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December 17, 2025 • 32 mins

Michael Berry and his callers share bold beliefs—from why Blue Bell vanilla reigns supreme to why assimilation matters for America’s future.

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time. Time, time, luck and load. The Michael
Verry Show is on the air. It's time for a

(00:28):
little I truly believe you. Seven one three nine nine
one thousand, seven one three, one thousand. As the phone
lines are lighting up, I will go to Perry, who
has been patiently waiting on the black line.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Take it away, brother, Yes, Mary, Michael, my name is
Parry from th Arthur. You know, I listened to your
earlier segment about about the women on the view making
comments about Rush. You know, I listened to Rush for
a very long time, even back in the nineties when
he had his TV show, and you know, Rush used

(00:58):
to say, you know, I'm ninety nine point nine to
nine percent of the time, and I used to think,
I said, you know, when he say the things, I would,
you know, research and look, I said, he's definitely right.
And also he was just funny. It was just so
it was it was amazing to listen to him and
what he said was the truth. And I've never heard
Rush ever say anything racist, but he said what he
said was the truth. And people can't handle that, even

(01:21):
people in my community. They still, you know, think what
he said was racist. But I said to myself, I say,
if it's the truth, the truth, it doesn't change. So
you know when I argue talk to my friends and
we debate about politics and everything, and you know, I
used to say to myself, I said, I used to

(01:43):
listen to them and they would say the same thing.
I said, what I thought I was liberal, rush to
this mean that what I was was a truth conservative
And it just it just opened my eyes to a
lot of things. He used to say things about authors
and common soul and all these people, the books that
you know I never read, but you know, I wish
I'm not a rare red person or never you know,

(02:03):
uh uh, I guess read those officers. But those are
some of the things. And also you always talk about
the same thing. What you say is the same thing.
Truth will always make you, uh, to show you who
you truly are. But if you can't accept the truth,
you're going to always say what somebody else says is racist.
And one other thing I don't want to keep you long.

(02:24):
I know this is your truly believe line. But you know,
assimilation one thing about if you live in a community,
in a nice neighborhood, and the neighborhood starts to go
down and people don't have the same values that you
have your neighborhood. It's just a microcosm of what's happening
here with radicals coming to these to the country and
don't know how to assimilate. They will destroy your neighborhood

(02:45):
and cause you to say, well, I need to live,
leave this this this neighborhood. I need to get out
and move somewhere else where the people have the same values.
It's the same thing with America. So when when when
they when the country is destroyed, When people come into
this country and they destroy this country, where you're gonna go,
then you can't move to another neighborhood. This is the
country that we're here with it, and there's no other

(03:08):
place to go. You know, Uh, I know I'm ramming
a little bit, but it's just something that is on
my mind. I listen to you all the time, and
you know, we always talk about you don't agree with
this me and you don't agree on every little thing
about ice cream and all these things. But those are
those are things that are not important. What's important as
the value of this country. What's the value about God, country?

Speaker 1 (03:29):
Family?

Speaker 2 (03:30):
You know, and finances, all those things they're coming but
but it just frustrates me when I used to think
the same things that I argue with my friends about
and I know what they're gonna say before they even
say it, because it used to have those same arguments.
But Russ showed me that if you if you say
what's true and you know what you're I know, liberals

(03:50):
before before they even say anything. I know what they're
gonna say before they even say it. It's just it's
just it's just amazing when your eyes are open and
you can just realize and see what this country is
coming to and and and people always talk about, uh
uh uh, this country is bad. There's no other place
in the world that you would rather be. You know.

(04:11):
I served in the military a little while, been over
been in other places and stuff like that. There's no
other place. Whether I don't care what you are, you
can make it in this country. There's no other place
that's like here. And I'm just you know, it's kind
of disheartening sometime to hear that, but you know, it
just it just you know, saddened me. But the thing
that keeps me going is God. And I know that.

(04:33):
You know, if you don't believe in a higher power
than yourself. You know, there's and liberalism teaching you, Oh well,
we can I don't need God. I don't need these
things in my life. You know, I can make my
own God. That that there has to be a higher
power to have a moral sense of compass to take
you where you need to go and and and this
country allows you to do that.

Speaker 1 (04:55):
How do we disagree on ice cream?

Speaker 2 (05:02):
Michael? You know, I like the simple I like the
simple chocolate. I like the millennial crutch. See you don't
like the millennial cut crush.

Speaker 1 (05:10):
I wouldn't know if I want it because I don't try.
You know, I don't I don't know if I like
heroin because I don't try. I don't know if I
like cocaine. I don't fool that I got. I got
my things that I do. And that's what you're supposed
to do. You go straight Offaly, you know, I mean, Perry.
There might be a woman across town that you'd love
to lay with. You don't do it one time, because
then that's how that in trouble.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
See you are you are as you are, exactly with it,
and that way we never run out of home.

Speaker 1 (05:36):
Made what do you do for me? Well, I've retired now.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
I retired from the Federal Bill of Prison right here
both my Texas did twenty five years the Styles Unit.
Uh No, the Federal Bureou Prisons uh SCC Beaumont right
here in Boma, Texas.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
You spent twenty five years there.

Speaker 2 (05:55):
Twenty five years of that? Wow, twenty five years. I
did six years active in fifteen years in the Army
National Guard.

Speaker 1 (06:01):
Retired from there.

Speaker 2 (06:02):
In two thousand and five. I'm retiring. I lived here
in Port Artha, right here in nice neighborhood, great neighbors.

Speaker 1 (06:13):
Hey, let me ask you a mission parry. Yes, have
you been to the Sabine Past Marina.

Speaker 2 (06:20):
Yes, I have. I've been there before.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
Okay, I don't believe I have. But Landman this new
TV show with Billy Bob Thornton, his father who's played
by Sam Elliott. His wife says, hey to her, fallow up,
what would you like for dinner? And I'm doing a
pirate theme And what's your favorite seafood? And he says
best seafood I ever had? I think, he said, was
a flounder prepared at the Sabine Past Marina. And I

(06:45):
wish my brother was alive because he used to fish
Sabine Pass, and I'm sure he would have been there,
but I was wondering if there was an I mean,
I don't know if it's called the Sabine Past, Marina.
I've been meaning to look this up, but I've got
to check that out, because if Taylor's and thought enough
of that to write it in the script, it must
be pretty darn good for that. Hey, thanks for the call, Perry.

(07:07):
Can Parry be the call of the day? Yeah, no,
I'll come. Oh, okay, all right, Parr's a call of
the day. And I'm not just saying that because he's black.
Seven one three nine nine nine one thousand. We're going
to do and I truly believe. Whereby you state what
you truly believe, be quick, get right to the point.
If you think you're on, you're on. I'm good, You're good.

(07:29):
I will say, ramon, what do you truly believe? And
you will say I truly believe that It can be
a statement that you're willing to hold fast too, no
matter which way the winds blow. It's even better if
it's something that might be controversial or offensive, as long
as you truly believe it. You, honest to goodness, in

(07:50):
your heart of hearts, truly believe it, and you cannot
be convinced otherwise. And it doesn't matter that you know
that I won't like it or other people won't like it.
Seven one, three, nine, nine, one thousand and yes, I'm
reading your emails as they come in through the website
at Michael Berryshow dot com. With his finger on the pulse.

Speaker 3 (08:12):
The King of Team continues on The Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 1 (08:18):
So the mons we go. It is open line of
Friday and Romeo, can we get our theme music please?
And all the Michael Berry Show presents are truly tell

(08:46):
What I truly believe is that our listeners are amazing
and that partnership with our show works. Fellow named Will
Hawkins came up in a business that his father started.
It's what he's done his entire life. And the business
is when you need embedded employees in your oil fill, midstream, upstream,

(09:06):
downstream project, they send the people out. In many cases,
he drives out with them. He's there with them, he
shows them the project. He makes sure you got the
right people. People matter. They're not all the same. There's
a difference between Tom Brady and JaMarcus Russell, and he
was with us for two years. We never got a
project for him, and finally he said, hey, I love you.

(09:30):
I want to continue to support the show, but I'm
going to take some time off. Took a year off,
came back he said, everybody in my business listens to
your show. They told me they heard you talking about
us on the show. We just never got any business
off of it. So I said, well, what do you
want to do. He said, I want to sponsor the
show again, and so he sponsored the show. We went

(09:50):
six months still no calls or no one who told
him that we were the reason they had called it.
Then a project hits in Oregon. Big project made his
whole year. Now he's busy through half of twenty twenty
six off of our listeners who were using big national
staffing companies, and they get whatever person that guy got

(10:13):
off of Indeed, who's you know, not exactly an ideal
worker showing up to your project and you don't want that.
And now he could not be happier. So it took
a long time, but I take a great deal of
pride when somebody is a show sponsor. That's hard earned money.
That's their name behind us, and I want a return
on investment. I want the partnership to flourish, and it did,

(10:33):
so that's my I truly believe r Moon. All right, Scott,
you're up. What do you truly believe? From Lithonia, Georgia?

Speaker 4 (10:40):
I truly believe that Ice has a naming problem. It
just sounds so called.

Speaker 1 (10:45):
They need to start with Nashville. I like it. I
don't think he came up with that. I heard someone
else say it, but I like it. It still bears repeating, Billy,
what say you? What do you truly believe? I truly
believe that Taylor Sheridan is the best thing that's happened
to Bobby Wood in the movies and TV. Yeah. I
don't know if that's forever, but certainly in the modern era.

(11:06):
And he's captured a niche audience, which is this vast
swath of American society that nobody was writing for and about. John,
What do you truly believe? I truly believe that Noah's
arc will never be found intact. But Noah and his
family disassembled it to make houses and barns. Okay, that's

(11:28):
very random, but that's that's the point here seven one three, nine,
nine nine one thousand, Brian, what do you truly believe?
I truly believe that Rocky Road is way better than vanilla?
Why because it just is? Well? See if you can't
say any better. Now, that just proves my point, David,

(11:48):
what do you truly believe? I truly believe that I
just got undercut?

Speaker 5 (11:54):
If all the children in.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
The world were raised on Bluebell.

Speaker 3 (11:59):
Rocky Road, the world would be a phenomenal place.

Speaker 1 (12:06):
Yo. Here, I guess here's my point. Bluebell homemade vanilla
ice cream is as an ice cream, the ultimate. There's
nothing else like it, Carnation, Hagendaws, you name it. If
you have to add something to an ice cream, that's

(12:28):
what you do to an inferior ice cream. But because
it is so good, you don't have to add to it. Now,
when you do add to it, you're not getting Bluebelt
homemade vanilla. You're getting the basic bean vanilla or whatever
that is. So now you're not even really eating ice cream.
You're eating all the dipping dots or whatever crap you're
putting in there. And that is not in its purest,

(12:52):
most distilled sense. It's like barbecue joints that slather their
cheap meat with a bunch of sauce. They do that
because the meat is not any good. If you're eating
high quality, first class barbecue, you don't have to put
everything else on it. If you're drinking a really good coffee,
you don't have to dump everything else in it. If

(13:13):
you're eating a really good steak, you don't have to
put a thousand things on it. Russell Lebarro, you're eating
a really good quality steak. Although I hate to admitt
hees right as uncouth and unsophisticated in date class A
as a one steak sauces, it really is something special.
It is now. I know, No, I don't put it

(13:34):
on my If I eat a first class steak, I
just want the meat because it's that good. But if
it's a second class steak, a lower quality, oh I'm
gonna put it on there. Yeah, you know, you go
to Roochie's and get a steak quote unquote steak, little skirt. Yeah,
you probably ought to put some one on there. Just
eat the steak is your delivery mechanism for the A one. Matt,

(13:55):
you're on the Michael Berry Show, What do you truly
I truly leaves that.

Speaker 3 (14:01):
Sean Ryan is going to smoke Dan Crenshaw on his
podcast January second.

Speaker 1 (14:05):
I think everybody should listen in. You know, I can
tell you how that podcast is gonna go already because
I've watched Dan Crenshaw do it a hundred times. He's
going to do what democrats do. Dan Crenshaw should have
been a Democrat. He would be a good Democrat. He's
a Gavin Newsom style Democrat. He really should have, except

(14:27):
he was he was in a district that's Republican. He
would be because he's bothered by everybody. He's better than everybody.
He's arrogant, he's he thinks everyone else is stupid. He
thinks anybody questioning him, he thinks, hey, I got inside
the gated walls. Now you peasants down there, don't get
to keep asking me questions. And he loves to demean

(14:49):
anybody who asks the question. Oh yeah, well just keep
asking us if we're trading stocks, and just keep asking
us if we have information about it. Yeah, y'all just
do that. Do y'all not have anything better to do?
Scott Bessent coming out yesterday and saying the Treasury Secretary

(15:09):
that it is time to ban members of Congress from
trading stocks period. End of story. Let me ask you this,
How come athletes cannot bet on the game that they're
playing in. If they can't bet in the game in
which they play, Pete Rose got a lifetime ban, how

(15:31):
can a member of Congress. Members of Congress, every single
one of them have inside information. There's no doubt about that.
That's not an insult. You know who else has inside information?
Insiders to the company they shouldn't be able to trade
on to Albany, all great cities in between the Michael

(15:52):
Berry Show is nichewide. Perry being from Port Arthur reminded
me of one of the prettiest tributes to Port Arthur
I have ever heard.

Speaker 6 (16:05):
Oh liital town of polled author between bamns up be
past all the drive by slow down at night because.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
They ain't got no money for no gas. We drain some.

Speaker 6 (16:30):
Fotysus if IM don out a clothes, that's how we
do l pod out.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
But not in Needa Lain pod nature is a gross
such a pretty pretty song. It's time for little I
truly believe who's that in there? And Michael All our

(17:18):
engineer is here and that always makes me nervous because
that means that Ramona's probably built a Cocon's buttons again,
and one of them's Glitchen.

Speaker 3 (17:25):
But what do you truly believe, Michael, I truly believe
the reference to Sabine past Marina is actually the original
Sartan seafood.

Speaker 1 (17:33):
And oh you know what, Oh good, call that's it.
That's gotta be it, you know, I think so. I'm
so glad you resolved that for me. That has been
eaten at me. My mother's best friend was a woman
named Billy Tucker, and Billy Tucker's son, Troy Dean Tucker,
married the daughter of the family that started Sartan's, and

(17:57):
in our family that was like Megan Markle, like he
had married into royalty, because that would mean he could
eat at Sartans whenever he wanted. Sartain's was for us
the kind of thing we did about every three years.
It was a first of all, you had to drive
over the bridge to get there, so you know, we
didn't go out to eat. Going out to eat was
not something we do. I think that's why I do
it so much now. But we would drive over and

(18:19):
it was a really, really, really big deal. And I
mean we'd planned two months ahead of time. We were
going to Sartan's. It was going to be an event.
You have solved my issue. Gosh, dog, I'm so glad
you called. Butch.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
Do you live there?

Speaker 3 (18:33):
I was born there and I still have family in Needland,
but I was down there quite a bit in the
eighties and yeah, we would go there all the time.
And it was barbecue, soft show.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
Crabs, man, that was it.

Speaker 1 (18:49):
So I met my friend Mike Batchis the other night
to celebrate his birthday, and we went to the Oak Room,
which is a private club atop the Postoke Hotel. You
can order in they'll they'll bring you food from anything
on campus, so Mastros or Willie Gee's or the ice
cream shop downstairs. And I have been on this kick

(19:11):
to get into fighting weight. I want to hit one
seventy two. I would love to hit one seventy two
by January first. I'm not going to get there. But
I have been lifting, I have been eating right, I'm
getting my sleep, I've cut off my drinking. I have
been hardcore right. But we meet for dinner and I

(19:32):
ordered a grilled fish, which is what my wife would order,
not me and vegetables, no rice. So I am I
am in fighting shape. I'm being an aesthetic. And he
orders fried shrimp, French fries and hush puppies and I
had to sit there and watch him eat that, and

(19:54):
that was oh man, that is a weakness of mine.
You have made me very happy. Butch, what do you
do for a living?

Speaker 3 (20:01):
I sell well in sittings for whom Maco norka, mac
O norka.

Speaker 1 (20:09):
Yes, sir, is that m A k O m A
T c O oh matt co Okay, yeah, okay, all right, Well,
good for you, Good for you. You done that a
long time.

Speaker 3 (20:18):
It's not about eight years now. But I've been in
I've been in the valve industry for since the early nineties.

Speaker 5 (20:24):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (20:24):
Where'd you go to high school?

Speaker 3 (20:26):
Spring Branch High School?

Speaker 1 (20:28):
Okay, so you moved over here for high school?

Speaker 2 (20:31):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (20:31):
Actually dad moved us over here when we were kids.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
But yes, sir, what business was he in?

Speaker 3 (20:37):
He sold anything under the sun?

Speaker 1 (20:39):
Okay, one of those types. I like it. Thanks for
the call, Butch, thank you for putting that to rest.
You have you have given me peace on that's been
bothering me. Ed, What do you truly believe.

Speaker 3 (20:51):
I truly believe that the Democrats are always watering the
grass when their house.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
Is on fire.

Speaker 1 (20:58):
Yeah, Wally, what do you truly believe?

Speaker 2 (21:02):
I truly believe, sir, that this country is gonna make
it because of the great people of it.

Speaker 1 (21:07):
I think if we do make it, that's the reason
we will, because we do have great people. Donald, what
do you truly believe? Donald? His name is gonna end
up being Ronald? You know, oh, Ronald, I know Ronald,

(21:35):
mark my words, his name of Ronald, and still Donald.
He'll be sitting he went, Oh, I had no idea. Yes,
that's crazy.

Speaker 7 (21:45):
His name mselves at la mine. He's sitting there listening.
Unless he just stroked out, that'd be weird. And I
don't mean had to stroke Charlie, what do you truly believe?

Speaker 2 (21:58):
I truly believe as detrimental to society?

Speaker 1 (22:02):
Why is that.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
Lots of jobs like cab drivers are losing their jobs.

Speaker 1 (22:09):
And cars that drives theirselves. Okay, give me the next loop.
Here's the problem. It's going to happen whether we embrace
it or not. Countries that do not embrace technology live
in the past. I visited a lot of third world

(22:30):
countries and they do not embrace technology. I think that
there comes a point in time where you don't need
buggy whip makers any longer or carriage drivers. I think
that what we have to do is continue to grow
and adapt. As we move forward, a lot of people
are going to get very rich off of AI and

(22:52):
off of technology. And I don't just mean Elon Musk.
If you look at the stock market and the reason
a lot of people have done well in the increased
profitable it is because of a decrease in labor cost.
If the job you do can be replaced by technology,
find a different job that adds skill. I have said
this for decades. If what you do for a living

(23:15):
is perform a task at the direction of another person
that you can't do any better than in anyone else,
or that can be replaced by technology, learn a skill
if you have a skill that cannot be replaced by technology.
My nephew, Harrison Reeback is a partner at a firm
called Baker Bots, great old firm, and he's in those

(23:37):
tough years where you've got a grind where he's a
young partner, he's just working all the time. And they
had a conference for their lawyers. And the question was
is AI going to replace us as lawyers? And the
answer was AI is not going to replace you as
a lawyer, but another lawyer is going to replace you
as a lawyer who uses AI to practice law. And
I think that is very very well said exclusively my

(24:00):
Hawaiian Chad Makanishi Aloha bro Ha to the Michael Barry Show.
Further complicating the Sabine Pass Marina issue referenced on A
Landman where Sam Elliott's character says it the best seafood

(24:21):
he ever ate was at the Sabine Pass Marina. Another listener,
Ben Barlow writes, I thought they were referencing the Channel
Inn in Sabine Pass had the all you can eat platter.
It was awesome, and I had the barbecue crabs like Sartan's.
But I believe a lady there started them years back.
But I might be wrong about that. I don't have

(24:42):
I mean, I do have a connection to Taylor Sheridan,
and that is our friend Gator, who is his chef
and lives on property. I just thought about that. Maybe
I could ask him. I just would like a little
clarity on what that marina was because somebody got a
pretty awesome reference from all that, and that's cool. Let's
go down the line. James, you're on the Michael Berry Show.

(25:04):
What do you truly believe? Truly?

Speaker 4 (25:09):
Right track?

Speaker 1 (25:09):
Sorry, James believe.

Speaker 4 (25:14):
I'm sorry I have.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
To start you over. I didn't go over to you
quick enough. What do you truly believe?

Speaker 4 (25:18):
I truly believe that America is not on the right
chack a Jenda twenty thirty is well is very on schedule.
The Bolsheviks still own this country and still own our government,
and they're pretty much sold out. And if we don't
do some tarn and feather in our government, officials were screwed.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
Richard, what do you truly believe?

Speaker 4 (25:41):
I truly believe that since I've been lovingly but I
led Zeppelin is the greatest blue song ever recorded.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
Blue Eyed Blues, maybe, Donald, what do you truly believe?

Speaker 5 (25:51):
I truly believe, Michael Berry, that you and Donald Trump
and my friend Jeff who ranches in love Lady are
keeping me alive. Which benefit of knowing that there's good
people out there doing what I would like to do.
I'm eighty years old. I worked trade presidents Johnson Nixon,
Ford Carter, Reagan, Father Bush, Clinton, w And I'm just

(26:12):
really hanging on because, thank goodness and cash Betel. People
in India don't even know who he is. I let
them know. I called India about every other day.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
How do you what did you do for those presidents?

Speaker 5 (26:24):
Oh boy, where do we start?

Speaker 2 (26:26):
Well?

Speaker 5 (26:26):
I got my pilot's license in the Navy when I
was twenty years old. I didn't know that was going
to happen. But because I graduated in nineteen sixty five,
I'm a baby boomer. My older brother said, go to
the recruiters. They're salesmen. They can't make you do anything
but take a job that's not being in a ditch
with Forrest Company Vietnam. That's where you're going to go.
And so I went to the recruiters, and of course

(26:48):
there was no AI or no computers, no nothing. When
they gave you a test, they gave you a pencil
and a piece of paper and you sat down and
wrote the answers on the piece of paper. So there
was no way you could be cheating or anything. If
he wrote the paper right, he got a hundred.

Speaker 1 (27:04):
You know, Donald, I am amazed that before we even
had instrumentation, people did things using their brain and spatial recognition,
and it's just incredible to think pre computer, pre technology,
what people did. You didn't have lenses and calculations, and

(27:25):
it just it it blows my mind. Eric, what do
you truly believe? I truly believe bluebell homemade vanilla is
good with any cobbler. Oh amen, Although again I'm kind
of a purist. I usually only eat my cobbler as
cobbler because the blue bell will overwhelm the flavor. Bobby says,
I truly believe that homemade vanilla I had last night

(27:45):
on top of a heated up walnut brownie was delightful.
Gerald writes, I truly believe Pete Rose should be in
the Hall of Fame. He beat Ty Cobbs record and
should be there one of the greatest players in my lifetime,
despite betting on games. Note to Jackass is a disagree
Maybe you should learn a little on how horrible a
person Ty Cobb was before judging Pete. I'm not convinced,

(28:06):
Babe Ruth didn't bet on games, So there you go.
That's me, not Gerald saying that less rights. Come on, man,
Butter Pecan is the bomb. Miss Jerry mcilhan and says,
I truly believe bluebell ice cream, homemade ice ice cream,
homemade vanilla with pecans and kalua can't be beat. I

(28:28):
will not argue with you. I do not mind the
external addition of walnuts, walnuts or pecans. Wayne Wrights, I
truly believe that I would love to have Perry as
a neighbor that was a black fellow from earlier Scott writes,
I truly believe Lena Hidalgo withdrew from the Democrat primary
for County judge because she was going to get her

(28:49):
head served to her on a platter. Matt writes, I
truly believe the decline in enrollment in school districts is
due to the deportation of illegal aliens, and they won't
admit it. Andrew Wrights, I truly believe blacks have suffered
from liberal white racism since Republican Party was created to
stop slavery by Democrats. The last sixty years of pandering
and infantilization of blacks has been worse for them than

(29:12):
one hundred years of being terrorized by the Democrats thug
and forceress to plan. At least their enemy wasn't pretending
to be their friend. Malcolm X may have been a sociopath,
but the white liberal is the Negro's worst enemy. Is
a smart observation. SS Rights. I truly believe that the
best sleeping is on cool, cloudy days with windows cracked
and an extra blanket on the bed. Brant Gundy Rights,

(29:36):
I truly believe. Oh, it's how much he loved Lewis
from Ability Trees. That's from an earlier email. Let's see J. K. Wrights.
I truly believe that you are more relevant in my
life to me than Rush Limbaugh was. That is all
John Kirksville, Missouri. Two hundred and ninety pounds was two
eighty three last time I wrote you. But I've had

(29:56):
too much food lately, six feet tall, sixty one years old.
I don't know if we are more relevant to your life,
but we're not a better show, and I will never
think that we are. That's our tribute to the great
Rush Limbaugh. He's the reason that we do what we do,
not only as an inspiration for us, but because there
wouldn't be an am dollar if we know as we
know it had it not been for him. But I

(30:18):
do have people say and I will take this as
a compliment, because it's possibly accurate that in many ways
they may relate to us more than Rush, and that's
because you're from Southeast Texas or the son of a
plant worker, or brother of a police officer, or whatever
unique set of traits and characteristics we have. But it's
part of the reason that I don't compare and contrast

(30:39):
and try to have anything be my favorite per se
is because I don't feel the need to have a favorite.
I don't feel the need to say this is better
than that. They can all be fantastic and people will say,
you know, this show is better than this show. I

(31:00):
can both, and I just don't know that that's necessarily important,
But if it is to you, so be it. With
that in mind, we will close with the news that
Jasmine Crockett's not getting much sleep these days. She's happy
to do the legwork of campaigning, lots of travel, long days,
you know, all the stuff she doesn't want to do.

(31:20):
Just show her the damn money all ready. Well, Jazzy
Crockett's not getting much sleep these days. Either. Ooh, she
Jack goes done, got me all jacked up, tossing and turning.
I just need a good night, sleep tonight. I ain't
got no time for no good Oh hell no, here'll
come that damn call Winny. Yeah, what the hell are you?

(31:42):
You got more change the damn did it jazz Christmas mask?
She jes now see to those so oh hell no,
that's you a come out of harbits. What you're doing
with the damn bottle of Bolly's farm. We gotta deal
with trunk come on of the night. I just have

(32:03):
to remind you. Don't you ever let anybody take your
power from you. Damn girlfriend, you get your chee booze
all over my sheets and you damn drooling on my pillow.
You have the same power, and you have the same
purpose that you did okay, and you have the same
ability to engage and inspire. So don't ever let anybody

(32:27):
or any circumstance take your.

Speaker 5 (32:29):
Power from you.

Speaker 1 (32:30):
Cheney ghosts. If there's some way to unplug this hoochy mama,
Hey I now here, come back, Hyaena laugh again.
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