Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, Time, Time, Luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Michael Varry Show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
I talked about this a couple of weeks ago, and
I don't know how. I guess I didn't go deep
enough into it, but I knew it was only a
matter of time, and so did you.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
We all knew.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
When the Democrats and the mainstream media started to promote
drag queens. You knew what was coming next. Drag queens everywhere,
because it sort of induces others and becomes, in an
odd way, a bandwagon effect. Now you may say to yourself,
I don't understand that, because it doesn't make me want
(00:55):
to be a drag queen. But it was never intended
to appeal to you. It was intended to appeal to
a certain amount of a certain type of person. So
when tattoos became more commonplace, it was a rebel thing
to do.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
It's a crazy thing to do.
Speaker 3 (01:10):
It was it was a it was a rebellion and
it showed that you were different. And so people would
get tattoos as a way of making a statement piss
off mom and dad. And when you saw them, you
knew that's a person that doesn't care what you think,
and it's it's as much a uniform as any other uniform.
(01:30):
But that's what it was until everybody started getting tattoos.
It got to the point where people in their seventies
are getting tattoos. Little ladies are getting tattoos because their
granddaughter comes home from college says, Grandma, let's go get
a tattoo. You and me, we'll get it on our ankle.
It'll be a butterfly. All right, maybe I'll do Your
(01:50):
grandmother do anything for the grandkids, you know that. And
so now you walk into a tattoo parlor and there's
grandma over there, sweet as she can be. He's been
voting Republicans since Eisenhower, and she's getting a tattoo. So
they had to go right. They ruined it for us.
It's like hipsters. It's very much like hipsters. It's like hipsters.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Who you know, they want the hot new.
Speaker 3 (02:15):
Thing, the craft beer, or this brand of clothing, or
vacationing in this particular place, and then when the normies
do it, when the rest of us.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
Do it, it ruins it.
Speaker 3 (02:26):
Or if you have teenagers, your teenagers will use words
that are teen vocabulary jargon, and so what you do
is you learn about it and you throw it in
real casually as if you think you're super cool, and
they hear it, and it, I mean, destroys that term
(02:49):
for them, and in my house like dad, no, no,
But what will happen is Michael or Crockett one or
the other, whichever one reacts the most harshly to it,
which is usually Michael t my oldest crocodile.
Speaker 2 (03:01):
Go, I gotta tell you that props.
Speaker 3 (03:03):
You did use it, right, I mean you did, you
did actually use it right, I mean, I gotta give
you credit.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
You did so.
Speaker 3 (03:10):
Anyway, So when the when normalizing the drag queens became
the deal, it started making more popular drag queens reading
to kids in school. They didn't they didn't just want
to be left alone and not beaten up. See that
was the originals. It always starts there, leave them alone,
they're victims of crime. Okay, leave them alone, don't pick
(03:31):
on them. Okay, they're coming to read to your kid
in school.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
Whoa, whoa. That escalated quickly.
Speaker 3 (03:37):
Drag Queen's Story Hour in the public library turned into
drag Queen's Story Hour in the school. And you were
a bigot if you balked at it. Okay, I'm a
bigot if that's what that means, because that's no place
for that. Then they put pornography in the school library.
Then they said that we wanted to ban books, and
(03:57):
so the FBI started investigating parents that went to school
board meetings to protest, bullying them, intimidating them, gestapo tactics.
Speaker 2 (04:06):
Exactly what. It is, no different, and.
Speaker 3 (04:09):
That's why it's so important for all these people to
do what they do in the school. They don't want
to be left alone. Used to they'd say, just leave
us alone and leave our life. We're just like you,
We just want to be left alone. They don't want
to be left alone anymore. Now they want to come
and smirit in your face, and they want to dare
you to have a problem with it so that they
can destroy you. That's their goal. You have to fight
(04:30):
back in the same way they're fighting. Well, we now
have liberal white women, which is the source of most
problems in this country in academia, trying to tell us
that pedophilia is a sexual orientation.
Speaker 2 (04:43):
Listen to this.
Speaker 4 (04:45):
Most of us feel this comfort when we think about pedophiles.
But just like pedophiles, we are not responsible for our feelings.
Speaker 2 (04:56):
We do not choose them.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
But where is.
Speaker 4 (05:00):
About our actions, and we must make a decision. It
is on our responsibility to affect and to overcome our
negative feelings about pedophiles and to treat them with the
same respect we treat other people with. We should accept
that pedophiles are people who have not chosen their sexuality
(05:24):
and who, unlike most of us, will never be able
to live it out freely if they want to lead
an upright life. We should accept that pedophilia is a
sexual preference.
Speaker 5 (05:38):
Statistics indicate that there will be one or two of
you who are struggling with some form of pedophilic interest.
These people can't talk about their feelings because they know
that they will be hated for it. I truly do
believe that every person is longing for love at some
point in their life. And what if this love that
(05:58):
you really wish for will forever be impossible. That must
be a really lonely situation to be in. Yes, from
an emotional point of view, I can kind of understand
that you want would want to eliminate these people from society. However,
it doesn't make sense, and that's because we're talking about biology.
(06:21):
We're talking about a sexual orientation, something that we simply
cannot change. And on top of that, every day new
people are born with the same difficulty. So it's not
practical to eliminate these people from society. They haven't done
anything wrong.
Speaker 3 (06:39):
This should not be a surprise. How many high profile
people flew to Epstein Island. Nobody made them. They didn't
arrive and find out later. I had no idea what's
going to happen. These people wanted to do this. They're
being protected. There is a powerful cabale protecting them, and
I think, by the way, blackmailing them. Joe Biden had
(07:03):
been smelling the hair of young girls for a long time.
His daughter wrote in her diary, which has now been
verified she did write it. It is her diary that
he would shower with her when she was a teenager
and it was creepy and she wished he would stop.
Do you know any other grown men who get button
aked in the shower with their teenage daughter? Honest, and
a guy that already has it, has a whole history.
(07:26):
But he's not the only creeper juist.
Speaker 6 (07:31):
Georgia's sweat comes to the far Sax. He sensol cast
his actious leaves for plexed.
Speaker 1 (07:45):
His ice cream with his hallo. He's got orders from
the little schools from where to Mexic go.
Speaker 2 (08:06):
It's Tracy Bird. Hey, y'all, if you drink, don't drive,
do the watermelon crawl. Listen to the Tsar salt my
buddy Michael Berry.
Speaker 3 (08:16):
So here's what happened with Obamacare, and this was by design.
When you work for a company, we'll use round numbers.
When you work for a company, Let's say you made
fifty thousand dollars. And for those of you in the business,
I don't know the actual numbers, so I understand I'm
going to get the number wrong, but just just follow along.
And where I put in numbers, put an extra a
(08:38):
Y because I don't have the experience in it that
you do. Because a lot of people do work in
the finance side of healthcare. Unfortunately, that's how you know
how inefficient this process is. Very little of healthcare in
America today is a doctor looking at a problem and
working to solve it. That's just that's a tiny little
(09:00):
portion of what we would generally call healthcare. Most of
the industry and people that work in it are selling
you on you, sending checks every month for something they
hope you won't use, and if they have the opportunity,
they won't pay for then you setting up occasionally when
(09:23):
after all of this, because you planned ahead, you set
up an appointment to go to the doctor, and then
you get to the doctor and the people who are
there who do not want you there. By the time
you get in to see the doctor, for a few seconds,
think about all the people who have touched your account.
(09:43):
Everyone's getting paid, none of them is helping to heal you.
Now you get back there to the doctor, he's bedraggled.
He's worst slap out because the practice changed. He doesn't
own his practice anymore. This is why Mary taly Boden
can walk in with a smile, because she owns her
practice independently. That poor guy you're seeing, he's most likely
(10:05):
from India, but he could be from another country. Very
little chance, especially if he's under forty, very little chance
that he's an American born. And even then he's from
Indian heritage because his parents are Indian.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
Nothing wrong with that. A lot of my doctors are Indians,
a lot of my family are Indian doctors. I'm good
with it.
Speaker 3 (10:25):
But that is the reality, and that's a whole separate
conversation as to why this happened. I'm not mad at
Indians for owning all the convenience stores or the motels.
They didn't steal them. They're not the cartels. Nobody else
wanted that. It's a horrible thing to do. It's an
entrepreneurial thing to do. It's hard work. That's why the
(10:46):
whole family lives there. But anyway, by the time you
get to the doctor, because remember I don't know if
you remember a while I as have you had something
wrong with you. Let's say you had a real bad cold,
and like me, about every two or three years, you
mess around and let that cold develop into bronchitis.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
And then it knocks you out for a while.
Speaker 3 (11:09):
So all you really need, because you already know what
drug you need because you're fifty three years old at
this point, all you really need is for him.
Speaker 2 (11:17):
To write the prescription to give you the drug.
Speaker 3 (11:20):
Because we've created a situation where you can't go and
get that drug yourself. And many of you don't understand
that in some nations you could, and that as an
adult you ought to be able to no Michael, somebody
will abuse it? What like alcohol that's on every street corner?
What do you need a doctor to give you alcohol?
(11:42):
How about food, you fat ass? Do you know how
many people abuse food? Do you know he knows the
number one killer? Do you have any clue how much
abuse of food there is? Why don't we regulate that more?
We are headed there by the way we are headed
there because the nanny state in innies believe if something
(12:03):
bad happens, if somebody makes bad decisions, then what we
need to do is the government needs to make that
illegal or give.
Speaker 2 (12:14):
Somebody power over you. As an adult.
Speaker 3 (12:18):
You cannot make a decision what you eat and when
you eat because look at you, you're so fat. Why
would you want to take away my ability to decide
when I eat and what I eat?
Speaker 2 (12:34):
Well? Because you're fat and you're costing a.
Speaker 3 (12:38):
Lot more, the study says, And they'll make this available
to you and people will quote it. Study says that
a fat person costs four times as much as a
skinny person for health care. And I have to pay
for your health care, and I don't think it's right
because you eat too much, and I think that the
government ought to ration your food. We're headed there. I
(13:02):
hope you understand that this is not a scare attactic.
That is where we are headed. So now you've got
a situation where by the time you get to the
doctor to get what you need, all these other people
have needed to be paid. The doctor is only a
tiny portion. And by the way, nine times out of ten,
especially if it's a general practitioner, you didn't actually need
(13:24):
to see the doctor.
Speaker 2 (13:25):
You could have seen a nurse practitioner.
Speaker 3 (13:27):
I'm not for socialized medicine, but there are very very
simple things you could do, very simple things you could
do to reduce the cost of health care in this country,
and one of them is stop clogging everything up with
a doctor.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
We have this doctor worship in this country that is
so silly.
Speaker 3 (13:48):
There are many, many, many Americans who are capable of
assisting in your healing and wellness who do not have
an MD. What we ought to do is save doctors
for issues where a doctor's experience and care is necessary,
and stop having doctors be the front line of every
(14:10):
single issue and requiring you to need to see the
doctor for everything. In most cases, a nurse practitioner can
do just as well and truthfully most nurse practitioners have
more experience with your particular issue than the doctor does
because they're doing all the work. This is also true,
(14:31):
by the way, with dental hygienis. I don't think there's
a gradation in dental hygienis. I don't think you go
from you know, dental hygieneus to master plumber dental hygienis
to you know talk you know. I don't think you
start as journey you ought to, because I don't know
if you've noticed when the dentist comes.
Speaker 2 (14:51):
Swaggering in and oh, Dennis is here? Why else, how
are you doing that? Let me take a look at this, Susie.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
What do we have.
Speaker 3 (14:58):
Well, on the A three rushed it in eight years,
and on the C four he's got a cat yep
ship you're right, Susie, you're cute. Sweat on the ass.
Sign him up, pay the bill. I will see you
back next time. Susie's gonna take care of you and
we'll give you a toothbrush to boot. Who do you
think delivered all the care the hygienist and in the
(15:19):
process she knows as much as he does. Yeah, well,
that's true in medicine too, all right, So back to
the point. Here's here's how it got all Caddi whoppers.
Democrats didn't want you to have a healthcare plan that
your company paid for, company was invested in because they
wanted you healthy, so they took care of you and
your dependence. Obamacare's goal was to break that relationship, and
(15:43):
they did.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
And how'd they do it.
Speaker 3 (15:45):
They convinced the idiots who needed healthcare most that they
were going to get through healthcare.
Speaker 2 (15:50):
This is the Michael It was their undoing with what's happening,
jac you're old Michael Berry show, go ahead there.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
Uh yeah, we take out veterans hunting. We partner up
with another group and they bring veterans out that have
been in combat and we get to spend We've been
doing it for about four or five years now. We
get to spend at least the weekend with them and
it's really impactful in their lives and on ours. Uh.
You get to hear some stories that are amazing, Touch
(16:22):
your touch your heart, make you realize how blessed we
are here to how easy our lives actually are. We'll
hear what they go through. But one of the first
guys I took chok out hunting. Uh, he, I might
get up choked deeps to bear with me. He really
good friends.
Speaker 3 (16:40):
Hey do you get choked up because you care so
passionately about veterans and the experience you gave them.
Speaker 2 (16:49):
I got a note you take all the time you
want them turning off on my car.
Speaker 1 (16:53):
So we became real good friends. Funny story is about it.
We were out on three of them. We to me
they wanted to go try to get some kyotes. So
I set up a coyote call, and I knew probably
weren't going to see anything because we weren't hearing them,
and we've been snaring them pretty good. So we put
a good death in the population. So I set up
the kyode call, get them all in different areas where
we have different lengths to shoot out us. And I
(17:14):
laid down next to Jonathan and uh, we're sitting there,
sitting there, and he founded a lot in his life.
And he looked at him and he goes, they ain't coming,
are they?
Speaker 4 (17:23):
No?
Speaker 1 (17:23):
I don't think they are. He goes, man, can we
go look for some sheds? I said, yeah, absolutely, man,
We'll go look for some sheds. Talking about antler shed
that fall off every year.
Speaker 2 (17:31):
So I thought that was shunting. Okay, all right, go ahead.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
No, no, shed it's actually sheds off. They said, their
antlers every year and you can walk around and pick
them up. Pretty cool deal. And so we're walking around
and you know, just two guys in the woods and
I said, man, so I don't. I said, I'm I'm
a very blunt person. Man, I don't. I don't know
how to say it. But you seem pretty normal, man,
So what's what's up with you? And uh he uh,
He's like, man, I've got a TV I and PTSD.
(17:56):
So he was actually uh his paint got hit by
an ID and he was actually am I for twenty
one days and uh that started our relationship right there,
and uh, every year since then, it's been coming up
on three years now. We meet up at least once
a year. He actually we just did a veteran hunt
two weekends ago and then he came in to pee
David brotherly skin and flew in and we went back
(18:18):
to the ranch and did some hunting, and uh we
were sitting, uh, we were sitting up totting, and I
could tell he was getting Uh. We were talking and
you know, talking to get deep over some some beers
and some whisky drinks. And one of my wife's friends
was there and she went and decided. My wife, She's like,
I think we're getting shreed. She's like, leave them alone,
let them do the things they got to get this,
you know, get it off their chest. And she's been
(18:39):
around to the um, so she's just like, let them be.
And Uh, he's taught us about somebody that he served
with that he helped train. I guess and h he's
wore this bracelet on his wrist. You know it says, uh,
I'm gonna read it real quick. I guess it's Corporal
David Jay BNS Sam seiz in US Marine Corps Alrek
(19:00):
Your Freedom eleven six KAYIA. And he's always had this
bracelet on him and when he goes out on trips
or hunts or whatever, he takes pictures with that thing.
And and said it to that guy's dad, who is
now a very good friend slash father to him and
sends pictures to him and his memory and his honor.
(19:20):
And he looked at us, me and my buddy Jason,
that we've all become real good of friends, and said, hey,
I want to do something with deil. He took that
bracelet off and put it down.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
Next to us.
Speaker 1 (19:31):
He said, I'm gonna be back in the year. I
want you to wear it for six months, and you
to wear it for six months and take pictures and
send them to me so I can send him to
his dad. And he hasn't taken this bracelet off in years.
And to be entrusted with something like that is it
is really amazing. And uh, you know, it all started
over relationships, over over a deer hunt. And I've dealt
(19:54):
with several of these guys now, and we look at
it as a it's just a deer, man. It's you know,
if you have a stale where you put one thing
on one side and one on the other, it goes
up and down. We look at what they did and
that scale was weighted down heavy on their side, and
we look at it going, man, we just a word
to being able to give you a hunt and gives
you a deer and just listen to y'all and talk
with y'all. And it's just no comparison. But one thing
(20:14):
I've learned is it's the exact opposite to them. It's
not just a deer to them. Hearing some of these stories.
One of the guys told us that one of his friends,
you know, was blown up missing an armor leg type deal,
and always turned out in these hunts and finally went
on one because he was debating suicide and shot a
deer and was able to put food on the table.
(20:34):
And he told us that literally this saved that man's
life one of these hunts that he realized he's still
a man. He can still put food on his table
to support his family. And man, if y'all have opportunities
that you own a ranch or you're part of something,
whether it's hunting, fishing. I know they do fishing trips,
to do all kinds of stuff. Reach out to these
different organizations. The one we deal with is Combat Ring
up Doors, which was started by two Marines. But they
(20:56):
do every branch in the military and they bring these
guys out. Man, it's it's truly life changing for them
and you get to see them decompressed. And two weekends ago,
the one night I took he had TBI and PTSD.
He was hit by three IED's and he just looked
at me while we're in the stand and he said, man,
thank you so much. I was able to unplug for
(21:16):
three days and I really felt peace for the first
time in a while. So it's it's an amazing experience
for everybody. J C.
Speaker 2 (21:25):
First of all, thank you for doing that.
Speaker 3 (21:28):
And I suspect you would agree with my assessment that
you took more away from that time you spent with
that better and than he did.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
And that's not to diminish what it meant to him.
Speaker 3 (21:39):
It's that very few things in life will give you
the fulfillment that that did.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
Yeah, And it's and I've been blessed with a good family,
wife and kids that you know, they let me take
time away from our schedule to go do this for them,
and it's it's even though my family's not always there,
my family's there and we're all saying thank you to them,
and Danny, any veteran who is served, thank you. You know.
Speaker 3 (22:06):
Yes, one of the things I'll tell you that I've
been doing radio for seventeen years and I've had other
careers and I've done things for people in some way
or another. And I often say this, and it makes
people uncomfortable, but it is true. People don't want to
admit this, but that which we do for other people
(22:29):
we do because we are selfish, extremely selfish. Now people
will say, I am so selfless. I do things for
other people, to help other people. If doing things to
help other people did not give us a sense of
fulfillment on a profound level, we wouldn't do it.
Speaker 2 (22:50):
We wouldn't.
Speaker 3 (22:52):
And I will tell you that we landed on combat
veterans with PTSD and that has occupied a great deal
of my energy since then. It's been ten years now,
we just celebrated ten years Camp Hope. And the beauty
is especially for guys. If you, if you are a
hunting and fishing guy, you got to realize the people
(23:12):
who went and served in Afghanistan and Iraq. You think
about the demographic. A large number of those guys are
rednecks from small towns that love to hunt and fish.
And when you think about you got something that you
don't even think of. You it's deer hunting season and
you go deer hunt, or you go out fishing, or
(23:33):
you know, you do outdoors activities. Man, that's you could
take that guy to the ball game, sure that's fine,
but you take him fishing, oh man. And I will
I will promise you this. I will, I will make
this guarantee to you. If you do that for a
combat veterans suffering from PTSD, you get out there, you'll
(23:55):
feel so good about yourself as you're going, I'm gonna
take some veterans out because you want the credit, right,
I'm gonna taket veterans and I'm gonna do this, and
you'll get out there and the new will wear off
of that penny, the shine will wear off, and a
few hours into it, you will realize you are going
to gain more from this experience than that guy is,
(24:16):
because this is going to put it all into perspective.
Because you sleep like a baby through the night, because
you have full use of all your appendages, you will
find because you don't have horrible nightmares and desires to
kill yourself, and you don't have tattoos that remind you
of their buddy who they had to carry to the
helicopter to be hauled away so that he could be
(24:37):
brought home at least as a body to be buried.
Those are things you never forget. You will from that
experience be forever change. You've got to the Michael Berry's show,
scientists discover for the first time that men and women's
brains do work differently. It's amazing everything we've known for
(24:59):
thousand of years has all of a sudden been upended
in about a ten year period. The Left running around
saying the most ridiculous things and nobody actually believes them,
except for really stupid, low information people and people who
want to be nice. I've decided that people who just
(25:21):
want to be nice, no matter what crazy idea somebody comes.
Speaker 2 (25:23):
Up with, are big part of the problem. Well, if
if he says he's a girl, who am I to
tell him he's not a girl?
Speaker 3 (25:32):
Uh, a human with a brain because he's not a girl. Well,
what does it hurt to just call him a girl?
If it makes him happy? Poor thing, You're the problem.
You're an enabler. You are an enabler because all they
need is enough of you going. Well, don't pick on him.
He's if he wants to be a girl, poor thing,
(25:55):
that's the problem. The Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences has issued a startling discovery. Startling, I tell you
not startling, startling. The brains of men and women work differently.
Speaker 2 (26:11):
Let me repeat that.
Speaker 3 (26:13):
The Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences has issued
a startling discovery. The brains of men and women work differently.
This is groundbreaking stuff, folks. We've always known that men
and women show love differently.
Speaker 2 (26:35):
You show love through love. We don't do that. We
show love through sacrifice. So a lot of times we'll
be loving you and you don't even know.
Speaker 6 (26:47):
For example, right we're sitting on the couch at home,
cuddled up, chilling watching movies.
Speaker 2 (26:52):
You've got your leg on top of my leg. I
don't want your legs there at no point in time
during this movie. Am I gonna baby? You don't make
this better. If I had no feeling from the hip down,
that would really prove my movie wating situation.
Speaker 6 (27:12):
If I had like one leg with blood in it, right,
and then one Lieutenant Dan, that would be perfect.
Speaker 2 (27:25):
Now I want to ask you to take your leg
off my leg.
Speaker 6 (27:27):
But you can't mean you gotta girl, there's no way
you ask that, and then it goes well right, no
matter how nice you say it.
Speaker 2 (27:35):
Oh baby, you know your legs are made of clouds.
Let me get out out there.
Speaker 6 (27:44):
Amazing, and not even the cumulatnimbus ones, like the thin ones,
like the little you.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
Don't even know is that a cloud and what is it?
Speaker 4 (27:51):
Right?
Speaker 2 (27:52):
It's like.
Speaker 6 (27:54):
I was just wondering if you could take your little
cloud figh and.
Speaker 2 (27:58):
Give me some sunshine.
Speaker 6 (28:00):
And you can say that, but all she hears is
get your fat dinosaur thigh off.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
Of the human beast?
Speaker 7 (28:10):
Holy?
Speaker 2 (28:11):
Are you a centaur?
Speaker 7 (28:12):
Is that what you are?
Speaker 2 (28:13):
Because you look like a human, but your legs feel
like a good horse? Holy sea biscuit?
Speaker 3 (28:19):
What the.
Speaker 6 (28:21):
Your legs should be hanging in a Spanish restaurant where
they shaved ham off of it.
Speaker 2 (28:25):
That's what your legs are.
Speaker 6 (28:27):
You're made out of her month said, no, that's what
you are, So instead we just sit there let you
crush our legs.
Speaker 2 (28:35):
You ever wonder why every old man is a cane?
It's so true.
Speaker 3 (28:42):
We know, and always have known, that men and women
show love differently. Scientists have never been able to definitively
prove that our brains work differently, even.
Speaker 2 (28:54):
Though we all know they do. Women will admit this,
Women will admit that this is not my wife. But
I do know.
Speaker 3 (29:09):
Friends who have wives, and this is a common one.
That the wife will have a dream that her husband
is cheating on her, and she'll see it. She'll witness
her husband is cheating on her with her sister, with
his workmate, with the neighbor. She will wake up from
the dream angry at him for what was in the
(29:34):
dream and be angry with him for the whole day
because she had a dream, even though the dream is
not real, and some women will admit to that. For
the research, the team used explainable AI, a type of
computer learning which can sift through vast amounts of data
(29:58):
to explain why an effect is taking place. The model
was shown MRI scans of working brains and told whether
it was looking at a man or a woman. So
here's the data, here's the scans.
Speaker 2 (30:12):
Science.
Speaker 3 (30:14):
Over time, the neural network began to pick out subtle
differences between the two sexes that had been missed by humans.
When the researchers tested the model on about fifteen hundred
brain scans, the model was able to tell that the
scan came from a man or a woman more than ninety.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
Percent of the time.
Speaker 3 (30:36):
Experts are hopeful that finding differences between male and female
brains could be crucial in tackling neurological or psychiatric conditions
that affect men and women differently. For example, women are
twice as likely as men to experience clinical depression, while
men are more at risk of drug and alcohol dependence
(30:58):
and dyslex yeah. The brain areas discovered in the study
are often associated with neurological disease. There's still some debate
as to why the male and female brains work differently.
Some scientists say it's biological, while others say it is
(31:22):
societal nature versus nurture. You don't have to be a
scientist with a fancy AI machine to know that men
and women think differently. This isn't groundbreaking stuff. Comedians like
Jerry Seinfeld and lots of others have been making a
(31:44):
good living for decades talking about this. Whyamen do these things?
Why are they acting these ways?
Speaker 7 (31:52):
Why AREM in rude of not just getting drunk, screaming out,
peeling out, rubber making kissing noises?
Speaker 2 (31:58):
Why why telling awful jokes? Why have men behave so badly?
I know what you ladies are thinking. No, no, not
my guy. I'm working with them. He's coming along. No
he's not. He's tricking you.
Speaker 7 (32:18):
Men are not developing, we're not improving. We men know,
no matter how poorly we behave, it seems we somehow
end up with women. Anyway, Look around this room. Look
at all the men you see Look beautiful women men
are with them.
Speaker 2 (32:32):
What do you think?
Speaker 7 (32:32):
These are special men, gifted, highly unusual, one of a
kind man.
Speaker 2 (32:37):
These are the same jerks and idiots that I'm talking about.
They're doing fine.
Speaker 7 (32:45):
Men as an organization are getting more women than any
other group working anywhere in the world today. Wherever women are,
we have men looking into the situation right now. We
explore the earth looking for women. Even went to the
moon just see if there was any woman there. That's
why we brought that little car. Why was it bringing
a car unless there's some chance of going on a day.
Speaker 2 (33:09):
So there you have it. Men and women are different.
Speaker 3 (33:13):
Okay, Then, now that we've come to this drammatic conclusion
that we've known for thousands of years, sort of like
we're headed the wrong direction as a society, did you
notice that it's almost as if it's time for us
to stand up for truth so it's not destroyed by
the idiots on the left.