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September 1, 2025 • 29 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Angry white liberal women have come to be a dominant
force in the Democrat Party, and they share certain characteristics
a lot of cats, a Karen nature, a willingness for
those who have children to sacrifice their children, to sacrifice

(00:23):
their children for the purpose of more attention, and their
ideological insanity. Michael Malice is a Fox contributor in podcaster,
He's 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 2 (00:49):
I think people underestimate to what extent privileged, especially white women,
are willing to sacrifice their children for the altar of status.
It's for them, having a transkid is like winning the
lot of 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 affluent white female liberals,

(01:09):
offers 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 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 1 (01:32):
He's absolutely right, He's absolutely right. And a lot of women,
i think, fall into this because they see the effectiveness
or they are they are affected by the effectiveness of
political propaganda that tells them that Republicans are mean, and

(01:53):
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, but there comes a point where
you have to wake up and realize that there is
evil in the world and it must be destroyed, and

(02:15):
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 deliveries, Just Golden.

Speaker 3 (02:35):
Did you hear the story about the kidd who was
outside the Democratic fundraiser selling kittens when the people came
out from the fundraiser. He was holding up the kittens

(02:56):
and he was saying, by a Democrat kitten. But 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.

Speaker 1 (03:09):
And one of the members of the.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
Pressido'd seen him there two weeks before. I said, wait
a minute, you were selling these kittens the last time
as Democrat kittens. How come to Republican kittens? Now? Kids
says because now they got their eyes open.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
Ah, 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 you talk about liberal white women,
these are the kind of people that watch the View,

(03:42):
not grudge watch, actually watched the View because they think, oh,
they're talking about Paul. I want to stay up to date,
what's going on. Well, here is Tulsey Gabbard, 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 trader to her country.

Speaker 4 (03:59):
Just give us a listen.

Speaker 5 (04:00):
Some of you have accused me of being a traitor
to my country, a Russian asset, a trojan horse, or
you haven't used you a useful idiot. I think was
the use you used, which basically means that I'm naive
or or lack intele You know what's going on is
that I want to let I want to let your
viewers know exactly who I am. All right, set the

(04:22):
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 in
this country. It was the attacks on Nileta Well, I guess,

(04:45):
I guess we were getting We're.

Speaker 6 (04:46):
Getting a little bit far ahead of ourselves. But Franklin
Graham finds you refreshing. He doesn't find me refreshing. Richard Spencer,
the white nationalist leader, says he could vote for you.

Speaker 7 (04:57):
Joy this is.

Speaker 6 (05:00):
It calls in at least ten times. Why don't you
go on, Chris?

Speaker 5 (05:02):
Why 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 6 (05:12):
Well starting to do and then you shot back at her. Boy,
you called her the queen of Warmon.

Speaker 5 (05:17):
You double down, 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 on that day. I've served now for over sixteen years,
deployed twice the Middle East during the height of the war,

(05:39):
where every single day I saw firsthand the terribly high
human cost.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
Who hasn't dealt with a crazy white liberal woman. I'll
give you a 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 control and she is so determined. I mean,
she's going to make her point and stand up for herself,

(06:07):
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 you lose wars. This is how little boys
get their wiener cut off. This is how bad things

(06:29):
happen in great nations. This right, listen to this for
a short approach.

Speaker 7 (06:33):
If you're going to do a power off one eighty,
that's my point.

Speaker 4 (06:36):
Well, okay, I will remember that from now on, no problem.

Speaker 7 (06:39):
Yeah, when you ask for a short approach, I expect
you to turn your base and even the numbers right.

Speaker 4 (06:45):
This will be a full stop for six five Charlie.
And maybe we need to talk about that some more,
because you're the first controller of fifteen years that's ever
said that.

Speaker 7 (06:53):
Well, I'm just you know, if you ask for a
short approach, a short approach is when you turn your
base to 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 extend. But if you're
doing something other than a short approach, don't ask for
a short approach.

Speaker 4 (07:13):
Well, I will definitely look up the definition of short
approach because I've never seen where it says you turn
base of beam the numbers. Because I don't see how
you could possibly do that.

Speaker 7 (07:21):
Well, I googled it. Actually, I googled short approach, and
it's said to turn your base a beam or before
the numbers and you will land probably touch down around
this field.

Speaker 4 (07:33):
Okay, well, then I apologize for requesting the wrong thing
because everywhere else short approach means power off one eighty.
But that's definitely not want to mean too.

Speaker 7 (07:43):
Yeah, well, I mean, as you know, I don't know.
Maybe it because I'm work at Siderent Airport. I don't
know a.

Speaker 4 (07:47):
Little more, and Michael Perry wouldn't change it.

Speaker 1 (07:51):
Vicos in the system, lack.

Speaker 2 (07:54):
Of two modern day Robin.

Speaker 1 (07:58):
You know, I've got an email doing the break from
our fellows. I'm a Vietnam veteran. I'm not listening anymore.
Your service in Vietnam is appreciated, but I'm not sure
how that's relevant to where we're going. Let me see
why he's not listening anymore. He's not listening because I

(08:20):
said that if you get COVID or die of COVID
after having taken the VACS, then that is poetic justice.
It's not what I said. I said those who pushed
the VACS, that is Fauci and Biden. I do hope

(08:43):
they get COVID. I do hope it takes them down.
You don't need to tell me that's evil or devilish
or not Christian. I understand I have family members who
died from taking that shot. I feel pretty passionately about it.
You're free to have your opinion. You're free to forgive,
for get, justify, judge, But I'm not changing my position.

(09:06):
My wife and kids took that stupid thing. You think
I want people to die from that. But the bigger
issue is not the COVID shot. The bigger issue is this,
As I wrote to the guy, you misunderstood what I said.
Here's what I said, Here's what I intended. But if

(09:26):
you say you're not listening ever again because I said
something with which you disagree, I want to be as
clear as I possibly can. If I'm left with three
people listening, but there are three honest to goodness, truth seeking, honorable, honest,
open minded, thoughtful people, I consider that better. I don't

(09:53):
listen to other shows. But we've all heard it. We've
all heard the pandering that, the jingoistic patriotism, the jingoistic manhood,
We've all heard it. If the only reason you listen

(10:13):
to our show is you agree one hundred percent with
what I say, why are you listening honestly for an
affirmation of what you already believe? That feels weird. The
old line, if we agree on everything one of us
isn't necessary to me. The interesting parts are where we disagree,

(10:38):
Why I disagree and show I'm not gonna listen. Look,
I know this sounds arrogant, but why not be honest?
You not listening is not enough to make a difference.
Our show is not sold on ratings. Our ratings are great.
Our show is sold on the basis that people who

(11:01):
sponsor the show spend a lot of money on it
because they know that our listener it's a qualitative not
a quantitative buy. They don't want everybody groupon didn't end.
Groupon didn't fall apart because nobody came to the restaurant.
Groupon fell apart because everybody came to the restaurant. It

(11:24):
was just all the wrong kind of people. Houston Restaurant
Week is not a bust because people don't come out
to eat at a restaurant that would normally be one
hundred dollars per person for twenty dollars that goes to charity.
Houston Restaurant Week is a bust because you find out
that those people coming out there that you're not gonna

(11:45):
make any money on, they're not samplers that you want
to come back. They're the deal seekers. They eat half
their meal and send it back. They show up drunk,
They stand up and stagger through the aisles. They argue
with your staff, they humiliate your staff. They don't tip,
they spill things. They piss all over the floor in

(12:07):
the bathroom. The only thing worse than groupon not or
that Houston restaurant week, or groupon not delivering people to
your restaurant is they delivered too many of all the
wrong kind. What makes our show special is that companies

(12:28):
partner with us because they get the kind of people
that you you would seek out that special person. How
often is it during a transaction that you enjoy the experience.
How often is it that you are providing air conditioning

(12:52):
services or plumbing or roofing or whatever else, and you
feel the need when you're done to send me an
email because you just talked to the most interesting guy ever.
That's where our listener is. You passed up nine houses
to get there, and eight of those nine you don't
want to do that roof You do not want to

(13:13):
have to argue. You do not want to worry he's
gonna sue you. You do not want to where he's
gonna threaten. You don't where he's gonna call the cops.
You don't worry he's gonna show up or not show
up tomorrow. So if you're that person, you got me
fed up, don't you don't get me? And that's okay.
I say this all the time. Not every marriage works. Hey,

(13:36):
we're not meant to be together. I'm not offering what
you're wanting, and you're wanting what I'm not offering. What
I am offering you don't want, which is to have
your opinions challenged. I'm gonna say things on the air
that you might not agree with. I'm gonna say things

(13:59):
that you might agree with with but don't realize it
and can't give voice to it. I'm gonna say things
that are gonna upset your wife or your mother, or
your secretary or your boss. Know that in advance. That
shouldn't come as a surprise, even though I haven't done

(14:19):
it in a little while because I've gone soft of late.
I'm gonna do that and I'm gonna keep doing it.
Not to provoke, not because I'm a shock jock, because
I believe the truth is more important than people's feelings.
If you can't tell the truth, you can't be honest.

(14:41):
If you can't offend, you can't be honest. That was
the essence of Thomas Paine's statements. A series of them
being completely honest is going to upset people. And if
you respond.

Speaker 8 (14:57):
By saying, well, I'm going to not isn't anymore good.
But I need you to know I'm not listening. Okay, Ramote,
can you.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
Redo the role and not call out Bob tomorrow so
we don't have him as absent. We just we already
know he's moved school district. He's not with us anymore.

Speaker 3 (15:20):
I grew up seeing and hearing about the horrors that
this kind of ideology can wreak upon a civilization.

Speaker 6 (15:27):
The Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
I downloaded the NASSA app on my phone, Ramon, because
I needed space. Houston Post Office employee, a mail carrier,
arrested charge was stealing credit cards to buy stuff at

(15:53):
Academy stores throughout the Houston area. Twenty six year old
Cornelius Jermaine Davis. We don't know the skin color. We
just have his name. Cornelius Germaine Davis could be anything.
Was identified after officials recognized his car during multiple curb
side pickups at various stores. The Webster Police Department officer,

(16:18):
posing as an academy employee, brought Davis his order of
stolen goods. Other officers were reportedly on standby and arrested him.
At the time of his arrest, he was found with
a fake driver's license. US Postal Service records show Cornelius
Jermaine Davis worked as a carrier technician at the Astrodome

(16:40):
station and had worked for USPS since twenty eighteen. Detectives
found evidence that he also stole checks from the mail.
What no not check Cereal? No no, no, These are
some people will still get in the mail. You're not

(17:01):
old enough to remember, but used to before. Before you
could pull out your phone and pay for things with
your phone. You know, I really do wonder if my
kids know that there's such a thing as a checkbook,
because they pay for things on Apple pay. Before. If
you wanted to give me money because we went out

(17:22):
and I bought drinks and you said I'll pay you back,
you would you would pull out this little booklet, and
you would you would ride out. In the top right
you put the date, and at the top on the
top line you'd put the person's name, and then over
to the right there'd be a box and you'd write
in the numbers, and then on the next line you

(17:44):
would spell it out. That would get people kind of
confused because they didn't really know how to A lot
of people struggled with that line. That was a tough one.
How to do that, oh man? And then in the
bottom right you would sign it, and then in the
bottom left you could put it what it was for,
but you would probably end up regretting that, so you
kind of you had any sense, you left the memo

(18:05):
line empty blank for you know, plausible deniability, and then
you would begin this process. This was the delicate dance off.
You would try to pull that check out from the booklet,
and they were supposed to have perforated it at the top,
but the way the booklet was set up, and then
you get that thing out and you'd hand it to

(18:26):
somebody and invariably it would get washed in their pants
or it would get lost. There was a lot of
and people would owe you money, but they had no
intention of paying you. So they'd say the checks in
the mail, and you'd ah, and you'd wait on the
mail every day, and probably some people had sent the
check in the mail. And there's the person waiting on

(18:47):
the check in the mail. And then here's old boy
Cornelius Jermaine Davis. He was stealing the check in the mail. Yep,
so that happened, yep, Cornelius Davis, twenty six. No idea.
They don't give us any other any demographic information, just
that he was a postal carrier. You know, day in

(19:10):
and day out, you see the rot in this nation.
Teachers that look like some sort of a freak show
from a Boy George video. You know, they've done their
hair yellow and pink and red and green all at once.
They're a boy that wants to be a girl, a
girl that wants to be a boy, and they're making

(19:31):
videos of it. They didn't make videos, we wouldn't even
know what freaks they are about how they're going to
turn your kid into some little monster. You've got the
school system screwed up, You've got postal carriers stealing stuff
from you. You've got the FBI terrorizing tax paying citizens,

(19:52):
veterans that come home and all the while you've got turds,
run them up. You've got a culture, run them up.
This is the culture of the Democrats that has like
an invasive species, has invaded the ecosystem and rotted any

(20:16):
sense of decency that made America great. This is it
and for his best efforts, this is not an overnight solution.
You've got a lot of people embedded, particularly in government,
because that's where people like this end up as government.
They end up in government because they can get hired

(20:37):
by their buddies and when they get there, they never
get fired. I bet you this guy's been stealing How
long you think this guy's been stealing? Good before? Neelis
Jermaine David.

Speaker 3 (20:52):
Hello, this is Nicky Gilly and you listen to the
season Radio Michael Berry.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
On this day in nineteen sixty seven, Charlie Pride, the
former star of the Negro Leagues, the baseball player. Fortunately
he gave up baseball to start singing. He became the
first black solo singer to perform at the Grand Old
Opry and of course Nashville, Tennessee. He was invited to

(21:25):
perform after the success of his hit Just Between You
and Me, which made it to number nine on the
Country Music Charts, written of course from owned by Jack Clement. Yes,
yet another song part of the soundtrack of Your Life

(21:50):
written by Jack Clement. Still a highlight of my RCC
years and my life to get to meet Charlie Pride.
And I think that was the most fun person we
booked because we just started calling him out on the
air until finally his manager got wind of it and
called us up. You can tell him to stop, now,

(22:12):
we'll do a show. I think it was in January. No,
it was in December. It was in December because it
was what's old boy's name, that's a cosmic cowboys, last
thing I needed. First thing this morning, three names, Gary P. Nunn.

(22:32):
It was December fifth, I think, and we had Gary P.
Nunn's birthday, And so they called us in like June
and said, all right, all right, you can tell Michael
to stop. Here's your one day. He's got to be
in town for some medical stuff and some different things,

(22:54):
and you can have December fifth and we'll work out
the money. We did. He was very reasonable on the money,
and he said December fifth, and it was Gary P.
Nun's seventieth birthday and Gary P. Nunn had called me
two months before that and said, hey, I'm turning seventy
in December and I want to do three concerts to

(23:14):
commemorate it. And that's John T Floors and Billy Bob's
and RCC. And when he said that, I thought this
is weird. I appreciate that, but we're not in that league.

(23:35):
And he said, nope, that that's the three places that
are meaningful to me and that's why I want to
do it. So we did. So I had to call
him back say, Gary P. Here's the story. I've been
trying to get Charlie Pride and the only day they
would give us was December fifth. And he said, Michael,
I understand, don't worry. We'll we'll do it. Well, we'll
do it, and we'll do another show in the new year.

(23:55):
I'll find somewhere else to do it. I said, no,
it's worse than that. I'm not calling to cancel you.
I'm calling to ask you if you will open. It's
your seventieth birthday party and I'm asking you to open.
This is an insult. But I said, look, you got it,
and he said stop stop open for Charlie yes, that's
an honor. I just want to meet him, and he did,

(24:19):
and the whole thing was a hoot. And remember we
got the cake made of the armadilla holding the lone star.
Oh what a night. Vaughn on the black line, Vaon,
you are up, sir?

Speaker 9 (24:30):
Hey, how you doing? Mike good calling from Beaumont.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
Uh five seconds in?

Speaker 9 (24:38):
Okay? Right? Okay, well yeah with Cornelia's he said, no better.
You know, each particular mail is photographed and then automatically trade,
so you know, according to delivery sequence and about more
than ninety five percent of the mail you know, is

(24:59):
done that way. Uh, you know sequence and uh and everything,
and you know each trade go to a carrier, so
they know exactly, uh you know, the order of that
mail and who's carrying it.

Speaker 1 (25:12):
Yeah, but hold on, hold on, easy to judging, hold on.

Speaker 9 (25:15):
Okay, So so.

Speaker 1 (25:16):
They know, but they don't have a GPS on it, right.
So so they know that that mails go through this
place and went to this carrier, but they don't know
if the carrier put it in his pocket or put
it in the in the box.

Speaker 9 (25:32):
Well, well, the thing is is that he's responsible because
he handled the mail. They don't know if he missed
delivery to the to the neighbor before or after the house.
But they know the sequence in order of the mail,
and uh, if it happened more than one time, you know,
they can see the good that is that. Yeah, especially

(25:52):
if it's credit cards or something like that. So it
wasn't hard for them write at thirty two years, I.

Speaker 1 (26:02):
Was going to say, why did you leave? Because nobody leaves.

Speaker 9 (26:07):
Oh yeah, well there's a lot of people, young people nowadays,
they leave and a lot of them go to the
plants and stuff. Well, another way they used to catch
carriers is that they used to write down the serial
number of the paper money and put it in the
envelope and have part of it kind of showing, and
you know, carrier was still it that way. Sometimes they

(26:29):
would write the serial number and leave it on the
floor in the post office or in the jeep or
something like that.

Speaker 1 (26:35):
So that was happening a lot.

Speaker 9 (26:38):
God, no, that wasn't happening a lot. But you know
when it did happen, they you know, they would have
a way to discover the carrier.

Speaker 1 (26:49):
You know, how is different from when you when did
what years you retire.

Speaker 9 (26:57):
In twenty eighteen?

Speaker 1 (26:58):
How is it different five years ago.

Speaker 9 (27:02):
Oh, well, they didn't take pictures of the you know,
they do that, you know, and they you don't care.
I mean, customers can go online or in something and
see what they have coming in the mail, you know.
So they started that when I was kind of going
out maybe the last couple of years, you know. And

(27:26):
well it was hard to getting on when I got
on in eighty six. You know, you have to take
a test and the memory report was pretty hard. But
nowadays there was always a sign up at the post
office around here trying to get Yeah. I used to
tell people all the time, you know, to go in

(27:47):
and try to get a job and stuff because we
needed help. But just about every single person that I
told h half something wrong with their record. Well they couldn't,
you know, either drive us a license, bad record of
something was wrong. And I don't think one of them
came in, you know. But yeah, there's something else though.

(28:09):
You know.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
A buddy of mine, buddy of mine has a has
a it is a company called Liquid Assets, and they
deliver liquors to specs and other liquor stores. And so
when he needs a driver and they go to hire
a driver, it's something like for every two hundred applications
they get, somebody has a clean record. They can't even

(28:32):
begin to talk to somebody because their insurance from to
carry somebod unless they have a clean record. And you
can't find a mail between the ages of you know,
eighteen and forty five that has a clean record anymore.
They've all got dwi's, they've all got I mean, it's
exactly it is. It is rough, and everybody tells me

(28:52):
this when you're hiring for somebody to drive the military
has you know, they've had to lower the standards. Hold
on just a second, body

Speaker 7 (29:00):
Zero
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