Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Arry Show is on the air. Oh yes, it's
Friday in January twentieth. Fast approaches. I don't even need
(00:28):
it to rush to get him. I'm interact top because
Trump's really already president. Down to the lake. The world
knows it. This is just giving him time to get
all the right people in place. Things are good. In fact,
there is such a mandate. It was too big to rig,
(00:50):
as he said. MSNBC's Jim Posaki, who is a flak
for the Democrats, she makes the point here that I
think is true that Cash Patel is on a glide
path for confirmation. Cash Pateel would be the FBI director,
(01:13):
and she's angry about it. The Democrats are falling apart.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
Not a single Republican senator has raised any significant public
concern about Patel's nomination. Now, my last guest, Senator white
House said, maybe that will come in the hearings, maybe
it'll be quiet, but it still does is kind of
an eye opener worth discussing. As The New York Times
put it this week, Patel appears, at least for now,
to be on a glide path for confirmation.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
Yeah, that's exactly right, because there's nothing you can do.
The American people knowing you. Look at Fetterman out there,
the Democrat senator from Pennsylvania. He's out there saying nice
things about Trump and the Republicans. Heck, things are so
(02:02):
bad for Democrats. How bad are they? Democrat Senator Amy
Klobuchar was on CBS's Face the Nation this past weekend
with Margaret Brennan and she actually criticized Joe Biden. Now,
remember these people are They have access to polling data
(02:25):
every day. They are aware that not only every single Republican,
but the majority of Democrats are angry over the pardon
of Hunter Biden and some of these other preemptive pardons.
The American people are not as partisan as the people
(02:46):
in Washington, d C. Want them to be, and they
know that what's happening is wrong.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
This last week, he had this record number of commutations,
fifteen hundred Americans, more than any in any single day.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
Among them, though, there.
Speaker 3 (03:03):
Was a judge involved in a so called cash for
Kids scheme that sent thousand psychids to jail for millions
of dollars. A man who committed tax fraud at a
cost him more than one point six billion dollars, describes
the most prolific, pernicious, utterly unrepented tax sheet in US history.
A woman who was involved in a twenty six million
dollar scheme to defraud medicare. Are you comfortable with some
(03:25):
of these decisions?
Speaker 4 (03:26):
Now, there's also a man in Duluth that was running
a major drug house basically and had all this money
under his bathroom tiles.
Speaker 1 (03:35):
I was also commuted.
Speaker 4 (03:37):
So the way I look at this is I also
didn't agree with the pardon of the president's son.
Speaker 1 (03:43):
Wow, isn't it interesting that after four years of Joe Biden,
they're now actually able to admit that he is slightly
less than perfect. They're able to come out and say, hey,
(04:07):
you know what, ninety five percent of Americans believe I
agree with that. Now whether they agree with it or
not doesn't matter. The mandate in this election, the too
big to rig was so big that now even Democrats
are having to come out and say, he shouldn't have
(04:27):
pardoned his son. He shouldn't be talking about preemptive pardons.
These are bad things. This should not be happening. This
should absolutely not be happy. So we had a glitch
in our weekend review that Chad puts together every week.
But we thought it would be fun if we did
(04:49):
something that we did on the morning show earlier in
the week, and that is We're going to play a
weekend review from earlier in the year. And let's see
if you can guess the date or the week did
this happened. And I'm gonna make it real easy. It's
the week that our president was shot in the head.
You this will listen and now a totally random week
(05:13):
in review from the past. Take a guess when this
was special report.
Speaker 3 (05:20):
We are coming on the air live tonight moments after
shots have rung out at a rally where President Trump
was addressing the crowd.
Speaker 5 (05:29):
And I really see something that said, take a look
at what happened.
Speaker 1 (05:39):
Trump security detail lifting him up from the ground as
he raises his fist, his ear and face bloody, gesturing
to the crowd.
Speaker 6 (05:47):
Raises his fist, his ear and face bloody, gesturing to
the crowd.
Speaker 1 (05:51):
I don't recall being this angry in my life. It's
the kind of anger you have that isn't because of
one incident or one statement, one act. It is a
boiling anger.
Speaker 7 (06:06):
Ladies and gentlemen, the chairman of the Republican National Committee,
Michael Lotley of North Carolina.
Speaker 1 (06:12):
This convention welcome to order.
Speaker 7 (06:16):
This is welcome the next President at the United States,
Robert O'donald J.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
Trump.
Speaker 8 (06:23):
We're effectively run in this country via the Democrats, via
our corporate oligarchs, by a bunch of childless cat ladies
who are miserable at their own lives and the choices
that they've made, and so they want to make the
rest of the country miserable too.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
And this convention tells one hell of a story, the
story of America, and I love it.
Speaker 8 (06:42):
And the union representing Texas futility.
Speaker 6 (06:44):
Workers for urging people to leave Blinman alone, which comes
after multiple reports of violence, and that weekend review.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
AK forty seven aired on July nineteenth. I've done the
shooting of our president in his head. It was July thirteenth,
did you remember. I looked at him, and they looked
at me, you know, and I just looked at her, and.
Speaker 8 (07:02):
I had to just get your stuff and get out
to Michael very. I reached over and got a newspaper
and I wrote it up.
Speaker 1 (07:08):
I slapped him on the nose that said bad part
of Joe Biden's pardons and commutations the commutation of the
sentence of evil corrupt Pennsylvania judge Michael Conahan. He was
(07:28):
the Kids for Cash judge. More than twenty five hundred
children between two thousand and three and two thousand and
eight were given disproportionate sentences by Conahan and another judge
in order to populate the private detention center, paying them kickbacks.
(07:57):
This evil monster was sending kids to these detention centers
for unusually long periods of time because they got paid
based on the number of inmates and how long they
stayed there, and so they were giving him kickbacks to
(08:20):
be a monster to these kids. And one of the
victims says, what about us? He gets a commutation? What
about us? We did the time, we were punished wrongfully.
Where is our justice? There were fifteen hundred of these
(08:45):
commutations granted by Joe Biden last week alone, the largest
presidential act of clemency on a single day in modern history.
The mother of one of the victims has lost her
mind because her son committed suicide after he was locked
(09:09):
away for this. It's here's the story. The story is.
The credit goes to w b r E TV. You know,
we look at news stories all day, every day, and
after a while, it's kind of like if you're an
(09:30):
undertaker mortician, you no longer you know, stuff didn't bother you.
Police officers they tend to have gallows humor because you
see death every day, paramedics, same way firefighters, and so
you become almost numb to it. But this story, it
(09:57):
it just it's so sickening, and that Joe Biden would
let him out. Why do you think he's letting him out?
Speaker 9 (10:11):
Just Kanye I didn't want to say anything about the
guilty Please to tax persons.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
In don't have a comment right now.
Speaker 10 (10:16):
And it's a big snack in the face for us
once again.
Speaker 9 (10:19):
The words of Kids for Cash victim Amanda Laura after
hearing that President Biden community sentence of disgrace loz Aren
County Judge Michael Conahan, we had.
Speaker 10 (10:29):
No time to get any time taken away from us.
We had no be your right to talk to But
now we're talking about the President of the United States
to do this, what.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
About all of us?
Speaker 9 (10:40):
Laura was one of thousands of juveniles were wrongly imprisoned
as part of the Kids for Cash scheme that involved
Conahan and fellow judge Mark Shivarella. They received two million
dollars in kickbacks in exchange for sending juveniles to two
private detention centers in which they had a business interest.
(11:00):
The scandal gained national attention. He and former judge Michael
Conye entered a plea agreement to basically one corruption charge.
Shivarella was convicted in twenty eleven on twelve or thirty
nine counts and sentenced to twenty eight years in prison.
In twenty ten, Conahan pled guilty to one count of
(11:22):
rocketeering conspiracy and was sentenced to seventeen and a half
years in prison. He was released to home confinement in
twenty twenty because of COVID nineteen health concerns. Now Amanda
Laura was sent to detention for five years for simply
being involved in a fight at a high school volleyball game.
Speaker 10 (11:39):
So he wants to talk about with Conahan and everybody else.
But what is Joe Biden joined for all of these
kids that absolutely got nothing and almost no justice from
this whole thing that happened. So it's nothing for us,
But it seems that Conahan is just getting a slap
on the wrist every which way he possibly could still.
Speaker 9 (11:58):
Today, white House, she leased a statement on the commutation
for non violent offenders, which read, in part, these commutation
recipients who were placed on home confinement during the COVID
pandemic have successfully reintegrated into their families and communities and
have shown that they deserve a second chance. But Laura
(12:20):
says she and other juveniles were never given a second chance.
Speaker 10 (12:24):
There's never going to be any closer for us, Andy,
There's never going to be somehow, some way. These two
men are always going to pop up. But now when
you think about the President of.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
The United States.
Speaker 10 (12:36):
Letting him get away with this, who even wants to
live in this country at this point? God, I'm totally
sick and I just can't even believe this.
Speaker 1 (12:46):
You know, there is by Democrats a complete and utter
perversion of any sense of justice. Murderers and rapist being
freed by the sorospacked district attorneys, terrorists, rapists, traffickers of
(13:09):
people in drugs being allowed to come into our country
and invade us, and then bad guys fat Alvin Bragg
in Manhattan prosecuting Daniel Penney, prosecuting our president. You know
(13:32):
a court ruled this week. I don't know if I
talked about it, and I meant to that. Chauven the
officer who was railroad in Minneapolis. His attorneys got an
order to test the heart tissue of George Floyd. And
what I suspect they're going to find is that George
(13:55):
Floyd that he died of a drug overdose, as he
almost did about thirty days before he died. This time,
you think I'm crazy. People think I'm a conspiracy theorist
or some sort of nut for thinking this. Go do
your research on George Floyd and his drug overdose. What's
(14:16):
the documentary they made about Minneapolis. You remember the name
of it. The news anchor there in town made it.
Her husband was a cop about the precinct there and
when they came and burned the precinct down. You know,
George Floyd just before he died, when he was being
arrested or in the middle of committing a felony, he
(14:39):
had drugs on him and he had thrown him down
his throat and he said I can't breathe. That day too,
He also was saying I can't breathe before they ever
had him on the ground when they had him in
the backseat of the squad car before he got out
and they had him on the ground, he said, I
can't breathe. Then the reason he couldn't breathe is that
(15:02):
when they came up to arrest him for the felony
that he'd been called in on, which is passing counterfeit money,
this felon was committing another felony. Well, he didn't want
to have added to that that he had illegal drugs
on it, so he tossed the drugs down his What
are you talking about? Oh yeah, okay, all right, I'll
get this ramon a king of ding It and this
(15:25):
other guy, Michael Barry. He's the kind of guy you're like,
just smacking ass. I've never been a big Stephen A.
Smith fan. He is a he's an ESPN personality, and
there's a lot of bluff and bluster and you know whatever.
(15:47):
I'm not a huge sports talk personality fan. I'm not
against it. It's just not my thing, so I'm not
saying I'm down on it. But he's always kind of
seem like he was a little heavy on the stick.
But whatever. But what's interesting is Stephen A. Smith is
(16:14):
a black guy who always kind of prided himself on
being buddies with the black basketball players as if they
were running dogs. And then he would get called out
by other people in sports as to stop acting like
you were a great basketball player. I think he averaged
(16:36):
one point per game in college basketball. Stop acting like
you're one of the guys just because you're a tall
black guy. And a lot of people got really over
his bluster, well because he didn't seem to understand politics
(16:56):
and government and he was really more interested in the
celebrity of people like Lebron James. He would always espouse
stupid political opinions that were the kind of opinions that
you would expect from the San Antonio coach or Steve
(17:19):
Kerr Lebron James. But somehow this year, during this election season,
he started pointing out, Hey, the Democrats are lying to us.
(17:40):
The race bating has got to stop. I don't know
if this is him trying to transcend sports into something more.
I don't know what it is, but I do welcome
him saying these things because I think there are a
(18:03):
certain number of what I call sports bros, which is,
you know, twenty five to forty year old dudes who
primarily care about sports and nothing else, and they listen
to athletes and sports commentators on issues of politics, and
make no mistake, winning them over in this election was
(18:28):
one of the pillars of Trump's stool of success, make
no mistake. So with that in mind, here after this election.
Here we are, almost two months after the election, and
ESPN Stephen A. Smith criticizing the lies that the Democrats told.
(18:56):
And again, the reason this is important is the kinds
of people who listen to stephen A. Smith and will
hear these sorts of things are people who many of
us cannot reach. They may not care about politics, they
care much more about sports. But when politics is worked
(19:21):
into the conversation by somebody who they respect or at
least listen to. Because some people listen to Stephen A.
Smith just to hate him, don't underestimate how influential this becomes.
And so with that in mind, I commend this one
other thing to add to all of this. Steven A.
(19:44):
Smith on ESPN. ESPN a Disney station has had Disney politics.
Remember Jamail Hill, that left wing nut black woman who
just evil awful. ESPN destroyed their brand with their liberal politics.
(20:09):
They got so far out there. The same ESPN that
takes every classic movie they had and then says, oh,
you got a white male in there, Well, let's put
a lesbian black woman in there. And it got to
the point it was comical. So it's not lost on
(20:30):
me that this is a black sports guy whose politics,
such as we knew of them, were never where This
is on ESPN saying what he says here.
Speaker 11 (20:46):
The news comes amidst a bombshell report from the Justice
Department that revealed the FBI had at least twenty six
confidential informants on the ground when the Capitol was stormed
in January sixth, twenty twenty one. The report says most
of the informants in aged in illegal activity during the chaos.
The Justice Department says only three of its twenty six
and foremants president had been instructed to observe potential domestic
(21:09):
terrorist suspects on the day of the riot. The rest
of the twenty three appeared to have gone to the
capital on their own accord. Upon hearing news of the report,
Vice President elect JD. Vance posted the following on X
quote for those keeping score at home. This was labeled
a dangerous conspiracy thirty months ago end quote. Didn't hear
anything about that for the election, didn't hear anything about that.
Speaker 1 (21:34):
When the quote unquote insurrection was.
Speaker 11 (21:36):
Broached by Vice President Kamala Harris as a Democratic nominee,
the belief that Donald Trump was a danger to democracy
and using this as a profound, illuminating bullet point to
make that case. And now here we are yet again
finding even more evidence to Donald Trump's claims when he
(22:01):
articulated that process is rigged. My big issue is that
I'm really really sick and tired of every time I
turn around finding something else that the Democrats have lied
about or downplayed or misrepresented along the way. I mean,
I see Republicans like Megan Kelly or Officer Tatum or
(22:25):
a Canvas Owens or you know, to showing Hannities of
the world that.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
You know what, I'm getting tired of.
Speaker 11 (22:33):
I'm getting you know what, I'm getting to the democratic part.
You know what I'm getting really pissed off about.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
I'm getting really ticked off.
Speaker 11 (22:41):
And every time they open their mouth about something.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
Pertaining to y'all, they seem right to make the case.
Speaker 11 (22:51):
That the right had a monopoly on insidious evil tendencies,
corrupt tendencies, duplicitous, hypocritical, untruthful tendencies. And every time they
made those accusations, we turn around and find out that
(23:16):
at least some of them are guilty of the same.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
I don't know about y'all, but I'm sick of all
of it. I'm sick of all of it.
Speaker 11 (23:29):
They've actually made Donald Trump.
Speaker 1 (23:36):
Look like he was right instead of that.
Speaker 9 (23:40):
I don't like man no more, E Michael.
Speaker 5 (23:50):
And.
Speaker 12 (23:52):
I'm not gay no more.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
Pharmaceutical companies have become the major advertised on news talk television,
and that's how they control the message. So CNN, MSNBC,
probably Fox News for that matter, don't dare question whether
(24:18):
the plot shot is effective or not, or causes more
deaths than it saves, because they don't want to dry
up that money. You know, the pharmaceutical companies are using
that advertising money as a way to buy off news stations.
(24:42):
Well CNN. One thing about CNN, When they get bought,
they stay bought. They do what they're told. Here's CNN
doing the bidding of their big pharma overlords by going
after RFK Junior and what they called vaccine skepticism. If
(25:03):
it's called a vaccine, you're supposed to be in favor
of it, even if it kills you.
Speaker 5 (25:08):
Scene as Whitney Wilde shows us how that is playing
out in Minnesota in other areas with the measles vaccine.
Speaker 13 (25:14):
Hi, I'm Stacy needs to meet you and Whitney and Hi,
thank you so much.
Speaker 1 (25:20):
So tell us all what's what's halting?
Speaker 12 (25:21):
So this is not one of my patients, is one
of my colleagues patients, but they just refuse their music's vaccine.
Speaker 13 (25:28):
Encouraging parents to stay up to date on vaccinations for
their kids is routine for doctor Stacy Moroschek at the
Hanifin County Healthcare's Pediatric Clinic in Minneapolis.
Speaker 8 (25:38):
A year.
Speaker 12 (25:39):
All right, take here, you guys, but people forget how
diseases used to kill kids. We essentially had white measles
out in the United States, but then because of the
vaccine rates plummeting over the last several years. Now, once
those people come back into a community that has a
low vaccine rate, it just goes like crazy and poof,
(25:59):
there's your outbreak.
Speaker 13 (26:00):
Minnesota is now over its worst outbreak in seven years,
health officials say, which infected seventy and sent many to
the hospital. Do you know immediately that's the measles.
Speaker 14 (26:10):
There's a pretty significant rash that partners with it, so
to be fever, rash, running nose, kind of the red eyes.
Typically children are more at risk. It's that significant respiratory infection.
Speaker 1 (26:22):
Have you seen pray of your cases. Yes.
Speaker 13 (26:26):
With the bulk of Minnesota's infections and Hadepen County emergency
room nurses and doctors find themselves on the outbreak frontline Again,
What does it feel like when you're like, oh my god,
these numbers are tacking up.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
This could be really bad.
Speaker 13 (26:37):
What does it feel like for you?
Speaker 14 (26:38):
You certainly get very anxious. You worry about the supplies
that you have on hand, You worry about the staff.
Speaker 1 (26:44):
Will you have the resources? Is this the outbreak that's
going to break you? Nationally?
Speaker 13 (26:49):
The CDC says there have been sixteen outbreaks in twenty
twenty four, there were just four and twenty twenty three,
and more than half of the children under five who
got sick had to be hospitalized, and the numbers for
kindergartner starting school fully vaccinated or dropping nationwide.
Speaker 15 (27:04):
One she got fires, including the polia, including the flu,
including the.
Speaker 13 (27:16):
Her father skipped the MMR vaccine, not because of her pain,
but because of his fear.
Speaker 16 (27:21):
I've had a lot of news going around that if
someone takes them autistic.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
Where did you hear that?
Speaker 16 (27:30):
I watched from the YouTube from YouTube. Yes, also I
had I've heard from the parents who have already h autistic.
Speaker 1 (27:42):
Let's see, child's.
Speaker 12 (27:45):
Something you're saying every day, every day, multiple times a day,
all preferred perceived fear of autism. Some people you can
talk them into a vaccine. Some people they're just.
Speaker 13 (27:57):
Like, no, there is no link between autism and the
MMR vaccine or any other vaccine. And yet families believe
the possibility exists and take the risk.
Speaker 16 (28:07):
Fast son from missus, Oh you had a sun with
he he was in the hospital and in unity.
Speaker 13 (28:16):
The skepticism could further be fueled by incoming President Trump's
choice to name a known anti vax crusader to the
head of the nation's sprawling Department of Health and Human Services.
What is the biggest risk of vaccine disinformation? I mean,
are you worrying where people are going to die?
Speaker 12 (28:30):
Absolutely?
Speaker 13 (28:30):
Whitney Wilde, CNN, Minneapolis vaccine disinformation.
Speaker 1 (28:36):
Remember when they told us it was Russian disinformation when
the New York Post ran the story on Hunter Biden's
laptop and over fifty security experts, the deep staters, because
they know they know what the truth is and isn't
you shouldn't be told a bunch of lies. And now
(28:59):
four years later, Joe Biden pardons Hunter Biden or exactly
what was on that laptop? And then what did CNN
do after that? They had this nut job doctor from
Houston who is an absolute crazed maniac. This guy, he really,
(29:21):
I honestly think he thinks that we should have an
authoritarian government where doctors can just declare what you can
and cannot do with the full authority of the government.
This guy's out of control. This guy's worse than Anthony
Fauci and I don't say that lightly. This is what
they followed up that story with Peter Hotez, this crazy
(29:45):
Houston doctor. This guy's a nut.
Speaker 5 (29:48):
We'll go through your mind when you hear this. Someone
involved with staffing HHS has called for the government to
revoke the polio vaccine's approval.
Speaker 1 (29:57):
Well, here's the big worry, John.
Speaker 6 (30:00):
This kind of anti vaccine rhetoric is part of a larger,
coordinated disinformation campaign and the consequences we're now seeing. We've
had not only an increase in measles outbreaks as was
just reported from four to sixteen, from twenty twenty three
to twenty twenty four, we've had a fivefold rise in pertussis,
otherwise known as whooping cough. And now there's polio that's
(30:23):
been reported in the wastewater in New York State in
twenty twenty two. And I'm not only you know, we've
been talking about COVID vaccines for years now. I not
only make vaccines, but I'm also a pediatrician, and I've
taken care of children with congenitor Rubella syndrome. So the MMR,
the R part stands for rebella. It's devastating, right, It's microcephaly,
(30:47):
it's cataracts, it's horrific heart disease, and neuminitis. I've taken
care of kids with psis. It's called whooping cough because
the bred to tell of Protassas bacterium literally destroys the
airways with a toxin, and the child and in desperation
to catch some oxygen, gives a big whoop of of inspiration. Inspiration.
(31:10):
I've taken care of kids intubated with measles. I've held
the hand of parents who've watched their child die of
hid medingitis. All of that's going to come coming back
because of this kind of anti vaccine rhetoric and activism.
And that's why it's important to speak out and really
push back on this.
Speaker 1 (31:31):
If you question the vaccine, then your anti science. So
say the people who tell us that a grown man
wearing a wig is a woman and that she can
menstruate and breast feel right. Okay, while we're at it
talking about vaccine skepticism, Bill Gates says he's all for
(31:52):
free speech unless you say something that causes someone not
to get vaccinated, we shall free speech.
Speaker 17 (32:00):
But if you're inciting violence, if you're causing people not
to take vaccines, you know, where are those boundaries that
even the US should, you know, have rules.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
And then if you have rules, you know what is it?
Speaker 17 (32:17):
Is there some ai that encodes those rules, because you
have billions of activity, and you know, if you catch
it a day later, the harm is done.
Speaker 1 (32:29):
So says the guy who flew with Jeffrey Epstein the
Epstein Island is why his wife divorced him.