Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Verie Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
The greatest trick the Devil ever pulled was convincing the
world he didn't exist.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
You know, the misinformation about vaccines and associating certain people
like myself or Fauci having maligned in Tampa vaccines. That
was most acute in the United States. But the pandemic,
which you would have thought, wow, global health research to
talking about health being ready for the next pandemic. You know,
(00:42):
when you've got millions of deaths, isn't that you know,
it's sad, it's tragic that isn't the at least there
a benefit that health is on the agenda. Sadly, it's
a topic nobody wants to talk about because it was painful.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
You know, it's over. Let's move on. We should have speech.
Speaker 3 (01:00):
But if you're inciting violence, if you're causing people not
to take vaccines, you know, where are those boundaries that
even the US should you know, have rules. And then
if you have rules, you know what is it is
there some ai that encodes those rules because you have
billions of activity and you know, if you catch it
(01:23):
a day later, the harm is done. The GA's Foundation's
very involved in vaccines, the invention of new vaccines, donning vaccines,
and we're very proud that through joint efforts like Gobby,
that saved tens of millions of lives.
Speaker 1 (01:37):
So it's someone.
Speaker 3 (01:37):
Ironic to have somebody to turn around and say, no,
you know, we're using vaccines to kill people or to
make money, or we started the pandemic. Even some strange
things like that, I somehow want to track, you know,
the location of individuals because I'm so deeply desirous to
know where everybody is. I'm not sure what I'm going
(01:59):
to do with that in me?
Speaker 1 (02:00):
Bring that down? Yes, Yes, isn't that? Isn't that silly?
You crazy people?
Speaker 2 (02:05):
You know, guys, there are people who are not think
tank people like y'all are, who are not at this conference.
They don't have all their teeth, they're in bread, they're
all meth heads. They live in places you would never
want to go. They don't have a professional sports team
in their little po dunk town. And they those crazy people,
(02:28):
they think that I want to track where you look?
Speaker 1 (02:31):
Can you imagine how ridiculous?
Speaker 2 (02:34):
Why would I want to track where the nobody's are
powerful me.
Speaker 1 (02:39):
Bill Gate, Well he.
Speaker 2 (02:41):
Does, as it turns out he does. This morning, I
was talking about something. We've had horrible floods here in
Texas in Kerrville. One of our affiliates in Curville reporting
constantly on the damage done to this community. But what's
(03:04):
interesting about the damage done to Kerrville during the July
fourth weekend. It's sort of like if a disaster occurs
in Las Vegas.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
Or New York or d C.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
Is that many people at that particular time are not locals.
The locals end up having to pick up the pieces.
The businesses in the community, the churches in the community suffer,
the schools suffer, and they're left when everyone else picks
(03:44):
up and goes home, when all the bodies are hopefully
recovered and that the damage is done, and they're the
ones that still have.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
To live here.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
You know, my mom told me when I went off
to college, she said, you know, the hardest part about
you going off to college, you had something new to
focus on. We just had this house without you here
in it. So it wasn't enough that we didn't have
you in our lives, is that we had to live
in this house where you had been and I never
(04:16):
really understood that until my oldest son went off to college.
You know that you're going to be separated from your child.
That brings a certain you know, mansion Bummer. Been around
my kids since they were a little bitty, But not
only are you not around them, but you're still in
the place where they were, so you have a remembrance
(04:36):
of them daily. So that's what happened with Kerrville.
Speaker 1 (04:42):
And then.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
You have all these kids that were at camp. You
have Pat Green's brother and his wife and their kids,
who were, like many other people, in an RV next
to the river.
Speaker 1 (04:55):
If you don't know, you probably know by now.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
We have these rivers, particularly in the hill country in
central Texas, and they're very popular for recreational activity in
the summers.
Speaker 1 (05:11):
It was a very popular thing to do.
Speaker 2 (05:13):
It might seem silly, it might seem simple, but to
get in an it or tube and float down the river,
it's a blast. Spend time with your friends, drink beer,
take your kids. It's a whole lot of fun. We've
all done it. And throughout all of this one of
the things that captured the attention of a lot of people,
(05:34):
and there were a lot of kids from Houston and
around Texas that were at these camps, Camp Mystic where
a lot of the girls from which a lot of
the girls died. One of the things that a friend
of mine, Mattress mac here in Houston, the largest furniture dealer,
I think, the largest single store furniture dealer in the country,
(05:56):
but he's much better known. While he's great at that
as being a big part of the community. He talked
to a doctor who's a child psychiatrist, a doctor Perry,
and he was talking to doctor Perry. This is the
clip that begins doctor Perry. Jim, can you play that
for me?
Speaker 4 (06:15):
We heal from these tiny little doses of kindness, of thoughtfulness,
of understanding, of listening, of giving a hug, of being.
Speaker 1 (06:25):
Present, of bringing a meal.
Speaker 4 (06:26):
You know, these things provide this relational regulation of these
systems in our body that make us feel connected and
safe again.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
And this is what you know.
Speaker 4 (06:39):
This is what I think is going to happen in Texas.
I mean, Texas has got so many great communities.
Speaker 2 (06:47):
This child psychiatrist, what he just said is so powerful.
I want to explore this in just a moment. Can
you play the other one? This is mac This is
our furniture guru could community. This guy's more the mayor
than any mayor of the last twenty years. Here's more
of that than we're to talk about in the next segment.
Speaker 5 (07:07):
How do we help all the Houstonians and the thousands
of people that are affected by this tragedy. So I'm
here to listen and learn. How do we make things
better so people can get through this. I can only
imagine the horror of not only the people that can't
miss it, but all the people that also were.
Speaker 1 (07:24):
Drowned by this horrible storm. So we're here to listen
and learn.
Speaker 5 (07:28):
And it's a thrill to have live on in doctor
Perry And for all you Texans out there.
Speaker 1 (07:34):
I think Doctor Perry is a hard.
Speaker 3 (07:36):
To what it's like to be, you know, a real man.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
I have never met someone so wonderful. I call him
rich MARKL.
Speaker 4 (07:43):
Perry.
Speaker 2 (07:44):
So the storms in Cerville, which made national news for
a week, gave way to the regular news of the day.
And I noticed that since then, there's a storm on
the east coast, a storm on the west coast. Missouri
will have a tornado or a fire. Oklahoma will have
(08:07):
a tornado. You know, there'll be a big fire somewhere,
building jobs, a school shooting, and those things come to
our attention in the way they wouldn't have one hundred
two hundred years ago, because we have immediate gratification media.
(08:28):
And I call it immediate gratification media instead of immediate media,
because it is not always to our best interest. Gratifying
people want, just as when you drive past a crash,
there's rubbernecking.
Speaker 1 (08:49):
People want the constant adrenaline.
Speaker 2 (08:52):
Rush of crisis and disaster.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
And I think what ends up happening.
Speaker 2 (09:01):
Is that because people turn on the television or scroll
on their phone, or they get the constant this. Many
died this, many died this, many died. This happened, This happened,
This happened, And it's very hard to process this. The
human brain is overstimulated and doesn't know where to put
(09:25):
all of this. What do I do with this? There's
really only two reactions for most people. Either I become
numb to it, in which case I just don't pay
attention to it, or the flip I become overly panicked.
(09:47):
And I believe this is one of many reasons that
more Americans are in therapy today than ever before. More
Americans are on significant psychiatric drugs. Americans are suicidal, anxious,
and unstable.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
I do believe that.
Speaker 2 (10:09):
I think it is the steady flow, the steady shock
of the system. Clockwork Orange is one of my favorite films.
For those of you who have a quick recall the
scene where this young man who has lost direction in
his life. So he is a porn watcher, he is
(10:36):
a sex addict, and he has become a thug. And
so rather than sending to prison, they're doing this scientific study.
He agrees in lieu of prison that he will be
a subject of this doctor's unique study as to how
to deal with young hoodlums. And the way they do
(10:56):
that is they have him watch the things that he
enjoys the most, which is porn and violence. They pry
open his eyes and they insert a serum which makes
him violently ill. And the idea is that his brain
(11:18):
will identify those things porn and violence with being sick,
and then he will reject doing that in the future.
That's the premise of the whole thing. Well, I think
that the reverse is true of why we crave disaster.
(11:43):
But I think the Clockwork Orange is what is happening
to us. I think that that thing we are getting
too much of is making us very sick, and we
don't know how to deal with it. We don't have
the mental capacity. I'm involved with a group called Camp
Hope out of Houston. It's part of the PTSD Foundation
(12:06):
of America, and veterans from across the country can come
for free to them. We raise the money. Our listeners
actually are major donors to this program, and it's a
residential treatment facility, a Christian based six month program, and
(12:26):
combat veterans come in and they're usually suicidal.
Speaker 1 (12:30):
They have multiple addictions. They're at the end of the road.
Speaker 2 (12:34):
In most cases, they've tried suicide at least once, and
now they give up.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
They give it all up, they let it all go.
Speaker 2 (12:43):
They come to Camp Hope broken, and six months later
they emerge with tools to cope with the pain. Why
the pain, why the anguish, Why the anxiety, why the rage?
Why the self harmed? Because war is not a movie.
(13:06):
Because the human brain is not ready to watch heads
blown off. The human brain is not ready for you
to make a fast friend during boot camp and then
watch him killed.
Speaker 1 (13:19):
Right beside you.
Speaker 2 (13:21):
The human brain does not allow us to process the guilt,
the survivor's guilt, the smells of war, the smells of death,
all of the.
Speaker 1 (13:31):
Things that a warrior goes through.
Speaker 2 (13:37):
Well, they're not the only ones that suffer severe trauma.
I'm not saying that a daily news cycle viewer consumer
is the same as a warrior at Camp Hope and
what they go through. I am saying they are points
on the continuum. I do think there is a hole taken,
(14:01):
a cost to be paid. And so this particular psychiatrist
who was talking to my friend Mattress Mac of Gallery
Furniture in Houston, he's talking about one of the ways
we process, one of the ways we control, is through
tiny acts of kindness. That's why we love to see
(14:22):
these things. That's why we love to see rescues. That's
why we love to contribute to charitable causes. That's why
we show up at a funeral to someone we don't
even know, to watch these little girls come home to
the towns that they're from. Belleville, Texas in the news
this weekend, and people driving for hours to be at
a funeral, to line the street.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
The road where they don't even know this little girl.
Speaker 2 (14:47):
Because in these little, tiny acts of kindness, we take
back some control of the world that we can make
sense of. We can't make sense of why little girls
were swept away and killed when they did nothing wrong
at a Christian camp. We can't make it, but we
can heal by tiny acts of kindness. That's not just
(15:07):
some aspirational statement. It's a psychiatrist telling you. That's how
you begin to control things. That's how you begin to
get your life back. That's how you begin to make sense.
Speaker 1 (15:16):
I'm not sure what your question was, Michael Berris. I
lost the plot somewhere. You did.
Speaker 2 (15:24):
The story breaking over the last few days that Jim
Comey's daughter Maureen has been fired from her powerful position
in the Manhattan US Attorney's Office. And she was the
(15:46):
prosecutor of Jeffrey Epstein, She was a prosecutor of Gallaine Maxwell,
and she was a prosecutor in the Sean Combe's case
aka Puffy Diddy all sorts of other names. The New
(16:08):
York Post says the reason for Comy's firing, which law
enforcement and Department of Justice sources confirmed they confirmed the firing,
was not immediately clear. She informed that she was being
axed under Article two of the Constitution, which describes the
power of the president. President Trump has a long history
(16:29):
of conflicts with the elder Comy, her father, and fired
him as FBI director in twenty seventeen during Trump's first term.
Maureen Comy served as an assistant US attorney in the
Southern District of New York since twenty fifteen, worked on
the prosecutions of Epstein and Maxwell, most recently worked on
(16:49):
the high profile sex trafficking case of Combs. So let's
step back for a second and think of about this.
What do the Epstein and Galne Maxwell trials and the
(17:10):
p did He trials trial have in common? Notice the
parallel and in fact, this ven diorram would have some overlap.
The person prosecuted did not do what the accused always does,
(17:36):
cut a deal to name names Forget Epstein for a moment.
You ever noticed that Combs is never ratted out anyone else.
There are pictures of him and Barack Obama, for instance,
a lot videos. It's pretty clear they're close. This wasn't
(17:57):
a grip and grin. He paid ten thousand dollars for
a table to get a photo he could put on
his wall at the office and claim his buddies with
him when he doesn't know him.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
Sean Combs is friends with.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Oprah Obama, very powerful people who showed up at his parties.
Were they just attendees? Did none of them ever commit
any crimes? And if they did, why wasn't he offered
(18:31):
a deal. I have two law degrees, but I've never
prosecuted a case. But I have talked to lawyers who
tell me that do have experience, that the charges brought
against Sean Combs were not the right charges to bring,
(18:54):
and that any veteran prosecutor would know that that those
charges were charges that were harder to accomplish to convict,
almost as if they were trying not to convict him.
They managed to get a couple of tiki tac things,
(19:16):
almost as if he pled out.
Speaker 1 (19:20):
He does a few days.
Speaker 2 (19:21):
In jail, he goes on his way, no double jeopardy,
He's finished, he moves on down the road, and nobody
got exposed. There is a certain level of power where
you don't turn on other people, you get away with everything.
The system is rigged. It's not true that Jeffrey Epstein
(19:42):
was never charged or punished.
Speaker 1 (19:46):
Oh he was back in seven o eight. Remember he had.
Speaker 2 (19:50):
To check in every day and sleep at the jail
and then by day he would go off to run
his foundation. Foundation he created right before the sentence was
to be served, so he'd have some excuse why he
needed to leave all day. But you know, it's a foundation,
it's for charity, it's for the children. Ironic, right, So
(20:12):
Marian Komy would seem to be the person in the
power of leave party aside. It's almost as if there
is a powerful group of people who have an incredible
amount of influence hypothetically speaking, and they don't want what
(20:34):
they are doing or what their friends are doing to
be exposed, including sex with minors, considered one of the
most repugnant crimes in our society. Well, how is it
that Marie and Komy keeps getting these cases? You know
how many prosecutors there are out there. It's almost as
(20:56):
if she is uniquely suited to try these cases. And
I don't mean to send people away. I mean it's
almost as if she is uniquely suited to try these
cases to protect powerful people who might be associated with it,
but get the people charged to avoid revealing who those
(21:22):
people are and what they've done. We're told we can't
see the Epstein list because children were involved. Oh that's
what we were told a month ago. Now it's switched
because children were involved and we don't want to expose
those children the victims. Wait a minute, since when is
(21:45):
that a basis upon which we do not prosecute people
because we're going to embarrass the victims. That's never been
the case. There's reactions of the names of the children.
That's done all day, every day. We figured out as
a society, Anglo American jurisprudence has been doing this for
(22:09):
a very long period of time. If every time a
child was a victim, the predator was let go and
not even their name mentioned in public because somehow that
would embarrass the child, then we would never prosecute child predators.
(22:32):
This strains any credulity. There's no way anybody believes this
is true.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
And you know what scares me about the whole thing.
Speaker 2 (22:43):
We know that there are powerful forces that are not
appearing before our eyes, who don't have a business card
or an office that we could go to or call,
or a background that we can check.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
We know it.
Speaker 2 (22:58):
But here we're seeing exposed a power greater, perhaps than
even our president.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
And that ought to scare you.
Speaker 2 (23:09):
If the most powerful man in the world is not
the most powerful man in the world.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
Who is.
Speaker 2 (23:15):
Because nobody, and I mean nobody, believes that the Epstein
stuff has been made up?
Speaker 1 (23:24):
What about contraception? Was that just not an option for you?
Was your ambitions with Michael Berry? He is young and
ambitions and I love women. Hey, you cannot no.
Speaker 5 (23:33):
Man for loving women.
Speaker 1 (23:36):
This is going to be quick. Number four O two.
Speaker 2 (23:38):
This is a state senator in Mogadishu, aka Minnesota. His
name is Omar Fat He's running for the mayor of Minneapolis.
Which Minneapolis is now Mogadishu. It's it's Somali controlled. It
has fallen to Somalia. And I want you to listen
(23:58):
carefully to what he says.
Speaker 6 (24:01):
Heard them being called terrorists, if we heard them being
called drug dealers.
Speaker 1 (24:09):
We heard a lot of insults.
Speaker 6 (24:11):
We heard that that they're a threat to our national security,
and that's a flat out lie. You want to know
who the real threat is the matter of president, I'll
give you a hint.
Speaker 1 (24:21):
It doesn't.
Speaker 6 (24:22):
They don't look like our chief author. They don't look
like the folks up in the gallery. They don't look
like the folks on the rotunda. They look like many
of the members that sit in the front, and you
don't have to take my word for it. According to
DHS Matter, President for the Domestic, the greatest domestic threat
facing the United States comes from quote racially or ethnically
(24:45):
motivated violent extremists, specifically, specifically those who advocate for the superiority,
superiority of the white race, not our immigrants.
Speaker 2 (24:59):
Law is as great as the vaccination lie. It is
as great as the Epstein cover up. It is as
great as a number of other lies we've been told.
But what makes these lies so pernicious.
Speaker 7 (25:21):
So evil, so awful, is that these lies are so
carefully created, incubated, and then berthed into the public.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
Domain that they have with them the patina of credibility
government studies. You know where this comes from. Donna Schalela,
who was a cabinet secretary under Barack Obama. She is
(25:57):
the one who released the report that said during Iraq
and Afghanistan that the greatest threat to America was white
male soldiers coming home from war who were pro life
and anti government. Timothy McVeigh that that is the greatest
(26:22):
threat to this country. White nationalism is the greatest threat
to this country. If you've ever spent any time studying
the Salem witch trials.
Speaker 1 (26:33):
It's fascinating. Wow, is it interesting.
Speaker 2 (26:40):
Any time there is something that becomes accepted by society
as this is the worst thing anyone can ever be.
You must repudiate this thing, even if it's your own child,
your own mother.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
You must avoid being.
Speaker 2 (26:58):
This thing and anyone like this. They are zombies. They
must be killed off. Once you can manage to build
a subscription to this model, now you have created a power.
This is why the left in America says, can we
(27:21):
all agree that racism is bad?
Speaker 1 (27:25):
Yes? And the white people? Yes, it's bad. I don't
like racism because no white person wants to be racist.
It's bad. Well, racism bad.
Speaker 2 (27:35):
Can we all agree that hate speech, which is racist speech,
that we should punish that seriously? And all the white
people yes?
Speaker 1 (27:45):
Yes.
Speaker 2 (27:45):
I don't want to be against punishing racism because that'll
make me look a racist.
Speaker 1 (27:48):
Yes, So now everyone is Racism is bad. Racism must
be punished. Hate speech is bad.
Speaker 2 (27:55):
Okay, all right, So once we have established that, now
we got to write a law. Well, nobody wants to
be against the law. Racism is bad. Racism must be punished.
Now we're going to have a law that says we
can punish racism, and everybody says, yes, we must punish it.
(28:16):
And then you say, hey, I think we're spending too
much on welfare. Over here, We're spending twice what we
did three years ago and we're not getting better results.
Speaker 1 (28:26):
That is hate speech.
Speaker 2 (28:29):
Now there is a mechanism, an instrument by which you
may be bludgeoned. There's the cudgel, and people look around
and go, wait, that's not a hate speech. That's a
public policy discussion. They marched you ninety percent of the
way to your grave. Omar Fete, the state senator in Minnesota,
(28:57):
is simply the next phase in the predicate that has
been laid for decades. Non white people are victims. White
people are awful, Non white people are pure. White people
are oppressors. Non white people struggle, they work honorably, they sacrifice.
(29:25):
White people have had everything given to them. They have privilege.
We've seen cases, folks where teachers are teaching the black kid,
you're a victim, the white kid, you're an oppressor. Now
a white kid, apologize to him. If you see the
number of rituals Marian Williamson led one when she was
(29:47):
running for president, where white people will will apologize to
a random black person for all the evil they have
done them in their lives. You're taught in news accounts
that a white victim of crime by a black perpetrator
is not so bad because the white person will recover
(30:09):
and that black person has had a struggle in life.
Speaker 1 (30:14):
You're just putting a.
Speaker 2 (30:19):
Rose pedal path for an Omar Fate running for Minnesota
governor or Kami Mandani in New York, or Alexandria Casio
Cortes or Ilhan Omar or Jasmine Crockett. The longer you
perpetuate this guilt based non white is the god man.
(30:45):
White is evil, this guilt, this self flagellation, it will
end very badly. We are not at the end point.
We are not at the point where you say to
awful people you can speak on, behalf of every immigrant,
(31:07):
you can speak on, behalf of every non white person.
Now will this be enough? Will we have paid your ransom?
It is not until the politics of this type of
evil is stopped and white people stop feeling so damned
guilty over everything, that we can see progress. Because I
(31:33):
can tell you it's worse than it's ever been and
it's only getting worse. And it doesn't stop until you
stop entertaining this nonsense.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
Stop feeling guilty for being white. And black folks who
are being called Uncle Tom, I know who you are.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
Other minorities, gays who are being insulted because you want
your country back, you just know we got you back.
Speaker 1 (32:00):
Strong to do the right thing. Hey, example at Elvis
has left for Jim. Thank you and goodnight,