Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's that time time time, time, luck and load. Michael
Very show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
How long play to make a jumping hi speed.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
Take a few moments to get coordinates from the nation.
Speaker 4 (00:16):
Here he's kidding the right.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
They're dating coming through hyperspacing like that and crops. Boy,
pup precise calculation, ut fly right through a star.
Speaker 4 (00:24):
I'm too close to a super and open that injured
for real quick?
Speaker 2 (00:29):
But I took up how much I hate space chopping?
Speaker 4 (00:33):
And he's gone long time? Don't right to fun rocking.
Speaker 5 (00:55):
Elon Musk is not a scientist. He is not an engineer.
He is a billionaire con man with a lot of money.
He does not have this kind of good background. And
in fact, while there's some disruption over that, I sincerely
ask you all, I sincerely ask you all to examine
what expertise he has.
Speaker 6 (01:19):
Racket you're Jimmy right, this is your house?
Speaker 2 (01:29):
Sure is I much to Wolf? I sot problems?
Speaker 4 (01:33):
Good?
Speaker 2 (01:34):
We got one, so I heard, I commend, Yeah, please do.
Speaker 7 (01:37):
We can see that recovery vessels slowly but surely closing
the distance there between dolphin can back again. We can
we can see that the dragon capsule and that is
where our crew nine team members will egress from the
Dragon spacecraft. Now Here on your screen we can see dolphins. Actually,
(02:01):
who wants to come and play with?
Speaker 8 (02:03):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (02:03):
With?
Speaker 9 (02:03):
Dragon Musk saved the US space program.
Speaker 10 (02:18):
If it wasn't the Elon Musk, we would not be
able to fly US astronauts from US soil to the
International Space Station.
Speaker 2 (02:26):
Make no, that is no doubt about it.
Speaker 10 (02:29):
We stopped flying astronauts on Space Shuttle in twenty eleven.
Speaker 4 (02:36):
Rocket long time.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
I want to be very clear on something. For many people,
politics is sports. A lot of them don't even realize.
You root for your team, you boo the other team.
But this is not sport. This is our nation. I
grew up in a little town and perhaps not as
sophisticated as the big city of Houston, and certainly not
(03:16):
as La or New York. I didn't grow up in
a political family. We were so far from politics. We
thought our state rep was the most powerful person in
the world. The local sheriff of our town was a
powerhouse to us. We lived out in the country. We
didn't even have police. We had one constable and his
(03:39):
name was Don Hubbard, and he happened to live not
very far from us, and he had an old crown Victoria,
old ragged and like in the movies if you go
back and watch Kojak, they'll pull the siren ount and
put it on top when they're on a chase. That
he had what we called a syreene that he would
(04:01):
place on the top of his vehicle. And you know,
for whatever reason, and there weren't many usually because there
was a you know, parade at the church for Mother's
Day Out kids during the summer, our little southern Baptist
church had Mother's Day Out and my mother volunteered there.
And that was an opportunity for stay at home moms
(04:22):
to have a day or a few hours to go
grocery shop or just be away from the dang kids.
And if you've stayed at home with kids for very long,
you know, we laugh about it, but it's real. I mean,
I think the postpartum depression thing is real. I'm surprised
it doesn't happen more often. Raising a family is a noble, beautiful, wonderful,
(04:46):
necessary thing. It really is. We don't talk about this enough.
It's one of the great heroic things that people do
that we don't. You know, people want to do. What's
society values? People want to go to Harvard. How come
you've never even been there. You don't even know what
(05:07):
it looks like. You don't know anything about it. Because
when you say Harvard, everybody gets excited or at least
used to right, So people start gravitating to things like
that that they notice that society holds in high value. Well,
we didn't have access to pr firms. Our local news
(05:34):
didn't cover the national news anymore than just the basics.
So I knew who the presidents were and I even
knew their party, but it didn't matter much. And I
grew up believing that we were all in this together.
We all rooted for America in the wars, we all
rooted for American companies to succeed. We all believed that
(05:58):
our president wanted the best for our country. And maybe
he just disagreed with the guy he defeated in the election,
But no matter what, he rolled your sleeves up, get
to work, represent the American people and do what's in
our best interest. And I'm not NAIU. I now understand
that's not what was going on, but it wasn't what
(06:19):
we're seeing today. If a private citizen in America had created,
against all odds, a space travel company, a spaceship company private.
When I was growing up, that would have been amazing.
Speaker 8 (06:43):
Wow.
Speaker 2 (06:45):
And if as NASA declined, his company went up so
much so that NASA discussed SpaceX taking over many of
the functions because there were so much better, leaner, better,
more innovative than NASA, which had a fifty sixty year
head start. Fifty year head start. And how many billion
(07:07):
dollars have been spent and we couldn't even read, We
couldn't even land a capsule and use it again. What waste?
How inefficient? That kind of inefficiency makes me feel kind
of sick to my stomach, the way if you eat
too much or you have nausea, it's just wrong. It's wrong.
(07:30):
So here's Elon Musk his company, a great not just
a great American story, a great story for humanity. These
guys went up there for eight days, that was the mission,
eight days, and they got stranded. I get upset if
I get stranded in an elevator for eight minutes. They've
been up there for nine months with no plan to
(07:52):
get them home. Folks, you understand the government had no
plan to get them home. They would have died up
there eventually. Think about this, This is talk about a
false imprisonment. Can you imagine how frightening? This is very
difficult to live this way. And Elon Musk rescued them.
(08:14):
He's a national hero. And I don't care what your
politics are, we should all be cheering. This is a
great African American.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
If you can't say something nice, you can always say
it on the Michael Barry Show, back.
Speaker 2 (08:27):
My Bags last night, pre fled zero hourne I am
and I'm gonna be hi.
Speaker 11 (08:51):
We definitely offered to return the astronauts earlier.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
There's no question about that.
Speaker 11 (08:56):
The astronauts were only supposed to be there for a
today missed the Earth so long and they've been there
for almost ten months and lose my wine, so obviously
that doesn't make any sense. Strongly, SpaceX could have brought
the Nationals back after a few months at most such
(09:18):
a time, and we made that offer to the wide administration.
There was rejected for political reasons, and that's just a fact.
Speaker 2 (09:29):
And I think it's going to be a long long time.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
The touchdown brings me back again to find I'm it's
not the man they think I am. I'm a rocket man,
rocket man burning out of his fuse? How to he alone?
(09:57):
I think it's going to be a long, long time,
so much time bringing me around again.
Speaker 4 (10:03):
Fine, if you hear and.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
You think yourself, why are they playing?
Speaker 4 (10:09):
That?
Speaker 2 (10:10):
Is Ramon off his rocker? I see why he was suspended?
Speaker 8 (10:13):
Now?
Speaker 2 (10:14):
Or who is that guy? Was he? Is this a
spoken word version of rocket man? How dumb is that?
I want you to go to your father and I
want you to say, Dad, do you remember a guy
when you were back in my age named William Shatner?
(10:35):
Is that name? Ringabell? And he will say, sit down, grasshopper,
I have done an insufficient job of preparing you for
the world. Yes, and lower your tone when you say
that man's name. Keep that man's name out of your
mouth unless it is spoken with reverence. William Shatner, Captain Kurk.
(11:03):
And if y'all aren't nice, I'll order Ramon to come
back at the next break with Lucy in the sky
with diamonds. William Shatner is an American legend. I don't
have time to explain it to you now. If you
don't know it, it's because you didn't know who he was.
(11:24):
And I just want you to ask your dad who
William Shatner was still is. He's one hundred and sixty
four years old. He'll never die. I don't think all
right now to people who are not cool, Tim Waltz,
I told you that greatest African American alive today is
Elon Musk heroic act on behalf of our country yesterday. Nobody.
(11:47):
He didn't ask their politics, He didn't ask if they
supported Trump. Hell, he didn't support Trump very long ago.
Do you see the great, the great migration of America's
hearts toward the MAGA movement. Hey, why can't we be
proud of ourselves? Why can't we put America and Americans first? Yeah?
(12:10):
How about we be exceptional again? For those of you
who are sports fans, you go to a sporting event
because you support a team. You love a team, whether
it's because your kid is playing, or because you went
to school there, or that's the team in your town,
and you root for them. Man, you want them to win,
(12:31):
and they lose, it hurts. But when they lose for
a long time, it becomes it's like a wet blanket.
It's terrible. So Tim Waltz told the crowd that when
he needs a boost, he takes a look at Tesla stock, which,
as you may know, has been down, saying on my phone, I.
Speaker 12 (12:51):
Don't some of you know this on the iPhone. They've
got that little stock app. I added, Tesla tode to
give me a little boost during the day.
Speaker 2 (13:00):
Twenty five and dropping.
Speaker 13 (13:02):
So, and.
Speaker 12 (13:07):
If you own one, if you own one, we're not
blaming you. You can you can take dental floss and
pull the Tesla thing off, you know, and take out
of just telling you.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
He suggested he's celebrating an American company that employs American
workers that their stock prices down. How many idiots cheering
that audience are unaware that their four to oh one
k is pegged to the price of Tesla, among others,
(13:40):
which has been a blue chip consistently strong stock. Why
don't you bash Apple and Exxon while you're at it
as well? And all the stupid seals will go yay. Well,
never to be outdone, Elon Musk tweeted back on the
site he owns sometimes when I need a little boost,
(14:00):
I look at the JD. Vance portrait in the White
House and I thank the Lord.
Speaker 8 (14:06):
Uh huh.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
So old jazz hands. Tim Walls says, I just look
at the I just look at the stop price of Tesla,
and when it's down, I feel good about myself, you know,
because I'm kind of the Democrat. Lindsey Graham and Elon
Musk says, well, when I need a little boost, I
(14:28):
look at the Jdvan's portrait in the White House and
thank the Lord that you're not there.
Speaker 8 (14:35):
Ah.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
Yes, it's a glorious thing. Tim Waltz was asked last
week if he was running for president, and he said, well,
if I'm asked, I would have to. Today he made
the statement that Trump supporters are bothered by him because
of his masculinity because he could kick their ass. He
(14:58):
actually said because he could kick their ass. Here he
is when he was asked if he had run the president.
Speaker 8 (15:08):
Sorry, I'm late, guys. They don't make those family bathrooms
like they used to.
Speaker 2 (15:12):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 8 (15:13):
Oh, oh my gosh, gosh, you guys, just stop and
stop it. I mean really, I walk in here and
I mean the flow is heavy. The energy is just electric.
I can feel it all the way down to my Lloians. Okay,
you all want me to run for president, don't you.
I knew it.
Speaker 4 (15:32):
I knew it.
Speaker 8 (15:33):
It's like when somebody brings a cheesecake to a party
and they're like, oh, I wasn't sure if anyone wanted
to deserve, but of course everyone totally does. And now
I'm the cheesecake.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
Governor Waltz. Are you saying you're running? Oh?
Speaker 8 (15:47):
I couldn't possibly unless you insist.
Speaker 2 (15:52):
What do you insist? Do you need me? Do you
crave me?
Speaker 8 (15:56):
Tell me you need me?
Speaker 2 (15:57):
Uh, nobody's asked you to run.
Speaker 8 (16:00):
I mean it's a big decision, the weight of the
nation on these shoulders. I'm just a humble public servant,
a pleaser, a giver. And if the people begged me, oh,
if they insist, if they fall to their knees and
they say, Timmy, Timmy Wallace, you must save us, then
oh I'd have to.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
It'd be rude.
Speaker 8 (16:21):
Nothing.
Speaker 2 (16:21):
So are you running?
Speaker 14 (16:24):
Oh you not?
Speaker 2 (16:25):
A little scampsy? Almost stricken me in to stay it.
Speaker 8 (16:28):
But listen, if the American people demand me, and I
mean demand me like a sequel that kid is on
hot ten roof, well I'd be selfish.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
Not to say hit it.
Speaker 4 (16:38):
Boys.
Speaker 2 (16:44):
Yes, good, I.
Speaker 8 (16:47):
Think we're done here.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
Let's get out of here, and so I just put
that on the micro baris Michael Barry Show.
Speaker 2 (16:55):
I am really really excited the about the emergence and
ascendants of that gargamele looking creature. I honestly don't know
if it's a dude or a girl. I'm not sure
they know. I'm not sure it's important, and I ain't
fishing around down there to find out. But that creature
is tall and haglike with purple hair that looks like
(17:20):
it's probably a wig. I mean, it's an atrocious look,
it really is. Do you remember the dude in the
longest yard I said, I think I broke it's freaking
nick big dude. He put his arm out. Do you
remember his name? That's right, Richard Keile. You are amazing
at random trivia. I give you one that you probably
(17:43):
don't know. What was his full name? I didn't think so.
His full name was Richard Dawson Keel. Yeah, he had gigantism,
that's why he was so. I think I read one
time he had taken a like a growth hormone as
a kid, or he'd given some sort of growth hormone
while while at at some age, And I don't know
(18:06):
if his parents, I don't know. I don't remember why
he took it, you know. But whatever he was in,
he was Jaws in the Spy who Loved Me. Uh,
he was in Moonraker, he was in uh what was
a force from Navarone? What was it called? He was
(18:26):
in Burt Reynolds put him in Cannonball? Was there a
three or was it just two? It wasn't as good
as Cannonball run? I know that, but anyway, Uh, he
was a it was. He's a fun actor, but he
was got awful to look at. And Gargamel this congressman.
By the way, you don't need to email me her name.
(18:48):
I've my Google's broke, but Ramon's got googled. If I
wanted to know the name, We've got a whole team
of researchers. They'd find the name for me. I don't
want to know her name. Learning someone's name and remembering
their name it's a way to honor them. Dale Carnegie
says in How to Win Friends and Influence, people remember
people's name because it's important to them, that's part of
(19:11):
their identity. And so when people say, man, you're good
with names, I'm not good with names. I make it
a priority to remember names. You don't trust me. I
meet more people and come in contact with more people
than most people do, so remembering names. There are little
(19:32):
games you can play, but really we're good at what's
important to us. Right, it's about reps. Baseball hitters, great hitters, pitchers,
shooters in basketball, passers in football. Golfers will tell you
it's how many reps, right, ten thousand reps. Tiger didn't
(19:52):
get to be one of the greatest golfers of all
time because he walked out on the greens and he
was great. He spent the time driving bass period. John
Day is a bit of an exception, but even John
Daley doesn't want you to know it. He spent a
lot of time driving balls. He didn't do anything else.
It's what he did anyway. So the Democrats are in
(20:13):
such trouble and they're ready to drive out the old white,
more moderate Democrats. Now, when I say Chuck Schumer and
Nancy Pelosi, just as they did to Joe Biden, you
may say, well, those guys aren't moderate, but for Democrats
they are. For Democrats, they're actually within the Democrat Party,
(20:34):
which is a small percentage of American society. They're in
the middle there. So Chuck Schumer goes on CBS News,
and what you're going to notice is that they kind
of hammer him a little all of a sudden, and
you may think, oh, well, maybe they've come around. Maybe
(20:55):
they learned from their lawsuit after they had to pay
all this money to Donald Trump, learn a damn thing.
They're scared to death and they're under strict orders don't
get us sued again by saying untrue things about Donald Trump.
So there's that, and there's the fact that Schumer is
persona on Grato right now because he didn't try to
(21:17):
shut down the government when Trump said, hey, give me
till September, give me a continuing resolution, and then we'll
battle it out. But let's not fight it out right now.
Was this last week or the week before it all
runs together afterward? I think it's last week. He said,
give me a couple of days, a couple months to
get this thing together, because otherwise the government's gonna get
shut down and you're gonna pay for it. People are
(21:39):
gonna remember that. And interestingly, you know when Schumer's out
there saying, hey, those is bad because people are being
laid off. The government's good. When you're the guy that
is then shutting down the government, it undercuts your core argument.
Because what we're gonna hear next year at next November
(22:00):
is we're going to hear Democrats talking about how good
the government is. Government, social security, and the infernal Revenue
Service which collects taxes for the devil. And we're going
to hear how the government. Government is, military, government is policing,
government is good. That's what we're going to hear anyway.
So just listen to Chuck Schumern. Notice how things have changed.
(22:22):
Notice how he's actually for a Democrat. He's being hammered.
Here your own party, they're saying, look, it's time for
you to go. They're no longer trust your leadership. They
want somebody else in there. What do you say about
That's what I say, their own party saying that's to go.
Speaker 14 (22:36):
Here's what I'm saying. I'm the best leader for the Senate.
We have a lot of leaders. You know, when you
don't have a president, there's not one leader of the party.
There are lots of them. We have a lot of
good people, But I am the best at keep winning
Senate seats. I've done it in two thousand and five
to just in twenty twenty. No one thought we'd take
back the Senate under my leadership, we took it. So
we now are executing going out. We have a great
(23:00):
we're moving forward. Hakim and I have a plan. Let
me just say this, there's a real contrast between the parties.
The Republican Party now, particularly in office, is the party
of rich oligarchs who want to really screw every average
American so they can get tax cuts for the rich.
And we are fighting that every day. So today we
(23:21):
just issued a statement a tod eight o'clock that describes it.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
Hakim and I.
Speaker 14 (23:24):
We have a day of action on medicaid in every state,
in every corner of the country. Democrats are talking about
they're going to medicaid centers, They're going to people who
would be descrived.
Speaker 2 (23:35):
And Senator in the Democrats, well, well, let.
Speaker 14 (23:38):
Me say this, and we're going to do this day
in day out on issues. Why are they doing tariffs
and raising your cost two thousand dollars, it's beginning to work.
Why are they taking away Fanny and Freddy and raising
your housing costs dramatically? It's beginning to work. As numbers
have come down. If we keep at it every day,
relentless fighting and showing how they're hurting people so badly,
(24:02):
Trump's numbers will get much lower, and his both popularity
but also his effectiveness will decline.
Speaker 2 (24:09):
That I believe that strategy will work. There's an important
moment right there. Chuck Schumer said, I'm the leader of
the Democrats. I should be the leader of the Democrats.
When you have to say that because he doesn't have
that formal title, it's a bully pulpit, it's an understanding.
(24:32):
He's trying to position himself as a more moderated leader
because he's under attack by AOC and Ilhan, the sister
wife and Jasmine Crockett. Don't laugh. Those people are gay.
They're more popular than him and the party. That's a
poll that came out this week.
Speaker 4 (24:47):
THO, what's your want?
Speaker 13 (25:02):
What is he gonna do when you send a son
prom come for you.
Speaker 4 (25:11):
Me? What you're gonna do? What she's gonna Doah, bad.
Speaker 13 (25:19):
Boys, bad boys?
Speaker 2 (25:21):
What's he gonna do?
Speaker 13 (25:22):
What's he gonna do when they come for if? Bad boys,
bad boys? What's he gonna do? What's he gonna do
when they come for you when you were eight and
you had bad treats.
Speaker 8 (25:33):
You go to school and learn the tol then.
Speaker 13 (25:36):
So why how are you acting like a bloody food?
If you then you must do bad boys, bad boys?
What's he gonna do? What's he gonna do when they
come for? If bad boys, bad boys? What's he gonna do?
What he gonna do when they come for you.
Speaker 2 (25:53):
To chalk it on that one, You chalk it.
Speaker 4 (25:55):
On this one. You took it on.
Speaker 13 (25:57):
Your mother, and you took it on your father.
Speaker 2 (25:59):
To chalk it on for the rest of the Chuck
Schumer interview on the View. The strategy of the View,
which by the way, is working. You're wondering if it's working.
It is. The strategy of the View is not to
put compelling, uplifting, informative content on midday television targeted to women,
(26:30):
and not the best and brightest of women. The kind
of women watching the View, I mean genuinely watching. I
don't mean grudge watching. I've got a bunch of stay
at home moms whose kids are at school? Do you
know what time the View comes on? But I don't either.
But I got a bunch of stay at home moms
whose kids are off at school and they'll flip it
(26:51):
on just to see what the dumb bembos are saying,
what the Hen Party is doing. These are women who
are embarrassed by the View. It's sort of like black
friends of mine who are embarrassed by Al Sharpton, and
so they will tell me what Al Sharpton's up to,
almost as a way to say, hey, man, this is
going on, but I swear I think it's horrible. Don't worry.
(27:13):
I ain't blaming you. I don't expect you to blame
me for Bill Clinton or Chuck Schumer. You got nothing
to worry about. So the View strategy is to throw haymakers.
The crazier the content, the more it gets picked up
by Fox News and conservative talkers and gets talked about,
(27:36):
which gets them more samplers. Samplers are people who come
check out your show, even if they don't stay there,
but they add to your overall numbers. This next clip
of Schumer on the View, if it is not used
by Republicans during next year's midterms, they have missed a
golden opportunity. This is one of those At the minute
you hear it, you go ooh, ooh, ooh, you shouldn't
(27:56):
have said that.
Speaker 14 (27:58):
And you know what their attitude is made my money
all by myself. How dare your government take my money
from me? I don't want to pay taxes, or I
built my company with my bare hands. How dare your
government tell me how I should treat my customers, the
land and water that I own, or my employees. They
(28:18):
hope government. Government's a barrier to people, a barrier to
stop them from doing things. They want to destroy it.
We are not letting them.
Speaker 2 (28:26):
Do it, and we're united. This is a very common theme.
You don't accomplish anything on your own. Government deserves all
the credit. This is socialism one oh one. This is
what Orwell was writing about the destruction of the individual.
(28:48):
This is why the church must be destroyed, because the
church competes with the state, the government. The church competes
with the government as the moral compass, as the decision maker,
as the lawmaker, as the personal savior of your life.
(29:12):
The socialist state cannot exist in its purest form if
it is rivaled by organized religion, unless the state is
the religion. So what you're seeing here is yet another
example in a long line of democrats saying you didn't
(29:35):
build that that's not yours.
Speaker 15 (29:38):
If you were successful, somebody along the line gave you
some help. There was a great teacher somewhere in your life.
Somebody helped to create this unbelievable American system that we
had that allowed you to thrive.
Speaker 2 (29:56):
Somebody invested in roads and bridges.
Speaker 15 (29:58):
If you've got a business, you didn't build that. Somebody
else made that happen.
Speaker 2 (30:05):
You know, different people with different life experiences react to
that differently. If all you've ever done is punch a clock,
if you resent the man, whether you're a government employee
or private sector, but you work for some big company
(30:27):
and you feel unappreciated. A lot of people heard that line,
you didn't build that, and they thought to themselves. Some
people it didn't affect, but many people it affected them
in a way. I'll tell you one of the things
(30:47):
that's happened in the news in the last twenty years
that surprises me how many people call it to mind
so quickly, And that was Joe Biden's botched withdrawal from
Afghanistan and the thirteen men and women who were killed
and many more injured in that botch withdrawal. Not because
(31:09):
I didn't expect the families to be hurt by it,
or even active duty military because of the sense of
fraternity of military members. But how many people listed that
as one of their biggest complaints against Joe Biden who
(31:30):
are not active duty, some of them not even members
of the military or a family member of the military.
People that one really affected them, and I know it
should affect you. You have to realize we live in
a different time today. I was talking to Buddy Mine
a couple of days ago about how much less risk
(31:51):
averse people are now than they used to be. And
I don't mean the left, I don't mean young people.
I mean fifty This guy's fifty six. He looks a
lot younger than that. And he said, you know what
I think it is, And I think he's onto something.
When we were growing up and you came through the
trees coming down a black on the side of a mountain,
(32:14):
you didn't think anything of the trees, You didn't wear
a helmet, You just flew down to get to the base.
You're having fun. And then there was TikTok and vine
and all these different different sites, and you saw people
get splattered, and there's you two, and you saw people
get splattered when they did that. And now all of
(32:37):
a sudden, you start thinking about things differently, and you
process it differently. Because thousands of people died on ski
slopes when we were growing up, but we didn't know
about it because it didn't make the evening news. You
only had a couple stories in the evening news. Now
we're scrolling so fast. We didn't know you could make
(32:59):
dogs down. Now, well, that dog better really dance, because
I've seen videos where they do all sorts of things
or cats or horses or anything else. I think that's
how so much media available, so often, so easily. So
those kind of comments like Obama made there to entrepreneurs,
(33:22):
because let me tell you something, if you're an entrepreneur,
folks don't know the risk you go through, the risk
of everything, the favors you have to call in, the
all nighters, getting up early, the government on your back,
a permit for this, and harassing you for that, and
a permit for this, and an inspector for that, and
a tax for this, and a feed for that, and
(33:43):
a fine for that, and to shut you down. Don't
tell me you didn't build that by somebody who never
built anything. Barack Obama never worked for a day in
the private sector, and he's telling you you didn't build it.