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January 5, 2026 • 34 mins

A deep dive into Trump’s stunning capture of Nicolás Maduro—how it happened, why it matters, and the global ripple effects across China, Russia, Cuba, and the oil market. Plus: what Venezuela’s collapse means for America.

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Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Come and get me, Nicholas Maduro will wait right here
in Mira Flores.

Speaker 1 (00:19):
Don't take too long, coward.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
The Biden administration made a deal with Maduro.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
No one talks about this.

Speaker 3 (00:25):
Maduro asked that his nephews, convicted drug traffickers, be released
from US prisoners. He asked that his chief money launderer,
his money man, his bagman, be released from US custody
before he stood trial. In exchange, he promised to hold
free and fair elections. He got the nephews back, the
drug dealers, he got the bagman back, and he never did.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
The free and he stole all the election. He stole
the elections.

Speaker 3 (00:44):
President Trump just announced on social media that Veslimam President
for Nicholas Medora has been captured and flown out of
the country. The forty seven president the United States is
not a game player. When he tells you that he's
going to do something, when he's good, tells you he's
going to address a problem, he means it. This is
a president of action, Like I don't understand yet how
they haven't figured this out.

Speaker 1 (01:04):
And now if you don't know, now you know.

Speaker 4 (01:19):
The Venezuelan people need our support to recover their democracy
and rebuild their country. A new sanctions is one of
the tools for a comprehensive strategy that includes humanitarian assistants,
international pressure, and support for democratic actors in Venezuela to
force the regime to embark on the road to a
free and fair election.

Speaker 3 (01:37):
This is not any president that just talks and does
letters and press conferences. And you know, if he says
he's serious about something, he means it. The message here
should be for the world. Look, the president doesn't go
out looking for people to pick fights with. He's not
generally wants to get along with everybody. We'll talk to
me with anybody, but don't play games. Don't play games
with this president's in office, because it's not going to

(01:58):
turn out well.

Speaker 5 (02:12):
Tell me how this news is being received in Iran,
How's it being received in Russia, How's it being received
in China? All three, predictably will deplore this kind of
activity publicly. Privately, they will be impressed with the military
capability here.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
I would argue none of.

Speaker 5 (02:32):
Those three militaries could have executed in operation like this
and again, we just we tend to just breeze by this.
But the idea of finding Fixing, kidnapping, taking him out
alive with his wife, no casualties on the side of
the US, that's an extraordinary military operation. The US has
something of a mixed track record of ousting dictators without

(02:55):
necessarily a plan for what comes afterwards.

Speaker 6 (02:57):
It that way, so that's what.

Speaker 1 (02:58):
We have different presidents. With me, that's not true. With me,
We've had a perfect track record of winning.

Speaker 7 (03:05):
We win a lot in less than an hour. Minnesota
Governor Tim Waltz, the vice presidential candidate for Kamala Harris

(03:29):
Jazz Hands Timmy the football coach. You'll recall after the election,
he said that he was the redneck whisperer. He was
brought onto the ticket to talk to the white men,
you know, because because he likes to hunt and play
football man apparently diddle young men's booty holes. But I

(03:51):
don't know how that was supposed to help him connect
with anybody.

Speaker 1 (03:55):
That's that's what he thought. Well, he will speech.

Speaker 7 (04:01):
The announcement yesterday did not say that it would be
his resignation, but we now know that it will. The
Star Tribune out of Mogen Issue has the speech, and
I will just read to you the operative lines. But
as I reflected on this moment with my family and
my team over the holidays, I came to the conclusion
that I cannot give a political campaign my all. Every

(04:24):
minute I spend defending my own political interests would be
a minute I cannot spend defending the people of Minnesota
against the criminals who pray on our generosity and the
Senate cynics who pray on our differences. So I've decided
to step out of the race and let others worry
about the election.

Speaker 1 (04:42):
While I focus on the work. Oh way to go, Timmy.

Speaker 7 (04:48):
Timmy would love to continue being the best governor in
the history of Minnesota, but he realizes that traveling the
Great State and eating the Somali food, and kissing the
Somali ass and protecting the Somali criminal enterprise the warlords
that would take so much of his time that instead

(05:11):
he's just gonna He's just gonna sit in his office
and govern. He's just gonna do what needs to be
done for the people of Minnesota. That's old Timmy, always
willing to take one for the team. If you know
what I mean, no matter where that comes. We'll talk
about that on the evening show. The story of Venezuela

(05:33):
grows more interesting by the minute. Aside from Venezuela, some
of the largest heavy crude oil reserves in the world
are in Russia. This will of course affect Russia, it
will affect China, which depends on Venezuela and oil. Cuba

(05:58):
is absolutely a and so that's why President Trump is
suggesting that a fall in Cuba is imminent.

Speaker 1 (06:11):
The argument goes that.

Speaker 7 (06:13):
Tapping into Venezuela's heavy crude oil reserves would weaken Russia's influence.
I saw somebody's saying that this would strengthen Russia because
it would reduce a number of It would reduce the
amount of heavy crude overnight, making Russia a more valuable
provider of heavy crude. Well, yes, in the short term,

(06:36):
but if you open up Venezuelan production, you're going to
create a competition for Russia that is not going to
inure to their benefit. And in Russia relies heavily on
the sale of their oil to the world. So this
becomes a geopolitical move between Trump and Putin. This gives

(07:02):
Trump leverage with putin. It gives him leverage with China,
and that's something I think that is very very important
to him, is leverage on both of those countries, particularly
with China. He has said over the weekend that he
will sell some of the oil that will be produced

(07:24):
out of all of this to China, and as I said,
I think that is to a sage the Chinese and
keep them out of meddling with this process.

Speaker 1 (07:36):
You'll be fine.

Speaker 7 (07:37):
You'll still have the oil your economy so desperately needs.

Speaker 1 (07:42):
It's not just about oil.

Speaker 7 (07:44):
Reports are that Venezuela holds two hundred cubic feet of
natural gas reserves, much of which is unexplored.

Speaker 1 (07:56):
Now.

Speaker 7 (07:56):
The problem with their natural gas and heavy crude oil,
as I understand it, is it's very expensive to recover.
Oil's currently at fifty seven dollars a barrel. The guys
in Texas would like it to be seventy. This poor

(08:17):
tends to drop that and more supply is going to
be lower prices and lower profit. But it's going to
be lower cost to you and me at the pump,
and that's a good thing. The King of Dean suggested
for general audiences, all right, let's open the phone lines
seven one three, one thousand, John and Kirksville, Missouri. Rights

(08:42):
had a fellow at work with atrocious breath. We called
him breath of a thousand Buttholes. I can't tell how
many people have said to me that this or that
person has breath that smells like ass. I don't know
what's wrong with my mind. But my immediate response, rather

(09:02):
than thinking, wow, that's really descriptive, I get your point,
my immediate reaction is always, well, how do you know
what ass smells like? Are you really flexible? Or were
you somewhere you shouldn't have been? Are you a proctologist?
Michael writes I lived for twenty years in Venezuela, finally
getting out in twenty thirteen. The significance of the cartel

(09:26):
the sols is that they are the equivalent of stars
or an American uniform, and in fact they are generals.
They are the people running the cartel. The military is
the cartel. I was waiting to see how many Cubans died.
They make up the Praetorian Guard, and that has turned

(09:46):
out to be the case. The Cuban government themselves announcing
that thirty two Cubans have been killed I'm not sure
why they had to have a reason they thought that
was that does not look good for them. Your task
was to provide president security for this propped up president

(10:09):
who gives you oil in exchange for your mercenaries, and
your mercenaries just got their ass kicked and you didn't
take out one American in the process.

Speaker 1 (10:18):
I don't know, as I understand.

Speaker 7 (10:21):
That the West Texas light crude and the heavy Venezuelan
or even OPEC oil are needed in the formulation of
gasoline as we use it, and having that heavy crude
at American disposal makes us less dependent on OPEC. Because

(10:45):
we produce our light crude, we need the heavy crude.
It makes us less dependent on OPEC. It makes us
less dependent on Canada. So expect to see a change
in tone from Canada going forward. But as you can imagine,
American energy companies are not going to invest billions of dollars,

(11:05):
which the President says they're going to do, unless they
perceive Venezuela to be stable. And that's where you start
looking at the potential dangers of nation building. Because we've
not wiped out the Secretary of Defense, who by all
accounts is a really bad guy. We have not wiped
out the Vice president, who, despite her recent protestations overnight

(11:28):
that she's looking forward to working with Trump, is not
a good person. We've not wiped out the operators and
other cartel leaders who were behind the scenes running the
Maduro government. You take out Maduro and his wife, you
have to remember there's a whole group of folks, and

(11:50):
I'm not suggesting that we should wipe them out. I
think that's the lesson we learned from Iraq. If we
had extricated Saddam Hussein and co opted the units, the
special units that he had in place, and the structure
that he had in place, at least until internally they

(12:12):
could develop their own, that country would have been better off.
But what we did is we wiped out the entire
top tier, and that created a vacuum, and it was
a vacuum that was filled by some really bad operators
who knew nothing about governing, but had a lot of
men and a lot of guns. It opened the door

(12:33):
for Iran to come in. So now you had this
triangulation of Saddam Hussein, who was in the minority of
that country based on his beliefs, background, religious denomination, you

(12:56):
had the Irani Shia government, you had other operators in
the region who might have claimed to be overly religious
but were really just power hungry, and we created an
environment where the country collapsed overnight. That would not have
happened simply with the removal of Saddam Hussein.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
That was a huge mistake.

Speaker 7 (13:19):
The Bush administration was operating at the time under what
they called the Powell doctrine, and that went, if you
break it, you bought it.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
That meant, if you create the collapse, you then.

Speaker 7 (13:32):
Go in and engage in the nation building activity of
providing their security. There are people listening to us right
now who lost a loved one patrolling the streets of
Baghdad or to Cree or Belujah. You know, it's interesting

(13:54):
when I think back, Marcus Ltrel comes back from Afghanistan
busted up, broken up, shot to hell, hospitalized in recovering
for a year. He goes back and serves in Iraq.
In fact, I think he comes back from Afghanistan five

(14:14):
and he's in Iraq in O seven. I may be
wrong on this on the dates I knew it. At
one point, I just can't recall it. I believe he
was in Iraq, or had just returned from Iraq when
the book was published, changing his life forever. He didn't
swim back Ramon, that's uh, he might be a Navy seal.

Speaker 1 (14:34):
I don't know.

Speaker 7 (14:34):
He not swimming that long, although he did lose fifty
pounds in forty days.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
Very christlight, very christlight. Yeah, he's uh.

Speaker 7 (14:44):
My wife said, you know, I think you and Marcus
are very similar, because neither one of you does well
with just treading water. You either need to be doing
something really extreme, you know, losing a lot of weight
or whatever you're doing. Going back into normalcy is not
good for you. And I said, I don't know what

(15:05):
you said, but when you said that Marcus and I
were a lot alike, I like that part of that.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
That was real good.

Speaker 7 (15:10):
I like Ramona's shaking his head. I like to catapult myself.
See that is the opposite personality of a CHATTACONI Nakanishi.

Speaker 1 (15:19):
That guy gets up early every morning. He gets up
earlier in the morning.

Speaker 7 (15:25):
Did I go to bed, gets up, goes and does
his workout, does his protein powder and his seaweed.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
Mix, and is this and is this probably has his.

Speaker 7 (15:34):
Daily ablution and does this this this works out preps.
The show shows up, turns the lights on, turns the coffee.
I mean that guy, there's no extremism with him, none,
absolutely none. Think about the other countries watching what just happened.
If you're a guy like Maduro a ten pen Martinette

(15:59):
dictator of a country, and you go, you know, I
kind of like what's going on? And while nobody in
my country is allowed to question me, you know, there
is that little detail of I could be toppled Noriega
in eighty nine, Kadafi under Obama, Saddam Hussein. You know,

(16:21):
maybe maybe no more saber rattling for me for a
little while. Maybe I realized there's something out there that's
bigger than me.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
It's the excitement of Oshan, the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 2 (16:31):
Everything you need and most everything you want.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
A friend who was.

Speaker 7 (16:40):
Who works with the riot group for the Houston Police Department,
who had to work yesterday afternoon because there was a
Venezuelan protest downtown Houston. And it's interesting, isn't it that

(17:01):
the Democrats are constantly playing defense. This is what Trump
does that no Republican has ever caused them to do.

Speaker 1 (17:12):
The entirety of my life.

Speaker 7 (17:15):
The Democrats go on the offensive, and our side tries
to find a way.

Speaker 1 (17:21):
To thwart that.

Speaker 7 (17:25):
When they win, they win. When they lose, we're just
back to neutral. We can never win. Trump stays on
them constantly. They have to wake up every morning unsure
of their playbook because Trump is going to control the
media cycle. That's what he's going to do. Trump is

(17:46):
going to decide what we're going to talk about today.
Rare is the day that he is not the one
who sets the agenda for what every water cooler conversation
is going to be that day. And once he sets that,
the Democrats run around and say he's hitler, he's a cannibal,
he's a horrible guy. He did this, he did this.

(18:07):
But they are always in defense.

Speaker 1 (18:09):
Or what he's arguing.

Speaker 7 (18:13):
I saw Newt g Angrish giving an interview last night
and he said, one of the things they wanted to
do to Bill Clinton during the Hillary Care, yes there
was Hillary Care before Obamacare. One of the things they
wanted to do was they wanted to put Bill Clinton
in the position of having to defend indefensible positions. And

(18:35):
what Trump has now done is put the Democrats in
the position of having to defend Maduro, and that is
not an enviable position with regard to the public. I
saw some polls last night that Trump is anywhere from
five to ten percent more popular. His policies are five

(18:56):
to ten percent more popular than he is individually. And
I'll go back, as I always do, to twenty twelve.
There was an exit poll done between Romney and Obama.
Romney was underwater. He was under fifty percent approval rating.
It was the worst approval ratings for a sitting president

(19:18):
seeking re election since polling had begun on a national
scale in the thirties. There was no way he was
going to win. There were two key questions asked at
the exit poll. Remember, the exit poll is what you're
asked as you're leaving having voted. It's considered accurate, although
it's turned out not to really be so. But this

(19:39):
gives the media something to report on when they start
reporting in the minute the polls closed. The problem is
the polls close on the East Coast long before they
do it on the West Coast, or even before in
Central time zone. So what they're trying to do is
skew the election leftward because the East coast countries tend
to be more Democrat. Middle America tends to be or Republican,

(20:01):
so they hope to suppress the vote with the early
returns that oh the Democrats canna win. The two key
questions were who would do better on the economy and
who would you rather have a beer with? Who would
do better on the economy was sixty forty Romney. Who
would you rather have a beer with was sixty forty Obama.

(20:22):
What the media and the Democrats do a very good
job of doing is that their people are cool and
hit likable, nice, caring, sympathetic. Republicans cruel, cold, aloof distant

(20:43):
and as it turns out, a lot of people are
not in a position that they're capable of choosing who
would be the best leader because they don't have any
leadership skills themselves. Most Americans are not leaders. That's that's
very simil Peo prime of Faci point. Most Americans are

(21:03):
not leaders. Everybody can't be a leader for every leader.
You have a lot of people who are non leaders.
Whether they're followers or not depends on the person, but
they're not leaders. And people who are not leaders don't
understand what leadership entails. You can go to the break
room of every company in America, and you can hear

(21:24):
the guy with four dwis, three divorces in bankruptcy court,
who won't pay his child support tell you how the
CEO of the company doesn't know how to run it.

Speaker 1 (21:35):
And that's fact, that is a fact. He knows more
than everybody, Yes he does.

Speaker 7 (21:43):
So to the surprise of nobody, when the Maduro capture
and it was held close to the vest emerged, the
protest machine fired up. Actually, for the first time in
a long time, saw some what used to be called
mainstream media, mainstream media reporting on who was funding and

(22:04):
organizing these protests, because they're not organic. They're funded, they're organized,
they're paid for, and who are these people getting paid
and busted around the country. They got to be getting
confused as to what exactly they're protesting.

Speaker 1 (22:25):
Now they can't keep up.

Speaker 6 (22:27):
Okay, everyone on board.

Speaker 1 (22:30):
Here for our next process.

Speaker 6 (22:33):
Now remember, and I'm confused, I'm here for rainbow Walkways.
You know it's not just Gabe bring back rainbow Walkways.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
No, that was quarter three.

Speaker 6 (22:48):
Last year we moved on.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
Wait a minute, my brochure says, more cats, less king.
Last year we moved on another whoa, whoa, whoa.

Speaker 6 (23:00):
My champ book says we hate Trump. He hated just
say no to the dictator.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
Well, yes, that's true, but people.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
Were I'm confused, are we burning our proper Palestine T shirts?
Where in the.

Speaker 6 (23:13):
World we get these people?

Speaker 7 (23:23):
Let's see, let's check our notes here. So six months
ago they were carrying Iranian flags. Seven months ago it
was Mexican flags like they're a used car dealership on
forty five South.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Eight months ago was Palestinian flags.

Speaker 7 (23:45):
That was fun because you had gaze for the Palestinians
and he sort of go, okay, how about you go
visit this enchanted land on whose behalf you protest? Nine
months ago you had Ukrainian flags. That was a real treat.

(24:06):
Remember when Secretary Susan replaced her profile pick with the
Ukrainian flag? Oh really, Sison worried about Kiev?

Speaker 1 (24:19):
Are you?

Speaker 7 (24:21):
Please do tell me, in my best Gene Wilder in
the Willy Wonka movie, explain to me what's going on
in Ukraine and why exactly you are their staunch, ardent defender.
Please do tell me what's wrong in Ukraine. Please do

(24:42):
tell me why exactly you are defending the Palestinians, particularly
the Palestinians who attacked israel. I think it's an unforcend
fortunate litmus test in America when we have Somali warlords
and a thirty eight trillion dollar deficit and fraud on

(25:03):
a level that is literally beyond your belief, and the
conservative machinery entertainers have decided that they're going to declare
civil war on each other over whether they love or
hate Israel. Whether that's the case or not, it's a sad,
sad day, Michael Berry.

Speaker 1 (25:27):
We have come to.

Speaker 7 (25:28):
Take for granted the tactical precision of sey Delta force
in Venezuela. You think about the extent to which they
threaded the needle to make that operation such a raging success.

(25:50):
Every single one of them came home alive.

Speaker 1 (25:53):
That's incredible.

Speaker 7 (25:55):
It's so incredible that the BBC was reporting that this
was a negotiated settlement, and maybe it was. Maybe Maduro
was facing internal pressure, assassination, Maybe he was looking for
a landing pad. Why not take exile that was offered

(26:16):
to him, Why not go to Turkey and live like
a king. That's what Bashar Asad does in Russia, and
by all accounts lives very well. He almost waited too late.
I don't know, but this is a good opportunity to
remember that there are men and women who sign up

(26:40):
to serve this country and without regard to a political affiliation,
they mostly vote Republican, very patriotic people, and without regard
to whether where they will be sent is a good
place or a bad place where they should be there
in the first place, they just do it.

Speaker 1 (26:58):
And then you have some of them.

Speaker 7 (27:01):
Who go to the next level and say, I want
to be a ranger, I want to be a seal,
I want to be delta Force, I want to do
one of the number of very specialized forms of training,
And every dude out there, myself included, kind of secretly imagines, yeah, badasses, Yeah,

(27:24):
we wouldn't put ourselves through that level of physical emotional stress.
Can you imagine to get to that point. They've been
for six months on this task, having to be ready
at all times for the moment the order is given,

(27:46):
and then they had to be perfect, and they were,
and they were. For every one of you out there,
for every family member out there who makes that happen,
thank you. We take it for granted all too often
we take it for granted Maduro has hired a prominent
criminal defense attorney. I made the note Pollock. I can't

(28:13):
remember what his first name is. I thought he was
going to hire Dan Cogdill. That was the rumor legendary
Houston criminal defense attorney Dan Cocktail. He may end up
on the criminal defense team after all. Pollock represented Wiki
Leak's founder, Julian Assange. He's out of d C. This
case is in the Southern District of New York. We'll

(28:36):
talk this evening on this evening show a bit about
the judge who has been assigned. But it is quite troubling.
Just a couple things I read over the weekend, comments
from different people. Trump arrested a president who stole an election.
Democrats arrested a president because they wanted to steal an election.
We'll be getting the Timmy Waltz jazz hands resignation here shortly.

(29:01):
John Lefay, who's been a guest of the show, wrote,
don't let the people criticizing Trump today forget Joscelyn Nungerai twelve,
Lake and Riley twenty two murdered by Venezuelan thugs sent
here by Maduro and let in by Biden.

Speaker 1 (29:21):
It's incredible.

Speaker 7 (29:22):
It's incredible how many Americans, how our streets are less safe,
how many girls and probably boys for that matter, have
been raped and killed.

Speaker 1 (29:33):
Because of this, and Trump put a stop to it.

Speaker 7 (29:39):
I don't expect the Democrat politicians to give Trump credit.
I don't, but it would be nice for everyday Americans
to realize, oh wow, I'm better off. I know I've
been ridiculing the Republicans for years. I know I'm Jewish
and I was supposed to be Democrat. I know I'm

(30:01):
Black and I'm supposed to be a Democrat. I know
I'm gay, I'm supposed to be Democrat.

Speaker 1 (30:06):
I know I'm labor. I'm supposed to be Democrat.

Speaker 7 (30:08):
But damn it, Trump makes my life better, and I'm
going to be bold enough to say so. CNN International
ran a story a little while back, Can Rabbit Meet
save Venezuela.

Speaker 1 (30:22):
From going hungry?

Speaker 7 (30:26):
So socialism begins with the question, you know, why can't
we just have health care for everybody? And it ends
with questions like that, can rabbit meet save Venezuela from
going hungry? It only took seventy seven days to go
from No Kings to leave the dictator alone. President Trump,

(30:49):
remember the no Kings not so long ago?

Speaker 1 (30:51):
Was it? Not a word?

Speaker 7 (30:55):
And no outrage from the looney left When President Joe
Biden had President Juan Orlando Hernandez of Honduras arrested and
extradited to the United States for drug trafficking. I bet
you'd forgotten that one, hadn't you. Successful operation in Panama
Canal increased the ranks of our military, shut down Iran's

(31:19):
nuclear prowess, smacked Muslim extremists in Nigeria, causing them to
return the Christian hostages that they had taken, took out
the Venezuelan military bases and captured their leader without killing him,
and no soldiers killed in any of those operations. Tell
me again that how Pete Hegseth drank too much and

(31:41):
couldn't do the job he's turned out to be. If
we're going to give a Defense secretary war secretary as
he calls it, which is what the department used to
be called a Department of war, We're going to give
the war secretary the blame for when things go bad.
Flip side of that coin, as you give him the

(32:01):
credit for when things go well, the email system is
back up and running. Michael Berryshow dot Com the website.
You can sign up for our daily blast, which has
gotten better and better by the day. Darryl Kunda does that.
Sign up now you'll get Today's which comes usually between

(32:23):
about noon or one o'clock. That'll be clips from the show,
a funny meme, some silliness, some nonsense. You can buy
our show merch there. You can send me an email directly.
There Folks sending me email saying that they've started their
estate planning because January it's a new year, Great time
to do that. Michael Petru signed up to three new

(32:45):
clients as of this.

Speaker 1 (32:46):
Morning at about nine thirty. It's probably more than that.

Speaker 7 (32:48):
Now we have a call from Maduro when he was
at Mita Flores in Venezuela, to his buddy and protector
Putin from inside his bunker where he thought he was safe.

Speaker 2 (33:05):
Hello, I hope you've been watching the noose. I'm playing
Trump and his voice like a pair of cheap maraccas.

Speaker 1 (33:16):
Did you hear my.

Speaker 2 (33:17):
Speech yelling and banging on the podium. I took a
page out of our boy Hitler with that one. Anyway,
So here's the great part of an all Laddy. I
scream and I shot to come get me, and mid
of Flora's palace here I am calling get me.

Speaker 1 (33:31):
I think they fell for it. Little do they know.
I'm ally waying caracas Flatti.

Speaker 2 (33:36):
You see I played chess, not checkers, or that it'll
connect four like you do sometimes, my friend.

Speaker 1 (33:41):
Yes, I'm in my bitch in bunker. I love this place.

Speaker 2 (33:45):
Oh and right on cue, that must be my bunker
side piece, Valentina.

Speaker 1 (33:50):
Hello, my darling, hands up on the ground. Man that
is created quickly. Not quite as I plan after all.

Speaker 2 (34:00):
So yeah, I
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