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May 21, 2025 • 33 mins

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

Speaker 2 (00:14):
What happened?

Speaker 1 (00:14):
Something must have happened. It's not you, it's me. You're
giving me the it's not you, it's me routine. I
invented it's not you, it's me. Nobody tells me it's them,
not me. If it's anybody, it's me. I'm great, George,
it's you. You're damn right, it's me. I.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
Let's start with a new polling that shows the Democratic
Party has preached an all time low in popularity. The
latest NBC News national poll finds that a majority of
registered voters fifty five percent, have a negative view of
the party, while just over a quarter.

Speaker 4 (00:57):
Yesterday and I went past and I went and bought
the book Original Sin. This is Jake Tapper and Alex
Thompson of Axios. Jake Tapper, of course with CNN, it's
there kind of way to set the record on the
Biden administration and what went wrong. Now, as you know,

(01:21):
Jake Tapper was part of what went wrong. So there's
an irony to him now saying this is what has happened.
Megan Kelly grilled him on that He's been grilled on
this multiple times, and as this interview phases have gone
from step to step, he's grown more and more.

Speaker 1 (01:41):
The supplicant. You know, Ah, yeah, you're right. I was wrong.
Y'all were right.

Speaker 4 (01:44):
I don't think he thought he was going to have
to say that, but these are the things he has
to do to sell the book. So I commented last
night that I'd bought the book and that I had
started reading it and I would be reading it until
late in the night. Get up this morning and read
it some more, and I will finish it this evening.
It's a pretty quick it's about three hundred, three hundred

(02:05):
and twenty pages, three hundred and fifteen pages, but it
does flow pretty well, and it is written well Jake
Tapper has written, he has written before. This is not
a turgid, difficult thing to read. But I notice, based
on commenting about the book, that there were a number
of people who lost their mind that you know, I

(02:27):
will not read it. I will not give him a dollar.
My buddy Buck Saxton said, you know, told people in there,
do not read this, do not give him any money.
And I just disagree, and I'll tell you why. First
of all, the easier path is to not read it. Okay,
it's always easier to not do so I'm gonna not
read that. I'm gonna do it principled. Well, maybe you
just weren't going to read it because you don't read.

(02:48):
You never thought of that. When's the last book you're read.
I don't I don't like people make money off me.
I'm not gonna read this and there's nothing else. Okay, well,
then that's not really as high minded as you think
it is. All right, that's fine, But the second question
is what if?

Speaker 1 (03:04):
What if?

Speaker 4 (03:04):
Hypothetically, what if there are some things in the book
that you didn't know that you now know that become
available to us. It's never going to be the Republicans
who can expose what went on in the Biden administration.
It has to be Democrats who have access to other
democrats who they can get to talk. And in that sense,
this is true. Jake Tapper's not a good guy. I

(03:27):
don't want Jake Tapper to get glory or anything else.
But there were things that I learned in this book
that I did not otherwise know. And I will be
sharing from my notes, and I will just rattle through
my notes Now some of it was reminders of things
I'd forgotten about. But I noticed the three areas of
decline are energy level, cognitive, and communication. That's something that

(03:52):
comes through again and again. Now on the point of communication,
they continue with this nonsense that Joe Biden is a
survey of a stutter. Poor guy, he's stuttered as a kid.
I don't believe this. I've followed his entire career. I've
seen audio clips. He made himself out to be an
overcomer of the stutter. So when he went into decline

(04:16):
talking like this, they said, oh, this might just be
his stutter. This man has used medical elements, death, disability,
and all that as an excuse for his own failures
his entire life.

Speaker 1 (04:31):
It keeps coming up again and again and again.

Speaker 4 (04:33):
His son bo died. That's terrible. No parents should have
to bury their child. But you can't use that as
an excuse when you're running for president or you are president.
That's inappropriate. We're talking about the biggest job in the world.
Your son having died that does not qualify you for that.

(04:55):
There is the story about his wife dying and his
little daughter dying, and then Hunter and or in the
car when he's pretty young and his wife dies. Remember
later he claimed that the driver was a drunk driver.
It turns out that was a lie, but he was
speaking to the drunk drivers group. I didn't realize his
brain problems went back to nineteen eighty seven. So I

(05:16):
remember him leaving the nineteen eighty seven presidential race over plagiarism.
The guy had lied about his his qualifications, his how
he did in law school, how he did He lied
about everything, and it all came out and he left
the race. He left the race in eighty seven. In
February of eighty eight, he has an aneurism that two aneurysms,

(05:40):
one of which actually bursts, and his spinal fluid problems.
This isn't a case of him using a medical this
is a real medical condition. And last rights were administered.
They thought he was going to die. They would not
let Jill into the room. They were married by then.
Where he was and the thought was that he's going

(06:00):
to die. So he had a series of problems related
to his brain that begin in nineteen eighty eight. Mind you,
that's thirty seven years ago. They thought he was going
to be their candidate this year. That's thirty years ninety

(06:22):
eight eight eighteen. That's thirty two years before he's elected president.
That's a long time to have suffered with a degenerative
brain and spine issue, which he had. Doesn't include the
fact that he's had prostate cancer for some number of years.

(06:42):
In twenty twenty two, he said he had cancer. There
are doctors suggesting that he could have had this cancer
for ten years. We also know that they weren't testing
his PSAs a typical sixty five year old man and
up will have their PSA checked because it's the breast
cancer of male, it's very likely you're going to have it.

(07:03):
My my wife's uncle was a prominent doctor at Northwestern
University who studied prostate cancer, and he said, there's a
seventy percent chance that a seventy year old man will
get prostate cancer. And with each age your percentage goes up.
If you live to be one hundred, the odds are
you're going to have prostate cancer. It's just our body
wasn't built to run this long of a race. We've

(07:23):
kept the body going for this long. So two thousand
and eight, twenty years later, he runs in the presidential
race again against Barack Obama, comes in fifth in Iowa,
drops out. Obama ends up picking him to be his
running mate. Twenty fifteen, his son Bo died. Now here's

(07:46):
something interesting about his son.

Speaker 1 (07:47):
Bo died.

Speaker 4 (07:49):
The plan was for Bo to run for president, and
Bo ends up getting very sick. He's the Attorney general
of Delaware.

Speaker 1 (07:58):
Bo gets very sick.

Speaker 4 (07:59):
And guess what They hid Beau's illness from the voters.
As well as a pattern that goes on.

Speaker 5 (08:04):
They laugh learning doing it big on the Michael Barry Show.

Speaker 4 (08:12):
I read Jake Tapper's books that You Don't Have To
Biden's aneurism and near death experience in nineteen eighty eight. Interestingly,
of all the things that Biden lies about to puff
himself up and bluff as to all his accomplishments, he

(08:34):
doesn't talk about the aneurism, So the real medical issues
he has he avoids. This is something that is very important.
His son did the same thing. So in twenty fifteen,
Beau dies. He'd been sick for two years. He was

(08:55):
the Attorney General of Delaware. He was coming to Houston.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
To go to M.

Speaker 4 (09:01):
D Anderson and he had some sort of a blastoma.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
I don't remember exactly what it was.

Speaker 4 (09:07):
Joe has talked about him himself being a gold Star dad.
You know that his son died in battle. Not true.
His son was sent to the Middle East as a
lawyer in the Jag Corps and he had been back
for five years at that point. So no, he wasn't
in battle, and he didn't die in uniform. As Joe
has told some gold Star families. The man is a

(09:29):
pathological liar.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
He really is.

Speaker 4 (09:31):
You could see that from the nineteen eighty eight election.
But his son denied. Health problems kept anyone from knowing that. Now,
what's interesting is upon his son's death, Hunter, who had
had all these problems and was described as a disappointment
to his dad, Hunter, all of a sudden starts dating

(09:54):
his now dead brother's widow.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
There is a lot of scuttle but that.

Speaker 4 (10:02):
He was knocking boots with Bo's widow before she was
a widow, because Bo was still alive. And that's the
kind of person Hunter Biden is. Hunter Biden introduces her
to cocaine and meth, which she would end up having
a problem with. That's also a pattern Hunter Biden introduces

(10:22):
to women in his life to meth and they get
hooked on it. In twenty fifteen, when Bo dies, Hunter announces,
Hey Dad, I'm going to run for mayor of Wilmington. Hunter,
You're not allowed to run out of rehab. You've been
in rehab most of the time.

Speaker 1 (10:42):
They have a big.

Speaker 4 (10:43):
Family interdiction with Hunter. He leaves the house and refuses
to participate. He dates Bo's widow, leaving Bo and his
widow's children in a real bad pickle. When drama unfolds there,
mom gets hooked on cocaine. He fathers another child named

(11:05):
Navy with the woman London, who was a stripper in
DC at the time. She's in Little Rock. He refuses
to admit it is his child. Then he marries a
woman to this by the way, to this day he
still refuses it. But the blood tests show they did it.
And you know what, his answer to the blood test
is a Hillary Clinton answer. His answer to the blood

(11:26):
test is, that's just a Republican conspiracy. They just did
that to embarrass me. They probably switched my blood in there. Believable, Hunter,
very believable. Then he meets a woman and three days
later marries her and she has a baby shortly thereafter.
So I don't know if they got pregnant the first
who knows, who knows? The younger sister has serious drug problems.

(11:48):
That's Ashley. You know about her problems. You know about
the book and all that. So there is this mythology
that develops around Joe Biden that he's very, very tough,
that Joe Biden.

Speaker 1 (12:00):
He writes a book.

Speaker 4 (12:01):
It's says his dad always told me to get up,
and that nobody keeps Joe Biden down.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
He gets up.

Speaker 4 (12:08):
Well, you start to note there's a disagreement as to
when the mental decline begins in earnest. There are some
who trace it to twenty fifteen, about the time Bo dies,
and they blame it on Bo's death. Whatever the reason,
if he's out of it, he's out of it. Not
for me to decide. But there increasingly, all the way

(12:31):
up to and before the twenty twenty election, there is
discussion about his mental decline.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
More and more and more so.

Speaker 4 (12:41):
The idea that in twenty twenty he's fine and it's
not until recently that he declined.

Speaker 1 (12:46):
That is just not true.

Speaker 4 (12:47):
There are too many people who are close to him
who say that is just not true. His sister vow
who had run every campaign of his since nineteen seventy two,
begged him not to run and writes letter to the
family that he is in no condition to run, he
should not run, but of course Jill wins out. Another

(13:08):
thing you noticed from this is that Jill isn't that
involved politically until about the mid two thousands, and by
twenty twenty she's running everything and her aid.

Speaker 1 (13:23):
Yes, Jill had an aid.

Speaker 4 (13:25):
Anthony Bernal becomes deputy communications director, and many people claim
that he was really running everything Jill's aid, not Joe
Biden's aid, which is very odd. Nobody's ever seen that.
There's also a fun, little, fun little skirmish when Hunter
is with this woman, Kathleen. He treats her very very

(13:49):
very badly, and she goes off and is estranged from
the Biden family. But while she was with Hunter, she
became very good friends with Michelle Obama. Michelle Obama is
loyal to Kathleen, the ex wife, and feels that the
Bidens treated her horribly, so Michelle despises the Bidens and

(14:11):
will never come around them, and it gets pretty nasty.
Apparently over the years, Nicki Hayley will give her credit
for this phrase referred to the White House as the
most privileged nursing home in America because it was a
nursing home, Joe Biden would have in his annual physical

(14:33):
they would do a test, a neurological test, now that
is to see if the nerves are operating correctly. But
they would not do which every other president had done,
a cognitive exam. And the reason is his cognitive levels
were in deep steep decline. Jake Tapper makes the point,

(14:56):
and I don't think this is just a what about
ism that this has been going on elderly people in
our government. This had been going on around twenty twenty already,
and he's absolutely right about this. Kay Granger from Texas,
she was in an assisted living center in Texas.

Speaker 1 (15:14):
And nobody knew. There are reports even her staff didn't
know where she was.

Speaker 4 (15:21):
That should be criminal. She was still holding the seat
as a congressman. Mitch McConnell, freezing up, glitching.

Speaker 1 (15:30):
What was going on?

Speaker 4 (15:31):
You had the speaker, you had the Senate majority leader
who can't do a press conference. He was as bad
as Biden. We have to acknowledge that strom Thurman. Strom
Thurman died as a US senator at one hundred years old.
Diane Feinstein, Chuck Grassley ninety years old.

Speaker 1 (15:54):
This is this is awful. This has to change.

Speaker 2 (15:57):
This is the Michael Barry Show. See people give pot
a bad name, man, and it's because for some people,
it's not the best thing in the world. All right,
people like go bro felt my brother's life. My brother
was fun. Then he started smoking weed. What about gods
like him? Oh you mean losers? Oh yeah, let's make

(16:21):
it illegal. By the way, let's make hammers illegal too,
because if you don't build a house with them, you
can't hit yourself in the deck. If you're just crazy.

Speaker 1 (16:28):
Your brother's a fat dummy.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
He never did anything right. If it wasn't pot, that
guy's life up, it would have been cheeseburgers and scratch tickets.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
All right. He's an idiot.

Speaker 2 (16:37):
A plant that made him silly, that took him over
the Edge't take it anymore.

Speaker 1 (16:42):
I mean too much food.

Speaker 2 (16:45):
Life is too much fun.

Speaker 4 (16:53):
But I used to argue with my mother because we
had some severe alcoholics in our extended family, and she
would get frustrated at them.

Speaker 1 (17:06):
They were older and I was younger.

Speaker 4 (17:07):
But I can remember even as a teenager, you know
so and so on so and so he did this
and just that alcohol, And I would say, Mom, his
problem is not the alcohol. His problem is his problem.
The alcohol is how he deals with it. You have

(17:29):
to confront the underlying problem. It's too easy to blame
drugs for why people do the things they do. That
person seeks out a drug because of a demon inside them.
That's why the most effective addiction programs, and there are
several different ones. AA is probably the most common, but

(17:50):
it doesn't work for everybody. That's why those programs focus
on the underlying issue that makes someone seek refue in
a bottle or narcotics anonymous the same thing. And one
of those is resentment. People who bear resentment and can't
speak to it. They feel like they're being taken advantage of.

(18:12):
They feel like they're not respected, they feel like they're dishonored.
They feel like this person oversteps boundaries and picks too much,
or kids too much, or does this too much, and
so they come out and they become like, yes, man,
they be I think that's what the movie is called
what's the name of the movie, where the guy basically
now has to be has to be honest about it.

(18:34):
That's why the AA graduates will come out and they'll
call you and say, hey, Ramon, I just want to
tell you when you call me this name, I don't
find it funny.

Speaker 1 (18:44):
It bothers me. Uh okay, weirdo. I wanted you to know.

Speaker 5 (18:49):
Click.

Speaker 4 (18:49):
And that's why they do that, because what they're trying
to do is a hard reset, which is what they
claim ibagain does. They're trying to do a hard reset
and say, these things cause me frustration, grief, whatever, resentment, bitterness, anxiety,
whatever that is. These things cause me those emotions. And

(19:10):
because of those emotions, I then go and do a
bad thing, which is I drink, and I drink to
excess and then I end up out in the streets
or fathering children, or fighting people, or crashing a car
or whatever the reason. The alcohol is not the problem.
It was the solution. It just turns out not to
be a good solution. It creates other problems. That part

(19:32):
is true. It creates other problems. But what causes the
person to rely on that drug and getting to that
route and beginning to understand and how to find more
productive outlets, whether that be exercise a very common one, meditation,
a hobby, whatever else. That's how people get through those things.

(19:58):
Blaming drugs for human frailty is a weak and inappropriate
way out. Many people do it as an excuse. That
wasn't me, boy, when I get drunk. No no, no, no, no no.
There's somewhere along the path of getting drunk, and I
bet that wasn't the first time you were drunk that
you had to know. You had to learn. I do

(20:20):
dumb things I send me in texts, I crash my car,
I uh say in appropriate things to women or men,
I fight in a bar, whatever that thing is. You
will find that it's typically a pattern that continues over
a period of time. Now, did the person pass from

(20:41):
buzzed to slop you drunk by making a decision, Hey,
you know what, this buzz is good.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
But what I want to.

Speaker 4 (20:51):
Do is get so drunk that I embarrass all my friends,
my wife, my kids, my boss, my whatever. What I
want to do is I want to take this to
the level that I end up in jail overnight and
humiliated tomorrow. Or I want to take this thing from
you know that nice real light buzz where it started
to getting.

Speaker 1 (21:10):
In my car and killing an entire family. That's what
I like to do. So this.

Speaker 4 (21:13):
Can you, Hey, guys, can y'all bring me a glass
about yahai of gonna kill a family tonight using my automobile.
People don't do that, but there has to be a
certain amount of agency that we take responsibility. If you
are a person who has never had more alcohol then

(21:34):
is necessary to get your buzz and caused you to
say or do a mean or stupid thing, then God
bless you. Because I listen, I will say full confession,
Ramone has. Ramone definitely has, and I will confess that
Ramone has definitely, definitely done that.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
He has sent me.

Speaker 4 (21:58):
One of the things he will do, we'll disclosure. We're
in the circle of friendship. He will send me a
text message with a link to a really stupid song
and pour out his heart on what a great song
this is usually from the nineties, and how I should
really learn to like the song, which is a very
inappropriate behavior. It'll be YouTube or depeche Mode or something

(22:18):
like that. But he does that, and he wouldn't do
that save and accept being under the influence of alcohol.

Speaker 1 (22:27):
Really, that's where we're going. That's where we're going. Okay,
all right, well, who you got online?

Speaker 4 (22:33):
Mark?

Speaker 1 (22:35):
Mark? You're up, sir, go ahead.

Speaker 6 (22:38):
This was Mark from Bolmony, Michael Barry Hazar second time,
long time, this second time calling in the same day
we got it. We had a hard break and actually
I had a hard break too, said all timed out correctly.
But yeah, just going back to the I be game
and Rick Perry pushing this and also not just Rick Perry,

(22:59):
Marcus and Morgan Latrelle are pushing m d m A
and I began as well as a treatment.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
For Peter Marcus. Marcus has yeah, and so it.

Speaker 6 (23:09):
Is Morgan and so is Morgan as well according to
the Texas standard.

Speaker 1 (23:14):
But yeah, and they.

Speaker 6 (23:16):
Both are are are procured of PTSD, and I mean
it only takes one or two you know, treatments. And
like I was talking about before, this is not a
fun trip. This is not a recreational drug that you're
going to have. You know, this isn't this isn't the
LSD of the seventies or the eighties it was. You know,

(23:36):
this is something you need to have under clinical treatment,
and you know have having somebody you know, check your
blood pressure, check your heart rate, make sure you're not
going crazy. But I mean, if we can have fewer
camp hopes in America because of this. I'm all for it.

(23:57):
I'm one percent all for it. Second point, I have
an adult son who's severely autistic, nonverbal, you know, six
foot two hundred and forty pounds, with the mind of
a two year old, and he has high anxiety.

Speaker 1 (24:14):
Thunderstorms.

Speaker 6 (24:15):
Last night he was closed fist hitting himself in the
head because of the thunderstorms. That's how anxious he is.
And we have him on Klonzipan and Xanax. I'll wait,
I'll wait till after the break.

Speaker 5 (24:27):
Well, well, lucky you, the Michael Berry Show continues for
your lucky day.

Speaker 4 (24:38):
So my wife is something of a fitness nut and
I can't keep up. And yesterday, I guess was overcast
in Houston, or so I'm told, and she took George
on a walk around Memorial Park. George is you know,

(25:02):
she has a full coat. They are German shepherds, not
desert shepherds. But we've never had a problem with her.
You could walk a pretty good distance and she would
be fine. My wife takes her on one loop, which
parking across the way. All in, it's probably going to
be about a four mile walk, not an intense.

Speaker 1 (25:27):
Pace.

Speaker 4 (25:29):
But she's wanting to get her back into shape because
she hasn't been walking her of late. She wants to
build her back up where she can go for nice
long walks, which my.

Speaker 1 (25:40):
Wife loves to do.

Speaker 4 (25:43):
So they start walking and they get about three point
seven five miles into this thing, and George just falls over.
And my wife filmed it and sent it to me, like,
what do you think? And I said, she looked panicked,
she looks terrible, she's clearly scared, and she's extremely dehydrated.

(26:13):
You got to get some water down here. So my
wife said they were about two hundred feet from a
water fountain, but she could not get George to move well.
As you know, dogs can't sweat, so their mechanism for
reducing their body heat is limited to panting, which is
not a very efficient valve to get rid of this

(26:36):
internal heat that has built up. So I'm on the
phone back and forth, back and forth. A guy's jogging by, said,
will find somebody with water, asked him to help you
put some water down her. So that helped, and this
guy was very nice. He put water on her paws,
her extremities. He sat with him for a few minutes

(26:56):
and he's on his way. So my wife is there
for quite some time from when she stopped walking. It
was an hour and forty minutes before a friend of
ours could arrive to bring a wagon to put her in,
to haul her to the vehicle and get her home.

(27:17):
She gets home, she's she can't move for about three hours,
and finally she kind of comes around and she's okay.
So obviously it put my wife in a pretty big panic.
And she said, you know, the frustrating thing is the
sun wasn't out and it didn't feel like it was
extremely hot. So our nephew Kyle, who's the knower of

(27:40):
all things. He's the one that explains, you know, relative
humidity to me, or how rockets work or whatever. And
he was an ac repairman growing up in Virginia who
went on to get a PhD in geology. So he
has this he's at Occidental. He finds oil for Occidental,
that's what he does.

Speaker 1 (27:59):
He has this rare.

Speaker 4 (28:00):
Ability to explain scientific phenomena in a way that I
can understand. So he sends a message. There are other
reports of two dogs passing out yesterday that I have heard.
Austin said it was a rare weather phenomenon of high
pressure with extreme humidity and high heat. Heat index was

(28:24):
one hundred and twenty or so yesterday at the high point.
That's when you were out. You didn't see it in
the sun, but the heat was there. And he said
that he had done some yard work last night. It
was my nephew Kyle, and that he found himself weak
in a way that kind of made him uncomfortable. He

(28:47):
said the temperature was only ninety two. We said only
ninety two. Because of Houston temperature was only ninety two.
So nobody was aware of the heat index and the
shock of the rapid transition to one twenty, which is
hard for the body to adjust anyway. I only say
that for those of you who found yourself out gardening

(29:12):
or walking or washing the car yesterday and you thought
to yourself, man, I feel a lot older than usual.
I think I don't know what's going on. Actually, it
was apparently a.

Speaker 1 (29:26):
Very rare day.

Speaker 4 (29:28):
With regard to the weather. Morgan Latrelle, Marcus's brother, Congressman,
is demanding to know why the Department of Veterans Affairs
regularly overpays veterans and then comes back and demands a clawback.

(29:51):
Morgan Latrelle saying that the VA issued at least five
point one billion dollars in comp and pension overpayments from
fiscal year twenty one through fiscal year twenty four, end
of the last fiscal year, and he is demanding that
the veterans not have to pay it back because they've

(30:13):
not budgeted for this.

Speaker 3 (30:17):
You know, I.

Speaker 4 (30:21):
Am a person who finds comfort in orderliness. I am
a person who finds comfort in cleanliness. I acquire these
habits from my parents. Things being clean and tidy and
in their place it gives me a happiness. And things

(30:48):
being out of place or dirty or the like broken,
it gives me an unhappiness. When I see that the
American systems are broken. And by the way, this isn't
a heat index melting something. This is human beings screwing

(31:12):
up repeatedly. It gives me a lack of It gives
me a sense of something being wrong. You know, if
a guy's out in the street and he kicks a dog,
you see that and you just viscerally react, there's something wrong.

(31:33):
When I see that almost no aspect of American government
operates properly. When I see that people are being hired
and promoted for all the wrong reasons. When this doze
just touched the tip of the iceberg. When I see

(31:54):
money just being wasted and sent all over the world,
When I see that the heart earned dollars that you
send in every day are just being burned in a
pile and there's no concern for it, it makes me
so angry, just furious. This isn't somebody's money in Romania

(32:20):
or the Philippines. This is my money and your money,
and my dad's money and my kid's money, and it's
just being burned. And what has been the reaction to
pointing out all the fraud. Elon is hated, Trump is hated.

(32:42):
Let mean think about that, Think about our neighbors who
are angry that the waste is being exposed. And so
that's why I feel no compunction.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
Don't.

Speaker 4 (32:53):
I won't hire those people, I won't do business with them,
I won't shop with them.

Speaker 1 (32:58):
Doesn't bother me one bit
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