Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
Verie Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Right not trust doctor disease, that they're all mixed up.
Speaker 1 (00:17):
You think my proctologist used to be a photographer. He
took X ray, tell me to bend over and say cheese.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
While we didn't know that much about Joe Biden's health,
we know even less about Donald Trump's health. He was
completely untransparent during the twenty twenty three eight twenty twenty
four campaign.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
He has not been transparent.
Speaker 4 (00:39):
Then we're in the midst of a presidential cover up
of Donald Trump's mental and physical condition, and it's his
doctors are part of the cover up under his orders.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
That much, we know that much his fact.
Speaker 5 (00:51):
But it is.
Speaker 4 (00:52):
Essential that Republicans especially and I've talked to some Republicans
on the Hill, and indeed there are Republicans in the
seven who are furious, concerned, worried about the president's mental health,
physical health, and they too want some disclosure of what
the real facts are here. But it's time for them
to step up and demand because we've never had a
(01:12):
presidential crisis of leadership such as this. We don't know
what damage may have been done we don't know the
test to his vital signs. We need full disclosure and
immediately a real possibility that this is a time that
the twenty fifth Amendment needs to be considered.
Speaker 1 (01:30):
This is a cover up.
Speaker 4 (01:31):
It is a cover up clearly directed by the President
of the United States, whose closest aids in the White
House and his family. There are people in the National
security bureaucracy who are terribly worried about what is going
on in terms of America's adversaries and particularly the Russians
and the Chinese taking advantage of this situation.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
It's ongoing. I believe Director Ray.
Speaker 4 (01:52):
Is very, very at the FBI is very concerned about
the President's health, mental and physical, and how it is
underlie this lafe of disclosure. The national security interests in
this frunt.
Speaker 1 (02:03):
Heart disease is what you said. He does not have
heart disease, does yet.
Speaker 6 (02:07):
Since you've seen him before that showy.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
But yes, I think so.
Speaker 4 (02:12):
Technically he has non clinical athroscratic cornary corniathroscroosis.
Speaker 7 (02:19):
Some of this maybe samanthis Sanderson, I mean, you've heard
these terms before.
Speaker 8 (02:22):
Cornary athoscrosis, cornary art disease, heart disease, people use these
terms interchangeably, and.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
You know, I think, what what? The test has shown
that he does.
Speaker 9 (02:33):
Have a mild form common form of heart disease.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
Yesterday we talked about the blue gene controversy, which is
benefiting American Eagle. I mean, look, most people do not
want to be involved in controversy. That's just a fact.
They cringe, they shy away from it. Most people don't
even really want much attention drawn to themselves. And the
(02:57):
more successful people get, the less they want to be noticed.
Because these are French Revolution times. They don't want to
get the guillotine. Nobody wants to be known as rich.
You ever noticed during presidential campaigns the candidate's poor mouth,
you know, Joe Biden, you know, as a as a
poor kid on the hard scrabble streets of Scranton, Pennsylvania.
(03:23):
You hear them all. Trump doesn't do it, but the
rest of them do You hear them all? You know
as a poor kid. Oh, it's a sad, sad state
of affairs. It's a sad I can't believe I'm up here.
It's American dream. I was support There is a great
(03:43):
money python skit. The what's it called the three the
Englishman of Yorkshire. Oh, you have it play that. It's
it's a it's a comedy. It's a comedy bit. I
realize as the accent for Yorkshiremen, it's caught. I realize
the accents are a little strong because they ham it
(04:06):
up in this. But you'll get the point. Each of
them is trying to be more poor. This is what
a Republican primary sounds like in this country.
Speaker 2 (04:13):
Very possible, Yashi, good glass of shatleh ah, you right
there over all? Who would have thought thirty years ago
we'd all be sitting there drinking shadow of shaffle Them days,
we're glad to have the prize from a cup of tea,
all right, a cup of cold tea without milk or sugar,
(04:34):
or tea in a cracked cup, and all oh, we
never used to have a cup. We used to have
to drink out about it, all up, newspaper. The best
weekend manage was to suck on a piece of damp cloth.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
You know, we were happy in those days.
Speaker 2 (04:47):
Pauloh, we were poor because we were poor.
Speaker 10 (04:50):
Hi.
Speaker 2 (04:50):
My old dad used to say to me, money doesn't
bring you happiness, son. It was right, So I was
happier then, and I had nothing. We used to live
in this tiny, old tumble lown house with gray, big
holes in the.
Speaker 1 (05:02):
Roof and house. You were lucky to live in a house.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
We used to live in one room, all twenty six
of us, no furniture, half the floorwards because they were
all huddled together in one corner for fear of falling.
Speaker 10 (05:13):
You were lucky to have a room.
Speaker 1 (05:14):
We used to have to live in a corridor.
Speaker 11 (05:16):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (05:17):
We used to dream of living in a Connie door.
It would have been a palace to us. We used
to live an old water tank on a rubbish tip.
We not walk off every morning by having a load
of rotting fish.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Dup tall over us house.
Speaker 2 (05:32):
But when I say house, it was just a hole
in the ground governed by a seat of tar ball in.
Speaker 1 (05:37):
But it was a house to us.
Speaker 2 (05:39):
We were evicted from our le in the ground. We
had to go and live in a lake.
Speaker 12 (05:45):
You were lucky to have a lake.
Speaker 2 (05:47):
To one hundred and fifty of us living in a
shoe box in the middle of the road, cardboard box.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Bye, You were lucky.
Speaker 2 (05:57):
We lived for three months and a rolled up newspaper
and a set it tank. Pase have to get up
every morning of six a cock and clean the newspaper,
go to work down the mill fourteen hours a day
week and we got for six months a week and
when we got home, Oh Dad would slash us.
Speaker 1 (06:11):
To sleep with his belt. Luxury.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
We used to have to get out of the lake
at three o'clock in the morning, clean the lake, eat
handful of hot gravel, work twenty hours a day at
mill for tup and some months from home and Dad
would beat us around the head and neck with a
broken bottle. If we were lucky, well, of course we
had it.
Speaker 12 (06:32):
We used to have to get him out of the
shoe box in the middle of the night and lick
the road clean with our tongues. We had three half
hiding for a freezing cold gravel walks twenty fours of
that mill for fourmus every six years, and when we
got home, Oh Dad would slash into it with a
bread knights.
Speaker 13 (06:48):
Right.
Speaker 2 (06:50):
I had to get up in the morning at ten
o'clock at night half and a before I went to bed,
eat alm of cold poison, work twenty nine hours a
day down mill, and paid mill.
Speaker 1 (06:59):
On for permission to to wakan. Why don't we go home.
Dad would kill us.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
And that's about to no grave. Are you trying to
tell the young people of today that I won't believe you.
Speaker 1 (07:11):
No, you take care of your own think about it. So,
the thing when we're talking about is American eagle and
the genes they're selling. And interestingly, Americans love controversy, and
(07:32):
we love controversy more today than we ever have. If
I were to ask you, for instance, tell me an
episode of the Ed Sullivan Show that you remember, And
so a lot of shows, but tell me about an
episode you remember. Oh, you remember Jim Morrison singing light
(07:55):
my fire when he wasn't supposed to use that phrase.
You know, we couldn't get much higher, and he did,
and then he was banned from the show. You know
about that? You know about Elvis the pelvis as they
called him at the time, going on The Ed Sullivan
Show because they weren't the cameras weren't supposed to pan
below his waist because he was doing something that might
(08:17):
lead the kids to having sex, and that was swinging
his pelvis around. Oh, scandal of scandals. That's why you
know those episodes because they were scandalous. We love scandal.
We love controversy. The fact that American Eagle made an
(08:38):
ad that has created such controversy means they've sold out
of their genes twice already. The heck, it might have
been three times already, and they'll keep selling out. They
can't keep up. There are a lot of jeans out there.
How do you separate yourself? Do you separate yourself on
(09:00):
the basis that the zipper is better, or you're molded
to a body? Everybody is different. You separate yourself on
the quality of your denim? Hard to do. Trous has
got the lock on that. How do you separate yourself
for a few bucks? Well, you upset the ugly loud
(09:22):
black women on CNN and MSNBC, you upset the ladies
on the view and you get called racist, and then
Ted Cruz comes out which happened, and says, y'all are
being crazy. This isn't racist, it's just jeans. And then
you get all the talk show hosts saying it's not crazy,
(09:43):
it's not a racist, it's just jeans. She looks good.
And then you get no, no, it's racist. No it's not,
No it is yes, it's not and then before you
know it American Eagle has an ad that people are
going to as a destination. Hey, how do I see
the American Eagle ad We're going to a dinner party tonight.
(10:05):
I don't want to be the only one at the
dinner party when someone says, hey, I'll see that the
big brew ha ha about the ad for the jeans,
and someone else pipes up because they want people to
know that they're on top of things. Yeah, American Eagle. Yeah,
so the woman I hadn't seen it, but apparently the
story goes she's wearing it's Sydney Sweeney. Yeah, yeah, that's it.
(10:30):
And that person's real had they're up on the news.
See that person's up on the news. That's a that's
a parlor trick right there. If you are at the
party and you know the details of the scandal, then
you get a little credibility, You get to kind of
you get the money. Oh, the story goes Sidney Sweeney.
You remember Sidney Sweeney, she was in all of Yeah,
(10:52):
what was she in?
Speaker 9 (10:53):
So that?
Speaker 1 (10:53):
Oh, if you know it, Oh, and you know you've
looked up Sidney Sweeney and all of them and then everybody.
Oh and then so she wearing these genes and they
say Sidney's Winny has good genes. Well, there's some black
people apparently who are upset because Jens has a double
on tender. Oh g oh, yes, genetics. Oh yeah, And
(11:18):
so they're saying it's like Nazi Germany. Oh that's crazy,
they say. And so then the whole thing, so the
whole dinner party conversation is people overreacting to that. And
then there will be some woman, because it's always a woman,
and she'll be a white woman, and she'll say and
she wants to show how open minded she is, because
(11:38):
nothing is better today than being the person whose mind
is so open that there's nothing left in it, it's
all falling out. And she'll say, well, I agree with y'all.
I think people scream racism too much, but I could
see where that would upset some people. You know, I
don't know what it's like to be black, None of
(11:59):
y'all do. It's an all white dinner party if you
hadn't figured out and you know, I mean, I don't
I understand. Okay, there's too much talk about race, everything racis.
I get that, but I could see I think American
Eagle knew what they were doing if they say she
has good genes. If I'm black and I hear that,
(12:21):
I think, well, maybe they're saying you have superior Maybe
that's white nationalism, you know. I mean, there's a lot
of people that like Trump that I think. I think
some of them are white supreme. How do you see
is it supremacist or supremacist or supreme or what?
Speaker 13 (12:37):
You know?
Speaker 1 (12:38):
There's a lot of those people, you know, and I
think a lot of those people like Trump because of that.
And then blah blah blah blah, and before you know it,
what do you know? That becomes the conversation. Now, if
you're the average person, you think this is bad for
American eque but you'd be wrong because it's very good
(13:00):
because how did you separate yourself amidst the noise controversy?
This is all what's called earned media. It's free. I
don't know how much money American Eagles spent making that ad.
I don't think it was that much. They probably had
to pay Sydney Sweeney a certain amount.
Speaker 10 (13:21):
You know.
Speaker 1 (13:21):
The most famous political ad of all time in all
of American history was only aired one time. It's called
the Daisy Ad. It's a little girl plucking the pedals
on a daisy flower and then the whole world blows up.
The Johnson campaign Lyndon Johnson commissioned this ad to make
(13:41):
the point to parents out there that Barry Goldwater, the
Republican candidate, was crazy and he would cause us to
go to war and the world would end in nuclear war.
That was a real fear in nineteen sixty four. And
Goldwater was a hardcore neocon and those types do like war.
(14:04):
So Johnson played on that and rather than be a
Democrat who tried to outwar him, uh so he wouldn't
be seen as weak on foreign policy, he made it
seem that Goldwater was crazy. And look, if you want
to stay alive, you don't want some guy that's going
to be setting off nuclear missiles. Fois play fuck fine?
(14:33):
Say six six ain't.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
There?
Speaker 2 (14:58):
These are the stakes to make a world in which
all of God's children can alile are to go into
the dark.
Speaker 1 (15:08):
We must either love each other are we must die.
Vote for President Johnson on November third. The stakes are
too high for you to stay home. This is the
Michael Berry Show. Locked and loaded, didn't load it liked?
(15:30):
You've been talking about the Sydney Sweeney American Eagle the scandal.
I say scandal because I really think it's a great
promo for their products. And I don't know that yesterday
or today we have played for you the audio I
want you to actually hear. This was on Good Morning America.
I'm check the pulse.
Speaker 8 (15:51):
We begin with the backlash of our new ad campaign
featuring actress Sidney Sweeney.
Speaker 4 (15:56):
The answer for American Eagle and the tagline is Sidney
Sweeney has where genes Now?
Speaker 1 (16:00):
In one ad, the blondehair, blue.
Speaker 4 (16:02):
Eyed actress talks about jeens as in DNA, being passed
down from her parents.
Speaker 8 (16:06):
The play on words is being compared to not the
propaganda with racial undertone.
Speaker 11 (16:14):
The pun good genes activates a troubling historical associations for
this country. The American eugenics movement and it's prime between
like nineteen hundred and nineteen forty, weaponized the idea of
good genes just to justify white supremacism.
Speaker 6 (16:34):
Despite that backlash, American Eagle Stock has.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
Been soret now here is a liberal white woman and
she is very upset with this fascist propaganda because liberal
white women love nothing more than to tell you how
upset they are on behalf of the minorities.
Speaker 14 (16:52):
Should we be surprised that a company whose name is
literally American Eagle is making fascist propaganda like this? Probably not,
but it's still really shocking. Like a blonde haired, blue
eyed white woman is talking about her good gens like
that is Nazi propaganda.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
And now you got a black woman and she is
very upset. She wants the good whites to protect her.
This is just just remember Oprah said that her mama said,
you got to find you a good white and then
some white women, yes, and she's like, we want to
be the good whites. And so this black woman wants
some good whites to protect her because she fears she
will be lynched because she watched a blue jean advertisement.
(17:37):
So she's afraid she's gonna be. Black's habit so bad
in this country. I mean, you got black president, black
attorney general, black governors, you got black's heads of company.
Everywhere you go. White people living in absolute fear either
of being mugged or being canceled. But all the while, no,
everybody's scared of black people.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
Yep.
Speaker 15 (17:58):
That got me too, And I don't know why, maybe
because it's just so blatant. I keep thinking that people
just are not gonna believe us until we're hung out there.
But then even then I feel like they'll be like,
oh no, kind of like they are with I see
the same perpetual self imposed victimhood. You know, I did
(18:21):
a post about saying, hey, like, these are the action
steps that we really need to see from the good
whites where I said I need protection, put my cash out,
and she goes, well, would you just rather white women
just not follow you at all anymore? Because and I'm like, yeah,
definitely unfollow me if you thought you being here and
(18:42):
clicking a follow button was doing me a favor. Same
as that one guy whatever his name was, oh, descendant
of the oppressor. He's like, well, Lindsay still does a
good job, and I appreciate her work in labor, so
I'm gonna still follow her.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
No, definitely unfollow me.
Speaker 15 (19:00):
If you are any type of person, but especially a
white woman who's coming to this platform thinking you're doing
me a favor by clicking a follow button, leave now
immediately now, because honey, boo boo, not this person. I'm
doing you a favor by showing up and calling you out.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
So here is Spencer Hoogeveld on TikTok. I'm not on TikTok.
A bunch of you are gonna ask, I'm not on
that Chinese propaganda site. But our team follows stuff and
there's a way to get TikTok videos without being on TikTok.
And if that's what's being talked about and going viral,
sometimes they'll bring it to my attention. So old Spencer
(19:44):
Hoogveld says that as a blonde haired, blue eyed guy,
the ad made him uncomfortable. He's a shamed of his
whiteness as some of my blonde hair and blue eyes.
Speaker 6 (19:54):
Watching that Sidney Sweeney odd about good jeans made me
quite uncomfortable. And there's a lot of just course like, oh,
it's not that deeper, it is that deep. But at
the end of the day, I know how it made
me feel. And some people will be like, oh, this
is white savior complex, this is white guilt, whatever it
may be.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
And it's like, I love my blonde hair.
Speaker 6 (20:08):
I love my blue eyes, I love my white skin
because those are the features that I was born with.
Speaker 1 (20:12):
I can't change them.
Speaker 6 (20:13):
I love me for me, But I don't think that
they're particularly good or better than any other set of genes.
In fact, there's a lot of evolutionary defects, like I
can't go into the sun without getting burned afterwards sunglasses
like ninety nine percent.
Speaker 9 (20:26):
Of the time.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
But that's besides the point.
Speaker 6 (20:29):
To promote something that implies that blonde hair, blue eyes,
white skin are good genes the historical context and implications
of that, while simultaneously there's an ethnic cleansing actively happening
in Palestine and Gauza in the West Bank of brown
Muslim Arabic people, it feels tone deaf. If nothing else,
(20:52):
it feels tone deaf, and it made me feel weird
and uncomfortable. And I'm not trying to make this about
me in any regard, especially with what's happening in Palisiane
and Gauza in the West Bank, but as someone that
shares features in genetics with Sidney Sweeney blonde hair, blue wise,
white skin, I'm just trying to share a little bit
of perspective on it.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
You know, the funny thing when you have to quote
somebody on social media what they've said and you have
to quote their handle is their handle is never that
their name is James or Bob or Susie. It's always
something goofy. Well this one is I am meme O.
That's the social media handle. They asked if American Eagle
(21:32):
had run an ad on eugenics. Oh my goodness, this
this Nazi stuff.
Speaker 16 (21:38):
Did American Eagle just run an ad for eugenics?
Speaker 17 (21:41):
Chans a pasta from parents to offspring, often determining traits
like her color, personality, and even eye color. My gens
are blue.
Speaker 16 (21:50):
Sidney Sweeney has very keenes, totally just talking about dnim right,
Just a blonde haired, blue eyed woman explaining how her
good genes gave her personality. And I mean, are we
really going to pretend that this isn't a little fasci coded. Look,
I'm not saying that Sidney Sweeney personally wrote this ad
to revive the Third Reich, but American Eagle absolutely knew
what they were doing here. You don't get to drop
(22:12):
lines about inherited traits, blue eyes and great genes while
zooming in on somebody that could have walked straight off
of a Nazi propaganda poster and expect people not to
catch that reference.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
Good genes used.
Speaker 16 (22:24):
To mean racial purity and fascist circles.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
And now it's just DNA marketing.
Speaker 16 (22:27):
We are watching fascist aesthetics sneak back into pop culture
through fashion ads, chidwife influencers, and yes, now blue genes.
If you think this was an innocent ad, you have
not been paying attention.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
By now, you probably know that American Eagle is not
the first denim company to make an ad with a
play on genes J E A N S and genes
G E N E genetics. In nineteen eighty, Calvin Klein
ran this ad with then superstar Brookshields.
Speaker 17 (23:03):
The secret of life lies hidden in the genetic code.
Genes are fundamental in determining the characteristics of an individual
and passing on these characteristics two succeeding generations. Occasionally, certain
conditions produce the structural change in the gene which will bring.
Speaker 1 (23:21):
About the process of evolution. This may occur in one
or more of the following ways.
Speaker 17 (23:28):
Firstly by selective mating, in which a single gene type
proof superior and transmitting its genes to future generations. Secondly
by gene drift, in which certain genes may fade away
while other genes persist, And finally by natural selection, which
filters out those genes better equipped than others to endure
(23:50):
in the environment. This may result in the origin of
an entirely new species, which brings us to calvins and
the survival of the fist.
Speaker 4 (24:01):
Calvin Klimb James, We're going to be changing the name
of the Gulf of Mexico.
Speaker 5 (24:06):
To the Gulf of myth and Michael Berry's Church as
a beautiful way.
Speaker 18 (24:22):
Ray the color of you.
Speaker 13 (24:30):
Use it for.
Speaker 18 (24:34):
Stuff that you want to dodo, rain.
Speaker 13 (24:43):
Black, white, yellow, brown, Use it to build you up
or to tear others down.
Speaker 18 (24:56):
The racecar, use to detract from, not things you've done
the race scor.
Speaker 19 (25:08):
Useful forst of you haven't earned or won nothing ever,
the workstmanter, the truth hasn't conssion chanceguse race.
Speaker 20 (25:26):
If one's views orange when an argument, or settle the score.
Speaker 7 (25:39):
Claim race.
Speaker 13 (25:43):
When you're fairing gord use races.
Speaker 1 (25:51):
Speaking of race and racism, which is what many black
elected officials and the black guests on MSNBC and CNN,
it's all they got, like, did you take math? Did
you sit through science? Have you ever read the great
literature of world history? Because all you seem to talk
(26:14):
about is racism. Yeah, so here's the governor of Maryland,
Wes Moore, saying that black men are not voting Democrat
because the system is set up against them. It's the
logic is questionable, but the choice of subject is consistent.
Speaker 9 (26:37):
I think we've got to start making sure that this
is not something that we're doing because of an electoral strategy,
but something that we're doing because we actually care about
the prospects, you know, because it is true that we
have a justice system that has been targeting and weighted
against black men. We have an education system that has
been deliberate about the way that we are criminalizing and
(27:01):
punishing black boys. When we're watching the results of our
young black boys continue to downgrade, and we are actually
then turning around and blaming the black boys for their failure,
not the system, not the structure, but the young men,
blaming them. We do have a system of employment where
we make it more difficult for black men to be
(27:23):
able to enter into the employment market. We do have
a system that makes basically every sentence a life sentence.
Then when someone comes back from incarceration, we make it
deeply challenging for them to be able to get public housing,
challenging for them to be able to get a student loan,
challenging for them to get a home loan, challenging for
them to reintegrate with their families. And then we wonder
what's going on with the black men and why they're
not voting for us. Oh man, we'll be right back
(27:45):
after this message from our sponsor.
Speaker 1 (27:48):
Oh man, it's the bottom of the ninth too long,
too half. My eyeballs are floating. Man, I can't leave
my seat now. But what am I to do? I
don't worry, Bob, I got what can you do? Bring
the restroom to me? Buddy? Watch this Cribeji coach Prime.
When you find yourself in Prime time, depend I want
(28:10):
to Pete Gee, Thanks Prime.
Speaker 21 (28:12):
You know you want live with the band.
Speaker 1 (28:17):
So on the subject of boys in the girls locker room,
if Pete but a gig or booty gig, if you
prefer if he can't answer the question, I mean, it's
it's a cut and dried question. It's simple. You either
think it's a good idea for boys to play against
girls or you don't.
Speaker 21 (28:35):
When President Trump says something like no boys in girls' sports,
which is a phrase that they use, it sounds like
you're not standing on to that, I think that chess
is different from weightlifting, and weightlifting is different from volleyball,
and you know, middle school is different from the Olympics.
So that's exactly why I think that we shouldn't be
grand standing on this as politicians. We should be empowering
(28:58):
communities and organizations and schools to make the right decision.
Speaker 1 (29:02):
Scott Jennings was on Patrick bet David's podcast and he
made the point that I think needs to be made
about every issue like this. If you cannot answer this question,
or if we can't trust you to get this question
(29:24):
right and to act accordingly, then we can't talk to
you about taxation policy, foreign wars, or anything else. We
can't trust you.
Speaker 5 (29:34):
Democrats because of the Biden presidency, because they lied about
Joe Biden's condition, because they lied to the country about
the inflationary impacts of his policies, have dug themselves the
deepest hole they've ever been in in the history of
their party.
Speaker 1 (29:51):
At number one.
Speaker 5 (29:51):
Number two cultural radicalism. I mean, when the hills you're
willing to die on are boys and girls' sports paying
for transgender surgeries of inmates, which Kamala Harris ahead in
the last election. When you're willing to die on these hills,
when you're willing to go and say Maryland man unfairly
(30:13):
deported back to his home country. I mean, when you're
willing to die on all these eighty twenty hills, eventually
your approval reading will wind up. I'm no mathematician, but
around twenty they're getting there. And so this hole they've
dugged themselves in. If I can't trust you not to
put a boy in my daughter's locker room, why would
I talk to you about taxation policy.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
Or inflation, or terrorists or anything else. You're trying to
put a boy at my girl's locker room right? Why?
Speaker 7 (30:39):
And the truth that we need to confront now is
that medicine and science are being politically perverted around this country.
Speaker 1 (30:45):
That this destroys human lives. So how come something so
to night weird rectificate?
Speaker 6 (31:03):
After all, we.
Speaker 10 (31:07):
Like good.
Speaker 14 (31:09):
I don't know you.
Speaker 7 (31:13):
Trans youth are vulnerable and they suffer significant harassment and
bullying sometimes at schools, are in their community.
Speaker 1 (31:20):
They have more mental health issues.
Speaker 7 (31:22):
But there's nothing inherent with being transgender or gender diverse,
which which predisposed youth to depression or anxiety.
Speaker 1 (31:30):
It is that harassment and bullying?
Speaker 10 (31:34):
So how can something so right? After all weeping?
Speaker 1 (31:51):
Why do you want me don't know as you're so
roman sid knocket? Something so good? Let me fingers coming
to let me lonely?
Speaker 2 (32:06):
Happiness day of my life is so stack feel I
want to feel solo.
Speaker 1 (32:12):
After all we've been cruel after coming so far? Business mood?
Where's the love? A stitch of areas stuff?
Speaker 9 (32:26):
Okay?
Speaker 2 (32:26):
Something so.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
I have to always been?
Speaker 19 (32:46):
Why do I.
Speaker 2 (32:49):
Don't know you that?
Speaker 7 (32:53):
We really want to to debase our treatment and uh
and too firm and too support and empower these youth
not to limit their participation in activities to sports and
even limit their ability to get gender affirmation treatment in
their state.
Speaker 13 (33:11):
Webody else has left for me, Thank you and good
night