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 don't look, Stacy.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
Where Oh god, I mean I contact you?
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Oh Psychoh hos piece Stacy. We broke up two months ago.
Well that doesn't mean we can't still go out. Well
it does. Actually that's what breaking up is.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
You know.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
And if you're not careful, you're gonna lose me. I
lost you two months ago. Are you mental? We broke up?
Get the nut?
Speaker 4 (00:53):
Saw this video?
Speaker 1 (00:55):
I mean I've been seeing a lot of videos anyway.
Speaker 5 (00:59):
Else.
Speaker 4 (01:00):
I was having a hard time not just breaking down,
crying several times a day because you're just watching the
horror happen. Well, you have so many people around you
that either have no idea, don't care, or are pretending
it's not and like you're crazy and you're just a
conspiracy theorist and you're just insane, and you just search too.
Speaker 1 (01:21):
Dramatic and you're gonna calm down.
Speaker 6 (01:22):
You just use.
Speaker 4 (01:36):
You want to help, and there's nothing you can do
because you don't have money. You have billions of dollars
you don't have. I don't have many.
Speaker 1 (01:43):
Dollars that I can spare. Frankly, like truly, But that's.
Speaker 4 (01:48):
The only thing that seems to kind of make a difference.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
And you can't even do that. You can't even do that,
you can only speak. And now we can't even speak.
Speaker 7 (01:58):
So watch and cry it is, I guess you know.
Speaker 4 (02:14):
The worse it gets, it's not like the quieter I
want to get. It's the angrier I get, the louder
I want to be.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
I've just been screaming for so long that I'm not sure.
Speaker 4 (02:26):
Who I'm even talking to anymore, who's left? But still,
what else do you need to see?
Speaker 1 (02:42):
After World War Two, the idea was from the Communists
that women should leave the home, go into higher education,
lead the workforce, not have children, not get married. There's
(03:03):
been a change in our culture beginning in the fifties,
accelerated in the seventies, taken to a level now that
is you see it on full display, and so first
for millennia, the role of women in the household, in
(03:25):
the relationship, the role of the male was to be
the protector and provider. The role of the mother was
to be the child bearer and rearer, and the god
afraid of the keeper of hearth and home. And you know,
(03:47):
you would have the coupling of the male and the female.
As with every species, there would be romance which would
yield to an act, which would yield children. They're all spring,
would be the subject of their care and devotion and training,
and they would grow up to repeat the cycle, just
as every species does. And then there was the idea,
(04:13):
this leftist communist idea, that women will no longer play
that role. How do we get women not to play
a role that God planted in them a desire to play?
How do we get them to do that? First of all,
we humiliate those who play that role, and we uphold
(04:34):
and elevate those who do not play that role. This
is sex and the city. These are freed women. These
are independent women. These are not women under the thumb
of some abusive, drunk, misogynistic, smelly sex demanding thirty seconds.
(05:00):
And he's done, man, violent, drunk, because that's what all
men are, you see, and you don't want that. Women
are better than that, You're better than him. We don't
need men running companies, We don't need men doing everything.
Women can do it, and women don't need men to
(05:23):
provide and protect. Women can be independent, should be independent,
because to play those traditional roles is a sign of
weakness and stupidity. You're not a cow giving birth to
calves because the bull impregnated you and then went off
to cavort with his buddies and watch football games and
(05:45):
swill beer and hunt and have fun while you're at
home with postpartum depression with these kids. You're better than that.
You go to school, you reorder society, You put yourself
in hr and punish such men. So they did, and
so the very natural urging that every member of every
(06:08):
species has to reproduce, which involves a romance and a relationship,
that was stifled. This was the nurture rather than the nature.
It was stifled. In culture, heroes were made of women
who were not womenly, who were not feminine, because that
was weak. Strong women were heralded so much so that
(06:35):
many stay at home moms, many wonderful, beautiful, great moms,
many school teachers, all of these traditional female roles came
to believe that this was the exaltation of their sex.
Women having finally arrived, and so more and more did that.
They went off to college, and they came home from
(06:56):
colleg They didn't live at home anymore. Why would they
they got an apartment in the city and will live
out with their parents. And they sat in that apartment lonely, sad, depressed, anxious,
all alone. But they got a pet, and they had
TV shows, and they were disconnected from their family, who
was at home wishing they were there with them. But
(07:18):
you're out of school. You shouldn't live with your parents
like people do in other countries. You have to be independent.
And so out of that loneliness, they went to the
bars and needing comfort, they had sex with random men,
loads and loads of random men, which had the psychological
scar of making it difficult for them to ever become
(07:42):
a wife, which many of them in time desired to be,
and a mother in a loving, lasting relationship. When you
destroy the family, you destroy the culture. When you destroy
the culture, you destroy the country. Most of what you're
witnessing today the subculture of young blacks and others, for
(08:03):
whom the man is a stud by how many women
will have a child for him, as they say, give
it his name. But he ain't hanging around because he's
got other things to do and he's not working, and
she is. It's not just black culture. It has permeated
our culture it's the decline of our culture. Listening to
(08:24):
the Michael Berry Show podcast, is sexy be sexy? The
very nature of blurring nature is a very subversive act.
The point at which we cannot define what a woman
is the point at which anyone can declare they are
(08:45):
a woman. That's fine. You can declare you're a canary
or a tree or a skyscraper. Find by me. But
you will not compel me to call you that, and
you will not compel me to act as if you
are that. And if you are a man claiming to
be a woman and you intend to walk into a
(09:06):
little girl's dressing room, you're going to get hurt. That's
the natural reaction, paternal reaction of every father and for
that matter, every mama bear. The blurring of sexual roles
in this manner is in and of itself, a subversive
action designed to destroy our country. I know that sounds
(09:29):
like some nineteen fifties John Birch society argument. I don't know.
I hear that because you're supposed to him in hall,
You're supposed to everybody has it. No, it's bull. You
have to paint with broad colors, not pastels, as Ronald
Reagan said, you have to stand for something because these
people will not stop. You cannot give them an inch.
They'll take a mile. You simply can't do it. You
(09:52):
cannot accommodate them. You can tolerate them to the extent
you don't bash them in the head, but you cannot
accommodate them. And make no mistake, they've gone from tolerate
us to we're going to kill you and blow up
your tesla overnight. I do believe that Luigi Mangioni, the
(10:13):
man who killed the United Healthcare CEO, that was not
a one off. He's being celebrated for a reason. They
want violence, they want a civil war. They don't know
what they're going to get when they get it, because
we're the side that's armed and trained. We got the cops,
we got the veterans. They don't. The problem is for
(10:36):
now they're getting to bully little old ladies and nice
people with their cameras. Don't you touch us, don't you
touch us? As they slap you. It's called a cry bully.
They slap you in the face or punch you in
the face and wait on you to respond, and then
they make it go viral. I'm gonna tell you something.
They don't want this thing to turn hot because it
(10:56):
won't be good for them. But the blurring of the
sexual roles, the saying that we don't know what a
woman is. If God says he's a woman, he's a woman.
If he commits a murder, as many of them do,
he wants to go in the women's prison so he
can have sexual with women the whole time, which ameliorates,
you know, some of what makes it difficult about being
in prison. You have no consort. You do now just
(11:20):
say you're a woman. We're just lesbians over here in
the corner. Odd because you look like heterosexual rabbits. So
President Trump was asked what is a woman and why
is it important to understand the difference? He didn't hesitate.
Speaker 8 (11:36):
What is a woman and why is it important that
we understand the difference between better way? Well, it's sort
of easy to answer for me, because a woman is
somebody that.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
Can have a baby.
Speaker 8 (11:45):
Under certain circumstances. She has a quality. A woman is
a person who is much smarter than a man. I've
always found a woman is a person that doesn't give
a man even a chance of success, and a woman's
person that in many cases has been treated very badly
because I think that what happens with this crazy, this
(12:07):
crazy issue of men being able to play in women's
sports is just ridiculous.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
And very unfair to women and very demeaning to women.
So when when Donald Trump says a woman is someone
who's smarter than a man, and they chuckle, it sounds
like pandering. Sounds a lot like pandering. Here's the only question.
Don't listen to what people say, listen to what they do.
(12:34):
If you study Trump's organization through the course of his
professional life, which is almost fifty years, you will see
that he has almost exclusively had women in the top
leadership decision making positions. And I say that as someone
(12:56):
who has as well, and my reasoning has always been
women tend to try harder, they have a chip on
the shoulder. Women also are not going to be having
sex with other people in the office. I mean, it's
very rare that that happens. Whereas a lot of men
in a position of power will end up screw and
have the rest of your staff, and then you've got
(13:17):
a distraction on there. You don't need that. Women will
often try much harder because they have something to prove.
And Trump's top people and even now it's chief of staff,
are women who are fiercely loyal to him. They're not
pretty women at all. They're tough women. And you know,
(13:41):
where do you put your trust? Where do you put
your own dollars with the business you care deeply about.
That's where you know we're saying. Democrats will talk big
and they'll have all white men about diversity. They'll have
all white males when it's their money on the line.
Trump is proposing that anyone who buys a car and
manufactured in America, we'll be able to deduct the interest
(14:05):
payments from their taxes. I'll let you hear it from him,
and then I'm curious what you think.
Speaker 8 (14:11):
And if you build a car in the United States.
And one thing that we just I just spoke with
John Thune about I just spoke to Mike Johnson about Speaker.
We're going to do something that has never been done
in this country before. I'm very proudiced there was my idea.
And so sometimes the simple idea, they say, how'd.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
You think of that one? It's so simple, it's never done.
Speaker 8 (14:32):
If you buy a car in the United States that's
made in the United States, if it's manufactured here.
Speaker 1 (14:38):
When you borrow money, if you borrow.
Speaker 8 (14:40):
Money you have interest payments, We're going to let you
deduct the interest payment for income tax reasons. And I
think that's going to more than pay for itself. I
think people are going to be they've never had a deduction.
You know, deductions are supposed to be for like rich people,
and it's unfair to have that, But rich people are
I think I know more about.
Speaker 1 (14:59):
The ductions and any human being on earth.
Speaker 8 (15:02):
But you know the truth is that people that are
middle income people that buy a car and actually have
to borrow money, they're going to now get an interest
deduction on their car if it's made in the United States.
If it's made someplace else, that won't take place.
Speaker 1 (15:17):
Dave Chappelle had an interesting comment about Trump being a
gangster and winning the election when he said, Hillary Clinton
during the twenty sixteen debates, you know, she was talking
about the tax policies and the policies for the rich,
and he said, yes, it's true. I took advantage of them.
You could have changed them, but you didn't because you
(15:37):
have lots of rich friends. You complain to the common
man about the policies and you kept them in place
for your rich friends. Stop lying. But with regard to
this tax pray, if you buy a car this manufactured
in the United States, this could end. Well. Let's talk
about that.
Speaker 4 (15:57):
He that shows me what it's like to be a
real man.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
I have never met someone so wonderful. I call him
rich the MARKL Barrier for free. The left doesn't want
government interfering in consumer decisions, picking winners and losers in government,
I mean in business, as we have complained about for years.
President Trump shouldn't be saying that you have to buy
(16:22):
an American car to get a tax break. That's not right.
That's giving an advantage to American made cars over foreign
made cars. Oh you mean like when Obama gave a
huge tax break I think it was seventy five hundred
dollars if you bought an electric vehicle rather than a
(16:43):
gas powered vehicle. You mean when government picked winners and losers,
and we didn't even have a standing in America for
electric vehicles at the time because Elon wasn't making them here?
What about that? What about what about when government did that?
Did you have a problem then? Because I don't think
you did, I don't think you did. So. I'm not
(17:08):
in favor of government picking winners and losers, but at
this point I am for the raw, robust exercise of
the power that we all work together to accumulate. In
this president I am tired of Republicans who get into
(17:31):
office and take pride that they don't do anything. I
shan't be like the Democrats. I shan't pick winners and losers.
I will only create the level playing field so they
can continue to destroy us. So we suffered four or
eight years under these people, and now that you're in power,
(17:54):
you're too good to engage. You're just barely better than
the left. The only thing we can say about Republicans
as well, at least they're not Democrats. That's one. You
can't get people to vote. The big shock in twenty
sixteen and twenty twenty four, and frankly twenty twenty because
he won. The big shock was all these people who
(18:14):
shut up to vote, who normally don't vote, working class, disgruntled, frustrated,
left out, fuel left out, forgotten Americans white and black
and Hispanic, and some immigrants and women felt disgruntled. This
country left me behind. This country doesn't even want me anymore.
(18:36):
This country wants to import the labor. This country wants
to pick winners and losers. And I'm a white male
and I didn't have any choice in that. Or I'm
a black guy that doesn't play along with the rules.
I refuse to be a victim. I work for a living.
Make no mistake. There are a lot of disgruntled black
men and women in this country, frustrated over government policy
(18:59):
that rewards victim hood and not hard work. And they know,
they know how much they pay in taxes that goes
to somebody else that may look like them and refuses
to work. It might be their cousin, and they ain't
happy about it. They ain't happy when the President of
the United States, Barack Obama, says, go.
Speaker 9 (19:16):
Get you your cousin Pooky to come and vote, because
they do have a cousin Pooky, and he's a loser,
and it makes them mad because he makes them look bad,
at least they think he does.
Speaker 1 (19:29):
They know who cousin Pooky is. They don't like cousin Pooky.
So these things matter. These things matter. And Trump managed
to get people out to vote, but he got him
out to vote because they believed he would do something,
and now he understands if you promise that, you've got
to deliver it. Well, delivering it means that you're going
(19:51):
to upset some people. There are gonna be some people
who say, yeah, but I mean, I know you, I
know that all that money going to USAID is wasteful,
but my company got some of it. It's wasteful, Yeah, yeah,
but we like getting it. There's a really good podcast
done by Gimblet Media called Crimetown and season two is
(20:15):
about Detroit and it's about Kwame Kilpatrick who was the
mayor there. Let it starts with Coleman Young, who was
the corrupt mayor there, and then Kwame Kilpatrick so impressed
with Coleman Young that he becomes the mayor and then
he was running game really bad. So he gets into
all his trouble and goes to prison. Trump ends up
partning him in twenty twenty one. He ends up campaigning
(20:37):
for Trump in twenty twenty four. So Senegro Big Waste
Sludge Sewerage company was paying bribes to then mayor Kwame
Kilpatrick's father and the guy who was paying in bribes
a senior vice president there. It was a big deal.
(20:58):
It was a multi billion dollar deal de Troit, big City.
It's a ten year deal. He was two point five
billion dollars. So he's paying bribes to Quameen Kopatrick's father
so that he can get this massive contract for his company.
Of course he's going to make a lot of money
out of it. And so he's being interviewed during the
(21:18):
podcast years later and he breaks into tears. I just
why did you pay bribes to the mayor's father to
get a contract for billions of dollars? Which is a
criminal act. You're committing a criminal act. I just love
my employees. Wait, you're crying now over what do have
(21:47):
to forgive me? I did love my employees, and I
didn't want to not get the contract and then they
might lose their jobs and so and so you paid
a bribe. Do you realize that some other company, their
employees had to lose their jobs because their boss wasn't
(22:09):
willing to pay a bribe. And we're supposed to think
you love your employees more than they do because you
were willing to pay a bribe. People will justify the
craziest things. You're on the hook for paying a bribe.
You are what's wrong, fella? And your answer is, I know,
(22:30):
I just love my employees so much. Really, you loved
your employees so much you paid a bribe. Well, by
that measure, we will never ever root corruption out of
public contracting because somebody's gonna love their employees more than
the next guy, and he's gonna pay a bribe. If
(22:52):
your competition knew you were paying bribes, maybe they would
have shown that they loved their customer their employees more
than you love your employees, and they would have paid
a bribe. And before you know it, we will have
devolved into a third world country, which it's Detroit. I
under saying, that's not a big leap. This is how
you end up with wasting corruption. We like to think
(23:14):
that people who are doing bad things are all democrats.
We like to think that they all have a horn
coming out of their heads so you can see them.
Sometimes they go to the same country club we do,
maybe the same church. Maybe they live on the same block.
Maybe they're big fans of Trump. But they got to
(23:36):
do business, you know, So I got to pay a
bribe to keep them at Detroit waste water contract in line.
So I will you know, we've got to reward principle
over selling out. I'm all for profit, compete fairly, be better,
(23:58):
do better. That's the American way. I got to tell you.
Trump is bringing back the American way. It feels good.
These are the good old days. You realize that, folks,
these are the good old days. I'm not sure what
your question was, Michael Berris. I lost the plot somewhere,
you did. The biggest political issue in America this week
(24:18):
is getting very little attention from the general public. But
there are clever, crafty, wily, evil, conniving people working to
ensure that America is attacked from within. Democrats are trying
(24:41):
to redraw the districts in Wisconsin to add two House seats,
and in order to do that they need the Wisconsin
Supreme Court. So their election tomorrow will make all the
difference because the judge who will be a contributor to
(25:02):
this decision, it is very clear because they want to
take back the House. We have a razor thin majority
in the House. Without that race within majority, we don't
get all these things done that we can. They will,
they will choose the committee chairman, they will make all
the decisions. It's all or nothing. If you have a
one vote majority, it is all or nothing. So here
(25:25):
is Elon Musk. This is going to be five oh
two Ramon talking about why this race is important. He
showed up this weekend with a cheesehead on. I think
he's there at Donald Trump Trump's direction, and he is
putting money into this race. This is a very important race.
If we don't win this race, we very likely lose
the House in next November. And when you lose the
(25:50):
House next November, President Trump's last two years he'll be
a lame duck. And that's that's going to be a
huge shock for many folks.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
You're still involved in politics, you're big in the election
obviously in Pennsylvania, and now I guess you're in the
Wisconsin Supreme Court race.
Speaker 1 (26:08):
Why plug in?
Speaker 10 (26:10):
Well, the Democrats are trying to redraw the districts in
Wisconsin and we're trying to stop that. The Democrats from
jerrymandering Wisconsin to remove to House seats.
Speaker 1 (26:21):
That's what this whole.
Speaker 10 (26:24):
Supreme Court justice case is about. So I really want
to emphasize people out there, if you're.
Speaker 1 (26:30):
In Wisconsin, gotten and vote.
Speaker 10 (26:32):
You can do early voting for the Supreme Court if
you have prince and family in Wisconsin, please urge them
to vote for Bradchennal. If we don't, we could lose
control of the House and all of the government reforms
could be shut down.
Speaker 1 (26:44):
Before you think that it's a conspiracy theory, and well
I've heard this before. Listen to Hakem Jeffreys. Who would
become Speaker of the House should the Democrats take back
control in Wisconsin.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
That's a fifty to fifty race, because we know Wisconsin's
a fifty to fifty state. Yeah, and we have a
strong Democratic candidate. Whoever wins is going to determine who
has the majority in the Wisconsin Supreme Court. Why is
that important Because there are gerrymandered congressional lines right now
(27:17):
in Wisconsin. Wisconsin's the fifty to fifty state, as I mentioned,
but there are six Republicans and only two Democrats out
of an eight person delegation. Because the lines are broken,
and as soon as possible, we need to be able
to revisit that.
Speaker 1 (27:34):
And have fair lines.
Speaker 2 (27:35):
The only way for that to be even a significant
possibility is if you have an enlightened Supreme Court, And
so you know, I think that's an incredibly important race
in Wisconsin. That's a fifty to fifty race.
Speaker 1 (27:54):
It's important. It's the kind of things you don't pay
attention to. Who paid attention to Who the Secretary of
State of the State of Florida was in two thousand.
I'll bet you twenty five percent of you could tell
me it's Catherine Harris right now without even looking it up,
because she turned out to be the most pivotal person
(28:15):
in that election that year. It's crazy. Who would have
guessed the Secretary of State in Florida, like Texas, is
now appointed by the governor, nominated and confirmed, I believe,
or maybe just traight up appointed. I'm not sure, but
at that time that person was popularly elected. If Democrats
had won that election, and who cares who the Secretary
(28:36):
of State of Florida is, right, If Democrats had won
that election, that would have been a Democrat sitting in
the secretary of State's office for that state, and Gore
would have won that state and therefore the White House,
and it wouldn't have gone to the Supreme Court, and
Gore would have been president instead of George W. Bush.
I think Bush was an utter failure. George W. Bush
was an utter failure. Very disappointing for me. I worked
(28:59):
hard to get him elected of the country for him,
very disappointed. But you know, his war buddy's got a
lot of money, so I guess there's something to be
said for that. Let me close. Do I have enough
time three and a half? Yes? No, I don't have
enough time for all of them. Jasmine Crockett is she's
taken on this hood rat personality, and she said that
Byron Donald's, a black congressman from Florida, is whitewashed. And
(29:22):
she said he is her skin folk, not ken folk,
because he doesn't he doesn't act black enough like she does.
And I'll close the show with a professor from Columbia
who's a black fellow named John McWorter. He was on
Bill Maher's show, and his description of what she's up
to see. Black people can see game. They can see
(29:42):
a black hustler better than white people because they don't
have the guilt of oh, I can call her a
hood rat. They don't have to worry about that. They
can just be honest and they've seen these type of
hustlers in their community. Anyway. His name is John mcwater
This was on Bill Mahers Show.
Speaker 6 (29:56):
Here are the thing questions from the people. What did
the p I don't think of Democratic Congresswoman Jasmine Crockett
calling Texas governor Okay, she's from Texas. The governor Greg Abbott,
who was paralyzed and uses a wheelchair, she called them
governor hot wheels.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
I mean, what do you think.
Speaker 5 (30:22):
Congressperson Crockett is part of the new trend where informality
is okay, where formality used to range okay, fine, that's
been going on since the sixties. So her routine is
that she wants to bring a little bit of what
I might quaintly call the ghetto cat fight into these spaces.
(30:43):
I get it, you know, bring a blaxploitation movie or
something into Congress. Great working, but you do not make
fun of the fact that somebody lives their life in wheelcare.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
That doesn't do it.
Speaker 5 (31:01):
It's two things that being black and fabulous gives her
a pass on that. Then she's got a really unfortunate
sense of what black is.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
Well, what do you think breaking in?
Speaker 3 (31:12):
I mean, I think this is just an example of
when they go low, we go lower, and the Democratic
Party is going to lose if they try to use
kind of maga world tactics back at them. I think
that if the Democrats want to succeed in the future,
they need to be the party that is normal, that
are stand up people that do not take the cheap
shots back.
Speaker 1 (31:36):
I can let that upset about it.
Speaker 6 (31:41):
Really not, you know why, because I'm a big fan
of Family Guy and they.
Speaker 1 (31:45):
Have I'm gonna why.
Speaker 8 (31:50):
Every week, I mean, one of.
Speaker 6 (31:52):
The characters, Joe the cop, is in a wheelchair, and
every week there's twenty jokes about it be in a
wheelchair and nobody died, and like, I just think everybody
has to like lighten up a little. Yeah, it's terrible
to be in a wheelchair, but you know, it's not
like it's news to him. And I don't know.
Speaker 5 (32:12):
I'm a Family Guy. I've seen every episode. But that
wasn't a cartoon. This is this is real life. And
she was saying it with dismissive hostility as opposed to
the cartoonist. We can get away with it because we're drawn.
Jasmine Crockett is not drawn, and neither is Abbot.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
I see a distinction. Although I see you mean thank
you and good night.