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December 30, 2025 • 34 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time time, time, time, luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
The Michael Verie Show is on the air. Is Mark Elias.
Those of you who follow politics, many of you know
his name. He's the devil. According to the New York

(00:36):
Times quote, Mark Elias has done more than any single
person outside of government to shape the Democrat Party and
the rules under which all campaigns and elections in the
United States are conducted. Now understand that what they're applauding

(00:59):
is voter ID laws and allowing an environment where cheating
is rampant. And that's why he fights any voter ID,
any election integrity, because you have to leave the door
unlocked for the burglars to get in. His job is

(01:20):
to keep the door unlocked. In April of twenty fifteen,
so a year before, year and a half before the
election that Donald Trump would win, Hillary Clinton was hired
by Mark Elias as the attorney of record and general
counsel for her twenty sixteen presidential campaign. She's got to
make sure she can cheat. A year later, April of

(01:44):
twenty sixteen, the Washington Post reported that Elias on behalf
of the Democrat National Convention Committee. Sorry, and the Clinton
campaign hired something called fusion GPS that would conduct research,
and that research would lead to the creation of what

(02:04):
came to be known as the Steele Dossier. Remember Christopher Steele,
he was the disgraced supposed British spy who had to
admit under oath that he lied. Elias played a key role,
the lawyer, in funding this quote unquote research. It was
all made up. That research produced now debunked claims about

(02:28):
Donald Trump's ties to Russia. This was the Russian collusion case.
So what they did is Elias pays Steel, pays a
fusion GPS, a group of former Democrats or group of
Democrats former media members. They find a disgraced former spy

(02:52):
and they get him to put his name on the
dossier as if he was hired by the media. Hey,
who is Trump? Is there anything out there we need
to know, Let's ask one of the spies. So the
spy comes back with the report which was already created
for him, that says, yes, the Russians ConTroll Donald Trump.

(03:13):
Trump must not be president. He is under the control
of the of the Russians. The Russians are taking over America.
Ah okay, So all of this happens, and all of
it would end up unraveling. Remember, they even Eves dropped
on Donald Trump by using carter Page as the subject.

(03:36):
All this carter Page is a bad guy. We got
a spy on him because they knew carter Page was
coming into meetings with President Trump, who was not the
president yet at Trump Tower. Well, if you're Eves dropping
on carter Page, you're also Eves dropping on the presidential candidate.
This was the deep State trying to get something on
Trump that they then hand to Hillary's lawyer, who then

(03:58):
hands it to the media and Trump is finished because
they were scared to death. Well, President Trump now talking
about the Department of Justice, this weaponization against him, and
that he's going to do something about it. He mentioned
Mark Elias by name, and that clearly has Mark Elias
scared to death because he deleted his aggressive x account.

(04:26):
He's not on Twitter anymore because he realizes, uh, oh,
the walls are closing in.

Speaker 3 (04:31):
They spied on my campaign, launched one hoax and disinformation
operation after another, broke the law on a colossal scale,
persecuted my family, staff and supporters, raided my home mar
A Lago, and did everything within their power to prevent
me from becoming the president of the United States with

(04:54):
the help of radicals like Mark Elias, Mark Pomerants. And
these are people that nobody's ever seen anything like it,
so many others, but these are people that are bad people,
really bad people. They tried to turn America into a corrupt,
communist and third world country.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
So now he's got him scared. He's not forgiving and forgetting.
You remember the name Peter Strasak. He's the one that
was like a horny teenager who was screwing Lisa Page,
who was a married lawyer for Department of Justice. And
she was texting him, what are we gonna do if
Trump becomes president? What are we gonna do? And he

(05:43):
was responding, don't worry, I got an insurance policy. I
and my friends at the FBI are going to prevent
Donald Trump from being president. Remember all this, Remember that smirky,
creepy smile when he was testifying in front of Congress. Well,
this is the head of the CIA, John Ratcliffe, who

(06:04):
was a member of Congress when all that happened six
years ago. As a congressman, he's questioning Peter Strasick. And
listen to this exchange.

Speaker 4 (06:15):
The approximately fifty thousand text messages that I've seen with
your personal beliefs like f Trump, stopped Trump, impeach Trump.
Go ahead and confirm on the record that none of
that occurred on an official FBI device or on official
FBI time.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
Go ahead and do that, sir. No, they did, many
of them did it. Oh they did?

Speaker 5 (06:31):
Okay, So so.

Speaker 4 (06:34):
Really no, I'll give you a chance at the end.
So what you really meant to say was that when
you said you never crossed that bright, inviolable line, what
you meant to say was except for fifty thousand times,
except for hundreds of times a day where I went
back and forth expressing my personal opinions about efing Trump
and stopping Trump and impeaching Trump on official FBI phones

(06:57):
on official FBI time, Other than that you never crossed
that line. I'm sure there are thirteen thousand FBI agents
out there that are beaming with pride and how clearly
you've drawn that line. Agents, Tructor, You're starting to understand
why some folks out there don't believe a word you say,
and why it's especially troubling that you, of all people,
are at the center of the three highest profile investigations

(07:21):
in recent times that involved President Trump, and that you
were in charge of an investigation, investigating gathering evidence against
Donald Trump, a subject that you hated, that you wanted
to f him, to stop him, to impeach him. And
do you see why that might call into question everything
you've touched on all of those investigations.

Speaker 2 (07:44):
So what the left will do when an asset like
this is burned? As they'll go, Oh, he was a
lone wolf. He was acting alone. It was all he
answered that question. He was a flashback to Peter strausik answering,
Oh no, no, no, no. Everybody was in on what
I was doing.

Speaker 5 (08:01):
At every step, at every investigative decision. There are multiple
layers of people above me, the assistant director, executive assistant director,
deputy director, and director of the FBI, and multiple layers
of people below me, Section chiefs, supervisors, unit chiefs, case agents,
and analysts, all of whom were involved in all of
these decisions.

Speaker 2 (08:19):
Michael, do I have a story for you. My brother
in law murdered too Native American to Michael Berry show,
Now you have my attention. The media bubble is real.
A new study shows a massive disconnect between journalists and
the public. Now I know that's nothing new to you,

(08:41):
but it is worth noting because I was in a
dinner party last night and the starting point for every
conversation is stories that are in the news now. The
good thing is there's more competition to provide news than
there ever was, and that means a couple of different things.

(09:02):
It means you can choose your news. You want liberal news,
you want conservative news. It's hard to get down the road,
down the middle of the road, you know, objective news
any longer that doesn't have any spin because what used
to be considered that is all left wing now, so
now everything that is not left wing is a reaction

(09:23):
to that. But it means that at least you can
flip channels and see how a story's being portrayed by
various networks and maybe from that come to your conclusion.
What I find interesting, however, is that as the news
business is dying, and they are dying, especially particularly on

(09:47):
the left, as that is happening, they don't seem willing
or able to self correct because they have no sense
of self awareness. They don't realize they're the problem. They
hate you, and they just keep getting madder at you.
But there's not enough of them to support them. They've

(10:10):
tried liberal talk radio again and again and again, and
they just can't get it. They cannot get it. There
are so many conservative talkers in this country. There are
people that are lifelong liberals who wanted to be talkers
and switched over to being a conservative. Some of them

(10:30):
are national now some of them, and I'm not faulting them.
Look as long as they're saying what I think is
the right thing, I really don't care where they came from.
But there are people. There is so much conservative content
out there. There's kind of right wing neocon conservative, a
lot of that. There's Conservatorian. There's more libertarian than conservatorian.

(10:54):
But that's where the American public is now. So a
new study by the supposedly non partisan but very left
leaning Pew Research Center found that sixty five percent of
the nearly twelve thousand journalists surveyed say the media do
a solid job of quote covering the most important stories

(11:17):
of the day and reporting news accurately. Sixty five percent
of the twelve thousand journalists believe, yeah, they're doing a
great job, but a solid majority of the American public
at large has the opposite view. Only thirty five percent
of them feel that way. That's a thirty percent, thirty

(11:38):
point perception gap. That means these people have no clue
how they are perceived. When asked if journalists perform well
when quote serving as a watchdog over elected leaders, fifty
two percent of journalists agreed, but the number were dropped

(12:01):
precipitously when the general public was asked, with fewer than
thirty percent agreeing with the assessment. When asked if journalists
manage and correct misinformation consistently, forty three percent of those
in the industry said yes, So look, more than half

(12:22):
of them agree, yeah, we don't do that very well,
while just twenty five percent of the general public agreed
almost half. Forty six percent of journalists said they felt
connected to their readers and viewers, while just one quarter
of the public says they feel connected to the media
outlets from which they get their news. And imagine that.

(12:44):
Imagine that there was once a day of Walter Cronkain
Edward R. Murrow. We respected and admired these people. Bob Schiffer,
longtime journalist, did a piece several years ago on how

(13:04):
insulated journalists have become. Here's an example In the twenty
twenty election, just nine percent of Manhattan voters voted for
Donald Trump. In DC he got just five point four percent.
Think about that, So these people that's where they live.
They live in New York and DC. They're surrounded by
other people who view the world, and so you get

(13:28):
a confirmation bias. You know, how do the people in
Charlie Manson's cult think what they're doing is okay? Because
everybody around them says it is. If everybody around you
lives in a polygamous cult, you think that's normal. That's
why they don't let you see the outside world. That's
why in Iran and China they shut off the outside

(13:48):
world the Internet and television. And because as long as
you don't know what else is going on out there,
you think the whole world is living the way you are.
Just give you a couple of examples of how out
of touch the media is, and look, could we could
play this game all day? I get it. Let's start

(14:09):
with Don Lemon.

Speaker 6 (14:11):
I don't do opinion, and I know that the difference
for me is I do point of view. So I'm
giving my point of view as an American, as a
black man who happens to be gay.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
But I'm through that lens.

Speaker 6 (14:22):
But I'm also I'm also I also represent CNN, and
so I must tell the truth. And if I don't,
if my facts are wrong, then I had to clarify it,
and I had to come on television and I have
to apologize, and I say, I got that wrong.

Speaker 2 (14:36):
How about we do a little montage of this unbiased
because they think they are this unbiased news. This is
a montage of CNN and MSNBC.

Speaker 7 (14:47):
You're hearing a lot of Republicans who are outrage over
president by handling of the exit, especially in the so
called Freedom Caucus, if they support the former guy, the
one who set all of this in motion in the
first The hypocrisy is off the charts and it is sickening.

Speaker 2 (15:06):
All right, everybody, Good evening.

Speaker 8 (15:08):
We begin the readout tonight with two cases which will
once again tell us where we are as a country,
whether armed primarily white men can continue to take matters
into their own hands and serve as judge, jury, and executioner.

Speaker 9 (15:21):
So I had this segment laid out where I was
going to call out all of the people who are
prolonging this pandemic with phony COVID cures and anti vaccine garbage.

Speaker 10 (15:29):
Now in a moment, you're going to see the sheer
spectacle of a sitting Republican US senator, one of the
most powerful individuals in the country, representing one of the
biggest states in the nation, pretty much groveling at the
feet of a right wing cable TV entertainer, which certainly
reflects the state of the union.

Speaker 11 (15:44):
Was the peaceful transfer of power in January something of
a miracle.

Speaker 8 (15:49):
We're moving toward a kind of politics. We'll remember the
new Republican strategies to follow voters to their cars. They
now have normalized the idea of using political violence to
get the ends they want.

Speaker 9 (16:00):
That about twenty million people across America watched Thursday's prime
time hearing. Twenty million viewers is in the ballpark with
big television events like Sunday night football. Oh my god,
But I want you to compare those twenty million viewers
with the biggest ratings. Donald Trump gardnered for his reality show.

Speaker 2 (16:20):
A fourteen show, Celebrity and Famous. This was the build up.

Speaker 9 (16:26):
They had seven point six million viewers.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
That's what's become of independent, impartial, non biased, unbiased, objective journalism.

Speaker 9 (16:40):
The Michael Berry Show show.

Speaker 2 (16:45):
Angry white liberal women have come to be a dominant
force in the Democrat Party, and they share certain characteristics,
a lot of cats and Karen nature, a willingness for
those who have children to sacrifice their children, to sacrifice

(17:10):
their children for the purpose of more attention, and their
ideological insanity. Michael Malice is a Fox contributor in podcast.
He has been a guest on our show over the years.
He was on a podcast called Triggernometry, and he makes
this point I think quite well about crazy liberal white women.

Speaker 12 (17:37):
I think people underestimate to what extent privileged, especially white women,
are willing to sacrifice their children for the altar of status.

Speaker 2 (17:46):
It's for them, having.

Speaker 12 (17:47):
A TRANSCID is like winning the lottery, right, and you laugh,
but it's really the case. It's very disturbing. They're the
only ones bringing their kids to drag shows because for
these white female liberals, offals a man in makeup is
like the second Coming, and you know, they're showing dad
or their husband or whoever, how enlightened they are because
this is what corpor media tells them. So they can't

(18:09):
wait to bring their kids and show how with the
program they are, so they are a menace, and this,
in my opinion, is Munchausen's by proxy. You know, they're
torturing their kids for the sake of status and accolades.

Speaker 2 (18:24):
It's absolutely right. He is absolutely right. And a lot
of women, i think, fall into this because they see
the effectiveness or they are affected by the effectiveness of
political propaganda that tells them that Republicans are mean, and

(18:46):
women in particular, their entire lives have been told that
mean is bad. You must always be nice. You must
not fight back, you must not defend yourself, you must
not shoot back. You must be nice. We can just
nice people to death. There comes a point where you
have to wake up and realize that there is evil

(19:08):
in the world and it must be destroyed, and that
you have to defend yourself or it only gets worse.
You know, the Democrats bad polling numbers right now because
they took up these bad issues, and a lot of
it is liberal white women. Led reminds me of an
old joke from Ronald Reagan and his delivery is just golden.

Speaker 13 (19:30):
Did you hear the story about the kid who was
outside the Democratic fundraiser selling kittens when the people came
out from the fundraiser, he was holding up the kittens

(19:53):
and he was saying, by a Democratic kitten. Well, a
couple of weeks later, the Republicans held a fundraiser in
the same place, and when they came out, there was
the same kid with the kittens, and he said, by
a Republican kitten. And one of the members of the
president seen in there two weeks before. I said, wait
a minute, you were selling these kittens the last time
as Democrat kittens. How come the Republican kittens now, it says,

(20:17):
because now they got.

Speaker 2 (20:18):
Their eyes open. Oh we cut that audio too fast.
The crowd, I mean, it was raucous. The response was
absolutely raucous. They loved it. They absolutely loved it. You
talk about liberal white women, these are the kind of

(20:39):
people that watch the View, not grudge watch, actually watched
the View because they think, oh, they're talking about pault.
I want to stay up todate what's going on. Well,
here is Tulsey Gabbert, who's a real woman you can
look up to, and she's calling out the Hen Party
hags at the View for calling her a traitor to

(20:59):
her country. Just give us a listen.

Speaker 14 (21:02):
Some of you have accused me of being a traitor
to my country, a Russian asset, a trojan horse, or
you have a useful idiot. I think was the you used,
which basically means that I'm naive or or lack intell
what's going on. I want to let I want to

(21:22):
let your viewers know exactly who I am. All right,
set the record straight. I am a patriot. I love
our country. I am a strong and intelligent woman of color,
and I have dedicated almost my entire adult life to
protecting the safety, security, and the freedom of all Americans

(21:42):
in this country.

Speaker 2 (21:42):
It was the attacks on my level.

Speaker 15 (21:47):
Well, I guess, I guess we were getting We're getting
a little bit far ahead of ourselves. But Franklin Graham
finds you refreshing, he doesn't find me refreshing. Richard Spencer,
the white naturalist leader, says.

Speaker 2 (22:01):
He could vote for you.

Speaker 16 (22:02):
Joy.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
This is.

Speaker 2 (22:05):
The calls in at least ten times.

Speaker 14 (22:06):
Why don't you go on, Chris, this is why I'm
here because you and other people continue to spread these
innuendos that have nothing to do with who I am.

Speaker 2 (22:18):
Well hillary to do.

Speaker 15 (22:19):
And then you shot back at her, boy, you called
her the Queen of Warmond you doubled down.

Speaker 14 (22:24):
Unfortunately, you double down on the baseless accusations that she
made that strikes at the core of who I am.
I'm a soldier because of the attacks on nine to eleven.
I enlisted in the military to go after and defeat
and destroy the evil that visited us.

Speaker 2 (22:41):
On that day.

Speaker 14 (22:42):
I've served now for over sixteen years, deployed twice the
Middle East during the height of the war, where every
single day I saw firsthand the terribly high human cost.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
Who hasn't dealt with a crazy white liberal woman give
you great example. Here's girl power, as they call it,
on full display in this next clip. It's it's not new,
we've played it before. It's a female air traffic controller
and she is so determined. I mean, she's going to

(23:14):
make her point and stand up for herself, and she's
making a complete idiot herself. And if you've ever had
a liberal white woman as a boss who's like this,
it's a living hell because they have what they think
is confidence, but it's not. And this is how you
destroy This is how you crash planes, this is how

(23:35):
you lose wars. This is how little boys get their
wiener cut off. This is how bad things happen in
great nations. This right, listen to this for a shorter.

Speaker 16 (23:44):
Proces if you're going to do a power off one
eighty that's my point.

Speaker 11 (23:47):
Well, okay, I will remember that from now.

Speaker 2 (23:49):
On, no problem.

Speaker 16 (23:50):
Yeah, when you ask for a short approach, I expect
you to turn your base with even the numbers.

Speaker 11 (23:57):
This will be a full stop for six pock Charlie.
And maybe we need to talk about that the more
because you're the first controller of fifteen years that's ever
said that.

Speaker 16 (24:05):
Well, I'm just you know, if you ask for a
short approach, a short approach is when you turn your
base I mean the numbers. If I know you're a
student asking for a short approach, I know you're out
there practicing and you probably will excess. But if you're
doing something other than a short approach, don't ask for
a short approach.

Speaker 11 (24:27):
Well, I will definitely look up the definition of short
approach because I've never seen where it says you turn
base of being the numbers, because I don't see how
you can possibly do that.

Speaker 16 (24:35):
Well, I googled it. Actually, I googled short approach and
it's set to turn your base a beam or before
the numbers, and you will land probably touch down around
this field.

Speaker 11 (24:48):
Okay, well, then I apologize for requesting the wrong thing
because everywhere else short approach means power of one eighty.
But that's definitely not what it means to Yeah.

Speaker 16 (24:59):
Well, I mean, you.

Speaker 5 (24:59):
Know, I don't know.

Speaker 16 (25:00):
Maybe it's because I've worked at different airports. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (25:03):
She was twelve, I was thirty. But anyway, it was
wonderful to have you, mister President. The Michael Barry Show.
You've all heard of the reference to the slippery slope.
I was reading a report yesterday in a medical journal

(25:24):
that said that cigarettes are a gateway to more powerful drugs,
and it's not. There are lots of there's been lots
of study of this over the years. But one of
the reasons they find that to be the case, I'm sorry,

(25:47):
not cigarettes marijuana is that it opens up receptors to addiction. Now,
I don't believe that mar I wanna should be illegal.
You're free to disagree with me. You're free to think
I'm a horrible person. That's fine, and you're free to think, well,

(26:09):
the only thing is that because he's a user, I'm
not a user. I have tried it, but it didn't
do anything for me. I do like bourbon and wine
and beer. And there was a time that the same
mindset was in effect. With that we had prohibition in
this country, might I remind you, And it did not
end well. In fact, our government, this same United States government,

(26:33):
during prohibition, one of their ways to get people to
stop drinking, which they couldn't seem to be able to do,
was they sent out poisoned alcohol so that when people
would consume the alcohol, they would die. And that was
supposed to spread fear in the land that I don't
want to drink that alcohol or I'll die. But it

(26:55):
didn't work. The government murdered people for their purposes. Wow,
was that a precursor That should have been our wake
up call to stop trusting a government. And that was
one hundred years ago. The only thing that came out
of that prohibition was NASCAR. The mafia was more powerful

(27:20):
than ever. You see, when people want something bad enough,
they'll go underground to get it. You can't just say,
can't just by legislative FIAT say not going to happen.
But I have to ask you. You know, when we
talk about the slippery slopes of arguments. If I were

(27:42):
to ask you, let's take the pandemic, what more could
our government have done to punish us? What more tyranny
could they have visited upon us than they did guarded
with them doing nothing? How far from there to the

(28:04):
worst thing you can imagine did we get? In Australia
they locked people into prisons. In China, they literally fastened
the doors closed. You could not escape. Can you imagine
how claustrophobic you had to feel. Can you imagine how
mad you would have to go in that rubber room.

(28:24):
That's a torture palace. That's awful. Our government may not
have gone that far, but they went pretty damn far.
Do you remember the moms that were out in the
park because they lived in tiny apartments and their kids
were stir crazy, and the moms needed a moment. These
kids needed some fresh air, and they took them out

(28:46):
and they arrested them in front of their children, mothers
and fathers in front of their children. You wouldn't believe
that would happen in this country, but it did. Go
Look up the Tuskegee syphilis. It's a wonder black people
trust the government to this day. Go look at what
they did to black people so they could study syphilis,

(29:08):
treating them like mice, like animals. How quickly people have
forgotten what our government has done where our government has lied.
Was fdr in any way aware ahead of time or
more of Pearl Harbor? I don't know, but I'll tell

(29:32):
you the people who said that he was and allowed
it to happen, because that inspired the action that inspired
us to get into the war, that dragged us into
the war. This idea of provoking a clash, a shooting,
a riot, a murder, this is not new. Remember the

(29:56):
little white punk in South Carolina that went into a
prayer group and as the members of the church were
holding his hand to pray over him, he pulls out
his gun and shoots all of them. Do you remember
why he did it? He wanted to incite a race riot.

(30:19):
The blacks would be so angry over this that they'd
start killing white people. So if you were the devil,
what would you do that's not currently being done? I
send it to the Great Paul Harvey.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
If I were the devil, If I were the devil,
if I were the Prince of Darkness, I'd want to
indulp the whole world in darkness, and I'd have a
third of its real estate and poor.

Speaker 2 (30:53):
Bits of its population.

Speaker 1 (30:54):
But I wouldn't be happy until I have seized the
ripest apple on the tree the So I'd set about,
however necessary.

Speaker 2 (31:03):
To take over the United States. I'd subvert the churches.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
First.

Speaker 2 (31:07):
I'd begin with a campaign of whispers.

Speaker 1 (31:09):
With the wisdom of a serpent, I would whisper to
you as I whispered to Eve, do as you please.
To the young, I would whisper that the Bible is
a myth. I would convince them that man created God
instead of the other way around. I would confide that
what's bad is good, and what's good is square, and
the old I would teach to pray after me our father,

(31:33):
which aren't in Washington.

Speaker 2 (31:37):
And then I'd get organized.

Speaker 1 (31:38):
I'd educate authors in how to make the lowrid literature exciting,
so that anything else would appear dull and uninteresting. I'd
threatened TV with dirtier movies, and vice versa. I peddle
narcotics to whom I could. I'd sell alcohol to ladies
and gentlemen of distinction. I tranquilize the rest with pills.
If I were the devil, I'd soon have families at

(31:58):
war with themselves, churches at war with themselves, and nations
at war with themselves until each in its turn was consumed,
and with the promises of higher ratings. I'd have mesmerizing
media fanning the flames. If I were the Devil, I
would encourage schools to refine young intellects, but neglect the

(32:20):
discipline emotions, just let those run wild until before you
knew it. You'd have to have drug snipping dogs and
metal detectors at every school house door. Within a decade,
i'd have prisons overflowing. I'd have judges promoting pornography. Soon
I could evict God from the courthouse, then from the schoolhouse,

(32:41):
and then from the houses of Congress and in his
own churches. I would substitute psychology for religion and dify science.
I would lure priests and pastures into misusing boys and
girls and church money. If I were the Devil, I'd
make the symbol of Easter an egg and the symbol
of Christmas. If I were the Devil, I'd take from

(33:02):
those who have and give to those who wanted, until
I had killed the incentive of the ambitious and what
will you bet? I couldn't get whole states to promote
gambling as the way to get rich.

Speaker 2 (33:19):
I would caution.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
Against extremes in hard work, in patriotism, in moral conduct.
I would convince the young that marriage is old fashion,
that swinging is more fun, that what you see on
TV is the way to be.

Speaker 2 (33:38):
And thus I could.

Speaker 1 (33:39):
Undress you in public, and I could lure you into
bed with diseases for which there is no cure. In
other words, if I were the devil, I'd just keep
right on doing what he's doing.

Speaker 2 (33:57):
Thank you, and good night, Hey,
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