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February 18, 2025 • 32 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time time, time, time, Luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Michael darry Show is on the air. I call it
the Group of one hundred.

Speaker 3 (00:15):
We literally started off with fourteen or fifteen young geniuses.
Now we have one hundred young geniuses and what's happened.
I'll probably get a lot from the show. People are
calling up from all over the country wanting to do
and wanting to help you lot.

Speaker 2 (00:28):
Allow me to introduce myself.

Speaker 4 (00:30):
My name is wile E Coyote Genius.

Speaker 5 (00:35):
I came in like the.

Speaker 6 (00:45):
You y'all Goose.

Speaker 7 (00:56):
Is an accountant's biggest dream to go in to the
government and go through every single piece of dollar and
tell the American people where it's going.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
This is commendable from.

Speaker 6 (01:13):
An accountant standpoint.

Speaker 7 (01:14):
I'm like, nobody has ever told us where our tax
dollars were going.

Speaker 6 (01:20):
They told us what we wanted to hear.

Speaker 7 (01:24):
They didn't necessarily tell us what we needed to hear.

Speaker 8 (02:05):
This is a DEI contract thirty six thousand dollars for
US Citizenship and Immigration services that is against the President's
policies and his America First agenda. This is a three
point four million dollar contract a Council for Inclusive Innovation
at the US Patent and Trademark Office, Department of Commerce.
Another DEI contract that DOGE identified.

Speaker 6 (02:27):
I can continue to go through these, Oh, I love
this one.

Speaker 8 (02:29):
Fifty seven thousand bucks for climate change in Sri Lanka.
What is this doing to continue the interests of the
American people.

Speaker 6 (02:37):
Absolutely nothing.

Speaker 8 (02:39):
These are the line items across the federal government that
DOGE is identifying daily.

Speaker 6 (02:43):
They're moving very fast.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
I came in likes. We moved across the street from

(03:17):
a raggedy old house. And I mean rackety, raggedy ratchet,
I mean falling over clapbird.

Speaker 9 (03:26):
It was.

Speaker 2 (03:28):
Practically a lean to two story structure. It had been
there since just after World War Two. We were in
West University, and this whole little development that including ours,
had been built right after World War two. And they
were old asbestoshingle houses, two story, about fourteen hundred square feet.

(03:54):
They were all on the same kind of model. And
this was in the late nineties, so this had the
house was fifty years old but had not aged well.
I think the developer had gone in and threw them
up pretty fast. And the little lady across the street
she passed away. Developer buys it. He's going to build
a mansion there, and he sends in the bulldozer and

(04:19):
I've come home because my office was not too far away,
and I've come home to grab something to eat, and
I see the bulldozers rolling up, and I, oh, I'll
stay here, I'll delay this because I want to watch it.
And it shocked me that they could send that piece
of equipment in and with one blow of this thing

(04:43):
knock half the house down and with the other one
knock it off its foundation. And it was just like that.
It was, you know, this thing that had made it
through storms and floods, and you kept the heat out
and the cold out and the critters out, and all
of a sudden it was gone. And you had to
wreck that down to build back up something better. And

(05:05):
when I see that Trump is knocking down, wrecking, bawling
things that you might have believed would never be fixed,
It's incredible. That's night I had a horrifying dream that
Disco was actually making a comeback. At first, I was afraid.
I was petrified. I'm pretty sure my local Chinese restaurant

(05:32):
killed Big Bird and they're using his meat in one
of their dishes. They're calling it sessing me chicken. One
of my delights in life to start the day off
right is my wife will be downstairs and she's making
breakfast for the boys. Now it's just one boy, and

(05:52):
she's getting my stuff ready for me to leave, and
she'll scream up and say, you know, this is what
time you need to wake up, Crockett. And so I
enjoyed going in. I flip on the light and they are,
which I think is the cutest there because that light
and I wish it the light would go away. And

(06:13):
then I'll rub their feet and tell them how awesome
they are, what a great day They're gonna have something
they've done that's made me proud and all that. And
so today I just sort of off handedly said, Crockett,
you're eighteen. Now you got to get up The first
time I come in, and it hit me eighteen as
an adult, I don't have any minor children any longer.

(06:35):
You know, when you plot your life on a timeline,
you know, there's that old line. I think you're the
one that told me wrong that at some point you're
gonna carry your kid into the house from the back seat. Yeah, exactly.
He's wiping off the tears. At some point you're gonna
carry your kid. You're gonna scoop him up because he's
asleep as y'all drive home, and you're gonna take him

(06:56):
to his bed or her and lay him on the
pillow and turn the light off and go. And it's
one of those beautiful moments, and that will be the
last time you do it, but you won't know at
the time that that's the last time you'll do it. Right, Well,
when you plot on the timeline, these certain moments that

(07:17):
I don't know with the point at which you're officially old,
but you're you're you're definitely on some part of that
when you no longer have minor children, right, that is
that check that box, move move along that timeline. It's
always interesting you go to the museum, and especially like
a science museum, where you go, well, that's ten thousand

(07:38):
years ago, Well, how do you know? And then there's
this long and in this there's there's a carbon dating.
I don't believe that it might have been a fauci
alive at the time, but you look on the timeline
and there's periods where it's like six hundred years this happened.
And then Isaac Newton did this, and and then euclid Well,
wait a second, what happened? What about the people who
lived in the period of time that gets no nothing,

(08:01):
You just you're part of that blob like that. I
don't know. This is just things that haunt my mind
and I think about. But I'm pretty sure when you
don't have two children at home, you are, if not old,
you're you're something that you were not before. These are
such wonderful times, gosh, I mean, just it really is

(08:23):
such a thrilling time in this country. What do you want?

Speaker 10 (08:27):
You want just to say the word and I'll throw
a asshole around it and pull down.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
I saw a picture of President Trump at the Daytona
five hundred this weekend and he was talking to Richard Petty.
And I was talking to Petrow about this yesterday, and
I said, I was pretty sure Richard Petty died. Pretty
sure Richard Petty had died. In fact, I thought it.

(09:02):
I was scanning when I saw it, so I figured, well,
maybe that was kind of a wouldn't it be cool?
You know, here's Elvis and Trump and Winston Churchill. Wouldn't
it be cool if Richard Petty? But apparently he's alive
and we were talking about the fact that we're kind

(09:24):
of at an age where the people who were our
heroes are at an age that when their name comes
up or when you see a death notice, you go, oh,
he died. I've just assumed he'd already died, right, Bob
Yucker died. I mean, I just assumed he died a
long time ago. And there's that, there's that, there's that doubt.

(09:49):
It's an uncertainty. Of course, you can go look it up,
but you don't want to have to. And then we
started talking about people that you just don't know if
if they're still alive or not, because they're in that
you know, eighty to ninety five range, and then some
of them, it turns out, are still alive. I it
was Augie Gurrito so winning his baseball coach at all times,

(10:11):
he's still alive. I don't know. I could go look
it up. It's if you've got a suggestion on someone
that fits into that category for you. I remember when
they had when Tony Bennett made the comeback, and I thought, oh,
I just assumed Tony Bennet had been dead for decades.
And then he's performing with Lady Gaga everybody wants to

(10:33):
be on stage with Tony Bennett. There's a certain star
dust that only a very very few people get where
late in their life they have that moment. Betty White
had the best of it and she just became cool.
It was Betty White was just cool. But I was
thinking a moment, if you could make a list of him,
maybe we could put him out as questions. On this

(10:55):
day in eighteen sixty one, in Montgomery, Alabama, Jefferson Davis
inaugurated as the provisional President of the Confederate States of America.
For folks who'd had enough of the Union, the federal government,
the nationalistic policies, the destruction of the Southern way of life.

(11:19):
It was not a battle over slavery. Let nobody tell
you that. There's the same people will tell you that
the COVID shot is good for you. On this date,
in eighteen eighty five, Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark
Twain was published in the United States. People will often
ask what book their child should read, and I do
not necessarily recommend a political book. I recommend that you read.

(11:43):
I recommend that you read the classics, and Twain's huck
Finn is as good as it gets. I've always heard
it said that you should read Huckleberry Finn three times
in your life because you will identify with three different
characters in the book when you do.

Speaker 6 (11:57):
So.

Speaker 2 (11:59):
You can do a book on tape, you know what.
I don't know why you're so arrogant about books on tape.
I don't know why you think you can look down
on me for that. On this day in nineteen seventy seven,
the Space Shuttle Enterprise test vehicle was carried on its
maiden flight on top of a Boeing seven forty seven.
On this day, in two thousand and one, NASCAR's champion

(12:20):
Dale Earnhardt died from an accident on the final out
of the Daytona five hundred and Ramoni. You'll want to
tune in for this because there is a quiz on
this day. In twenty ten, Wikileagues published the first of
hundreds of thousands of classified documents by an Army soldier.
There was what came to be known as the Afghan

(12:42):
war logs. I mean that's the Iraq war Logs and
the Afghan Diary, or I might have those transposed, but
you know, you know what I mean. There were thousands
and thousands of documents about what was going on in
the war that were revealed. It's hard to believe twy
ten wasn't so long ago. They were revealed by a
dude who wanted to be a girl, wanted the taxpayers

(13:06):
to pay to cut off his wiener. And in twenty
ten that was, Oh my god, what's going on? Now
you go, it's Tuesday. But back then that was a
and that's very very recent. Ramon, do you remember either
his given name or his girl name? What Chelsea Manning's

(13:29):
his girl name. I bet you more people know his
girl name than his boy name. His birth name. Don't
dead name him. His birth name was Bradley Manning, and
he was pardoned in twenty seventeen as Barack Obama was
walking out the door. I suspect, somehow, someway you figure

(13:52):
it out, maybe Barack Obama felt for Bradley Manning in
a way that maybe some other people wouldn't. Born on
this day, nineteen fifty four, John Travolta, there's a comeback.
Who would have thought, oh, get shorty. John Travolta could
go from the disco era to go from the heights

(14:12):
of celebrity and crash, and somehow, some way managed to
make the comeback that I think pulp fiction really really secured.
Born on this day in nineteen sixty eight. Molly Ringwald
Molly Ringwalt, born on this day in nineteen fifty. Is

(14:34):
she a natural redhead? Is she really a redhead? Is
that right? Born on this day in nineteen fifty. John Hughes,
who began his career in nineteen seventy as an author
of humorous essays and stories for the National Lampoon magazine.
He would go on to Hollywood to write, produce, and
sometimes direct some of the most successful live action comedy

(14:55):
films in the eighties, National Lampoon's Vacation, Mister Mom, Sixteen, Candles,
Weird Science, The Breakfast Club, Paris Buhmer's Day Off, Pretty
and Pink some kind of wonderful. How about the fact
that he and Molly Ringwald share the same birthday and
in my opinion, his greatest planes, trains and automobiles. Now
that is a movie friend. She's having a baby, Uncle

(15:18):
Buck Home Alone, Dutch Beethoven, which he wrote under the
pseudonym Edward Dante, Dennis The Menace, and Baby's Day Out.
I'd say, that's a pretty impressive body of.

Speaker 11 (15:31):
Work right there. That is your childhood. I like a
sesame chicken joke myself. You're listening to Michael Berry.

Speaker 5 (15:47):
Shout lifeless eyes, black eyes like a dollar, you know.

Speaker 2 (16:01):
Creative director Jim Mundson along a clip from The Breakfast
Club and he said, growing up just across the Mississippi
Rivers from Saint Louis, this scene was always a favorite
of mine of my friends. We'd cross Poplar is it
Poplar or Poplar Poplar Street bridge to get into Saint Louis,
the same bridge Clark drives over when he gets lost

(16:22):
in North Saint Louis, which is not a good area
of Saint Louis.

Speaker 6 (16:30):
Clark, what are you doing this, las On? This is
so dangerous.

Speaker 2 (16:35):
We have no business being in an area like this.
Well look at it this way, honey. This is a
part of America we never get to see.

Speaker 6 (16:41):
That's good.

Speaker 2 (16:42):
No, that's bad. I mean we can't close their eyes
with the plight of the cities, the kids. You notice
all this plight. This will just make us appreciate what
we have. Well, am, I I thought East Saint Louis
was the bad stuff, But I guess North. Saint Louis
isn't very good. I don't know anybody going to Saint
Louis because they choose to Saint It's one of those

(17:04):
cities you forget about because it was a once great city.
You had some opulent, some welts, some industrial titans, and
they got mired in the racial crisis and crime, and
you just never hear about Saint Louis anymore. We went
to Saint Louis. This is my dad's eighty fifth birthday today,

(17:25):
Happy birthday. Normally Bury. We went to Saint Louis when
I was a kid on a driving vacation. We had
this van. It was a kind of a rainbow colored van.
It was yellow and orange and red these stripes, and
it had white wheels. And my dad built bunks in
the back, wooden bunks and put a little cushion on

(17:45):
it so we boys could sleep four of us. And
he got a little Coleman cooler. You couldn't plug in
a fridge and a van yet. And we were on
our vacation and it was the longest vacation he had
ever taken, the longest amount of time. He let his
time roll for a year, so to add it up
to three weeks and he's got the van already and

(18:06):
we're on vacation and we're so excited, and we're going
to Mammoth Cave in Kentucky and we're gonna see King
tut exhibit and it's going to be great. And this
woman smashes into the back of us, smashes into the
back of us, and our van was con cave from there,
and so we went to the insurance headquarter. We drove

(18:27):
on our vacation to the insurance headquarters in Saint Louis,
which wasn't so far away, and we camped out there.
My dad be and my dad. We camped out there
till they wrote us to check. Yeah, we weren't going
to play the i'll call you, you call me back. Long
distance calls are expensive. He camped out at their office.
And I think that's where I learned part of my tenacity.
I'm not saying we're always pleasant about it, but I
think that's where I learned part of my tenacity. For sure.

(18:51):
I'll tell you this. It was just short to ten
years ago, nine and a half years ago that I
asked Chance McLean make a little documentary about my dad.
It was my dad's, so it must have been ten
years actually, So it was my dad's seventy fifth birthday
and we were having all and there's there about it.

Speaker 7 (19:13):
And.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
So we had him and my mom set out mostly
him but a little bit of my mom talking about
his life. And they brought every photo they had of
him and dumped it on Chance, and he, in Chance,
interviewed him for several hours and then he wove the story.
It was amazing the storytelling, because chance pulls it out
of you. And as he talked about working at the

(19:36):
Dale Dixie pickle plant, and as he talked about working
at Westernado, and he's talking about working at DuPont and
there we would go swim over at the DuPont employee's
credit union or recreational area, and this was where they lived.
And the one time we had snow, and there's a
photo of it and they have it and him and
my mom going with the k C's even though they
weren't Catholic. It was very important that he told you

(19:57):
they're not we're not Catholic. But the Case's kept wanting
us to go on our trips. We go on our trips.
The kids were gone, we didn't know what to do anyway,
So we had that film, we had that event happening,
and that was the day that we had everybody singing
Happy Birthday to him and he did the interview. And
then a few months later we had this biography of him.

(20:19):
So this weekend we set to watch the biography and
there's all the photos. Well, my brother's in the photos.
He's a young man ten years he's forty forty four
years old, and there's my mom in it and she looks,
I mean, you can't imagine she'll be gone in ten years.
And he's talking about his mother being ninety six and
she's still doing well. Well, of course she's not with
us anymore. And it's just amazing we have all of this.

(20:41):
You can watch this. We all sat spellbound around the
television on Sunday as we celebrated Crockets eighteenth and my
dad's eighty fifth, and included in there with montages of photos,
and I made the mistake we did an update because
we had a lot of photos. We have a lot
of grand and my dad has life grandkids now that
obviously weren't there ten years ago. And Chance said, what

(21:04):
song do you want me to use for the montage
to close it out, and I said, that's my job.
By Conway, Well that was a mistake. I mean, not
a dry in the crowd. Woo boy, that's that one
will get you every time. But do not wait to
do that. Heritage Film people will email me and go
I wish I'd taken your advice. For years ago my

(21:25):
dad got cancer. He declined precipitously and we lost him,
and now I don't have it. It was interesting we
were sitting there. It was the first time I've heard
my mom speak, obviously since she passed September nineteenth, and
it was interesting to hear her. I had forgotten. You know,
we all have little quirks about the way we talk
and the way we you know, our cadence and our
voice and all that stuff. And we've got it all

(21:47):
right there in a self contained film that I sent
it to everybody. Anybody can watch anytime, and you can
go back and the kids can see that, you know,
they were growing up and to see that time progression.
It was a beautiful thing. So if you haven't done
an email me and I'll connect you with Chance, or
just go to Heritage Films and connect with him, don't
wait to do it. I'll say that planes, trains, and automobiles.

(22:09):
If you have not seen that movie, since we're talking
about John Hughes, you must see it. It is. I
rewatched it last year, and I really took my time
with it and studied it and studied the effect it
had and how it was made. And it was originally
over three hours, and they cut it down, and I
get real deep into all that. It's the story of
Steve Martin plays a guy named Neil Page, and he's

(22:32):
a marketing executive who is very high strung and he's
trying to get home, and John Candy is del Griffith.
I don't want to ruin this for you, so I'll
keep it too simple. And he's this kind of annoying salesman,
but he's very, very good hearted, heart of gold. They're
very different people. Steve Martin is bothered by as hell

(22:52):
by John Candy, and John Candy is just He's this
lovable guy who just screws everything up. And they're trying
to get Neil home to Chica. I'll go in time
for Thanksgiving Day dinner with his family, and so everything
that could go wrong, and it's slapstick laughter on a
level that I don't know if they still make movies
like this, and they did, I don't think I would

(23:13):
enjoy them, but I did. This one. They wake up
snuggling after being forced to share the same bed in
a hotel, and it makes for a very awkward moment.

Speaker 12 (23:23):
Oh oh oh, why did you kiss right hair?

Speaker 2 (23:32):
Holding hand? There's your other hand? He told two pillows.
Those aren't pillows. The last of the on this day
in history that I have on my list is Yoko
Ono quote, Japanese American multimedia artist and musician born on

(23:55):
this day in nineteen thirty three. Is she still alive?
How about this one? Chubby Checker. Chubby Checker is still alive.
We should twist again. We were kids, like we did
last summer.

Speaker 1 (24:13):
All admired the champion marble shooting, the fastest runner big
league ballplayers. There, Tucker, the Michael Berry America.

Speaker 2 (24:35):
All right, ramon for you're dead or alive? Because the
name comes up and you're talking about their legacy and
he look, he's still alive somewhere. Quincy Jones. Whence he died?
That's right, died within the last year. At huh, you
interviewed him. Is that true? Oh, I bet that was
a doozy. What what I'm just saying. No, I'm sure

(24:58):
it was a nice interview. I'm sure it was a
nice inter of you.

Speaker 6 (25:01):
All right.

Speaker 2 (25:01):
How about Frankie Valley. Frankie Valley is not dead. Frankie
Valley is still alive. How about Barbara Eden? Barbara Eden
is still alive. Yes. How about Richard Lewis from Curb
Your Enthusiasm Anything But Love? Richard Lewis is dead. How

(25:23):
about Carl Weathers? Carl Weathers who was Creed in Rocky?
Who was was he in Happy Gilmore? He did die
in the ring, but in real life it's Carl Weather's
dead or alive. Carl Weathers is dead, that is correct.
How But Gladys Knight, with or without the Pips, Gladys

(25:45):
Tonight is alive. Very good. How about Tito Jackson of
the Jackson Five, He's the one you can't pick out,
looks a little like Smoky, That's correct. Tito Jackson died
at seventy one. Seventy one. That's all I got for now,
but I'll be I'll be back with more throughout the
course of the program. Likely involved in one of the

(26:05):
burglary tourism rings that mark the Biden era. A person
with restrictions on his tourism visa from South America, Chilean
man arrested by the POPO in West University for burglary

(26:26):
and when they caught him, they found that he had
a jammer on him that would jam radio frequencies. Investigator Stale.
Officers within the vicinity of the device were unable to
properly use their body worn cameras and their key fobs
to lock and unlock their police vehicles, and were unable

(26:46):
to transmit information through police issued handheld radio devices during
an emergency. That is a serious, serious crown. He's probably
out on the streets again. The story from Fox twenty six.
Are you a United States citizens?

Speaker 6 (27:02):
No?

Speaker 2 (27:02):
What's your country origin?

Speaker 4 (27:05):
In the US for a year and eight months, two
months in.

Speaker 2 (27:09):
The Houston area. Recently, he's been in a hotel for
a couple of days.

Speaker 13 (27:14):
Ignacio Castillo Conservers was arrested on February eighth for burglary.
Police say he broke into a home here in the
sixty four hundred block of Westchester West University Place. Police
say they found a radio frequency jamming device in his
backpack a.

Speaker 2 (27:29):
Radio frequency gamming device.

Speaker 9 (27:32):
Since a lot of signals, very high intensity signals around you,
so what he does is blocks signals from going from
point A point B.

Speaker 13 (27:42):
According to court arguments, officers within the vicinity of the
device were unable to properly use their body warned cameras,
key fobs to lock and unlock police vehicles, and were
unable to transmit information through police issued hand held radio
devices during an active emergency.

Speaker 14 (28:00):
And the fact that this defendant was able to jam
up the local police officers who were responding to the calls, radios,
keyfobs to get into their car, and body cams makes
it a dangerous situation for law enforcement.

Speaker 9 (28:12):
Whoever did this have some tactical knowledge on how to
use these devices and workplace.

Speaker 13 (28:16):
In Remember, if terrorist to the court, he's not a
US citizen, He's been in Houston just a couple of
months and currently resides in a hotel.

Speaker 14 (28:24):
If you imagine an ordinary criminal committing a crime with
a radio frequency.

Speaker 6 (28:29):
Jamming device, now add.

Speaker 14 (28:32):
To that the specter of somebody with real bad intent
who wants to harm a lot of people, a terrorist,
a mass murderer, and it gets scary quick, and.

Speaker 13 (28:40):
Trevis's bond was at thirty thousand dollars.

Speaker 2 (28:45):
This from UH Local twelve in Cincinnati. Just last month
before Chile. Also chile and illegal aliens arrested for breaking
into Joe Burrow's home and stealing his Jersey.

Speaker 15 (28:57):
Borough may soon be getting some of his belongings back
to Men who the police appear to believe were involved
in a burglary last month are now indicted. They were
among four Chilean nationals busted earlier this month in Clark County.
The four suspected burglars were apparently staying here at this
lakeing To Inn in Fairbourne, near Wright State University. What
they likely did not know was that they were being

(29:17):
surveilled by the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigations. Court documents
show one of the BCI agents recognized two of the
men wanted in connection with the burglary of a Hamilton
County multimillion dollar home on December ninth, that's the same
day Burrough's house was hit. The agents, along with a
state trooper, followed the men up I seventy in Clark County,
where the trooper pulled them over for an alleged traffic violation.

(29:40):
When agents looked in the car, they found a tool
used to break into homes and an LSU T shirt
and Bengals cap. Joe Burrow, of course, attended LSU. A
grand jury has now indicted the men for possessing criminal tools,
participation in a criminal gang, and engaging in a pattern
of corrupt activities.

Speaker 4 (29:58):
As you collect your valuables send them back home, you
continue until you're either cut or recalled by your handle.

Speaker 15 (30:05):
Sergeant Mike Maher first booke with Local twelve about two
years ago when we broke the story of Chilean tourist
burglers coming to Greater Cincinnati and hitting high end homes
in places like Indian Hill. The Rangers even put out
a flyer warning its residents. The robberies began shortly after
Chile was approved as one of forty countries included in
the Homeland Security visa waiver program. The waivers allowed tourists

(30:29):
from Chile to visit the US for ninety days with
virtually no questions asked. It has apparently led to a
sophisticated criminal enterprise, and.

Speaker 4 (30:38):
Once you're caught, are recalled, you are sent back to
your home nation, or you can then be recycled as
an agent into another state, another nation.

Speaker 12 (30:45):
Local authorities formed a task force to improve communications and
keep bonds high, like these latest suspects in Clark County
who are now held on two hundred and fifty thousand
dollars cash bonds each.

Speaker 2 (30:58):
Our country is not a place to pillage. It is
not the trash to be picked over. Anybody who does
not want these people kicked out is not a good
American and does not care about you, period, end of story.
It is time to get rid of it. It is
time to make America great again. It is time that

(31:20):
we lead the world. It is time that we protect
our people. I put our people over people of the world.
I'm sorry that other countries are in disarray or they're poor,
or you're fleeing the government, or you're fleeing crime, or
you want to traffic drugs or sex. We don't want
you here, and we're standing up to the nonsense. And

(31:43):
that makes me proud. Americans are putting Americans first. Americans
are putting America first, and the people who don't want
to just know, that's the guy you can't trust. The
people who want them here, that's the guy you can't
trust act accordingly. How about AJ Boy for a moment

Speaker 4 (32:02):
M
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