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May 19, 2025 31 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
And load for Michael very show is on the air.
Mister President, you are the oldest president ever, pretty good shape,
which leads to my next question. You are more aware
of this than anyone. Some people ask whether you are

(00:28):
fit for the job, and when you hear.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
That, I wonder what you think? Watch me.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
The most difficult part about a meeting with President Biden
is preparing for it, because he is sharp, intensely probing,
and detail oriented and focused.

Speaker 1 (00:47):
How would you say your mental focus is? It's focused?

Speaker 4 (00:51):
The best way to get something done if it holds
near and dear to you that you like to be able.

Speaker 5 (00:58):
To anyway, I won't read the news that if it
is getting you, boy, you just keep on you let me.

Speaker 6 (01:14):
Do you use me?

Speaker 1 (01:15):
Uh?

Speaker 7 (01:18):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (01:20):
Do you use me?

Speaker 1 (01:21):
To start your tape right now?

Speaker 8 (01:23):
Because I'm about to tell you the truth and that
you if you can't handle the truth. This version of
Biden intellectually, analytically is the best Biden ever, not a
close second. And I've known him for years. That presents
mes of known him for fifty years. If it weren't

(01:44):
the truth, I wouldn't say it.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
Of Putin's cyptocer.

Speaker 4 (01:49):
Yeah, America is a nation that can be defined in
a single word.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
I was gonna foot him to put.

Speaker 4 (01:57):
Los Angeles and uh and uh uh I wan am
I joint here?

Speaker 5 (02:02):
I said, brother, if your own you wished you in massu.
It does keep on you, letting me until you me h, until.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
You Here's what drives the driver on.

Speaker 9 (02:26):
What pronouns does a gender fluid donkey use?

Speaker 1 (02:31):
Hear her? Hear her.

Speaker 9 (02:40):
The man's wife's contractions were getting closer, so they dashed
off to the hospital. After getting checked in, the obstetrician
came into the room, examined the wife and wrote Annie
on her chart and left the room. They were obviously confused,
and they asked and urse what it meant, and she
said this this means you can go home. There won't

(03:02):
be a baby today. Even more confused, they asked how
she was in How was she able to interpret that
from just Annie? And she said, oh, the doctor's a
big fan of musicals. His note means the sun will
come out tomorrow. Today is National Asian and Pacific Islander

(03:33):
HIV AIDS Awareness Day, So Chad, we need you to
know that AIDS is out there. Okay, just now you
know and you've been made because if you don't have
AIDS Awareness day, people won't know.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
People won't know. But this isn't You don't need to.

Speaker 9 (03:51):
Worry about being aware of AIDS unless you're an Asian
or Pacific islander. Okay, So Blacks, Hispanics, whites, y'all don't
need to know about AIDS or be aware of it.
Just Asians and Pacific Islanders. Today is the day we
tell them about it. Okay, Hey, Susie, what I'm on
the phone? Okay, I didn't want to come around to

(04:13):
your cubicle, aren't you. Aren't you from Hawaii?

Speaker 1 (04:18):
Yes? What, I'm trying to close this deal AIDS. Yeah,
just be aware of it. Okay, weirdo. Yeah, now you've
you've been made aware.

Speaker 9 (04:29):
You've been made aware that now you are aware that
AIDS exist, because that's what we do.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
We needed to make sure that you were aware. We're told.

Speaker 9 (04:41):
Not to criticize Joe Biden and his dementia with the
book coming out tomorrow, as the Democrats and their media
rush to hide. See, this isn't on Joe Biden anymore.
This is on the people who covered for him, and
so they come out now with the well, he has
a very very advanced prosthetic prostate prostate cancer and it

(05:05):
has metastasized into his bones. Won't all these doctors come
forward and go, that didn't happen overnight. He's very likely
had this two hundred days or more. Well, there is
a twenty twenty two clip we played you last hour
of him saying in twenty twenty two that he had cancer. Well,
that's weird. He wasn't supposed to say that, and he
wandered off again. It was always when he got off

(05:28):
the teleprompter that he got in trouble because he'd starts
saying things he wasn't supposed to in his mind.

Speaker 1 (05:32):
Doesn't work right.

Speaker 9 (05:33):
But they say, don't criticize him for having cancer because
it's not right.

Speaker 1 (05:37):
Well, let me be very clear. When I die, I.

Speaker 9 (05:40):
Want the most criticism possible because I want to know
that they hated me, because that's how I know I
was making a difference. But here's CNN's hit piece after
rush Limbaugh announced that he had cancer.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
See how classy they were.

Speaker 10 (05:55):
Rush Limbaugh is, as you know, a conservative fire brands
and a radio talk show icon. Now he is battling
advanced lung cancer. Limbaugh is at the center of a
new controversy after President Trump awarded him the medal, the
Presidential Medal of Freedom. Santan Sara Sidner has more on this.

Speaker 11 (06:10):
As long as you're here Monday, I will tell you
what happened.

Speaker 12 (06:13):
Rush Limbaugh rose to fame with his gift for political
gas on talk show radio and later online.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
Somebody to Stand Up for You, the.

Speaker 12 (06:21):
Conservative talk show host, words reach millions, including the ear
of the man who has become President American. As Limbaugh
faces a deadly battle with lung cancer, President Trump has
awarded him the Presidential Medal of Freedom.

Speaker 1 (06:35):
Rush Limbaugh, Thank you for your.

Speaker 3 (06:38):
Decades of tireless devotion to our country.

Speaker 12 (06:41):
Limbaugh has lived the American dream, but at the same time,
he's used his words to make a mockery of that dream,
sometimes sharing xenophobic, misogynistic, and racist sentiments with the masses.
This is how he chose to speak of a New
York Yankee icon the day he died.

Speaker 11 (06:57):
In twenty ten, Time Runner has passed away at age eighty.
That cracker made a lot of African American millionaires.

Speaker 12 (07:05):
In twenty eleven, Limbai decided to mock the Chinese president
during his visit to the United States.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
Hu Jinta was just going King King.

Speaker 12 (07:16):
Limbaugh attacked those who didn't share his political ideas with
a fervor and harshness that stood out amongst his talk
show peers.

Speaker 1 (07:24):
As you might know, I care deeply about stem cell research.

Speaker 5 (07:28):
When after Michael J.

Speaker 12 (07:29):
Fox, who suffers from Parkinson's disease, did this ad for
a Democratic candidate who sported stem cell research, Limbaugh pounced.

Speaker 1 (07:37):
This is Michael J. Fox.

Speaker 11 (07:38):
He's got Parkinson's disease, and in this commercial he is
exaggerating the effects of the disease. He is moving all
around and shaking and it's purely an act.

Speaker 12 (07:51):
After outrage over his comments, Limbaugh apologized the next day, saying,
I will bigly, hugely admit that I was wrong.

Speaker 1 (07:59):
In twenty twelve, when a Georgetown law student.

Speaker 12 (08:02):
Spoke to House Democrats to support mandating insurance companies cover
contraceptives a slut, well, this is going to.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
Be clip number five two.

Speaker 9 (08:17):
Lee Zelden, the administrator of the EPA, was on News
Nation and he announced something that has not received enough attention.
But how could it? The Trump media cycle is so
intense the man is doing lictorially multi billion dollar deals,

(08:43):
one of which is a trillion dollar deal. He's traveling
the globe. He's landing in the Middle East, where you've
got extremely extremely repressed Muslim nation leaders. The YMCA theme
song as he gets out, and I'm just worried that

(09:08):
the YMCA theme song might.

Speaker 1 (09:10):
Also double.

Speaker 9 (09:12):
As a Muslin's call, like the Muslim call to prayer
for gay dudes. So you might ask some gay dudes
come running out because they hear YMCA, which was played
for Trump because he loves the song. The gay dudes
run out and think, oh, we're free now, and they
put them up on top of the buildings and throw
them off because that these are countries where that happens.

(09:33):
I hope not, but these kind of things that I
worry about. So you got all these things happening.

Speaker 1 (09:40):
You know.

Speaker 9 (09:40):
It's an interesting thing about the tariffs. Wall Street journal
was fretting about the terraffs. The dry by media was
telling everybody, whatever your toe hurts, it's the tariffs. You
feel mildly depressed. Tariffs, menopause setting in tariffs, it's what
they do. Everything was a tariffs, and so the polls

(10:03):
were showing that there was a fatigue people were. Consumer
confidence was down, people were worried, people were fearful things
weren't going to be good. When things are. When bad
things are in the future, businesses don't hire, Businesses don't invest,
businesses don't buy, don't make cap X purchases, they don't

(10:26):
they don't invest in research. They hoard their cash because
they're scared bad times are coming. Reverse is when there
is a feeling of exuberance. Things are about to be
really good. Money starts flowing. Mister Smith, did you just
agree to Yeah, yeah, we're taking on executives on a
big trip or doing things. Are you sure our cash

(10:49):
position is not great? It's about to be wonderful things
are It's about to happen. Okay, that's all based on
a mindset, not on fundamentals. That's not all related to
what is happening. It's related to what people perceive is
going to happen. Well, everything about the terraff was going
to end America as we knew it, as Trump often does.

(11:14):
The threat of the teriffs and the belief that he
would implement them, which is why he had to implement them.
Otherwise it was just a bluff. A bluff that is
not believed is ineffective. Well, he immediately implemented them, so
there had to be some short term pain. There was
short term pain. You might have felt it. American businesses
in the supply chain felt it, but foreign countries really

(11:38):
felt it, and they panicked. So what did they do?
They cut new deals. So Trump starts rolling back the
terrace the Geneva Switzerland accords where they agreed a couple
weeks ago. We're we're to hold off for ninety days.
We're gonna keep your terifts at ten percent. You put
ours at ten percent, will have reciprocal trade terifts the

(11:58):
first time in decades. So the market that had begun
a slide overnight had an explosive growth. Well, you know
how you know, the Trump economy is picking up the
fact that the media is not talking about it. But
Lee's Elden, the EPA administrator, made a statement on Fox News,

(12:22):
this isn't the most important thing in the world. But
to me, this speaks to the kind of common sense
that Trump brings to the issue that he doesn't need
a commission, he doesn't need a study, and we're not
going to do stupid things if Susie comes home from college,
sits down at the family table at Thanksgiving and says,
I demand that we say a prayer to the Native

(12:44):
gods because we're on stolen land. Trump goes, no, we're
not going to do that. Okay, eat or don't eat,
Get out or don't We're not We're not playing the
silly games, okay. So Leez Elden says, we're going to
revoke that twenty twelve Obama EPA stupid auto start stop ruling.
I go a lot of places with Uncle Jerry, my buddy,

(13:06):
and he's got a great truck, high powered, he's got
the lift on the other but every time we get
to a stoplight, it stops like a golf cart.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
And then when you get rid of.

Speaker 9 (13:20):
What the hen's one hundred thousand dollars truck and he's
got to stop start like a golf cart. So here
is him saying, we're doing away with that nonsense.

Speaker 6 (13:28):
You made some news in the last couple of days
about this this stops star technology.

Speaker 1 (13:31):
Right.

Speaker 6 (13:32):
It's basically when the engine shuts down. It was incentivized
in twenty twelve in the Obama administration something like thirty
million vehicles I believe in this country or give or
take about two thirds have it. You say you want
to you want to fix it. Why are you taking
this on and what do you mean by fixing it?

Speaker 7 (13:49):
Why do most Americans despise it? And to the level
of most Americans with a hatred of saying that this
is the single worst feature in their motor vehicle, they
want it eliminated. Epall over a dozen years ago, about
thirteen years ago, approved an off cycle credit for this feature,

(14:11):
and a lot of Americans over the course of the
last dozen years have grown in frustration as they've had
this experience where you're going to a red light and your.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
Car is stopping.

Speaker 7 (14:24):
Maybe you're in an area where your car is constantly
turning on and turning off. You start wondering, okay, so
if this saves a little bit, maybe if it saves
a little bit and gas, what is it doing to
my starter? Was it doing to my engine? Is is
it safe? And some people say, okay, you give me
the ability every time I turn my car on to

(14:44):
turn the feature off while I'm driving, But why don't
you just give me the option to opt out where
I don't have to turn it off every single time
my car starts, So universally, is it possible that every
single one of your watchers, your listener.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
All hate it? Uh? No, right? What is it quite possible.

Speaker 7 (15:05):
That most people watching us right now are nodding their
head in the agreement saying yes, thank you.

Speaker 6 (15:11):
So what are you gonna So then, what are you
gonna What are you actually gonna do about it?

Speaker 1 (15:15):
Right?

Speaker 6 (15:15):
Because at the end of the day, there are sort
of these these fuel economy credits attached to this. But
are you gonna say, you know what, cars that are
built in the US can't have it, have this, What
do you actually do about it?

Speaker 7 (15:27):
EPA would go through the process of revoking its approval
on the off on the off cycle.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
Credit Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 9 (15:42):
It is being reported that at this very moment, which
is why I held out coming back, I was trying
to get an accurate update, President Trump is or just completed,
is currently talking to or just completed a conversation with
Vladimir Zelenski. He has or is expected to have right

(16:05):
about now, a conversation with Vladimir Putin. It is being
reported that Putin is slow walking the deal. But remember
the same people that report these things reported that the
clock shot was safe.

Speaker 1 (16:21):
It wasn't.

Speaker 9 (16:22):
They've reported that climate change was going to kill us all.
Whatever happened to climate change, It's like they've just forgotten
about climate change. Where did climate change go? We're all
supposed to be dead by now. Somehow that's not the
hot item these days. I believe that Putin wants peace.

(16:50):
I think he wants crimea but I think he wants
to war over. I was talking to my brother in law,
who was a very high general on the Indian Army.
He's retired now last weekend and we were talking about
war and if the war between Indian Pakistan escalades it.

(17:14):
He said, despite what people think, war always leaves you weaker.
And I said, well, but don't you sometimes have to
have war to No. No, it's understandable, but it leaves
you weaker for a short term or a long term.

Speaker 1 (17:30):
It leaves you weaker.

Speaker 9 (17:32):
You lose a lot of brain power, you lose a
lot of treasury. There are effects to your infrastructure, There
are a lot of things that happen that are not
calculated in the cost of war. Even when you win,
I mean, it's never guaranteed you win. I think the

(17:53):
cost and the strain on Putin's Russia has been born
long enough and he's ready for it to be over.
And I think the media wants to blame Putin when
in fact, Zelensky is the one whose nation is suffering,
but he is personally being enriched by this war, and

(18:14):
nobody who is following what's happening would disagree with that.
Part of the end of the war is going to
be Zelensky stepping down. It's not official, but I believe
that to be true, and I think that's when he
steps down and seeks refuge. I think he would like
to end up in Miami. He's got real estate there,

(18:35):
a thirty million dollar house, it's been reported. And now
he's a rich man. He's a fabulously rich man from
being a third rate dancer a few years ago. So
if Trump pulls off the ceasefire of a war that's
been going on since shortly after he left office, and
because he left office, because he wasn't there to prevent it,

(18:56):
because Putin respects him and he has a respect for Putin,
it is the role of the media to undermine Trump's
very clear bonafides as one of the only people who
can reason with Putin that they claim he is owned
by Putin, because that's how they undercut and undermine one

(19:20):
of his greatest strengths is the relationship they have. Putin
did not respect Biden, That's why he invaded Ukraine. He
does respect Trump and this little turd Zelenski, this is
an awful little Cretan in all of the people who

(19:41):
have been personally enriched by nefarious, illegal activity from the
United States in Ukraine, from diverting funds that were supposed
to go to their military to medical testing that has
occurred on Ukrainian soil. All of this has been blown
up and been exp not all of it, but a
lot of it that otherwise was not because Ukraine was

(20:06):
the staging place for many, many evil, nefarious American activities.
And I think you can trace every one of these
prominent American families, Democrat and Republican, to the activities there
and their personal enrichment, which is why they never called
out hunter Biden, because in one way or another, they

(20:27):
were all doing the exact same thing.

Speaker 1 (20:30):
Now you add to this.

Speaker 9 (20:34):
That the leader of Iran over the weekend saying that
he is open to discussions with President Trump. Now he
has to say things like, but we're not going to
be threatened, and we're going to defend our rights, and
we're going to defend our nation. If President Trump sits

(20:57):
down with the Iranian leader, the Iranian leader and he
can cut a deal, he could, in one fell swoop,
change the security of much of the world, including the
Middle South of Africa, where Yemen is in basically a

(21:21):
civil war where the Houties have terrorized that region.

Speaker 1 (21:27):
The man who invented dynamite.

Speaker 9 (21:28):
Sought to save his conscience with the Nobel Peace Prize.
There is no one more deserving than Donald trumpet he
pos this over.

Speaker 1 (21:39):
Than Michael Berry show.

Speaker 9 (21:40):
Number one complaint I read day in and day out
resecution is frustration over property taxes. We had a conversation
about Galveston last week. First time I've seen this since
the real est state run up of the COVID era.

(22:03):
A house was reduced by one hundred thousand dollars. Several
people sent me a clip said price reduced one hundred
thousand on the listing that this is a trend. Now,
you have to be careful that you don't read something
into what I'm saying that it's not there. Because people

(22:24):
often do this. That is not to say that Galveston
is being abandoned, far from it. What it is to
say is you go back to your pricing in twenty
nineteen and you look at the price per square foot.

Speaker 1 (22:42):
You can look at West Beach, you can look at
in Town.

Speaker 9 (22:44):
You can look at the neighborhoods, the condos on the strand,
you can look at Typeman in that area, which I
really like. You can look at these different neighborhoods, and
then you can look on the West Beach. You can
go one after the other, Pirates Cove typically being about

(23:05):
the highest, and you've got Jamaica Beach, you've got Sea Isle,
you've got the beach side, and the bayside. Bayside tends
to be a little higher than the beach, all right.
So you look at those prices and you look at
them price per squarefoot and where they're located, all that,
and you have typically a slight increase in pricing up

(23:29):
until twenty nineteen, and that's your last stable baseline.

Speaker 1 (23:33):
Then in twenty.

Speaker 9 (23:34):
Twenty, when the Chinese flew was released on the American
people and you couldn't travel, a lot of people that
normally would have gone to Colorado went to Galveston. A
lot of people who would have gone to Europe went
to Colorado or Galveston, and a lot of mommies said, hey, honey,

(23:56):
since we can't travel for a while working from home anyway,
and the kids are here, won't we do what the
Smithson Joneses did. Won't get us a place on the
beach down there? When we get a place on the
bay down there, you love to fish anyway, So they did.
So remember, let's plot this on our axis. The demand

(24:17):
remained the same. There weren't new homes being built over
night in Galveston, but there was an increase in demand,
so the supply remained the same. They weren't building new houses,
the demand increased. So what does that do. It drives
the pricing up. So that price increase, which was artificial,

(24:41):
it didn't happen organically. You had a major event, and
that was a shutdown of the economy. People weren't flying anywhere.
They weren't traveling anywhere. They weren't going to the office.
When you're not going to the office, then where you lived,
which you lived there because it was close to the office,

(25:03):
there's a shorter commute. So Dad and if mom works,
mom too, are not going to the office. You wanted
to be close to the school. Couldn't live an hour
away from the school, hour and a half away from
the school down in Galveston. But if the kids aren't
going to school anyway, dad or mom is not going
to work, why wouldn't we go down and hang out

(25:25):
in Galveston for a year. We'll buy a house for
a couple of years. We've always wanted to. So that's
what people did. So now you had an artificially increased
demand for the houses, which drove the prices up. Well,
that first group that sold, they made out like bandits.
They had a low basis in their homes and they

(25:47):
cashed out. The people who bought have the mistaken impression
that the way things are today they will always be.
That is an unsophisticated, unstrategic approach to most anything. Prices
could continue to go up or prices could come down.

Speaker 1 (26:09):
Well. With the artificial increase in demand.

Speaker 9 (26:12):
Over that period of time, you had a lot of
people who rushed down to buy houses in.

Speaker 1 (26:18):
All the price ranges.

Speaker 9 (26:21):
But at some point you started to see COVID trailing off.
Fewer and fewer people wearing the mask, fewer and fewer
people getting the clot shot. Businesses slowly started reopening. People
started going back to the office, and it took two
or three years when some places didn't require it. A

(26:43):
friend of mine works for Treasury Department now and she
was working from home.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
She's a strategist.

Speaker 9 (26:49):
She's a lawyer, but she's a tax policy strategist, and
she said, we have to go back to the office
now five days a week. Trump administration says, get back
to the office, and that's what she does. But as
businesses started opening back up, they had less ability to
live down in Galveston. Now it was only on the weekend,

(27:10):
and so for some of them, they said, you know
what we're going to. We haven't been to Europe in
a few years. We haven't been here, we haven't done this.
We haven't gone back to Colorado, we haven't gone to California,
we haven't gone to Florida, we haven't gone to the
Redneck RIVERA let's sell our property. Well, now you don't
have as many people coming down as you do people

(27:31):
putting their properties on the market. So let's plot that
out again. The supply increased, and even if the.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
Demand remained the same.

Speaker 9 (27:42):
An increase in supply of homes for sale would drive
the price down, But now we have the X going
the other way. That axis moves back, So now we
have an increase in supply, more people selling their places,
and a decrease in demand. A lot of these sellers
are people who were buyers a couple of years ago.

(28:03):
They're not being replaced by people in the same numbers
wanting to go back now. Prices are not back to
where they were in twenty nineteen. So in the mind
of people owning properties in Galveson's my example here, but
there are others, this is the end of the world.
Galveson is over. It's horrible, it's no none of that

(28:26):
is true. There was an artificial market, and there were
winners and losers created by the artificial market. That first
round of sellers made a lot of money because their
properties were worth more than they were before. There are
losers the people who bought and now can't get their
money back out, especially if they financed it cash. Buyers
we hurt less because they can at least take back

(28:47):
less cash than they put it in the first place.
So what you're witnessing now is what stock market observers
call and a term I hate, which is a market correction.
A market correction somehow suggests that there is a proper
price for Tesla stock, or Nvidia stock, or Apple stock

(29:08):
or Exxon. There is no proper price. There is no
proper price for anything. There is only what a willing
buyer and seller will buy and sell them for. If
you get to the end times, what a bottle of
water will be worth will be say ten thousand dollars, Well,
it can't be water. How much does it worth to

(29:28):
you to have that right now? And that is the
factor in pricing that people tend to lose sight of.
I think what we're going to witness is a reduction
in values in resort tourist communities over the next few
years to get back to I don't call it a correction.

(29:49):
I call it a return to rational pricing. And I
don't know that Galveson will go back to twenty nineteen
numbers unless there's a big storm that comes through. Big
storm comes from You lose a lot of retail, it
doesn't come back. You put a lot of homes on
the market.

Speaker 1 (30:03):
That weren't there. You got it.

Speaker 9 (30:05):
There's a period to rebuild. There's all the things that
are tumultuous about that. But it's going to be very
very interesting how that plays out. So factor in that Galveston,
their appraisal district is based on number of complaints. I
get the worst in the region. They are absolutely gouging

(30:27):
people on appraisals. So now one of the other factors
is people had a second home, they don't get a
homestead exemption.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
Property taxes are going through the roof.

Speaker 9 (30:39):
You can't airbnb it the way you could before because
there's not the market for that anymore. So what's the
one thing we wanted the Texas House to do? Was
the one thing.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
Pass property tax production. They did not. They didn't even
get close to doing it. Out of time.

Speaker 9 (31:02):
They they did what the Democrats wanted them to do,
which was the deal they cut. So Burroughs gets to
be the speaker. The guys that cut deals with in
Mono di Lacy Hall, they go in, they all get
their committee chairmanships and they get to be big, and
they've got consultants who will tell you, well, they fought
like tooth and nail, but send them back one more

(31:23):
time to fight them. Dad Burn Democrats the ones you
joined in with
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