All Episodes

February 4, 2025 33 mins

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Very Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
At first, they thought this was a joke, the threat
coming from President Trump. They had good relations with President
Trump in his first term. They then were mystified. Then
they got angry and defiant. Then you started seeing, as
we've seen here in just the last days that we've
been here all this week, flags being arrayed all across
on the streets in Panama. It's not a big kauda here.

(00:48):
It's in defiance of the US and of Marco Rubio's
incoming business.

Speaker 3 (01:01):
The biggest, most expensive project we ever built one hundred
and ten years ago.

Speaker 4 (01:05):
If you bring it up.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
To now, it would have been the equivalent of two
trillion dollars, the most expensive we ever built. And we
gave it away for one dollar. Okay, we gave it
away essentially for nothing, and we either wanted back or
we're going to get something very strong. We're going to

(01:26):
take it back, and China.

Speaker 4 (01:30):
Will be dealt with.

Speaker 3 (01:45):
Talking about the Panama Canal, what they've done is terrible.

Speaker 5 (01:48):
They violated the agreement. I'm not allowed to violate the agreement.
China's running the Panama Canal.

Speaker 4 (01:54):
I was not given to China.

Speaker 5 (01:55):
That was given to Panama foolishly.

Speaker 6 (01:57):
But they violated the agreement and we're gonna take it.

Speaker 5 (02:00):
Back or something very powerful is going to happen.

Speaker 3 (02:03):
Can you assure the world that as you try to
get control of these areas, who are not going to
use his military or economic.

Speaker 7 (02:13):
Coerci The Panama now pledging to end the key development
deal with China on the Panama Canal. The reversal coming

(02:36):
following Trump's tough talk.

Speaker 8 (02:39):
The name of the game here is behavior modification. He
wants Canada and Mexico to help stem the flow of
drugs and people across the border.

Speaker 9 (02:47):
That's number one.

Speaker 4 (02:47):
He doesn't think they're doing enough.

Speaker 8 (02:48):
He's using these tariffs as a tool to say, look,
I'm not fooling around.

Speaker 4 (02:52):
We mean business.

Speaker 8 (02:53):
Until you help me, I'm going to inflict some pain
upon you. The American economy is bigger than yours. You
depend on us more than we depend on you. You, therefore,
please modify your band larger macro issues. Here to me
is is Donald Trump on a mission to show dominance
in the hemisphere, dominance in the region, and to try
to get other people to bend to our will Colombian

(03:14):
and Panama, I believe have. If Mexico and Canada been
on helping us stop the flow of people in drugs,
that would be another victory. And John, yes, if the
terriffs went away, everyone would be happy. We'd have less immigration,
less drugs, and lower prices, and that'd be a great davor.

Speaker 9 (03:37):
Sleeping right Czar. On yesterday's show, you were talking about
corn dog.

Speaker 10 (03:43):
This is a must try if you've not been there,
and it's a link to two hands in US dot com,
which is exactly what I tried and didn't like. Have
a great show this morning. But somebody else said two

(04:06):
hens in US is a Korean corn dog story when
you went to just Korean, it's a Korean corn dog,
and I had to admit I had to stop for
a minute really ponder that.

Speaker 4 (04:19):
Hmm.

Speaker 10 (04:20):
So I drove by and it said two hands corn dogs,
two hands on the top line, corn dogs on the
next one, and I thought, Man, if you gonna put
corn dog, if you're gonna steak your claim on corn dogs,
that's gonna be a good corn doll right there.

Speaker 9 (04:35):
It's gotta be. There's no way it's not.

Speaker 10 (04:38):
It didn't say corn dogs, hot dogs, nachos, sushi.

Speaker 9 (04:43):
I mean corn dogs. That's it. A corn dogs, not
even really a whole meal, right.

Speaker 10 (04:48):
A corn doll's what you eat one of your kids
at a little league baseball game because you're not an intermittent faster,
but you haven't eaten all day and you all going.

Speaker 9 (04:56):
To dinner later.

Speaker 10 (04:57):
I get corn doll, A little corn doll. Yeah, corn
dog right there. Yeah, Corndal might even get a coke
with corn doll and a coat. And that's to get
you through the game at the beginning of the game.
You don't do it at the end because y'all going
to it for fajdas later and you really want to,
you know, you got your mindset on some fijidas and Martarita's.
I'll have a corn dog. That's not a meal. And

(05:19):
even if it was, is that a dinner? What kind
of business are they doing at seven o'clock at night?
So I go in there and they have I mean
it's a little bitty I mean their footprint is probably
ten to twelve feet wide and about fifteen feet deep.

(05:43):
Before you get to the counter, there's a little bitty
narrow hallway down to the bathroom. Which they told me
they didn't have one. Well, it's funny because that's what
that is. I don't think she's been rude. I think
that's just what they maybe the Koreans have told her
that's what you do.

Speaker 9 (06:00):
So I go in.

Speaker 10 (06:03):
There's a cute black girl behind the counter. She's probably
twenty two years old. She doesn't want to be there.
This is not this is not what she where she
saw herself at this point, she's at least she's probably
twenty five actually, And they got her in a uniform
which you know, you don't want to wear a fast
food you nobody wants to wear that. And there's nobody

(06:24):
in there, you kids in in the kitchen is closed off.
There's just a swinging door to get back to the kitchen.
And she's there all alone. And I'm thinking, man, they're
being robbed right now. If it had that feel like
a place that's being robbed. And they can't tell you
because the people have said, you say one word, we're
shooting everybody. So they're going through the motions to get

(06:45):
you out of there, you.

Speaker 9 (06:46):
Know what I mean.

Speaker 10 (06:47):
So I order and they got you know, the different
kinds of hot dogs, and it wasn't really.

Speaker 9 (06:55):
It was like I was a potato.

Speaker 10 (06:56):
I asked her which one's the best, which I wish
I hadn't because it she said the potato hot dog,
and I didn't order that, and yeah, weird.

Speaker 9 (07:04):
So it was ten minutes.

Speaker 10 (07:06):
Unfortunately I didn't start timing to I was there for
five minutes, so it was at least five minutes. Could
have been four hours. And it was a long time.
And she goes to the back and then she's gone
for the longest time. I don't know if she's banging
a dude in the back, I don't know. She wanted
to smoke break, but she's gone for a long time.
So she comes back after a while with my corn dog,

(07:29):
and I can look at it and tell it's this
is not gonna work. It's like they port Nooi's pizza.
I only need one bite. It's it's spongy looking, and
it should not be spongy, should be crispy. There's no
place to sit down, so I said, there's a little counter.
It's about eight inches wide over near the window, and
I said, do you mind if I eating it?

Speaker 9 (07:48):
No, it's to go. It's only to go. I said, I'm.

Speaker 10 (07:53):
Gonna eat my corn dog in the car if I
got mustard and everything else, I did the mustard on
the side, not already on it, so.

Speaker 9 (08:00):
You can't blame the mustard for one night with Sagi.
Very disappointing. But here's my question.

Speaker 10 (08:05):
They're slapping Korean on everything now, Korean barbecue Korean.

Speaker 9 (08:09):
I wasn't sitting around going, man, you.

Speaker 10 (08:11):
Know, we got good food here, but I like to
see Korea's take on it. I wonder if the people
in Korea, even though they're going, there's a Korean hot
do you think they're even serving Korean hot dogs here?

Speaker 9 (08:21):
Rfk's day today. We need to pass this one.

Speaker 8 (08:24):
The information that I get from the show that I
don't seem to get from other places.

Speaker 4 (08:28):
The Michael Barry Show Show.

Speaker 11 (08:30):
No more.

Speaker 9 (08:33):
Ed, Dear Old Michael Berry Show. Go ahead, Sirry you're up.

Speaker 12 (08:38):
I was calling to see if you had listen or
watched all the President's Men, the Conspiracy against Donald Trump?

Speaker 9 (08:48):
No, who did it?

Speaker 12 (08:49):
No, it's well, it's all the Tucker Carlson Network. I'm
sure you can find it on X or something like
that and stream it.

Speaker 9 (09:00):
Is there anything we don't already?

Speaker 11 (09:05):
Uh?

Speaker 12 (09:05):
Yeah, it's a it's I watched the first two episodes
against They showed the series about George Puppatoppolis and Mike
Flynn and how deep the deep state is, how corrupt
it truly is. It's worth it's worth your time.

Speaker 9 (09:24):
To watch it now, you know.

Speaker 12 (09:26):
I keep up with I keep up, I watch your
listen to your show every day, and I keep up
with the news.

Speaker 4 (09:33):
And how I know how.

Speaker 12 (09:34):
Corrupt our government is. But I had absolutely no idea
how how how bad it was.

Speaker 9 (09:38):
I'll check it out. Thank you, Caleb, you're up.

Speaker 11 (09:42):
I just want to say good morning, gotta brush the
show and and and uh, I just simple just to quit.
Beautiful thought of prayer for mister Trump, and God be
with him, and continuous angels hover over him, the blood
of Jesus upon him, and God bless our troops and.

Speaker 4 (10:04):
Us.

Speaker 9 (10:04):
Let me ask you a question.

Speaker 10 (10:06):
Do you know the difference between a poorly dressed man
on a tricycle and a well dressed man on a bicycle.

Speaker 9 (10:14):
Attire? David writes.

Speaker 10 (10:24):
A friend who works for large avocado companies said, the
reason we're depending on Mexico for avocados is because southern
California growers couldn't grow avocados after the state could cut
off their water, so they switched to growing tomatoes. In
Mexico now grows most of the avocado crops. Trump opened
up the water.

Speaker 9 (10:41):
Do you see that They said he couldn't do what
he did? Tzar.

Speaker 10 (10:45):
I work as a civilian for the Department of the Army.
We're the part of the army that's helping DHS with
the border and deportations.

Speaker 9 (10:50):
It's keeping us busy. I'm shaking my head here.

Speaker 10 (10:54):
We recently received a mission to support cleanup efforts in
California from the wildfarest specifically to clean up has met
all the burned up electric vehicle. Imagine that. I'm not
sure where the EPA will haul all that stuff. Interesting.
Jesse Waters had a compelling little monologue about why RFK

(11:18):
should be confirmed today.

Speaker 9 (11:21):
Here's what he said.

Speaker 13 (11:22):
I want to tell you a little story about Jimmy.

Speaker 4 (11:24):
So Jimmy wakes up in the morning.

Speaker 13 (11:26):
And both parents work, so they don't have time to
make them eggs, and he has frosted flakes and fruit juice.
So he goes to school and he's all hopped up
on sugar, and then he crashes and then he does
the school lunch program and he has grilled cheese, cheetos
and cherry coke hopped up again, then crashes.

Speaker 9 (11:41):
The people at the school tell.

Speaker 13 (11:42):
The parents, man, this kid must be bipolar or ADHD.

Speaker 4 (11:45):
You got to medicate him.

Speaker 9 (11:46):
So he's medicated, and then.

Speaker 13 (11:47):
He doesn't really do recess because he's looking on his
phone the whole time. After school program, he's inside, and
then he goes home, and since his parents are helicopter parents,
they don't let him outside to play in the neighborhood
because they're worried about pedophiles. So he goes inside plops
himself in front of the television until his parents come
home and they're too busy because they're back from work,
and so they order takeout more fried food, and then

(12:08):
he sits in front of his iPad before he goes
to sleep, and he doesn't get a good sleep because
he's had screen time all day, no sunlight, and no exercise.
And this cycle repeats itself for years until he's single, suicidal,
over medicated, fat, sick, lonely and depressed. And then he
turns on TV because he wants to see what A.
Kennedy has to say about making America healthy again, and

(12:30):
what does he see. He sees disgusting looking senators who
are funded by industry cutting him off, so we can't
even hear what the guy has to say. There are
millions of jimmies out there in this country.

Speaker 9 (12:42):
They've been neglected, they've.

Speaker 13 (12:43):
Been preyed, u put on, and they want to get healthy,
but they don't have the knowledge, the support system.

Speaker 9 (12:49):
Or the environment to make it happen.

Speaker 4 (12:51):
RFK.

Speaker 9 (12:51):
Junior is not a perfect person. None of the great
leaders are.

Speaker 13 (12:55):
But he is the perfect person because he has the knowledge,
the experience, the skills, and the passion to get inside
of the government and turn this chronic disease epidemic around.
Because this is not just an economic issue.

Speaker 9 (13:10):
It is a spiritual issue. It's very well said, and
we all know it.

Speaker 10 (13:18):
We all see it. We all have children, they have peers.
You end up out in public. You see the difference.
Talk to a pediatrician today who's been around for a while.
Talk to a pediatrician about the chronic diseases they're now

(13:39):
seeing by the mid teens, fifteen year old diabetics. It's
easy to say, tists, fat little bastards, they ate too much,
or blame them or their parents. Sure, you got to
have some accountability. But if we're honest doing anything different

(14:00):
than I did or my brother did. They're eating the
same food off the same shelves of the same grocery stores.
They're going to the same fast food restaurants, they're going
to the same schools, and yet they've got chronic conditions.

Speaker 9 (14:20):
We didn't.

Speaker 10 (14:22):
They're going to live with chronic conditions. These are our children.
This is not an academic study of people in China.
This is not a theoretical discussion. This is our children,
your children, and your grandchildren, your nieces and your nephews.
It is happening on American soil. I am not for

(14:44):
government telling us what we can and cannot eat, not
at all, never have been, never will be. But I
am absolutely for transparency. That's why we have a Deceptive
Trade Practices Act. If they promise you that an automobile
is going to have these features and has had this
work done, and you go in and it's a jealopee

(15:05):
lemon hooptie that falls apart one mile away, you've got recourse.

Speaker 9 (15:12):
We built that in.

Speaker 10 (15:14):
We don't allow you to make claims to sell a
product that you know it can't deliver. We don't allow that.
What is happening is the poisoning of our children. And
that's not hyperbole, that's real. I can't tell you how
many doctors have shaken their heads, shaken or shook ramon

(15:38):
of shaking their heads, shake, huh, shaken past tense and
told me about the chronic conditions they're seeing in young
kids today. Man, where do you think we are when
those kids are my age? You can't can't consume that
amount of sugar. Your body will not process it. You

(16:01):
cannot consume that amount of sugar. You cannot consume that
amount of red dye and products buried in the same
box that I bought and you probably bought.

Speaker 9 (16:13):
We weren't health food nuts. We didn't know anything about it.
We trusted the products on the shelf and you can
choose to eat them or not. Every child should be
able to, but we should know what's in it. And
that's not happening.

Speaker 10 (16:26):
And if that's what Robert, Robert F. Kenney wants to
do and they're scared of him, it ought to tell you.
It ought to make you wonder why we didn't talk
about bigger at You think he's Jewish.

Speaker 9 (16:38):
Here's good time. No, it's not as I think.

Speaker 10 (16:41):
I think Joel's is middle Now, well, I say that
because I always thought he was Italian.

Speaker 9 (16:46):
It's only a few years ago I rose he was Jewish.
I'm moving out.

Speaker 10 (16:53):
Chuck Kosterman's got a whole chapter in his book about
how Billy Joel is underappreciated by the critics because he's
too popular. That because he's popular, the critics won't give
him his due.

Speaker 9 (17:08):
It's kind of an interesting, interesting notion.

Speaker 10 (17:13):
Incredibly silly fear mongering by the media and the Democrats
who are actually making the argument that America can't be
built or rebuilt without illegal aliens. She is an absolute
insult to skilled labor in this country to claim that
any illegal alien crossing the border can suddenly pick up
a hammer and build a home. CBS Los Angeles making

(17:39):
the noahs, CBS National making the case that you know,
we can't do anything for ourselves.

Speaker 14 (17:44):
We got to have all these illegals. On this street
in North Pasadena. We ran into about a dozen workers
volunteering to clear debris potential kindling, just two miles from
the Eton Fires burn scar. Many of these workers are
here illegally good. Bernardo Osserio is their crew boss. He

(18:05):
migrated from Mexico thirty six years ago and in twenty
twenty one became a US citizen.

Speaker 15 (18:11):
From every single people.

Speaker 16 (18:14):
They're afraid. What are they afraid of? Deportations? People like
to work. They want to work. I mean they want
their lives.

Speaker 4 (18:22):
As well, and there's lots of work to be done.

Speaker 11 (18:24):
Now.

Speaker 4 (18:24):
I'm luck.

Speaker 15 (18:26):
We can do it without then we can help you America.
Without them, these.

Speaker 9 (18:32):
Are the hands that will rebuild Los Angeles.

Speaker 14 (18:35):
We found many of those same workers protesting exist Ingestice.

Speaker 9 (18:40):
This is a rally of migrant day laborers.

Speaker 14 (18:43):
They're critical to the rebuilding of Los Angeles, but worried
they won't get that chance because of the Trump Administration's
aggressive stance toward deporting anyone without legal status.

Speaker 5 (18:54):
We will begin the process of returning millions and millions
of criminal aliens back to the places from which they came.

Speaker 14 (19:02):
In California, forty one percent of construction workers are immigrants,
many of them staying here without legal documents.

Speaker 9 (19:11):
Under the Trump.

Speaker 14 (19:11):
Administration's immigration crackdown, deportation officers can remove most immigrants who
are here illegally, even targeting refugee programs and birthright citizenship.

Speaker 4 (19:22):
They learned to trade.

Speaker 17 (19:23):
You cannot just being new people, you know, in training
skeet the keyears.

Speaker 4 (19:27):
So I mean, who's going to do it?

Speaker 14 (19:29):
Dan Gatsby founded the Los Angeles Builders Association, a trade
group for the local construction industry. Is it realistic that
Los Angeles could rebuild what's been lost without immigrant labor?

Speaker 4 (19:42):
It's can be very difficult.

Speaker 17 (19:43):
We already have a big shortage of home in Los Angeles.
I mean with this on top of it, I mean,
good luck.

Speaker 14 (19:50):
Gatsby estimates rebuilding Los Angeles could take twenty years and
maybe twice as long without the help of immigrant construction labor.

Speaker 16 (19:58):
We are shell workers, essential people for the community.

Speaker 14 (20:04):
Just like rescuing La from the flames, rebuilding it will
take every available hand.

Speaker 9 (20:11):
YEP, got to have every hand.

Speaker 10 (20:12):
Can't kick anybody out, can't kick anybody out. Are you
gonna have the homeless people who started the fires? You're
gonna have them help to or are you gonna keep
giving them a paycheck in free drugs? This country is
cleaning itself up. Just remember there are gonna be a
lot of people who don't want that done.

Speaker 9 (20:35):
Who are going to make excuses. But you know, you
think about this for a moment. But let's think about
this argument that they're using.

Speaker 10 (20:44):
We can't we can't build America or rebuild America, or
do anything else without these illegal aliens.

Speaker 9 (20:55):
We've got to have them.

Speaker 10 (20:57):
Our economy will collapse with this illegal labor, this cheap
illegal labor.

Speaker 9 (21:02):
We've got to have it. Who will pick our crops.
It's like we've heard this before. Our economy will collapse.

Speaker 12 (21:10):
Hum.

Speaker 10 (21:12):
Yeah, the last time we heard this, they were talking
about slaves. And that's what we're talking about here. If
you get right down to it, what we need.

Speaker 9 (21:24):
Is slaves. The laws won't apply to them.

Speaker 10 (21:28):
We'll just bring them in when they get here a
little too long, they get too uppity, because they do, don't.

Speaker 9 (21:35):
They They get uppity.

Speaker 10 (21:36):
They want rights, want to be citizens, they want to
do all that. We won't let them get uppity. When
they get uppity, we'll bring in some more. We'll drive
up to the home depot and we can that's like
the slave exchange. We'll pull up to the to the
home depot. We'll pick the one that looks like he's
least likely to smash us in the head or steal

(21:57):
something from our house.

Speaker 9 (21:58):
That's what we'll do.

Speaker 10 (21:59):
I'll pick you in. You y'all get in the back
of the truck. That's not that's not migrants. Those are slaves.
So we fixed the story.

Speaker 14 (22:13):
On this street in North Pasadena, we ran into about
a dozen workers volunteering to clear debris potential kindling, just
two miles from the Eton fires burned scar Many of
these workers.

Speaker 9 (22:26):
Are slave labor.

Speaker 14 (22:28):
Good Bernardo Osserio is their crew boss. He migrated from
Mexico thirty six years ago and in twenty twenty one
became a US citizen from avery.

Speaker 16 (22:38):
Single slave. You're afraid. What are they afraid of deportations?

Speaker 9 (22:43):
Slaves like to work.

Speaker 4 (22:45):
They went to work and mean slaves very lives.

Speaker 14 (22:48):
As well, and there's lots of work to be done.

Speaker 15 (22:52):
We can do it without slaves. We can help you
America without slaves.

Speaker 6 (22:58):
These are the hings that will rebuilding Los Angeles.

Speaker 9 (23:01):
We found many of those same slaves protesting ingestice. This
is a rally of slaves. They're critical to.

Speaker 14 (23:10):
The rebuilding of Los Angeles, but worried they won't get
that chance because of the Trump administration's aggressive stance toward
deporting anyone without legal status.

Speaker 5 (23:20):
We will begin the process of returning millions and millions
of criminal aliens back to the places from which they came.

Speaker 14 (23:28):
In California, forty one percent of construction workers are slaves,
many of them staying here without legal documents.

Speaker 9 (23:37):
Under the Trump.

Speaker 14 (23:38):
Administration's immigration crackdown, deportation officers can remove most immigrants who
are here illegally, even targeting refugee programs and birthright citizenship.

Speaker 17 (23:48):
They learned to trade, you can just being new slaves,
you know, and trainings get the keyears.

Speaker 4 (23:54):
So I mean, who's going to do it?

Speaker 14 (23:56):
Dan Gatsby found of the Los Angeles Builders Association, trade
group for the local construction industry. Is it realistic that
Los Angeles could rebuild what's been lost.

Speaker 9 (24:06):
Without slave labor?

Speaker 4 (24:09):
It's can be very difficult.

Speaker 17 (24:10):
We already have a big shortage of home in Los Angeles.
I mean, with this on top of it, I mean,
good luck.

Speaker 14 (24:17):
Gats Be estimates rebuilding Los Angeles could take twenty years
and maybe twice as long without the help.

Speaker 9 (24:23):
Of slave labor.

Speaker 16 (24:25):
We are essential slaves, essential people for the community.

Speaker 14 (24:30):
Just like rescuing la from the flames, rebuilding it will
take every available hand.

Speaker 10 (24:38):
Yeah, it really sounds more realistic if you just say slaves,
and that's what we should start doing. We don't want
slavery in this country anymore. We don't need slaves. Anybody
telling you that we need. These people just want slaves.
And what they do is vote the way we pay
to vote, and work without complying with our laws.

Speaker 9 (24:59):
And think about it. That's really what this is.

Speaker 11 (25:01):
Boy.

Speaker 9 (25:01):
I like love the Berry Show.

Speaker 4 (25:08):
Get a carry it with.

Speaker 9 (25:15):
Good evening.

Speaker 6 (25:16):
How you doing this is shirtick you liquor with your
Michael Berry reports from the wonderful City of Orange, Texas,
also referred to as fruit City by people who is ignorant. Girl,
We've had so many houses catch on fire this week, Lord,
and you look in their obittionaries and it's so many
people has been killed.

Speaker 4 (25:36):
But that's in.

Speaker 6 (25:37):
The forties, fifties and sixties.

Speaker 9 (25:39):
I feel like I'm next.

Speaker 6 (25:41):
Oh, Lord, I need to go see the doctor and
make sure my Gano country is all correct, because I
don't want to be killed. I want to live long
enough see Donald Trump do what he gonna do.

Speaker 4 (25:52):
Lord.

Speaker 6 (25:52):
Oh, speaking of that, I see I said was hero
Michael My I think came to Range.

Speaker 9 (26:00):
And the first thing they.

Speaker 6 (26:01):
Did, they come into Vivianese.

Speaker 9 (26:03):
What you call them the nail salon, and uh, they.

Speaker 6 (26:07):
Approach all these Vivimanese who don't speak English. If damn
one of them had a passport. They all here legally,
they're supposed to be here, and so I just had
to shake their head and go on and h. Then
they went for the convenience stoes, the cigarette stoes, the
vape shops and all listen. All their men's was Indians

(26:29):
and Bangladese and uh what you call Pakistanese.

Speaker 4 (26:35):
And I think most of.

Speaker 9 (26:37):
Them got away from it. They was pretty cool.

Speaker 6 (26:40):
But now they're fitly concentrate on these hispanicross and I
kind of hate that because I love my Hispanical neighbors.
They take some good care of their yards, and I
don't really know how many of them got their papers
or their documentary or whatever it is. But I'm just
praying I don't get replaced nice Hispanic neighbors with these

(27:03):
ghetto rats. And I don't mean to turn code against my.

Speaker 9 (27:06):
Race, but y'all know what I'm talking about.

Speaker 6 (27:08):
I don't want the next door neighbor to have thirty
seven children and sixteen pit bulls.

Speaker 15 (27:13):
Now.

Speaker 9 (27:13):
Hell, oh, how y'all doing?

Speaker 4 (27:16):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (27:17):
One week under Trump and the United States back together again? Amen.

Speaker 9 (27:23):
A man got an email from a woman.

Speaker 10 (27:30):
Whose teenage child is having some difficulties and she went
to a therapist took the child him. I think it's him. No,
Maye might be a female. Actually, no, nothing about a female.
I read it yesterday, and what the therapist is doing, advising, coaching,

(27:54):
instructing is contrary to the mother's vowel. It is a
very left leaning ideology this person is applying to the
treatment of this child. She doesn't sound like treatment at all.
It's a non sexual grooming, if you will, for another

(28:19):
member of the leftist army, I say, let's say this.
She asked me my email. Do I know of a
therapist for a teenager that is conservative in value, faith based,
more in line with traditional medical strictures, and not leftist ideology,

(28:44):
because this has been a problem with multiple therapists, and
she's moving each time. A woman posted last night and
I can't find it that most therapists are themselves broken.
I don't know if that's true or not. I've never
been to a therapist. I know a lot of people

(29:06):
who go to therapists and some of them it really
makes a difference.

Speaker 4 (29:11):
It is.

Speaker 10 (29:14):
It is my belief, based on asking a lot of questions,
that the real point, the real value to therapy for
the people that I know that go to therapy is
an opportunity to discuss things.

Speaker 9 (29:33):
With someone presumably.

Speaker 10 (29:35):
That will be a non judgment zone in a way
that they cannot with anyone else, particularly relating to issues
such as fraid relationships, dysfunctional relationships. And I will ask people, Okay,
why are you going? They is helping you, Okay, how's

(29:57):
it helping you? Tell me how it's helping? All right,
tell me the reason. What was the impetus behind you
visiting a therapist? And it's usually relations with their spouse
or they their ex spouse, can sometimes be a boss

(30:18):
or colleagues. Often it's brothers and sisters, mother and father,
and it can be children. And I'm not passing a
judgment on the therapy. I don't mind passing a judgment,
but the therapists are now going to email me that
you know I've said something wrong, because that's what you do.
You correct people and defend your field. That's fine, And

(30:41):
people who go to therapy. Are going to say, you're
judging me, and that's fine. I'm not I will I'm
not afraid to judge you. I don't see a need to.
I do think that what happens is I think that
people have to go to a therapist. This is the
thrust of the point and TEA don't have this yet.

(31:02):
People need to go to a therapist or feel they
need to go to a therapist when they don't have
a trusted advisor, conciliary friend. And why does that happen?
This goes back to where we went wrong in this country,
and that is a lack of candor. That is the

(31:27):
inability to deliver perspective that will not make the other person.

Speaker 9 (31:37):
Happy.

Speaker 10 (31:39):
I have had people who say, what you said hurt
my feelings. Okay, but it hurt my feelings. I heard
you the first time, and well you need to know
it hurt. No, I actually I don't. I don't because
you choose how to react to what I say. I
don't choose it for you. Where you go wrong is

(32:01):
you believe, and way too many in this country believe
that you should that the aggrieved is the king. Whoever
is upset makes the rules. Bull that's how we got
ourselves in all this trouble. You've got to understand that
some people choose to be aggrieved because that's how they
attain power. Black Lives Latter Matter is one big aggrievement

(32:26):
association that turned into a hustle that became very profitable,
that became very powerful when you got somebody at the
office who is constantly looking to be slighted because it's
a woman in a male's in a traditionally male position,
or black, or an immigrant or disabled or gay, and

(32:53):
that's really that's where we went wrong. That's why you
got to have therapists to help you navigate this mind
feel that people have signed up for and perpetuate.

Speaker 9 (33:03):
Be who you are.

Speaker 10 (33:04):
Be honest, be authentic, be real and legitimate, and people
who like.

Speaker 9 (33:10):
You for who you are will be your real friends.

Speaker 10 (33:15):
And people for whom you had to learn therapy speak
to survive in their orbit. That's a toxic relationship that
you can't fix. That's their problem, not yours. And that
little session right there is free
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.