Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
Time, luck and load.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
So Michael Varry Show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
You've probably heard of deep fakes, but just last week,
as President Biden was at the G seven summit in Italy,
cheap fake clips went viral on social media and were
picked up by some news outlets.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
Why the hell would I take a test?
Speaker 4 (00:28):
Come on, man, I've said it for years now. He's coaching,
but I undersold him when.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
I said he was coagent.
Speaker 5 (00:36):
He's far beyond cogent.
Speaker 4 (00:39):
In fact, I think he's better than he's ever been
intellectually analytically, because he's been around for fifty years.
Speaker 6 (00:50):
And you know, I don't know if people know this
or not.
Speaker 4 (00:53):
Fiden used to be a hothead sometimes that irishman would
get in front of the reasoning.
Speaker 7 (00:59):
Sometimes you would say things he didn't want to say.
Speaker 8 (01:02):
Honesty is such a lonely word.
Speaker 9 (01:09):
Every one is so untruth a honesty.
Speaker 8 (01:19):
Is hardly ever heard and mostly what I need fun.
Speaker 10 (01:26):
You start your tape right now, because I'm about to
tell you the truth and f you if you.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
Can't handle the truth.
Speaker 4 (01:42):
This version of Biden intellectually analytically.
Speaker 5 (01:48):
Is the best Biden ever, not a close sucking.
Speaker 10 (01:52):
And I've known him for years.
Speaker 5 (01:53):
The Presents Kings have known him for fifty years.
Speaker 10 (01:56):
If it weren't the truth, I wouldn't say.
Speaker 8 (01:58):
It honesty that the word everyone is so.
Speaker 9 (02:14):
Honesty. It's hadyver heard.
Speaker 11 (02:20):
Mostly what I need done news.
Speaker 12 (02:27):
Every time he comes on stage or they turn to him,
I'm like, Joe, can you get it out? Let's get
the words out.
Speaker 9 (02:32):
Joe, you kind of feel bad for him.
Speaker 13 (02:34):
How do you think it makes little kids with stutters
feel when they see you make a comment like that.
Speaker 12 (02:39):
First and foremost, I had no idea that Joe Biden
ever suffered from a stutter. I think what we see
on stage with Joe Biden Jake is very clearly a
cognitive decline. That's what I'm referring to. It makes me uncomfortable.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
You are.
Speaker 9 (02:55):
Thinks so amazing.
Speaker 13 (02:57):
It's so amazing to me that.
Speaker 12 (02:58):
And try and figure out and and cognitive decline. You're
trying to tell me that what I was suggesting was.
Speaker 13 (03:04):
I think that you were mocking his stutter. Yeah, I
think you were mocking his stutter. And I think you
have absolutely no standing to diagnose somebody's cognitive decline. I
would think that somebody in the Pump family would be
more sensitive to people who do do not have medical
licenses diagnosing politicians from afar. Come on, man, you all
(03:25):
went along with the idea.
Speaker 11 (03:26):
Who was up for it?
Speaker 13 (03:27):
And he wasn't and everybody saw it and the country
rejected it.
Speaker 4 (03:38):
Any What is so true?
Speaker 1 (03:43):
You lost Chris Howe twelve years ago, honesty trying to
help a veteran suffering from PTSD, A veteran that made
a bad decision, as many veterans do suffering from PTSD.
We send young men into war and it messes them up.
(04:07):
And if you don't think it always messed them up,
you don't know where the term shell shocked came from,
or the thousand yards stare. You don't know how many
men suffered in their recliner, pass out drunk every night,
trying to rid themselves of an awful memory in service
(04:29):
of their country, trying to absolve themselves of the guilt
that they survived. Survivors. Guilt is real in war, and
their buddy didn't. Wondering how their buddy's widow and kids
are doing, and wondering why they were chosen to live.
(04:50):
It's a tough business. It's a really, really tough thing.
Chris Kyles, I mean, arguably the best. I don't know,
how do you compete? But a lot of people with
a lot of knowledge said, if he wasn't the best,
And what did bum Phillips say about her? Old Campbell?
They said, is he is he the best in his class?
(05:12):
He said, I don't know if he's the best in
his class. Buying Taya, it doesn't take long to call
the role. So Chris Kyleer was born fifty one years
ago today. Hard to think we lost him twelve years ago,
which is forever ago, and he'd still only be fifty
one and it's not very old. The American Sniper, it's
(05:33):
a well done movie about him. Got to know his wife, Taya.
What a strong lady, What a strong have to be
to be married to him? Rodeo cowboy sniper, he man,
how tough he was to deal with? Holy wow? Her
father was for many years. I don't know if he
still is the mayor of Lake Oswego, most beautiful part
(05:53):
of Portland. What a glorious little community, Lake Oswego. Her
dad was a mayor there, made the news years ago
for a principal stand he took I don't remember what
it was, but we had him on the show at
the time. Taya raised those kids, Colton and McKenna has
done a wonderful, wonderful job with that. We took Colton,
(06:15):
his son after Chris passed. We took Colton out on
a father's son hunting trip down to South Texas, and
it was it was a kind of a crazy deal
because he hadn't his dad had passed, and he hadn't
had a chance yet to spend time with him hunting
(06:37):
birds because he was too young at the time. And
we felt like, you know, it's a father son, he
doesn't have a dad, and so we'll all step in
and he goes down there, and all the other dads
are so excited he's coming, and I said, look, don't
bring it up and treat him like everybody else. Don't
make it weird. And their kids, we didn't even tell
their kids. So he just Colton, just know the kid,
and the kids really enjoyed his personality and him and
(06:58):
it's kid, kind of a reserve kid. And he was
the only one there that didn't have a dad there
for obvious reasons. His dad had been murdered. And you
put the gun in his in his hands, and lo
and behold, he had a natural propensity for shooting birds.
It was it was uncanny. I mean, it was to
(07:18):
the point like this isn't really happening, isn't Like, well,
are the chances just because he has his DNA, what
are the chances that this would be happening. This is crazy.
It's absolutely crazy. And Marcus Latrell was good friends with
Chris Colin. He stepped in, as he does for a
lot of folks in a situation like that, and he
(07:38):
advised Taya. He put her on his patriots speaking to her.
So she had, you know, she had an outlet for that,
and she wrote a book and she really she kind
of served her country as well, you know, being the
strong suffering wife who said, you can pick up the
pieces when when times are tough like this, you can
pick up the pieces and raise your kids. And she did.
And out of that, I think that became the whole
(08:01):
family became an inspiration to all of America. And anyway,
it's his birthday. There's a clip from the movie. I'll
play it in the next segment. That's it's it's a
great moment. It's the sheep, wolves and sheep dogs. Quote
that that is a great it's a great line to live.
Speaker 11 (08:23):
The Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
Anyway, we're talking about Chris Kyle. There's a scene in
the movie that's made off of his autobiographical book called
American Sniper, and it's his dad talking to him about
the man he wants him to be. And I love
this line.
Speaker 7 (08:44):
The three types of people in this world sheep, wolves
and sheep dogs. Now, some people prefer to believe it
evil doesn't exist in the world. Even if ever darkened
their doorstep, they wouldn't know how to protect themselves. Those
are the sheep, and then you got predators. He used violence, prey.
Speaker 10 (09:07):
On the weak.
Speaker 7 (09:08):
There he lives. And then there are those who are
been blessed with the gift of aggression and the overpower
you need to protect the plot. He's living on a
rare Breathe lived to confront the wolf. They are the
sheep dog and we're not raising any sheep in this family.
(09:34):
And I will whoop your ass if you turn into
a wolf. But we protect our own. If someone tries
to fight you, he tries to bully your little brother,
you have my permission to finish it.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
The guy was picking on jeffs Is that true, Yes, sir,
yes he was.
Speaker 7 (09:59):
Did you finish it? And you know who you are?
Speaker 1 (10:10):
You know your purpose? You think about that. You think
about how many true sheep dogs there are in society.
In American society today, many families do not raise sheep dogs.
I mean, let's start with if you're raising a boy
(10:31):
and try to turn him into being a girl, think
about what you're doing. Think about those kinds of people.
Those kinds of people will be a conquered nation. Those
kinds of people will be a conquered vanquished people. They
will be enslaved, and there are other people who will
(10:53):
enslave them. Those kind of people are perverse and weak,
and that makes them dangerous because they're not only perverse
and weak, they tend to occupy positions of governmental authority.
They love bureaucratic jobs, they love educational jobs. Those kinds
(11:14):
of people can never be allowed to be the decision makers.
There are too many people in this country who are
confrontational with good values. The left is very confrontational. They
will blow up your car. They will blow up your car,
(11:35):
they will bash you in the head, they will burn
down your building. They are aggressive, they are a cult,
they are committed. Our people increasingly are hiding from them.
Our people don't want any part of them. There are
very few sheep talks. And when you study war and
(11:58):
you think of you know, the Nazis in Vain, Pole
owned and then eventually making the mistake of going into
Russia and Stalin, and you count what percentage of society
actually fights in a war, it's not very high. The
burden is carried by very few people when you get
(12:19):
right down to it. The burden is carried by very
few people when you get right down to it. Scott
Jennings shut down Temple law professor Dante Beasley's narrative that
any of us could be deported at any time.
Speaker 9 (12:33):
They admit that they did it by accident. They say, oh,
so it's too late.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
We have no jurisdiction.
Speaker 9 (12:38):
Now we can't do anything about it.
Speaker 12 (12:39):
That's not fair and it can happen to anybody. So
if we don't stop.
Speaker 4 (12:43):
It now, a scope will get bigger, and then it
will happen to you.
Speaker 11 (12:46):
And then you'll have a problem with I think also,
you're a conflating legal American citizens of people who came
here illegally. We do this all the time in these debates,
and I think what the administration is trying to do
is be as aggressive as possible at deport different kinds
of populations. One people who've committed heinous violent crimes. Number two,
people that were violent before they came here. Number three,
(13:08):
anyone who came here illegally. I mean, look, I'm sorry,
but if you came here illegally, no matter how well
intentioned you were, there's probably a decent chance you're going
to be sent back. And that's what the administration clearly
communicated to the American people in the election. They overwhelmingly
voted for it. And it's not particularly a controversial matter.
Speaker 1 (13:27):
It's that simple. State your case and don't apologize for it.
Be bold. The leader of the Democrat Party, Jasmine Crockett,
spoke at the Grace Baptist Church's one hundred and twenty
fifth anniversary program where she preached the virtues of keeping
illegals here because she wants them to pick her cotton.
Speaker 8 (13:47):
So I had to go around the country educate people
about what immigrants do for this country, or the fact
that we.
Speaker 9 (13:54):
Are a country of immigrants, right right. The fact is
ain't none of y'all trying to go a farm right now? Okay,
So I'm lying, raise raise your hands, you're not. You're
not we done picking cotton? We are. You can't pay
us enough to find a plantation?
Speaker 1 (14:15):
Okay, all right. I didn't realize she used to pick cotton,
so we need illegal aliens. She might as well have
called them what they are, and this is what she
wants them to be, which is slaves.
Speaker 8 (14:28):
So I had to go around the country and educate
people about which slaves do for this country or the
fact that we are.
Speaker 1 (14:35):
A country slaves right right?
Speaker 9 (14:38):
The fact is, ain't none of y'all trying to go
in farm right now? Okay? So I'm lying, Raise raise
your hands, you're not.
Speaker 6 (14:48):
You're not.
Speaker 9 (14:50):
We done picking cotton? We are. You can't pay us
enough to find a plantation.
Speaker 1 (14:58):
These people like this are the urge of this country.
Nobody wants to live next to him, nobody wants to
hire them, nobody wants to do business with him, nobody
wants to ride the subway. And by the way, they're
the scourge of the black community. Also, they make life
miserable for other blacks. This tough talking, very stupid loud mouth,
and there's this obsession with slavery. Sheila Jackson Lee used
(15:20):
to do this, I stand here as a freed slave. No,
you're not a freed slave. You're not that at all.
You're an entitled, mean bully member of Congress with smelly
feet and bad breath. You're not a freed slave.
Speaker 6 (15:34):
I stand here as a freed slave.
Speaker 1 (15:40):
Michael Berry's show, Chris Cuomo and his brother Angel, he
used to yuck it up quite a bit. And one
during COVID, Chris Cuomo would have his brother on CNN
with him, or was an MSNBC. I don't remember. I
don't watch either one. But his brother, his lockdown brother,
(16:01):
would come on and he loved it. He was the
all powerful. He could decide who could stay open and
who would close. And he sent a lot of people
to their death, a lot of people. He did some
very awful things, and interestingly he stayed in office. That
would not have cost him his career. It wasn't until
(16:24):
he started sexually harassing his staff. This was the me
too era. You can't flirt with the woman in your
office who works for you. That's a power dynamic and
it's evil and you must be cast from office. But
you can send a bunch of old people, using the
power of the state into nursing homes to infect each
(16:47):
other like a chicken pox party and kill them all.
That'll be fine, that'll be fine. So he made the
one mistake you couldn't make. But now that that has happened,
Bill Maher, to his credit, has a and Drew has
Chris Cuomo on the show, and Chris Cuomo's trying to
rehabilitate his brother's image. They're both trying to make their
weasel their way back into polite company. And he talks
(17:09):
about his brother running for mayor of New York City
and frankly, I think he'll win. But and Bill Maher says,
I don't think your brother can get past that nursing
home thing, that nursing home thing. And Chris Cuomo says, oh, no, no,
I think it'll be fine. And Bill Maher says, no,
I think it's a problem. And the reason this is
(17:32):
interesting is because Bill Maher is a white liberal, and
white liberals loved the lockdowns when they were happening. White
liberals wet the bed. White liberals need strong men to
defend them because they are secretly weak, and that leads
to some of their perversions, weaknesses, and problems. Frankly, so,
for white liberals to now be making statements that the
(17:54):
lockdowns were too much and the government intervention was over
the top tells you that we've turned a corner. So
with that in mind, give this a list.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
I don't think he's going to get past the nursing
home thing. I mean, I read the New York papers.
When when the Times and the Posts are both on
the same page, it's you know, and you know, I'm
sure he of course he wasn't trying to do something bad,
(18:23):
but just like with the handset thing, almost you know,
you kind of have to own. Politics is a high
wire act. Yeah, like one boner decision can Yeah, people go,
I'm sorry, I can't trust that guy's judgment or they don't.
Speaker 5 (18:41):
I don't know what the will happen, but that wouldn't think.
I don't think it determines the race. I think he's
got a lie do. I think he's got a lot
of pressure against him within that party, and they're going
to have to make a decision whether they want to
be in power or they want to police their own
(19:02):
set of beliefs within their party. I mean, that's what
they have to decide. What are they about as a party.
I'm not a fan of the parties. I'm not a
fan of the Democratic Party. I don't think they are
my father's party by a long shot. No, but well
they could make. You know, Andrews leading in the polls
for a reason. It's not name recognition. It's because when
people look at their experience living in the city, they
(19:24):
believe he's someone who can make it better.
Speaker 2 (19:25):
It's also huge name recognition. You're the cuemost, You're like
royalty in New York. Your father was the governor, your
brother was the governor. You know, come on, of course
it's name right.
Speaker 5 (19:37):
Right, but they know they know the controversies also, yeah, exactly,
so people will I mean, and luckily for him, he's
got a weak field.
Speaker 2 (19:46):
I mean, Mayor Adams is that name is pretty much uman.
Speaker 5 (19:51):
I don't think Trump did him any favors with how
that deal was structured. I was happy to hear that
the amicus brief that the person who was brought in
a li at it, who's a very legitimate person, said
these charges should be dropped. It shouldn't be that let's
see what happens after the election. It's not fair that
Trump is trying to keep those hooks in Mayor Adams
(20:12):
like that. I know my brother's running against them, but
that's that's how I feel. I think the federal indictment
was weak sauce, and I think this deal by Trump
was manipulative. And you drop the charges, you know, Okay.
Speaker 2 (20:23):
Weak, weak sauce. You you're talking about the actual thing
itself to deal with Turkey. Well, right, grades I agree.
I thought the same thing. I'm like, of all the
things politicians do, this guy, I mean, of all the
places Turkey.
Speaker 1 (20:39):
It's just like, Okay, you know, there's something grotesque about
these political families. You're telling me there's only one family
that can ever be the leaders of New York. How
(20:59):
many million people live there? And you go, well, how
in the world does it go from Mario Cuomo to
his son being the governor? How does this happen? It
means that there are powerful people behind the scenes making
things happen, and the average voter is just being manipulated
and duped. And the sad part is the average voter
in so many cases think that they have something to
(21:21):
do with choosing who that person should be. People say
to me all the time that y'all want Donald Junior
to run. I want why isn't this? Don't you ross
how creepy this is? Chelsea Clinton gets a job at NBC.
George H. W. Bush's president, His uncle was well, his
(21:43):
father was a prominent senator. His son becomes the president.
His brother wants to be the president. His brother's son
wants to be the land commissioner. It's creepy. Don't people
realize we threw off the shackles of monarchy. Some people
(22:05):
want to bring them back. Some people like that. Some
people like the strong man. They like to worship their
quote unquote leaders. Makes them feel good. That's why they
love Princess Diana. That's why they keep the Royalty around.
They love that. They love that that person has an
interesting life. What time do they have high tea? I
(22:26):
want to know what time they I know I'm American,
but I love the British Royalty. I just love it.
I watch it all, I watch all the TV shows.
I love it. I love it so much and a
little bit kind of wanted here too. Cuomo has an
interesting theory as to why nothing seems to stick to
Donald Trump, see what you think.
Speaker 2 (22:45):
One of my pet peeves about the left that I
would say they like to do is judge you by
your worst moment.
Speaker 1 (22:51):
Yes.
Speaker 5 (22:52):
And so that's why MAGA is immune because they can
only do it to their own. Donald Trump is truly
the teflon do. The media cannot take him down because
his people reject the basis of the criticism. There's an
old expression, you know that if if you have to
decide whether or not to care about what someone says
(23:12):
about you.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
The way you start is, well, who said it?
Speaker 5 (23:15):
What do I think of them? And people have made
that assessment about the media, and they've said, you know what,
I don't care what you say about him because I
think that you allow a lot worse and I think
you're kind of what you say he is. And that's
why they're not going to get hag set out. But
they would be if it were the Biden administration. They
can cancel all day on the left, they cannot take
(23:37):
out members of MAGA. Trump would have to go bad
on the guy. It would probably have to be a
federal case to even think about it. And there is
a power in that for him.
Speaker 1 (23:49):
I hope people aren't losing their appetite for revenge. I
hope people aren't ready to forgive and forget the crimes
against Trump that were camitted, the crimes against us that
were committed Fauci, Jack Smith, Merrick Garland. I want them punished.
I want Barack Obama to do prison time. I want
(24:11):
Hillary Clinton in prison. I want these people punished for
their crimes. And I don't care how bad people think
I should feel for that. I don't care how much
I want teeth gnashing and lamentations. I want them thrown
in a jail. So I want something must be right.
Speaker 13 (24:29):
You were listening to Michael Berry and Rod Stuart.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
I mean he had a creepy look. It's too skinny
and fell out and not have you know, a waistline
that small and hair that big. But far as I
could tell, it was always girls.
Speaker 2 (24:42):
You know.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
It was just a little odd at the time, wasn't
it like the clash or the King so just they
were just odd. We didn't have people like that in Orange.
We didn't know people liked that Orange just a little different.
I don't know how old I was, first time I
ever saw somebody that had hair that was normally the
front and then it got down to the back and
(25:02):
it was in it was it had a what do
you had a little I guess where they had tied
it up, like a little man bun or whatever. But
before the full on man bun there was there would
just be a little thing down there because there was
a lot of hair back there, but they had tied
it up, and I remember thinking, Okay, well, we don't
(25:23):
really have that where I was from, I don't, well,
you know how that happens, like do you just I
don't know. I mean, you watched your girlfriend do it,
and you do it. Now. I've got lots of friends
that do it. I mean they're private equity or lawyers
or you know, company owners and they do that and
it's kind of normal, you know, kind of a Lorenzo
Lamas kind of deal. I'm not talking full on fabio,
(25:46):
but a lot of hair. Now my hair got really
long like that. But that was more in a whaling
Jennings manner. Hank Junior bosiphas. You couldn't ask any questions
about that because it was and unkempt, and that makes
it manly. You see, there's a difference. You got to
know the difference. Taylor Starling is a sixteen year old
(26:07):
high school student who ran cross country until she lost
her spot on the team to a biological boy who
thinks he's a girl. She bravely told her story to
the California State Assembly. Protect our girls. This has got
to stop.
Speaker 14 (26:26):
Good morning, members of the committee. My name is Taylor Starling.
I'm sixteen years old and I attend Martin Luther King
High School. I have a four point oh GPA, serve
as vice president of my junior class and lead US
and volunteer with National Women's Charity League as and lead
US captain of my school's cross country and track and
field teams. I was removed from my varsity girls team
and replaced by a newly eligible male transfer student who
(26:49):
received favorable treatment. I worked every day during summer with
my team and into the school year, six days a week,
waking up at five am to a ten morning practices
and staying at school until four forty five each day.
My goal was to attain a varsity spot on my
school's Division one CIF team. Not an easy feet, but
one I accomplished. Since the start of the season in August,
(27:11):
I ran in every varsity race in late October, the
male transfer student was given my spot after not being
held to the same strict team requirements as me and
the rest of the girls. He did not have to
attend practice. Well, my team and I were running seven
miles a day together. After having my spot taken away
from me that I earned, I missed out on running
with my varsity team in one of the top cross
(27:33):
country invitationals of the season. As a result of this
unfair treatment, my teammate Caitlin and I wore shirts that
said save girls' sports and stated that boys and girls
are different. It's common sense. Xx is not equal x y.
This is not hateful or unkind, this is reality. However,
our athletic director made me remove my shirt and told
(27:53):
me it was like wearing a swastika in front of
a Jewish person and said that I would face disciplinary.
Speaker 12 (27:58):
Action if I wore it again.
Speaker 14 (28:00):
My title nine in free speech rights as a female
matter too. Why aren't girls being told that we must
sit down and be quiet while boys unfairly get ahead of.
Speaker 9 (28:08):
Us in life?
Speaker 14 (28:09):
Why do boys not have to attend practice and make
the sacrifices that us girls make an order to be
scholar athletes just because those boys believe they are transgender.
Girls matter too, Please protect us, thank you.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
If you think it's okay for boys to compete with
girls to take their position, then you're evil and there's
no way else around that, and you don't care about
little girls. And the worst part is this is what
happens is the Left becomes so determined to win and
so focused on their enemies that they will take up
(28:43):
positions that are directly contradictory to their position yesterday. Their
position used to be protect all women, they should get abortions,
protect all women, protect the girls. Republicans hate girls. And
now that the girls are saying, hey, you got boys
coming into our locker room and we don't want them
in here. You got boys competing against us and hurting
(29:04):
us in some of these sports. Please stop letting them
do this as we've done throughout the history of mankind.
Stop doing this craziness, right, And they go, no, No,
We decided that that would be one of the goofy
positions we take up. We're not about to change it.
It's just crazy. We're going to close the show with
a quote. Before we do that, I'm going to tell
(29:25):
you that we also do bonus podcasts. If this is
the only show you listen to too hours a day,
we do five hours a day and you can listen
to the entirety of our show on our podcast. It's
free wherever you get your podcast, it's a Michael Berry Show.
You can also communicate directly with me through our website
Michael Berryshow dot com. And as crazy as it is,
(29:45):
I still read every single one of them. You can
buy merch or our show there and the best thing
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And if you ever need that, you email me and
(30:06):
I will connect you directly. I spend a lot of
time on email. It's part of my business model. It works.
I enjoyed. Brett Weinstein is a former professor of evolutionary biology,
and he says, there's something as attacking all of the
mechanisms in civilization that are supposed to seek the truth
and act on it, and that is not a coincidence.
Speaker 6 (30:22):
They are hiding everything. And what I mean by that
is that they are sabotaging all of the mechanisms that
we would normally use to figure out what's true. And
that sounds like a wild exaggeration, but it isn't. The
fact is, it's not even just an attack on the
university system. It's an attack with every single university. The
(30:43):
research done there is low quality, not repeatable. The lessons
taught there are actually, in large measure not even true anymore.
Things that are verifiably false are taught as if they
are true. Our regulatory agencies work exactly in reverse. They
protect regulators from from citizens, not the other way around.
So something is attacking all of the mechanisms in civilization
(31:07):
that are supposed to seek the truth and act upon it.
And that's not a coincidence our truth seeking apparatus has
been under such intense attack. We don't know what's true
some things that are very easy to establish. It's not
a difficult scientific question to figure out whether or not
mRNA vaccines cause turbo cancers. That's a very straightforward scientific problem.
(31:30):
But we are nonetheless left to grapple with anecdote because
to the extent that there are studies, they're likely to
be set up to fail. And the rest is anecdote.
So we are left to make sense of the world
without the most obvious basic tools, without anything that flows
to us from the enlightenment, and that is indeed a
(31:52):
very dangerous predicament.
Speaker 1 (31:56):
Thank you and good