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May 15, 2025 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Eighty five years ago. Today, Richard and Maurice's McDonald opened
a restaurant put their name on it called McDonald's. Now,

(00:22):
it's a very different company today than it was in
nineteen forty and a lot has happened in the meantime.
But think about the cultural impact of what those two
guys did. A lot of what I know about the
founding of McDonald's I know from the Michael Keaton movie

(00:46):
The Founder, And what I find interesting about that movie
is they don't paint over the fact that Ray Kroc
was not a nice guy. Often it is the case
that the person who drives others, who scales big, is
not a nine to five guy. He's not the most

(01:09):
popular guy in the group. He's not your drinking buddy.
Steve Jobs certainly wasn't. These are guys who were built differently,
and often they can be tough to be around. Often
they cut a corner. Often they'll cut you. Period.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
They're tough.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
They're tough. Donald Trump refers to guys like this as rough.
That guy's rough. You're talking about the fat guy that
was on the Olympic. He said fat drugs. But he's
a rough guy. He says, rough in a way that
he admires. But that's that's often the personality type nice
guys finished last year. Actually, in terms of wealth creation,

(01:51):
that's often true. We don't want it to be true,
so we say it isn't true, but it is true.
It is, so those two guys create McDonald's. We dug
through a bunch of commercials we had and just audio
on McDonald's and I thought this one was fun to
nineteen sixty eight commercial for the Big Mac. The company

(02:13):
was twenty eight years old at this point.

Speaker 3 (02:15):
I'm going to show you how McDonald's builds a big
Mac sandwich. It starts here with a lightly toasted bun
and then a pure beef hamburger sizzling hot, a slice
of cheddar Blamd cheese and some crisp fresh lennuce. Then

(02:37):
our own secret sauce, the club slize toasted, another hamburger,
and a little more sauce just for good flavor, crisp
dill pickles, and the sesame seed crown. This is the
sandwich McDonald's new Big Mac Sandwich for the bigger an

(03:00):
average appetite.

Speaker 1 (03:12):
Wow, it's uh. McDonald's has changed. The primary demographic has changed.
The experience has changed, the staffing has changed. I'm reminded
of the old Hoodline News where Shirley Q Lickor reported

(03:32):
from the hood.

Speaker 3 (03:35):
And now Hoodline News with Shirley Q lickers.

Speaker 2 (03:38):
Well, I don't have nothing wrote down.

Speaker 4 (03:40):
I can tell you what's going on that now how
you learn? And this is Shirley Q Liquor with your
Hoodline News. I don't have time write nothing down, but
I show enough thought plenty. We went through this McDonald
drive through down here, and they got that long sculpt
to feedingernail. Female what's her name working up in the alice.
I done something with her big old hair, dude, and

(04:03):
she had the gold flex on her uh you know,
her mescarrow where it go it's gold up there. And
she acts like she figure to give a concert at
six thirty in the morning. I'd be more than pleased
if she was just giving my egg mcmufflin. And she
gonna just throw all kind of attitudes. So I'm sorry,
but me and her got into it. The manager was
called and the police was called, and the swat team

(04:25):
was the last ones down there.

Speaker 2 (04:26):
By that time. It was overwit, you know.

Speaker 4 (04:29):
But she's just gonna have to have her attitude adjusting
if she.

Speaker 2 (04:32):
Gonna work down there.

Speaker 4 (04:34):
This is my neighborhood.

Speaker 2 (04:35):
I don't play that down here.

Speaker 4 (04:37):
This had been Shirley q lickor with your hoodline news cads. No,
because I told her I'm not playing with I'm through
it house.

Speaker 1 (04:48):
That reminds me of the congressman throwing elbows at the
Ice detention facility last week. Not so different, Not so different.
It was an ugly scene. There was wigg snatching going on.
You ever seen the list of people who worked at
some point early in their lives at McDonald's. I can't

(05:10):
tell you how many comedians have had some clip, some
bit about McDonald's, and why wouldn't you. It's a cultural
relevance story. I wonder if that'll still be true, because
growing up, everybody had a McDonald's story. You worked there,
and you went there. I don't know. I mean, I'm older,

(05:33):
I live in a different place. I don't know if
that's if that would still be true today. I think
the company and the experience has changed.

Speaker 5 (05:39):
You know, those McDonald's commercials aren't realistic. I'd just like
to see one commercial that showed people five minutes after
they ate McDonald's. Oh no, I need a cigarette. I
deserve a cigarette break today, but they get it.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
Us in there.

Speaker 5 (06:00):
Yeah, some of those deals they offer a just crol,
two big Macs for two bucks. I drive by. I'm like, well,
I don't want to lose money on this. I'll get
eighty of them. I know some of you are like, sorry,
why traffic, I don't eat McDonald's. I have friends that

(06:22):
brag about not going to McDonald's. I would never go
to McDonald's. Well, McDonald's wouldn't want you because you're a.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
You know.

Speaker 1 (06:35):
You think about how our culture has changed in the
last fifty years. I'm fifty four. You could look at
a commercial for McDonald's and notice that they have completely
changed who they are appealing to. They are no longer

(06:59):
appealing to people who look like me. And that's okay,
because I'm not going there. McDonald's made a decision. Maybe
it was research, maybe it was eating habits. I don't
know what happened, but they made a decision a while
back to completely convert and focus heavily on inner city blacks,

(07:20):
and I have to I always assume that businesses have
more information about their business than I do, and I'm
not mad about that. If that's where their money is,
that's where they should go. I'm not where their money is.
I'm not a McDonald's fan. I'm not going to McDonald's.
I don't like McDonald I think it smells bad. And
their ice cream machine is always broken. Why can't they
figure the ice cream machine now?

Speaker 6 (07:42):
Four out of five future surveyed says listening to the
Michael Berry Show podcast improved their love life. The fifth
person didn't deserve one anyway.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
So one of the things that I've learned from having
been an elected official and then trying to keep elected
officer was honest is elected officials are always looking for
more money, and the departments of government are always looking
for more money, and there's always this fear mongering, Right,

(08:16):
we have to have more money for the school bond
or the schools are going to collapse, or gotta have
more money for the school or this is gonna happen.
Everyone's gonna die, okay, because taxpayers are taxed out right,
But I'm wondering about cash. Betel says that the infrastructure
at the FBI is outdated and that not every field

(08:37):
office has the equipment necessary to do their job. I'm
going to take him at face value because he's been
pretty honest and if that is true, think about all
the money that's been given to illegal aliens while the
organization that is supposed to be helping to protect our
nation doesn't have the equipment they knew that they need

(08:58):
process that for a moment.

Speaker 7 (09:00):
They're also under my leadership looking to cut waste, frauden abuse.
We have found duplicative line item contracts already within the FBI,
and we don't want to waste taxpayer dollars at the bureau.
We don't want to pay twice for something when we
have been only needed to pay once. Modernizing and prioritizing

(09:21):
the FBI is a critical component of what we need
to do. Our capabilities and our infrastructure the FBI are outdated.

Speaker 8 (09:29):
They have been.

Speaker 7 (09:32):
The opposite of streamlined. An agent in our field office
in al Paso does not have the same toolkit as
an agent in our field office is covering the Dakotas
as our agent in New York City. That's unacceptable to me.
We will fix that. But building this new infrastructure is
going to take not just a public effort, is going
to take a public private partnership engagement, which we have

(09:54):
already executed on Members of this committee are important, critical
partners to the fight against crime in this country into
defending our homeland. And you know better than anyone that
our own fail mission continues and can't continue without your
investment and your support. I rely on your expertise. I
rely on our conversations that I have with you here
and offline to tell me where the problem sets are

(10:16):
in this country because I don't know where they all are,
and then we can deploy assets to attack the growing
problem sets. Our enemies are getting more and more creative
by the day, and we need to keep up not
just with the intelligence but with you, who represent the
men and women in the in the United States across
this country. You have the ground level knowledge that we
need to help fight this message. Without the funds to

(10:37):
get ahead of our adversaries, I agree, we risk making
trade offs that will jeopardize the safety of Americans. So
it's my commitment to you to work with you during
this appropriations process to address budgetary needs shortfalls and also
think innovatively to make sure we fund the FBI for
a future.

Speaker 1 (10:54):
Well it's a kind of a sobering thought, isn't it so?
Then Cash had a heated exchange with Pennsylvania Democrat Madeline Dean. Boy,
she's a mean one when she asked if she should
be worried about being a target of the FBI, and
I wish he had answered by saying, yes, you're going

(11:14):
to get what the J sixers got. You See, our
side will point out all the awful things they did
to us, but our side never punishes them back. And
I want them punished back. I want a J six
implemented on them. I want them sent to prison. I

(11:35):
want them dragged to court because they don't fear doing
horrible things to us because there are never any consequences.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
It should be as you.

Speaker 9 (11:47):
And the President continue to weaponize and investigate is perceived
enemies as you follow this blueprint. When can I, a
former impeachment manager, expect the FBI at my door?

Speaker 2 (12:00):
Ma'am?

Speaker 7 (12:00):
You want to know who was targeted by a weaponized FBI?

Speaker 3 (12:03):
Me.

Speaker 8 (12:04):
You want to know how and why? You want to
know what I'm going to fix it?

Speaker 9 (12:08):
Let me move on.

Speaker 7 (12:08):
Well, you should read the book because there's no enemies
list on that book.

Speaker 8 (12:11):
So there are people that violated their constitutional obligations and
their duties to the American people, and they were.

Speaker 1 (12:17):
Rightly called out.

Speaker 8 (12:18):
And you should give that book to every one of
your constituents that they can read about it.

Speaker 9 (12:22):
I won't be doing that.

Speaker 7 (12:23):
That's their loss.

Speaker 9 (12:25):
During your Senate confirmation hearings, you repeatedly denied having any
involvement as a private citizen in the firing of FBI
officials who engaged in the prosecution against January sixth insurrectionists,
the violent rioters who beat and killed Capitol police officers,
and whom you referred to as political prisoners. Since then,

(12:45):
multiple whistleblowers have come forward, and we know that you
likely committed perjury. At the same hearing, you claimed you
were not familiar with Stu Peters and anti Semitic holocaust denier,
despite the fact that you appeared on miss Peters podcast
eight separate times, eight times and you claimed not to
recall mister Patel. My second question is should we worry

(13:09):
more about your memory or your veracity?

Speaker 8 (13:11):
We should worry more about your lack of candor you're
coccusing me of committing perjury. All right, let's move on.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
We got more to get to after uh after I
think Bessant went after her Treasury secretary. He had a
rather interesting exchange with New York Democrat Gregory Meeks. And
Meeks is one of these loud mouth, bombastic guys that

(13:40):
a lot of white people will just sit quiet when
he starts screaming because they don't want to be yelled at.
But he asked who was the president in the last year,
and Besson's answer suggests that Biden wasn't really the president.
And that's more than Gregory Meeks can handle. He's not
very smart, but his head is big, and his head
almost exploded.

Speaker 10 (13:59):
For decades, we've had trade deficits in the United States
of America and nobody said it was an emergency.

Speaker 2 (14:10):
Democratic and Republican presidents. You know what that says to.

Speaker 10 (14:14):
Me, that is not an emergency because it hasn't been
for four decades.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
It says to me that we should bring tariffs.

Speaker 10 (14:24):
Back to the United States Congress so that we can
make that determination as the Constitution has said, and not
tried to go around Congress.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
It's just unbelievable to me. Let me ask this question.
Maybe I'm they missed it. Who was the president?

Speaker 10 (14:50):
Who has been the president since January twentieth twenty twenty five,
Donald Jake Trump, okay, and who was the presid it
in twenty twenty four?

Speaker 11 (15:05):
The one believes President Biden.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
One believes.

Speaker 10 (15:11):
You one of those non believers that the election, the
American people didn't vote.

Speaker 11 (15:16):
I I am.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
Not, You're not, you said, one believes. Do you believe
in the Constitution of the United States.

Speaker 11 (15:27):
I believe in the Constitution of the United States.

Speaker 10 (15:29):
So you believe in it without any second thought.

Speaker 2 (15:35):
You don't have to think about it.

Speaker 10 (15:36):
You believe in it, and you would abide by it.

Speaker 2 (15:39):
Is that correct?

Speaker 10 (15:40):
I haven't I do, sir, okay, But do you know
that a president has said he may or may not.

Speaker 2 (15:47):
He don't know.

Speaker 1 (15:49):
Gregory Meeks is one of those guys in a proud
ful of people going preach. Yeah, I'm bad, Yeah, you
tell him. Gets the mistaken belief that he's smart when
he's not. He's idiot.

Speaker 2 (16:02):
Will fart hard for the freedom to vote.

Speaker 1 (16:04):
The Michael Arry Show.

Speaker 11 (16:08):
Direction.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
Speaking of not very smart people, Maxine Waters, you know
the thing about it is Maxine Waters and Gregory Meeks
and Jasmine Crockett are bordering on retarded. They are so stupid,
I mean, really really dumb, Like, don't ask them to

(16:31):
make change. If your bill is a dollar fifty and
you hand them two dollars, don't expect them to be
able to handle making change. They're really, really dumb. They
were elected in black districts because they're black, and that's
their one trick. Ponies. They just screamed racism, racism, racism,
and it's embarrassing. It's embarrassing for black people, it's terrible

(16:54):
for black people, and it's a bad look, and it
leaves people with them that this is what black people
are when it's not. But the power structure and a
lot of white liberals like to keep these kinds of
people around because they like to to to trape them around,

(17:17):
as look at, we got some black people in here,
got the You went out and got the dumbest, loudest
black person to represent black people, which and this is
the part that's hard to get people to understand. It's
not until you understand that white liberals want the dumbest
black person to represent black people because that's how they

(17:43):
view black people as pets. They view black people as pets,
pets that they care for and look after, but never
forget you're the pet. You're the toy. You're what I
parade around. You're my little prize. Look what I do

(18:05):
for you, poor dumb black people. That's what white liberals feel.
Malcolm X used to say that I didn't come up
with it. There's been a lot of blacks in between.
But Malcolm X used to say that in no uncertain terms.
He used to tell blacks the white liberal is not
your friend anyway. Here's Maxine Waters, a real mental giant,

(18:30):
questioning Scott Besson. And you know, this is why people
don't want to serve, because you don't want to have
to deal with this kind of trash.

Speaker 12 (18:38):
Do you know the level, type, or nature of the
clearances and security training required for individuals to access the
information held in the computers of Treasury I are as
a CFPV.

Speaker 11 (18:55):
Yes, I do, and I think we would have a
disagreement over the definition of the word unfettered.

Speaker 12 (19:01):
Missus Secretary, did all the individuals working with DOGE who
were given access to Treasury and CFPB's computer databases receive
all of the required clearances and security training before they
were granted access.

Speaker 11 (19:17):
Again, they were granted read only access at Treasury.

Speaker 12 (19:22):
There were two so let me just say you can't
filibus to hear. This is not the philibus to playground.
And so what you did was you let these strangers
into our treasury with access to all of the data,
all of the personnel information, and you just opened the door.
Why do'd you do that?

Speaker 11 (19:41):
No, ma'am, they were treasury employees.

Speaker 12 (19:45):
Oh are you saying today in front of this committee
that all of them were treasure employees. That the twenty
five year old who's being identified, who worked for Elon
Musk was not allowed was allowed into the treasure? Was
that person there.

Speaker 11 (20:01):
That he was a treasury employee, as was Tom Krause,
the senior person on the Dose team. There were only
two people.

Speaker 12 (20:09):
There were dogs employees also, now you know that? Were
you aware that there were Dose employees coming into our
treasure getting all of our personal information?

Speaker 2 (20:21):
Ma'am?

Speaker 11 (20:21):
There is no such thing as a DOGE employee. There
were Treasury employees.

Speaker 12 (20:25):
I tend to disagree with you based on the information
I had.

Speaker 1 (20:30):
I tend to disagree with you when you run the department,
and you know I tend to disagree with you based
on the information I have. Well, where'd you get your information.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
From?

Speaker 1 (20:45):
Two dudes? Throwing bones in the yard at the Section
eight housing complex. Where did you get your information? Because
obviously it's bad. I tend to disagree with you, Ramo,
what is at eight plus eight?

Speaker 2 (21:01):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (21:01):
You say at sixteen? I tend to disagree with you.

Speaker 2 (21:04):
What the number is? What the number? I tell you?

Speaker 1 (21:07):
Uh, Pooky told me it ain't sixteen, So you wrong,
good lord. Next we moved to the brother lover il
Han Omar, who is both black and Muslim. This is
very important. She was on Al Jazeera because why wouldn't
she be. She said our country should be more fearful

(21:27):
of white men. Yes, we played this the other day
in case you're wondering, Michael, you already played that. I know,
but there's an update. So let's get her statement on
the record first.

Speaker 13 (21:36):
A lot of conservatives in particular, would say that the
rise in Islamophobia is a result lot of hate, but
of fear, A legitimate fear, they say, of quote unquote
jahadis terrorism, whether it's Fort Hood or Sam Bernardino or
a recent truck attack in New York. What do you
say to them?

Speaker 14 (21:53):
I would say, our country should be more fearful of
white man across our country because they are actually causing
most of the deaths within this country.

Speaker 15 (22:08):
And so if fear was the driving force of policies
to keep America safe, Americans safe inside of this country,
we should be profiling, monitoring, and creating policies to fight
the radicalization of white men.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
So nothing could be further from the truth. I could
review the crime stats with you, but I suspect you know.
And we need to stop importing Somali Muslim terror, supporting
people like her and many of the people who have
supported her, and we need to stand up to this nonsense.

(22:50):
We need to stand up for our country. We have
enemies abroad, and we have enemies within, and we need
to get comfortable admitting this and deal with it. So
James Carvill, who was responsible for Bill Clinton being president,
the raging Cajun. He is the last white guy left

(23:10):
in the Democrat Party. He needs to turn out the
lights on his way out because he doesn't realize it
ain't his party anymore. So he's just this cranky, old,
raging Cajun right right, right, right right, who's now taken
to calling Trump crazy when he looks crazy and bitching
about all the young gun Democrats who have taken over

(23:32):
the party because of the policies of people like him.
You see, these were the white liberals who wanted to
bring in all the foreigners and ethnics and Muslims and
gays and transgenders and all this, but they wanted the
elements of those communities that were the most radical. So

(23:52):
they felt they could show that community. Look, we're giving
you a voice here that wasn't a good voice, and
you empowered those people, and now they make a mockery
of you. And that brings us to this.

Speaker 16 (24:05):
Illian Omar says that white men are responsible for most
of the deaths in the United States. So let me
get this straight. Sixty nine percent of the people I'm
stuck on that number. I don't know, but sixty nine
percent of people are going to vote are white. Of that,
forty eight and a half a man. So I don't know.

(24:25):
My rough mass is thirty three percent. Let's go out
and piss off thirty three percent of the people that vote.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
And that's a smart strategy.

Speaker 16 (24:33):
And if people that agree with her, there are people that.

Speaker 1 (24:37):
Actually agree with her.

Speaker 16 (24:39):
And I think this, honestly, I think there's people are
more trouble than their worth.

Speaker 17 (24:54):
We're going to be changing the name of.

Speaker 18 (24:56):
The Gulf of Mexico.

Speaker 19 (24:58):
To the Gulf of michael Berry, which has a beautiful.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
So the little communist Bernie Sanders has gotten rich promoting communism,
never had an honest job. This is a guy who's
been in love with Russian communism even though no Russians
are any longer. Isn't it crazy? This is a guy, boy,

(25:24):
he's a real scoundrel. He's something special, something special. Multiple houses.
Wife was working at a university that all the scandals
with that. He just keeps chugging on. So now he
goes on an anti oligarchy tour. Because there are always
people willing to lap this up. Karl Marx had rich

(25:45):
women who were willing to pay his bills. Their husband's capitalists,
or they inherited, willing to pay his bills for him
to be very clever in the salons of their parties
to talk about tool and the means of it and
control of it and wealth. And they love to hear

(26:07):
him talk about redistributing while they themselves ate from the finest.
It's an amazing thing, though, it's a really amazing thing.
There are scoundrels just scoundrels out there, and they use religion,
they use hoaxes, they use the combination of a religion

(26:28):
and a hoax, which is communism. And despite all the failures,
there will always be people guilt ridden, usually liberal, guilt
ridden white people, who will lap it up so crazy.
Bernie goes on his oligarchy tour in a really nice

(26:48):
private jet. I'm jealous because i like to fly on
private jets and I'm unashamed of it. But I'm not
out here against capitalism. I'm for it. And so he's
asked a question by Brett Baer about the fact that
he flies around on private jets.

Speaker 18 (27:03):
Alyssa Slockin senator from Michigan. She said, you shouldn't be
using an oligarchy.

Speaker 17 (27:07):
It's over people's head.

Speaker 18 (27:09):
You've gotten criticized from other people. Free Weekend says Bernie
Sanders spent two hundred and twenty one thousand on private jets
fighting the oligarchy tour paid for by friends of Bernie Sanders.
That you've spent millions of dollars in campaign funds on
private jet travel over the years. How do you push
back on both of those.

Speaker 19 (27:26):
Things when the last time you saw Donald Trump during
a campaign mode at National Airport.

Speaker 1 (27:32):
No, no, no, it doesn't.

Speaker 18 (27:33):
But he's also not fighting the oligarchy.

Speaker 2 (27:35):
No.

Speaker 19 (27:36):
And you run a campaign and you do three or
four or five rallies in a week, The only way
you can get around to talk to thirty thousand people,
think I'm going to be sitting on a waiting line
at United waiting. You know what, thirty thousand people are waiting.
That's the only way you can get around. No apologies
for that. That's what campaign travel is about. We've done
it in the past, We're going to do it in
the future.

Speaker 1 (27:56):
So what he's saying is I am really important. Now
the rest of you aren't, but I am really important.
And the god complex that leaders of movements develop is rich.

(28:19):
In this case, the laws do not apply, the rules
do not apply, logic does not apply. And this is
how people really struggle to understand. How is it that
these people claim they don't want anybody to have any
money while they themselves get rich off of it. You
have to understand they don't see that as a contradiction.

(28:42):
They see themselves as the god of a religion of
poor people. You people need to give everything up and
give it over to God, and I am God. He
doesn't see himself as the preacher of a poor church
for whom everyone should tell everything they have. He sees
himself as the god of a movement and an ideology,

(29:07):
make no mistake about that, and he wraps himself in
the cloak of Karl Marx, which, by the way, is
a religion that has never failed to sell since doscopy talk.
Ever since he's been sold to people, there have always

(29:29):
been people willing to buy. Many a huckster. Many a
huckster has sold Karl Marx as the answer. And the
reason it works is Marxism is based on the idea
of jealousy that guy has more than me. Marxism is

(29:50):
also based on what is an absolute foundation of any economy,
and that is that people value their own labor at
a greater rate than the marketplace does. There is nobody

(30:11):
in America who honestly believes they're overpaid. They may say
that as a false humility. Every person who's working believes
that they are more valuable using currency than what they're
getting paid. The fry cook at McDonald's, if he's making

(30:32):
nine bucks an hour, he believes he's worth more than that, Well,
what would lead him to believe that? Well, if I
walk out, you can't serve burgers. True, So walk out. Now,
when you walk out, where are you going to go?
What skill set do you have? Do you have felonies
on your record? Do you have do you have any

(30:53):
problems that would hold you back or skills that would
lift you up? Because if you do, go sell them
to the marketplace. How much you work twenty five an hour,
go get it. You can't prove you're worth an amount
of money until you go command it. But telling people
that guy's making more money, well, yes, but that guy

(31:14):
started the company. Yes, but that guy's in that position.
I tell you what, if you think people in that
position make too much money, you go get that job.
Why not? Crazy Bernie wraps himself in the cloak of
Karl Marx and the cloak of the poor man who
deserves more. But at the end of the day, he's

(31:37):
the one getting the more. It's a pyramid scheme and
he's at the top.

Speaker 20 (31:44):
Hello to all you little hooks us viewing right wing
extremists out down, Send it up, Bernie, send us here.
Did you know the most commonly searched thing on Google?

Speaker 2 (31:53):
Relating to my name.

Speaker 17 (31:54):
Is Bernie send Us Networth.

Speaker 20 (31:56):
For some reason, conservatives are obsessed with the fact that
I'm a very wealthy socialists. It's true, I've solved millions
of books, I have way more money than any of
you realize, and I'm basically a combination of Choral marks
and Charles Manson.

Speaker 17 (32:11):
How does that feel, Republican schmucks?

Speaker 20 (32:13):
Hearing that left wing pink o coming nutjob like me
is better at capitalism than you so called capitalists must.

Speaker 17 (32:19):
Really tickle your angry bone.

Speaker 20 (32:21):
Hack good, kiss my grits you, qann Elon Musk worshiping
Kanye West listening fascists, As my friend AOC would say, sorry,
not sorry anyway, I got to run somewhere. A struggling
small business owner is about to finally tin a profit,
and I have to go invent more ways for them
to keep suffering until next time.

Speaker 17 (32:40):
Talk radio Nazis.

Speaker 1 (32:57):
And that's how it works. It's the guy who leads
a cult to help the people like Jim Jones and
ends up driving them to their deaths, taking their wealth,
bringing them to a place they never would have, ended
up raping so many of them, all the while making

(33:20):
claims to the contrary, be careless, be careful the scoundrel
they're all around us.
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