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April 4, 2025 • 35 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time time, time, luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
The Michael Darry Show is on the air. Oh yes,
that's your reminder. It's that day. It's that time, happy d.

Speaker 3 (00:45):
Happy day. When g Do's war, when he war, when
g Do war, she.

Speaker 4 (01:01):
Is away he loves happy day or happy de happy.

Speaker 3 (01:14):
Or happy da. When Jesus war, oh whitty war, when Jesus.

Speaker 5 (01:27):
Wardel away he loved.

Speaker 6 (01:35):
What's a happy day, happy d.

Speaker 7 (02:16):
Or a happy day.

Speaker 3 (02:20):
Winter? Those wars, oh witty war.

Speaker 8 (02:28):
Wind those war feel away.

Speaker 6 (02:33):
You need to lk.

Speaker 5 (02:37):
Happy day, happy, oh, happy deal, happy.

Speaker 3 (04:39):
Oh happy when Jesus wo.

Speaker 2 (04:48):
Waity who oh yes? Seven one three nine, nine nine
one thousand, get in early. Has your week flown a blown?
You have a thought you'd like to share? I truly
believe whatever that might be. Seven one three nine nine

(05:10):
one thousand, seven one three, nine nine nine one thousand
And to get us started as we always do. Courtesy
of our executive producer, the greatest in the land, Chattakoni Nakanishi.
You'r we can live if she can darn or knit
or stitch, marry that one. If she's in college or

(05:33):
post college and she quilts, lock her down right now,
don't let that one get don't let her out of
your sight. That is the one you want. She's got gay.

(05:54):
David tell us, okay, song number four is dancing cleared
by Abba.

Speaker 9 (05:59):
That's pretty gay.

Speaker 10 (06:00):
Number three I don't feel like dancing.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
That's lesbian. We're not mixing the number two. Why yeah,
by the village people, all right, go ahead? Number one?
It me by the weather. Genie writes, idiots upline put
threes and butt wipes down the train. Please tell people

(06:25):
don't do this. I'm always amused how many people want
to do a public service announcement out of what happened now.
I don't know if I'm supposed to receive that and go, hey, guys, hey,
we're gonna talk about some stuff. But I want to
remind y'all please do not put grease down your toilets. Guys,
Czar burned my mouth this morning getting my regular coffee
at at McDonald's. Please remind people, don't put the coffee

(06:49):
to your mouth until you've tested it to make sure
it's not too hot. Not a PSA needed that for everything.

Speaker 11 (06:56):
And knowing is half about Geo, you know who did
a surprisingly good cover of this.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
Why Wrbison, I mean really really good, interesting voice, multi
octave boys, throw back look is going to cover love, hurts.

Speaker 7 (07:20):
Love, love, Colls love.

Speaker 12 (07:29):
And Pym not Norse. Come Take a lot of pain,
Take a lot of pain, lovely life of clove love Love.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
I on.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
All right, Let's get to your Colls Haven one three
nine nine nine one thousand, or you can email to
the website Michael Very Show dot com. Coming up.

Speaker 13 (08:19):
Yellow pudding fops prosen putting on the stake.

Speaker 9 (08:22):
The Michael Fairy Show Yellow brand pudding pops made with
the goodness of real jello pudding.

Speaker 14 (08:35):
Sixtem alarm clock won't stop going, I'll stumbled to the slame.

Speaker 3 (08:39):
Try to think.

Speaker 2 (08:40):
Fill the coffee pot, Mmm coffee.

Speaker 14 (08:47):
Get the sleepy heads out of bed, get them fair,
get them dressed, hurry up, get your stuff in the truck.

Speaker 2 (08:53):
Blow on them both the kiss when you drop them off.

Speaker 3 (08:57):
By kids.

Speaker 14 (08:59):
It feels tied A month of my knees since I
had a break.

Speaker 2 (09:05):
Sometime to tell myself when I had all I could take.

Speaker 1 (09:10):
Fridays come in.

Speaker 7 (09:14):
Just like that, It's gonna come.

Speaker 15 (09:16):
Back and round.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
Gotta keep on running.

Speaker 3 (09:20):
I can't let trouble run me.

Speaker 1 (09:22):
In the ground.

Speaker 16 (09:23):
I'm ready to feel that feeling.

Speaker 11 (09:26):
Nothing to do but to cant back singing, and damn
a torpedoes or little titos.

Speaker 14 (09:32):
Friday's here again, trying to get some mess to the
stress and my brain want to flip the moth. But
I do my best to the friend, well most of
the time. Sure do the job on the deadline way behind.

(09:53):
Have to tell the boss how to do his job
half the time. Man, I can't stand that, dude.

Speaker 16 (10:02):
I'm on to a mess of thirty this year is
in the same to the boat lines we go Tiffany
on the black line in Europe, it's hard to go ahead.

Speaker 13 (10:13):
Good morning. I'm a longtime listener, can you hear me?

Speaker 10 (10:17):
That's a long time listener.

Speaker 13 (10:19):
My mom actually got me listened to you over well
over a decade ago, so I've been listening to you.

Speaker 10 (10:26):
You do have black listeners, black women listeners out.

Speaker 2 (10:28):
There with what is your mother's name?

Speaker 10 (10:31):
Oh, she's de ceased now, where her name is Dale?

Speaker 2 (10:34):
Dale? Okay? All right? And what did she do?

Speaker 10 (10:38):
She was the benefits coordinator for the Harrison County Hospital District.

Speaker 2 (10:42):
And how did she get you listening?

Speaker 10 (10:45):
I would arrive with her some warnings and she have
you on so and we listen. We listened together.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
What did she pass up?

Speaker 10 (10:55):
She had kidney failure?

Speaker 2 (10:59):
Oh was she on dialysis?

Speaker 15 (11:03):
She could had just.

Speaker 10 (11:03):
Gotten a transplant at Saint Luke's.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
And it didn't take.

Speaker 10 (11:09):
Yeah, it took for a while, but yeah, I guess eventually,
you know, it didn't work out.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
Bless her her. Okay, what do you do, Tiffany.

Speaker 13 (11:20):
I'm a service coordinator at an independent living facility.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
Oh okay, and what what do you so?

Speaker 15 (11:29):
Like?

Speaker 2 (11:29):
Tell me my dad's and assistant living now, so I'm
living that life. Okay, So tell me what you do.

Speaker 13 (11:34):
What what I do is like all their I provide
any kind of services they need that, do their assessments.

Speaker 10 (11:41):
Make sure you know that they're cognitively.

Speaker 13 (11:44):
Able to live independently off any kind of service they need,
like insurance, well most of them have Medicare and Medicare,
but if they need like transportation provider services, anything they need,
they come to me or sometimes they just come to
talk to me.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
That's okay. So you're dealing directly with the resident, not
just their.

Speaker 10 (12:04):
Family, right, directly with the resident.

Speaker 2 (12:08):
So I didn't realize Medicare Medicaid because they won't pay
for my dad's I didn't realize that there was a
care process that they would pay for.

Speaker 13 (12:17):
Well, this is a hut soidized facilities income.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
Okay, that might be yeah, yeah, oh that's interesting, income
based Okay, So they can move from facility. Yeah, so
they can move from wherever they are and have twenty
four hour care presumably or at least nursing care and
all these sorts of stuff as part of Medicare or Medicaid.

Speaker 13 (12:39):
This this, this is, this is this is an independent
living right, independent living. It's like apartments, an apartment.

Speaker 2 (12:47):
Interesting, Okay, I didn't know they had such a thing. Okay,
all right, do you enjoy that?

Speaker 13 (12:53):
I do?

Speaker 15 (12:54):
I do?

Speaker 13 (12:55):
I do?

Speaker 10 (12:55):
I like it. I like interrupted with the people.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
What are the demographics of the facility where you are?

Speaker 13 (13:02):
My facility is maybe fi Asian, maybe about thirty percent Hispanic.

Speaker 10 (13:12):
Uh maybe we have maybe you know, maybe two three
American born people that are there the rest.

Speaker 1 (13:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (13:21):
So it's really kind of amazing that that's the best
word to say, that so many foreign people who are
from different countries have this nice housing facility that a
lot of American born citizens don't.

Speaker 2 (13:34):
It doesn't surprise me. What is it women versus men?

Speaker 10 (13:39):
It's about I would say probably like forty five fifty
five women to men. We alphabels will have married couples.

Speaker 2 (13:47):
Oh well, okay, all right, okay, interesting? And what have
you learned from dealing with this demographic? From dealing with
older folks?

Speaker 10 (13:57):
I have learned a lot of patience I've learned, and
like I said, a lot of my call my clientele,
they're Asian born, and so they have a lot of
different techniques on medication or how to do things, or how.

Speaker 13 (14:10):
They look at things. So I think having a different
perspective than your own, it's something else that I've learned.
But also their.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
Wisdom of course, of course. Yeah, okay, what'd you call abou? Sweetheart?

Speaker 13 (14:22):
I was calling basically you said you needed some somebody
from the black women's out there, and I really agree
with everything you say. I think a lot of black
conservatives are pushing to a corner because if you and
I think that Biden had it right what they said,
if you're not black, and I said on both for me,
that's what some of black people think. I don't think
they think for themselves that they've always been raised that

(14:44):
I'm a democrat, and you have to look at things.

Speaker 15 (14:47):
I know.

Speaker 13 (14:47):
At one time I was talking to some.

Speaker 10 (14:49):
Family members I know that I have.

Speaker 13 (14:51):
I mean, they've never taken micro or macroreg and almost anything.

Speaker 10 (14:54):
Because I remember doing the COVID. They're like, they can
just pre more money.

Speaker 13 (14:59):
I was like, prep more money. You know that's going
to cause inflation, blah blah blah. And they're just like, oh,
you know, I don't that they think about real problems
or real solutions to those problems.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
You know what's interesting. When I was younger, I thought
that people who thought differently were weird and weak and odd,
and it was it was a negative trait. And the
older I have become, the more I have grown to
appreciate people who think differently than the crowd, even if
they're wrong. The fact that they have the strength of

(15:32):
character to go to swim upstream, to go against the narrative,
the fact that they can have an opinion that other
people are going to castigate them for being different. You know,
you think about when you go to school. You don't
want to be in any way different. You don't want
to pimple, you want to dress like everybody act like
everybody do. It's you know, it's the ultimate peer pressure, right,

(15:54):
and you see that, you see how many people are
just trying to avoid being noticed and to have your
own opinion and do your own thing in whatever way
that might be manifested is such a bold act. And
I've really grown to appreciate that. Whether that's a black
person that you said conservative, I find a lot of

(16:15):
blacks that I know that are criticized for their opinions
are not necessarily conservative. They're simply not repeating what's being
told to them that they need to repeat. It doesn't
make them a conservative, it just makes them independent. And
it's such a bold act. And then they have to
become defiant in order to maintain that because they're sort

(16:37):
of browbeaten by other people and by your emotional close ties.
And it's the fascinating concept. You know, You've got to
give the left credit how they have managed to kind
of malmou blacks into doing this so that for somebody
like you, you have to spend effort to actually just
have your own opinion. That shouldn't be the case. Thank
you for the call, sweetheart.

Speaker 3 (17:00):
Jendy Man.

Speaker 1 (17:02):
The Michael Baiy Show simple man.

Speaker 7 (17:24):
I got a hundred dollars walking in my bill hole.

Speaker 2 (17:29):
I know all I've said.

Speaker 5 (17:30):
Anybody's burning a hold right through my fucking in, and
do my skins come on in the morning, I'll be
brown coal again.

Speaker 13 (17:39):
It's finally that Friday.

Speaker 3 (17:41):
I'm free again.

Speaker 12 (17:43):
I've got my motor running for again.

Speaker 2 (17:46):
Carrolton Conrad writes, you are not a girl, dad, for sure.
Last night you said the word penis twice and I
laughed because I had my nine year old daughter and
I knew what was about to happen. Ha ha asked
me what a penis was. I changed the subject, but
it didn't work because she asked me again. So you're
gonna tell me what a penis was, Dad. Anyways, it

(18:09):
was funny and I don't know why, but I wanted
to share that with you. Fun to listen to you,
because you never know what you're gonna get. Keep up
the good work, Harald from Conrad, Well, that's not very
nice of me, though I don't know what I was
talking about, but I probably should not have said that,
to be completely honest. John Campbell, you're on the Michael

(18:30):
Berry Show. Go ahead, sir, yes.

Speaker 15 (18:33):
Sir, Michael loved your shows. And I know it's early,
but I wane WI sure buy you safe and happy
holiday faster and the good pride and we're a peer
in the Ciguure prayer. So all right, burn up chapters.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
Who's that in the background. That's my wife, Charlotte, Charlotte, Charlotte, Charlotte.
How long have you been? How long are you like
Charlotte's webb?

Speaker 15 (19:13):
Yes, it's felled with an fs.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
Oh okay, oh I see, okay, yeah? How long have
you been with Charlotte? With an s?

Speaker 15 (19:25):
We've been married twenty two years, almost twenty three. We
went to high schools here in Barnard. Didn't know he
chosen and graduated a year apart, and I murdered about
thirty five years later. She was taking care of my daddy,

(19:45):
is now pay Timer's patient, and that led us going
out and eventually go marriage.

Speaker 2 (19:57):
And where'd y'all go out? First time?

Speaker 15 (20:01):
I went to Chili's and and the first day went
Chili's and my Paul.

Speaker 2 (20:11):
And what did what did you have?

Speaker 15 (20:13):
Best decision?

Speaker 2 (20:16):
Sounds like it sounds like she's running the roof.

Speaker 15 (20:20):
Well, yeah, I'm nervous. You know, you don't argue with.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
Them, No, he comes in handy.

Speaker 15 (20:29):
Oh yeah, she saved my life more times than.

Speaker 2 (20:34):
I can count I can imagine. Did you have breakfast?

Speaker 15 (20:39):
Yes, sir?

Speaker 2 (20:39):
What did you have?

Speaker 15 (20:42):
I had two scramble dames, one sauty or toasted pon
yellow as.

Speaker 2 (20:50):
How about some coffee to wash it down?

Speaker 15 (20:53):
Coffee? I'm doing coffee? Last move? Now?

Speaker 2 (20:58):
Did she make all that for you?

Speaker 15 (21:01):
No, sir? Oh did it?

Speaker 2 (21:04):
You did it yourself. I'm coming in okay. How about
any juice? Grapefruit juice?

Speaker 15 (21:11):
No, I hadn't had any of that yet.

Speaker 2 (21:14):
Y'all got any dogs in there with you?

Speaker 15 (21:17):
Yes, sir? Got three of them?

Speaker 2 (21:20):
What you got? What are their names?

Speaker 15 (21:23):
Lacy and mm hmm Wing the dog maps? And who got.

Speaker 2 (21:30):
What's the name? What's the US name?

Speaker 15 (21:39):
Wal? Her name is Belle?

Speaker 2 (21:42):
And then your wife said, y'all got a cat in
there too?

Speaker 9 (21:46):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (21:47):
Whose names?

Speaker 13 (21:48):
So?

Speaker 15 (21:51):
Pepper her name? Hand?

Speaker 2 (21:55):
Did you forget Pepper's name?

Speaker 15 (21:59):
Sir?

Speaker 2 (21:59):
Did you forget Pepper's name?

Speaker 4 (22:02):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (22:03):
I like to forget Pepper all together, but that's not possible.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
That's not.

Speaker 15 (22:10):
My wife is a cat lover. Yeah, I wasn't that
I had been transformed over to accepting cats.

Speaker 2 (22:24):
Yeah, you don't strike me that you love the cat,
but more that you just sort of accept the cat.

Speaker 15 (22:30):
Accept the cat.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
Yea. And what's on what's on the agenda today? John?

Speaker 15 (22:37):
Uh, we've got to do some walking. How you have
a heart surgery procedure and still go one more go
and several works? What are they doing? Well? Did our
arterial vowel first? And then next as I got seventy

(23:04):
percent blockage and one by bank orders and they're going
to have to go up in a push tamp.

Speaker 2 (23:17):
So did they already put one stint from the first procedure?

Speaker 15 (23:21):
No, they just did that vow.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
Oh, they just did the vow. Okay, so you're having
two procedures. Yeah, and you have it done there in
Burnett Or where do you have it done?

Speaker 15 (23:32):
No? We're in around rock At.

Speaker 2 (23:36):
Is that where you are right now?

Speaker 13 (23:38):
No?

Speaker 15 (23:39):
But touch before I get my care down.

Speaker 2 (23:42):
Oh, I see, okay?

Speaker 15 (23:44):
We'd live here?

Speaker 2 (23:46):
And have you always lived there? Uh?

Speaker 13 (23:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (23:51):
We both grew up here and I went to the
river Grand Valley, made that must and I came back
up to Hreim with fork in Austin. I rove Grave, next,
I drove Gray, next trucks.

Speaker 2 (24:09):
Ho oh Okay.

Speaker 15 (24:14):
Oh. I worked down there in the eighties and Austin
and the came, Uh got laid off. Some migrated back
up here and went work or go serve for concrete
company up there. It's you know, it's worked and it's hard.

Speaker 2 (24:37):
You do you come home dusty? Oh?

Speaker 15 (24:42):
Yeah, I had those clothes. What all people do? Washing washed?

Speaker 2 (24:53):
John? I had a guy called Uh. He worked at
a gravel pit and when he would come home, his
wife wouldn't let him in the house house because he'd
bring dust in the house. So he would be out
back of the house and she'd come out. He'd take
all his clothes off and she'd wash him down. Yeah,
is that what you did? That's a you know people

(25:15):
take for granted. That's a hard life. I worked during
this during the summers when I was in college, I
worked at a carbon black plant and orange J. M. Huber.
And when i'd come home, I'd have that it was
like a tar on you and it was thick. And
I would come home and you had to have a
what's that orange soap? You'd have to use and just

(25:36):
rub on yourself. And so what I did, yes, and
my wife, my wife, my mother just put an old
sheet on the bed, and I would just sleep on
that because otherwise you'd ruin everything. And I thought, you know,
I'm just doing this for a summer gig, to make
some quick money. People live like that. People among us.
You see somebody at the grocery store. They're living this life.

(25:57):
That's a tough, tough life. Well, John, I'm glad you called.
I wish you the best. This is well, Michael Barry,
show enjoy it.

Speaker 8 (26:23):
M Oh, how you sparkle and know how you shine,
blush on your cheeks.

Speaker 2 (26:35):
It's more than the poor one.

Speaker 7 (26:38):
And he must do something that I didn't do. Whatever
he's doing, it looks good on you.

Speaker 2 (26:50):
You look so you want him.

Speaker 7 (26:59):
That's easy to sing.

Speaker 3 (27:03):
Your song. I wish you still hold me.

Speaker 7 (27:16):
He must tear stoleum some stars from the Scout and
gave them to you to wearing your n I had
my chances, but I said you free. And now I

(27:36):
wonder why I couldn't.

Speaker 2 (27:40):
See you yet another of about four dozen storms that
see that George took to number one. That you just
imagine anybody else singing that. And it's an also Ran song.

(28:01):
It's it's not it's not you know, it's not a
breakout you'll turn it out. It's not a breakout song.
It's just yet another just.

Speaker 7 (28:17):
Yardy and I have wasted a lot of years not
seeing the real youth.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
But to not your beauty is shining the truth.

Speaker 7 (28:30):
And I never took the time to let you know.

Speaker 2 (28:35):
So before he takes you away, please let me say.

Speaker 7 (28:41):
You don't say you want him. That's easy to see.

Speaker 2 (28:52):
It's not even an amazing vocal performance. It's not up
there with you know, some impressive vocal perform it's just
very matter of factly, very offhandedly just it just blends
in with about fifty songs that he took to number
one that you don't. You forget if I asked you

(29:14):
to start rattling off the number ones, you forget how
many of those just boom boom, boom, boom boom. Nobody
else could do that. Nobody else could do that. April,
You're on the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 9 (29:29):
Good morning, Good morning. Well this morning was not so
great for a lot of families after they learned that
the murderer of their loved ones was out on bond
after being accepting a plea deal.

Speaker 15 (29:43):
He should have.

Speaker 9 (29:44):
Already been in PDC since December of twenty twenty four.
Here we are in April, and of course the corporate
is drum roll Hilary Hunger of the two forty eighth
once again in the headlines.

Speaker 15 (29:59):
Yep.

Speaker 9 (30:02):
And what's worse, after digging through his history here at
the courthouse, he had not one, not two, not three,
not four, not five, but six bond violations and at
no point that Hilary Anger of the two forty eighth
revoke his bond. This is where we have activist judges
at their best. They just don't want people in jail,

(30:25):
and they're showing us this time and time again. So
this guy has to go and kill himself and killed
two additional people for him to finally not be a
public threat anymore.

Speaker 2 (30:41):
That's right, one who killed his girlfriend and then he
killed himself, yeap, and.

Speaker 9 (30:49):
Right right, Well, he won't be on the tax dollars anymore,
and he guess what, he's no longer a public safety threat.
But instead of going down for the initial he went
and took down two young ladies down with him that
were at the movies.

Speaker 2 (31:07):
You know, April, if I remember correctly, because your name
is April and I've met you at an event or
two before. You had a niece that was murdered, Is
that right?

Speaker 15 (31:21):
That's right.

Speaker 9 (31:22):
Arlene Alvarez was also killed, and unfortunately, the same judicial
system that we're dealing with now since the consequences of
all these very bad elections that have linked to the
Democratic Party, our killer was no bills, and we had
to fight very, very hard to ensure that Arlene got
her day in court at the very least because these people,

(31:44):
these acted as judges, what their worried about is defendant rights. Ye,
they're trying to keep them out of jail, but at
no point does anybody talk about the crime victims who
have all of their rights, even the right to life
completely in that moment, taken away from them like Arlene did.
And that's what has fueled our fight to ensure that

(32:04):
people are aware of what's going on. We can't prevent
crime from happening, but we have a responsibility to respond appropriately,
and that's what we're not doing. We have misaligned sympathies
at the courthouse.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
You're right, we can't prevent a crime from happening the
first time, but we can prevent that person from committing
multiple crimes. And to me, everyone down the chain down
the line after they kill that first one. That's where
I really get hot. And I genuinely I don't ask
you to join me in this sentiment, but I genuinely

(32:39):
mean it when I say I wish every one of
these Democrat judges who puts these people out on the streets.
I wish those people that they keep releasing who've murdered
other people's family members would murder one of their family
members and they would have to suffer for it. I
wish they were forced to suffer the way your family
has had to suffer, and then they I believe they

(33:00):
would change their minds, and then they would make a
big deal.

Speaker 9 (33:04):
These judges have a special parking garage, have a special elevator,
or go up their chambers. My message to them is,
if you're fine with the rest of the community having
to be with these people, you're going to put them
out to our communities and you're not willing to even
write an elevator with them. Why if they're that, if
they're that great of folks, if they're not dangerous, why

(33:27):
why are you afraid to walk to your car and
you have to park in a special secure parking garage?
Why why should we take that risk as a community.

Speaker 2 (33:39):
Well, I wish what we could do is when these
people are released, who they keep releasing and putting out
on the streets, we could give them an address. So
here is the judge's house. They have lots of money
inside there. Go and do whatever you want to do.
And it scares people when I say that, But my
point is, why should your family or anyone else's family
have to suffer at the hand into these savages. And

(34:01):
the judges don't. Why shouldn't they have to suffer if
they were at risk of suffering the way the rest
of us are worried about being at risk of suffering.
You know, I really wonder, I really worry. I don't worry,
but if something happened to my family member as has
happened with yours, I genuinely worry that I'd throw it
all away and go postal. I do I do because

(34:22):
my anger would be so intense that I would want
them to have to pay for this. And I don't
know gay what.

Speaker 9 (34:31):
Our message that DA's office was clear, either the criminal
justice has some works for our lean or we're going
to take matters into our own hands. Because if you
think that we're going to stand by and allow an
individual that shot Arlen in the head, executed her within
the reach of her mother's arms get away with it.
You're wrong And I had to explain to them that

(34:51):
the reason we don't have our kids because we're supposed
to have a criminal justicism that works. And if they
continue this, people will start taking matters into their own hands.

Speaker 2 (35:02):
And didn't didn't the guy have an ankle monitor on
the one you're talking about that Collas?

Speaker 15 (35:07):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:10):
Yeah. You know, what the left wants is a civil
war and when they get it, they're not going to
like it. But if our people start, our people aren't
going to blow up Tesla's
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