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September 18, 2024 • 32 mins
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, luck and load. So Michael
Arry Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
I can see clear rais neuralink elon Musk's brain chip
startup received FDA approval as a breakthrough device for its
implant aimed at restoring sight to the blind.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
The experimental device, named blind Sight, will enable even those
who have been blind from birth to see for the
first time, Musk wrote on x He says the vision
will be low resolution at first, but has the potential
to be better than natural sight. Plus it already works

(01:11):
on monkeys. The start date for trials is yet to
be announced. Can you imagine how exciting that's going to be?
Ramon people that have never seen in their lives to
head to have site for the first time. Thirty forty
to fifty however they are for the first time to

(01:34):
have site is going to be you'd start with the
umpires from last night's game. Did you see they ejected
all twove for taking off his shoe.

Speaker 3 (01:52):
That hits out two day's foot.

Speaker 4 (01:54):
They're going to sing the ball breddittt Miller's going to
say that ball didn't hit out too bay and that's
going to be the final out of the Brennan Miller
is not ingratiating himself to Astros players, coaches or manager.

Speaker 5 (02:07):
You've got to ask for help.

Speaker 4 (02:09):
You gotta check with other umpires to see if it
did hit al Tuo. B al Tub needs to be
pulled out of a situation.

Speaker 5 (02:16):
They need to keep him in this game.

Speaker 4 (02:20):
They're gonna say that's a fair ball and it did
not hit Altube. In the end of the inning, Josh
Hater taking the mound here for the bottom half of
the ninth inning, alto be showing where it hit his
foot and now he's ejected. Oh man, that's amazing. You're

(02:41):
right though. They should have got Alto b out of there.
He's been ejected. We're going to have a tie game.
Heading to the bottom of the ninth Altube will limp
off the field. This game is crazy.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
The Astros would go ahead, go on to win, and
I think that extends their lead to five? Is that right?
Magic number? Now, Ramon three is the magic number in
the school of Rock. That's not really what I needed
to know, Bruce writes Peton pet In, I guess that's

(03:13):
how you pronounce it is from glycerin, which as an
explosive when they swipe your hands at the airport. The
machine detects pet in. Never use hand lotion if you're
going to fly, because hand lotion contains glycerin. I never
heard that before. Let's start with Kevin. Kevin, you're on

(03:36):
the Michael Berry Show. You know about explosives, Yes.

Speaker 6 (03:42):
I do.

Speaker 7 (03:43):
I used to work a dual fiscal on on in Colorado.
And that's basically how we had our source points, which
are which we had a two ways either with explosives
or with with big vibrator trucks and I and I

(04:05):
have operated both and uh and I was and I
was one of the guys that I was one of
the guys that that uh uh and would send it
off at first and then I basically and once I

(04:26):
get once I got the Colorado certifications, I handled this
stuff so and it is a lot of bureaucratic layers
there to handle the stuff and it and the control
on that is in freakingsane so and and on on.

(04:55):
Our charges were from uh uh uh from over from
about from about a quarter pound to uh to about
a pound and a half and and they were drive
down between fifty and one hundred, one hundred, one hundred
and fifty foot down, so whenever it went off, it

(05:19):
would send a waves to the waves of the center
grid and and that would and that would image your
you're on oil and gas. Uh uh uh the uh
the oil and gas. Uh, the oil and the oil

(05:43):
and gas. I want to say aquifers, but we can
you know, we could image aquiphers too, so and it
and on and he and even uh and even one

(06:03):
ounce of the stuff can't can blow your hand off.
That's that's probably that's probably the month that they used
on on in those pagers.

Speaker 4 (06:14):
And uh.

Speaker 7 (06:15):
That could uh, that could easily be about the size
of double a battery.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
Yeah, because it's got to be tiny to still fit
in naturally with the pagers. Bob, Bob, you're on the
Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 5 (06:37):
Hey, Michael, how you doing. I have a little more
of a local story for you. I was involved in
the building of a refracting or refracing plant down in
Roch Sharon, Texas when they built their their manufacturing facility,
and that's where they manufactured the fracking powder. And it

(06:57):
was our responsibility to put a anti static floor in
that facility, which was probably one hundred thousand square feet
of flooring. That you had to dissipate the electric charge
out of your body once you stepped on that floor,
because any static electricity in that plant would pretty much

(07:18):
wipe out road sharing. It was just a few grains
of that fracking powder. It will blow your hand off,
it's that volatile. And the walls on that facility are
about three foot thick with cinder block and rebar and
concrete in between, so it was like a fortress. After

(07:40):
we put the floor, and they had to paint radio
frequency lines on the floor because most of the powder
that was distributed throughout that plant was done by robotics,
So the little robots that would carry powder from one
process to the next would run on radio frequency lines

(08:02):
in the floor. So there weren't that many humans that
really worked in the plant. Amazing facility.

Speaker 1 (08:11):
It's you know there is It's interesting to me you
think of things like anthrax and different explosives, bio weapons
and the like, the fact that some people, in the
course of a day deal with things that just the
slightest error could kill them. In many other people, I mean,

(08:36):
we screw up all day every day and there's really
no consequence. I just come back and say I goofed.
I messed that up. Lan does it all day long.
Nobody's harmed. Can you imagine working in that kind of environment.
I had pink I went real bad pink out and
I went to this place was like a hazmat center,
and I thought, Man, I'm here this one day. Y'all

(08:57):
have to live like this. Ross rides six buzzards out
of the sky with a shockwave. US Army combat engineer.

(09:17):
I played with explosives. Depending on the explosive, you can
get it to any direction you want. Four Symtex etc.
Are shaped TNT just goes in all directions. We used
to put C four in a snuffcan to blow door
handles off of doors, or strap a pound of it
to a bag of water with one hundred mile an

(09:39):
hour tape. Then tape that package to a door. It'll
fold the door in half and blow it off the
hinges and take whatever. Let's just say a pejorative term
for a person who lives in that region of the world.

(10:00):
Out on the other side, we would use d play
some music.

Speaker 8 (10:11):
I didn't see, but.

Speaker 1 (10:33):
Yeah that obviously I hadn't read the email before I
read it on the air, so I'm glad I caught myself.
We would we would use deep chord. I don't know
what deep chord is. People keep writing to me, and

(10:55):
I'm not an expert and everything. D e T space
co o, you heard a deep chord. Let me look
that up. Play us some music, because I gotta look
up what deep chord is. We're probably mispronound. Detonating chord,
also called detonation chord, debta chord, debt chord, or primer chord,

(11:16):
is a thin plastic, flexible plastic tube usually filled with
pet N pentrite, as it's called with the pet in.
I wonder if that's called petin. I'm here to tell
you for you explosives people, I'm gonna mess these words
up because I don't know them. With the ptin exploding

(11:36):
at a rate of approximately sixty four hundred meters a
second or miles a second, any common length of detonation
cord appears to explode instantaneously. It is a high speed
fuse which explodes rather than burns, and is suitable for
detonating high explosives. Oh, I'm gonna start using debt chord

(11:59):
a lot. I's gonna start working that in there. That's
like not having anyone watch the ballots. I mean, you
know you got this. That's just setting off a debt
cord right there. Ramon, I'm going to figure out how
many clever ways I can work that into conversation, and
now you'll know. The detonation velocity is sufficient to use

(12:20):
it for synchronizing multiple charges to detonate almost instantaneously, even
if the charges are placed at different distances from the
point of initiation. It is used to reliably and inexpensively
chain together multiple explosive charges. Typical uses include mining, drilling, demolitions,

(12:42):
and warfare. Cord texts and primal cord are two of
many trademarks which have slipped into use as a generic
term for this material. Ladies, I realize for some of
you you're tired of hearing me stumble over these words
and talk about blowing stuff up. But I assure you
that every man in your life that's worth his salt

(13:04):
is loving this conversation because blowing stuff up is just
it's natural to our manhood. If you got some boy
talking about wanting to transition to be a girl, and
you can't figure out because you just read them an
article about blowing stuff up, and if that doesn't get

(13:28):
them all fired up. Say you know what, you might
be a girl, go ahead and chop that thing off.
There's probably no hope for you at this point. I'm serious.
All right, Sean, This says Sean is the explosives airport
we need, sorry, explosives expert we need. I was reading
about the glittering at the airport.

Speaker 6 (13:50):
Sean, there's no way I'm an expert.

Speaker 1 (13:56):
Well, that means you're probably an expert. A guy who
won't admit to being an expert, it means you're probably
an expert.

Speaker 6 (14:03):
What you got, Well, I know what we used to do,
and and and the way that we moved I've got
a secondary play in the ear. The way that we
used to move things. Uh, we used to move them
by magazine. As the other gentleman said, it's it is
highly highly regulated material. But I've got a feed in

(14:27):
my ears. I'm sorry. So what what what you need
is a device, a trigger and and a or a
cap trigger. So what what we What I saw in
these videos these were directional charges. Uh they probably see
four C four Uh, nothing like debtcord. As the other
gentleman said, you grabbed de cord around an arm or

(14:49):
a leg and use not it'll sever the leg. It's
a very powerful trigger. But what we did was we
would use caps and directional charges to take down refineries
and building and things like that. But it is highly regulated.

Speaker 5 (15:02):
So the way I think.

Speaker 6 (15:04):
That they got it into these was intercepted. I don't
think you could hack and blow a sown up like that.
The charge was just too powerful. Now one video, I'm sorry, no.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
Go ahead.

Speaker 6 (15:16):
The one video that I saw it blew a perfect
circle through the gentleman or not a gentleman, through that
rats nightstand and all the way to the floor. So
it was a directional charge. I don't think they could
hack it and put something in there. It's just you've
got to have that amount of power. And I mean
you could take a pinch of C four and do
this much damage with any kind of direction even heavy plastic.

(15:39):
I think we're all familiar with what a play mark
looks like. That's just a curved plastic which creates the
directional like a pound and a half of CEA four
or And then I think at the one hundred and
seventy two ball bearings in there, I think the number
is one hundred and seventy two, which is hilarious with
the seventy two in on it. But that's, uh, that's

(15:59):
what I saw in these videos. It's a white smoke,
so it's not nitri acid base. I think it's like
a C four with a directional and I think they
got in between the delivery and put something in these
devices with an electronic trigger.

Speaker 1 (16:17):
So okay, so help me understand how they would communicate
to the device to set it off or that.

Speaker 6 (16:26):
Now you're getting out of this would be more on
a tech side. You have a tech side, and you
go to that particular phone number, You're not You're not
You're not just going to that phone to that to
that device, you're going to that specific number. How they
do that? I had no idea super genius. I mean,
it was a very effective way to get their attention.

(16:47):
I don't know what's going to happen now afterwards, but
but uh, what they did was very effective and uh
a little bit a little bit uh a little bit unsettling.

Speaker 1 (16:57):
Also, Yeah, well and I think that's I'm sure that's
the point, right, I mean, yeah, if you're Hesbala and yeah,
this was.

Speaker 7 (17:10):
This was all.

Speaker 6 (17:11):
This was a syof as well as a you know,
uh uh. I don't even want to say to Terrent
this was a direct action, but it's going to leave
a huge syop. I can guarantee you there's no painter
sitting around today.

Speaker 1 (17:25):
Well and and and here's the thing you know now
that you now that you got me thinking. So they're
not using cell phones because they used the cell The
masade was the Israeli forces were using the cell phone
to locate and and harm, so then they had to
go to beepers. Well that makes you less effective at communication,
and now they're scared of the beepers, So you're basically

(17:48):
striking at their communication network and making it much harder
for them to communicate, which slows them down. I mean,
it's it's quite a wrest.

Speaker 5 (18:02):
Forget Michael Berry's Not Your.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
God Blasting, produced by the Great George Martin down Sir,
often referred to, among others, as the Fifth Beatle for
his role in producing all the Beatles' great hits. So

(18:27):
I went to look up the Tin Man because I
remember the story of I think it's Buddy Ebsen who
was I didn't get that far because Buddy Ebsen was
originally going to be the Tin man, but he reacted
to the lead in the paint that they put on him,

(18:48):
and so he couldn't handle the role, and they had
to have someone else do it. And it's apparently quite
terrible what you had to go through. But here's what
I didn't know, Ramon, the reference to the ten Man.
Did you know that the Wizard of Oz comes from
a book?

Speaker 6 (19:08):
Right?

Speaker 1 (19:09):
You knew that part all right? And the book is
from L. Frank Baum. I couldn't remember that, but I
knew that it was a book. The book was in
nineteen The book came out in nineteen hundred. It was
called A Wonderful Wizard of Oz and there was a
whole series that came out. Of course, the movie was

(19:30):
made decades later. But he was not called the ten
Man in the book, Ramon. He was known as the
tin Woodman, the tin Woodman, wod m a n. He
was the woodman who was ten made of ten, not

(19:56):
ten years old. What made me think of that? A
friend of ours, who you know, I'm going to say
his name on there was complaining about someone and I
told him I was going to pray over his anger
because he's so strongly doesn't like this individual. He was

(20:18):
talking about, and I said I was going to pray
over his anger, which is not what he wanted to hear.
And he said, I'm going to pray for your lack
of courage. And I said, yes, I'm like the Ten
Men because but I'm so happy that for once there's
somebody that I don't like that someone else. I mean,

(20:39):
it's somebody that I don't mind that someone else doesn't like,
because I spend a lot of my time, you know,
trying to explain to me to people that Nicki Hailary
is the second coming of the Devil, and I can't
get him as fired up on the issue as I
like to, and you know, kind of leaves me feeling
like some sort of weirdo. So it's nice when so

(21:00):
someone else really really really doesn't like somebody and I'm
just indifferent to the issue and say, well, you know,
poor old guy, you know, he's kind of probably got dementia,
and you know, he's left and he doesn't have So
that made me think of the Ten Men, which made

(21:22):
me think, which made me go look up the original book.
And I don't know why I thought to look in
the book at the character. I was just kind of
curious how he was portrayed in the book, and it
was the tin Woodman. That's some information you could do
something with. Right there, Let's go to Davis. Davis, you're
on Michael Berry Show. Welcome to the program, sir, Oh

(21:46):
we dropped. Oh Davis, is that goofball from Lovebuck? Remember
we set him up with that on the date at
b nineteen and he took and remember that girl told
him at the end of the day, she said, you're
a very nice person, but I'm just we're not I'm
not going out with you again. You're just just not
gonna work. Davis, You're only Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 9 (22:08):
Can you hear me?

Speaker 6 (22:08):
Now?

Speaker 1 (22:09):
Yeah? What did that girl tell you after the date?

Speaker 4 (22:15):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (22:15):
Man, that was like two years ago, Michael.

Speaker 1 (22:18):
Dude, I set you up with a free dinner at
a nice restaurant and that's like I can't forget that.

Speaker 6 (22:28):
Well, I mean it went good. Think when it was
on June July.

Speaker 1 (22:33):
Yeah, Well, what did she tell you broke up in October?
What did she tell you about the date of women
broke up.

Speaker 6 (22:42):
After the date or woman broke up several months later?

Speaker 1 (22:45):
Oh? I thought she just said after the date, we're
not yeah, how did When she broke up, she was
just like.

Speaker 6 (22:49):
No, no, no, no, no.

Speaker 3 (22:54):
You and I we've had the same conversation before.

Speaker 5 (22:56):
But she said she didn't like that I drank.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
Oh that you drank. I thought she drank and you
didn't like that she drank.

Speaker 5 (23:07):
Okay, no, she drank too.

Speaker 3 (23:09):
She didn't like that I drank.

Speaker 7 (23:11):
But I never drank too much.

Speaker 6 (23:13):
Michael.

Speaker 3 (23:14):
I know you talked to a lot of people. You
and I This second time we've had this conversation, well.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
We might have it five more times. I'm going to
tell you if it's a good conversation. Are you on
a speakerphone or or.

Speaker 4 (23:24):
I took the bluetooth off? Can you hear me now?

Speaker 1 (23:27):
Just hardly? But anyway, what were you calling about?

Speaker 5 (23:31):
All right?

Speaker 3 (23:32):
I was listening to podcast from yesterday and you were
talking about down ballot races and my comment, my thought
is it is kind of a chicken and an egg thing,
and I think we are going to continue to struggle
with down ballot races as long as we have a culture.
And I think this is across the US, It's it's

(23:52):
pretty nationwide.

Speaker 5 (23:54):
As long as we have a culture that does not
value local community. You know we're transient.

Speaker 3 (24:01):
People will retire and they'll move halfway across the state
and by a lake house, and they depart the people
that they know. Kids will go to college, you know,
hours if not days, away from home. We change jobs
regularly and move so far. Excuse me, so often we

(24:22):
live far away from where we were born. I think
it's a deeper cultural issue, and I don't know how
we're going to fix the down ballot issue until the
cultural thing comes first.

Speaker 6 (24:32):
That's my idea.

Speaker 1 (24:34):
I don't have any idea what you're talking about. What
does the down ballot issue have to do with the
weakening of hold on a minute? That is just weird
enough that I'm interested to know your thinking.

Speaker 4 (24:50):
And what I see it all over the place is
people who care about looking good while doing evil.

Speaker 1 (24:57):
The Michael Arry Show. How do you pronounce that news name?
Perry Ferrell or Pharrell? Okay, I'm not a big Jane's
Addiction fan. I couldn't honestly name one of their songs.
I would know the songs, but I couldn't say. That's

(25:21):
just sort of what were they nineties? Yeah? Okay, well
that's why I know who Dave Navarro is. But I've
watched that what people are calling a fight in Boston.
I guess they're on their reunion tour. And Perry Ferrell,
I'm just gonna say, Ferrell, I don't know. If you
don't know how to say it, I don't know how
to say it. He comes over, he's something's wrong with

(25:44):
that dude, and he starts screaming at Dave Navarro and
then he kind of elbows him a couple of times,
like Bill Lambier or something. He's lucky. From the looks
of it, I would guess Dave Navarro could have made
mincemeat out of him. I would assume he could have
really hurt the dude. And Perry Farrell looks like he's

(26:06):
he's older, but he might be like Tampon Tim, where
he just he uh, he looks a lot older than
he is. They have opened an investigation into Tampon Tim
Waltz and his connections to China. The list of disturbing
connections he has to China are manyfold. We had a

(26:30):
listener send in a song he made on Tampon Tim.
Do you have that remond? Do you think you might
be able to locate that? Well, we'll play it in
the next segment. How about that, We'll play it in
the next segment. I'm looking for that Peloton story.

Speaker 8 (26:50):
Let's see.

Speaker 9 (26:58):
Your father leads and just seeing the lamb. He's always
trying to change twelve year old girl into a default man.
He gotta got your waters on the set Castrol. He
got another one that ja say, coon. But every Sunday
afternoon he's putting Maxie bats in your little boy's red squats.

Speaker 8 (27:24):
Sender us.

Speaker 9 (27:25):
You do scare us because we don't know where you're staying.
You the clock faster down a NASCAR driver, run a
shine out of Alabama, hold the Democratic Party in the media.
We'll tell us that you're not a looon. But every
Sunday afternoon you put transgender males intoo the girls like
a room lot tempantemia.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
By that edition, we know he can trust you.

Speaker 9 (27:51):
You will lock down the town faster around the clown
at the first side of the flood wherever the communist
body in.

Speaker 1 (27:58):
The deep state TAXI will tell that said being route.

Speaker 9 (28:02):
But every Sunday after noon you're cutting a new age
girls and tuning in to a dude.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
It really is a sickness. These people have so desperately
wanting to convert boys to girls and to a lesser extent,
girls to boys. It's a sickness and the links that
they will go to to try to normalize this. It's

(28:35):
an odd, odd deal. If an adult wants to do
whatever an adult wants to do to themselves. I'm pretty
libertarian when it comes to that. You may not like that.
It's a sin, fine, but I'm not trying to jump
out in front of people making I don't even like tattoos, so,
but I ain't trying to shut down tattoo parlors. Somebody

(28:56):
wants to do something to themselves, I don't really don't
expect me to, and don't get angry. That's my position.
You're welcome to get real upset about it if that's
your thing in life. But when you start doing that
with kids, kids are children. That was a Kamala Harris comment.

(29:17):
If ever, kids or children, kids are not capable of
making those decisions. Pull that, Megan Kelly, if you would.
Megan Kelly was at the Tucker Croslson thing. Oh, that
Tucker Cross event is tonight in Rosenberg. No, it's Wednesday night,
it's today Wednesday. Yeah, Jesse Kelly is going to be
his guest in Rosenberg. I don't know how you get tickets.

(29:42):
I don't know any of that. But if you did
not know that and wanted to be there, I'm gonna
ask Jesse how you get the tickets to that. Let's
see it's probably Tucker cross and Tucker Crossing Live Tour. Yeah,
it's pretty pretty smart idea. He's going around the country
talking to interesting people and he just sits down and

(30:03):
has kind of like a lounge conversation. I love it.
Let's see Tucker cross in with Jesse Kelly and Nicole Shanahan. Oh,
I didn't know Shanahan was on this. Oh that's why.
Because Mary Tally Boden his friends with Nicole Shanahan. That's
why there we go. Was that for Mary Tally or
for Nicole? They're both okay? Oh well then that makes

(30:26):
sense why they're because Mary Tally is going with Nicole Shanahan.
Do you have that Megan Kelly deal, the one where
she was at Tuck with Tucker crosson and she tells
she tells Taylor Swift screw you because of Taylor Swift

(30:48):
said she's supporting tampon Tim because of his LGBTQ and
she said, well, do you know what they're doing?

Speaker 10 (30:56):
She says, the reason she's voting for Kamala Harris is
because of Tim Walls's LGBTQ stance. Do you know what
Tim Walls has done on the LGBTQ front, Tim Wall,
let me tell you what's gonna happen.

Speaker 11 (31:14):
Okay, Well, here's what's gonna happen.

Speaker 10 (31:16):
A little girl sitting in Wisconsin who's maybe on the spectrum,
maybe has acne.

Speaker 11 (31:23):
Maybe as a little heavy set, maybe feels.

Speaker 10 (31:25):
Upset because the parents are going to divorce something like that,
is going to find herself down a rabbit hole on
Reddit and her parents aren't going to know because they're
gonna divorce and they're not focused on her right now.
And she's gonna spend hour after hour on that thing.
And Reddit's gonna tell her she's actually a boy, and
she's gonna get sucked into this gender cult and she's
gonna say, mom and Dad, I want puberty blockers into

(31:46):
cross sex hormones, which will sterilize her and deprive her
of all sexual pleasure for the rest of her life.

Speaker 11 (31:52):
And they're gonna say, no, you're a girl, and she's gonna.

Speaker 10 (31:55):
Say, but I want to I want top surgery, this
benign thing, this double misteck to me where I'll have
tubes coming out of me and I'll never breastfeed a child.

Speaker 11 (32:02):
I want that too, because I'm a boy. And they're
going to say no.

Speaker 10 (32:05):
And she's going to go to a judge in Minnesota,
and because of Tim Walls, the court will take custody
of her, use the Medicaid funds in Minnesota to provide
her all of those things, chop off her breasts, sterilize
her with the puberty blockers, under the cross sex hormones.
And when this girl inevitably comes to the conclusion that

(32:26):
she didn't want any of this, that it only added
to her problems, which were the divorce and the acne
and the puberty and not any trans issue.

Speaker 11 (32:33):
Who is she going to go to then,
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Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show

The Clay Travis and Buck Sexton Show. Clay Travis and Buck Sexton tackle the biggest stories in news, politics and current events with intelligence and humor. From the border crisis, to the madness of cancel culture and far-left missteps, Clay and Buck guide listeners through the latest headlines and hot topics with fun and entertaining conversations and opinions.

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