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April 11, 2025 29 mins

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

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Michael Berry's show is on the air. It's Charlie from
BlackBerry Smoke. I can feel a good one coming on.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
It's the Michael Berry Show. Any attempt to restrict drinking
and driving here is viewed by some as downright fun democratic.

Speaker 4 (00:29):
You know, so many of our people have struggled, suffered
and frustrated under liberalism and Democrats for so long. It's
good to be in a moment where we are winning.
It feels good.

Speaker 2 (00:41):
Aeron, you're on the Michael Berry Show. What is your
executive order?

Speaker 5 (00:45):
And my biggest one is stay out of the left lane.
If you're not doing left lane, take.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
You know you wonder but I'm gonna tell you something.
I'm gonna tell you something.

Speaker 4 (01:01):
Having driven to Austin last weekend, it was father son
weekend and I went to see my oldest son, Michael
t at the University of Texas from Houston and for
those of you from outside this area, it's a beautiful
drive for me to go from Houston to Austin and back.
There's two different ways you can go. You can go

(01:21):
up to ninety or you can go it ten and
up seventy one. It doesn't matter either one. I love them.
But there is a thing I've noticed over the years,
and what he's talking about for those of you who
don't do a lot of highway driving, is if you
have two lanes, or even if you have three, your
right hand lane is for slower traffic. Your left hand
lane is to pass and then move back into the

(01:42):
right hand lane.

Speaker 2 (01:42):
Okay, So that's how it works.

Speaker 4 (01:44):
And that's how we share the space, and this is
what's efficient and okay, but what ends up happening. Its
speed limit is seventy and seventy five on most of
the Texas highways that I drive. So if you get
into the left hand lane, you pass a car and
you move into the right hand lane.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
Well, you start approaching. There's a guy in front of.

Speaker 4 (02:02):
You, and it's little lady or a little old man,
and they only drive, say sixty, So you start getting
closer and closer to them. You need to get back
into the left lane to pass them. Well you had
to slow down because they are going so slow. The
people coming in the left lane they don't want anybody
getting in between them because they're not really polite drivers.
They're not really use the left lane to pass. They

(02:23):
are I want to go as fast as I can.
I want everybody to get off the road so I
can go as fast as I can. And these are
friends of mine, these are our listeners, but I know
them mentality. So they're gunning along and they're on each
other's tailgate. And if you put your blinker on to
let you in, they're not letting you in. You can
stay in the slow lane. You don't get to use
the fast lane to pass. I'm passing in the left

(02:45):
lane and they'll just stay there because they're constant passers
because they're doing eighty five. So I've noticed what happens
is people get pushed into that right lane and can't
get back into the left lane to pass. And now
they're having to do sixty because a person in the
slow lane is doing sixty, and so all the other
guys as they're doing eighty and eighty five, they're never
letting anybody in in front of them to pass. So

(03:06):
when someone ends up in that right hand lane, they
get punished for it.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
So what do they do? They go, all right, that's
how y'all want to play.

Speaker 4 (03:12):
When I get in the left lane, I'm just gonna
drive there for a while, just like y'all do so
by not being polite and letting people in even if
we're coming up on them faster because they're trying to
get around and pass someone else. All we have to
do is pump the brakes twice and let them in
and let them pass. But nope, we're gonna do eighty
eighty five. We're gonna go as fast as we can.
And as a result, they can never ever get out

(03:35):
of that lane because there's a long line of trucks
coming just one after the other after the other after
the other. So when they do get in the left lane,
they go, screw it. I'm just gonna stay over here.
I'm gonna do seventy and y'all can stack up behind
me for miles and miles. There is a consequence to
that sort of behavior. There is a consequence to saying,
you know what, I'm not gonna be polite and let

(03:56):
you pass because I'm only all about me.

Speaker 2 (04:00):
And that's where you see the inefficiency on.

Speaker 4 (04:02):
The highway that will drive you mad because people people
stay in the left lane. And I genuinely believe I
know this because I've thought it myself. I drive the
speed limit. When I was younger, I sped. I thought
it was cool you speed. I don't do that anymore.
I drive the speed limit. I stopped being in a
hurry anywhere. I see these.

Speaker 2 (04:23):
People that are in a hurry. When you're in a hurry, you.

Speaker 4 (04:25):
Make bad decisions. You make decisions you wouldn't. It's not
like being drunk, but it's in the category. You make
decisions you wouldn't otherwise.

Speaker 2 (04:32):
You behave.

Speaker 4 (04:33):
You overreact to things, you get angry about things, You
engage in road rage, you provoke other road rage. I
just decided, you know what, I leave on time and
arrive on time. I don't need to always be in
a hurry because some people think they need to be.

Speaker 2 (04:48):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
You know.

Speaker 4 (04:49):
People will tell me they can drive from Houston and
I get there two hund and fifteen minutes.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
Great. I hope you survive.

Speaker 4 (04:54):
I just so, I hope you don't hurt anybody I
love in the process, because.

Speaker 2 (04:58):
I'm not in any hurry.

Speaker 4 (04:59):
And by the way, like right now, I spent the
whole drive there and back like I was ninety, enjoying
the wildflowers. We've got blue bonnets and Indian paints and
all these beautiful flowers out along the highway in Texas
that are just glorious, and I just slowed down and
enjoyed them. So, yes, the left lane should be for passing,

(05:22):
but we should also bear responsibility for letting other people
pass in front of us, even if the speed differential
has us going faster than them, and they're in the
right lane and they had moved over to the right
lane earlier. That might have been a little too deep
into the woods on highway etiquette.

Speaker 2 (05:37):
But my highway drivers will understand what ees do you want, Marry,
what do you want?

Speaker 4 (05:43):
You want to se the Faelbarry, Just say the word
and I'll throw a lasshole around them and plug down.
We're not in studio, people, or if we're in studio
recording segments or different things, the phone lines are turned off,
but you can still call in and you can leave
a voicemail at anytime, and when you do, it gets

(06:04):
distributed by email to our team.

Speaker 2 (06:06):
And one of our great joys is.

Speaker 4 (06:08):
Coming in every morning, especially on Monday morning, and there
will be voicemails that were left from the weekend, and
it'll be random thoughts. You know, Trump ought to do this,
or this team should have won that, or hey, we
have a question about it, And some of them we
just respond to because it's a question, Hey, who's your
show sponsor?

Speaker 2 (06:27):
Who you know?

Speaker 4 (06:28):
Who's the less lethal launcher folks and burna dot com
forward slash Michael all right.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
But sometimes it is.

Speaker 4 (06:34):
Something that we feel we should share on the air,
and those are always a lot of fun for us
because we get to incorporate more people into the show.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
So this one is Heath.

Speaker 4 (06:46):
We always ask when you call to tell your name
and where you're from. You don't have to do first
and last few to want. Heath is from French settlement, Louisiana,
and he says we don't exploit our national resources, but
he gives examples of times those in our government have

(07:06):
I think this is a very very good call.

Speaker 5 (07:09):
Michael's key from French settlement, listening earlier and not to
do the loot. Your larger point about our national resources,
our natural resources, we don't exploit them, perhaps in the past,
but we utilize them. Let me give you a real
example of somebody exploiting our national resources and our national

(07:33):
economic assets. That's Joe Biden, because he was in trouble.
He had shut down the oil industry and refusing them
permits and licenses and leases, and when the prices went up,
he sold off virtually all of our strategic oil reserves
to pull his political.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
Fact from the fire.

Speaker 5 (07:55):
I'll give you another example. Hillary Clinton cut a deal
with the Russians to sell seventy percent. I believe the
figure was of our uranium production to Russia going to
a Canadian company using the cutouts that cannot be traceable,
and not to mention at the very time when she

(08:18):
was cutting this deal or her husband, Bill was speaking
in Russia for three times his normal speaking fees. Bill
Clinton was normally getting one hundred, one hundred and fifty
thousand dollars for a forty five minute speech. When he
went to Russia and his wife, the former First Lady,

(08:39):
was acting Secretary of State and lining her own pockets,
they paid three times his normal speaking fees. So that
is just out and out, that's exploiting a natural resource.

Speaker 3 (08:57):
We utilize them.

Speaker 1 (09:00):
You know.

Speaker 4 (09:00):
It's interesting The word exploit is a word that has
come to have a pejorative.

Speaker 2 (09:06):
Meaning, and it shouldn't.

Speaker 4 (09:09):
If you have a talent for running, you should exploit
that talent and use it. Whether it's in sports or
if you have a talent for lifting, you should exploit
that talent, whether it's competitive athletics or.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
In your workplace.

Speaker 4 (09:24):
If you have a talent for programming computers, you should
exploit that talent. We should exploit the natural resources God
gave us and put them to good use to create wealth.

Speaker 2 (09:36):
And comfort and convenience for our people.

Speaker 4 (09:38):
And that means our coal and our fossil fuels, and
our fisheries and our lands.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
I believe this. I believe it's wholesome and good and decent.
That's take some costs. Roger, you're on the Michael Berry Show.
What is your executive order?

Speaker 5 (09:56):
Masked? I'll get rid of than masks.

Speaker 1 (09:57):
You shoup A time you walk in a liquor store
wearing a mask, you're gonna get shot.

Speaker 5 (10:01):
Now you just walk in there like it's normal, everyday thing.

Speaker 2 (10:05):
Roger.

Speaker 4 (10:06):
I saw Dave Chappelle had a comedy bit and he said,
you know, COVID has really made things change in this country.
He said, used to they wouldn't let a black man
wear a mask walking into a bank. Now they require it.
And I thought that was the funniest during I thought
that what do you do for living?

Speaker 1 (10:26):
Roger?

Speaker 2 (10:29):
We run hot shot deliveries.

Speaker 1 (10:32):
Oh, right on, okay, we got a small yeah, small
little comb before brothers, so we do this in two
thousand and eight and yeah, two of my brothers just
run out of town doing hot shots. I stay in
the city and my other brothers at thirteen ten ranking
building from building a building with a trailer, truck and trailer.

Speaker 2 (10:53):
So y'all are making it happen, working hard, Yes, sir,
I love it. I love it.

Speaker 4 (10:59):
I love I love I love to see how folks
make a living, and when you can do it as
a family. I say this all the time. If you've
got a family run business, try to get your kids
to come into it. If they got to spend some
time away, that's fine. But so many times, you know,
when you're a young man or woman in your career
and the grandparents rent a house on the lake, or

(11:21):
Eddie Martinez does this, he'll he'll rent a house on
the lake so he can get all his kids and
their kids and on it there together. And if you
work for somebody else, you've got this situation where well
I can't I can't get off from work if you
can find a way to make a living with the
people you love, especially the multi generational thing, then you
can spend time around them and it won't all be

(11:42):
hugs and kisses and reunions, but at least you'll get
to be with them. You'll get to build something with them,
and you get to it's what's that.

Speaker 1 (11:52):
And my mother's eighty five, she's in the office.

Speaker 2 (11:56):
Yeah, it's all at the house. It's incredible.

Speaker 4 (11:59):
I've got several show sponsors like this. I've got a
company in Houston called Redstone Payment Solutions, the Petrew brothers,
and it's three brothers. They all played ball at Texas
A and m Their.

Speaker 2 (12:12):
Dad started a business.

Speaker 4 (12:13):
They all went into it together and they do credit
card processing and they're basically in the customer service business.
And when I send an email, I'll pit one against
the other, just playing around, and they'll respond where all
three of them respond. It's like, you know, congreg Canlisk
and Tim Handley, and there is such love in that family.
They own a lake house together, they vacation together, their kids.

Speaker 2 (12:35):
You know, the cousins are all very close. It's a
really neat deal. It's not always perfect, and it's certainly.

Speaker 4 (12:42):
Not easy, but it's a neat deal when you can
make that happen, it's really is. I'll bet you you've
got ten thousands sweet little ladies of seventy or more
that would make a pound case that you could eat
cold and enjoy.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
Michael Very Show.

Speaker 3 (13:00):
Now.

Speaker 4 (13:06):
Aton Heim is a story that is a rollercoaster of emotions.
Very young doctor, you know, young in your career, it's
harder to speak out and speak up in a Karen
Silkwood sort of way as a whistleblower because you don't
have the credibility. I can call out anything these days
because I'm established, But when you're starting in your career,

(13:29):
you don't have that capital that you can employ to
defend against claims that you know you're a bad guy,
or you can get fired.

Speaker 2 (13:38):
Well.

Speaker 4 (13:39):
Aton Jim was at a Houston hospital where he discovered
mutilation of children, young children by the medical establishment, and
he worked very hard to expose this in order to
end it, got a state law changed as a result
of it, and the thanks he got from the hospital

(13:59):
system and authorities was that he was prosecuted criminally. It's
an awful, awful story, but this guy gets knocked down
but gets back up again. He was in front of
Congress this week and mile my, how this story, how
it has turned and he is the triumphant Paul Revere
in the era of goodness, and we're honored to have

(14:23):
him on the show.

Speaker 2 (14:23):
Aton. Welcome to the program, Sir.

Speaker 3 (14:26):
I said, thank you so much for having me. It's
great to be back on.

Speaker 4 (14:30):
So it's it's a very different mood than once when
we talked and I thought, this poor guy, he got
swallowed up in the swamp. Let's go back to give
a brief explanation of what brought you to the attempt,
what you did, and why you did it originally.

Speaker 3 (14:46):
Yeah, you know, it's really been a wild story. But yeah,
my name is Ayton him. I was a general surgier
resident at Baylor College Medicine in Houston, Texas, between twenty
eighteen twenty twenty three. One of Baylor there's primary affiliate
hospitals like its primary training hospitals. It's Texas Children's, you know,
the largest children's hospital in the world. They said that

(15:09):
they were shutting down their transgender program in March twenty
twenty two. That was in response to Texas turned general
opinion a few weeks before that that said it could
const to criminal child abuse, right, So they said they're
shutting it down, right, you know, nothing to see here. Well,
I worked there. I knew that was a lie. Over
the next couple of months, after March twenty twenty two,

(15:31):
I saw that they not only continued the program but
expanded it right into a multi disk plant clinic. It
was a hospital wide priority. So I didn't believe it
for months, but then I saw how egregious the deception
really was. So then I blew the whistle. On May sixteenth,
twenty twenty three, I was an anonymous whistle blower in

(15:52):
the story by the investigative journalist Chris Russo, and you know,
it revealed tcch's deception. No identifiable information was released. It
was like the same do identify hostile data they released
to like news organizations about in sexious diseases. Right, So
the story comes out, gets really big. No one knows

(16:15):
who I am. The day later, Texas passes a SB
fourteen right, which bans these transgender interventions on children. So
within twenty four hours, for storty of coming out, what
we exposed was made illegal. And then the agent announces
an investigation and TCH more whistle blower speak out, and
you know, I just go on with my life. Right.

(16:37):
A month later, agents came to my home. It was
June twenty third, twenty twenty three, the day of my
graduation from surgical training, one of the most important days
in my life. Two armed agents with the HHS show
up and I find out I'm being investigated by the
federal government. And then what followed after that was this,

(16:58):
you know, kind of cyclone of the most corrupt prosecutors,
FBI agents, the most insane criminal prosecution of all time,
where they used hippa and instead of making it about
patient privacy, right, they made it about protecting multi billion

(17:19):
dollar hospital systems. And that's and I mean that literally
because the victims in the indictment were TCH and its physicians.
No mention of patients. And it turns out that the
lead prosecutor bringing the case right, you couldn't throw a
tennis ball at Tinan, sorry, the lead prosecutor Thanksgiving dinner
without hitting a major TCH or Baylor donor or a

(17:41):
former TCH board member or a CEO who has contracts
with hospitals within the Baylor TCCH academic consortium. So the
person who was criminally prosecuting me, right, sending me a prison,
trying to send me a prison for being a whistleblower,
was the same person who had the primary interest in
seeing these institutions protected, right, which is like, you know,

(18:05):
third world level corruption. You know, after we made that known,
that was in November twenty twenty four, you know, she
stepped down. But then after that, right, they the DJ
pursued a gag order on me. Right because I was
just criticizing the government, and because the judge wasn't on
the corruption as well, he doesn't sign the gag order.

(18:28):
He just threatened to send me to jail. So he
successfully gags me for about a month and a half.
But then after the inauguration, you know, things really spin
out of control because at that point we were a
million dollars in debt. The DJ was accelerating the case
even after Trump's executive order ending the weaponsation DJ, and

(18:50):
every single day that DJ accelerated this was another ten thousand,
fifty thousand, one hundred thousand dollars for US. So it
was we were getting desperate, so I violated the judges
corrupt the facto gag order, and then the judge just
completely went insane. It's just Judge Hitner is based in Houston,
in the Southern District. And then January twenty third, the

(19:13):
day before my case was dismissed, my attorneys were told
that he was going to send me to jail the
next day unless I sign an agreement with the government.
So he was essentially extorting me. And he was also
going to move my trial to that Monday. So you know,
I essentially held up the middle finger to him and said,
you know, then do it because I continued to speak out,

(19:34):
you know, because you know, I violated his gag order.
And you know, luckily, you know, the stars kind of aligned.
Josh Holly, a bunch of people in DC kind of
you know, made sure the right things happened. And this
guy doesn't do you know, this judge doesn't you know,
send me a jail, and they were able to have
the case dismissed with prejudice. And it also helped that

(19:55):
the politically appointed a US attorney in the Southern District
and he was and was gone by that point because
everyone knew this case was corrupt. So the day the
day after I was about to go out to jail.

Speaker 2 (20:08):
Hold on a second, on just a second.

Speaker 4 (20:10):
The case this story has has a happy ending, folks,
a very happy endings. I think January twentieth, twenty twenty
five is Liberation Day.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
Michael show am atk Miim is, in my opinion, up
there with.

Speaker 4 (20:35):
Karen Silkwood Paul Revere as someone who became the tip
of the spear to stand up for what was right
at great peril to himself. And we'd like to think
that every time you do the right thing, a parade
is held in your honor and you were held out
as a hero. But we know that's not true. The

(20:57):
reason we say don't don't lightly step out there and
do that is you might get crushed. And he did
get crushed. Let's be clear. He did get crushed. And
somehow out of all of that, this guy, you know,
it's amazing.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
It really is. The glories of.

Speaker 4 (21:19):
The fact that he is now testifying before Congress and
writing things like it was a real joy to get
to tell my story because most people would have turned
tail and hid and well, why did you do the
right thing? Well, this guy did the right thing, and
we should do. We cannot extol his virtues enough. There
should be a parade in his honor because he did

(21:40):
do the right thing. Ayton, all right, so catch us
up on the case from there.

Speaker 3 (21:46):
Yeah, so it's sorry that was quite a long explanation,
but it's a very convoluted, crazy story. So really, the
ultimate thing that happened was that at the last possible moment,
at the most traumatic point possible, when I was on
the verge of going to jail after being extorted by
a corrupt judge in Houston, the case was dismissed with

(22:10):
prejudice so that I could never be brought again. That
was on Friday, January twenty fifth. And then that Sunday,
you know, I get a call and you know, it
was amazing, Josh Holly had invited me to the President
Trump's first Day of the Union. And then now yesterday
I testified. So and you're correct. You know, it's like
I was being crushed. I mean, for the past two

(22:32):
years was just one continuous kind of episode of me
being crushed time after time. But I just knew I
couldn't live with myself, so I didn't fight back because
in the middle of all this, you know, my wife
and I had her first baby daughter, right it was
September twenty fifth, and like, you know, I had to

(22:52):
leave that after my wife had an emergency C section
and while she was imposed up. I had to leave
my wife and my newborn baby daughter to go to
court the next day. And it was you know, it
was so painful. But it's like, you know, if I'm
bringing my child into this world, you know, it doesn't
the praise don't matter, the the you know, the praise

(23:14):
doesn't matter. It's like, I just have to do it
because I don't want to deliver her into a world
where this can happen, you know, because it's like, as
bad as I feel for you, if we'll do something,
how can we ever, Yeah, how can we ever deliver
them into that?

Speaker 4 (23:30):
I feel bad for your wife. She had to go
through pregnancy, through all this, She's just given a baby.

Speaker 3 (23:36):
She was working, yeah, she was. She was working in
the Northern District of Texas. The prosecutor coming after me.
My wife held the same position as her, but just
in a different district. So she was working in the
DJ every day of the week when she was like

(23:56):
fully pregnant, and this case was going on and they
were trying to send me a prison for ten years.
It was totally insane. That's I mean, that's why she
had to have an emergency fee section. It's because her
blood pressure was really high, right, Like we didn't expect
to go in on that day, on September twenty fifth,
you know, but it's because all this was going on.

(24:16):
Thank God, she's okay.

Speaker 4 (24:18):
So you have recovered, you're the better for it. If
you do have some scars to show tell me how
it felt speaking before Congress, man.

Speaker 3 (24:28):
It was amazing, and you know, especially it's like you
go through so much. You know, we're still a million
dollars in debt, you know, and if anyone's you know,
we're still andyone can donate gives sendgo dot com, forward
slash Texas underscore with the blowers. We're forever grateful for it,
and we'll pay it off over time. You know, we'll
probably pay legal bills with Social Security check. But it

(24:50):
is what it is. But to be able to speak
in front of Congress yesterday was one of the greatest
things ever because especially going toe to toe with these democrats.
Of these people they stand up there and they lie,
they lie in the most vicious way possible because they
just repeated the allegations that were already disproven in a

(25:12):
court in the Southern District of Texas. Everything they said
was a blatant lie, and somehow they have the audacity
to stand up there and repeat it. And you know,
just to be able to look at Jamie raskin a
slimy like, you know, a little goblin person right in

(25:32):
his dirty little eyes and just and just make them
look like a fool was the single greatest thing in
my entire life, other than marrying my wife and my
child and being born. So it's number three.

Speaker 2 (25:46):
Probably how old are you, thirty five? Man? You have
lived a lot of life in a brief period of time. Yes,
if I were, you know, in good.

Speaker 3 (26:02):
Yeah, there's so many crazy things that happened behind the scenes.
You know, it's I guess it's just one of those
things that when you go through something like this, it's
just the nature of it. You know, these crazy things happen.
But it's just like if you just stick with it
and just tell the truth and do the right thing
and treat people with respect, and you know, then things

(26:23):
kind of work out. And you know it's like you realize, like, yeah,
you know, we lost all this money, we lost everything
we ever had. But you know we're still healthy. You
know we still have our family, and I mean that's
the most important thing.

Speaker 4 (26:35):
So you took on Texas Children's Hospital, you took on
the medical regulators, you took on the entirety of the government,
our court system, our everything, because you believed, I don't
want to put words in your mouth, you believed you
saw that children were being mutilated in violation of Texas

(26:56):
law and that that was evil, right, in violation.

Speaker 3 (27:03):
And I believe this has always been illegal, but words
is in violation of divine law, of God's law. Right.
These children are created perfect, and what these doctors were
doing is destroying their bodies so that that they're they're
going to get put down this road that they can
never come back from. And it's like what's being taken
away from them is something they can't even fathom. Because

(27:25):
once I looked into my daughter's eyes and I held
her for the first time, it's like this, I realized,
that's what life is. Right, to have a child and
to bring someone into this world, it's the most.

Speaker 4 (27:38):
It's it's you, pet I'm going to rupt you because
I have a minute left. I want you to take
a minute, and it'll crash into the break. You told
the story about these fake they cut off these boys
wieners and they create a fake female organ and you
told about their their anus leaking into that.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
And all that goes wrong. People need to understand how
brutal this is. Tell that to the break if you would.

Speaker 3 (28:06):
Yeah, yeah, So it's I see these pathologies when they're
like caused by cancer, right when they're obstructing the urethra
or the bladder, or you have fishialize from for example,
I articulize, and so you have these connections formed between
different organs because that's the nature of healing. And what
these quote unquote neo viaginas are are just large healing

(28:26):
chronic wounds. So the cells grow together. You know, I
have patients who they will they will urinate stool, right
because of these connections. These are a not uncommon, you know,
you know, a shocklingly frequent complications from all these surgeries

(28:47):
and you know, to to and I know some of
the people who have undergone them, you know, uh uh,
you know de transitioners, I mean the light.

Speaker 4 (28:58):
Data that's just so hard.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
The japan applas have swerved with him Tikhill and good
night
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