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October 24, 2024 31 mins

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

Speaker 2 (00:12):
The Democratic nominee for Vice President, Governor Tim Walls side.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
I feel pretty.

Speaker 4 (00:22):
You're so pretty.

Speaker 5 (00:24):
I feel pretty witty. Governor Walls. Are you a progressive
or are you a centrist? I'm a progressive. I'm a knucklehead.
At times. I feel charming. Oh, so charming. It's a
love how charming?

Speaker 6 (00:40):
I'm so pretty?

Speaker 5 (00:43):
You believe somebody said, what's next? Child labor? Hell, yeah,
it's in there. That's what they've got in there. You
see stakes doing that, putting our children at risk. That's
what they'll do. I think we need to push back
on this.

Speaker 7 (00:58):
There's no guarantee of free speech on misinformation or or
hate speech.

Speaker 3 (01:03):
Feels stunny and in Chauncy.

Speaker 8 (01:06):
Feel like.

Speaker 6 (01:16):
She's always done it with energy, with passion, and with joy.

Speaker 5 (01:23):
Don't ever shy away from more progressive values.

Speaker 7 (01:26):
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.

Speaker 9 (01:38):
You previously oppose an assault weapons ban, but it's only
later in your political career did you change your position.

Speaker 5 (01:44):
Why so, I've become friends with school shooters. I feel
stunny and in chauncy.

Speaker 6 (01:49):
One person's socialism, you know, what you call socialism, another
person would call that neighborliness.

Speaker 5 (01:57):
You know, But what's the problem.

Speaker 6 (02:02):
If you have a refrigerator full of food and a
couple streets over the homeless people don't if the government
comes in and takes.

Speaker 5 (02:13):
Half your food, You don't need all that food.

Speaker 6 (02:16):
What do you need with all that money and all
those goods and all that you know, retirement savings. Other
people don't have that. Some people didn't save their money.
They spent it on stupid stuff, and they got lots
of divorces, and they wasted it, and they put it
up their nose or up their butt. They took vacations,

(02:40):
and they bought things they couldn't afford, and they didn't
have the good life you've had because you made good decisions.
Why should they not have the nice things you do?
That's neighborly neess. You all have two homes, the man
and the wife and your home both have a car.
There's a homeless guy who doesn't have a car. So

(03:03):
why not give him one of your cards? You'll still
have No, that's neighborly ness. You call that socialism. Tim
calls it neighborly right. Anderson Pooper interviewing Kamala Harris at
the CNN town hall also serious. He asked her why

(03:24):
she didn't stop the flow of illegals sooner. Now, remember
when Biden took over, they said, we're opening this border up.

Speaker 5 (03:32):
We're full throttle.

Speaker 6 (03:35):
Anybody's coming in that wants to. Now that she needs votes,
she's rushing back and saying we're going to strengthen the border.

Speaker 5 (03:44):
No, you're not. Everyone knows you're lying listeners.

Speaker 7 (03:49):
Twenty twenty two, twenty twenty three, there were record border crossings.
Your administration took a number of hundreds of executive actions.

Speaker 5 (03:57):
It didn't stem the flow. Numbers kept going going up.

Speaker 7 (04:00):
Finally, in twenty twenty four, just in June, three weeks
before the last the first presidential debate with Joe Biden,
you institute executive actions that had a dramatic impact, really
shut down people crossing over. Why didn't your administration do that?
In twenty twenty two, twenty twenty three, First of.

Speaker 2 (04:18):
All, you're exactly right, Anderson, and as of today, we
have cut the flow of immigration by over half. In fact,
the numbers I saw most recently illegal immigration.

Speaker 5 (04:29):
With that executive action?

Speaker 7 (04:30):
Why not do it in twenty twenty two, twenty twenty.

Speaker 2 (04:32):
Three, because we were working with Congress and hoping that
actually we could have a long term fix to the
problem instead of a short term thing.

Speaker 7 (04:38):
You couldn't have done one in the both at the
same time.

Speaker 2 (04:40):
Well, here's the thing. We have to understand that ultimately
this problem is going to be fixed through congressional action.

Speaker 5 (04:51):
Oh, it's always somebody else's fault one.

Speaker 6 (04:57):
Why can't you be held responsible? The questions then became
the kind of questions you'd expect in a job interview,
which in effect is what this is.

Speaker 5 (05:07):
She's trying to get a very big job. She's trying
to get a promotion. So she was asked this.

Speaker 7 (05:13):
Question, what weaknesses do you bring to the table and
how do you plan to overcome them while you're in office.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
That's a great question, Joe, Well, I am certainly not perfect,
so let's start there. And I think that I perhaps
a weakness some let's say, but I actually think it's
the strength as I really do value having a team
of very smart people around me who bring to my

(05:43):
decision making process different perspectives. My team will tell you.
I am constantly saying, let's kick the tire on that.
Let's kick the tires on it.

Speaker 6 (05:55):
She constantly says that, Yeah, her team will tell you.
So let's just see how much self awareness you have.
What would you say is a weakness of yours?

Speaker 5 (06:09):
Well, I shouldn't disclose this. I shouldn't.

Speaker 10 (06:16):
This.

Speaker 6 (06:18):
If I were to say a weakness, now, some people
would say this is a strength. But if I were
to say a weakness is I always surround myself with
incredibly smart people, the best, incredibly smart people, And I mean,
I guess, I guess I'm gonna I'm gonna level with you.
I demand absolute excellence from them all the time. I

(06:42):
shouldn't admit that, but I'm going to do it today.
And I guess my weakness is I care too much.
I just I care too much.

Speaker 5 (06:53):
I don't even know why we go through this, folks,
I don't even know why.

Speaker 6 (06:57):
Don't if there are people out there that are this
stupid At this point, I mean, what where are we
as a nation? She was then asked what she could
learn from the past four years, and she said, this.

Speaker 7 (07:11):
Is there something you can point to in your life,
political life, or in your life in the last four
years that you think is a mistake that you have
learned from.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
I mean, I've made many mistakes, and they range from
you know, if you've ever parented a child, you know
you make lots of mistakes too. In my role as
vice president, I mean, I've probably worked very hard at
making sure that I am well versed on issues, and

(07:47):
I think that is very important. It's a mistake not
to be well versed on an issue and feel compelled
to answer a question.

Speaker 6 (07:53):
She's not a parent, She's had no role of parenting
her husband's.

Speaker 5 (08:00):
Child.

Speaker 6 (08:02):
She just tried to pass herself off. How many people
realize she's never raised a child. I mean, it's not
required that you raise a child, but let's be honest,
it means you lack a certain skill set that you
can't just think you know because you watched it on TV.

Speaker 5 (08:19):
Gone a Todave.

Speaker 2 (08:20):
Everyone's thinking they can actually live the American.

Speaker 5 (08:22):
Church the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 6 (08:26):
Speaking of Anderson Cooper and packing, one of the things
that Democrats want to do is pack the court, expand
the Court to dilute the Supreme Court justices on there,
which is in keeping with everything else they've done by
bringing in enough of legal aliens and making them into

(08:48):
citizens who get to vote. Actually they're getting to vote
before their citizens. They're not even asking in California, when
you walk in, you just vote. You don't have to
speak English, you don't nobody. We don't know if you
flew in Venezuela yesterday, we don't even know if you
even live here. You just vote because they know they've
taught them to vote Democrat. That is what I just
said is a fact that is happening. So the replacement

(09:13):
theory is you bring in enough people that now you
don't need Americans to vote for you. You just bring in
enough foreigners and get them to vote for you, and
you give them what the Americans had, so they're happy
to vote for you. And anyone who says, no, I'm
not taking stuff from Americans and giving it to foreigners
who come here to take it illegally, well then we're

(09:36):
not voting for you. So next up is, are you
willing to expand the Supreme Court to dilute the votes
to replace basically effectively replace the Supreme Court justices who
are there already, by adding more seats of people that
share our liberal, communist agenda, would.

Speaker 11 (09:57):
You be in favor of expanding the court to say twelve,
so each justice has only one circuit court other than
Chief Justice, to assist in making judgments more balanced.

Speaker 2 (10:08):
Well, to your point, there is no question that the
American people increasingly or losing confidence in the Supreme Court,
and in large part because of the behavior of certain
members of that court and because of certain rulings, including
the Dobbs decision and taking away a precedent that had
been in place for fifty years protecting a woman's right

(10:28):
to make decisions about our own body.

Speaker 5 (10:30):
So I do believe that there should be.

Speaker 2 (10:32):
Some kind of reform of the court, and we can
study what that actually looks like.

Speaker 5 (10:40):
Okay, then that sounds to me like a threat to democracy.

Speaker 6 (10:45):
Anderson Pooper then asked, well, you got all these things
you say you're going to do, why didn't you.

Speaker 5 (10:51):
Do them for the last four years?

Speaker 7 (10:53):
Some voters that might ask, You've been in the White
House for four years, you were vice president, not the president,
But why wasn't any of that done for the last
four years?

Speaker 2 (11:02):
Well, there was a lot that was done, but there's
more to do, Anderson, and I'm pointing out things that
need to be done that haven't been done but need
to be done.

Speaker 6 (11:11):
Yeah, unburdened by what has been or hasn't been done. Next,
she's asked a question. Is this is a really interest
this is a really rich answer. Let me let her
answer it, and then we'll deconstruct it.

Speaker 2 (11:25):
So I may not be quick to have the answer
as soon as you ask it about a specific policy
issue sometimes because I'm gonna want to research it. I'm
gonna want to study it. I'm kind of a nerd sometimes, y'all.

Speaker 5 (11:43):
Sometimes I'll be honest with you. I'm come home as
a numb ass. I know you're thinking, well, she not
very smart.

Speaker 12 (11:51):
She just kind of repeats what they tell her to repeat,
and she never answers the question. He doesn't even seem
to know what she's talking about. And most of the
time it looks like she's drunk or high or boat.
But uh, I don't tell you all true, Okay, okay.

Speaker 1 (12:06):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (12:07):
The reason sometimes I talk in circles and I just
keep repeating the same thing that doesn't answer the question
is because and I hatered minute.

Speaker 5 (12:17):
I'm kind of a nerd. Okay, I'm really really smart.

Speaker 6 (12:20):
Okay, and uh and I'm really nerdy, but I don't
want to, you know, freak y'all out with a bunch
of this really smart talk. And I'm just, you know,
if somebody asks, all, hey, should we build a wall
keep the legal aliens out because it's causing the country
a lot of problems, y'all just answer.

Speaker 5 (12:37):
But me, I want to I want to study it,
i want to think about it. I'm you know, I'm
kind of a nerd. I want reports and graphs and
Venn diagrams, and I'm just I'm just really, really really smart.
That's what I'm trying to tell you.

Speaker 6 (12:52):
That was the most DEI answer she could ever give.
Let's talk about what's really in this country. What's really
going on is you've got a lot of people. So
so a lot of the corporate types in this country

(13:13):
are scared to death of revolution and they're getting pressure
from outside groups. And so you had white men who
were scared to death that they were going to be
kicked out of their jobs, and so they said, all right,
so what do I need to do to keep you
all from getting mad at me, so I can stay
here for five more years till we have a triggering

(13:35):
event that I can sell my stocks and cash out
and go hide in the country and get away from
all these people that I got to get five more
years out of this. So they said, well, you you
got to bring in a bunch of minorities. You don't
have any minorities. And the answer to everything is more minorities.
And so these old white guys, they don't know what
to do, so they go, well, go get me some minorities. Well,

(13:59):
that is like when you need a quarterback in the
draft this year, but this is a bad year for quarterbacks,
you end up with guys that you never would have
drafted with the first pick because that's all that was available.
So when you just decide go give me a bunch
of minorities, you don't end up with the best.

Speaker 5 (14:21):
You don't end up with people. You don't even end
up with the best minorities.

Speaker 6 (14:25):
You certainly don't end up with the best of who
is available in the entire pool. Because remember, this is
exactly how you ended up with Kamala Harris's vice president,
Joe Biden painted himself into a corner I'm going to
make a black woman my vice president. And during a
debate with Trump in twenty twenty, he said, I've committed

(14:47):
black woman vice president. Trump won't make that commitment, and
Trump said no, because that's an American.

Speaker 5 (14:56):
That's not how you do things.

Speaker 6 (14:59):
I mean, what would you say if your favorite football
team said next year's draft, we're going to use our
first round draft pick and we're going to hire for
our football team. We really need a quarterback. But we're
not going to pick the best quarterback on the board.
We're going to pick a Japanese midget because there've never
been a Japanese midget been quarterback. You'd go, oh, okay,

(15:20):
well that's good because we never had a Japanese quarterback.

Speaker 5 (15:23):
And that's the ending and every tale.

Speaker 6 (15:27):
Right, that's how you'd feel about it, for sure, for sure,
that's how you'd feel about it.

Speaker 5 (15:33):
Right. This is what we're debating in this country.

Speaker 6 (15:39):
This is where we've been left in this country, this
level of nonsense, we've allowed it. We're finally at the
point where we can vote and change it. We're past
the point of debating at this point. Vote for Trump

(16:00):
or watch your country burn. The time to argue over
what you do and do not like about Trump is
long gone. Vote for Trump because you're never going to
get out of Kamala Harris and this group.

Speaker 5 (16:14):
You're never going to get any of the reforms.

Speaker 6 (16:16):
If you're desperately hopeful, every libertarian, every one of them,
should just vote for Trump.

Speaker 5 (16:20):
And if you don't, God help you. God helped this country.
When it comes to be economy.

Speaker 6 (16:26):
Do you believe Americans are better off than they were
four years ago?

Speaker 4 (16:30):
Michael Berry, So, I was raised as a middle class kid,
Vanessa Gee and this young lady who had graduated from
Seyesar child As High School.

Speaker 6 (16:44):
She did very well academically, played soccer, apparently very well
liked or social young lady.

Speaker 5 (16:55):
She goes into the army, and pretty early in her
career there she goes missing.

Speaker 6 (17:05):
Was a young black man named Aaron David Robinson, who
we later find out was obsessed with her, and his
obsession manifested itself into him.

Speaker 5 (17:21):
She goes missing.

Speaker 6 (17:23):
Two months later, her body is dismembered, parts of her
were burned along the river and between him and his
girlfriend they had killed Vanessa Gean. Well, that's a terrible,

(17:44):
terrible story, but there are lots of terrible, terrible stories
that we don't know about people who aren't remembered the
way Vanessa Gian is. When you see the picture of
Vanessa Gien in her fatigues, in her camo fatigues, you

(18:05):
can't help but notice that she's very attractive. She's not
wearing a lot of makeup or anything like that, but
you can't help but know she has beautiful eyes, these
beautiful lashes that people would, women would pay for extensions
for gorgeous, gorgeous skin, and a look of a very

(18:27):
positive aura about her. And then you see her name
teg Gian. Nothing inappropriate, she's just not too much of that,
but you can't help but notice that. And maybe because
I first saw her picture knowing that she'd been a
murder victim, so that affected my view.

Speaker 5 (18:47):
How could you do this? She's young, she has a
world ahead of her.

Speaker 6 (18:54):
One of the reasons we know so much about Vanessa
Gian it's not because of the horrible things that were
done to her. Sadly, horrible things are done to young
people or to people in this country every day. It
is because her family was relentless. That's love. That's a
big Hispanic family. They love this young lady, and they

(19:17):
weren't gonna let her be forgotten. They weren't gonna let
her memory be lost. Well, at first, they're vigilantly pursuing
where she is. Maybe she's been held hostage, maybe someone's
kidnapped her. So her family plays into this story because
now we have the memory of Vanessa and that family,

(19:42):
the people behind the scenes who worked so hard to
preserve or to hold out hope for her, to find
her and then to honor her and you know her,
they're murals of her. The only young his any woman
I can think of that that fits into that category

(20:02):
would be Selena and the the just. But Selena was
her her fans. In this case, it was Vanessa Gean's family.
They loved this girl. There's a documentary on It's really
really good. Very close family, you know, one of these
Hispanic families. You can imagine they you can imagine the

(20:24):
life she would have had and the close knit family relations.
So it being the anniversary of her death, the Atlantic
comes back into the news and in January they approach
they approached the family and they say, hey, it's gonna
be the four year anniversary of Vanessa's death, and and

(20:49):
we'd like to we'd like to remember that moment and
remind people that's out there. So the family thinks this
is a tribute and remembrance memorial, never forget to their
loved one, Vanessa. It turned out to be a hip piece,

(21:09):
a fake hit piece on Donald Trump, because remember ten
the difference between them and us. They've been plotting and
scheming how to take Trump down.

Speaker 5 (21:25):
Long before these last few days.

Speaker 6 (21:28):
They needed to get this story in writing and then
they could turn to it and go, well, it's not
just me saying this.

Speaker 5 (21:36):
I read about it in The Atlantic.

Speaker 6 (21:39):
Trump didn't want to pay for that young lady's funeral.
Can you imagine she's serving our country and he doesn't
want to pay for her funeral.

Speaker 5 (21:50):
This is terrible. That's not true.

Speaker 6 (21:53):
Atlantic wrote it there, it is right there, independent journalist.
That's the smear. Once we've got the smear in writing,
now we when did Nancy Pelosis tell you merchandise it.
That's where you take it and make the money off
of it. So Myra Gihan, Vanessa's sister, who's a major

(22:18):
force in all of this in preserving her sister's legacy,
wrote I don't appreciate how you're exploiting my sister's death
for politics, hurtful and disrespectful to the important changes she
made for service members. President Donald Trump did nothing but
show respect to my family and Vanessa. In fact, I

(22:38):
voted for President Trump today. Now enter George Conway. Remember
old bitter George Conway. He wanted to be Attorney General
for Trump, and when he didn't get it, he went crazy.
He said, no one is exploiting your sister's death here.
This isn't about her. It's about Trump's sociopathic behavior. He

(22:59):
displays itblicly and privately, and his contempt for anyone else's lives,
including those of men and women in uniform who made
the ultimate sacrifice. Is a parent who to anyone who
chooses unlike you to open your eyes?

Speaker 12 (23:14):
How dare you, sister of army soldier who was murdered?
How dare you say when we say that he dishonored
your sister? How dare you her sister say that he
didn't your eyes and me?

Speaker 5 (23:34):
Can you believe? These people are monsters?

Speaker 1 (23:42):
With Michael Ferry.

Speaker 6 (23:44):
And I haven't been to yet, they've done this to
Donald Trump, but they use the wrong prop you see,
they don't care about Vanessa Gean. They don't care about
this young lady. They don't care about her memory, they
don't care about her family. But her family's not going
to use her name, not going to allow her name

(24:05):
to be dishonored. So Maida, her sister, spoke out against this.
This is Laura ingram recapping the lies in the Atlantic
story clip number twenty ramon go.

Speaker 9 (24:17):
Jeffrey Goldberg of the Atlantic published another screen without substantial
or convincing evidence, all in an effort to smear Trump
in the final days of the election. Now he's the
trumpeting leftist responsible for pushing that widely debunked Suckers and
Losers lie, But this time Goldberg is claiming that Trump
used vulgar language to describe a vet murdered at fort Hood.

(24:40):
Twenty year old Army private Vanessa Gian, the daughter of
Mexican immigrants, disappeared in April of twenty twenty. Her dismembered
remains were found months later.

Speaker 5 (24:51):
Her remains were found near the Leon River.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
Specialist Robinson's cell phone had pinged to that area the
night Vanessa when missing.

Speaker 12 (25:00):
According to investigators, he tells her that.

Speaker 1 (25:04):
He bludgended Vanessa to death on base with a hammer
in the arms.

Speaker 6 (25:08):
Room, the pair allegedly dismembered Vanessa's body and covered her
remains with concrete.

Speaker 9 (25:15):
Then President Trump invited Gian's grief stricken family to the
White House later that year and offered to help personally
pay for her funeral. Now, the cost was eventually covered
by the Army and other private donations.

Speaker 5 (25:29):
But this narrative.

Speaker 9 (25:30):
Didn't really work for Goldberg or his agenda, so he's alleging.
An anonymous witness said, Trump shouted crass epithets about the
cost of the funeral.

Speaker 5 (25:42):
Now.

Speaker 9 (25:42):
Less than an hour after Goldberg's story came out, Gian's
sister indignantly tweeted, in part, Wow, I don't appreciate how
you're exploiting my sister's death for politics. Hurtful and disrespectful.
And folks in the room for that meeting say Trump
never set it any of that.

Speaker 5 (26:01):
Even after those strong.

Speaker 9 (26:02):
Denials, the CBS Evening News led its broadcast with it
the new report the Trump, while president used the F
word to describe a murdered Mexican American soldier, and today,
the author of the hit job has enjoyed numerous media
appearances and of course the Trump hating networks in which
he furthered his disgusting smear.

Speaker 8 (26:23):
The story exhibits his racism because he used an expletive
to describe this soldier who was a Mexican American daughter
of American Mexican immigrants. It goes to the things that
trigger him, among other things, bills and.

Speaker 9 (26:43):
Mexicans another venal hail Mary in this case, so almost
should ask ourselves, how is it possible that this anonymous witness,
so shocked by what he heard, has just completely forgotten
about then conveniently remembered two weeks before an election.

Speaker 5 (27:02):
Now Here is my gain? Going on Laura Ingram Show
and setting the record straight.

Speaker 3 (27:11):
Hurtful in all kinds of ways. It brought back so
many bad memories that we had given up already after
four long years. And it was just a slap in
the face to my family, myself mainly being the main
spokesperson for them and for my sister who unfortunately passed away.

(27:32):
It was just a lie from the very beginning, and
it was very upsetting.

Speaker 9 (27:37):
Well, you lost your sister, I know how close you were.
I mean, America watching this tonight is weeping years later
for you.

Speaker 5 (27:47):
Having to go.

Speaker 9 (27:48):
Through this again and your lawyer's sitting next to you. Natalie,
you say that The Atlantic first reach out to you
in January. In January about this story, what was the
intent here do you think?

Speaker 10 (28:06):
Well, Laro, he first reached out to me and he
said he was interested in doing a four year story,
the four year anniversary of Vanessa's murder, a story into that.
And I texted Myra and I said, hey, can you
take it from here? You want to speak to him
about Vanessa's case. You know, they're going to discuss more
issues about the case. Things he found as she spoke
to him in January. He reached out again to me

(28:29):
just recently, and this is where this story popped up.
And obviously benboozled with it wasn't really about, you know,
talking about Vanessa here, It was just about a.

Speaker 5 (28:39):
Gotcha with Trump and Myra. Do you believe you were misled.

Speaker 9 (28:47):
By mister Goldberg in the way he approached you for
this story?

Speaker 3 (28:55):
Most definitely. Initially when we first spoke, she did that
this was going to be again a wrap up of
the four year anniversary and how we passed legislation and
all the achievements that were done. One as his honor,
and when I came across the he never not once
mentioned any other comments that he was going to put

(29:17):
in this article or how it was going to be
published this late in the year. He said it was
going to be around April, and I never saw the article.
I didn't follow up, and it was surprising enough to
see how he reached out to Natalie shortly about what
was it two days ago, just wanting to confirm what

(29:40):
was said, and I released a statement to him letting
him know that I was not happy about what he
was going to release and I did not wish to
be a part of it anymore or have my sister's
name be a part of that article. And he still
proceeded to not only publish it, but basically stain my
sister's image with this, And it's very upset.

Speaker 6 (30:01):
It pains me to see decent people who are not
even involved in politics, to see their good name besmirched.
Miighta Gian is the sister of I mean, isn't it
enough that her sister was murdered at twenty years old?

Speaker 5 (30:21):
Isn't that enough?

Speaker 6 (30:23):
How dare you democrats in media try to use her
death as a pawn in your game? Because of your
Trump delusion. How sick it hurts me for these families.
They've been through enough. They didn't ask for this. Trump

(30:44):
can handle whatever you throw it in, but the guins,
these people don't deserve this. This is a Houston family
who were so proud of their little girl going off
and serving the country, and then you do this.

Speaker 5 (31:00):
This has to be punished, This has to be stopped,
the gins, the nunger rays. These people deserve better. They
deserve better.
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