Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Very Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
Yeah, corn Pop was a bad dude and he ran
a bunch of bad boys.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
The first rule of fight club is you do not
talk about fight club.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
The second rule of fight club is you do not
talk about fight club. Not a joke.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
And so he's up on the board, wouldn't listen, and
I said, hey, Esther, you off the board.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
I'll come up and drag you off.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Well, he came off and he said I'll meet you
outside my car. This was mostly his We're all public
housing behind it.
Speaker 4 (00:47):
You know.
Speaker 2 (00:47):
The chain used to be a chain that went across
the deep end and he cut off the six foot
left of chain. He pulled up and said, you walk
out with that chain. And you walked in the car
and say you may cut me man, but I'm gonna
wrap this chain around your head.
Speaker 5 (01:00):
I wonder what is your message to Hezbollah, and it's
backer Iran.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
We don't.
Speaker 6 (01:08):
Don't, don't don't.
Speaker 1 (01:09):
Sureley' isn't be serious. I am serious. Don't call me
show you don't don't don't. But I'm serious.
Speaker 5 (01:15):
These are the kind of guys.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
You're like a smacking ass.
Speaker 7 (01:19):
You and me.
Speaker 8 (01:20):
We're gonna have a fight today after school, three o'clock
in the parking lot.
Speaker 2 (01:25):
Press always ask me, don't I wish I were debating him?
Speaker 1 (01:29):
No, I wish you're in high school. I could take
it behind the gym.
Speaker 9 (01:32):
Mister Dalton Man, nine staples to your DOSSI if three
men broken downs, two bull owns, nine functions of four
sailors still screws.
Speaker 6 (01:41):
That's an estimate. Of course, I'll give you a local.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
I thank you.
Speaker 2 (01:46):
Do you enjoy pain paint?
Speaker 1 (01:48):
Don't hurt? Most of my patients would disagree with you, okay.
Always carry your medical records around with you safe time.
Speaker 2 (02:01):
It's not about being a tough guy.
Speaker 10 (02:06):
Do I get old?
Speaker 4 (02:07):
Man?
Speaker 1 (02:07):
Do you want a piece of meat? I want a
piece of you. I want the whole thing.
Speaker 2 (02:18):
You can see that I'm mentally incompetent and I can't
walk you, and I can read the hell out of.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
Both of them.
Speaker 11 (02:23):
So I told you that Boston University Associate Professor Brooke
Nichols created a computer model, and you know, she just
wanted to know how many people are going to die
from the cuts from usaid that dog as proposed, and
(02:44):
that you know the computer doesn't care one way another.
The computer just tells the truth. And the computer model
revealed that three hundred thousand people are going to die.
That have y'all even thought about that? If you start
cutting money, all these people are gonna die and it's
on you.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
They're all gonna die. Where are they to die from?
They're gonna die?
Speaker 11 (03:06):
You mean, if you don't give all those millions of
dollars to news organizations that the USAID was giving out.
You mean, if all the welfare checks to politically connected
people aren't given, people will die. It's all the ways
about the children, and people are gonna die, isn't it?
(03:27):
You ever notice that? But it's the manufacturing of information.
Just sorry, it's manufacturing of manipulation. It's very very smart.
This is why government gives so much money to universities,
(03:49):
because universities are cover for leftist policies and big spending.
So when this you needed to slow down the momentum
of doze, you get a university professor at Boston University,
You get a computer model, You get an exact number
(04:11):
of people who are.
Speaker 1 (04:11):
Going to die, and it affects how other people react.
Speaker 11 (04:19):
This is manipulation. This is propaganda at its finest. Professor
at Leftist University publishes report. Leftist news organizations like the
PBS News Hour run with it. Now, most people don't
watch PBS News Hour. That's why PBS News Hour needs
(04:39):
federal funding. But it's people like Bono, the lead singer
of You Two, who hear it and they go, oh,
it has to be the truth. It's PBS News Aret,
And all it really does is reinforce the opinions they
already have that they're very righteous and they care about people,
and Trump doesn't.
Speaker 1 (04:59):
He wants everybody to die.
Speaker 11 (05:02):
So they go off and spout this nonsense. So Bono
goes on with Joe Rogan and he cites this, three
hundred thousand people have died that a bit. You know,
this is like the straws. You remember the whole story
about the straws. Plastic straws were causing the ocean. We're
(05:23):
going to fill up the ocean with plastic straws. That
quote was being used. A study had been done. Plastic
straws were going to fill up the oose. We had
to stop with plastic straws, so you had to use
the paper straws that didn't hold up. You had to
be inconvenienced, just like global warming, you had to be inconvenience.
It turned out it was a little kid who had
come up with that, and it had been reported so
(05:43):
many times, like the telephone game, nobody knew where it
came from.
Speaker 1 (05:46):
So listen to this just recent report.
Speaker 12 (05:51):
It's not proven, but the surveillance enough suggests three hundred
thousand people have already died from just.
Speaker 1 (05:58):
This cut off, this hard cut of us aid.
Speaker 11 (06:07):
He said that, and he believes that. You know, I
have for years wondered what percentage make up the two
positions of people, let's say the vaccine and mandatory shots,
(06:30):
let's say global warming, let's say the training issue. You know,
boys can be and the two sides of this coin aren't.
The first one is people who don't believe the nonsense
they're saying, but it's part of what they need to do.
Speaker 1 (06:48):
In order to be righteous.
Speaker 11 (06:50):
And a democrat and a university professor, and in order
to be accepted into the gang of the left, in
order to be able to go to the right cocktail
parties and be accepted as one of their own. So
there are people who will spout this nonsense who really
(07:14):
don't believe it or care to think about it, but
they'll cit it.
Speaker 1 (07:19):
Because they're supposed to.
Speaker 7 (07:20):
Right.
Speaker 11 (07:21):
And then there are the people who are the true believers,
and they're dangerous because they were able to be duped.
The first group is dangerous because this is how they pivot,
this is how they have you know, one group is
the favorite group on Monday, and then then all of
a sudden they turn against that group, they go to
a different group. They're dangerous for that reason. Bono actually
(07:44):
believes the nonsense he does. He's just a.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
Dumb dug.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
Bizarre is on well done. So this is the Michael
Berry Show. Maybe what that old boys looking for is
the truth.
Speaker 11 (08:00):
And it is clear by that stupid statement that he
definitely ain't ever heard it.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
No, he needs to change his attitudes. What needs to happen.
Just listen. It's still it's like these little kids.
Speaker 7 (08:12):
You know, I see this.
Speaker 1 (08:14):
You'll find this when you go to the schools. The
little kids will get up on stage. It's they're time
to present the.
Speaker 4 (08:20):
I want us save the world. I don't want us
to burn the world up. Well we have to do
is not burn no world up. And so we have
to al redy cycle. Where'd you learn that nonsense? Where
did you learn that?
Speaker 11 (08:32):
I want us to save the world and not burn
it up like has been done in the past.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
We have to be better and not burn the world.
We have to It's just nuts.
Speaker 11 (08:43):
I mean, just listen to him talk here, dude, just
sing your little songs. Stop trying to have opinions on
Stop trying to participate in adult conversation.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
Just recent report.
Speaker 12 (08:56):
It's not proven, but there's surveillance enough suggests three hundred
thousand people have already died from just.
Speaker 1 (09:03):
This cut off, this hard cut of USA.
Speaker 12 (09:06):
I d So there's food rotting in boats and warehouses.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
There is this this this will.
Speaker 12 (09:16):
Will you off, this will not you will not be happy,
no American will.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
But there is.
Speaker 12 (09:22):
And he has fifty thousand tons of food that are
stored in Chibouti, South Africa, Dubai and.
Speaker 1 (09:31):
Wait for it, Houston, Texas.
Speaker 12 (09:34):
And that is a rotting rather than going to Gaza
routher than going to True because the people who know
the coats or for the warehouse are fired, They're gone.
Speaker 1 (09:48):
And so this I don't know, I just it's what
do you think?
Speaker 11 (09:53):
What?
Speaker 1 (09:54):
What is? What is that that's that's not America.
Speaker 10 (09:57):
Is it.
Speaker 9 (09:57):
Well, they're throwing the baby out with the bath water, right,
This is the problem. The problem is, for sure, there
have been a lot of organizations that do tremendous good
all throughout the world. Also, for sure, it was a
money laundering operation. For sure, there was no oversight. For sure,
billions of dollars are missing. In fact, trillions that are
(10:19):
unaccounted for that were sent off into various they don't
even know where because there's no receipts. The way Elon
must describe that, he said, if any of this was
done by a public company, the company would be delisted
and the executives would be in prison.
Speaker 1 (10:36):
But in the United States, it's a standard.
Speaker 9 (10:38):
When Biden left office, when it was clear that Trump won,
in the seventy three days, they spent ninety three billion
dollars from the Department of Energy on just radical loans,
just throwing money into places, and there's no oversight, no receipts.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
Like the whole thing is, there's a lot of fraud,
a lot of money laundering.
Speaker 11 (11:06):
So what ends up happening is most people don't push
back on that, so they're so excited that Bono will
come on to promote his latest tour or album or
whatever else. And in the midst of doing that, he
wants to show that because here's what happens, Bono's really rich.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
He lives a great life.
Speaker 11 (11:31):
So they worry in that situation that people will begin
to resent them.
Speaker 1 (11:37):
So in order to appear to.
Speaker 11 (11:40):
Be giving back, you know, concerned, wanting to help, they
have big boy opinions. I'm really upset about you know,
food rotting and children dying, and and I just I
know euro upset to you know, three hundred thousand people
if died and the food is just sitting and rotting.
(12:03):
And so you get a lot of low information voters
who they hear this. They heard something about it in
the news, they scrolled it on a headline, there was
maybe something on Instagram. And then three people that they
know who follow Bono hear him say that, and they
have no reason to be skeptical. It just must be
(12:25):
the truth, so they repeat it. Also, the Left is
making this happen because Elon Musk is on his way
out the door and they need him to be disgraced.
They called him a Nazi. Remember they called him a Nazi.
They compared him to history's most notorious mass murderers.
Speaker 1 (12:50):
Now.
Speaker 11 (12:51):
Megan Touwhey is a New York Times investigative reporter, and
she told MSNBC that Musk has a drug problem. Wait
a minute, I don't know if he does or doesn't.
But what does that have to do with anything. Well,
what they're trying to show for anyone who might be
(13:11):
wondering if you want to help Trump and you're a
famous person, You've got skeletons in your pocket. You've got
skeletons in your closet, not in your pocket, you could
have him in your pocket. You've got skeletons in your closet,
and we're going to shame you. Make no mistake. This
was a scarecrow deal. This is a scarecrow hit. I
(13:34):
don't know that it's true. Doesn't matter if it's true
to me, honestly, it really doesn't. It doesn't affect what
he's done. But what he's doing. This is not for
Elon Musk. This is for anyone else who dares dares
think that you're going to help Donald Trump fix the government,
(13:54):
because when you do, we're going We're going after your company,
We're going after the people who are consumers of your company.
The same New York Times wrote a lie of a
story that the Tesla board was looking for a replacement.
They were tired of Elon. He called them on it,
(14:14):
threatened to sue him. They backed down and said, you're right,
we made it up, and they just move on down
the road. Well, that didn't happen by accident. It did
not happen by accident. It happened because they were going
after it. They're they're they're they're strafing Elon Muskville, anything
(14:35):
and everything associated with him. They're trying to very publicly
destroy in order to show anyone else. Don't you dare,
Don't you dare think you can help Trump, because this
is what will do. You see what they did to
Elon musk and famous people. They see this happen here
she is.
Speaker 13 (14:57):
There has been some coverage of Elon's drug use in
the past. He himself has acknowledged that he used ketamine,
as he said it was with a prescription in only
every couple of weeks to help with depression. But what
we found is that the drug use was much more
frequently than previously known, and it wasn't just the volume.
(15:19):
It was that these drugs appeared to be mixed, so
from the ketamine use that at times has been near
daily and got to the point where it's was causing
bladder issues as he was joining Trump on the campaign trail,
to the use of ecstasy and psychedelic mushrooms as well
as this pillbox that contained as many as twenty pills,
(15:42):
including one with the marking of adderall So, there were
some people close to him. It's been really hard for
reporters to penetrate circle of people who know him, But
in recent months people had started to talk to me
and my colleague Kirsten grind because there have been people
close to him who have had concerned about this dria.
Speaker 3 (16:01):
This is this is the Michael Berries Show.
Speaker 1 (16:04):
Yeah, that's.
Speaker 11 (16:09):
A real headline up here that in Newsweek said, eighty
years after Auschwitz, Elon Musk keeps the fascist salute alive
and will remind you it was the Nazis, not the
Fascists who ran Auschwitz. But we'll leave that alone for
(16:33):
a moment. The media tried to paint this was January
twenty sixth, sorry, January twenty seventh of this year. The
media actually tried to paint Elon Musk as a Nazi.
Now there they're using the word fascist. But in the
context of the concentration camp at Auschwitz you probably remember.
(16:59):
But Elon touched his heart and then he extended his
hand outward like a backhand, at an upward trajectory, as
a thank you, a very common gesture. I am moved,
thank you. This is you first touch your heart, You're
in my heart. Thank you, gracious way and Newsweek's headline
(17:24):
from that day was eighty years after Auschwitz, Elon Musk
keeps fascist salute alive. This is one year into the
one month into the Trump administration, and he was making
great headway. So how do we gum up the works?
How do this race car is lapping us? Can we
(17:46):
puncture the tire? So this was one of many things
they did. California Democrat Robert Garcia told CNN's Jim Acosta
that that was definitely a Nazi slope.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
He would know definitely that guy's a Nazi.
Speaker 5 (18:01):
I did want to ask you about the inauguration yesterday,
Elon Musk, I'm sure you saw this. The head of
the new Department of Government Efficiency, he spoke yesterday and
during his speech he used a hand gesture that looked
like a Nazi salute.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
Let's watch that.
Speaker 13 (18:18):
You know, there are elections that the elections that come
and go.
Speaker 14 (18:21):
Some some elections are you know, important, some or not.
Speaker 10 (18:25):
But this one, this one, this one really matters.
Speaker 11 (18:32):
And I just want to say thank you for making
it happen.
Speaker 1 (18:36):
Thank you.
Speaker 5 (18:40):
After this moment when viral congressman, the Anti Defamation League
released the statement we can show this, saying, in part,
it seems that Elon Musk made an awkward gesture in
a moment of enthusiasm, not a Nazi salute. Of course,
if you go on social media, there are lots of
other people with lots of other opinions and say, this
looks very much like a Nazi salute. No matter how
(19:03):
they're trying to clean it up.
Speaker 1 (19:05):
What was your reaction to.
Speaker 15 (19:06):
That that was a Nazi salute? And he didn't just
do it one time, he did it twice for emphasis,
And if he talked to anyone the historians folks actually
study the Nazis and study this actual kind of discussing display,
will have been very clear that what that was and
he should not just apologize, he.
Speaker 1 (19:25):
Should be condemned for those.
Speaker 15 (19:26):
Kinds of actions so gross disgusting, but more of what
we can expect, I think from Elon Musk.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
And Donald Trump. The exact same gesture.
Speaker 11 (19:40):
Was used by Corey Booker, the senator from New Jersey.
The headline, again in Newsweek, was not eighty years after Auschwitz,
Democrat Corey Booker.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
Is clearly a Nazi.
Speaker 11 (20:03):
Instead, the headline was, Maga accuses Democrat Senator Corey Booker
of doing Nazi salute. You can watch them side by side.
They are the exact same gesture. And how did the
media respond? Since we're on the subject of the media
(20:30):
and the damage they do. I was thinking it's not related,
but I guess in some ways it is.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
I was.
Speaker 11 (20:40):
And we went back with the George Floyd five years
of the anniversary of George Floyd's sobriety a couple of
weeks ago, and I listened. One of the news accounts
I watched was about the burning of American cities, the
(21:04):
absolute burning of American cities.
Speaker 1 (21:07):
This was NBC News listening to this.
Speaker 10 (21:11):
Looting underway nearbyes please seem to have had enough and
into the early morning hours, dozens of American cities up
in flames. After some protests turned into riots.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
Often followed by looting.
Speaker 10 (21:27):
As a nation simmering with unrest unraveled, how long can
you be people.
Speaker 11 (21:35):
Cities were burning to the ground. That's an insurrection. That
is everything January sixth wasn't. And yet we were told,
I understand why they're angry, it's justified. Republican Congressman Dan
Crenshaw said, I understand, it's justified. Say why they're angry.
(21:58):
Kamala Harris was running for vice president at the time,
and she raised money to get guys out of jail
who were involved in burning down buildings, and.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
They proceeded to go right back out and start.
Speaker 11 (22:15):
Burning down buildings again. And yet people went to prison
over January sixth. Well, I'll tell you.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
It's a good thing.
Speaker 11 (22:26):
Our side is patient because we have been kicked so
many times. Decent, honorable people have been kicked so many.
Speaker 1 (22:37):
Times meanwhile, and lied to.
Speaker 11 (22:42):
Meanwhile, Missouri Senator Josh Hawley says a Secret Service whistleblower
told him that Joe Biden used to get lost in
his own closet. That's like a bad joke, but it's true.
Speaker 16 (22:56):
Listen, I'll tell you something that I haven't said before
because it came from I'm a Secret Service whistleblower. This
past year, I talked to so many of them after
the attempted assassinations of President Trump. But this Secret Service
whistleblower actually was assigned to Biden, and he told me
that Biden used to get lost in his closet in
the mornings in the White House. I mean, the guy
(23:17):
literally stumbling around in the White House residents couldn't find
his way out of his own closet. The president of
the United States.
Speaker 1 (23:26):
I mean, this is outrageous. We were lied to.
Speaker 11 (23:31):
I mean, that was the President of the United States,
and now they all act like they didn't know it.
People that met with him, Majorca said, he's the problem
with meeting with him is he's so smart. Majorcas was
the head of Department of Homeland Security. He was meeting
(23:53):
with him weeklier, meeting with him regularly, couldn't meet with
him weekly.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
Because he was out of at most of the time.
I mean, my goodness alive, he.
Speaker 11 (24:08):
Was looking us in the eye and lying about that
while also telling us, as it turns out, that our
border was secure, that we didn't have anything to worry
about with all these people coming in, that they weren't
involved in making it happen.
Speaker 8 (24:27):
They're absolute pathological liars. I mean, there's no other way
than this, There's no other answer than this. You have
to start from that premise.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
Michael Berry.
Speaker 11 (24:39):
Michael Berry, I'm not on TikTok, but folks will send
me stuff on TikTok that they convert from my use.
And this was a parody, is a parody ad for
Harvard University, and it was done as if if the
(25:04):
university were to put out an honest ad that this
would be it. The TikTok account. I give credit when
I know it. I think it's important. It's called in
the event I go missing. So if you wanted to
track them down on TikTok, I don't know how you
do that. But anyway, I thought it was just a
funny parody. And we all need a good laugh this time.
Speaker 14 (25:27):
Of day, don't we ever wish your child was a
full blown liberal idiot desperate to turn them into a
Jew hating extremist who'd rather burn a flag than think
for themselves. Well, Harvard University has the answer. For the
low low price of half a million dollars will transform
your kid into the kind of zealot who sets bags
on fire in the street, screaming about whatever CNN's whining
(25:49):
about today. Our elite program guarantees they'll swap reason for
rage and facts for feelings faster than you can say
protest permit.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
But wait, there's more.
Speaker 14 (25:59):
Our tuition doesn't. The essentials blue hair dye, nose piercings,
and a weak, flaccid body are sold separately.
Speaker 1 (26:04):
And don't forget parents.
Speaker 14 (26:06):
You'll be footing the bill for these, plus financially supporting
your adult child for the rest of their life because
they'll never become productive members of society. Why work when
you can protest results not guaranteed.
Speaker 17 (26:17):
Side effects include chronic virtue signaling, allergic reactions to logic,
and an obsession with trending hashtags. Harvard University is not
liable for arrests, property damage for your kid's newfound hatred
of you. Consult your bank account before enrolling.
Speaker 1 (26:33):
Pretty well done, I mean it sounds real. So another thing.
Speaker 11 (26:37):
On TikTok Again. I'm not on TikTok, but people will
convert things to audio files and send to me, and
I thought this one was particularly good. It's a woman
named Eileen MacIntyre. That's the account name well, you don't
hear names like Eileen anymore or Ronda. Eileen was originally
(26:58):
created as a name for a person with only one leg,
but it grew No, it wasn't okay. It was very
common though, Aileen, Ronda. You know, little babies today don't
have the names Jennifer, Jessica, and Julie, which were very popular.
I mean, if a woman is fifty four years old
(27:20):
in the United States today, a white woman, it's fifty
four years old, the likelihood that she's a Julie, a Jessica,
or a Jennifer it is very, very high, very high. Anyway,
So Eileen McIntyre, in case you want to follow up
with this, woman posted a video about Generation X in
(27:43):
how we're the last generation before technology and cell phones.
Speaker 1 (27:47):
Now.
Speaker 11 (27:48):
Look, everyone thinks their generation is a big deal. I
didn't even know I was in Generation X until about
a year ago when I looked something up and it
was saying, you know, Generation X feels this way, and
I thought, well, that sounded like a bunch of stuff
you talked about watching these TV shows.
Speaker 1 (28:05):
And I said, huh, is that what I'm in.
Speaker 11 (28:08):
I never really when people get real into that stuff,
and I always thought that was dumb, But I do
think there's something to be said for your influences at
a certain point in life and your shared experiences. Like
we didn't have cell phones growing up, we didn't have
internet access.
Speaker 1 (28:27):
I mean, I can remember it was.
Speaker 11 (28:32):
It was a major issue when I was a kid
that mothers were concerned about that we were watching too
much TV. I mean, we were going to go blind
from one of two things we were doing, and I
was doing them both.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
That's a wonder, I can see it all. But we
were sitting too close to the TV. Now you got
this thing right in front of.
Speaker 11 (28:56):
You all day, got something in your ear. Uh, you
can't pry kids away from them. But they were worried
about the TV. We were watching a few hours of
TV a day. These kids today are are hooked on
the screen, and why wouldn't you be. It's entertaining, It's
so anyway, this is about Generation X and how we're
(29:21):
the last generation before technology and cell phones.
Speaker 1 (29:24):
I thought this was very very interesting.
Speaker 7 (29:27):
If we start writing in cursive and driving six speeds again,
we'll shut down your whole We were the last generation
before technology and cell phones. So when you can't get
on Wi fi, you start freaking out and your whole
world comes in.
Speaker 1 (29:39):
Honey, all we.
Speaker 7 (29:39):
Got to do is light the beacons and we write
it down. When you get a little cold, you run
off to the doctor to get your prescription. We'll make
us a houghty tidy, pop three iby profens and get done.
We only have patience for small children and the elderly,
so if you don't follow in between either of those two,
don't test our gangster. We learned to compartmentalize our emotions
because if we even cried a little bit, our parents,
(30:00):
after whooping our button making us cry, would tell us,
I'm gonna give you something to cry about. Our immune
system knows how to survive. We swim through every dirty
creek and ditch and pond that you can imagine. We
had parties out in the middle of the fields barefoot.
We rode down the interstate doing eighty miles an hour
in the back of the pickup trucks on Your generation
depends on a backup camera.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
We lived outside. We were feral. We grew up in
the woods. We know how to survive.
Speaker 7 (30:26):
We weren't allowed in the house until the street lights
come on because that's where the adults lived. You didn't
need a cell phone or GPS to find out where
your friends were. You just circleled the neighborhood and found
out where all the bikes were out up in utt
somebody's yard. We were the generation of mind your business,
but we were also raised in the generation of it
takes a village because you can bet your ass if
I was down the street out of eyesight of my
mom when I was doing something stupid, she damn sure
(30:48):
knew about it before I got home. You can't scare us,
you can't trick us, you can't control us, and most
of all, you can't punk us and back us into
a corner. We see straight through your bo We have
a real high pain tolerance because the majority of us
have been whooped with anything inside. I'm talking about extension cords, flyswater's,
flip flops, you know, a two by four, It don't matter.
(31:09):
Anything within hands reached was getting wasped inside your head
because we only got out of line by one or
two good times, because we learned real quick what that
mama look means, get show together, and if you acted
a fool out in public.
Speaker 1 (31:23):
We weren't concerned about what anybody else.
Speaker 7 (31:25):
So our parents didn't give, they would beat the hell
out of us in our three and dare somebody to
try to intervene. You take these kids home with you.
See if you ain't who when they asked by two o'clock.
So don't come for us. We'll hurt your feelings. We
got to go to work every day with Kate day drink.
Speaker 11 (31:44):
It's true, though, it's absolutely true. All right, I'll leave
you with this last one. I think this is about
a year old, so I don't know if it's if
it's still true, and some of you may have heard
it at the time, but it's absolutely It will warp
your mind if you process what you're about.
Speaker 1 (31:59):
To learn right now. This is wild.
Speaker 6 (32:04):
The last living grandchild of John Tyler, who was the
tenth president, has just died. John Tyler, he was inaugurated
in eighteen forty one, and his last grandchild just died today.
John Tyler's last son was born in eighteen fifty three,
when John Tyler was sixty three years old, and then
he had his son in nineteen twenty eight when he
(32:26):
was seventy five years old, and that man died today.
In ninety five, the man who died today. His grandfather
was born in the seventeen hundreds. I mean good jeans, right,
good jeans and not having babies till you're in your seventies.
That's the secret.
Speaker 1 (32:53):
Last nights, thank you, good night.