Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
The Michael Varry Show is on the air. Fact Drunk
and stupid is no way to go through life.
Speaker 1 (00:19):
So I'm shaking the dust of this crummy little town
off my feet and I'm gonna see the world all
my ll the fry gass water tight.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Yes, we believe it is.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
I'm going to steady that French kiss.
Speaker 4 (00:45):
So everybody does that.
Speaker 3 (00:46):
Yeah, But Daddy says, I'm the best dadus careful man
in the fabrics here, everybody down the ground, we gotta
what are the.
Speaker 2 (00:54):
Dollarscope, sir, what the wide wide.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
World of sports of going.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
To the phone lines? We go, Bob, You're rope seven
one three, one thousand, seven thousand, Bob, take it away, Laura.
Speaker 5 (01:19):
I believe that James call me welcomes this indictment with
glee and joy. Obviously, his Sanskrit writings on the beach
didn't get him the ego boost that he wanted and
just puts him right back in the public eye. He
thinks he's this guy in the room and so whatever
(01:40):
the DOJ throws at him, he believes he's going to
be able to finesse it to his benefit. We can
all only hope that this doesn't come out well for James.
Call me.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Well, I certainly agree with that portion, but I think
that I think that an indictment for a felony offense,
multiple counts and the possibility of going to prison, I
(02:18):
don't think that's something that even a guy who loves
attention the way he does. I mean, I've heard of
Munchausen and Munchausen by proxy, and I've heard some extreme
forms of masochism, but I haven't seen many people other
than Otis in Mayberry who want to go to jail,
(02:39):
much less prison, And the process of defending against it
is no small matters. I must say. I don't believe
he welcomes this. I don't believe he looks forward to it.
I don't think this is what he wanted. This is
a world of hurt that has just been put on him. Now,
(03:04):
you are right to bring up the little seashell game
that he played on the code for assassinating the president,
and then you know the too clever by half coy. Oh,
I had no idea what it stood for. I was
just playing in the sand. You exactly what he was
doing in that part was a little a little show,
(03:27):
a little game of him thinking that he's pulling one
over on Trump and Americans who support him, and amusing
his friends like Jimmy Kimmel, fellow travelers. But what I
think happened, and you see this happen often, is that
when someone knows their goose is cooked, they are certain
(03:52):
that they're going to be indicted, and what they will
do is they will then immediately begin doing things that
look principled so that they can argue that's why they
were actually arrested. So I questioned the authoritarian extension of
(04:13):
power by Donald Trump, and that's why they're arresting me.
So what they do is they create these scenarios, They
create this dust up around what looks like this highly
principled position, and then you're supposed to believe, oh, Kobe
didn't do anything wrong. They're just trying to find a
(04:35):
reason to put him in prison. That's what this is about. Well,
actually that whole thing is a setup on his side.
This is a man who has spent his life living lies,
creating lies, selling lies, peddling lies, making lies into truths
and truths into lies, making good people into criminals and
(04:57):
criminals into some sort of hero. This is a man
who has manufactured truth and destroyed truth. This is a
bad human being. And while I understand that we need
certain things to be undertaken during a time of peace
that during the time of war that wouldn't be allowed
(05:18):
in peace, in this case, these individuals like him have
been allowed to run free, run amuck, and run a
foul of American laws for a very long time, and
the American people have suffered, and good people have suffered.
The people on January sixth alone, and what they went through,
(05:42):
the number of doors that got kicked in, and people
yanked out of their homes, and children having to watch
their parents having to watch this happen to their parents,
and all of it by design, that over the top
military transport being brought in over the efforts, like these
people were El Choppo or something. And you're doing this
(06:07):
to average everyday people when you've seen the footage, they
did nothing, and you're treating them like such monsters, while
monsters are released on the streets every day are serving
into Congress. Yeah, I wish nothing ill of James Comy.
I wish justice. That's it, because I trust that justice
(06:33):
being imposed upon Jim Comey will be so cruel, so vicious,
so awful, that he won't he won't be able to
withstand it. That man and Clapper, and for that matter,
John Bolton. I want to see John Bolton. I want
(06:55):
to see John Bolton break down in tears and apologize
and confess for what he has done. And the rumor
which will soon be I think an indictment is selling
America's secrets to guitar Or and any number of other countries.
(07:16):
If that is not prosecuted thoroughly, then you will only
have more of it. That is espionage, that is treason.
That is wrong, and these are high crimes. These are serious,
serious crimes, and it will be interesting to see how
(07:38):
that case plays out. And we will hear from a
lot of people who are fellow travelers with him. We'll
hear from the Clintons and the Bushes and a lot
of other people that Trump is a bad person for
doing this. And the reason is if you've been playing
this game, this game that they play, of manipulating these
(08:04):
forces an American public opinion, opinion and sending us into wars.
We shouldn't be fighting and lying about things to the
American people and using these people like this, these these
sketchy people like this, then you're afraid it might end
up at your doorstep. And I think Hillary Clinton.
Speaker 6 (08:20):
Is to the anglobe doing a great job in Memorial Park,
my diversity.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller is in
many ways the brains of the White House. Kathy Wiles,
I guess her name is, is the gatekeeper and the
operations person, but Stephen Miller is the brains behind the
overall strategy, the thematic strategy. And from being a young
(08:58):
man calling into the Larry Elders Show radio program to
being a staunch Trump supporter from the early days to
today having sort of earned his way into being the
guy that really speaks with authority on the administration and
(09:21):
what they're doing and why they're doing it, and he's
grown quite a fan base as a result of it.
His wife appeared on Fox News with Jesse Waters, and
that conversation took a very interesting turn when Stephen Miller's
wife called her husband a sexual matador. Yeah, yeah, that happened.
(09:50):
That's not a joke, that really happened. It makes you
wonder what an actual Spanish matador would think of this.
Speaker 1 (09:59):
Going and welcome to noble. I'm your favorite balador. On
the microphone, Jose Garciallopez pon Seca A quick shot out
to all my fans listening today except for Juan. Let
me read a little note I get from someone called
Eduardow from America. Here right, dear Jose, how you call
yourself number one matador when your record in the ring
(10:22):
is only five and all? Well, well, well, Wardo from America.
Let me explain something to you about the life of
a matador while you sit there and you do your
data type type type on your stupid little keyboard chess.
I'm five and all seems not so good to you, huh.
But if I go five and one, I'm done. Oh,
horn up the hole and you see your soul. That's
what my grandfather always told me. Okay, enough of that garbage.
(10:46):
Speaking of America, I was winding down last night in
my little robe with my glass of wine, and I
fliply flipped to the television and I come on too
Fast News.
Speaker 4 (10:56):
Now.
Speaker 1 (10:56):
I like Fox News. I like what I say, like
what they do. They don't my man, mister Donald Trump.
But I see this woman and a beautiful woman saying
her husband is a sexual matador. Wait a minute, is
this a thing in America? You have sexual matador? Benito?
Play the clip for everybody.
Speaker 4 (11:13):
You are married to Stephen Miller, so you are the
envy of all women.
Speaker 1 (11:17):
What is that like?
Speaker 7 (11:18):
The sexual matador? Right?
Speaker 8 (11:20):
What is it like being married to such a sexual metai?
Speaker 2 (11:22):
Wait wait, wait, wait, wait a minute.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
Did anybody think that maybe the man is a little
light on his offers? He's really excited about the sexual matador? Okay,
go ahead.
Speaker 7 (11:29):
He is an incredibly inspiring man who gets me going
in the morning with his speeches being like, let's start
the day.
Speaker 8 (11:35):
I am going to defeat the.
Speaker 7 (11:37):
Left, and we are going to win. He wakes up
the day ready to carry out the mission that President
Trump was elected to do.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
Okay, I'm going to tell you right now, you Americans
know nothing about matadors or making it sexy. Senior Miller,
with all the respects, your speeches may be great, but
you know nothing about it.
Speaker 3 (11:55):
True Matador, I have a red cape of desire that
lures the bonds with a great passion. Now make the
bull a woman, and my cape pure silk of sexonies.
My red rocket would drive us in to read that's
wild would desire much like my red Cape. Guys with
the bull a.
Speaker 1 (12:15):
You see your women were leaning cross to your speakers. Ah, yes,
you can not call me manahoor.
Speaker 2 (12:30):
I'm reading online that the number of people celebrating Jim
Comey's indictment in cludes, by speculation, Martha Stewart, one woman
writing you better believe Martha Stewart bake to cake last
night when she got the news that the ham Sandwich
known as James Comy got indicted by a federal grand
(12:56):
jury twenty two years after the same Ham Sandwich indicted
the Goddess of Hearth and Home for supposedly lying to
the FBI. Well, yeah, I can imagine. I can imagine
there are a few people out there reveling in the
(13:17):
fall of Jim Comy. But I would like to see
the completion of it. The finish hymn if you will,
of Jim Comy. I would like to see justice done.
I truly believe that justice is all we need for
(13:37):
most everybody. It doesn't have to be petty, it doesn't
have to be vengeful, it doesn't have to be cruel
or in any way enjoyable. If simply justice is done,
If people are punished properly for their actual crimes, then
(13:58):
I think that that would be more than enough to
please those of us who have watched as these people
have managed to get away with the horrors that have
ravaged this country, horrors, remote horrors, the atrocities, the travesties.
(14:22):
I'm the guy still mad about how many people, including
my brother, died by the shot by the clock shot,
and how many people continue to have compromised systems as
a result of that shot. Shocking. How many people who
(14:44):
took the shot refuse to dig into what it has
and can do to you up to this day, shocking.
How many people will tell me they don't want to know,
they look the other way. Well, what you did in
fear handing your arm to a government that you trusted,
(15:10):
it bears accountability. But I would want to know what
I could do to potentially reverse the damage done to
me when I undertook a very very risky effort with
no upside by the way, and as it turns out,
pretty devastating downside. I at least would never trust the
(15:33):
government again. I mean, at a minimum, that'd be that
you want to understand giving information is not snitching. Friend
of mine is a plumber, and as he's out on
job sites, he will send me pictures and stories of
the sources of things he comes up with. And one
(15:55):
of them from this morning.
Speaker 3 (15:59):
Is a.
Speaker 2 (16:01):
Is a line he got called out to at a
house that was backed up and they were trying to
figure out why it was backed up, and it turned
out when they put the snake through there, the cabinets
inside the house are screwed to the pipe an inch
and a half the screw goes through, so the pipe
(16:24):
has like a cross bar that everything is getting hung
up on as it's going through there. And he sent
me enough photos at my request to dissatisfy my curiosity.
And I'm just imagining some guy just running that running
that screw through that cabinet directly into that line, and
(16:47):
nobody noticing it. And here we are, and you've got
to tear everything out of there to get to it.
M m mmm. That that's unpleasant. Well, what was it?
What was the audio clip I had wanted to play from?
What's that?
Speaker 3 (17:04):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (17:04):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, this was the flashback? Here we are.
This was the flashback of John Bolton in twenty twenty three,
after Donald Trump's home mar Lago was raided. John Bolton's
on MSNBC and he says, ah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, Trump,
Trump took those documents. He took those documents. Trump likes
(17:28):
cool stuff, so he took them because he likes this
cool information. You think it's neat and interesting. Bolton is
looking into the camera, that big old Wilford goofy brumley
looking mustache covering the bottom part of his face, looking
(17:49):
into the camera and making this statement about Trump taking
documents and that that is illegal, knowing good and well
he's doing it himself allegedly. How about that. That's some
diabolical stuff right there. That's in cold blood right there.
(18:11):
You're staring into the camera accusing Donald Trump of what
you know you are doing, and getting paid dearly for
listen to this.
Speaker 6 (18:22):
But I don't think he cared about the classification system.
I don't think he appreciated the sensitivity of this information,
and he didn't appreciate the sensitivity of how it was
often acquired, the so called sources and methods. So this
had been brief to him before I arrived, It was
repeated frequently. I think it simply had no impact on him.
Speaker 8 (18:44):
Whatever, there's a couple of different ways that people think
about this, and people who are not friendly to the
president who think about what's happened here, and one of
them is, you know, Donald Trump, master thief, you know,
criminal running the kind of elaborate conspiracy to bring things
out of the White House and keep them secret for
potentially for political or financial gain. There are other people
(19:04):
who added to attitude is Trump is chaotic, he's careless,
he's not that smart, he just wants He took these
things almost by mistake, and now he's basically stamping his
feet and saying, their mind, I don't want to give
them up. Give me a sense of where you think
the truth wise with respect to Trump's intelligence, carelessness, and
the degree to which he might have brought motive to
(19:25):
bear on taking these documents out of the way of
keeping them for this long at mar Lago.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
Well, don't.
Speaker 6 (19:31):
It's very hard to speculate on motive other than that
he liked cool things. He saw things that he so
he wanted to take them, and he was pretty much
able to take them, and not just on classified information matters,
on all kinds of things that crossed his desk. Some days,
he liked to eat a lot of French fries. Some days.
He took classified documents. He wanted them. Why did he
(19:53):
want them? Because he could get them?
Speaker 2 (19:58):
Wo, how does that pie taste going down? And probably
got it all hung up in his mustache. And yeah,
he got that flavor saver. He'll be able to taste
on that for a while. Eat on that for a while, John,
Eat on that. John Bolton is a bad human being,
(20:22):
a man who has, for as long as I can
recall many years, made it his business to advocate for
us to get into every war possible because it ain't
his son's getting killed. This is a man like Lindsey Gramnesty,
who clearly masturbates to the thought of us being at war,
(20:44):
and he's a fiend for it. He's addicted to it.
He wants war, war, war, and he's profiting from it, allegedly.
And I will look forward to his case going forward
as much as I will Comy. I think people may
be don't know as much about what Bolton has been
up to, but we will. And those prosecutions need to
(21:06):
begin now so that we can wrap them up by
the end of this first term. Those prosecutions need to
get fully underway. There cannot be a further delay. It
is time to prosecute and see justice for administered on
h on John Bolton. But do you notice there they
can't decide who or what Trump is. He's just a
(21:29):
bad guy. He's either really stupid or he's evil. We've
heard up until now that he's literally Hitler, he's a Nazi,
he's Hitler, he's a Nazi, and Kamala Harris this week
rolled out a new one that he's a communist dictator,
and I thought, well that's interesting. Where where does that come?
(21:51):
Is he Castro? Now he's gone from being literally Hitler
to castro puristic.
Speaker 7 (22:00):
Dear Diary, the fake news media has always tried to
call me a Nazi. Now fake news calls me a
communist dictator. No even a flat sight, when all along
I'm just working on lowering crime, strengthening the economy.
Speaker 2 (22:22):
I'm making America great again.
Speaker 7 (22:27):
I'm no Nazi and I'm no communist dictator. You can
call me Superman.
Speaker 2 (22:51):
The Ice Agent app, the app that tells you where
ICE agents are active, has been discovered to have been
you used by the individual who shot three Ice agents
in Dallas this week. Ice agents, of course, are referred
to in the worst possible way, Trump as well, and
(23:15):
most every Republican. And there is a consequence to this
when you refer to people in this way, when you
educate children that there was evil and it should have
been stopped and wasn't and as a result, the world
(23:36):
was almost lost. When you ask questions like if you
could go back and kill the baby Hitler, would you
to prevent the hell on earth he would cause for
so many And then you begin calling Trump hitler. It
(23:59):
is a dance you are performing, and they know what
they're doing. They're not gonna fire the bullet themselves. They
care too much about their lives. You know. You look
back at this little punk who killed Charlie Kirk. His
family can imagine his family, They're all devastated. His life
(24:21):
is crap. Now Charlie's life is gone. And for what
So they basically talked this guy into doing something that
now he's ruined everybody's life. You's ever touched it. She's
(24:44):
away shouting down and down on the weekend.
Speaker 4 (24:52):
She's a big city stripty.
Speaker 2 (24:58):
I shoot sleep.
Speaker 4 (25:02):
And for a dollar of feet you can make her quietness,
then leave.
Speaker 2 (25:12):
Her papple.
Speaker 4 (25:13):
He don't know he is the baby cheats of her clothes.
He don't live her ask castpades rent ye ever a good.
Speaker 5 (25:27):
To see her chance?
Speaker 4 (25:29):
O lord, it just spelled her chance.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
She leaves me with feeling it with money well spent.
Speaker 4 (25:39):
She's big, said stripper. Now the cables love its ever
spending their lives in a bill that see five dollars
SPI good fo Yeah, never ever wants She's my big
(26:02):
city stripped and I think she's in me.
Speaker 2 (26:08):
Speaking to the Stratford High School celebration that they got
their tp USA chapter this weekend or the earlier this
week two nights ago, I must say it was really
(26:31):
invigorating to see young faces, the young men with their
blazers and their red tie and their khaki pants, which
is exactly how I dressed as a high school debater,
and so eager, so fresh faced, so enthusiastic. These are
(26:59):
not patriots who've been worn down from campaign after campaign
and disappointment after disappointment. These are eager, idealistic young people
ready to change the world. It's just such a cool
(27:21):
thing to see. For so long we've thought that the
youth of our nation were lost. And sure, you can
go to some schools where they can't write their own name.
But to see these young people focused on issues and
(27:47):
structures and procedures for excellence, it's really an amazing thing.
It was a wonderful thing. I had the parents of
the kids, parents who had shown up for the event
stand as well, because I think there's something to be
said from the fruit doesn't fall very far from the tree.
(28:08):
I think most of these families, the parents would be responsible,
if not for their involvement in the organization, but in
an awareness to what is going on and from a
purely selfish perspective. It's pretty cool to hear these young
people say I've been listening to you since I was
(28:30):
eight years old. I've been listening to you sitting in
the backseat of my dad's truck or my mom's suv,
and you sort of you know, I think of the
music I really enjoy Ronnie Milsap, Charlie Pride, Mickey Gilly,
Charlie Rich. I didn't choose to like that music. My
(28:52):
mom loves that music. And that music was playing on
an eight track in our living room all day long
while she cleaned the house or cook dinner, and I
heard it so much that it sort of weaseled its
way into my brain and now it's mother's milk to me.
(29:12):
You don't choose these things. If we expose our children
before they are able to fully put it in context
and understand it. If we expose them to the values
we share, then when it comes time for them to
(29:32):
make decisions for their own lives, they have a framework.
That doesn't mean they won't stray along the way young
people often do. They need to test their boundaries. That's
true out in nature as well. You see it with
every species. A young person enters that age in most cases,
(29:54):
and it can vary what it is, but they enter
that age where they need to test the boundaries. They
need to not be the shining star, good kid, a
good student, good athlete, respectful American, and you know they
have to stray off for a minute. But they come
home and when they come home, they have something to
(30:16):
come home too, and they have the skills to understand
why that is the life they want for themselves, and
that's the life they want to build with someone else
for the future because they recognize that what they had
and took for granted is not the norm. It's not
(30:37):
the norm to have mom or dad come in and
put you to bed every night. It's not the norm
to have a hot breakfast made by mom or dad
in the morning, to be dropped off by your parents
one or the other to school and be picked up,
and have them show up to your events, and have
them sit with you at the table and do homework,
and have them be married as a cup, and to
(31:01):
have stability in your home. That is not the norm.
So much of the dysfunction we see in people that
may not manifest itself, at least publicly, until well into
their twenties when they take up a gun or join Antifa.
What we're witnessing in dysfunction is stage four or five
(31:23):
of what started in a broken home. And I don't
think that every solid home is going to yield a
solid citizen, nor every broken home yield a future Antifa member.
But the numbers are pretty clear, and it just happens
to make sense. You would want to raise people who
(31:47):
share these values, who share these goals, who understand these
rules of the game in terms of diligence and sacrifice
and trust and faith and kindness. But if a young
person is not exposed to that. On the main streets
(32:07):
of Detroit, or Houston or New Orleans or Islamabad. Then
those values will be what they go back to. That's
the only thing they understand because it's the only thing
they've been taught, and they've not been exposed to an experience,
(32:30):
and if they have, they've not been exposed to experience
with a mind willing to learn to recognize that life
doesn't have to be this hard. Life doesn't have to
be this unstable or violent or cruel or frightening. There
are controls that can be put in place for stability
(32:50):
and happiness and comfort where love can flourish. But if
you've never been exposed to that, then what you see
but from a distance, is someone who somehow stole that
or came by it dishonestly because you can't figure it
out for yourself, and you've never enjoyed it, so now
you hate it, you despise it. And that is why
(33:12):
so many the children praying in Minneapolis recently, they're killed,
not despite their beauty and their innocence, but because of it.
That's when you begin to understand how hard hearted these
folks are and where this all begins, and it makes
us redouble our efforts to raise our own children in
(33:35):
such a manner that we can be proud of, and
we put them on a good course. And to applaud
the families and children who are on this course.