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November 19, 2024 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Change from Michael Very Show is on the air.

Speaker 3 (00:12):
America first includes all Americans, regardless of their race, their gender,
or their sexual orientation.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Why don't we live a right these United States?

Speaker 4 (00:23):
We're the ones who Indeed, if works, let the rest.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
Of the world help us. Crouchmage and let's rebuild.

Speaker 4 (00:32):
A very first powerhouse, ridges a fun far who's who
has been the first?

Speaker 2 (00:43):
There's things to be din all over the world, but
let's rebuild them Mary First.

Speaker 3 (00:50):
Our message to black Americans tonight is this, we.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
Want you what we want for every American.

Speaker 3 (00:57):
Safe neighborhoods, good shops, clean streets, a country where you
are judged based on the content of your character, not
the color of your skin or your political beliefs, only.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
Due and watching the bed. Who's in charge of it all?

Speaker 4 (01:15):
Godless?

Speaker 2 (01:16):
The army, godless on liberty.

Speaker 4 (01:19):
That got the risk of it all in position of
the back and away the freedom is stuck in vers
Let's get out of Iraq, get back on the track,
and let's rebuild and marry.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
In the first.

Speaker 3 (01:39):
Our message to gay Americans tonight is this, You're free
to marry who you want if you want without the government.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
Standing in your way on small But that doesn't mean.

Speaker 3 (01:48):
That boys get to compete with girls in girls' sports,
or you do genital mutilation and chemical castration.

Speaker 1 (01:54):
On our children.

Speaker 2 (01:55):
I don't deliver right these United States.

Speaker 4 (01:58):
We're the ones you need it the most.

Speaker 2 (02:03):
You think I'm blind to smoke bars at, ain't no dope.
I'm a twenty six years coast coast.

Speaker 3 (02:09):
If you get ahead in the United States with your
own hard work, your own commitment, your own dedication, and
that you know what, you are free to speak your
mind at every step of the way.

Speaker 2 (02:19):
That is the American dream. That is what we are
running too. And that is what we get when we
said Donald Trump back to the White House.

Speaker 5 (02:29):
So CNN has chased down every accusation. You know, I
could accuse you of anything. It doesn't happen to you
because you're not famous. But if Trump picked you to
solve a problem, then overnight you'd say, wait, who's this
and your wife would say, who's this woman that claimed
you raped her? Sweeter, I don't even remember this person.

(02:54):
This is what is happening day in and day out,
and I will remind you. When the CNN panel was
talking about Doug m Hoff. Scott Jennings brought up Doug
im Hoff's domestic violence issue, credible claims that he knocked
a snot out of women that he was dating, and

(03:16):
look how quickly they shut him down.

Speaker 6 (03:18):
I gotta tell you this, this campaign is so everything
that's said about Donald Trump and his treatment of women
in the gender gap. In this campaign, this rapper, who
I fully admit, sold a lot of records. If you've
read some of the things he has said about the
promotion of domestic violence, may I listened to your entire filibuster.

(03:39):
If you could just give me thirteen seconds, I give
you twelve and so and so when you when you
think about the things he has said in order to
sell those records, and you also consider some of the
questions that are swirling around Harris's own husband in this regard,
I find you don't.

Speaker 1 (03:55):
Even get twelve.

Speaker 2 (03:56):
I find im.

Speaker 5 (04:00):
That's what they did to shut you down. They closed
down access by me to my Facebook page just before
the election. My company reached out. I got back access,
but only access, not to post, only access to the
back channel. And it had this warning spopping up and

(04:21):
the warning said, your account has been suspended for being
too political. That was the item. I didn't know that
you weren't allowed to be political. That's what social media is.
Baby pictures where you had dinner last night, and political stuff.
And why wait until the election. I hadn't posted. I

(04:43):
hadn't posted anything inappropriate, anything nasty, anything violent. They cannot
let you speak, They have to censor you. That's the
sign that your arguments are weak when you cannot allow
the other side to speak. Well, look at what's happening.

(05:03):
Look what they've tried to do to Elon Musk And
now he and Vivek are in charge of DOGE, the
Department of Government Efficiency. Look what they've done to Pete Hegseth.
Now he's going to be in charge of the military.
Look what they've done to Matt Gates. Now he's going
to be charge of in charge of the Department of
Justice with the FBI. Look what they're trying to do

(05:27):
to cash Fortel If he's in charge of the FBI,
he has said I would shut down the Hoover Building
on day one. This is their worst fear.

Speaker 7 (05:40):
We need to decrease what I call government creep with personnel.
The FBI's footprint has gotten so frickin' big, and the
biggest problem the FBI has had has come out of
its intel shops.

Speaker 2 (05:53):
I'd break that component out of it.

Speaker 7 (05:54):
I'd shut down the FBI Hoover Building on day one
and reopening the day as a museum of the deep State.
And I take the seven thousand employees that work in
that building and send them across America to chase down criminals.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
Go be cops. Your cops, go be cops.

Speaker 7 (06:12):
Go chase down murderers and rapists and drug dealers and
violent offenders. What do you need seven thousand people there for?
Same thing with the OJNY. What are all these people
doing here? Looking for the next government promotion, looking for
their next fancy government title.

Speaker 5 (06:24):
Two years ago, if I were to tell you that
John Fetterman, crazy John Fetterman would be the most reasonable
Democrat on the national stage, would you have possibly believed me? Well,
here he is with Jake tapperon see and his.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
Enitor always good to see you.

Speaker 8 (06:42):
You have said that Democrats shouldn't be quote freaking out
over every single thing Trump does. Are you freaking out
at all about any of these cabinet picks?

Speaker 9 (06:50):
I wonder well, I mean there's some that I would
absolutely be excited to vote for, like my colleague from
Florida or the representative from New York, of course, and
then there's others that are just absolute trolls, just like
Gates and those things. And that's why you know Democrats

(07:12):
now like Trump, that gets the kind of thing I mean,
he gets the kind of thing that he wanted, you know,
like the freak out and all of those things. And
he hasn't even been it's still not even not even
Thanksgiving yet, So they can run the table right now
and at least for the next two years. Now, those

(07:32):
are the things if you really want to be concerned about,
that that they have the absolute ability to run the
table at least for the next two years. And that's
what I think we should all be concerned on, not
small tweets or you.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
Know, random wrong. Well, something must be right. You're listening
to Michael Berry.

Speaker 5 (07:54):
I read a statement by doctor Simon Gold. It went,
just remember the government did more to stop the distribution
of ivermectin and hydroxychloroquin than it ever did to stop
the distribution of fentanyl. Isn't that the truth? Do you
know how many American families have been devastated by fentanyl.

(08:22):
How many young people took fentanyl one time and died
from it a trace amount. That's devastating. You don't get
that back. You will never replace that. You'll never be
the same again. You will never be the same again.

(08:42):
If you're new to our show, let me tell you.
I don't tell you how I think you should think.
I my only goal is not My goal is not
how you think, but that you think. To simply probe,
to poke, to challenge, to engage. I will play things

(09:06):
that I may not agree with, just to challenge the narrative.
So Ukraine has now been authorized by the Biden administration
to fire US missiles into Russia, and we're being told
this war started because of Putin's act of aggression. That's
what we've been told by the people who lie to
us about everything else. I want you to listen to

(09:26):
Columbia University professor Jeffrey Sachs with a history lesson of
his own on what led to this contradict. I may
not necessarily agree with all of it, but I want
you to hear it.

Speaker 10 (09:36):
This is not an attack by Putin on Ukraine in
the way that we are told every day. This started
in nineteen ninety. February ninth, nineteen ninety, James Baker, the
third Our Secretary of State, said to Mihail Gorbachev, NATO
will not move one inch eastward if you agree to

(10:01):
German unification, basically ending World War Two, and Gorbachev said,
that's very important. Yes, NATO doesn't move, and we agreed
to German unification. The US then cheated on this already,
starting in nineteen ninety four, when Clinton signed off on

(10:23):
a basically a plan to expand NATO all the way
to Ukraine. This is when the so called neocons took power,
and Clinton was the first agent of this, and the
expansion of NATO started in nineteen ninety nine with Poland,
Hungary and Czech Republic. At that point Russia didn't much care.

(10:46):
There was no border other than with the Kerningsburg, but
other than that.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
There was no direct threat.

Speaker 10 (10:52):
Then the US led the bombing of Serbia in nineteen
ninety nine.

Speaker 2 (10:58):
That was bad, by.

Speaker 10 (11:00):
The way, because that was a use of NATO to
bomb a European capital, Belgrade, seventy eight straight days to
break the country apart. The Russians didn't like that very much,
but Putin became president. They swallowed it, they complained, but
even Putin started out to pro European, pro American actually

(11:24):
asked maybe we should join NATO when there was still
the idea of some kind of mutually respectful relationship. Then
nine to eleven came. Then came Afghanistan and the Russian said, yeah,
we'll support you, we understand to root out terror. But
then came two other decisive actions. In two thousand and two,

(11:46):
the United States unilaterally walked out of the Anti Ballistic
Missile Treaty.

Speaker 1 (11:51):
This was probably the most.

Speaker 10 (11:53):
Decisive event never discussed in this context, but what it
did was trigger the US putting in missile systems in
Eastern Europe that Russia views as a dire direct threat.
In two thousand four five, we engaged in a soft

(12:13):
regime change operation in Ukraine. But in two thousand and
nine Yanikovich won the election and he became president in
twenty ten on the basis of neutrality for Ukraine. That
calmed things down because the US was pushing NATO, but
the people of Ukraine, on the opinion polls didn't even want.

Speaker 1 (12:34):
To be in NATO.

Speaker 10 (12:34):
They knew that the country is divided between ethnic Ukrainian
ethnic Russian.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
What do we want with this?

Speaker 10 (12:40):
We want to stay away from your problems. So in
February twenty second, twenty fourteen, the United States participated actively
in the overthrow of Yanikovich, a typical US regime change operation,
have no doubt about it. And the Russians did us
a favor. They intercepted a really ugly call between Victoria Newland,

(13:04):
my colleague at Columbia University now, between her and the
US Ambassador to Ukraine, Jeffrey Piat who is a senior
State Department official till today, and they talked about regime change.
They said, who's going to be the next government? All
of this is to say the US then said, okay,

(13:26):
now NATO's really going to enlarge, and Putin kept saying, stop,
you promised no NATO enlargement. It's been by the way,
I forgot to mention in two thousand and four, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia, Slovenia,
seven more countries in the not one inch eastward. And

(13:48):
then okay, it's a long story, but the US kept
rejecting the basic idea.

Speaker 1 (13:59):
Don't expect and NATO to.

Speaker 10 (14:01):
Russia's border in a context where we're putting in demn
missile systems. After breaking a treaty twenty nineteen, we walked
out of the Intermediate.

Speaker 1 (14:11):
Nuclear Force Treaty.

Speaker 10 (14:13):
On December fifteenth, twenty twenty one, Putin put on the
table a draft Russia US Security agreement.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
You can find it online.

Speaker 10 (14:24):
The basis of it is no NATO enlargement. I called
the White House that next week after that, begging them
take the negotiations. Putin's offered something, avoid this war. Oh, Jeff,
there's not going to be a war. Announced that NATO's

(14:47):
not going to enlarge. Oh, don't worry, NATO's not going
to enlarge. I said, oh, you're going to have a
war over something that's not going to happen. Why don't
you announce him? And he said no, No. Our policy
is an open door. This is Jake Sullivan. Our policy
is an open door policy, open door for NATO enlargement.
That is under the category of bullshit.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
By the way, you don't.

Speaker 10 (15:10):
Have your right to put your military bases anywhere you
want and expect peace in this world. They turned down
the negotiations. Then the Special Military Operation started and five
days later a Zelenski says, okay, okay, neutrality, and then
the United States and Britain said.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
No way, you guys, fight on. We got your back.
We don't have your front. You're all going to die, but.

Speaker 10 (15:39):
We got your back as we kept pushing them into
the front lines. That's six hundred thousand deaths now of
Ukrainian since Boris Johnson.

Speaker 1 (15:50):
Flew to Kiev to tell them.

Speaker 11 (15:52):
To be destroying the black community is to dismantle the
black family.

Speaker 2 (15:57):
Michael Barry show, why don't we ask.

Speaker 6 (15:59):
Missus Willie Brown if Kamala Harris cares about black families.

Speaker 5 (16:03):
I'm going to violate my usual rule of trying to
finish on something light, because I realized I had something
important I wanted to get to and I've not done
it yet. And it is a piece that appeared in
the day the Free Press this morning, Barry Wise's publication,
and it is a really really wonderful piece about this

(16:27):
election and what it means. And there is a segment
in here that we may not get to in time,
so I'm going to start with that. It's a description
of what this particular author martin Jury or Goury I'm
not sure. I don't know him. It's his take on

(16:49):
the election, but I thought this was very interesting, he says.
Podcaster Joe Rogan emerged during the campaign as a sort
of emissary from a forgotten demo graphic restless males who
found the culture's obsession with racial and sexual minutia incomprehensible.

(17:10):
Rogan is nothing like a preacher. He's just a dude
with a microphone, at the opposite end of the complexity
scale from the giant digital platforms, and almost transcendental normality
is his superpower. His method relies on duration. The podcasts

(17:33):
go on for hours, much too long for scripted answers.
Under Rogan's gentle prodding, the self protective phrases are pushed aside,
and an actual human being is revealed. Trump, who chatted
with Rogan for three hours, seemed surprisingly self aware, recalling

(17:54):
with awe his first arrival at the White House and
labeling his own meandering style of speaking quote the weave.
The Rogan podcast placed this humanized version of the usually
blustering former president before an audience of tens of millions. Meantime,
Kamala Harris reportedly following the directives of her normia Verse

(18:16):
staffers refused to go on the show. Many in that
audience belonged to Rogan's tribe of noormy males, an arcane
community I want attempt to describe other than to note
that it involves a rugged competitive spirit, whether in sports
or online gaming, a lot of cussing, and a contempt
for fakery, somehow balanced by admiration for a good bs

(18:37):
or The Normies believe they embody the ideals and character
that built America. Hollywood evidently disagrees. In films and television,
their kind is invariably portrayed as fools or brutes. Progressives
seem to hold them responsible for every crime in our history.
I'll stop there and say for a moment, or tired

(19:00):
of being portrayed that way to continue. In other words,
contemporary culture is at war with these men, who would
prefer to be left alone rather than fight back. Trump
represented the temptation to revolt. Trump's physical courage, demonstrated after
being nicked by an assassin's bullet, strongly appealed to the
values of the group. The bond between Trump and Rogan

(19:23):
I suspect, gave millions of Normies, including those who considered
themselves Democrats or a political permission to join the MAGA movement.
In the event, Trump received fifty five percent of the
male vote, while younger men aged eighteen to twenty nine
swung in his direction by nearly thirty percent compared to

(19:44):
four years ago. In twenty twenty, popularity among men helped
peel off typically Democrat and minority voters. Trump increased his
share of Latino males to fifty five percent and of
Black males to twenty one percent. To Everyone's prize, the
normies turned out to be a multi racial tribe. The

(20:04):
last and least noticed of the Republican's digital back alleys
to the public was the rise of newsletter platforms, including Substack,
which allows authors to monetize their work through paid subscribers.
Substack readership is small by comparison with Rogan's audience, never

(20:25):
mind Facebook's three billion active users, but the creators who've
gone independent tend to be extraordinarily knowledgeable and articulate, and
they embody a unique sliver of the population. Liberals and
Democrats who felt left behind by the Democrat Party's drift
to identity politics. People like Walter Kern, Matt Taibi, Glenn Greenwald,

(20:50):
and Michael Schellenberger all began public life on the left,
and all repudiated the inquisitorial lunacy of progressivism and abandoned
the Democrats long before aligning with Trump to any degree.
This publication's editor in chief, Barry Weiss, described herself as

(21:11):
politically homeless, giving a label to the multitudes multitudes that
felt repelled by the excesses of the Biden administration and
their cultural enablers, yet had no idea what to do
about it, other than to poke at the beast with
their words. Theirs was a political pilgrim's progress that may
come to define the twenty first century. In many ways,

(21:35):
their background and trajectory mirrored a cluster of ex Democrats
prominent on the public stage Elon Musk, Robert F. Kennedy, Junior,
Toolsey Gabbert, and a few others who had broken with
the progressive establishment and were excommunicated by it. They too,
wandered homeless for a time. None of them had supported

(21:56):
Trump in twenty sixteen, most at some point had expressed
their disdained for the man. Yet all of them writers, politicians,
tech billionaires, swayed by a mysterious pressure gravitated into Trump's
orbit in twenty twenty four. What changed? In short, the
politically homeless ran out of neutral space. As our dominant

(22:19):
institutions demanded ever more ideological adherents and political control, The
middle ground simply vanished. The dissidents were left with only
one place to go. Analyzing Trump is an exercise in frustration.
Although he's been reviled as a new Adolph Hitler and

(22:40):
exalted as a second Ronald Reagan, these historical figures stood
rock hard and well defined. While Trump is amorphous, mutable, impenetrable,
anything said about him will be superseded by events. Nevertheless,
I will say that he is, and always has been,
primarily a cultural force. That is such a powerful statement. Specifically,

(23:07):
he is a creature of American popular culture, hence his
strange adventures in professional wrestling, his prominent role in The Apprentice,
his acquaintance with virtually every entertainment celebrity whose lifetime has
coincided with his own. The motive for this isn't hard
to work out. Pop culture is the vortex of the
nation's attention, and attention is a fuel that powers Trump's

(23:32):
hyperactive existence. His entry into politics introduced the circus atmosphere
of popular culture to our bloodless and ritualistic elites. Washington
had become a city of ghosts and ancestor worshipers, where
ambitious souls were expected to look backward to the dead

(23:52):
grave and also to get raped. We should add that
in nothing was ever decided or done there, Nothing spontaneous
or eloquent was ever said. That Harris was an exempt
was an emanation of this exhausted political cast. She campaigned
in terror of saying anything that might be held against Trump.
On the other can was a peacock streading into a

(24:15):
city of crows. The proceedings the Court of Impeachment is
hereby dissolved. Michael Barry, Well, it's not about desert raps
are all up. Joe Scarborough and his mistress and Meeker
Brazenski went tomorrow lago to kiss the ring. Joe Scarborough
has there's no shame left. A former Republican congressman who

(24:41):
had a staffer end up dead, which is a story
in and of itself, and then he goes over to
become a liberal. And his mistress Maker Brazinski was all
over Donald Trump when Trump was running, when they wanted
Trump on the show constantly, and then when Trump won

(25:04):
and didn't put them in the administration, they turned on
him and went really nasty. But they have no influence,
so they lost. And then they looked like Keith Overman,
just desperate and sad and pitiful and angry. So yesterday
they revealed that they had gone to mar A Lago

(25:25):
and bent the knee because they desperately want to get
back in with Trump, with whom they were once friendly. Well,
the Hens on the View were not happy about this.
How dare you break ranks with literally Hitler.

Speaker 11 (25:42):
Look, the bottom line is that America needs a free
press that is willing to speak truth to power right
now more than ever. And I think that we have
to be very clear eyed when we think about the

(26:05):
president elect and cover the president elect. And I don't
think you need to sit down for ninety minutes at
mar A Lago and kiss his ring to be able
to speak truth and to be able to cover a story.
So maybe they're not journalists in the true sense. Maybe
they're saying that their opinion general journalists. But we have

(26:25):
to remember that Trump is the guy who ushered in
the era of fake news. He is the guy who
ushered in alternative facts. He is the guy who attacked
three black female journalists. He's the guy that revoked Jim
Acossa's press credentials for asking him a question. And so

(26:48):
I think that this president elect, I hate to say it,
would like nothing more than to have only Fox News
cover him, would like nothing more than a state sponsored media.
And I don't think he can be trusted in the
way that other presidents can be trusted. This is an aberration.

Speaker 5 (27:12):
So what's amazing is after they've just been crushed in
the election, after it's just been made clear to them,
nobody likes you, nobody trusts you, nobody listens to what
you say, nobody takes it as the truth. If Trump
is so awful, such a monster, then why are people

(27:36):
so eager to meet with him? Why does Schumer make
nice with him? Why did Biden welcome him to the
to the White House and smile for the first time
in years. CNN's Scott Jenny's making the point, how come
a guy who's literally Hitler can get along with people
like this?

Speaker 1 (27:57):
I'm amazed.

Speaker 6 (27:58):
I did not expect Hitler to get so many meeting
request first from Joe Biden now from Mika and Joe,
it's amazing that literal Hitler is getting all these meeting requests.
And what it tells me, professor, is that all the
rhetoric that came from the left, from the Democrats, from
the White House, from Kamala Harrison, everyone else before the election,
all of the rhetoric, the fascism, the Hitler, the Nazi

(28:18):
rallied and.

Speaker 2 (28:19):
It was all a bunch of bs. They didn't mean
any of it.

Speaker 6 (28:22):
And I and if I were in the Democrat sort
of Rebbels shoes, I would be looking at all my
leaders and going, did you just bs me for an
entire sight?

Speaker 5 (28:37):
Mean, you can't claim the man is Hitler and then
go meet with him. You can't claim the man is
Hitler and exist in the same country with him. At
some point you start looking really, really stupid, and at

(29:00):
some point you start to realize that you got yourself
so over your skis that you'll never get back. CNN's
Harry Inton now claims that Donald Trump's win was shallow
and not some mandate like they're making it out to be. Well,

(29:25):
that's odd clip number six oh five, Ramon, that's odd
you say it was shallow and not quite the mandate,
because just a week ago, the same fella, Harry Inton
at CNN was giddy over what he called a historic win.

Speaker 8 (29:45):
The breadth of the improvement that Donald Trump had Holy Toledo,
all right, Trump gained ground in forty nine states and
the District of Columbia compared to twenty twenty.

Speaker 2 (29:56):
I went back through the record books.

Speaker 8 (29:57):
One was the last time a party gained in some
so many different places.

Speaker 1 (30:01):
You have to go all the way.

Speaker 8 (30:03):
Back to nineteen hundred and ninety two, when Bill Clinton
improved upon Michael Ducaucus's performance in forty nine states plus
the District of Columbia.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
The bottom line.

Speaker 8 (30:12):
Is, no matter where you looked on the mat, Cape Baldwin,
no matter where you looked, Donald Trump was improving on
where he did four years ago, except for Washington State.
It is no wonder that at this particular point he
looks like he's going to be the first Republican to
win the popular vote since George W. Bush back in
two thousand and four.

Speaker 12 (30:30):
And to pull that off, he gained brown with groups
that Republicans do not generally count as part of their winning.

Speaker 11 (30:37):
Winning coalition er.

Speaker 5 (30:38):
Really at all, how.

Speaker 12 (30:40):
Much ground did he gain Yeah, O again, Holy Toledo.

Speaker 8 (30:44):
It's just like, oh, my goodness, gracious. These are the
types of groups that you would never have thought that
Donald Trump would have gained so much support among. Eight
years ago when he first won against Hillary Clinton, Trump's
was the best GOP showing among eighteen to twenty nine
year olds in twenty years. You have to go all
the way back to two thousand and four. How about
among black voters, it was the best performance for Republican
candidate for president in forty eight years since Gerald Ford

(31:05):
back in nineteen hundred and seventy six.

Speaker 2 (31:07):
And I'm hong Hispanic voters.

Speaker 8 (31:09):
The exit polls only go back since nineteen hundred and
seventy two. But Donald Trump's performance on Tuesday was the
best for a Republican presidential candidate.

Speaker 2 (31:18):
In exit pol history.

Speaker 8 (31:19):
He literally goes all the way back through history and
breaks history. This is what we're talking about, Cape Paul.
When groups that you never thought that Donald Trump would
do well among, even for Republican candidate, that is what
he did. If the twenty sixteen election was about Donald
Trump breaking through of white working class voters, this election
was about breaking through and going that Democratic Coalition.

Speaker 1 (31:38):
And tearing it apart.

Speaker 12 (31:39):
And it wasn't just what he did for his own support.
It trickled down to helping the Senate and helping in
the House.

Speaker 8 (31:46):
Yeah, so you know, a lot of talk this morning
and this week is you know, the GOP is going
to have a Senate majority. We don't know if the
Republicans are going to have a House majority, but we
think that that's the most likely to be the case.
But I want you to look at the twenty twenty
four House GOP national vote showing. So this has been
the House of popular vote.

Speaker 2 (32:03):
Currently the GOP is ahead.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
By five points.

Speaker 8 (32:05):
I expect that to shrink a little bit at some
of the California results coming, but that if let's just
say he wins the House GOP wins by more than
two point six points, it will be the best House
GOP showing in a presidential year in the House popular
vote since nineteen hundred and twenty eight. If there's any
viewer out there who is that old, God bless you.
But the bottom line is it was probably the best

(32:25):
House GOP national vote showing during most.

Speaker 1 (32:27):
Of our viewers' lifetimes.

Speaker 5 (32:30):
That wraps our show for the week. You can follow
our podcast wherever you get your podcasts are free. We
do another show in addition to this one, which you
can find there. Anything you need to check a detail
on that we said, that's the easiest place to go
to get it. Our website Michael Berryshow dot com. You
can send an email to me directly. Yes, I read

(32:50):
them all, I don't respond to them all. I can't.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
Possibly.

Speaker 5 (32:53):
You can buy our show year there. You can send
me an email directly there, and you can sign up
for our daily blast. We'll never share or sell your email. Promise,
never have, never will. We send an email in the
middle of the day every day to tell you what
we talked about in the morning, where we talk about
it in the evening, a couple of funny memes, and
then you can respond directly to that to me again. Hey,
thanks for listening.
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