Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
The Michael Verie Show is on the air. Young men
have been told for twenty five years.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
That the very thing that makes them who they are
is toxic. That being a boy who becomes a man
is in and of itself awful, shameful, criminal, hurtful, violent.
(00:53):
Toxic masculinity is what masculinity has been referred to as.
And so you have little boys in this country who,
from their earliest days are taught by mama, And those
mamas have increasingly been told, don't you lesia, little toxic
(01:19):
masculinity monster on society. So they dressed little Tommy up
in a dress and put lipstick on him, and gave
him fairy princesses to play with, toe him to play
with the girls. Don't be a boy. Then they send
him to school because he's a man, a man in waiting.
(01:46):
He wants to run, he wants to grapple. You ever
notice in the animal kingdom how natural it is for
animals to wrestle and grapple. We've noticed that from their
earliest days. It's how we learn physical human interaction. It's
(02:08):
how we learn to battle, the fight, defend ourselves. Oh no,
little Tommy, not you, not you. You won't do that.
We don't want you doing that. We're watching TV, We're
hearing it everywhere. These boys are running up. They're mad men.
All the while, the Muslims coming here and they're not
(02:30):
subscribing to this notion. But that's okay because they're Muslims.
We don't want to upset them. Just the white Christians.
So little white Christian boys are constantly being told, don't
be a boy, sit still in the class, even when
it's impossible to do so, for interminable periods of time,
(02:50):
while being lectured on the fact that girl is good
and boy is bad, and the only way out is
for you to become a girl. Everything about you, everything
that you were born into, everything that's happening to your body,
everything that's every hormone that's coursing through your brain is
evil and awful. But you can't stop it because you
(03:12):
didn't choose it. You didn't build your own DNA. You
are a product of your biology. And as the years
went by, you were constantly told sit still, be quiet,
don't do anything physical, don't defend yourself, be soft, be weak,
(03:35):
be like the girls. But you're not like the girls,
so as early as possible, you're medicated. And the school
told you that because the all women teaching core doesn't
understand boys, and many of them have never had a child,
And those increasingly liberal hags self loathing. Liberal hags hate
(04:00):
men because they're either lesbian or because they've had bad
experiences with men, and they themselves are ugly and ugly
women hate the rejection they have felt, even if that
rejection is having been neglected and ignored, it's simmers within
them and they carry it out on the next generation
(04:23):
of little boys. They can't punish the guy at college
who dated the pretty girls, they can't punish the guy
who dumped them for the prettier girl. But they can
damn sure make sure that the next generation of little
boys won't grow into men who could break their heart again.
(04:44):
And so the school tells the parent, and the parent
wishes well, of course. The doctors no medicine, the lawyers,
no law the politicians, no government whom I to question
those things. And the teachers they know education and children,
so they say, look, your kid's a little monster. He's
(05:08):
the absolute worst I've ever seen. But it's not his fault.
For the first time in human history, little boys are
so spastic, such whirling dervishes, that we need to sedate them,
like oh, I don't know the mascot at the football game,
(05:31):
so that they can be brought out in public, lebotomized pharmaceutically,
you see. So you'll just give him that pill, and
it'll be better for him, because then he won't be
getting in trouble. Then he won't want to run and
play and create and engage and interact. He'll just be
(05:56):
going through life with a low grade buzz. Starting in
second grade, and so the doses keep increasing. As sure
there's side effects, and sure it causes some very serious
health conditions in some people, but that's all right because
(06:17):
Mss Smith didn't one her second grade class to be
disrupted as it was from the beginning of time by
little boys being little boys. And then as he got older,
he noticed girls were pretty, so he asked one to
go for a walk with him, and he was told
that was rape. He was told this is the toxic
(06:38):
masculinity of being a man, and that sex is rape.
All heterosexual sex is rape. Camille Paulia said, all sex,
heterosexual sex, is rape. The only consensual sex is lesbian
sex and gay men sex. Okay. Checktually wrote that she
(07:01):
was proud of that, she felt that was good in nature.
It's all rape, okay. So that little boy who grows
into a man has been increasingly told that men are evil.
Women are wonderful and feminized at every turn, and a
lot of them, an increasing number of them now, a
very large percentage historically, by historical standards, decide that would
(07:25):
just be better nothing else, the path of least resistance.
And by the way, women don't submit to your man.
Don't make him dinner. And women started reinforcing this. You
made him dinner. Oh my god, are you kidding me?
What are you his slave? You did something nice for him,
(07:48):
you dressed up for date night, you washed the dishes
and brought him breakfast in bed. What are you his slave?
And so women felt this intense pressure to be single, eat, pray, love,
go out, have sex with lots and lots of men,
and women, don't relegate yourself to what women did before,
(08:11):
barefoot and pregnant in a miserable life. And Charlie Kirk
dared say, you can be happy in being married. You
can be happy and be a mother. You can be
fulfilled and it's true, and that's what they had Michael
Berry's show nationwide. I got few comments on the Emmys
(08:31):
that I have ever received because people didn't watch. One
guy emailed me and he said he was upset that
they promised. They made it seem that Vince Gill was
going to sing and it wasn't till the end when
he did go rest high on that mountain or he thought.
I guess he thought he would. I didn't undertand the
whole point. But he was upset at the Emmys, and
(08:53):
I said, you know, be upset at yourself. You remember
Lucy in the football and she would keep telling Charlie,
you know, I'll hold the football, you come kick it,
and she'd pull it out and he'd go sailing into
the air and land on his back. And he would
keep going back, hoping against hope, making a fool of himself.
And at some point, you know, you've probably had one
(09:18):
of your own children who keeps going back to that
bad person who's toxic for them, and it just it
frustrates you. Can't you see how you keep doing this? Well,
I said to the guy by email, shame on you.
Boomi Once shame on you. Poom me twice, shame on me.
(09:41):
Why would you watch the Emmys? Why would you watch
the Church of Satan because that's what these people are.
Why would you go there so they can ridicule you
and honor their own Why would you do that? And
watched that thing? And I can't tell you how many years,
but I take it as a good sign that almost
(10:02):
nobody reached out to me about it, because the only
thing worse than criticizing what they've done is ignoring it.
Because the theater types and the media types, you starve
them of oxygen when you ignore them. As long as
you're going Varn Lemon did this and Jake Tappert did this,
(10:23):
then they're alive. It's when you ignore them that they
can't They can't take. They just can't take. And I
tell people, if you didn't know who Charlie Kirk was,
don't you realize When rush Limbaugh died, people said to me,
this is the end. It's over, Michael, No, it's not.
(10:45):
There will be more rush Limbaughs. There have to be,
because if rush Limbaugh didn't spawn more rush Limbaughs, then
rush Limbaugh failed, and rush Limbaugh didn't fail if we
are not filling the ranks at each position with more
people ready than what are we senators in Congress hanging
(11:09):
around into our nineties because we have no farm team. Oh,
there are lots of great people out there. There are
comedians and pastors and politicians. Oh sure, you got to
sift through and find the needle in the haystack, but
they're out there. Charlie Kirk was out there and a
lot of people didn't know that. That's why he went
(11:31):
from one point six followers on Instagram to well over ten.
I think it's well over eleven. Now where were all
those people? They weren't bad people, they were unaware. They
didn't know. Well, guess what if you could have been
unaware of Charlie Kirk before last Wednesday, you can be
unaware of lots of other people. Oh no, Michael, Charlie's
the only one of these greats. That's not what he
(11:52):
would say, and that's not what he believes. But we
can't go find good things when we are focused on
bad things. And a number of people in our movement
are so concerned with eavesdropping on CNN and MSNBC, just
waiting to be angry at what They say, in fact,
(12:17):
so angry at seeing MSNBC that if nine out of
ten people there say Charlie Kirk was a demon, he
was awful, he was evil, he was hateful, I'm glad
he's dead, and the tenth one says we shouldn't talk
that way. Prayers for Charlie Kirk. They're mad at that
guy because he doesn't get to say that. Well, it's
almost as if you're just focused on anger and bitterness.
(12:42):
How about we focus on goodness? How about we go
focus on good things. Charlie Kirk was on campus talking
to people and answering questions, not people who didn't want
to listen, people who listened because of the power of
his arguments. Here he is talking to a young black
man who was bold enough to step up to the
microphone and concerned about Christian nationalism and listen to what
(13:04):
Charlie does.
Speaker 3 (13:05):
So, I'm particularly concerned about your brand of Christianity. As
a Christian myself, Christian nationalism, I do not agree with
that all. I think it's antithetical to the values of
the early Church, and I think how do you reconcile
the especially white Christians in this America marrying politics and
power with their faith in this country.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
There's a lot there.
Speaker 4 (13:29):
I've never described myself as a Christian nationalist, so I'm
a Christian and a nationalist, so I don't never use
those two.
Speaker 3 (13:35):
And then right there, that and nationalist. Where in the
scriptures does.
Speaker 4 (13:38):
A Christian thank you for Jeremiah twenty ninety seven, demand
the welfare of the nation that you are in, because
your welfare is tied to your nation's welfare. Let me continue.
Daniel fasten and prayed for his nation. Esther and Mordecai
carried for their nation their counsel of the king, Niemiah, Jeremiah,
Joseph Jacob.
Speaker 1 (13:52):
I can keep on going. Moses Aaron.
Speaker 4 (13:54):
In fact, Moses was so political that he wrote an
entire book of the Torah all about how to set
up a government.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
It's the book Deuteronomy.
Speaker 4 (14:01):
So, in fact, the Bible is an explicitly political text,
amongst many other things.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
Now, can we.
Speaker 3 (14:06):
Interpret those sects in the light of the revelation of Christ,
Because you decide to Old Testament texts, we have not
one side a same pole. Okay, yeah, if you want
me to also, just the Kingdom of Heaven and the
gods just so we're clear.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
Do you think that the New Testament is greater than
the Old Testament?
Speaker 4 (14:21):
It is.
Speaker 3 (14:21):
It is greater because the revelation of Christ dictates how
we interpret the Old Testament.
Speaker 4 (14:25):
So you think that all of a sudden, like Genesis one,
is not as great just because the New Testament, the.
Speaker 3 (14:30):
Old Testament was a type and shadow of the things
to come, and now we live in the full revelation
of Christ.
Speaker 4 (14:35):
Again, that's dangerous theological.
Speaker 3 (14:38):
That's not true, that's Christological theology.
Speaker 4 (14:40):
Hold on, of course, I believe in the resurrection, but
to all of a sudden say that like in the beginning,
God created the heavens and the earth is like somehow
in like lesser because of the revelation of.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
The New Testament.
Speaker 4 (14:51):
Christ even said I did not come to abolish the
law of the prophets. I came to fulfill the law.
In fact, you said, all the laws of the prophet
hang on the two teachings Leviticus nineteen and Deuteronomy three
through five. However, to use a New Testament example, as
you asked, says in one Timothy, pray for your leaders
and authority by name, that they might one great decisions.
I'm going to continue. Christ our Lord said on this
rock build my what church?
Speaker 1 (15:13):
Wrong?
Speaker 3 (15:13):
Eclasea? It's not the word church the translations of Common
Bible state church.
Speaker 4 (15:17):
So well, actually it shouldn't because the original Greek term
says on this rock, build my government structure. Eclacia was
a secular word used in that time, which was all
about the advancement of freedom and liberty, which are the
two words in Greek elutheria and sonomia, which are the
two words there. So the point being Christ called us
to be sultan light. We as Christians should change the
(15:37):
environment that we come in contact with.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
That's what sultan might do.
Speaker 4 (15:40):
So why should we then not care about changing government
to be more christ like?
Speaker 3 (15:45):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (15:45):
Dad, allow me to introduce myself. My name is Mitch
Michael Ferry, genius. And what should be your reaction to
people celebrating the assassination of a thirty one year old
young man who was speaking to students on campus. Should
be your reaction to that we played for you Thursday,
(16:10):
Charlie Kirk making the point that when we stop talking,
that's when the evil happens. When we stop engaging, that's
when the evil happens. Stephen King claimed that Charlie Kirk
(16:31):
said things he did, and a number of people have
said he was hateful, he was this, he was this,
he was this, And having had that happen to me,
you get to the point that you almost don't even
care because it's so common. It is so common that
you're so accustomed to it that you almost don't even care.
(16:51):
But you have to because you have to squelch it.
But when you understand that most of the people who
hated Charlie Kirk had never listened to him. Twitter a
couple of years ago, if you're not on Twitter, don't
get on there. Successible Rush Limbo used to say that.
(17:13):
But they have a thing when an article comes out.
You know, there's a headline to the article, and then
there's the article. And if you go to repost that article,
I did it. We all have it says, wait before
you repost this article that claims to say this, would
you like to read it first? Because the algorithm can
(17:34):
tell that you didn't read it. You're basically just forwarding
a headline and the headline might not be accurate. Would
you like to just check into it first and make
sure that what you're claiming it says that it says, well,
people were saying that Charlie Kirk hated trannies. Just listen
(17:58):
to what he said. They were saying he hated gay people.
Just listen to what he said. And that's the unfortunate thing.
It isn't accidental that people hate him for what they
believe he said and yet didn't listen. The point of
(18:22):
dehumanizing your opponent is to make him so evil that
it would be an act of shame to even listen
to him to begin with. You trust that Hitler's evil, right.
You didn't need to go read mine kamf right. You
(18:45):
don't need to go listen to the beer Hall push
or any of his rambling, fanatical statements. We trust that
he's evil, right. Well, they did that to Harley Kirk.
Except there isn't a mind comfort, There aren't crazy speeches,
(19:08):
you know. I gotta tell you, I watched a lot
of videos over the last several days, and I gotta
tell you thirty one is a kid to me. I
gotta tell you, Charlie Kirk was so patient, My goodness,
(19:32):
he was so patient. He was so merciful, he was
so kind. You know, when you're a speaker at an
event like that, because I've done it. Andrew Breitbart and
I did an event together in the Woodlands. It was
one of the most enjoyable I ever did. And You've
(19:53):
got this was tea party. This was twenty ten or
twenty twelve, I can't remember. It's a huge crust seven
thousand people there, huge crowd, and you have a tendency
to play to the crowd. Everybody does it. You got
your one liners, you use your emphasis, you raise your
(20:15):
voice at the right times as you're coming to the
close of a sentence and wow, and you pause and
it's almost a call and response sort of thing. And
so there is Charlie Kirk three thousand, sometimes five thousand,
sometimes more people showing up on a college campus. You
are a rock star. Do you understand you are a
(20:39):
rock star when you can show up at a campus
and you can get kids to walk away from the
beer keg and laying in bed and gaming and watching
movies and maybe even going to class and walking around
class and throwing the frisbee or listening to music or
did I mention gaming because that's what they all do,
(21:00):
including his Killer, And you get them to come out
and listen to you talk about concepts of Western civilization
and faith. That is a rock story. I cannot say
this clearly enough. That is rock star stuff. And you're
(21:20):
out there and you got all these people, and I
want to make clear you watch enough of these videos
you realize these aren't people. These aren't dispassionate college students
who are simply showing up to learn a little Half
these college kids have bunked their class today to come
(21:43):
out and listen to you, because they'd rather listen to
you than here's some Chinese teaching assistant who takes over
the calculus class that day. They're there because they want
to learn and engage, but they're there as fans. Man,
they are fans. They are super fans of Charlie Kirk
(22:03):
and he's come to our college today. He's a rock star.
He's here for us, and they are frothing at the mouth.
They want to cheer and hoot and holler the same
way you would for the Rolling Stones. I mean, this
is exciting. And then somebody back there would have a
(22:24):
bullhorn or a provocative shirt. Somebody had shown up to
criticize him and call him awful names, and it's kind
of a cry for attention to do it, but in
their own minds they had come to the conclusion this
was worth doing, and Charlie would show almost a paternal
(22:51):
kindness to that person. I'm going to be completely honest,
I don't think I would have done that. And when
they say stupid things and they'd call him evil names,
and they would interrupt him while he was making his point,
and he's got that entire crowd behind him, he didn't show.
(23:14):
He didn't flex, he didn't have the crowd destroy them
with the hive mentality that they owe. Were just so
much as a flick of his wrist, those people would
have been shredded to pieces. But he didn't do that.
He didn't do that. And that's just amazing that a
(23:34):
young man, that anybody, could show such not just restraint,
but tenderness and mercy and kindness to people who disagreed.
And that's why he won so many souls for Jesus,
and that's why he won so many people who weren't
people of faith because of the way in which he
(23:58):
conducted himself. It wasn't just proper and gentlemanly, it was
really loving. And that's why the left makes Christians out
to be hate mongers, because Christians are the opposite, and
any Christian who's a hate monger is not a Christian.
(24:20):
What Charlie was doing was ministering to these people, evangelizing
to these people, both when he quoted the Bible and
when he showed them with his actions. And that's why
they curious, because it was too powerful. An illegal alien
with a lengthy criminal record repeatedly released into the United
(24:42):
States in Dallas chase a hotel manager down while the
hotel manager's wife and kids watched, and cut his head
off because the hotel manager had told him not to
(25:05):
use a washing machine that was broken, and the illegal
alien was angry at the Indian owner of the motel
because he had told an employee who worked there to
(25:27):
tell the guy, please don't use this washing machine he's broken.
To use the other one, and the guy was offended
that he himself didn't speak to him in Spanish, but
he's Indian. So he proceeded to chase the much older
Indian motel owner while the motel owner's wife and children watched.
(25:49):
He cut his head clean off, beheaded him, and then
he played soccer with his head in the open air space.
The atrium or the open air space of the motel.
And also in Arizona, two Muslim men were arrested after
(26:15):
leaving a bomb under a Fox thirteen News vehicle. Fox
thirteen News vehicle was covering the guys. The crew were
covering the assassination of Charlie kirk. They lit the bomb,
but it didn't function. It didn't work, as they're idiots. Now,
(26:39):
I don't know how we're supposed to respond to these
two things, because I don't want to be what they
accused Charlie kirkud being what hateful. I want to make
sure we love these people to death. I don't know
if we should take up a charitable collection for them.
I don't know how much money we can give them.
We should make them automatic citizens. We should give them
(26:59):
jobs that they don't have to show up for. We
should give them all the money in the world and
phones and houses. We should, of course free them and
allow them to commit murder and rape to as many
people as they would like to commit, which there seems
to be a strange propensity for illegal aliens to be doing,
whether it's diddling little children or raping women or both,
(27:25):
and there seemed to be a high propensity of this
bomb making among cultures, and so I'm just wondering how
what we can do as a reaction to show that
we're not hateful, because apparently to have the natural reaction
would be hateful. And then you start to understand, for
every person who tells you that Charlie Kirk or you
(27:48):
are hateful, what would they do if that was their
husband or wife who was beheaded and you had to
watch his head kicked through the courtyard of the motel,
Your child is holding your hand, and you're fleeing like
his heads is soccer ball. Should you be less hateful
at that moment? What would you do if that was
(28:08):
your spouse who worked for the news crew and two
Muslim men planted a bomb and tried to set it
off under the news station. Did they deserve that for
being hateful for working for the local Fox affiliate. Should
we out hug these Muslims? Should we tell them that
they're wonderful people? Should we name something for them? Should
(28:29):
we give them more money? What should we do? What
would be the appropriate non hateful thing to do? Because
whatever reaction you have that any human throughout the history
of mankind would have has been labeled hateful by the left,
at which point you begin to realize I can either
(28:49):
let these people murder me while the left tells me
I have to or I can stop it and the
left calls me bad names. Once you understand that's your
habesian choice, that's your dilemma, one or the other. It's binary,
now you start saying, I don't really care what the
(29:10):
left says of my actions. If we could just have
the Muslims put the bomb under their truck, if we
could just have the illegal alien cut off their head
and use it as a soccer ball, maybe, just maybe
we'd see how many of these democrats, as we're already seeing,
(29:31):
once they become victims of crime, or they begin or
they get canceled or whatever else, that they realize that
they chose the wrong side. Now I'm going to close
with something because I run out of time, and I
got a lot. I got pages of notes that we're
going to get to this week. Now I want to
close with something that is heavy on my heart. Number one,
(29:56):
the father of the young man whose name I will
not say in Utah who assassinated Charlie Kirk and set
off a movement I don't know all the details yet,
I suppose we will at some point. But he turned
his son in. It wasn't law enforcement that found the killer,
(30:17):
it was the father. He's like a deacon at the
Mormon church, former law enforcement officer, by all accounts, a
nice guy. I don't know. I'm sure they'll make him
out to be a demon, because that way they can
try to reduce his sentence. We'll they'll have the kid
being raved. They'll have all these things about him that
he had this horrible life, and none of the will
be true, but that's what they'll do. But this father
(30:39):
had to go and turn his son in. And you
think that was an easy choice, I want you to
really internalize how tough that had to be because he
knows that his son is very likely going to be
put to death. That's a hard thing to do, man,
and he did it. And I got to say that
was the right thing to do. We might not have
(31:01):
possession of this turd. We want to have custody to
him right now without it. But I also see a
young man who, by all accounts, was raised in a
good home, a loving home that respected law enforcement. And
let me tell you something, if you're spending all your
time watching what Jake Tapper says so that you can
(31:23):
immediately tweet it or Facebook post it or be angry
about it. Remember the old commercial it's ten o'clock or whatever.
Do you know where your kids are? Let me ask
you something. Is that time productive that you're spending on
all that other stuff. This kid didn't live at home anymore.
He was twenty two years old. He was living with
another dude that's transitioning to be a girl. So you
(31:45):
got more training violence, and you got more of that
community and their calls for violence. That has become a
cult of violence. But this father has to be regretting
now that when this young man started showing signs, he
couldn't have guessed he would kill Charlie Kirk. This is
your We've got to be parents, folks. We've got to
(32:08):
be bosses. We've got to be husbands and wives. We've
got to be parents. A lot of folks will tell me,
you know, I've lost my kids. My kid's going off
to Cosmon. That is your child. God put that child
in your hands to raise upright. If that child is wayward,
(32:28):
fix it. Well it's not easy, Michael. He's not talking
to me. Fix it. Nobody said it would be easy
fix it. Do you see how bad the consequences can be.
They're being exposed to bad things, they're spending a sit down,
look at do an intervention. Do it now, Thank you,
(32:56):
and good night,