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February 12, 2025 33 mins

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

Speaker 2 (00:11):
So Michael Verie Show is on the air.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
The Joe's Subcommittee, shared by Marjorie Taylor Green is meeting
now talk about government.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Waste, and.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
What we'll make news out of that is that a
Democrat congressman called Elon Musk a street term that is
used for a penis a word that starts with the
D N n's with a K and has an ick
in the middle, or the shortened form of Richard, and

(01:04):
it just goes to show that you can't govern seriously
when the news cycle is driven by and frankly maybe
the public's attention is wetted by silliness like that. These
are serious issues and that's what's going to get the attention,
which is one of the guys did it. We'll have

(01:24):
an update on Tulsia Gabbard and her nomination, which we're expecting.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
Chad tells me the vote is any moment.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
So in Austin, a very important issue is raging right
now is school choice and vouchers. Where kids go to school,
the quality of that education, how much we spend on it,
and where that is spent, is a major issue and
should be for any society, because you're talking about the

(01:53):
future of your society and what's going to happen in
those schools and how much people are going to get
paid to run those and teaching the schools and and
the sports and all that. This is very important stuff,
and frankly it should be. That's a good thing. It's
the kind of things we ought to be focused on.
Brent Money is one of the the young gun leaders
of the New Movement. He's just been elected along with

(02:14):
Mitch Little, who are shaking up the house in a
good way.

Speaker 2 (02:18):
Brent, I want to ask you.

Speaker 1 (02:20):
You gave some numbers on the amount of money under
the Senate bill too, if it's passed. How much money
would a family get if they have a kid in
second grade and instead of sending him to public school,
they want to home school.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
How much would that would they get?

Speaker 3 (02:35):
Two thousand dollars?

Speaker 2 (02:37):
Okay, and if they send them.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
There, And just to be clear, that's not like they
just get sent a two thousand dollars check like a
health savings account. There'd be two thousand dollars in their
account that they would be allowed to spend on education
related goods and services. So it's not you know, it's
not just a blank check that they could can use
to go on vacation or something like that.

Speaker 2 (03:00):
About private school kids, under.

Speaker 3 (03:03):
SB two, the private school kids would get ten thousand dollars,
which is about the median price of private school in Texas.

Speaker 1 (03:13):
It would seem to me that we are saying that
we find it more valuable for you to go to
private school than to homeschool.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
I haven't been able to talk directly with Senator Creighton,
who was the author of the bill, on exactly why
he did that, But being a homeschool parent, I know,
even a homeschool parent that has homeschooled five kids at
a time, two thousand dollars is plenty to buy the
curriculum and the services that are needed. And so I

(03:45):
think I got it.

Speaker 1 (03:46):
Yeah, but there is unless you are valuing and attempting
to compensate in some way other than a pecuniary way
for the time value of the teacher.

Speaker 2 (03:59):
And if that's the goal, then it strikes me.

Speaker 1 (04:02):
And by the way, Rick Perry, my wife was on
the border regents the University of Houston when Rick Perry
came out with a ten thousand dollars degree, and that
was the goal in University of Houston embraced that the
idea that we were going to push We're going to
compress the cost down of a university education, and ten
thousand dollars a year was, in his opinion, a realistic number,

(04:23):
and I agree with that. I think the cost of
quote unquote education, the cost of schools is out of control,
and I think that part of what we're going to
have to do is snap that back and give them
less money. I think we should spend less money every year.
I know that's politically infeasible. I think we should cut
I think we could cut spending probably in half and
cut out layers of administrators. Not what you came on

(04:45):
the show to talk about, but I don't think that
we're very efficiently funding our schools. And I think you
got a bunch of fat, lazy people in public schools
that are assistant principles and assistant superintendents and consultants who
are costing us a lot of money, just like our
military is, but aren't fighting the war. Now I feel better, Brent,
thank you for this port Noois complaint session.

Speaker 2 (05:06):
I'm glad you could get that off of Yes, I
feel much better at your chest.

Speaker 1 (05:10):
I spend a fortune to send my kids to private school.
I'm fortunate that I'm able to. I would have it
no other way because they've had the best education possible.
Every program they wanted to enter, every language they wanted
to learn, every event, every sport, you name it. But
most people can't do that, and I would like to have.
And that brings me to the next question, Brent, do

(05:33):
you expect and I know public schools fear and outgrowth,
an explosion of every little Catholic church, every little you
name it, charter opening schools as a result.

Speaker 3 (05:46):
If this thing is funded, I don't know if I
expect it, but I hope for it. I certainly think
that you know, most churches have a lot of space
that is not used Monday through Friday during school hours.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (06:00):
Most churches have families that would love to have their
kids have a Christian education. Most churches have at least
some women, mothers, grandmothers in their church who are capable
of teaching some kids math and reading and history. I
think that that that type of innovation is what could

(06:25):
put Texas at the top of the education rankings in
the coming years and decades. Is the innovation that just
says we're going to put the kids first. We're going
to do what's best for the kids and the families.
If we have engaged families, then then the kids are
going to perform better and become better, more well educated,
well mannered members of society.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
Interesting, very interesting.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
I find this whole discussion both interesting from a political perspective,
and so much of it is fear. So much of
it is people that don't fully understand the issue, and
they can be played like sheep. And that's what the
public school lobby does. They've scared people into everything. Poor
black kids are going to come into your all white
rural school. Gang members are going to invade your public school.

(07:14):
Your public school is going to have to close down.
Your wife who's a teacher is going to lose her job.
They're throwing everything at the wall, including the If you're
for school choice, you're beholden to rich people who want
good schools. Rich people are typically rich if they're self made,
like the Duns, like Elon. Rich people are usually rich
because they've been very successful and they look back and

(07:35):
see the public school education system as a failure and
they want to fix it. And that's what nobody wants
to admit there is the dirty little secret. Brent Mooney,
I have to move on. You've been a great guest.
We'll have you back as the session progresses. Keep up
the great work. I follow you and you're doing a
wonderful job.

Speaker 3 (07:55):
Thank you so much, appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (07:56):
I'd love to come on anytime. Yeah, And I don't
have anything nice to say about anything bank that one.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
And I might not have anything nice to say about
you in a week the hell out of my friend
Mitchell Little.

Speaker 2 (08:05):
I try to avoid that, all right, buddy, bye, we'll
do it.

Speaker 1 (08:11):
When it comes to beards, briskets.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
And Barry, let it all hang out.

Speaker 1 (08:17):
Going against the grain is what we do on The
Michael Barry Show KPRCTV in Houston, Channel two's Amy Davis,
a wonderful investigative reporter, noted the fact that the former

(08:40):
City of Houston Water Department manager patrise Lee, under Sylvester Turner,
it turns out that she stole a lot of money,
over seven hundred thousand dollars from you, the taxpayer.

Speaker 2 (08:57):
And of course Sylvester.

Speaker 1 (08:58):
Turner is now in Congress because that's how this works.
Its chief of staff is in federal prison for taking
a bribe. His director of the housing department is in
prison for taking a bribe. His water department manager is
has pled out to taking bribes, and so did her

(09:22):
number two, and Sylvester Turner was sent to Congress to
take Sila Jackson Lee's place. It's almost as if the
people in that congressional district, in a Stockholm syndrome sort
of way, have such low expectations for themselves.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
I have known men.

Speaker 1 (09:47):
Who only date ugly girls because they believe that that's
what they're supposed to do. They do not date girls
to whom they are attracted. They date girls who they
think no one else wants because they have so much
low self esteem. I've known people who will introduce themselves
in the most self deprecating way, and not in a

(10:09):
way to make themselves more accessible, but as a way
to prepare for the fact that you're gonna think I'm
a loser. So I'm gonna tell you I'm a loser,
because that's how little they think of themselves. The majority
of voters in the eighteenth Congressional District are good people

(10:32):
making bad decisions because they think they can't do any better.
This is why Sheila Jackson Lee remained in Congress. And
there is a power structure that controls who gets the
money and who gets the seat. There are people behind

(10:54):
the scenes living off of this process, the Rodney Ellis's.
Look at what Rodney Ellis his wife does. Look at
the real estate deal she's involved with.

Speaker 2 (11:05):
It is out there.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
It's all Dulta Fino's exposed it again and again and again.
And you've got people who are helping them do this,
who are themselves making.

Speaker 2 (11:15):
A lot of money. Lance. What is the guy's name?

Speaker 1 (11:18):
Is a white guy wears glasses And there's this video
after video of dul Chaffino walking into meetings where he's
going in there and they're about to rob the taxpayer blind.
But kprctv's Amy Davis asks a very important question. Patrese Lee,
the City of Houston water department manager who's been caught
stealing over seven hundred thousand dollars. She got a plea

(11:43):
deal so she doesn't have to go to prison and
she's not required to pay back a single penny of
what she stole. Danielle Hurts, one of the seven people
charged who was under her, so she's not the head
of the snake. She just somewhere along the way. She
was ordered to pay restitution amounting to fifty thousand dollars.

(12:04):
So why did an underling who stole a lot less
money have to pay it back and she doesn't?

Speaker 2 (12:15):
The District Attorney's office, Shawn Tier's office.

Speaker 1 (12:18):
Ridiculously responds to this question as follows, are you ready
for this?

Speaker 2 (12:24):
Are you ready for this powerful logic?

Speaker 4 (12:27):
Yep?

Speaker 2 (12:29):
The charges were handed to us. Yep.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
We cut a deal with her because we don't think
she should have to go to prison for stealing from
the taxpayers. But we're also not going to require her
to pay back a single dollar she stole.

Speaker 2 (12:41):
We're gonna let her keep it over here. How come?

Speaker 1 (12:47):
Well, she didn't have any money, she's spent it all.

Speaker 2 (12:53):
Wait, what.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
So if she'd put it in a T bill because
pretty good return right now, or socked it away in
a savings account, or bought apple stock, which has been
doing well lately, then she'd have to give you that back.
But by being ghetto fabulous and blowing through it, because

(13:17):
why wouldn't it easy come, easy go? In that case,
you don't have any problems with this? Uh?

Speaker 2 (13:28):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (13:31):
I I think that that's a brilliant I do I
guess or something? Or so your logic is, if you
spend the money you steal, you don't have to pay
it back. Right, If you spend the money you steal,

(13:51):
you don't have to pay it back. But but if
you don't spend the money you steal, and you you
have to pay it back. Dare I ask what did
she do with the money she stole? Did she buy cars?
I mean, you let me blow through seven hundred thousand dollars,

(14:15):
I could, I could do some things. There's no way,
there is not an asset involved here. She go to
Vegas and just put it all on one hand. Did
she stay in the nicest hotels? Because that's a lot,
I mean even the nicest hotels. It takes a while

(14:35):
to go through that. Did she eat at Turkey leg
Hut breakfast, lunch, and dinner every day for two years? No?
You know she bought cars. You probably could guess what
kind of cars she bought. You know she bought cars.
You know she bought clothes. You know she bought purses.

(14:59):
You know she did all the those things. Guarantee you
she took some vacations. If I got a superpower, Ramon
and I do.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
It is.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
I can tell you how somebody liked this person. I
can tell you how she spent her money. I can
tell you exactly where this money went. She went to
Vegas a few times. She ate at the nicest restaurants.
She probably they probably knew her fat ass face when
she walked into Mastros. Oh, miss Lee, welcome. She's a

(15:35):
big spender, big spender. She looks like the manager of
the City of Houston's water department.

Speaker 2 (15:44):
That's her.

Speaker 1 (15:45):
How does she How does she afford to eat here?
She dating an NFL player? No, no, she got.

Speaker 2 (15:54):
A credit card.

Speaker 1 (15:56):
She don't have to pay a penny of that back out, Ben.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
Is my money rule tears because I didn't.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
Get a single time start here that our country is
failing you today, invest in kleenics, ladies and gentlemen, And
this is the Michael Barry Show. Toulcy Gabbert has been

(16:28):
confirmed as the Director of National Intelligence, meaning she will
be responsible for the daily briefing of the President on
matters of intelligence. This is incredibly important because if you

(16:48):
have garbage in, garbage out. Give garbage and you're gonna
have garbage out. What you are telling the president is
incredibly important. What you choose us to prioritize, the angle
you give it. Oh boy, this one's big.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
It is fresh. It just happened. This is huge.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
The vote on the filibuster in the filibuster on RFK Jr.
Is happening now. It may be final. I don't know.
That was a few minutes ago. Once that happens, RFK
Junior is expected to pass and cash Betel we're expecting
any day now. Once those pieces are in place. Buckle up.

(17:45):
These are the good old days, folks. This is as
good as it gets. Pinch yourself that you're in a dream.
This is as good as it gets. Wow, I uh,
these are wonderful times. On a personal note, Prockett turns

(18:06):
eighteen on.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
Sunday.

Speaker 1 (18:11):
My father turns eighty five on Tuesday, so we will
gather on Sunday to celebrate with family both of those birthdays.
And losing my brother and my mother in relatively short
succession has made me realize what I've always known. But

(18:34):
it makes it more poignant that life is precious and
life is not permanent. So celebrate your big days, celebrate
your big moments, Celebrate the people in your life.

Speaker 2 (18:46):
Who matter.

Speaker 1 (18:48):
Social media has a very powerful effect on our lives
in many ways. Is for some of you it doesn't
and that's good. But for some of you, and I
will admit myself, it is an opportunity to connect with
a number of people with whom you would no longer
have a connection. You know, Stephanie moved off to Baton Rouge,

(19:12):
and Bobby moved off to Omaha, and Susie moved off
to Seattle. But it allows you, in some superficial surface
level to see who they married, and what their kids
are up to, and what they're doing for a job,
and what their thoughts are.

Speaker 2 (19:26):
And I do find that enjoyable.

Speaker 1 (19:27):
And I'm not ashamed to tell you that it can
get out of hand, it can be crazy, but I
do find that to be enjoyable. Oh my god, my
screen right now tells me that I have a call
from Jake, and then I have a call from Susayne
spelled s U s A n E. Dear God, So
what you tell me? What do I do at this point?

Speaker 2 (19:46):
Folks?

Speaker 1 (19:47):
Do I go to Susayne you're on the line. Do
I do susin a do I assume Ramon just added
an E for no good reason. What is one to
do at this point? What is one to do at
a moment like this? These are the times trimensuls right here. Yeah,
this is it to be or not to be?

Speaker 2 (20:06):
Question?

Speaker 1 (20:07):
This is what they call an old fashioned dilemma. Yes,
an old fashioned dilemma. But back to the point. Social
media allows us to have. At one point, I had
three hundred and fifty one thousand friends, but you don't
really have that many friends. Although because of the unique
nature of what I do, a number of people do

(20:28):
view us for mom as friends. And that's pretty cool.
It's pretty cool, not because of some sense of celebrity.
It's pretty cool because we get to interact with a
lot of people.

Speaker 2 (20:38):
We get to if something's.

Speaker 1 (20:39):
On my mind, heavy on my heart, important, I want
to share it, whether that's a movie recommendation or you know,
brag on my kid, or brag on Pops down at
the shrimp boat with the Galveston Diva Nikki his daughter
taking him out on Saturday and Channel thirteen doing a
story on it, or to say, hey, here's this little

(21:00):
taco joint and they're barely making it. You know, could
could we help them out? When we got involved with
Federal American Grill. He was not a sponsor. He had
been years before and it had worked out because he
couldn't monetize it. He was at Shepherd in Washington and
he had just opened. It was twenty twenty. It was
Valentine's and Harris County had shut everything down, and he said,

(21:22):
I can't shut down. These people will lose their jobs.
I'll lose this restaurant. I'm upside down and I'm hanging
on by a thread.

Speaker 2 (21:27):
I've just opened. I'm opening.

Speaker 1 (21:29):
I'm opening with these protocols. And I think back Lord
and whatever his name was at Penny Point, I forget
his name, And what's a guy's name that was Hadwig?

(21:49):
I can't remember his name. In Jimmy Pappas at Hunter's
Creek and those got Bunker Hill was Lord, I think.
And those guys said, we're the mayors of the communities
here around you.

Speaker 2 (21:57):
We're going to eat.

Speaker 1 (21:58):
If you're opening, we're going to be there. And Ed
Hendy came from Taste to Texas and he said, I
want to be there for your opening. And Matt Bryce said,
no problem, tell me what time. I'll have a table
for you. And he said table, No I'm not eating.
My wife, Nina and I will be there to help
seek people, to answer any questions, and to show solidarity
from another restaurant a titan. Taste of Texas is a

(22:20):
titan in the industry, so well respected, and of course
many of you will remember ed Hendy for being on
KCV for years and years and years. By the way,
he never took a dime for that. He built his
own studio out of his house. He did that show
for nothing because he wanted to do it, because he.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
Believed in it.

Speaker 1 (22:34):
He raised money for the toll road. He raised money
to send a missile or to oh, I think, to
put a plate under a tank. The guy just he
and his wife had done more for pro life in
this town than as they've done as much as anybody
in this town.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
And I'll tell you that and a hell of a salad.

Speaker 1 (22:53):
He calls Matt Bryce and says, if you're opening, because
Taste of Texas was close, If you're opening, Nina will
be there. And Matt said, all right, to get you
a table, and he said table, no, I'm working, And
he went to this other, to a rival restaurant. And
by the way, they sell a lot of the same food, steaks, salads,
family time, take your client, and here's a rival restaurant

(23:14):
opening and he's like, I'm going to be there to
show that we support you. And that was the moment
that launched Matt Bryce. After all these years of hard work. Finally,
you know, you hear musicians say they call me an
overnight success. Yeah, I'm a twenty five year overnight success

(23:35):
because you've been playing in bars and driving the little
towns and you didn't change. You know, Chris Tableton didn't
all of a sudden become a great singer a great songwriter.
He'd been a hell of a singer and songwriter with
the Steel Drivers. It wasn't until he got discovered big
time that all of a sudden said oh, he's an
overnight sensation.

Speaker 2 (23:53):
Well don't.

Speaker 1 (23:53):
He been a long time at this. But Matt Bryce
went from that to that restaurant. It became so successful
that then he opened in Katie and then in the
Woodlands and now downtown and it's incredible. It's incredible what
he's done. So to get to do those sorts of
things is awesome and that's what I love about this.

(24:16):
But I say all that to say this, your close
friends and your close family. Share those memories, Celebrate those memories.
Taxes are gone before you know.

Speaker 2 (24:25):
It, true national treasure. No messer around with any old
This is the Michael Arry Show. This is Tulsey Gabbards.

Speaker 5 (24:47):
Where there are bos, it's laughing the laughter morning.

Speaker 2 (25:10):
As start nice.

Speaker 4 (25:16):
Where there are moods, have flowers fall of colors.

Speaker 1 (25:37):
That is Josh Tatophi, who is known as the Hawaiian
Luther Van Ross.

Speaker 4 (25:45):
I can smile when it's raining.

Speaker 1 (25:50):
And Luther Vandross might be the clack Josh todd.

Speaker 4 (25:59):
Ah how richest voices.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
I'm talking when I want to talk to Michael Barry Show,
tell me I'm talking over.

Speaker 2 (26:15):
People might not know how pretty his voice was. If
I didn't tell.

Speaker 1 (26:17):
Him, that was Tulsey and her husband singing at the
beginning of that song. And if asked Chad, I think

(26:39):
somebody had just died. The famous Hawaiian had just died,
and I think that was her tribute. What oh, come on,
you want to lay me had just died? Yes, yes,
that is called Hawaiian lullaby.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
I'm told.

Speaker 1 (27:02):
Josh to Tophi, thank you for that chat. I never
heard of him. That's pretty man, that is beautiful.

Speaker 5 (27:16):
Wow.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
They were Talker's magazine was doing something. They were doing
a mashup of the top talk hosts in the country,
and they made a montage and the people on either
side of they put our voice in there, my voice
in there, our show's voice in there, and the two

(27:39):
voices on either side were rich baritones.

Speaker 2 (27:43):
And then my voice. I was like, damn.

Speaker 1 (27:48):
So I sent him a message.

Speaker 2 (27:50):
I said, hey, thanks, but.

Speaker 1 (27:53):
You kind of sandwiched me in there. That's like a
butter sandwich or something.

Speaker 2 (27:58):
It's like all bread. No.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
I didn't like what was in between there because my
voice is kind of is it well, you know, you
have to listen to it, but it's kind of allergy issue,
and you know, it's not deep enough, and it's not
it's enough, and it's not full enough, and it's not
rich you no, you know, we all have an issue
with our voices. Nobody ever likes to hear their voice.

(28:21):
It's funny when people are on our show. Jim Mutter,
our creative director, will cut it and send it to
them and people always go, oh, sound horrible. Nobody likes
to hear their own voice.

Speaker 2 (28:35):
It's just one of those things.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
But Talker's Magazine said, yeah, but your voice is special.
It's unique, it's different. And I thought, you know, when
you tell a kid, you know, mommy, I didn't get
picked for the team. I'm the only one didn't. That's
because you're a special, Bobby. Bobby, you're a spy. I thought,

(29:02):
that's a very interesting.

Speaker 2 (29:03):
Way to say that.

Speaker 1 (29:04):
That's a very interesting answer to me bitching about my
voice special.

Speaker 2 (29:11):
The Senate is voting.

Speaker 1 (29:12):
Right now to advance the RFK junior nomination. Fathom this irony, folks.
RFK Jr. Is a lifelong Democrat. His father was Democrat Royalty.
His uncle is the greatest Democrat of all time. For Democrats,

(29:37):
the heyday of the Democrat Party Camelot in America transcended politics.
The Kennedys, the Kennedy brand was so powerful that they're
good for nothing. Bloated drunk brother Teddy drove Mary Joe

(29:57):
Kopecne all Bridge while he was married and she's, you know,
many years younger than him, leaves her dying in his Lincoln,
swims to shore and goes into hiding lawyers up, doesn't
emerge for seventeen hours later, and still ran for president

(30:21):
and had a shot at it and still didn't lose
his Senate seat in Massachusetts. That's how strong the Kennedy
brand is. Tulsey Gabbard's vote was fifty two forty eight. McConnell.
Mitch McConnell, the guy who was leading Republicans in the
Senate up until a few weeks ago, dissenting joining the Democrats.

(30:47):
Mitch McConnell doing what Dustin Burroughs and these guys Sam
Harless did in Austin, siding with the Democrats. My goodness, alive.
Have you seen Mitch McConnelly. He's had two falls in
the last week and a half. They're now wheeling him around.
He weighs about one hundred and ten pounds. It's bad

(31:11):
enough that he looked like a turtle, but now he
looks like an emaciated turtle, which is a very awkward look.
And he's just kind of looking he's kind of stirring
in his space. He has no idea what he's doing.
At any time he locks up, it's like his battery
goes dead. I will say this, and I mean this

(31:32):
not for a fact. I think Mitch McConnell is in
further cognitive and physical decline than Joe Biden was when
he walked out of the White House. I believe that,
I do believe that. I believe it's that bad. And
he's voting with the Democrats now. He hates Trump with
everything he's got. And this just goes to show I

(31:55):
got news for you. When Democrats leave politics, they don't
then go over and hang out with the Republicans. I
was really always a Republican. But do you notice that
when many Republicans leave public office, when they're no longer
beholden to you, the Republican voter, the American voter, they go,

(32:16):
how is really a Democrat? Look at Liz Cheney, Look
at Adam Kinsinger, look at Bayner, look at Paul Ryan.
Look at how many of them, Bill Crystal, Look at
how many of them go over and keep company with
the Democrats for that matter, Dick Cheney, John McCain, You

(32:41):
find out a lot about these people once they no
longer have to tell the public what the public wants
to hear, and they are honest with who they really are.
They come out of the closet. They are swamp machines.
They hate you, they hate Trump, they hate everything you
stand for they hate good government. It's amazing. This is

(33:04):
a wonderful day, folks. I'm gonna be very clear on that.
This is a wonderful day. Toolisey Gabbard was confirmed fifty
two forty eight. Jasmine Crockett is snapping. She doing the
Z pattern. I can't hear what she's saying, but it's
something about girl. We gonna keep our eyes on you.
Toolsey Gabbard and dare I say this.

Speaker 2 (33:26):
Made Sheila Jackson.

Speaker 1 (33:27):
Lee look almost smart. And that's saying so, that is saying,
so my goodness alive. We're gonna have RFK passed by
the evening show. We got cash right after that.

Speaker 2 (33:41):
We got the A team on the field. Now it's
about to get good.
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