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May 6, 2025 • 31 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, time, lock and load.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
The Michael Berry Show is on the air. You sure
you're ready for This.

Speaker 3 (00:15):
I'll do my best.

Speaker 4 (00:18):
Your best losers always whine about their best.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Winners go home and the prom queen.

Speaker 5 (00:29):
It's long been a symbol Alcatraz whatever it is. I mean,
you know, it's a sad symbol, but it's a it's
a symbol of law and order, and uh, you know,
it's got quite a history, frankly, so I think we're
going to do that, and we're looking at her right now. Good.

Speaker 6 (00:47):
You know, I don't know nothing about the internet.

Speaker 7 (00:51):
Once my son d my.

Speaker 8 (00:52):
Tourists got me hook up to that illegal disc direct
TV and got me a cricket.

Speaker 7 (00:58):
Song I don't have to pay for.

Speaker 8 (00:59):
I don't care if nothing else behind that. But I
kept hearing this every time I went somewhere, even at
market basket.

Speaker 7 (01:05):
They would ask, oh, miss Nicko, what have you tweeted
on there? I said, what you talking about?

Speaker 6 (01:10):
And they said, oh, I seen your tweets.

Speaker 7 (01:12):
I said, honey, I don't have no bird seed out here.

Speaker 8 (01:16):
I said, I'm trying to grow some grand And you know,
they say it's on the internet. Can you go on there?

Speaker 7 (01:21):
And uh, I said, what do it do?

Speaker 8 (01:23):
They said, well, you put up one thoughtand a time
on this Twitter and either the people will like it
or they will hate it, or they will cursh up.
And uh tiny she explained how I could go on
there and do this?

Speaker 6 (01:37):
And uh so the first thing I look up was
who is my friends on h Well, of course Michael
Barry was on there with seventeen thous comments.

Speaker 7 (01:49):
Made about things.

Speaker 6 (01:50):
Oh my god, I said, what the parsident Trump had
on there?

Speaker 7 (01:55):
They said thirty five thous and thoughts of ignorance, So,
oh my god, So only the President of United State
got more ignorant comments to Michael Barrett.

Speaker 6 (02:08):
And they said, yes, Well, so I took a Supreme
Court judge right there we'll be It was just.

Speaker 7 (02:14):
Flow edgingly down here at the community center, but I
notarized it. And they said, I will never keep tweet trick.

Speaker 6 (02:24):
On him longer than it need to be dead, which
is used about.

Speaker 7 (02:29):
Ten minutes hunting. It's like, anybody want to be heard
from it if I want to get their word in,
everybody want to get on TV. Everybody will get paid.

Speaker 8 (02:39):
That's the thing people suppants to get paid.

Speaker 4 (02:45):
If you watched Kentucky Derby, you already know. But if
you didn't, President Trump winning in November was not just
beating the Democrats. It was beating the media, the self
described journalists who are not their advocates. How about the
fact that the Kentucky Derby had a horse named Sovereignty

(03:08):
beating out another horse named journalism to win the Derby.
What are the chances you couldn't script this stuff?

Speaker 9 (03:17):
Journalism is on the move because they turned for home,
and Sovereignty is coming with him on the outside.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
The two of them go right by with a prolonged run.

Speaker 9 (03:27):
Journalism and Sovereignty loves to those down to the last
sixteenth of a mile. Sovereignty has taken the lead. Journalism
is second toward the outside. Bayes's third. But it will
be Sovereignty.

Speaker 10 (03:41):
To rule the Kentucky Derby.

Speaker 9 (03:44):
Journalism and baleys over next final cap it was furth.
The penal time was two or two quite three one seconds.

Speaker 4 (03:55):
Sovereignty beat journalism. President Trump saying, the sovereignty of our nation,
the fact that we control this property properly, rightfully, And
the journal is saying, but what about the people who
should get to come here and kill.

Speaker 3 (04:14):
Us all.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
You know.

Speaker 4 (04:17):
I have been a Wall Street Journal reader for many years.
There was a time that I would tell you that
the Wall Street Journal was the finest bit of financial
and political journalism out there. But they have changed. I
have remarked many times on the air, and I've had
people email me and say I'm glad you said something
because nobody else has mentioned it. Well, obviously President Trump's

(04:40):
had a problem with it as well. A reporter from
the Wall Street Journal tried to ask President Trump a
question and the president this was on this was a
board Air Force one. The President just let him have it.
Tell you what.

Speaker 5 (04:57):
People do theirself? Bad journal, It's truly gotten the hell
go ahead, rotten this paper. Everybody I said, it's rotten
this spacer. And I wouldn't tell them glow Set Journal
because any wasted time they're right talks. I don't want something.
Both Street Channel is China oriented. Bitch in this comman.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
It's true, it's true.

Speaker 4 (05:25):
A week or so ago, the Wall Street Journal ran
a story that said that the Tesla board had begun
a search for a new CEO. Well that wasn't true,
and they were forced to double back. But do you
ever notice their error is never the other way. They

(05:48):
never get it wrong about Hunter Biden or Joe Biden,
and it's more negative than it turns out to be.
It's always always cutting against what's good in decent.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
What are they so mad about?

Speaker 4 (06:06):
W y FF NBC News for in Greenville, South Carolina
went to an anti Trump, anti Elon rally and ask
people there, you're here protesting against Trump and Elon? Why
are you protesting?

Speaker 11 (06:20):
There are considerations that are not being taken about people
who are needy and unfortunate.

Speaker 12 (06:27):
This government is there.

Speaker 13 (06:28):
They're hurting people to get more profit for the for
these billionaires and all of these people, but the average
person are being are being hurt by this, and so
we want to call attention to.

Speaker 5 (06:36):
That and say that we're not going to stand for it.

Speaker 14 (06:37):
A very strong ground swell of support for the support
against what's going on in our country right now, and
hopefully we get uh it'll turn the tide when we
come back to the elections in a couple of years.

Speaker 4 (06:53):
They couldn't find a single person that could explain to
reporters why they were actually protest. I like to bring
this one out and dust it off from time to
time for no other reason than to revel in it.
Rush used to do that. There's certain bits of audio
that I just right on, right on. This was Fox

(07:13):
News breaking the story that Donald Trump had settled his
lawsuit with ABC News and George Stephanopoulos for a cool
fifteen million dollars. You folks not lied, You knew it,
and now you're going to pay me for it. This
was just in December, a few months ago.

Speaker 12 (07:34):
ABC News and George Stephanopholis have reached a settlement with
Presidents Elect Trump in his defamation lawsuit. The network agrees
to pay fifteen million dollars as a charitable contribution to
Trump's presidential library. ABC and Stephanopolis will also issue statements
of regret as an editor's note to the March twenty

(07:56):
twenty four article and television segment that prompted Trump to
file the lawsuit. Earlier this year, Trump sued Stephanopoulos after
he asserted in an interview that Trump was found quote
liable for rape in a civil case, despite the fact
that a jury actually determined Trump was liable for quote
sexual abuse, which has a distinct definition under New York law.

Speaker 4 (08:22):
What you allow me to introduce myself. My name is
Mitch Michael Berry genius.

Speaker 3 (08:31):
This video gives me every time.

Speaker 4 (08:36):
You go to the YouTube machine fits us in the
official video for this, there's a lot of video him
at Houston Livestock Show on Rodeo.

Speaker 2 (08:49):
And it is a young.

Speaker 4 (08:50):
I mean, look, King George has aged very well, very well.
He's got no regrets on that.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
But he looks like a kid.

Speaker 4 (09:03):
Was it eighty two eighty three when he first takes
the stage and they got him multiple years there, and
he's he's not very tall, much like Merle Haggard. He's
a short guy. And it's him going out on it's him.
It's him reaching down and touching the fans, and he's

(09:26):
like a child prodigy. He's baby faced. He's uh, he's
almost shy. He looks almost shy, and he's reaching down
and touching the fans there, and they got you know,
the cops or the security around him, and it's.

Speaker 2 (09:47):
It's a beautiful thing.

Speaker 4 (09:48):
It's a beautiful thing to see. Now. By the end,
he does not look as old as he is. Of course,
he still looks right, but he kind of had it
kind of bows his head when he says, you know,
when he when The song is about being what.

Speaker 2 (10:11):
We're an eyes of course we.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
Are, Oh, it's what are we out?

Speaker 2 (10:30):
Now?

Speaker 3 (10:34):
Well?

Speaker 4 (10:35):
True? The bottom never is that a damn noble never.

Speaker 3 (10:42):
Don't really tell.

Speaker 2 (10:44):
The whole truth.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
It don't show on Stephen's side all between the lines.

Speaker 4 (10:56):
You know, it's a crazy thing when you've got an
emergency alert you have to put out, and the emergency
alert always happens during the content of our show and
never during the news segment. It's almost as if somebody's
making the decision that the news is more important than
our show, because I'm sure somebody's sitting out there going, hey,

(11:17):
it's eight twenty, let's go get the news. We'll tolerate
Michael Berry in between. It's the news we're looking for.
It's the news that are more important. It's almost as
if somebody is sitting in a corner office whose name
you'll never know, who says, make sure you play the
eas during Michael's show and not during the news, because

(11:44):
the news is how I get paid, and the news
is how I measure my wiener. It's all most as
if that's the case, but it's not.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
But we don't mind. We don't mind at all.

Speaker 4 (11:56):
I mean, you know, just play something else during our
show as long as you have that news, because that
news that news man, whoo, what's that?

Speaker 3 (12:09):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (12:10):
Yeah, We'll break into the bottom of the news because
because I'm sure that between eight and eleven people tune
in and think to themselves, man, nothing else. We're gonna
get some news today. We're gonna get that news. We'll
tolerate Michael Berry. Well whatever the guy or whatever guy's
name is, It talks in between, but we we gotta
have that news. It's almost as if it is it

(12:32):
is being ordered from on high that the news will
never be interrupted, but our show will always be interrupted
by the requisite eas But that that wouldn't happen, would it?
Go woke?

Speaker 3 (12:49):
Go broke?

Speaker 4 (12:51):
Don't feel sorry for Lululemon, since they've made very clear
that they don't want staff confronting or calling the popo
on thieves. They went so far as firing two employees
in Atlanta for doing it. When thugs came in and
stole items on the shelves. They fired them for trying

(13:16):
to stop the guys. Kprctv's Amy Davis reports at flash
mob shoplifters have targeted at Houston Lululemon stores fifty one
times in the last six months. From July through January,
POPO arrested eleven shoplifting suspects at the three Houston locations,

(13:37):
with total losses surpassing two hundred and seventy five thousand dollars.

Speaker 10 (13:44):
Hereious bold, brazen thieves targeting Lululemon stores all of Houston,
and customers have had enough for.

Speaker 13 (13:53):
An employee to tell us it doesn't last that long.
They're not violent, just hang out for a minute normalizing.
That is just insand to me, I mean why.

Speaker 10 (14:01):
Jess Schindler says she was trapped in this Height store
in February when five men barged inside.

Speaker 13 (14:07):
Somebody got knocked over that was right in their pathway,
and they have these large trash bags and they were
just shoveling as much merchandise as possible.

Speaker 10 (14:15):
They're called Lulu boosters, selling stolen goods on social media
from these stores to your Facebook feed. The organized retail
theft is easy to track. Is that putting a strain
on resources for HPD.

Speaker 15 (14:28):
Yes, ma'am at Salado calls for service check it out.

Speaker 10 (14:32):
In just six months at the Height store, the Rice
Village and the City Center Lululemon locations, flash mob shoplifters
struck fifty one times. On January fourth, thieves stole two
hundred and ten pairs of leggings or twenty one thousand
dollars from the Rice Village location. One hour later, a
group took eighteen thousand dollars worth of clothes from the

(14:52):
City Center store, and reports show on January eighteenth, thieves
return to the Heights location three times at one o
two pm, again at three twelve, and a third time
at four to ten, a more than ten thousand dollars
day for thieves who simply walked out. Do you think
there's something Lululemon could be doing to prevent these crimes?

Speaker 15 (15:13):
From what we've seen at other department stores is they
have some form of security, either inside the store or
outside the store.

Speaker 12 (15:20):
Lululemen doesn't really have.

Speaker 15 (15:21):
That, not that I've seen.

Speaker 16 (15:22):
No.

Speaker 15 (15:23):
Have you asked why I have, but I have not
gotten an answer yet.

Speaker 10 (15:28):
When we reached out to Lululemon, a spokesperson sent us
this statement that explained the company does use on site
security in some stores across the country, and that they
are continually assessing and updating their security measures.

Speaker 13 (15:40):
Why have everybody that works here so calm about this?
It's like they're you know, they've acclimated for this environment and.

Speaker 4 (16:09):
You wis them just a few ours.

Speaker 3 (16:17):
Be to you? Oh what can I do?

Speaker 13 (16:30):
What can I do?

Speaker 4 (16:33):
I saw an interview with as Freely last night and
he said, uh, Jeanne and Paul.

Speaker 2 (16:41):
He did this so much.

Speaker 4 (16:44):
That Peter came in and recorded it. They didn't even
come into the studio while he recorded this. There's your
drummer back there in the back, contributing to the show,
trying to carry his weight. They go love thoull Loveile.

(17:06):
They don't even show up at the studio.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
Did it on his own?

Speaker 4 (17:10):
Ace Freely came in well, Paul Stanley and Jean Simmons
did not. Peter wrote it, recorded it and for my money,
for my money, it's as good as anything.

Speaker 2 (17:23):
Kissed it. Because they weren't this kind of band.

Speaker 4 (17:28):
This was how you knew. I mean, you're thinking to yourself,
these guys go around.

Speaker 2 (17:32):
And make up all time. They're badasses.

Speaker 4 (17:34):
Everyone rock and roll, Detroit, rock City, big old platform shoes.
These are men's men dressed up like pantomimes. But Beth
shows you that you know, when it gets time to business,
They're gonna get down to business. And little do you
know that that's happening. So think about our country is

(17:59):
in such disarray, most of it over race. Even the
stuff that involves white liberals uses race. Our country right
now is a subset of blacks. I don't know what
percentage blacks is. I say it's ten percent absolutely running

(18:21):
them up, and the rest of blacks going would you
people knock it off? And the white liberals cheering them on,
and the law enforcement apparatus saying, well, we're gonna do
whatever it takes to show that we're not the Trump guys.

(18:43):
So just burn, pillage, rape, murder, and everybody else.

Speaker 2 (18:50):
Quietly seething.

Speaker 4 (18:53):
You don't steal two hundred and seventy five thousand dollars. Look,
I'm not saying Lululemon's affordable, it's not. But you don't
steal two hundred seventy five thousand dollars worth of yoga
pants in Houston without some people noticing.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
To what happens.

Speaker 4 (19:13):
More and more people just move out of the city,
move out of the city, move out of the city.
We are in the midst of the worst racial problems
in American in modern American history.

Speaker 2 (19:25):
And nobody talks about it.

Speaker 4 (19:28):
I bet some of you Koreans when I talk about it,
I get it all the time. People don't know what
to do. All right, play the story again, or mon
listen carefully. This is happening in Huge. You're telling me
we can't stop this from happening.

Speaker 10 (19:44):
Bold brazen thieves targeting Lululemon stores all of Houston and
customers have had enough for.

Speaker 13 (19:51):
An employee to tell us it doesn't last that long.
They're not violent, just hang out for a minute. Normalizing
that is just insanity to me.

Speaker 10 (19:58):
I mean, why says she was trapped in this Height
store in February when five men barged inside.

Speaker 13 (20:05):
Somebody got knocked over that was right in their pathway.
And they have these large trash bags and they were
just shoveling as much merchandise as possible.

Speaker 10 (20:13):
They're called Lulu boosters selling stolen goods on social media
from these stores to your Facebook feed. The organized retail
theft is easy to track. Is that putting a strain
on resources for HPD.

Speaker 15 (20:26):
Yes, ma'am at Salado calls for service check it out.

Speaker 10 (20:30):
In just six months at the Height store, the Rice
Village and the City Center Lululemon locations. Flash mob shoplifters
struck fifty one times. On January fourth, thieves stole two
hundred and ten pairs of leggings or twenty one thousand
dollars from the Rice Village location. One hour later, a
group took eighteen thousand dollars worth of clothes from the

(20:50):
City Center store, and reports show on January eighteenth, thieves
return to the Heights location three times at one oh
two pm, again at three twelve, and a third time
at four ten, a more than ten thousand dollars day
for thieves who simply walked out. Do you think there's
something Lululemon could be doing to prevent.

Speaker 15 (21:11):
These crimes from what we've seen at other department stores
is they have some form of security, either inside the
store or outside the store.

Speaker 4 (21:17):
There you go, there's your yoga pant politics. Lululemon wanted
to believe.

Speaker 2 (21:26):
We'll just love people to death.

Speaker 4 (21:28):
I see this all I see mothers who don't discipline
their children. You see it all the time. I'm not
going to confront reality. I'm going to bend reality to
what I want.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
It to be.

Speaker 4 (21:47):
Bad people are bad people just as simple as that
yoga pant. Politics bad politics.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
Every business is.

Speaker 1 (21:56):
Everybody you do business. They don't even tell you about
the product, no more, they just tell you how much
charity they do.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
He say, we give back.

Speaker 3 (22:06):
We like to give back.

Speaker 17 (22:08):
We don't even like the money, We.

Speaker 3 (22:12):
Just give back.

Speaker 17 (22:13):
I'm in them all other than I went by that store.

Speaker 1 (22:16):
What's this thing called Lulu Limen Lulu Liman. I walked
by and in the window of every Lululuman there's a
sign that says we don't support racism, sexism, discrimination or hate.
And I'm like, who gives them? You're just selling yoga pants.

(22:39):
I don't need your yoga pants. Politics. Tell me how
you work on a sweat.

Speaker 17 (22:49):
You're talking about man.

Speaker 1 (22:51):
And then I'm watching the game the other night there's
a at there's a commercial for a super Root, commercial
for super Root, and it said, uh, for every super
rul we sell, we'll donate two hundred and fifty dollars
to your favorite charity.

Speaker 17 (23:07):
And I'm like, who gives a I'm like, supararo, you
want to help me out, why don't you just sell
me the car for two fifty less?

Speaker 1 (23:21):
I'm my favorite charity. They sell one hundred dollars yoga pants.
One hundred dollars yoga pants. They hate somebody, they hate
the poor.

Speaker 17 (23:41):
One hundred dollars yama pants.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Hold, no, no correction, They don't sell a hundred dollars
yoga pants. They sell one hundred dollars.

Speaker 17 (23:49):
Non racist yoga pants.

Speaker 1 (23:52):
I think I speak for the entire audience tonight when
I say most people in this crowd would prefer a pet,
a twenty dollars racist yoga pet.

Speaker 12 (24:07):
To the Anglo doing a great job in memorial.

Speaker 4 (24:11):
Paste my diversity a firm US. An eighty year old
woman who was violently robbed by a thug who had
been paroled two years after being convicted as a juvenile
for murder, tells Khou, they shouldn't let somebody go that's

(24:35):
viscient and vicious and violent, because the more I hear
about him what he did, the more it concerns me
that something could have happened really bad to me. He
could have had a gun and did something to me.

Speaker 2 (24:46):
Well, he didn't kill.

Speaker 4 (24:47):
You, but he will kill somebody else. He will absolutely
kill somebody else, And maybe Laurie Chambers Gray, the Democrat
judge that Rodney Ellis owns maybe shehould put him back
out on the streets again. When I say maybe, I
mean absolutely one d percent.

Speaker 3 (25:05):
I thank you.

Speaker 11 (25:06):
I spend that right here.

Speaker 16 (25:07):
Sandra Glenn is eighty one years old. She tells me
she's feeling thankful, yet still shaken after what she's been through.

Speaker 11 (25:14):
I have never had anything happen to me like this, you.

Speaker 12 (25:18):
Know, never.

Speaker 16 (25:19):
On April third, she was at her apartment complex in
a Ley loading up her car to head out. She
says she noticed a man nearby, but didn't think much
of it until he approached her and yanked the lanyard
with her car keys from around her neck.

Speaker 11 (25:31):
And he started pulling on it and he was trying
to get it over my head.

Speaker 16 (25:36):
Police have now identified him as Benny Simmons. He just
turned eighteen last week, but was seventeen at the time
of the incident. According to Glenn, Simmons pulled so hard
on the lanyard he knocked her to the ground, leaving
her very bruised.

Speaker 11 (25:49):
Hit my head and then I was just kind of
a shock, and I jumped up and ranch forwarded the car.

Speaker 16 (25:57):
A neighbor contacted the apartment management. Simmons allegedly tried to
drive off. They called me and told me about the
gate fight lock there. In the process, he reportedly crashed
into several vehicles before getting out and running away. Houston
police say he was later arrested because he dropped his
cell phone at the scene, and we've learned this wasn't
simmons first running with the law.

Speaker 11 (26:18):
Mister Simmons is on parole for capital murder and aggravated robbery.

Speaker 16 (26:22):
The capital murder charge dates back to when he was
just fourteen, when he shot and killed a man during
a robbery. He was convicted and sentenced to twenty years,
but released on parole after only serving two.

Speaker 11 (26:32):
They shouldn't let somebody go that that smat fish is unviolent,
And because the more I hear about him and what
he did, the more it concerns me that something could
have happened really bad to me. He could have had
a gun and did sam fay to.

Speaker 16 (26:49):
The Glenn tells me she's always been aware of her surroundings,
but after this she plans to be even more cautious.

Speaker 11 (26:55):
I'm scared to dance the people that I say, because
I'm thinking they could be violent.

Speaker 4 (27:02):
See the real tragedy here is the rich white liberal
doesn't live in the neighborhoods.

Speaker 2 (27:08):
We have to deal with this.

Speaker 4 (27:10):
The rich white liberal doesn't live in an apartment complex
a leaf. They don't have to walk in and out
past his trash every day. Fourteen year old murders somebody,
We say, well, he's a juvenile. Can you imagine would
you have murdered somebody at fourteen years old?

Speaker 2 (27:29):
Would your kid?

Speaker 4 (27:31):
What kind of person murders somebody at fourteen years old?
And poor bastard, I'm not without any sympathy. That's a
little monster. I guarantee is his mother's a whore. I
guarantee you they live in a Section eight housing that
you've paid for. I guarantee there hadn't been an honest

(27:53):
dollar made in that household, which doesn't have a father
in it. His entire life. To you, that little punk
has seen the worst movie you've ever seen, k new
Jack City. His entire life doesn't make it okay, doesn't
It doesn't make the victims feel any better. But I
guarantee you that that young punk has been destined for

(28:18):
awful from the beginning. The difference now is the Rodney
Ellis George Soros coalition says no, no, no, put him back
out on the street. How much can you rape? How
much can you pillage? How many white people can you
beat to death and murder? And that's what's happening, slowly
but surely at an accelerated pace, happening in the schools,

(28:42):
in the subways. That's the liberals wet dream, that you'd
be stuck on a subway where you can't get out,
and you will be subjected to this nonsense day in
and day out. For most people, most people listening to
me right now, they have no idea.

Speaker 2 (28:59):
How bad it is.

Speaker 4 (29:00):
Because your kids aren't going to these schools, you don't
live in these neighborhoods, you don't have to get on
the bus with them. This is a subset of blacks
who are terrorizing other blacks, but you'll never hear about that.
And whites, it is an out and out race war
for them, and it's being stoked. Jasmine Crockett every day
stoking it. Rodney ellis every day stoking it. And it

(29:24):
only gets worse, it doesn't get better. There's not a
good thing to come of this. There's not an upside,
there's not a light at the end.

Speaker 2 (29:33):
Of the tunnel.

Speaker 3 (29:36):
You are.

Speaker 4 (29:36):
You are launching savages who have no job skills. They've
never seen somebody. I'll bet you this kid has never
seen or this guy has never seen a human being.

Speaker 2 (29:49):
Get up and go to work.

Speaker 4 (29:51):
You take for granted everything that made you who you are.
If you were raised in an apartment, men coming in
and out, your mother's a whore. You don't know how
the rent's paid you.

Speaker 2 (30:06):
Money is not.

Speaker 4 (30:07):
Something you earn. You don't have a budget.

Speaker 2 (30:09):
What a quaint concept.

Speaker 4 (30:13):
And other people have money. I don't know how they
get it, but damn I got to get some too.
And you've done without, no doubt, you've done without. You'd
like to have some of that money. The only way
to get it is turntracks or bash them in the head.
By the time you're twenty two to twenty three, you
got a rap sheet a mile along.

Speaker 2 (30:33):
You've committed a murder.

Speaker 4 (30:35):
You don't know why you get off.

Speaker 2 (30:36):
But you got off.

Speaker 4 (30:38):
I might not be here.

Speaker 2 (30:39):
In a month.

Speaker 4 (30:39):
I'm gonna live for this moment. I'm gonna bash that
old lady in the head. So I wonder he didn't
kill her, Probably didn't have time, or maybe he's just bored.
Maybe it's feeling lazy. He didn't want to put in
an effort to finish her off. You think you rehabilitate
this guy, but what are you teaching plumbing? Seriously, this

(31:00):
guy's gonna be around for the rest of his life.
You throw him in a cage, or you put him
out there to kill the next person and hope he
catches it. How would you like to be a cop?
How'd you like to put on your uniform?

Speaker 2 (31:08):
Every day?

Speaker 4 (31:09):
There's your little kids dead, dad, dad, dad, dad dad.
That's gotta go to work, baby, And no, you gotta
go out and if you're in that precinct, you gotta
go deal with that. Will you put that guy away?

Speaker 2 (31:20):
What's the next one?

Speaker 4 (31:21):
And by the way, if he puts if he pulls
a gun on you, there's quant election, the media and
the whole thing if you put him down first. But
if he kills you, that's okay. Boy, I said, a
real pretty picture, isn't It doesn't have to be this way,
but it.

Speaker 2 (31:35):
Is this way. Make no mistake. It is this way.

Speaker 4 (31:38):
This is the reality. You don't see it because you've
moved out to Waller, You've moved out to Republic gran Ram.
But for the people, that poor white lady that lives
in the middle of this. God help this old way
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