Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
darry Show is on the air right now.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
There's a lot of fallacies about Latinos.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
And we want to clear that up. Oh yeah, like
like what.
Speaker 4 (00:16):
Officer, Well, first of all, not every single Latino is Mexican.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
I'm glad you noticed different kind of Mexicans.
Speaker 5 (00:26):
Puerto Rican Mexican is Nicarado Mexican, Dominican Mexicans.
Speaker 6 (00:45):
I knew nothing in Mexican culture. I'm originally from the Midwest.
I moved to Los Angeles like Sinko DeMaio. I didn't
even know what it was. My neighbor's Mexican. I asked him,
I mean in Midwest we call it Tuesday, you know.
I asked him, what is? He goes, It's our Independence Day?
I go, who'd you beat? He goes the French. I'm like, well,
who didn't you know?
Speaker 3 (01:07):
I don't know if it's.
Speaker 6 (01:08):
Something to get quite mis wound up about Hose, but if.
Speaker 5 (01:12):
Martinitas or Half Pride, I'm all the actors leave going.
Speaker 7 (01:14):
To bamakok.
Speaker 3 (01:20):
Sa bootha.
Speaker 7 (01:23):
Sat book day.
Speaker 8 (01:30):
The French forces in the Battle of Puebla back in
eighteen sixty two, It's also an excuse to drink to
kill on a Monday morning at work for Lewis. President
Obama will mark the holiday with a reception at the
White House. You have to drink the whole thing and
eat the worm. I wanted to take a moment right
here because on Monday, think of the mail Way too
early made sarcastic references to the way some Americans celebrate
(01:52):
the holiday, and it was not our intention to be disrespectful,
and we sincerely apologize for those references. You know, after
twenty years in this business, anyone who knows me those
where I stand on diversity and inclusion.
Speaker 7 (02:02):
So to those I let.
Speaker 8 (02:03):
Down or feel betrayed, I hear you, and I'm sorry.
We want to go over to Lewis now, but the
look at the stories in the court of this morning,
and I know you are contrite.
Speaker 7 (02:11):
As well, Thomas.
Speaker 9 (02:12):
I want to express my sincere apologies as well.
Speaker 7 (02:15):
I truly it was never my intention to offend anyone.
Speaker 9 (02:18):
And if I did it, and I know I did,
I'm very sorry.
Speaker 3 (02:37):
How perfect is this?
Speaker 5 (02:40):
If you watched Kentucky Derby, you already know, But if
you didn't, President Trump winning in November was not just
beating the Democrats. It was beating the media, the self
described journalists who are not their advocates. How about the
fact that the Kentucky Derby had a horse named Sovereignty
(03:04):
beating out another horse named journalism to win the derby.
What are the chances you couldn't script this stuff?
Speaker 4 (03:12):
Journalism is all the move because they turned for homd
Sovereignty is coming with him on the outside.
Speaker 7 (03:19):
The two of them.
Speaker 4 (03:20):
Go break by with a prolocum. Journalism and Sovereignty loves
to those down to the last sixteenth of a mile.
Sovereignty has taken the lead. Journalism is second, priding outside
by athels third. But it will be Sovereignty to rule
the Kentucky journalism advas of our next final deay, it
(03:42):
was for the federal time was two on two point
three one seconds.
Speaker 3 (03:50):
Sovereignty beat journalism.
Speaker 5 (03:54):
President Trump saying, the sovereignty of our nation, the fact
that we can troll this property properly, rightfully, And the
journal is saying, but.
Speaker 3 (04:07):
What about the people who should get to come here?
And till us all.
Speaker 5 (04:12):
You know, I have been a Wall Street journal reader
for many years. It was a time that I would
tell you that The Wall Street Journal was the finest
bit of financial and political journalism out there.
Speaker 3 (04:26):
But they have changed.
Speaker 5 (04:29):
I have remarked many times on the air, and I've
had people email me and say, I'm glad you said
something because nobody else has mentioned it. Well, obviously President
Trump's had a problem with it as well. A reporter
from the Wall Street Journal tried to ask President Trump
a question and the President this was on this was
a board Air Force one. The President just let him
(04:50):
have it.
Speaker 10 (04:51):
You people do theirself bad. Wall Street Journal has truly
gotten help roten this big book. Everybody I said, it's
up running. And I wouldn't tell them both Jernal because anyway,
did right to office something. Wall Street Channel is China oriented.
(05:16):
This guy.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
It's true, it's true.
Speaker 5 (05:21):
A week or so ago, the Wall Street Journal ran
a story that said that the Tesla board had begun
a search for a new CEO. Well that wasn't true,
and they were forced to double back. But do you
ever notice their error is never the other way. They
(05:45):
never get it wrong about Hunter Biden or Joe Biden,
and it's more negative than it turns out to be.
It's always always cutting against what's good and decent.
Speaker 3 (06:00):
What are they so mad about?
Speaker 5 (06:03):
W y FF NBC News for in Greenville, South Carolina,
went to an anti Trump, anti Elon rally and ask
people there, you're here protesting against Trump and Elon?
Speaker 3 (06:15):
Why are you protesting?
Speaker 11 (06:17):
There are considerations that are not being taken about people
who are needy and unfortunate.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
This government is there.
Speaker 12 (06:25):
They're hurting people to get more profit for the for
these billionaires and all of these people, but the average
person are being are being hurt by this, and so
we want to call attention to that and say that
we're not going to stand for it.
Speaker 13 (06:34):
A very strong ground swell of support for the support
against what's going on in our country right now, and
hopefully we get it'll turn the tide when we come
back to the elections in a couple of years.
Speaker 5 (06:50):
They couldn't find a single person that could explain to
reporters why they were actually protesting. I like to bring
this out and dusted off from time to time for
no other reason than to revel in it.
Speaker 3 (07:04):
Rush used to do that. There's certain bits of audio
that I just right on right on.
Speaker 5 (07:10):
This was Fox News breaking the story that Donald Trump
had settled his lawsuit with ABC News and George Stephanopoulos
for a cool fifteen million dollars. You folks not lied,
you knew it, and now you're going to pay me
for it. This was just in December, a few months ago.
Speaker 14 (07:32):
ABC News and George Stefanopholis have reached a settlement with
President elect Trump in his defamation lawsuit. The network agrees
to pay fifteen million dollars as a charitable contribution to
Trump's presidential library. ABC and Stephanopolis will also issue statements
of regret as an editor's note to the March twenty
(07:54):
twenty four article and television segment that prompted Trump to
file the lawsuit.
Speaker 3 (07:59):
Earlier than this year.
Speaker 14 (08:00):
Trump sued Stephanophoulis after he asserted in an interview that
Trump was found quote libel for rape in a civil case,
despite the fact that a jury actually determined Trump was
libel for quote sexual abuse, which has a distinct definition
under New York law.
Speaker 7 (08:21):
Allow me to introduce myself. My name is Mitch Michael
Berry Genius.
Speaker 3 (08:28):
This is maybe my favorite name. This bit of audio.
It doesn't involve Trump. Today.
Speaker 5 (08:36):
There's a woman named ion Heir c Ali. She's a
former member of the House of representatives of the Netherlands.
I think her family lineage is Sudanese or Somalia. I
can't remember. This is the ilhan Omar you would like?
Shall we say? She was on a podcast called The
Daily Tea with Camilla Tomminy. I hope I'm pronouncing that correctly,
(09:01):
but I have no idea. A few months ago and
she was asked a question. She's a black woman, beautiful
black woman who writes a lot about the individual and
the collective and oppression and race and propaganda and these
(09:21):
sorts of things. Now, her perspective is more European, which
is about twenty years head of where we're going to be,
which is not a pretty picture. She has a massive
audience for her writings, and I would encourage you to
read some of the things she writes. Ion is ay an,
Here's c h I R SI ali A l I.
(09:41):
And she's asked the question about diversity, equity and inclusion
and her answer is glorious. Oh, those are real pretty words.
They are a velvet glove surrounding an iron fist are
used bludgeon people to death.
Speaker 3 (09:56):
That's basically what she says, but she says it beautiful.
Speaker 12 (09:58):
Here we go make of what Trump has said about diversity,
equity and inclusion policies.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
He's basically suggested that they should be scrapped.
Speaker 3 (10:07):
They should be scrapped.
Speaker 11 (10:08):
Yeah, Diversity, equity, and inclusion, three wonderful sounding words that
are in fact a scheme to do the exact opposite.
It's to divide, and it's to create inequality. It's to
revive racism, but this time against white people. It's all
based on this idea that there's an oppressor and oppressed.
(10:28):
It's what I call neo communism, because the communism before
nineteen eighty nine field it was centered around class and
economic inequality. But this DEI scheme is based on race
and identity and identity politics, and these things are terrible
and we've seen the outcome of that. So for the
Trump administration to go out and say let's get rid
of this, I'm very much in favor of that.
Speaker 5 (10:52):
That is extraordinarily well said, extraordinarily well said. They need
more people willing to step up and say such things
on the subject. Vice President jd Vance, who I keep
saying this because it's true, and I'll tell you when
I don't believe it's true. He has turned out to
be a great choice for vice president. I did not
(11:13):
expect this. I did not expect him to be this good.
I interviewed j D when he was running for the Senate,
and I did it at the request of Ted Cruz,
but I said, I think he's a question. I'm going
to hit him pretty hard. And I didn't think he
was that conservative. I really didn't. I was worried he was.
Speaker 3 (11:33):
Going to be a swamp creature.
Speaker 5 (11:34):
I was worried with his Peter Thal background and he
was going to be a guy that was more kind
of a prime I mean, I like deal, don't even wrong.
Speaker 3 (11:40):
He's libertarian all that.
Speaker 5 (11:41):
But I was afraid he was going to be a
country club technology you know, tech bro kind of go
along to get along, the kind of people who listen
to sports radio and don't want to take tough positions
or anything because they don't want to upset the athletes.
Speaker 3 (11:57):
You know, that type of person.
Speaker 5 (12:00):
And he's turned out to be quite the opposite, both
as a Senator and now as Vice president. And I
when I'm wrong, and I'll admit it and happily so
I like to be wrong. I'm glad I was wrong
about Donald Trump. I'm glad he was not what I
feared he would be when he ran. I'm glad he
is who he is. He's been just wonderful. On first
(12:22):
one to admit I didn't think he would be, Well,
I knew, Michael, you knew because you liked his TV show.
Calm down over there. Anyway, here's President Vice President J. D.
Vance on Fox News with Brettbear when he correctly identified
the leader of the Democrat Party. Now, if you don't
know what he says, it's going to surprise you, and
it's going to startle you in a bad way to start,
(12:43):
But just listen carefully that the reasoning is sound.
Speaker 8 (12:46):
On the Democratic side, do you think Alexander Accassio Cortez
AOC is the new leader?
Speaker 7 (12:51):
Couldn't be in advance AOC and try Tanya President AOC
the stuff of nightmares. Bread, Thank you, you've ruined my
sleep for the Democratic Party.
Speaker 15 (13:00):
Don't know, honestly, I think think about it. I think
to the extent that Democrats have a leader.
Speaker 7 (13:04):
Donald J.
Speaker 15 (13:04):
Trump is the leader of the Democratic Party because they're
just against everything that he does. I mean, who could
possibly disagree with rebuilding American manufacturing and ensuring.
Speaker 7 (13:12):
These steelworkers have higher wages and better jobs.
Speaker 15 (13:15):
But anytime Donald Trump does anything, they have this emotional response.
Speaker 7 (13:19):
They have to be against it.
Speaker 15 (13:20):
Who could disagree with supporting millions of illegal aliens, many
of whom are violent criminals, But they do, they have
and I think that what they do is whenever Donald J.
Trump does something, they react negatively to it. They don't
have real leadership. And I think that's why I'm not
too concerned about twenty twenty eight.
Speaker 7 (13:35):
Because if I wake up in.
Speaker 15 (13:37):
A fantasy world where the Democrats actually have constructive ideas
about how to govern this country, that will actually be
a good thing.
Speaker 7 (13:43):
But in the world that we actually live in, where
they're just.
Speaker 15 (13:45):
Anti Trump about everything, the politics of twenty twenty eight
will take care of the fid.
Speaker 3 (13:49):
It's a really really interesting point. And in fact, in
some ways, the President's success and the Democrats hate of
him is covering up. It's putting makeup on their black
eye of lack of leadership. So what's rising to the top,
(14:12):
what's getting the most airtime for the Democrats is whoever
says the most crass thing about Donald Trump. That's why
AOC is up there. If you're wondering why AOC has
become the leader of their party. It's because they don't
have a leader of their party. It's because they don't
have someone to step forward. Kamala Harris was their presidential candidate,
(14:35):
but she was never the leader of their party. It's
important to understand.
Speaker 5 (14:39):
In twenty twenty, Kamala Harris was out of the presidential race.
Before Iowa, she never got a vote for president. Think
about that. In twenty twenty, she had the highest intersectionality score.
She was half Indian, half black imigrant parents born in Canada.
(15:07):
Uh woman, Californian. I mean she she had. She looked
great on paper, she looked perfect on paper, and then
you hear her talk, and then you see her records,
and then you realize some people just have that certain
something of being really unlikable.
Speaker 3 (15:27):
The boy was that ever her Michael Berry's show.
Speaker 5 (15:34):
If Elon Musk had continued being a Democrat, had funded demo,
talked about illegal immigration being great and boys should be girls.
You know, he has a son who transitioned. That was
a major moment for him where he realized that his
son was taken away from him and made into a
girl and alienated him. From his child and it really
(16:00):
really tore him up, and he's spoken a lot about that.
Speaker 3 (16:09):
Well, what's interesting is.
Speaker 5 (16:15):
If Elon had stayed a democrat, which is in keeping
with most people who do what he does, you know,
the Mark, he'd just be like Mark Cuban running crypto
scams and well if Elon allegedly remond. If Elon had
continued to do that, he would be heralded as the
(16:37):
most accomplished man alive today. Before Tesla, you look at
his involvement in PayPal and other companies, but let's just
start with Tesla. In the modern era, you've got the
most valuable car company in the world by far. He
(17:01):
revolutionized evs. I'm not an EV fan, but I can
recognize what he did. He brought full self driving. To me,
the most revolutionary thing to happen in transportation. He brought
that to the market. They said it would never happen.
(17:22):
He raised or or created a market capitalization for Tesla
that was more than the next seven largest companies combined.
Creasy companies have been around for one hundred years, and
he did that. He also, oh, by the way, started
(17:46):
sending people into space with a rocket that could come
back down again.
Speaker 3 (17:53):
It could be recycled.
Speaker 5 (17:55):
The government never did that, despite the many billions they spent.
He created the greatest advancement in Wi Fi or connectivity
in starlink of the last twenty five years. And you
might not need it, but if you live out in
the country. I've got friends that live out in the
(18:16):
mountains in Montana, Wyoming, Colorado, different places, Texas, and they
couldn't get internet. And now they can by literally just
buying this dish, walking outside, flipping it on poop, they
got internet, good Internet. That's insane. By dropping these satellites
to hover just above the earth, why couldn't somebody else
(18:37):
have done that? Nobody ever talks about his boring company,
which he named cheeky enough, cheicily enough, the boring company
which bores underground and amazing technology, Neuralink, which gets no
press because nobody wants to help him. Is using your
brain as you think things to make it happen on
(19:01):
the screen, or make it happen in real life. You've
got sufferers from als, sufferers from paralysis who were able
to talk to you even though they can't speak, by
their brain being able to write on the screen.
Speaker 3 (19:17):
It's unbelievable.
Speaker 5 (19:19):
Well in Cameron County in South Texas, where he located SpaceX,
the voters living around there have voted to create to
incorporate the city of Starbas.
Speaker 3 (19:37):
I'll read it to you.
Speaker 5 (19:38):
Cameron County election officials confirmed that overwhelming support among early
voters clinched the election in favor of creating the city
of Starbas. Unofficial results showed the election was a landslide.
After the county certifies a result, the new city will
be official. Only two hundred and eighty three people those
who live within the boundaries of the proposed city, were
(19:59):
eligible to vote in the election. Two thirds of them
either work or SpaceX or had already indicated their support.
Unlike other tech leaders who built their campuses in Silicon Valley,
SpaceX Starbase is perched on the far edge of Texas,
about twenty miles outside Brownsville. Next to SpaceX's main building
(20:23):
are the remnants of an old beach village. Nearly all
of the houses are now owned by the company. Musk
has been open about his desire to create a city
here for years. By February enough, SpaceX employees had signed
a petition to force a vote on the issue. The
new city will have approximately five hundred official residents. Star
(20:43):
Base leaders have said in corporation will help the area
continue to grow while giving them more control over functions
that already managed, like roads and utilities. City leaders could
also adopt zoning ordinances that are more lenient than those
of the county, allowing them to build more homes on
the lots they already incorporating. Star Base will streamline the
(21:05):
processes required to build the amenities necessary to make the
area a world class place to live for the hundreds
already calling it home, as well as for prospective workers
eager to help build humanity's future in space. Starbas manager
Catherine Looters said in a letter to Cameron County Judge
Eddie Travino, What a wonderful success story. What a wonderful
(21:30):
success story. I was going to go into a negative story,
but I'm not going to. I'd like to end this
story on a very positive note. President Trump has ordered
an end to federal funding for NPR, National Public Radio,
and PBS, the public broadcast system. President Trump signed an
(21:51):
executive order Thursday directing the Corporation for Public Broadcasting's board
of directors to cease federal.
Speaker 3 (21:57):
Funding for NPR and PBA.
Speaker 5 (22:00):
Yes, Trump writes in the Executive Order, which viewpoints in
PR and PBS promote does not matter. What does matter
is that neither entity presents a fair, accurate, or unbiased
portrayal of current events to tax paying citizens. President Trump
wrote on social media, quote, Republicans must defend and totally
(22:24):
disassociate themselves from NPR and PBS. I'm sorry, defund, defund
the radical left monsters that so badly hurt our country.
In the Executive Order, President Trump instructs the CPB and
Executive Branch departments and agencies to cease direct and indirect
funding of NPR and PBS, writing the c PB board
(22:46):
shalling cancel existing direct funding to the maximum extent allowed
by law, and shall decline to provide future funding. I
suspect they will come begging, begging, board in hand, and
he will cut a deal and keep them in business.
(23:08):
I suspect that will happen, but at least, and this
is the art of the deal. First there's the takeaway,
Then you come to the table. Then he cuts a deal.
But they weren't ready to cut a deal because they
didn't believe he would do this, because in order to
do this, he has to be thought a bad person
by the media and by the lawyer class and the
(23:31):
accountant class, and the symphony goers and the opera goers.
Oh my, what will we do without NPR and PBS.
I don't know, spend the money sending it back to
the taxpayers who earned it. Why do we need government
controlled media? Oh, but we need mister Rogers neighborhood. If
(23:57):
there is a market for it, it sexual will do it.
Elon's better than NASA.
Speaker 3 (24:03):
Leave it at that.
Speaker 2 (24:06):
Conjunction junction?
Speaker 3 (24:08):
What's your oction?
Speaker 7 (24:10):
The Michael Berry Show conjunction junction?
Speaker 2 (24:12):
How's that ounction?
Speaker 5 (24:16):
There is a scene in No Country for Old Men,
one of my all time favorite movies, where the sheriff
is going back to see I guess his uncle, who
was an.
Speaker 3 (24:29):
Old law man before him.
Speaker 5 (24:32):
And he's he's there to get some advice on how
to handle this case he's working on, and he talks
about how things have gone to hell and it all
started when the girls started wearing a green hair. And
that story has always spoken to me because he says
(24:54):
in there signs and wonders. So I came back to
the studio after watching it for fifteenth time recently, and
I decided that we had to start doing a segment
for the fact that sometimes I see a story and
I think to myself, if if you put this moment
(25:16):
in a time capsule and one hundred years later he
looked at it, there would be that carnival cruise brawl.
Speaker 3 (25:25):
The mayhem there.
Speaker 5 (25:28):
There was recently at a in Houston, at a sweet
sixteen party, guy walks in. They tell him he can't
be there. He's probably in a rival gang or something.
So he pulls out his gun and wounds eighteen and
kills one. Wasn't so sweet after all. It soured the
sweet sixteen party. And you just think, who does these
(25:53):
sorts of things? Well, just so you don't think I'm
picking on minorities, this guy's a white guy that I'm
about to tell you about. And well, it qualifies for
a Signs and Wonders segment.
Speaker 3 (26:05):
So here we go.
Speaker 16 (26:21):
It's all of the damn money and the money in
the drugs.
Speaker 3 (26:26):
It's just THEMN beyond everything.
Speaker 16 (26:29):
What's it mean?
Speaker 3 (26:30):
What's it leading to?
Speaker 16 (26:32):
I don't know. If you'd have told me twenty years ago,
i'd see children walking the streets of our Texas towns
with their green hair, the bones and their noses. I
just flat out with't the bleach signs and wonders.
Speaker 5 (26:45):
But I think once you quit here in sir and ma'am,
the rest of them to follow.
Speaker 3 (26:50):
Oh it's the tad, it's the dismal pad. It is
not the one thing the one point signs had signs
and wonders.
Speaker 7 (27:05):
It's the.
Speaker 3 (27:07):
Size, wondrous size.
Speaker 5 (27:11):
A little background. This fellow was a security guard an
hour north of Houston in a bedroom community called the Woodlands,
one of the nicest places to live in the Greater
Houston area. People want to get north of the crime,
north of the crowds, the north of the Sweet sixteen
(27:33):
parties where somebody shoots the place up, and it is
an idyllic community.
Speaker 3 (27:39):
It has a mall there, and there.
Speaker 5 (27:42):
Was a security guard who was working at the mall
who was secretly recording children when they'd go to the bathroom.
My brother, the cop, used to tell me that sex
crimes have the highest recidivism rate. When the guy commits
a sex crime, especially on kids, you let him out,
(28:05):
the chances he's going to re offend are almost they're
approaching one.
Speaker 3 (28:11):
They're high. So you figure this old boys out.
Speaker 5 (28:16):
He's had his picture splashed across the news of every
station in Houston.
Speaker 3 (28:22):
He's lost his job. He's ashamed. You figure.
Speaker 5 (28:27):
Last thing he'd do well, he can't work an hour
north of Houston. Last thing he'd do is go an
hour south of Houston in Galveston, which is an island community,
the other.
Speaker 3 (28:40):
End of Houston. That's the far north, and now this
is far south.
Speaker 5 (28:44):
Last thing he would do is that same thing again, right,
you'd be wrong.
Speaker 17 (28:55):
Guard, already facing charges for secretly recording underage girls, is
back in jail, this time in Galveston. Taylor Roy was
arrested Wednesday on a new invasive recording charge. KPRC two
reporter Corley Peel is outside the Galveston County jail where
Roy is being held, and she's sharing how Roy was
caught a second time.
Speaker 12 (29:16):
Taylor Roy's arrest here in Galveson County and Montgomery County
are almost.
Speaker 2 (29:20):
Exactly a year apart.
Speaker 12 (29:22):
This time, he's accused of trying to take videos of
a child on the beach. The beaches of Galveston Island
are where many families spend quality time on Easter weekend.
It's where police say a bond stander notice Taylor Roy
taking videos and pictures of their child. The family managed
(29:43):
to gather pictures of Roy and his vehicle. Police quickly
identified him as their suspect. Eleven days later, police tracked
Roy down, taking him into custody. During the investigation, detectives
learned Roy was already out on bond for the same
crime in mcgummy County. Roy was a security guard at
(30:04):
the Woodlands Mall and a youth tennis coach. He and
his wife, Tasha, were arrested last year after allegedly creating
secret videos of girls as young as ten and selling them.
Roy is accused of recording in many places where young
girls were known to be wearing swimsuits, like dressing rooms
and six Flags Hurricane Harbor. Investigators in both Galveson County
(30:27):
and Montgomery County now working together to solve Roy's accused crimes.
Taylor Roy is currently being held in the Galveson County
Jail on a seventy five thousand dollars bond.
Speaker 2 (30:38):
His next court date has not been set yet.
Speaker 12 (30:40):
I did reach out to the Montgomery County District Attorney's
office to find out if his new charge here in
Galveson will have an impact on his bond in Montgomery County.
Speaker 2 (30:50):
The spokesperson says.
Speaker 12 (30:51):
That generally speaking, if someone is out on bond with
conditions and they commit a new offense, and may be
a basis to acid judge to set aside that bond,
increase the bond, or make changes to the bond conditions.
But this is an active and ongoing investigation in Galveston,
Corley Peel KPRC to News.
Speaker 3 (31:12):
I don't feel sorry for this guy.
Speaker 5 (31:15):
I don't empathize with criminals, because there are real victims
of these sorts of things. But I do look at
them as peculiar. And I will tell you that I
believe something goes wrong in a brain for somebody to
(31:36):
want to do that. I believe something goes wrong in
a brain that in almost every case cannot be fixed.
You know, I'm not a heroin addict because I've never
tried heroin. Right, there are things that scare me. Things
are areas you just don't go. You don't leave your
(31:58):
wife for a stripper who you met at the strip club.
Speaker 3 (32:02):
If you don't go to the strip club, just that simple.
Speaker 5 (32:05):
You don't get hooked on heroin if you don't try
it the first time. It's like this guy had one
shot at not doing this. I don't think he intended
for his life to fall apart like this. A lot
of guys like this will suck start a shotgun because
they see no upside from it. But boy, that's a horrible,
(32:29):
horrible place to be in your life, a terrible horror.
Imagine the demons he's got to put him. He knows
he's been caught before. So being caught, you know, when
you had teenage kids like I do, you got to
tell them, hey, don't drive fast, you could die.
Speaker 3 (32:46):
Oh I won't die. How about this guy over here?
Speaker 10 (32:48):
Now?
Speaker 5 (32:48):
Oh dad, you always know somebody died. This guy's been
caught before, so when he got arrested this second, I
can imagine
Speaker 3 (32:55):
How awful cold mind goodness, I mean, good guy