have so much more in
common than on separates us Latinos. Everyone care about bringing
down costs of groceries, the everyday cost of life.
Speaker 6 (15:06):
Yeah, people think they're you know, aliens or they live
in a culvert. But what I'm here to tell you
is they're just like everybody else.
Speaker 1 (15:17):
I'm here to validate the Mexicans.
Speaker 6 (15:19):
Okay, Okay, they're just like everybody.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
Okay. I think about them a lot, I really do.
Speaker 6 (15:26):
And and you know, they're just they're just, you know,
they're Yeah, I'm really like gen Z, I like them.
Speaker 3 (15:33):
An undocumented immigrant is not a criminals.
Speaker 1 (15:37):
Michael Arry Show, we have.
Speaker 3 (15:38):
To correct course in this conversation.
Speaker 6 (15:41):
What comes to mind when you think of Latinos? Oh,
I think of them all the time. Sometimes I'm driving
down the road and they're over playing soccer in the
soccer field, and I think, oh, look.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
At them, so cute. Hello, Jopanitos.
Speaker 6 (15:56):
They're over there just playing their soccer, just kick. But
when I talk to them, I don't even call it soccer,
you know, you know, I call it football because you
know that's what they call it football. So you're going
to notice in my answer, I'm going to have a slight,
slightest accent like I'm a Chicana, because you know I
can do that now.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
I don't know why the La.
Speaker 6 (16:16):
Times didn't endorse me, largest paper in my home state.
It's almost like they've had enough of me, but they didn't.
But when you when it comes to Mexicans, I really
you know, like if I go into a restaurant.
Speaker 1 (16:32):
Doesn't matter what kind of restaurant is.
Speaker 6 (16:33):
When I'm eating my food, I think to myself, did
a Mexican prepare this? And then I'll taste it and
I go, oh, this is really good. I bet a
Mexican back there. Even if a Japanese restaurant, I think
to myself, they're all Mexicans back there.
Speaker 1 (16:46):
I think about them a lot.
Speaker 6 (16:47):
I want you to.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
I think about you a lot.
Speaker 6 (16:49):
You know, if I go to the bathroom and it's
really clean, I'll think, ah, I bet that Mexican works
here because I love Mexican. You know, they're they're just
they're not they're not being different. They're just like everybody else. Know,
it is just like everybody else. And I think about
them a lot.
Speaker 8 (17:04):
What comes to your mind when you think about Latinos
in the United States a lot.
Speaker 3 (17:11):
I'll start with the fact that on so many of
the biggest issues, we all have so much more in
common than once it writes us. Latinos like everyone care
about bringing down costs of groceries, the everyday cost of life.
Speaker 6 (17:29):
You know. Her saying a lot reminded Ramon of a
clip from Family Guy of politicians pandering.
Speaker 7 (17:36):
Mayor West, if re elected, would you increase the frequency
of garbage pickup?
Speaker 1 (17:41):
Well, citizen, that's an excellent question, and I thank you
for it.
Speaker 2 (17:44):
I think it's.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
Great we live in a town where you.
Speaker 5 (17:47):
Can ask questions, because without questions, we just have answers.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
And an answer without a question is a statement.
Speaker 9 (17:56):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (17:56):
I like him.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
He looks me in the eye. I'd like to have
a beer with him. I'm voted for him. He don't
understand these people.
Speaker 9 (18:06):
He didn't even say anything, and they're eating it up.
Speaker 3 (18:08):
Well.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Its undecided voters are the biggest idiots on the planet.
Try giving short, simple answers.
Speaker 6 (18:13):
Sir, your question please, Missus Griffin, what do you plan
to do about crime in our city?
Speaker 1 (18:20):
A lot?
Speaker 7 (18:25):
Because that's what Jesus wants?
Speaker 2 (18:30):
Nine eleven was bad? I agree with that.
Speaker 4 (18:36):
I can't believe how easy this is, Missus Griffin.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
What are your plans for cleaning up our environment? Nine eleven?
Missus Griffin, what about our traffic problem? Nine eleven.
Speaker 6 (18:55):
So, continuing the Telemundo discussion, the host says, Hey, these illegals,
they came here. Nobody's talking about making them into citizens.
Democrats don't want to talk about this right now, because
(19:15):
the minute you engage in mass amnesty, you encourage more.
See that's how this works. Some of you don't know
your history or you don't remember this. But Ronald Reagan,
in what I believe was an honest, legitimate, authentic, serious
(19:41):
attempt to deal with illegal immigration, Ronald Reagan supported and
signed what came to be known as the IRCA, which
was the Immigration Reform and Control Act, And it was
an It was signed in November November sixth actually of
(20:02):
nineteen eighty six, and what it said was if you
had arrived in the country before January one of nineteen
eighty four, that you would now be made and you
would have a pathway to citizens.
Speaker 1 (20:22):
You would become a citizen.
Speaker 6 (20:26):
And then it changed up some of the laws, and
we went from having a couple million illegal aliens.
Speaker 1 (20:35):
To having an.
Speaker 6 (20:36):
Explosion of illegal immigration. And the reason was because if
you came here as an illegal alien, you were breaking
into the country. You break into somebody else's home, no
matter how nice the home is, don't make any improvements,
(20:59):
because at some point you're going to kicked out.
Speaker 1 (21:02):
The moment you.
Speaker 6 (21:03):
Gave amnesty was when the moment you said, hey, if
you break in, eventually they're going to make you into
a citizen. And that's what we've been doing ever since.
And that's when the problem got bad. Now correlate that
or overlay on that, an absolute collapse of much of
(21:27):
Latin America, the most important of which was Mexico. A
previously relatively stable Mexico fell into corruption, the combination of
corruption in the cartels. Mexico was not always in the
sad shape it's in today. Mexico was a relatively stable country.
(21:50):
A lot of Americans would go down there still Americans
go down there. But the rise of organized crime and
the influence of the Chinese triad into the cartels. The
absolute sophistication of the cartels, combined with complete brutality, has
(22:12):
made them the most powerful and sinister criminal organization on
the earth today, far more powerful than any mafia.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
And brutal, vicious.
Speaker 6 (22:28):
You know, we go and fight wars in Afghanistan and
Iraq for their country.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
We should fight a war.
Speaker 5 (22:33):
And JD.
Speaker 6 (22:34):
Vance said this the other day. We should send our
troops to our border and protect it. Period, end of story.
When President Trump asked his cabinet, why can't we use
our military to stop what the cartel is bringing into
this country? Some of them the establishment type, the Kelly
(22:55):
and the types that are now turning on him and
we're never really his friends. They went and told that,
and they made it seem like he was trying to
invade Mexico. Do you know how bad things are in
Mexico right now? There was a mayor of a town.
I forget the town. I knew it a couple weeks ago.
He was in office for six days and cartel didn't
(23:17):
like him. They cut his head off and put it
on the top of his car. This is gruesome. That
was a message across us and you will end up beheaded.
Speaker 1 (23:27):
We will decapitate you. So we're going to talk about.
Speaker 6 (23:35):
Amnesty because now Kamala has had to commit to it,
and that's the end road your your nation has gone.
Speaker 3 (23:42):
Once it's happened, everybody needs to be woke.
Speaker 2 (23:49):
I just take woke, the left woke.
Speaker 6 (23:52):
Telemundo wants Kamala Harris on the record. I want to
know that all those illegal aliens that you've let in
that when you win, I want to know they're going
to become citizens. I want to hear the word pathway
to citizenship. Well, she's all in now, she can't back out.
(24:14):
Now they put her on the spot. She's got to
say yes, and she did.
Speaker 8 (24:20):
Right now, we're talking about border security, and there's nobody,
no Democrat talking about the pathway to citizenship. An immigration
belief that the benefits that migrants bring to this country.
Speaker 3 (24:33):
But there's no question that migrants bring. America is a
country that was built in part by immigrant.
Speaker 8 (24:44):
People, their GPS third that have there. We're talking about massiportations.
I'm not talking about what do you send on portations
What's what's your stand there?
Speaker 3 (24:59):
We need smart, humane immigration policy in America that includes
a pathway to citizenship.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
There it is, that's amnesty period. End of story.
Speaker 6 (25:16):
So then she goes to a CNN quote unquote town hall.
We know she's handed the questions before that with Anderson Pooper.
She's asked if under her administration, Americans will be paying
the benefits or foreigners who break into this country illegal aliens.
Speaker 9 (25:36):
Regarding the rapid increase in the migrant population, how will
you ensure that every immigrant is integrated into American society safely?
What benefits and subsidies will you provide them with? And
how long will these benefits and subsidies last.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
For an individual?
Speaker 9 (25:51):
Most importantly, will the American citizens taxes pay for these
benefits and subsidies?
Speaker 2 (25:56):
And if so, how much money? How much money will
be allocate?
Speaker 3 (26:01):
Well, thank you, Jackson. Let's start with this. America's immigration
system is broken and it needs to be fixed, and
it has been broken for a long time. And part of
what we need to do is always prioritize what we
need to do to strengthen our border. I will tell
you I'm the only person in this race among the
two choices that voters have. I've personally prosecuted transnational criminal
(26:25):
organizations in the trafficking of guns, drugs, and human beings.
I have spent a significant part of my career making
sure that our border is secure and that we do
not allow criminals in and we don't allow that kind
of trafficking to happen and come into our country. And
as the as my opponent has proven himself, he would
(26:51):
prefer to run on the problem instead of fix the problem.
Speaker 1 (26:55):
So you see what you do there.
Speaker 6 (26:58):
You say the system is broken and my opponent's evil.
This is how they got Obamacare through. You create a
problem so big that no individual thing can fix it.
Texas Monthly doing their part in Houston, Texas, a liberal magazine.
(27:20):
They came out with an article this week that said
the border. Yeah, the border problem can't be fixed at
the border. It's too big. If you remember Obamacare, when
when there were solutions proposed, they said no, no, no, no,
your idea, your idea, and none of that was that
(27:42):
won't fix the whole problem. We have to have a
comprehensive health care reform. Do you know why you always
need a comprehensive reform because the bigger you make the
quote unquote solution, the more stuff you can bunch into there,
(28:05):
there's more room to pad.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
You see, if we.
Speaker 6 (28:09):
Make the solution, we say, we need a comprehension.
Speaker 1 (28:14):
We're gonna solve this. We're not just gonna deal with
the symptom.
Speaker 6 (28:19):
We're gonna fix the whole big problem. Okay, is that
really necessary? But by making the solution so big than
anyone who says, yeah, but what you're doing over here
is wasting a lot of money. And what you're doing
over here is a bad idea. This is it's win
(28:40):
or take all it. It's it's take it or leave it.
It's we got to do this whole comprehensive thing. This
is how they pass the budget every year. And you say, hey,
do you want to spend ten million dollars studying whether
dogs that leave their home in Alabama end up in
Montana or Ioming. More often you'd say, no, that's dumb,
(29:02):
that's a waste of money.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
I don't want to do that.
Speaker 6 (29:05):
Uh no, what about weather squirrels in Oklahoma end up
in Arizona when the dust gets to fly in too hard?
Are you willing to spend twenty five million for that.
No nobody should vote for that, but you bury it
in the omnibus bill, and now we've got a comprehensive solution.
Speaker 1 (29:26):
And that's what they do. That's exactly what they do.
Speaker 6 (29:31):
And so you get these ridiculous things that nobody would
ever vote for. Nobody would ever vote for this nonsense,
but they'll vote for it now because it's a comprehensive,
comprehensive solution. So next we've got the issue of the
border wall. Remember when you said the border wall was stupid,
still say it stupid?
Speaker 2 (29:51):
Is a border wall stupid?
Speaker 3 (29:52):
Well, let's talk about Donald Trump in that borderwall. So
remember Donald Trump said Mexico would pay for it, Come on,
they didn't. How much of that wall did he build?
I think the last number I saw was about two percent.
And then when it came from time for him to
do a photo op, you know where he did it
in the part of the wall that President Obama built.
Speaker 7 (30:13):
But agreed to a bill that would ear MOREK six
hundred and fifty million dollars to continue building.
Speaker 3 (30:18):
That way, I pledge that I am going to bring
forward that bipartisan bill to further strengthen and secure our border. Yes,
I am and I am going to work across the
aisle to pass a comprehensive bill that deals with a
broken immigration system. I think Jackson's question part of it
(30:41):
was to acknowledge that America has always had migration, but
there needs to be a legal process for it. People
have to earn it. And that's the point that I
think is the most important point that can be made,
which is we need a president always grounded in common
sense and practical outcomes, like let's just fix this thing,
(31:04):
Let's just fix it. Why is there any ideological perspective
on let's just fix the problem.
Speaker 7 (31:10):
To fix the problem, you're doing this compromise bill. It
does call for six hundred and fifty million dollars. That
was your march under Trump to actually still go to
build the world.
Speaker 3 (31:18):
I'm not afraid of good ideas where they.
Speaker 2 (31:20):
Occurred, you know, saying you don't think it's stupid anymore.
Speaker 3 (31:23):
I think what he did and how he did it
was did not make much sense because he actually didn't
do much of anything. I just talked about that wall, right,
we just talked about it. He didn't actually do much
of anything.
Speaker 2 (31:35):
But you do want to build some wall.
Speaker 3 (31:38):
I want to strengthen our border.
Speaker 1 (31:41):
That's odd. It's almost like you're not answering the question,
how weird is that