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April 3, 2025 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Very show is on the air. Julianne, yes, So

(00:33):
what was that moment you were up on the top
of the piano at the school singing Don't It make
your brown eyes blue?

Speaker 2 (00:39):
And well, he says, that's the moment he knew. Fast
forward twenty something years he went off to college.

Speaker 3 (00:50):
I did the same, and then I married not the
right person for me. So then we re met by
an e accidental email twenty years later and we've been
married for twenty one years, happily ever after. But we
knew when we we met. We went and met each
other at Gillian's for a drink, just on a Sunday

(01:14):
afternoon after the first couple of emails, and we both
left and called our best friends.

Speaker 4 (01:20):
And said, well, we're going to get married.

Speaker 3 (01:22):
And they said we might want to have a second date,
and we said we didn't need one, and we've been
happily married. We were engaged in six weeks and then
our parents really all wanted us to have a big wedding,
so we would have just gotten married, but we did
the whole big wedding thing and it was a.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
Lot of fun, so that time he saw you on
the piano.

Speaker 3 (01:44):
What grade were we all in, Oh, gosh, I think
that was our junior year of high school. And then
he just he never We were friends and he ran
in our friend group, and he just was shy and
just never asked me out. And I knew I had
a crush on him, but and he had a crush
for me. But we didn't ask boys out that in

(02:06):
those days. You just didn't do it. It was fordidn't.

Speaker 4 (02:10):
In my household.

Speaker 3 (02:13):
Anyway, there you go. And uh, but I always knew
and then that, you know, I figured he'd gotten married
and had a family, and he never did, and I did,
I had. I have two wonderful daughters, and uh, he
just loves some like their own and had done everything
in the world for them. And he's an incredible person.

(02:35):
And I knew the minute that I met him again
and that he was always the one I should have married.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
Is their father involved in their life now?

Speaker 4 (02:47):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (02:48):
But not but not growing up? But now but not
growing up?

Speaker 1 (02:53):
You mean after you got married he got more involved
or right?

Speaker 4 (02:58):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (03:01):
Well, you say he loves them like they are his own,
and in a sense they are the idea of biological
birth and what it means and all of that. Sometimes
folks will say to me that, you know they married
this woman and you know they have these step children,
And I'll say, is their fathers still in a lot
in their life? No, he died, Well, then you're the dad.

(03:23):
I don't know why we or the other thing people
will say to me, these are my adopted children. What
a freaky thing to say. I've never understood why people
say that. So when I meet the child, I don't
actually shake their hand. I just get close because with
adopted children there's some other I don't know. What do
you do? What does that mean? That is your child?

(03:44):
What does it mean for someone to be your child?
It means that you love them, and they love you,
not all the time. They don't always love you because
you have to be the parent. It means that you
provide for them, You care for them, You would kill
for them, you would protect them, You teach them, you
guide them, You pro oritized him. Why is there a
hyphenation when someone is your child? If they are your child,

(04:08):
I don't know if it's a brag factor. Am I adopted? Y'all?
Look at me. I'm a great guy because it's not
that big a deal. It's really not. I've never understood that,
But I'm not criticizing you. Please. Sometimes people thinking, yeah,
he should love them as his own if they're going
to live under your roof. Look, if every marriage worked out,
it'd be great, but they don't. And if every parent

(04:29):
would understand we have children here and whether i'm the
quote unquote stepdad, step mom, whatever, let's do what's best
for those kids, and our own personal animosities and insecurities
should be put aside. And if they live under your roof,
do as much as you can. If nothing else, these
are two jurors in the jury pool one day, when
you're a crime victim or you're being accused. These are

(04:51):
two future voters. I mean, we've got a responsibility to
raise these little things. So anyway more than you want
to hear, let's go to Meg. Meg did when did
you know? It was the moment.

Speaker 5 (05:05):
We were dating and we were kind of new dating
that we were established, and my old boyfriend called and
I think it was landline Times that my old boyfriend called,
so I guess I didn't know if it was picked
up the phone, talked to him for a second and
then my husband, who is my husband now who is
my boyfriend, said hey, you need to clean all that
up because I'm not going to fight for you. And

(05:25):
I remember at first being like, wait a minute, what
you're not gonna And then I realized, Oh, that's who
you marry. You don't want somebody who's gonna, you know,
punt somebody at a bar because he thinks they looked
at you or whatever. And he wanted me to be
completely ready and available before he was going to put
in his hat.

Speaker 1 (05:43):
So I thought, that's him. That is such a mature approach.
I will tell you this is uh. There's no group
I've seen this more prominently with than Hispanics. The idea
that you like a lot of his Spanish women like
their men to be seloso. They like them to be jealous,

(06:04):
and they will make them jealous on purpose, as this
weird love language. It's an insecurity, it's a test. So
they will flaunt, they will flirt, they will create a
situation in public to make their man jealous. And if
their man comes rolling in and you know, shoots, the

(06:26):
guy stabs him, you know, throws a brick into his butt,
bashes his head over and then he likes her, you know,
he really really really likes her. Look at that, I feel, okay, honey,
we may leave. I'll hold your hand and we will
leave the bar. And you have proven again that you
love me. It's so twisted, but I've seen it. It is.

(06:47):
It's crazy to see that happen. And some of the
men will do that with the women. And that's obviously
a stereotype. It's not true of everyone. You don't need
to get your feelings hurt, but it is. I've seen
it happen. I'll tell you this. What was the young
lady who was in the army looks like Selena who
was killed became a nationally famous case. Here. Do you

(07:10):
remember she was killed by the young man, a young
woman that she no, no, no, different case, different case. She
was killed by a black man. This one was they
were young like cadets marines. Maybe what the first one was?

(07:32):
It ford to it. I got the cases mixed up.
This is different. This is different young Hispanic couple and
this was a young Hispanic couple and they killed another
girl that he was having an affair with, I think,
and the girl kind of put him up to it
was sort of the deal. But this whole idea of
needing drama run from people who need drama. That is

(07:53):
not the one you want. You want people who are
the anti drama. If someone needs drama, you know, I
know men that if their wife goes through their phone
and accuses them of things and throws things and slash them,
they're excited because that means she that's her show of caring.
That's your show of being stupid. That is not mature,

(08:16):
as not healthy. If you need that, God bless you.
I just hope wife number four, five and six doesn't
do that.

Speaker 6 (08:22):
I trigger you prepare for a complete meltdown with more
of the Michael Berry Show, because.

Speaker 4 (08:34):
I haven't heard you mentioned anybody is name at all.

Speaker 1 (08:41):
I I wish you Coulbie sure it's me the tangent
Wood each time heard it said that dreaments never know.

Speaker 4 (09:00):
You've been sup and sleep bun and dream.

Speaker 1 (09:10):
With some sweet Landon McDonald our master of memes graphics
guru sent I posted a photo yesterday of ramone because
he's down fifty pounds and he had shaved which knocks
off another twenty five and he was we were I

(09:31):
was asking him some questions because Richard Gerlovich, who who
along with David Obert, handles all our technology and studios
set up and equipment and all that. And he was
looking at bringing in some different equipment because we've had
a bunch of problems with the phones and all this.
And he was asking Ramone, all right, well, if I
move this, I got to change this, and then you
got to learn a new system and all that. So

(09:52):
I was asking, well, what do you want to do.
Whatever you want to do, you're the one that has
to to, you know, push the buttons and make things
happen here. So he was and as he was processing,
I took a quick snap of him in deep thought,
kind of lean back, and it was also the way
to show that he'd lost weight and that he'd shaved
his beard. And so I posted that photo and Landon McDonald,

(10:16):
our graphics guru, master of memes, just sent me a
photo of Joe Biden down as if he's doing exorcism
in church and he has his hands on Ramon's head.
But it's so perfectly cropped that it looks real and
it freaked me out at first. So I have posted
that disturbed me as it is the first time you

(10:37):
see it on our Facebook page for you to for
you to add your comments. One quick note on our
Facebook page. I had about three hundred and fifty thousand
followers on Facebook, and we would have some very engaging conversations.
They had been shadow banning me for quite some time,
and then they took me offline again, which they would
do it election time every year, just before this election.

(11:00):
So Mark Zuckerberg can burn in hell. And I hope
they tax him into bankruptcy and I hope he's sued
and the rest of his life is spent in horrible
He's a horrible human being and they're a horrible, horrible
group of people. And now he's all lovey dove with
Trump because that's you know, he has to change. Merchants
like that don't bother to have any ideology whichever way

(11:20):
the wind blows, you know, John Cornyn, Oh, I'm reading
Look at me, I'm reading Art of the Deal. Look
at his photo of me reading the book? What he
lebron He's always reading a book, please anyway, So they
took my page down. But the problem is Facebook is
a useful tool for me. It's a place that I
can post things that don't make it on the air,

(11:42):
I can post a picture of something if I want
you to see something I've been describing. It's a place
that we can have some fun with memes, and it's
a place for me to interact with listeners. Because you
listen to me, I don't get to talk to you
in that same way. So I enjoy I will admit it.
I enjoy being able to post random stuff that doesn't
make it on the air. Like yesterday, my friend Aggie
Plumber sent me a picture of this hideous growth that

(12:05):
he has on the bend of his elbow. Did I
show you this? It's just gross, It's no. If it
was a wound, it would be interesting. It's it's like
a tick, except it's not a ticke. It's part of
his body, and it's just colored. It's like a peach orange,
but not trump orange. It's more sort of tangerine. You know,
you would, you would, you would take it's what was

(12:27):
that awful orange drink that they took to like tang
like a tang colored tick on the elbow of his thing.
And he said, hey, could you talk to your dermatologists
for me about this? And I said, lord no, because
she'll think that that's mine, and I don't want that.
I'll I'll call her and get you an appointment. I'll

(12:47):
go with you and hold your hand as she burns
it off, But that whole arm might have to be removed.
I said that awful canker, and of all those horrible
things I just said, he got upset that I called
it a canker. Canker is one of those words that
you can say, like one of the things that ramow
other people know that I do. If we're at a
restaurant in a crowded place, is I like to say

(13:09):
a word a little bit louder than the rest. That's
an awkward word, but not a cross word, so you know.
And so he looked over and there was a canker
on her arm, and you can just feel the energy
around you as people will spin their head and look
and you just act like you don't notice. You just
keep talking. And now they desperately want to know the
context of why a canker was mentioned in the sense
or maybe he said hanker, or maybe he said wanker,

(13:32):
or maybe he said spanker. I mean, this could go
any different direction, but it feels like he said hanker.
I mean a canker, So anyway, Facebook allows me to
do that. All about way of saying, I started a
new Facebook page. You'll notice it it has thirty thousand
that you'll know that because of how many followers it has,
because there's still some that are hanging out there, and
then there's a bunch of fake accounts. But you'll see

(13:54):
the stuff I'm posting is the kind of stuff I
would post if you want to follow it. Russell Labar
also sent me a picture. He said, every time you
speak with that Mexican accent on the radio, I see this,
and he took Jack Black's Nacho Lebra and put it
the bizarre of Nacho and put my face with a cigar
on it. I must addite it's pretty funny. It's also
pretty good graphics work. If you were wondering what Russell's

(14:14):
up to right now, he's not commanding his twenty three
restaurants at one hundred and seventy million dollars in revenues
a year. He's actually making a funny meme at this point.
That's what you can do when you get to the top. Willie,
how did you know she was the one.

Speaker 4 (14:26):
Well back in systems forever? In eighty seven. We've just
been seeing each weren't even dating and seeing each other
and just met it and taking a walk on the
sea wall here in Galveston, ended up at the San
Luis Hotel. We're dressed in casual clothes, but she does
have makeup on, so up by the pool area that
we walked over by to the chacuzzie. We've both been

(14:47):
down the field of water see if it was cold
of warm, and it was lukewarm, and she had makeup
on and everything. And I don't know what made me
do it, but I grabbed a handful of dracuzie water
and splash in the face with it.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
It was just something.

Speaker 4 (15:00):
I don't know what maybe do. I did it, but
her reaction was shock, and then she laughed.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
Because she's like the.

Speaker 4 (15:05):
Best practical joker that there is, or ever was. And
for her to have that reaction and not get mad
or upset, that told me a lot.

Speaker 1 (15:16):
Interesting. You say that, because humor is one of those
things that a lot of people never develop an appreciation for.
That's why it's called a sense of humor. I one
of the most insulting things I can say about someone
is that they are humorless. It's a powerful word that
doesn't get used off and it's a great word in
English literature. But a humorless person a scold, the kind

(15:39):
of person who they live by. The they have rules,
they have anger, they have structure, they have You're very German,
but no ability to laugh. It's why who wrote Moneyball.
He wrote a book about the Germans and their poof
procession because they're they're always puckered up up, and it's

(16:00):
a fascinating study into the German mindset. If a woman
can make you laugh and laughs at your jokes, there's
a keeper.

Speaker 7 (16:07):
What's the name you say, Michael Goody.

Speaker 6 (16:13):
I've gotta take a little time, a little time of
things over.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
A better read between the night in case I needed
what a old Catherine writes. I met my perfect husband
at a Christmas party. My older sister dragged me to
On the way home. I thought I had probably married.
I would probably marry this guy. We did. Four and

(16:47):
a half years later I lost him four months shy
of forty five years. Give your husband's a hug today.
You never know when you won't be able to again.
And then I got an email from Amanda with the
song Without You by Harry Nielsen, which we played yesterday.

(17:10):
She said, I know our phones track us, but how
weird I heard you talking about this song yesterday, then
it comes up on my TikTok. I love this song,
but how freaked out can I be? Then it comes
up tonight. Just wanted to share with my friend MB
that I listened to every day. How weird is that
Harry Nilsen's Without You. I didn't google it or anything.

(17:33):
Of course, of course you are being followed. You are
living according to a simulation. You are living according to
the algorithm. I find you can't have the good without
the bad, but neither is it completely good or completely bad.
I like the fact that when I go to look

(17:54):
something up, it auto populates, and it knows when I
start with Hank, it goes to Hank Williams, You're already
and already starts getting in the mindset of all right,
he wants to know what bosiphas did in seventy one. Right,
there are forms of these things that I absolutely love.
But then the problem is it's the technology is not

(18:17):
the enemy. It is how it is used. An automated
phone system is not in and of itself a horrible thing.
It's the fact that company shows to replace it, to
replace answering the phone with it. The technology didn't do that.
There's so much technology the text message that you could
use a computer to communicate with your people is not,

(18:40):
in and of itself evil. The fact that you think
I want to be spammed because I brought a product
from you, and then I have to fight you to
get off there, and I'm pretty nasty about it. That
is not the technology's fault. That is the use of it.
It's a tool. Lawyers are not in and of themselves
evil people. It's those who hired lawyers and try to

(19:00):
act like the lawyer made me do it. No, he
works for you. I got a bunch of emails from
people because everybody I know has either been represented by
Bobby Newman or had Bobby Newman represent their wife because
he got to her first. And Bobby Newman is known
for gutting people. If you got a ten million dollars
state he's going to get, he's going to get at
least fifty for her and a couple million for himself.

(19:23):
And so I got And I don't know him, I've
never met him, but I know who he is, and
I know enough stories, so I got all these emails
from people. He was saying one of two things, either
Bobby's going to be mad at you, or the other
one was stop advertising for him. It is so funny
to me how people don't get how media works, how

(19:45):
everybody's being manipulated at all times. Me, you, all of us,
how exposure. Two things affects us, some good, some bad.
And a lot of people just want to hide and
never be noticed. So the idea that their name would
be mentioned on the air is horrifying to them because
someone might notice them, and they're just trying to hide
and get through life without being noticed, and hopefully they
can die real quick and nobody will look at him

(20:07):
and ask him a question. The flip side of that
is people who want to be noticed at all time.
The peacock throwing up. If you've never been around a peacock,
they are a crazy, crazy thing. They will they the
male of the species, like almost all birds, is the
one that is coveted. The female makes all the decisions.
She looks like a guinea When people will say is
that a peacock or is that a girl, it's a
peacock and a pin a hen. She's a hen and

(20:29):
he's got a so it's a peacock a pea hen.
The female is the hen, as with many of the
foul anyway, So he walks around throwing his feathers up
and hoping that she'll pick him to be the one
that she reproduces with to continue that gene pool. So
his whole thing and throwing that up is notice me,
notice me. So, having grown up hearing them from oh

(20:49):
he came peacock, and then like you understand that the
reason these phrases came to be running around like a
chicken with his head cut off is somebody who actually
saw that. It's not not until you see it that
you go wow, Okay, I've used that phrase my whole life.
I now understand what that means. For mo. What was
I talking about? Oh, Bobby Newman. So there was a

(21:12):
split of opinion of first that he would be mad
that I was talking about what an effective, if vicious
divorce attorney he is, and other people who were saying, god, dog,
I'm the one of the ones that got gutted stopped
talking about him, because then he's going to have he's
going to build up his practice and it's neither one.
It's just the natural effect of me talking about someone.

(21:33):
But for anyone who thought that was insulting to Bobby Newman,
if it was, he's an idiot, And he doesn't strike
me as an idiot. He didn't get rich, you know,
being a shrinking ballot. If he was afraid to have
a fight with every one of his client's husbands, then
he wouldn't be rich today. And my impression is he's
pretty rich. If you're going to be in that business,
you're going Look, you're picking fights because no husband is

(21:55):
giving you their hard earned money and certainly not giving
it to their ex wife. They're not giving their exe
that hard earned money because they want to. You're gonna
have to force them to do it by picking a
big fight and saying I'll take even more than that.
That's the nature of the beast. You don't have to
be mad at me over that. I guess you can
be mad at him, but that's his job, and she
could she could call off the dogs. It's always funny

(22:16):
when people say, well, my wife Max wife's okay, but
she's lawyer that she got he was he works for her. Okay, Yeah,
you know, I had a former employee who sued me,
and you know, he wasn't a bad guy, but this
lawyer was a wait wait, waita the lawyer works for them.
You don't have to do anything you don't want to do.
Don't blame it on the lawyer. The lawyer is at

(22:38):
the direction of the client. So anyway, Bobby Newman probably
ought to send me a commission. Truth be told, he
probably locked up three clients out of that deal. I
don't know. No, I don't know. I don't know why.
I don't know because we run in the same circles.
But I'm but he had a wife named Lil, who's
apparently a spark plug and very cute. And Lil was

(23:02):
friends with some friends of mine. No, she not a rapper. No, Lil,
I think is just a full name. There's no nothing
after that. But if she weren't gonna be Lil and
have a full name, what should it be hung wheezy,
little whazy would be? Is it really a little easy?
You got to be black to be a little easy. Though,
she's a white girl. Best I understand she's a white girl. Anyway,

(23:23):
Funny thing, people don't mind me talking about stuff in
Washington DC. But if I so much as mentioned the
name of somebody in Houston, the people who know that,
people get very nervous, like, oh my god, something that's
gonna happen. We're just words holm down, Jim. How'd you know?

Speaker 6 (23:41):
Well?

Speaker 7 (23:41):
I was all the more directors at a Christian school
in Burnie, Texas, and there was a young lady there
that was teaching and more couldn't date teachers and that
kind of thing. Well, the mord asked me to come
back up for another four year stint, and I there
was some kind of chemistry there. So I called her

(24:03):
and I asked her. I said, hey, you know, the
board's gonna ask me to come back on for another
four years. Where do you.

Speaker 1 (24:11):
Stand on that?

Speaker 7 (24:12):
It seems like there's it seems like you would like
to date. And she just she just flat out said, uh,
if you go on, I'll never speak to you again.
I said, okay, well you answered my question, thank you. Well,
so we went to our first date was at the
Barn Door Steakhouse in San Antonio and I went to

(24:36):
a and m she went to that. Well, she went
to Michael's school there in Austin, that other school and she,
I said, you know, it's funny how you had to
come to Tamas station to get you know, something, not
lighting this loafer flower around and she said, well, it's
funny how you had to come to Austin You.

Speaker 4 (24:57):
Did you Knowice that Jase A.

Speaker 1 (25:01):
Story out of this is going to be number twenty
nine Ramon Jay rovers story out of Dallas, out of Frisco.
Actually a high school boy stabbed to death at a
track meet by another young man. It is so random,
so violent, so vicious. Well, let me play the story

(25:24):
and then we'll discuss it. The credit goes to NBCDFW.
I feel like it was since this shouldn't have happened.

Speaker 8 (25:30):
From a packed prayer vigil at Hope Fellowship Church to
the home of the victim's family be the same. Tonight,
friends and relatives of seventeen year old Austin Metcalf are
leaning on faith.

Speaker 9 (25:43):
I can't really understand everything, but I just believe in God,
in my faith, we'll get us all through this.

Speaker 8 (25:50):
Jeff Metcalf is father to Austin at Hunter Metcalf brothers,
who were both at the track meet where today's tragedy happened.

Speaker 9 (25:57):
There were twins, identical twins and his brother was holding
on to him, trying to make a stop bleeding, and
he died in his brother's arms.

Speaker 8 (26:05):
The horrific outcome unfolding at Kirkandall Stadium around ten this morning.
It started, Metcalf says, when a student from another school
was told he was sitting in the wrong place.

Speaker 9 (26:16):
End result, he stabbed my son in the heart and
killed him.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
That's the extent of this.

Speaker 4 (26:22):
That's what it was over.

Speaker 9 (26:24):
Something so small, so trivial.

Speaker 8 (26:26):
Seventeen year old Carmelo Anthony, a student athlete at Centennial
High School, was arrested and charged with murder.

Speaker 1 (26:33):
Pray forgiving him. That's for my piece, not his. Metcalf says.

Speaker 8 (26:37):
His son, Austin had a four point zero GPA, was
MVP of his football team and a member of his
track and field team, and a matter of hours, more
than forty thousand dollars have been donated to his online fundraiser.

Speaker 9 (26:49):
He was loved by many. He was a leader, He
believed in jod He was a great kid. Made me
the proudest father in the world.

Speaker 8 (26:59):
Commune coming together to mourn a young life lost, Frisco
isd says Austin's death will be acknowledged tomorrow during second
period at Memorial High School, and that counselors will be
available through this greeting process.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
Seventeen year old white young man stabbed to death by
a seventeen year old black young man and attract me.
He plunged a knife into his heart. Why was he
carrying a knife on a school property? What were his intentions?
Was this a premeditated active rage? You can continue to

(27:42):
ignore these things, and we will. You can cancel the
people like me who point them out. But there is
an absolute epidemic in this country a violence on white
people by black people. It's real, it's terrible. And the

(28:07):
thing about it is we've had a rash of black
on black crime for so long that that's not even discussed.
Pull Jesse's quote, Miller time. The thing is, if a
white person harms a black person, we've got riots, national riots,

(28:28):
even if the white person didn't harm the black person.
George Floyd or if it's in self defense, Trayvon except
George Zimmerman was Hispanic, but leave that alone. It helped
that he had what in some cases is a Jewish name.
He is clearly Hispanic. He was defending himself to the

(28:50):
point that NBC even altered the photos where his head
had been bashed in on the concrete and had some
split open. They all those photos because if your head's
been split open, you've got every justification to kill this punk.
So we've got horrible elements from outside, George Soros led

(29:11):
it's the same mindset, it's the same money. It's the
same organizers that are shooting up, blowing up, burning, bashing,
defacing Tesla's look. They'd turn the Whites against the Blacks
if it helped. They'd turn the Asians against the Europeans
if it helped. They're agnostic. They just want chaos in

(29:35):
this country. And the way they're doing it, they're not idiots. Okay,
if you've ever watched any mind Game movies, there have
been some great and frightenedly prophetic movies to describe some
of the things that have happened that came to happen
in this country. What was one I told you about

(29:57):
the other day. What was the guy's name? Parallax Parallax view.
I urge you, if you're ever going to take a
movie recommendation for me, go home today, go onto Prime
Video and watch the Parallax view. Probably other ways you

(30:17):
can watch it, but I know if you go to
Prime p A R A L e X e e
X and it will I think it's nineteen seventy, and
it's very nineteen seventy. I mean, you're going to see
the high popped collars and the mop hairs and the
Marco Rubio style boots. But this movie is so strangely

(30:39):
prophetic you almost think, ah, come on, that's a period
piece set in twenty twenty five to mirror what's happening today.
But when we know what's happening and no one will
talk about it and no one will do anything about it,
it's got to stop. It's got to be talked about openly.

(31:03):
I don't fear my kids going into an all white gathering.
I fear in certain circles because there's a higher incident
of black on black crime. These sorts of things need
to be discussed. This isn't a random it's not that
random that a black would attack a white, And yet

(31:27):
all we hear about is blacks are scared and whites
are That is a lie, That is an absolute lie.
Nobody in America is scared of blacks. It's scared of whites. Sorry,
nobody black in America is scared of whites, not one person,
not one bit, not even a little bit, because it
doesn't happen. Black people are not walking home from the

(31:48):
store and a white guy jumps out of the bushes,
rapes the woman, or bashes the guy, or shoots them.
White people are not driving through neighborhoods shooting them up.
White peopleeople are not going into stores with guns and
taking everybody's money. But Michael, all black people ain't bad.
You're the mass My kids are black. You think I

(32:09):
don't know that. But what if some are? What do
we do with those? Some just ignore it? Me we
just keep ignoring it. Thank God for those poor cops
out there, they got to deal with it. But God
forbid the black person fights back. And that's when it
gets bad, because even the black cops are gonna get
in trouble and they know it. They know what's gonna happen.

(32:33):
They know what's gonna happen. If if that when you
pull up on a black suspect with a gun out,
God help you if you're a cop, because if he
chooses to make this a situation, you can't win. Your
best case scenarios. You get him tough stuff in down there,
and he's still gonna file an IAD. He's still gonna
file that you abused him. He's even though there's cameras
the entire time, he's still gonna file it. And if

(32:55):
he's gay, go kwan Alan, they'll have a story about it,
and you're the bad guy. But let's just keep going
like nothing's happening, and black people are scared of white people.
That's funny.
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