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April 1, 2025 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Varry Show is on the air. I realize it's

(00:26):
a recipe for disaster to talk about tariffs two days
in a row. I get it, I do. I understand
that you've had a hard day at work. If you're
listening as you drive home right now, I get it.
You've had a hard day at work, hard day with
the kids. Let's go a little lighter fair. Maybe you
know the cat fight that is Congress, and you know

(00:48):
jazz mcer. I get all that, but this is very important.
So please bear with me for a moment. And I
admit this is dry, but my apologies. This is a
bit dry, But I'm going to ask you to indulge
me and give me your attention for a moment. Let's
step back. The tariffs go into effect tomorrow presents calling
it Liberation Day for America. Let's step back for a moment,

(01:10):
and let's talk in broad generalities about things that we
take for granted but don't often say. America has changed
in my fifty four years of life. America's industrial output
has changed dramatically. A number of industries that once existed

(01:30):
in the United States do not exist here any longer,
they are either greatly reduced or in some cases, they're
no longer here. We all know this. It bothers us,
but we have learned to process it, to make excuses
to deflect from it. We only manufacture high end goods

(01:55):
for airlines and military. We are not in the cheap
stuff anymore. We leave that to China and South Korea
and India. Okay, but that's not what's happening any longer.
What's happening is we have become at most an assembly
yard for foreign components. So I have folks that work

(02:20):
in the C suites and that make millions of dollars
per year. Who would tell me this is okay, Michael,
and I get it. My dad worked at a chemical plant.
I'm all for the working man. I think you have
problems in a society when a guy can't graduate high
school and go to work and make enough money to
buy a little house in at least one car, and

(02:43):
put clothes on his kids back and eat a square
meal every night at dinner. Okay, If you can't do that,
the American dream is lost because there are going to
be the outliers. The entrepreneur of this or that. But
if you don't have a place for your guy that
didn't take to school and doesn't really know what he
wants to do, and he knows what he wants to do.

(03:05):
He wants to hunt and fish on the weekends, want's
go to a ballgame, wants drink beerard wants to watch
ball games. It's not wrong with that, but he's got
to figure out a way to finance this life. He's
found a girl, he's married her, they start having kids,
and it's this is the cycle, right this, This is
the American the American dream, even if it's not dream
like as often as we'd hoped it would, because your

(03:25):
back hurts, your nee hurts, and it's just not very
glamorous and not getting get up tomorrow and be there
to everyally want to stay up late and watch this game.
Well they start these games so late. But all that
being said, so so what is what are we to
do when those jobs have gone away? And what are
we to do when America's manufacturing has changed so dramatically,

(03:48):
And couple that with the fact that a lot of
these companies, like what Disney did in Florida, have pushed
out their American educated, American born and raised, good enough
to fight our wars, but not good enough to work
in our plans where they've imported the workforce, which has
hollowed out generations of Americans and their opportunities. So now

(04:13):
we have a lot of young people, and I'm gonna
call young all the way up to forty. I'm fifty four,
but they've been living this life where they're just kind
of floundering, some of them. We've got a lot of
young people who have never really worked post high school,
have never really had a job. They might have started

(04:34):
as a waiter over here, or did someone did a
little retail job at the mall. They've never really had
a job, and they have no prospects of a job.
They don't know what it's like to enter the workforce.
And the longer you do that, the more disconnected you
become from industry standards and expected behaviors. They've got a
resume that they go, well, there's nothing really on this resume.
I don't have any life experiences, And what's the point

(04:56):
of submitting a resume. It's going to those big national
resume services. It's just going to fill in with everybody else.
And they don't want to do a job like that
because it's not very fulfilling. So we got real problems
in this country, and nobody seems to want to do
anything about it. It's easier to just dismiss it and

(05:17):
move on. But these are transformative changes in our nation
that leave us with a very different nation. If you
were to do a serious analysis instead of like I do,
offhandedly dismissing them as nuts, if you were to do
a serious analysis of every white male that is digging

(05:38):
into a cyber truck swastikas and you were how did
you end up here? You know, I always think about
that when you see somebody accused of a terrible crime.
How'd you end up here? Let's let's rewind. You know
the rewind sound. You have to rewind sound, And you know,
I grew up with is it live or is it memorys?

(05:59):
We had tape recorders, and that rewind sound was very
common when you're trying to find that right spot on
the cassette because unlike That's why the CD was a
big deal, because you just push ahead and you go,
you go from song to one, to song two to
song three. But I grew up on the cassette tape
where you had to rewind it and try to get
to the to the beginning of the song. Anyway, you
just you do the rewind of how that person ended

(06:23):
up on the journey, and you'll note along the way
some signposts, Hey, this guy's off track. He's wandering off.
You know, if you ever go on a trail ride
and there's a group of you on horses, you notice
the guy's horse is starting to wander like you got
one of your kids on a horse, and that horse
is starting to wander off, and you go, we got
to get that horse back on track because it'll get

(06:45):
so far out there we can't find it, we can't
bring it back. Well, you start looking at lives and
you see that, Well, let's start looking at our nation
and where it all went wrong. We've got look, if
I'm doing great, Ramon's doing great. There there are lots

(07:05):
of people doing great, but there are lots of people
not doing great. And I'm not for guaranteed results. I
don't believe the government should guarantee your results. But I'm
telling you that the path we are on right now
is the Scandinavian model, where you don't make, you don't

(07:25):
manufacture anything. You everyone has clean nails, you have guaranteed results,
you have socialism, and you are decaying from within. And
that's a problem because now you end up with vast

(07:48):
swaths of society who are not part of the overall,
cohesive whole. They're not contributors, they're not participants, they're not invested.
And what Trump is trying to do, for better or
for worse, Okay, for better or for worse, we can
argue over it. He's trying to do something about it.

Speaker 2 (08:10):
Now.

Speaker 1 (08:10):
I don't want to get corny, but dang it, that
should mean something.

Speaker 3 (08:15):
What about contraception is that's just not an option for you?

Speaker 1 (08:18):
I was young ambitions, Michael Barry. I was just young
and ambitious and I love women. Hey, you came out
no man for loving women. You remember the videos and
pictures of the emaciated hostages that were released by hamas
the ones they didn't slaughter, their bodies were broken and

(08:39):
starved by those savages. Leslie Stall of sixty Minutes sat
down with one of those hostages, and this is what
she said.

Speaker 4 (08:53):
The terrorists became very mean and very cruel and violent,
more so much more so. They were beating me and
starving me.

Speaker 1 (09:02):
Do you think they starved you or they just didn't
have food.

Speaker 4 (09:06):
No, I think they starved me, and they would often
eat in front of me and not offer me food.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
Millions of dollars food and aid were sent to Gaza
during the war. Hamas would seize the aid and keep
what they wanted and they would sell that, which they
was the abundance. They would sell that to buy more weapons,
So we were effectively funding their war effort. Maybe Leslie

(09:38):
Stall couldn't verify this man was being starved. It is
sixty minutes, after all, they can't report on unverified accusation.

Speaker 5 (09:47):
Jim walk out of a store and he's walking with
a ice cream and the question the media asked him,
what kind of ice cream? What flavor ice cream do
you have? And he's in the midst of a scandal.
He's taking come on, of course he is. It's the biggest,
second biggest scandal. So the biggest scandal was when they

(10:08):
spied to my campaign. They spied on my campaign.

Speaker 3 (10:11):
There's no real evidence of that, of.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
Course there is. It's all over the place. Leslie So
spied to my campaign and they get caught. Can I
say something?

Speaker 2 (10:20):
You know this is sixty minutes, and we can't put
on things we can't.

Speaker 5 (10:25):
Verify it on because it's bad for Biden. We can't
things we can't very Leslie, they spy to my campaign,
it's fine, totally verified. It's been Just go down and
get the papers. They spied to my campaign. They got caught, No,
and then they went much further than that, and they
got caught. And you will see that, Leslie, and you
know that, but you just don't want.

Speaker 6 (10:45):
To know all.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
As a matter of fact, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
You know when you see a couple argue and they're
arguing over she doesn't like the parking place that that
he chose, or how he parts, or he doesn't like
something she did, and they're arguing over what was said
or done, and you realize that what they're really arguing

(11:12):
over is he has a mistress and he wants to
leave his wife for the mistress and he can't figure
out how to make that happen. Or she's done with
him and she doesn't want to be with him anymore,
but she can't figure out how to separate. That's the
real issue, and you really just want to get down
to the real issue. The real issue here is this

(11:32):
is not about what they can verify on what they
can It's a very simple thing. Do you believe that
ideas matter and do you trust an audience to discern
what is and isn't truth? Or do you believe that

(11:53):
people are inherently stupid and that they need their overseers
to determine what is and isn't truth and feed it
to them or prevent them from knowing about it. That
is the very simple but profoundly fundamental difference. White liberals
believe that they are better than you, the commoner, that

(12:19):
you vote for Trump because you're dumb, and you vote
for him because of jingoism and silly slogans and needing
a strong man, and they are much much wiser, more
sophisticated than you, and they know better than you, and
so they are the gatekeepers of information. Donald Trump cannot

(12:42):
state an opinion on the show because he can't prove
that point, and they're not any even if he could,
they're not going to allow that on there because people
can't Their ears are two. They'll hear it and then
they'll believe it, and we can't have that happen. Y'all
can't believe that I'm Leslie Stall. Y'all can't believe that
I'm the expert here. There is always the elevated platform

(13:03):
for the fauci the Leslie Stall, the social media company,
the Bill Gates. They know things you don't know. They're
smarter than you, and you're kind of like cattle. There
is a caste system for the white liberal in America,
make no mistake about that. They are the brahmins, and

(13:27):
you are the untouchable. You do the heavy lifting, you fight,
the wars, you handle the policing and the little stuff
they don't want to get their nails dirty with. And frankly,
they'd rather input for a lot of it. They'd rather
import it from Mexico because they don't like you doing it,

(13:50):
because you complain and you expect certain things, and they
don't like you around. They'd rather the people who are
here illegally, who are gared to death at all times,
are being deported. They'd rather they come here because they're
more compliant, and the white liberal likes a compliant manservant.

(14:12):
You will try to get up with you, right. You
watch pretty women and think that you know you get
to go back in there and say, you know, how
about this? And They don't want that. They want you
to know your place. If you listen carefully and you
watch the actions of white liberals, what you are witnessing
is a revolt from the caste system that they want

(14:35):
to impose upon you, and their desire to crack the
whip and reimpose the social structure. This is why you
were not allowed to post on Facebook your actual life
experiences with the COVID shot. This is why doctors see.

(14:56):
Doctors are supposed to know better. You're supposed to be
part of the professional and you're supposed to toe the
line a conventional wisdom. This shot is good. They must
all take it. That's why McCullough. When McCullough first came out,
he was the first guy with a national following that
I saw who said, hey, we need a hold on this.

(15:17):
That the protocols are not in we didn't do the
proper testing. I'm worried, I'm seeing bad things. And then
you started seeing all these doctors out there. We had Stella,
Emmanuel and Huston, we had doctor Mary Tally, Boden and Hustor.
We started seeing more and more doctors around the country
and they were saying, I'm very concerned. I'm seeing these

(15:40):
horrible rashes. We have video of people going into cardiac arrest.
We have teenagers who are collapsing, who are athletes who
are just collapsing after they take this test, I mean
after they take this shot. But the experts they know,
you don't know, they know, Fauci said. The media said,
so if you tried to tell something on Facebook, you
weren't allowed to because you're not allowed to have opinions.

(16:02):
You are the lower cast. Know your place. Houston as
a man flabbit, Michael Berry, Houston as a meth labit.
I'm just trying to bring you know, there's songs you go,
it's this good song. Turn it up a little bit.
There songs. It's just pretty good.

Speaker 4 (16:24):
Their songs go.

Speaker 1 (16:26):
That's one of my favorite songs. How many are in
your favorites? You know this would be in my top
one hundred. And that's saying something because Skinner's probably got ten,
Conway's got seven. Elvis isn't gonna have that many of
my all time favorites because Elvis is more like suspicious

(16:48):
Minds and his My Way. You never listen to Frank
Sinatra's My Way again. If you hear Elvis's my way
and something. I mean his version of something is. I mean, okay,
I'm gonna have it lead ten Elvis's. But for as
big as Elvis fan as I am, Elvis doesn't have
an outsized influence on the top one hundred because it's

(17:08):
not about individual songs. It's about the body of work.
Crying in the chapel. It's not gonna be one of
my one hundred favorite songs, but it's just glorious.

Speaker 7 (17:18):
I mean it.

Speaker 1 (17:21):
I can listen to Elvis for four hours straight now
or and ever. There's just so many wise men say
only fools for Oh, I mean, I can't help falling
in love with you. Just amazing. Anyway, that song right there,
Songs of the Sea and the idea of coming into

(17:42):
port in that lifestyle. Unless you're in the merchant Marines today,
people don't understand that that was for literally centuries, that
was the equivalent of everything Elon is doing with Space
and every thing we're doing with Ai and everything we're doing.

(18:03):
The idea of taking to the sea and living port
to port and the sexual escapades and the bars and
the fights and the all of that. That was lore, man,
That was lore and that song captures that, which I

(18:23):
think is pretty darn cool. It also makes you feel
very much for this woman who, whiles she's her beauty
is being extolled, you know, she's she's this long suffering
woman who you got to feel for. All right, So
here we are. Let there's some audio I want to

(18:44):
get to her. And let's let's turn through some audio.
There's there's some things I've been willing to get to
that I'd like to do. Now. The the Kid Rock
at the White House moment. So President Trump signed in
an executive order to combat ticket scalping, and he has
Kid Rock come and he looks like he's in one

(19:05):
of the Elvis you know, Nudy suits. Nudy was the
guy that made those suits and designed them, and it
looks like like the love child of Elvis and Evil Knievel.
It's a red suit with wings on the chest and
it's got red, white and blue stars all over. It's
I mean, I was jealous. It's awesome. And so President
Trump had this exchange with Peter Deucy and Trump really

(19:25):
likes Doucey. You can tell. Did Biden do news offenses
like this feeder?

Speaker 2 (19:31):
I don't think he was ever standing nice to somebody
who looked like they were about to be shot out
of a candidate.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
You know, we give Scott Jennings a lot of credit
on the show, and he deserves it. But Peter Doocy
deserves a lot of credit for having been consistently, for years,
consistently a beak and of hope, asking tough questions. I
don't know why the Biden administration kept let him continue

(20:05):
to come to events. I mean, I mean, because he
embarrassed him every day. I mean, he just embarrassed them
every day with what he did with tough questions, and
they'd have been better off I think to uh, they'd
been better off to just bite the bullet and go,
you're not coming in. Oh, this is terrible freedom of speech. Nope,

(20:28):
we decided not to the media wouldn't have The media
wouldn't have given him any trouble. The media would have
probably said it was the right thing to do. It's
you know, that's what they would have done. So we'll
file this one under remember the nice people Joe Biden
brought here without any vetting. This is a Houston story.
An Afghan man murders a fellow Afghan man who ran

(20:50):
a business in Southwest Houston helping Afghanis obtain refugee status.
What happened was story goes investigators say that but he
wanted he wanted to get his status to stay here,
and he didn't think the guy he didn't like that
he wasn't getting a status update fast enough or results
fast enough, so he just kills the guy. Well, I

(21:12):
don't think that's really the best way to get your
refugee status. Granted, I mean, if we were making a
list of things you could do to make it more
likely you could stay here, you could do what all
of them do and claim that you helped the Americans
while we were there fighting their civil war. That I
you know, I was an aide, I was a translator.
I was of this, I was of that. See, this

(21:33):
is the problem when you go occupy other countries. This
happened with I Rock, it was happen with Afghanistan. You
go occupy these other countries to fight their wars, and
then at the end you leave and the soldiers are like, hey,
that guy really helped me and it's a compelling story.
So now you're bringing people here, Well, guess what some
of those guys are scoundrels. Some of them may have

(21:56):
helped our soldiers because they got paid. Some of them
may have helped our soldiers because they were double agents.
Some of them may have helped our soldiers because they
saw that as their ticket to come here. But they're
pedophiles and rapists and murderers, but they also helped our soldiers. Well, okay,
but now you create this complicated scenario where we're bringing

(22:19):
all these people into this country and then some of them,
as this story will tell, are monsters. We don't need
more Afghans and Iraqis and other people who help us
because we're in there so well, we need to get
out of the civil wars.

Speaker 8 (22:32):
Incredibly disturbing details here what investigators.

Speaker 3 (22:35):
Are sharing with us this morning. And so they have
identified the suspect in this.

Speaker 8 (22:39):
Case as Masioula Sahil, who investigators say actually admitted to
carrying out that brutal stabbing attack.

Speaker 3 (22:48):
And so the reason why they say that he did this.

Speaker 8 (22:50):
Is because that he was upset it was taking too
long for his refugee status to be approved and so
he did appear. The suspect did in probable cause court overnight.
This is our first look at that suspect in court
and so he is charged with murder this morning, and
he had an interpreter in court with him, and his
bond was eventually set at seven hundred and fifty thousand dollars.

(23:11):
So the allection attack happened inside of Abdul Niazzi's office
there on Harwin where he actually ran a business helping
Afghan refugees.

Speaker 3 (23:20):
And so investigators say that there.

Speaker 8 (23:22):
Is video showing the suspects Sahil going in and out
of that office building on Wednesday, and they also say
that video captured while he was leaving, it appears that
he has blood on his clothes. Investigators also say the
suspect actually admitted to getting into an argument with the
victim and then went out to his car, got a
knife and then threatened the victim before stabbing him about

(23:44):
twenty times all over his body.

Speaker 3 (23:47):
Now, Niazi, the victim came.

Speaker 8 (23:49):
To Houston after working with the US government in Afghanistan,
and he actually lost both of his legs because of
a suicide bomb attack. Now in court overnight, we heard
that investigators actually spoke to some of the victims' family
members who say that the suspect contacted them after the stabbing.

Speaker 1 (24:08):
They explained that this defendant that they know.

Speaker 4 (24:12):
Is another refugee from Afghanistan, had called one of the
cousins and apologized.

Speaker 1 (24:17):
To him over the follow for harding and victim.

Speaker 8 (24:22):
Pretty unbelievable details there that we learned overnight, and so
we also have learned more about the victim, Nyazzi. He
actually leaves behind four children who are under the ages
of ten years old, and he also was married and
leaves behind a wife.

Speaker 7 (24:37):
I really believe that the worst thing that ever happened
to America was slavery Michael Barry Show, and the best
thing that ever happened to slavery was America and the
Republican Party.

Speaker 6 (24:49):
Listening.

Speaker 1 (24:50):
This is a relationship, you and me. There's give and
takee Okay, I'll make you a deal. If you will
commit to me to go home tonight and listen to
one Jeffrey Lynn song electric Light Orchestra ELO. He is
the band. You will commit to me that you will
go home and do your homework and listen to one
ELLO song, then I will not spend this entire segment

(25:12):
talking about ELO, because I know that's not why you
tuned in. Because I love Ylo. Barack Obama referred to dreamers.
These are illegal aliens who came here for a better life.
You know why, it's a better life here because our
country has structure, because we have the rule of law,

(25:35):
because we don't have a lawless, lazy, criminal culture. Culture matters.
When people come to this country and do not buy
into the culture, then you are a purely transactional relationship
based on the idea that, well, people will come here

(25:57):
and just have more money. And I'm going to tell
you this is where it gets uncomfortable for people. People
don't want to admit that there are bankrupt cultures and
that there are prosperous cultures. There's a reason that parts
of the world are extremely poor, and that no matter

(26:17):
how much aid you pour in there, you don't see
significant results. You have to change the culture. And there
are people who flee these countries and come to this
country and thrive here. But they couldn't have They could
not have thrived in the country from which they came.
And the reason is because there was not the opportunity.

(26:39):
There was not the fairness, there was not the the
the commercial culture. There are countries around the world where
if you try to do business there and ask a
businessman who's had to try to do business in some
of these countries. They make it so difficult. And I'm
just not talking about the country the government. There are

(27:00):
cultures of people who come to this country and if
you've ever engaged in a commercial transaction with them, at
the end of the transaction, you will give them your
profit to get out of this deal and move on
and never deal with them again. And there are a
lot of people who say that, and they'll say, I'm
never dealing with somebody from that country ever again, because

(27:23):
if they're from that country, they're a scam artist or
that country. If if they're from that country, they're renegotiating
the deal down to the last bit. If they're from
that country, they'll make a promise to get your deal
and then they'll they'll break it. If they're from that country,
they will, you'll set a closing date, you'll set up,
you agree on a price, and set a closing date,

(27:44):
and then they won't show up. And you're sitting there
all day and they're not at the closing not answering,
and they did it to renegotiate the deal. And turns
out that that guy, that's what he does, or they
make statements as fact that are lies. They provide financial
statements that are fraudulent. People who've done business with these

(28:05):
cultures know exactly what I'm talking about, and white liberals
don't want you to talk about that. It's very upsetting.
But if that is my, as the left would say,
lived experience, because I've done business with a lot of
different cultures, If that is my lived experience, our lived
experience is supposed to be important, right, Or is that

(28:25):
only a dude that wants to cut off his dong,
it's only a girl who wants to grow one, Or
that's dude doesn't want to cut off his dong but
dresses a girl and going to the girls. His lived
experience is more important than mine because I think if
I've got a skill set, it is my observational ability,

(28:46):
my ability to notice trends and patterns in people based
on however, whatever cross section you cut of them, age, nationality.
I think that's what I do. That's what I enjoyed doing.
It's a hobby of mine. Study people who they are,

(29:07):
how they got there, what they do, why they do
that is that typical of other people who are similarly situated.
If we're talking about people from northern Sweden. Is that
how the people of northern Sweden would typically act in
that case? Does he do the job that's typical of
that region. Does he have the same politics as people
from that region. That's interesting stuff to me. So next

(29:31):
is a story out of Rochester, and there was an
update on this. It happened earlier today, but I saw
it as a headline. I didn't get to it. It's
in Rochester. We have an affiliate in Rochester, upstate New York.
Rochester is one of those stories. It's one of the
great American cities that just absolutely collapsed. You had Eastman

(29:57):
Kodak there, you had medical, had industrial, you had culture,
you had university, and you see these cities that were
drained of part of their life. There's still reasons to
live and work in Rochester, but it was once a burgeoning, booming,

(30:17):
the thriving city, and a lot of that's going away.
But what's happened here that we're going to talk about now.
After twelve officers provided emergency backup on a traffic stop
by border patrol, the mayor and the police chief are

(30:39):
saying that the officers violated the city's sanctuary city laws.
The union representing the POPO are saying, yeah, you need
to be focused on keeping the city safe, not going
after officers for assisting federal officers who needed help.

Speaker 2 (30:56):
It happened early Monday evening near here Whitney Street off
Lyle Avenue on the city's west side.

Speaker 9 (31:04):
The Rochester Police Department received an emergency rist for backup
at the scene of a traffic stop.

Speaker 2 (31:11):
A request from Border Patrol officers who had stopped a van.
Chief David Smith says when a police supervisor arrived, he
canceled the emergency response based on what he.

Speaker 6 (31:21):
Saw from watching the body worn camera footage. What is
concerning to me is, despite the fact that we were called,
we went light's ensiren, I see in the video a
total lack of urgency on the part of multiple Border
Patrol officers at the scene.

Speaker 2 (31:38):
Smith says Border Patrol should have initiated contact with those
in the car, but instead it was RPD. The mayor
says city officers acted outside their scope.

Speaker 9 (31:48):
The officers on the scene were verbally directed to occupants
to get out of the vehicle, and this is against
our policy.

Speaker 2 (32:00):
Rochester Sanctuary City Resolution was passed in nineteen eighty six
and was later reaffirmed in twenty seventeen that an rpd's
General Order five h two prohibits RPD from enforcing federal
immigration law, but allows for certain levels of assistance only
to ensure the safety of those involved.

Speaker 6 (32:19):
We are not to be handcuffing subjects, we are not
to be doing pet frisks on subjects, and we are
absolutely not going to be detaining them or putting them
into our cars.

Speaker 2 (32:30):
The circumstances surrounding why the van and its estimated eight
people were stopped remain unclear, but city leaders say RPD
should not have helped as they did. Mayoral candidate Mary
Lupian says she has seen the video, which she says
shows more than eight RPD officers threatening immigrant construction workers
inside the van, at one point threatening to break the

(32:52):
car's windows.

Speaker 6 (32:53):
The only time we will ever take any tape of
type of law enforcement action is for officer safety issues
or exigent circumstances.

Speaker 2 (33:02):
In a statement, the Rochester Police Locust Club called the
mayor's statements a complete overreaction, defending the actions of the officers,
saying quote, the city's decision makers would be better served
to focus on stemming the violence that plagues Rochester, rather
than projecting their anger over national policies onto Locust Club members.

Speaker 1 (33:23):
End quote,
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