Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time time, luck and load. The Michael
Verie Show is on the air. I guess because I
(00:46):
stalk about Greeks must have hit my algorithm something, because
something just popped up on my feed and it said,
this is Giorgio's Shika gas k A g A I S.
Do you know how to pronounce Greek names? Usually it's
pretty easy. It's like Papadopolis something like that. But I
(01:06):
don't know how an ai would be, and it's usually
like an i. It could be an a's. See if
you can find out, you know, anybody greet to call
for now, I'm gonna say George kagais, but it could
be Kageis till I'm corrected. This is Georgio's. Kageis a
ninety three year old man from Rhodes, Greece. For more
than seventy eight years, he has kept the same daily ritual,
(01:30):
heading to the beach and diving into the sea. This
ninety three year old man, this has got to be
see using his height, but Diagorean theorem Archimedes principle. All
I've got is the video of him diving from the
high dive. It's probably twelve feet in the air. The
(01:54):
water is glorious. It's beautiful, beautiful blue water. And this
old man just climbs up on the I guess this
is a board, walks out there, stands there for a minute,
looks into the water, and then he just kind of
it's it's like a tower fall, like a domino fall.
He just roof and goes in head first, hits the water.
(02:16):
Ninety three years, every day, every day, for seventy eight years,
since he was fifteen years old. Ramon, is there anything
you do every day a daily I don't even brush
my teeth every day. I mean some days I probably forget.
I'm just making a point. Five years from now, somebody goes,
you don't write your teeth. I I'm not a ritual person.
(02:46):
My dad is. My dad has the same set of
little things. He does just one, two, three, four, every
every time, same set, same routine. Now don't you dare
alter his routine? Hey dad, I was thinking tomorrow, Jim
(03:08):
Crane said, if I wanted to bring you to spring training,
we fly out. It's in Florida. Now, he's got a
nice place there. We'll stay there, check out the squad
with pictures and catchers report and we'll watch them and
it'll be great. So see what we're working with this year.
Oh no, his reaction is always new, new, new, because no,
(03:31):
because I got to do this or this or this
or this for breakfast. Dad. We can alter the schedule.
It's it's okay. Montgomery County Republican Party says they will
not support the re election efforts of state Reps Will
Metcalf and Cecil Bell after Metcalf and Bell joined with
(03:53):
the Democrats and the Drunk Day Parade to install Dustin
Burrows a speaker. The Executive Committee of the Montgomery County
Republican Party back in March tried to censure state reps
Bell and Metcalf over their support of Burroughs instead of
David Cook, but that effort failed to garner the required
(04:14):
approval of two thirds of party leaders in each of
the lawmakers districts, so County Republican leaders moved ahead with
the reprimand outside of the state party rules. Herschel Williams.
They don't name people Herschel anymore. That's a good old
white man named plus Harshawalker, Herschel Williams Precinct sixty three
chair said during last week's meeting that the censure says,
(04:37):
we don't have to support these two people. It's time
for us to have consequences for bad behavior. Scott Robbins
Precinct Dirty three chair added that Metcalf and Bell betrayed
them by supporting Burroughs Overcook. That's true, that is correct.
That is an accurate statement. Catherine Dominguez with the Courier
of Montgomery County Rights. In December of last year, the
(05:00):
Montgomery County Republican Party passed a resolution urging local Republican
lawmakers to vote for Cook for Speaker, stating that the
party would consider a vote for Burroughs or any other
candidate who depends on Democrat votes to be elected, and
was not supported by the Texas House Republican Caucus as
a censurable act. Robin said, they betrayed us, They betrayed
(05:24):
the voters, they betrayed their oath, they betrayed everyone. That
is exactly right. You know, it comes across as as
my grandmother would say, being ugly when you have to
deport illegals, when you've got to rip them out of
places to send them back, when you've got to come
(05:47):
and arrest somebody sitting in their living room who committed
murder the day before. When you've got to censure and
then defeat a Republican state reportive for what they did,
and it comes across as you're the crank, you're the
mean person, you're the bad person. But what you learn
(06:11):
is that what you do in the light of day
that is a bad act must be met with equal force.
Those state representatives pitched in with the drunk Dade parade
and they voted for the guy who was first supported
(06:31):
by the block of Democrats. Rest assured, if you want
to know anything about John Cornyn, that Jasmine Crockett says
he's good to work with is all you, as a
Republican need to know. That's all you need to know.
Just know that when these people get to Washington, d C.
(06:52):
And close the doors behind them, they're all giggling and going,
don't let them see this. But I like you. I
like you too. Okay, but don't let the foot out there.
They Okay, we go back out. It's like a movie scene.
We go back out. I'll say something bad about you,
and you say something bad about me too. Okay, Okay,
Well how about real bad. The worse the better, the
(07:13):
worse it is the more I can raise on it.
I'll raise a bunch of money if you criticize me. Hey, Jasmine,
John Wayne mccornyn here, appreciate the nice words, but uh,
let's save all that for after the election, shall we?
The fact that I work so well with Democrats and
that you really like what I do, it's not helping
(07:35):
me in my Republican primary. So maybe you could say, uh,
I really don't want John Corny and win? Could he bad?
That'll help me if you would, if you could just
you know, kind of sass it up, you know, you
know how you that sexy way you do. If you
could sass it up a little, that really helped me.
And then my team will take that clip and we'll
send that out to the state and we'll say something
(07:56):
like John Wayne mccornyn sassy jasse. He hates him, but
Donald Trump works right there beside him. They're best of
friends all the time. Because nobody really knows the difference.
I mean, you just, I just people are stupid. I
just tell them I love Trump. Trump loves me, even
though I can't stand the guy, and I've worked hard
to defeat him. And yeah, you know, if you's putting
(08:17):
up money behind it. The information that I get from
the show that I don't seem to get from other places.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
The Michael Barry Show, How you doing this, Shirley Hue liquor,
And I just want to go on ahead and say
the truth.
Speaker 3 (08:36):
The whole Black Lives Matter movements, black bile movement, whatever
was called, it's been ruined. And you know why it's
been ruined because they insisted that the po po were
body camels.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
And now that they do, everybody see the black people
showing that and asking to be arrested. They're not being
criminalized or racialized or what they call it stereotypicals. No,
they just showing ass and that's ignorant. And I feel
(09:18):
like the mold they show it, the better it is,
because people need to see how people do in real life.
I could never be a police lady, oh my god,
even if alas a young woman, I would have tasered
(09:39):
ever damn body I ever come in contact with. And
you have to admit, you know, I know a lot
of white people and one of their favorite things is
to look at these YouTube videos or these tiktokies of
black women. Is getting taste because it just There's a
(10:04):
certain thing about the juster position of somebody shouting and
holling and they wig is on, and then suddenly the
electrostis that they asked the wig fly off, and they fall.
Speaker 3 (10:24):
Flat on their ass on the pavement.
Speaker 1 (10:27):
I don't know why that's so satisfying.
Speaker 2 (10:30):
It is even for me because.
Speaker 3 (10:32):
I know a lot of women's I love to do
that too, girl.
Speaker 1 (10:43):
Former Texas Longhorn Star cornerback cornerback Quentin Jammer has admitted
he played much of the twenty eleven season with the
San Diego Chargers drunk, saying he would keep bottles of
bourbon or tequila in a bag and the locker room.
He wrote on Twitter this week that the reason for
the drinking stem from going through a rough divorce at
(11:05):
the time, writing something no man should ever have to
go through. He added that his Chargers teammates knew what
was going on in my life at the time and
were generally supportive of him. During the twenty eleven season,
Jammer allowed more touchdowns in yards per attempt than his
career average. He wrote true story in twenty eleven, I
(11:27):
played completely I'll say crap faced roumon, but that's not
the word he used. The word he used reminded rhymes
with spit faced or slit faced or sit faced or
skit faced or smit face. No, that's changing the laced word.
(11:53):
I faced. Yeah, you can't. It's the first where we
can't get right. I played completely crap face drunk in
at least eight games. I was out there seeing again
that word that rhymes with spit and slit and smit
in and skit and spit that wasn't there. I was
(12:18):
out there seeing We'll say stuff, but that's not the
word of ue. We're out there. I was out there
seeing stuff that wasn't there. After the twenty eleven season,
Jammer would play another two seasons, including one with the Broncos.
The thing about it is what's amazing. How good did
he have to be if he was drunk and you
(12:42):
couldn't notice it. Okay, so his stats weren't that good.
I mean, I know a lot of people that they're
not even on a football field with a dude who
runs a four to three forty and is making all
sorts of cuts playing a cover two on a stadium
(13:02):
at high speed, and they can't keep up with just
walking in and out of the bar. How good did
this guy have to be that, even drunk, he didn't
get pulled from the game. My goodness, Quintin, you're not bad.
Imagine if you weren't staggering when you were out there,
that's incredible. Have you heard of this high school receiver
(13:26):
in Texas named legend Bay and the story of him
and his signing day? His mother forced him to sign
with Tennessee even though he had committed to Ohio State,
and his older brother apparently took control of his social
(13:46):
media account, locking him out. Bay's mother reportedly would not
sign off on the commitment Ohio State since Bay was
still a minor. Ohio State would have waited until his
eighteenth birthday in three weeks to accept the signature through compliance.
The situation between Bay and his mother became so intense
that his high school coaches tried to intervene and diffuse
(14:08):
the situation. Later in the afternoon, it appeared Bay's mother
and family had won out, as Tennessee announced that the
four star prospect had officially signed with the school. It's
worth noting that NCAA rules prohibit a school from discussing
a high school prospect unless they receive a Latin national
letter of intent or in some cases financial aid paperwork
from the athlete. So Tennessee's public acknowledgment of Bay's decision
(14:33):
is significant as it indicates that the school did receive
paperwork announcing his intent, but seemingly confirmed his decision later.
I'm sorry By seemingly confirmed his decision later that day.
Then things took another turn on Thursday afternoon, when By
appeared to claim in a sense deleted expost that he
was no longer in control of his social media accounts
and did not want to sign with Tennessee. What if
(14:58):
completely hypothetical? Now that we can openly talk about money
in the game, now that it wasn't there before. I
read a funny comment that for one hundred and fifty years,
Indiana was the worst team in all of college football,
the worst team by far, the worst team, and now
(15:20):
nil starts and they're number one, having just beaten number one.
And the comment was, they didn't know you were allowed
to pay players all those years, Now that they can anyway?
What if completely hypothetical? I'm sure this didn't happen. What
if Tennessee handed some money to his mama, and what
(15:45):
if his mama now needs to deliver. And what if
he's going Ohio State is receiver of university not Tennessee.
I want to go to Ohio State. He's down. Shut
your mouth. They gave me some money. I mean, that
wouldn't happen, would it. This is the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 4 (16:08):
Rest assured that whatever you're seeing, by the time it
makes the news, there are moves being made behind the scenes,
calculations that are not considered, and when the results hit,
it's always shocking to people.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
You know. I was talking earlier about Jasmine Crockett entering
the Senate race, and everyone seems to think of it
only on the level of will she win or will
she not? There's so much more to this story than that.
(16:52):
How does she change the dynamic of who shows up
to vote? Does she bring more black women who mistakenly
believe that somehow she's an empowering, inspiring figure. Does she
bring more middle American Middle Texas voters who say, I've
(17:16):
dealt with her type at the DMB, I've had her
on the other side of the glass in the cash register.
I do not want her snaping her fingers at me again.
I don't want to deal with that again. I don't know,
but those are things to be considered. You got little
(17:37):
white Weasley James Tallerico over there, and and he is white.
I mean, he is the whitest white dude ever. And
he's cosplaying as the sort of Jim Jones of this movement.
He's the rich people are dividing us. We're not divided
(18:01):
by religion and race and party. It's really us against them.
That is actually the politics of jealousy, the politics of hate,
the politics of division, and an outright lie. You don't
(18:22):
think we're divided by religion. Of course we are, but
it's in your interest to tell the broader audience that
we're not, because you can sucker a few folks into
believing that you're a reasonable guy. And then the person
who says, hey, we got a little bit of a
(18:43):
threat on our hands. Here we got people saying they're
going to take over the country and this is jihad. Oh,
you're being hateful. Stop that. Listen to James. James says,
we have nothing to worry about. And James said, We've
had nothing to worry about. He and his ilk going
back a long way. We should never have anything to
worry about. Everything would be Okay, why were you fussing
over illegal immigration in the fifties. Why did Dwight David
(19:08):
Eisenhower have a program known as Operation well, you know
what it was called. It wasn't called Operation dry Back.
And that program was designed to deport illegal aliens from
this country who had entered the country illegally. Obviously, it's
(19:31):
been a problem since then. And then Reagan, as only
Republicans can do, naive as they are, I'm giving him
the benefit of the doubt. His name. Reagan had the
Amnesty Act. H Yeah, we would make two million of
them citizens. But now you can't come in illegally. And
(19:52):
this time we mean it. We feel real bad that
after you broke into the country, you don't want to
kick you out. So here's what we're going to do.
We're gonna reward you for this bad behavior, but don't
ever do it again, pinky swear. And that is when
(20:14):
the floodgates opened, because the whole reason not to come
to this country if you wanted to, because you're in
a crappy country with no opportunity. Well as well, you'll
never be a citizen here and eventually they'll kick you out.
But they rewarded the people who came here illegally, and
then we went from a few million to god knows
(20:35):
how many plus. Now you had chain migration. The Once
you make an illegal immigrant into a citizen, the statistics
will show that what they do immediately is start marrying
their brother from Somalia. They start engaging in all sorts
(20:57):
of fraud because that full citizenship makes it much easier
to get away with. So now you've got people hosting
their relatives that lived in the village where they were
to come here from Honduras El Salvador, Guatemala on a
(21:19):
tourist visa. But wait till your eight months and three
weeks pregnant come here, drop a baby, anchor baby. Now
you stay, How dare you throw Emelda out? She just
had a baby. That baby's a US isn't That's not true.
Our constitution does not ensure that, but they'll tell you
(21:40):
it does. So now you've got the anchor baby problem.
What it comes down to is we built something in
this country far before I was alive. The people in
this country built something special and has, as often happens,
everybody else wants to crash that party rather than host
their own and that's what we're up against. That's really
(22:04):
the great American battle. And so it's people who see
what's happening and want it to stop versus people who
benefit from it. And there are a lot of people
who get rich off of illegal immigration, not just the
cartels in the Triad, people on this side, people that
need the cheap labor, people that use the cheap labor.
In fact, the cheap labor had become so widespread, so used,
(22:31):
so commonplace that it didn't even seem illegal anymore. Everybody
had it. Everywhere you go to a job site, had
immigration officials tell me that they would show up at
job sites. You could show up screaming lamiga and nobody
would move. There was no fear that, well, we'll be
(22:52):
prosecuted for breaking law to come here. There will be
those people in the Democrat Party and frankly some Republicans
as well, who will always tell you, just calm down.
The fact that we had five of these people, yes,
a year ago, and a month later we had fifty,
(23:15):
and a month later we had five hundred, and a
month later we had five thousand, and a month later
we had fifty thousand. Look at the trim lights where
this thing is going. So now the problem is so
big that we do have to do drastic things that
people make people uncomfortables. It's done for a girl and
(23:36):
a boy.
Speaker 2 (23:36):
I like like a berry Shore.
Speaker 5 (23:42):
Put them repointing to Ramone the Popo and San and
Toon say, jugging crews from Houston are praying on residents
in San anton and you have to ask how many
of these thugs are free on bond thanks to Harris
County Democrat judges vo but not limited to the Black
(24:02):
Girl Magic Jurges.
Speaker 6 (24:05):
Police say juggers are out right now staking out bank
parking lots and waiting for their next victim, and with
cases on the rise, police now believe that organized crews
are coming from Houston and now zeroing in on San Antonio,
and detectives have one message tonight be vigilant. Surveillance video
(24:26):
captures crooks ambushing a woman going for her purse moments
after she walked out of the bank with cash.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
They'll just watch to see people leave the bank.
Speaker 3 (24:35):
From there, they'll spot a potential victim and follow them
around throughout the city wherever they stop.
Speaker 6 (24:41):
If Detective Nathan Zachary with sapd's property Crimes Unit says
jugging cases are spiking across San Antonio.
Speaker 4 (24:48):
We've seen from where they've only taken twenty dollars to
up to ninety thousand dollars.
Speaker 6 (24:55):
In one incident last year, Zachary says, crooks got away
with a quarter million dollars of your heart earned cash.
In August, two Houston men were arrested accused of stalking
a local bank parking lot, then trailing their victim thirteen
miles to his North Side home. It's an alarming trend,
detectives say is adding to their caseload.
Speaker 1 (25:15):
I believe they just come here to kind of make
it harder for us to catch them.
Speaker 6 (25:19):
And in October, Brinson Lair, also from Houston, was the
first suspect arrested under a new Texas law that carry
stiffer penalties for jugging. Detective Zachary is hoping it will
help police cracked down on these crimes.
Speaker 1 (25:33):
It's a new pinacle violation, so we're able to kind
of focus in on where they're happening and trying to
find a trend to see if we can catch the
more they're There are really no words to add to
the situation. There's a case involving a black woman judge,
(25:57):
black girl magic judge named Beverly Armstrong. The details from
when I first heard about it until now, if the
new details are correct, make it far worse. This individual
gave fittanel to someone, sold fentannel to someone allegedly who died.
(26:21):
That's a stepped up charge in the state of Texas.
Now gets out on bond because you know, there's work
to be done. There's still drugs to be sold cartels.
You know, cartels can't file for unemployment. They got work
to do. Get back out and get to work. Then
commits capital murder. Capital murder, the stepped up murder for
(26:46):
which the only real punishment is life or death. It's
serious stuff. Beverly Armstrong, allegedly from what I hear, it's
just all the buzz at the courthouse, gives this person
another bond back out on the streets. I think it would.
(27:08):
I'm not sure what would happen. Maybe nothing, Maybe I'd
like to think something would happen. But if people understood
that when you get up every morning, you get to
kids ready, Mom goes off to work or stays home
and takes care of everything at the house. Dad gets up,
gets dressed, heads into work, whatever that may be, showing
(27:33):
up at the manufacturing plant, putting on his uniform and
driving the truck, whatever that may be. That's what you do.
So really, the totality of who you are is how
you make a living, what kind of mother, father, husband,
wife you are, Any hobbies you have, because there ain't
a lot of time left after that, your church involvement,
(27:55):
maybe your little league involvement, but all of those would
go into your personal activities. To imagine that there are
people who never go to a workplace in most cases,
never have in their lives, and they're going to wake
up the butt crack of noon, rolled out of some
woman's bed who they've probably just impregnated and will never
(28:18):
hang around to know that she's pregnant, much less the
name of the child or be there for him. And
they will gather with their homies and they will begin
the process of what are we going to take from
other people today? And now, every person going about their lives,
(28:38):
these innocent, precious, beautiful people going about their lives, every
one of whom is somebody's mommy, daddy, husband, wife, son, daughter,
is going about their lives, going into the grocery store,
going into the bank, going to work, get in gas.
But they don't see them as that people, as humans.
(29:02):
They're savages, they're rabid dogs. I'm often shocked that they
don't kill more people. So they run up on people.
They wait till they get the right person in the
right moment. They're not real discriminating, but they run up
(29:22):
and then they begin to take whatever they can. They're
automobile at a minimum. They're watching there, their their purse,
their wallet. The problem becomes when they decide that it's
easier for them if you're dead than you're alive. That's
the problem. If they fear that you might try to
(29:43):
chase them, that you might call the cops too fast,
then you might be too good a witness. And what
they look like, what they were driving, they just kill you. Now.
It's bad enough that they've committed crimes before this, but
there are people who have done that and killed someone
who are out on the streets doing it today. I
(30:06):
don't know if you saw this video. This this woman,
she's been arrested over one hundred times. She uh she
crashed into a fellow named McLeod was a grammy. I
think he's a Grammy Award winning musician, a person who
brings joy to other people, and she's an absolute piece
of trash ran him over and killed him. Now, the
good news is she's white and he's white, so I
(30:28):
can say things without the white liberals or other people
being upset about it. She is absolute trash. As a
farm animal useful, so put a pistol to her and
blasted and put it out of her misery so she
doesn't cause other people problems, like a horse with a
lame leg or dog that's dying painfully. She is useless
(30:53):
to humanity, and she was useless to humanity after the
first few arrests, and yet here we are she had
over one hundred. It has to change. Democrats have to
stop electing Democrats in primaries who are pro crime, because
that's what they are. And Republicans have to get hardcore
(31:13):
about this. If Trump hasn't proved anything, if he has
proved anything, it should be that we will support people
who take strong positions. But I will tell you and
we'll discuss this on the Evening Show today. This Congress
and this Senate is determined to destroy Trump, and they
are doing everything they can. I believe it is a
(31:34):
conscious effort. I believe they gather to discuss it. I
truly believe that