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October 27, 2025 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time time luck and load. The Michael
Arry Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Lies looking into Mica week, gotta freed every beard. I
don't plan to shave, and it's a good thing, but
I just gotta see I'm doing all right.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
Will you come make me support?

Speaker 2 (00:36):
It's I'm beating ridydude and that's the truth.

Speaker 4 (00:41):
It's neither drinking, no drug and juice, noool.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
I'm just doing all right. It's a great dad, Beline,
and no sun's still shining on a close my eyes.

Speaker 5 (00:55):
It's hard times.

Speaker 6 (00:56):
In the neighborhood hood wiking every day.

Speaker 5 (01:00):
Well, I hope your weekend was fulfilling. I suppose for
some folks that depends on who your favorite college football
team is or is not. You're far more likely to
be happy if you don't have a team, because if
you root for a team, at some point, they're going
to let you down. It's the nature of sports in general.

(01:24):
It's easier not to be a fan. But if your
weekend is gardening or working on your old car, you
can have complete and utter control over whether you're going
to enjoy yourself and not be bothered by the actions
of another. That's what we love about sports, isn't it?
That's what we love about sports. A Shenandoah police officer

(01:50):
North Houston saved an eleven year old girl undergoing a
mental health crisis.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
You know, everybody's had.

Speaker 5 (02:01):
An experience with an officer who was an ass But
how about the nine out of ten cases where an
officer does something amazing. Let's take a moment pay tribute
to that.

Speaker 1 (02:13):
The story from.

Speaker 7 (02:14):
Khou shout into a police officer. Patrick Reid's body camera
was rolling as he started running, stop, stop, i't wait here,
Just come talk to me, after hearing a call regarding
an eleven year old in the main lanes of I
forty five just before the afternoon rush hour back on
October seventeenth, Right.

Speaker 3 (02:33):
Time, right place. Fortunately, was able to make what I
hope was the right decision.

Speaker 7 (02:38):
Police say the girl bailed out of her mother's car
while turning into a hospital for mental health treatment. She
then crossed the feeder lanes before walking against traffic in
the southbound lanes to the overpass at Highway to forty two.

Speaker 1 (02:50):
I'm not gonna do anything. I'm not gonna do anything.

Speaker 4 (02:55):
I want to talk.

Speaker 5 (02:56):
Come here.

Speaker 1 (02:59):
You're not in top, you're not in trouble.

Speaker 7 (03:02):
The girl who's blurred in the video to protect her identity,
gets on top of the guardrail with her feet dangling
as Reed pleads with.

Speaker 3 (03:09):
Her, trying to be a little more empathetic and sympathetic.
I think may it delayed her slightly.

Speaker 7 (03:16):
It eventually ends as Red inches closer.

Speaker 4 (03:19):
I'm begging you, please come.

Speaker 8 (03:23):
Here and talk to me.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
Will you talk to me?

Speaker 6 (03:25):
Blease Blakes.

Speaker 3 (03:30):
But it was really that moment when she looked away
where I tried to seize that opportunity and grabbed.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
A hold of her.

Speaker 7 (03:35):
Did she say anything to you?

Speaker 3 (03:38):
She wanted me to let her go, but that wasn't
going to happen. Unfortunately that that was the kind of
state of mind she was in.

Speaker 7 (03:46):
How could this have ended?

Speaker 6 (03:49):
Very, very tragically?

Speaker 7 (03:50):
Lieutenant Courtney Pulland credits the ten year department veteran for
remaining calm in a very tense situation.

Speaker 8 (03:56):
In the split moment, he acted swiftly and was able
to save her.

Speaker 7 (04:00):
Is this something like other officers can look at and
learn something from? Absolutely, like in many cases involving kids.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
I'm not gonna do anything, Reid.

Speaker 7 (04:09):
Says he couldn't help but think of his own children.
What is your hope for her today?

Speaker 3 (04:13):
I hope that she gets the the treatment that she needs,
she's able to make a full recovery and hopefully go
on to live a long, happy life.

Speaker 5 (04:27):
I could hear in his voice the anguish. I don't
know if he's a father of children. I didn't hear
him say that, but he's a fellow human being and
whose heart doesn't go out to an eleven year old
little girl in that kind of shape.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
It's terrible.

Speaker 5 (04:49):
I don't recall the number of mental health episodes that
we witnessed today when I was growing up. That there
is something wrong, there is something terribly wrong, and we
need to get better hold of it, because if for
no other reason, then imagine the hell that little girl

(05:11):
is living through. Imagine the pain she is suffering. But
a moment of tribute to that police officer and every
police officer out there today and every day that's busting
their ass to keep us safe and.

Speaker 1 (05:25):
Save our lives.

Speaker 5 (05:26):
Paul Harvey, who lost his father in the line of
duty when he was murdered, said it.

Speaker 9 (05:30):
Best, policeman. A policeman is a composite of what all
men are. I guess a mingling of Satan, center, dust,
and deity called statistics wave. The fan over stinkers underscore
instances of dishonesty and brutality because they are news. What

(05:55):
that really means is that they are exceptional. They are unusual,
They are not commonplace. Buried on the frauth is the fact,
And the fact is the less than one half of
one percent of policemen misfit that uniform, and that is
a better average than you'd find among clergymen. What is
a policeman? He, of all men, is at once the

(06:17):
most needed and the most wanted, a strangely nameless creature
who is sirved to his face and pig or worse
behind his back. He must be such a diplomat that
he can settle differences between individuals so that each will
think he won. But if a policeman is neat, he's conceited.
If he's careless, he's a bum. If he's pleasant, he's

(06:39):
a flirt. If he's not, he's a grouch. He must
make instant decisions, which would require months for a lawyer.
But if he hurries, he's careless. If he's deliverate, he's lazy.
He must be first to an accident infallible with the diagnosis.
He must be able to start breathing, stop bleeding, tye splints,
and above be sure the victim goes home without a

(07:02):
limp or expect to be sued. The police officer must
know every gun draw on the run and hit where
it doesn't hurt. He must be able to whip two
men twice his size and half his age without damaging
his uniform and without being brutal. If you hit him,

(07:22):
he's a coward. If he hits you, he's a bully.
A policeman must know everything and not tell. He must
know where all of the sin is and not partake.
The policeman from a single human hair. Must be able
to describe the crime, the weapon, the criminal, and tell

(07:43):
you where the criminal is hiding. But if he catches
the criminal, he's lucky. If he doesn't, he's a dunce.
If he gets promoted, he has political pool. If he doesn't,
he's a dullard. The policeman must chase bum leads to
a dead end, stake out ten nights to tag one
witness who saw it happen but refuses to remember. He

(08:04):
runs files and writes reports until his eyes ache to
build a case against some felon who will get dealed
out by a shameless shamus or an honorable who isn't honorable.
The policeman must be a minister, a social worker, a diplomat,
a tough guy, and a gentleman. And of course he'll
have to be a genius because he'll have to feed

(08:25):
a family on a policeman's salary.

Speaker 7 (08:30):
Michael Berry Show continues.

Speaker 5 (08:39):
Last week, we were talking about the area around in
RG Stadium in how unfortunate it is, how rough that
area is, and then this one team shot another facing
charges over the shooting. Harris County. One constable's office said

(09:01):
it involves students at the Harris County Juvenile Justice Alternative
Education Program. Well, that just rolls off the tongue, doesn't
the JJAEP, the j JAPP, the JJP, the JUJUI. Well,

(09:22):
whatever it is, it sounds like we might have some
young folks that are not exactly.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
Peaceful, shall we say? ABC thirteen with the.

Speaker 10 (09:34):
Story, this is the Juvenile Justice Alternative Education Program. It's
a program here in Harris County for students who have
been expelled from their schools, either for criminal or disciplinary issues.
The Harris County Juvenile Justice Department confirming five students headed
to school gone off the bus this morning but never
went inside. Shortly after, the call went out around nine

(09:54):
Wednesday morning for shots fired according to the Harris County
Precinct one Constable's Office, instigators say that the group of
students encountered another group of young people just a few
blocks away. Law enforcements say that there was an argument
and shots were fired near McKee and Kirby. That's where
law enforcements say they found one juvenile with a gunshot
wound who was taken to the hospital, the wound being

(10:15):
described to me as superficial. Pracinct one tells me that
they were told a car may be involved, which they
found a short while later and pulled over. Investigators say
the shooter was found inside the vehicle. I asked if
there was any relationship between the driver and shooter, but
so far law enforcements say that the driver claims the
shooter just jumped in the car. This all happened near

(10:36):
the energy grounds and training facilities we could see from
SKYI As police searched the nearby grounds on foot and
with dogs, we also saw what appeared to be two
young people placed into law enforcement vehicles, both of which
were driven away. Precinct one confirming at least one sixteen
year old will face a charge of aggravated assault with
a deadly weapon. The Juvenile Justice Department telling me right

(10:59):
now they're working to learn if the person who was
shot or the person facing charges are students here at
this school.

Speaker 5 (11:09):
Yeah, yeah, I mean sort of a bummer. You can't
get out of your car, You can't walk to the stadium, right,
You gotta go in there, watch your sporting event, and
then get the hell away as fast as possible. Meanwhile,
NASA is launching a new satellite to say sorry to

(11:32):
any aliens who may have visited Earth. It's going to
be called the Apollo g family of a man whose
body was found in Buffalo Bayou last year disputes the
investigator's ruling. Investigator's ruling was that the death was accidental,
but his father says, uh uh no, his death's not accidental.

(11:56):
He didn't fall in the by you. Somebody put him
in the bayu. This comes amidst a growing sort of
urban legend related to bodies being found in the bayous
of Harris County. Now, the last time I look, the
numbers were not significantly higher than any previous year, which

(12:19):
would lead me to believe that we do not necessarily
have a serial killer on our hands. We have a
means of disposal of dead bodies and a relatively consistent
number of people who are unlived against their wishes, and
that that tends to be the easiest, most convenient, safest

(12:41):
place to put the body after the deed is done.
But in the era of the crime podcast, which oddly
enough is led by women, I think women wouldn't want
to hear about crime, since most crime like this occurs
on women.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
But they do. They do.

Speaker 5 (13:02):
They are very interested in true crime, and there is
a growing community of folks who believe that something is
happening and we're not being told the truth. I don't
actually believe that, but I see where the interest comes from,
especially if you're trying to spark interest in a podcast

(13:24):
or some other media story. But now you got the
fellow coming forward saying, uh, there's no way my son
ended up in there as an accident.

Speaker 1 (13:35):
Khou with the story.

Speaker 6 (13:38):
I don't know if there's a serial killer, but the
way they're dealing with these bodies is ridiculous.

Speaker 11 (13:44):
Kenneth Cutting is tired of being patient, and.

Speaker 6 (13:47):
I've been waiting for a year and a half now.

Speaker 11 (13:49):
The body of his only child, Kenneth Cutting Junior, was
found in Buffalo by you in early July of last year,
three days after he went missing after spending the evening
at Pete's Piano Baring Down. His roommates reported there was
an altercation inside their car. They say Kenneth jumped out
at the Waco exit near Ient. After that, they say
they never saw him again. The roommates were interviewed by

(14:11):
police and have never been charged with a crime. Kenneth's
body was found floating in the water more than a
mile from the spot where they say he was last seen.

Speaker 6 (14:19):
There's been a lot of bodies found and if you
see all of them being determined as undetermined.

Speaker 11 (14:29):
Which was also the case for Kenneth. The medical examiner's
report states his cause of death is undetermined. What's also
strange is the finding of what the emmy's office calls
medical hardware in Kenneth's neck. His family says he never
had any surgeries and they would have known today. The
Houston Police Department told me the case is closed. They

(14:49):
say there were no signs of foul play, and this
was not a homicide.

Speaker 7 (14:53):
I'm pissed.

Speaker 12 (14:55):
This is a twenty two year old kid that showed
up dead in Buffalo Bayou and nobody gives a flying
flip about it.

Speaker 11 (15:03):
Kenneth's cousin says, his case is like many of the
others who have been found in the bayou's across the city.

Speaker 12 (15:09):
I think that it was a quick wash of the hands.
They couldn't find evidence super quick, so at this point
they said, oh sorry, it's just closed. Proper investigation wasn't done.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
Very suspicious.

Speaker 11 (15:24):
Private investigator Coleman Ryan has been working on this case
since Kenneth went missing. In your expert opinion, was this
an accidental.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
Death, no autumn wish at all.

Speaker 11 (15:35):
Kenneth's dad doesn't think so either.

Speaker 6 (15:37):
He did not fall in up by you. Somebody put
him in that by youth.

Speaker 1 (15:45):
Well, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (15:47):
Your heart goes out to anyone who loses a twenty
two year old. And if you genuinely believe that you're
not getting the full story, yeah I think I'd be
pretty mad too. Does not mean they're not getting the
full story, But if you believe that, then that is
your reality, and I can only imagine. I think every

(16:10):
parent feels that, feels a certain empathy toward parents having.

Speaker 1 (16:17):
To go through that. It's not good.

Speaker 5 (16:20):
I have a friend who got fired from a dairy farm.
They said he was a danger to himself and utters when.

Speaker 3 (16:28):
You need to escape from the every day escaped Michael Berry.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
Now, it's all relative, so hear what I'm saying. It's
all relative, but relative to most.

Speaker 5 (16:47):
Of the others. Miley Cyrus actually turned out pretty well
compared to the others.

Speaker 1 (16:58):
Michael, she didn't turn while.

Speaker 5 (17:00):
She had it, Okay, but it's not Britney Spears, It's
not what all the others are. I am convinced that
making a child into a star is a curse on

(17:21):
the life of that individual. I've seen it so many times,
and more often than not, especially the bigger the star
they are, the earlier, more often than not, they're going
to be an extraordinarily unhappy adult, and I think that's sad.

(17:46):
I can't I can't imagine being twenty five and feeling
over the hill, being twenty five and knowing your best
days are behind you, Being twenty five and having been
robbed of the innocence of childhood. I don't make excuses
for Michael Jackson because I think he did. I think
he did some awful things. I don't make excuses for that.

(18:11):
But I do think there was some level of dysfunction
as a child.

Speaker 1 (18:17):
It's relatively well documented.

Speaker 5 (18:19):
I'm not revealing anything that may that may have contributed
to his lifelong weirdness and his desire to remain a
child for the rest of his life or to ever
get to be a child for the rest of his life,
and his sort of fetishistic obsession with children who were

(18:43):
not his own, which just creeps me out in the
worst possible way. I can't imagine that parents left their
children in the care of a grown man to sleep
in his bed room.

Speaker 1 (19:02):
I mean, I.

Speaker 5 (19:03):
Realize that people will sell out for fame and fortune
or at least a lottery ticket to achieve that, But
to sacrifice your child, Wow, I just I cannot imagine
that a man's burning body was found hanging from under six'
ten North loop Near Kirkpatrick. Boulevard where Is Kirkpatrick? Boulevard

(19:29):
do you? KNOW i don't Know Kirkpatrick. Boulevard popo say
it is highly unlikely he took his own. Life this
sounds very much to me.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
Like the, cartel.

Speaker 5 (19:48):
AND i am hearing increasingly from members of law enforcement
that they see the cartel creeping closer and closer Into
american life.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
And less willing to hide that.

Speaker 5 (20:05):
FACT i don't Think americans quite understand how brutal the cartel.

Speaker 1 (20:12):
IS i, know, yeah, okay Sixteen north and what what's
the parallel Old? Liberty, okay all, RIGHT i know where liberty?

Speaker 5 (20:21):
Is all.

Speaker 1 (20:21):
Right here is the story FROM kprctv.

Speaker 4 (20:25):
Today you can see what's left, behind a pile of
burned rubble directly underneath a rope hanging from that. Underpass
this area appears to be a homeless, encampment but we
are still waiting on the identity of the person who
was found set on fire hanged. Here we're also trying
to determine who did.

Speaker 8 (20:46):
IT i, mean we're kind of like in a bad area.
TOWN i, mean for, everybody daylight is, cool but when
it gets dark you might want to get in the.

Speaker 13 (20:57):
House it was around ten ten last night when officials
were called to seventy six Hundred North Loop. East it
appears a man in his forties or fifties had been
hanged and set on. Fire houston police say his identity
is pending notification to his. FAMILY i was amazed by
how bad the crime has been in in areas THAT
i live. At while investigators say the man did suffer

(21:19):
burns to his, body his cause of death is. Pending this,
morning the investigation into who may have killed him.

Speaker 8 (21:24):
Continued the police pulled up and they walked over there
behind that, wall but then they walked round back by
their car and burned.

Speaker 5 (21:29):
Off So President trump has been itching to attack the,
cartels and, interestingly the left doesn't want him, to which
brings us to the next, thing and that is the
idea that the left, is in an odd, way both

(21:51):
very devious but also. Naive they love to play with,
fire but they don't realize and how quickly that fire
burns out of. Control let's take the case Of New
york and where we are right. Now unless something dramatic,
changes they're going to have a very very very, radical by,

(22:15):
far the most radical mayor In New york's, history who
is A muslim who openly hates white, people who openly
hopes to Repopulate New york And america for that, matter With.
Muslims and if you point that, out you're called an.
Islamophoe the difference, IS i don't care What i'm. Called
that's what this man wants to. Do he wants to

(22:37):
bring a bunch Of muslims Into New york and Repopulate
New york with a bunch Of. Muslims AND i don't
want that to happen. There, now say what you. Will
when you stop caring what these people, think and when
you stop joining in when other people are attacked because
there's a high, mentality then they stop this. Nonsense so

(22:59):
you've got the situation where everybody can see what's about
to have happened With Kammi. Momdani everybody can tell how
bad it's going to, be but it's going to be far.
Worse just As Barack obama was far worse than anyone
could have, Expected mamdani will be worse even than. That
and that is why for the issue to be published

(23:25):
on the inauguration Of Barack. Obama when they went to
all These republicans and they asked you know your thoughts
for your wishes For Barack, obama and The John cornins all, said,
oh we wish him the, best and we're he's in
our prayers and we're just rooting for, him and he's

(23:49):
a good. Man and you'll remember What Rush limbo said four,
WORDS i hope he. Fails oh he's a, racist he's,
Awful he's. This it wasn't three months until everyone hoped he.
Failed the difference Was russia had been around long enough

(24:11):
that he didn't need to play that. Game he didn't
need to feel as, most especially White republicans. DO i
better say something nice so they don't Think i'm a.
Racist the fear of being a racist or an islamophobe
or a xenophobe or whatever else has got white people
cowered into such a ball that the country is being taken, away,

(24:36):
destroyed and burned to the. Ground but at, least maybe
for today they will call me a bad.

Speaker 8 (24:41):
Word, drink don't, drive do the watermelon, crawl and listen
to The tsar Of Talk My Buddy.

Speaker 5 (24:46):
My every day there is a new revelation of Something Zora,
mamdani the next mayor Of New.

Speaker 1 (24:54):
York has said or.

Speaker 5 (24:56):
Done and then they hold a poll and it doesn't
affect the. Numbers And donnie's at about consistently between forty
and fifty. Percent Andrew cuomo usually at about thirty percent or,
so it, varies and Then Curtis sliwa at about fifteen.

(25:21):
Percent Curtis sleiwa has done a radio show for. Years
he was part of The Red Beret Guardian angels group
that took Back New york streets as private, citizens patrolling
the streets to help keep it. Safe he's been around

(25:42):
a long time and he's running as A, republican but
he doesn't have it doesn't have a huge amount Of republican.
SUPPORT i think some people like the fact that you,
know he's been out on the. Streets he was once
he was once. SHOT i was with him one night

(26:02):
and he told us the. Story he's told it on the.
Air he's told. It you can look it. Up but
there was a hit on him and they shot. HIM
i don't some number of, times six, seven and.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
He shouldn't be.

Speaker 5 (26:13):
Alive and he's one of these, people almost like A Marvin.
Zendler's he's part of the landscape Of New. York he's
he's part of the iconography of the modern. Area he's
been around a long. Time but the two of them
are splitting the, vote And mamdani's going to. Win the
problem is if they don't split the. Vote If sliwa

(26:37):
had gotten out of the, race which at this point
he still, hasn't you left With Andrew. Cuomo let's rewind
for a. Moment this was the guy who was governor
Of New york During trump's first. Administration this was the
guy who locked down the residents who refused federal aid

(26:59):
when in twenty, twenty when WHEN covid, hit he locked
people into nursing. Homes he killed a lot of, people
and there's a great deal of resentment for. That So
New yorkers are in this situation where they're, going, well

(27:21):
Wellm donnie's, horrible BUT i don't Want cuomo. Back and
that was the Candidate we spend two little time recruiting good.
Candidates so you're left with the people who want to
be in the. Position And Andrew cuomo was not a
guy who has a lot of. Support the support he's

(27:42):
getting now it's not a residual.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
Support he did a great.

Speaker 5 (27:45):
Job it's, well at least he's the guy most likely
to Beat. Mamdani and so every day a new terrible
detail comes out on Things mamdanni had, said and he
has openly his father has compared To Abraham lincoln And
Adolf hitler and claimed That hitler was inspired By lincoln

(28:08):
and that white people have caused all the problems in the.
World his father who came to this. Country you, know
you get these people from in this, case He's South.
ASIAN i Think pakistani by way Of. Uganda you get
these people who come to The United, states and there
are more and more of, them and they're more and more,
open who absolutely Hate. America and let's be, clear they

(28:32):
hate white. People they hate. You they don't say they
hate you until they're in a position that they're surrounded
by people just like, them and they can because otherwise
they'd like you to think they kind of like it
here and they're nice people and they blend in like other.
Immigrants but this sub type of individual is sitting and

(28:56):
plotting all day every, day what can we do to
burn this country to the ground because we hate?

Speaker 1 (29:03):
It, well why did you come?

Speaker 5 (29:05):
Here you hate our, flag but you love the.

Speaker 1 (29:08):
Benefits it gives.

Speaker 5 (29:09):
You why did you come? Here if this is the
worst place in the, World why do you stay? Here
why don't you go back to that great place where
there are lots of other people that worship like you
and look like, you and talk like, you and you
can sit around and Hate america and never have to
worry about. It you can be part of a government
that Hates. America you can go to a mosque that Hates.

(29:32):
America next, door there's another mosque that Hates, america and
one next door to that that Hates, america and y'all
can all sit. Around you can MAKE tv programs about Hating,
america and you can give speeches about Hating. America and
you can hate white people because we, KNOW i, mean
drove a number of people, out including people that look
just like, you Mister. Mumdunny but that's. Okay and these

(29:56):
people have populated our. Faculty these are the people that
are getting hired to lead diversity. Conferences these are the
people who are getting hired by companies to come in
and give presentations to a bunch of white people about
how awful you. Are it's sickening And i'm tired of.
It it's not, progressive it's not, positive it's not, productive

(30:20):
and it needs to. Stop and one Thing trump has
given people a spying to do is to, say, hey
we don't have to do this. Anymore we don't we
can see what's happening In. Europe we don't have to
let it happen. Here but here is the. Part no

(30:41):
matter what details hit About, mumdani the polls don't. Change
and you wonder, Why i'll tell you. Why Because New
york no longer has enough reasonable citizens who love our,
country who are open and willing to hear these, arguments

(31:03):
who will vote against. Him you, know if you were
to go to the to the playground at the school
for second graders and you were to, say, Look darry
is bad for the human, gut leaky gut is a real.
Deal derry causes all of these. PROBLEMS i know y'all

(31:26):
were promised ice cream, tomorrow BUT i think we need
to agree right. Now and here's all the reasons we
shouldn't have ice cream Because darry is bad for. Us
you're not going to get a very receptive audience because
they're second or third. Graders they don't process the way you.
Do your arguments don't mean anything to. Them their arguments.

(31:47):
Do New york has become not An american, city not
a place of reasonable, people not a people who love our.
Country New york has become a mishmash montage of people
Like mandani, who to some degree or another don't love

(32:09):
this country and hate it and hate white, people and
they will vote for a jelly donut to keep a
white person from being the. Mayor but let's go back
to The. Democrats The democrats brought this. Pluralism The democrats
brought this. Diversity The democrats told, us, oh hug this,

(32:32):
group and hug this, group and y'all are. Awful y'all are.
Terrible White christians are, bad white men are, bad, toxic
masculinity is, Bad patriotism is, bad self defense with your
own gun is, Bad The american flag is. Bad trump is,
Bad american industry is. Bad and they flirted.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
With these, groups.

Speaker 5 (32:57):
And those groups were only too happy to let them
be this pokesmen for their movement until the moment that
they achieved critical.

Speaker 1 (33:06):
Mass and now they're Kicking. Cuomo, Well cuomo was.

Speaker 5 (33:11):
Their, spokesman and now he's looking around at The republicans.

Speaker 1 (33:15):
Going, hey, hey, guys they're really crazy over. There, YEAH i,
KNOW i.

Speaker 5 (33:21):
Know that's what we've been telling you for years
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