Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
So Michael Very Show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:12):
That American dream is slipping away.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
I don't have to tell you that you're feeling your lives.
Speaker 4 (00:20):
You're seeing your shrinking wages in the cost of everything
from groceries.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
To healthcare, to college to filling.
Speaker 2 (00:29):
Up your car at the gas station. It keeps going
up and up and up, and.
Speaker 3 (00:35):
The future keeps receiving further and further and further away.
Speaker 5 (00:39):
That really speaks to a lot of pessimism.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
Here about the American dream. How it feels like it's
out of reach.
Speaker 6 (00:44):
You know, home ownership for too many people in our
country now is elusive. You know, gone is the day
of everyone thinking they could actually live the American dream.
Speaker 7 (00:52):
I'm here today with a message of hope for all Americans.
With your vote in this election, I will end in play.
I will stop the invasion, and I will bring back
the American Dream.
Speaker 3 (01:04):
Know me.
Speaker 8 (01:07):
When you're not strong, and I'll be your dream. I'll
help you can.
Speaker 7 (01:18):
We're witting by a lot, we're leading by a lot,
we're leading.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
In the balls.
Speaker 7 (01:21):
Every single state looks like we're doing And with your
supporter November fifth, America will be bigger, better, boulder, richer, safer,
and stronger than ever before me.
Speaker 8 (01:39):
When you're not small, and I'll be your bread. I'll
help you can.
Speaker 7 (01:50):
For those who abandoned hope, we'll restore hope, and we'll
welcome them into a great national crusade to make America
great again. And that's why I'm here today, Yes, why
I'm standing before you, because we are going to finish
what we started.
Speaker 2 (02:05):
We started something that was about We're going to complete
the mission.
Speaker 7 (02:13):
We're going to see this battle through.
Speaker 2 (02:16):
To ultimate victory.
Speaker 7 (02:18):
We're going to make America great again.
Speaker 2 (02:21):
No, ined somebody.
Speaker 7 (02:27):
This election is a choice between whether we will have
a four think of this, four more years, could you
stand it? Four more years of incompetence, stupidity, and failure
and disaster, or whether we will begin the four greatest
years of the history of our country.
Speaker 2 (02:48):
I think we have a real chair make America great again.
Speaker 7 (02:52):
And quite simply put, we will very.
Speaker 9 (02:56):
Quickly make America great again.
Speaker 10 (03:09):
Well, it's the call before the storm.
Speaker 2 (03:14):
Very exciting times.
Speaker 10 (03:16):
A presidential election should not make this much of a
difference to your daily life.
Speaker 2 (03:21):
It shouldn't.
Speaker 10 (03:23):
It was not the intention of our founders that the
determination of who the president and our government was was
going to have so much impact on the individual. Thomas
Jefferson wrote at length about the limitations we should have
on our government. He wanted an agrarian economy where the
(03:49):
planter could be left alone. On Tom's Mountain, which came
to be known as Monticello, people could be left alone.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
The government wouldn't bother them.
Speaker 10 (04:00):
They would cast their vote at election time, and then
they wouldn't have to worry about it. Well, you do,
because evil folks have come to hunt down your country,
and this is the last shot we have. The Democrats
are scared because Americans have awakened. I must say I
am so hopeful. I really am. Seeing how people have
(04:23):
responded makes me very very happy. People that don't otherwise respond,
Small business owners that.
Speaker 2 (04:31):
In the past would have said, well, I.
Speaker 10 (04:34):
Can't get involved or I might lose some customers. At
what point in the life of your business is your
patriotism such that you'll put your neck out and say
it's the right thing for my country. Well, I'm watching
people do it, and that makes me happy. The Democrats
(04:57):
are desperate. The numbers are bad. Former Obama senior advisor
David Axelrod was on CNN when he said, the polls
are so close that it's scary, and I'll tell you
in a moment why that scares them.
Speaker 11 (05:12):
Well, look, the watchword of the day is humility here
when you have polls that are this close. And I'm
sitting next to one of the great pollsters. If you
and I think she would tell you when you up
polls this close, you're not sure of anything, and it
really matters who shows up because these polls are not precise.
So what I'm worried about is how you're counting on
(05:33):
some women who are independent Republican women to come out
and vote for Harris. Is that going to materialize? Is
the gender gap going to be what you needed to be?
Are minority voter is going to come out in the
numbers of African American voters in particular, And are you
going to get the margins that you want there? So
(05:55):
there are a lot of open questions and they're obviously
working it hard right now. There are feet on the
street and they're doing the kind of work that you
do in a race like this, But this race is
filled with uncertainty.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
Today.
Speaker 10 (06:08):
One of the things to bear in mind Trump under
polled in sixteen and twenty, and there's a reason for this.
A lot of people who support Donald Trump are afraid
to say so publicly. This is part of the bullying,
(06:31):
the thuggery, it has become the Democrat party in their media,
the alienation, the other ring of people who do not
support the narrative. So people don't say that they're going
to support Trump, but they are. Another Obama official also scared.
(06:55):
But it's the early vote numbers that worry Jim Messina.
Speaker 2 (06:58):
What's their biggest concern right now? If you're the Harris.
Speaker 12 (07:01):
Cheme, Well, look, I think it's a couple of things.
Early vote numbers are a little scary, and you and
I have been Texan back and forth. Republicans didn't do
what they did last time. Last time Trump said don't
early vote, and so they didn't. Republicans do have an
advantage in early vote numbers. When the early vote come in,
it's going to look a little bit different than twenty twenty.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
And that's scary.
Speaker 10 (07:24):
You know, every time I mentioned Chuck Todd, I miss
Rush Limbaugh and how he ridiculed the smarmy and often
sanctimonious Chuck Todd will take it to the break on him.
He went on Meet the Press, and he said, look,
the odds that this is a one term presidency right
here pretty darn high.
Speaker 9 (07:42):
That the voter that walks into the booth that is
thinking about Trump is probably voting for Harris, and the
voter that walks into the booth that's thinking about Biden
is probably voting for Trump. Or what it's worth. But
let's step back. Whatever happens, this is not the beginning
of something, nor the end of something. We continue to
be in the middle of something. We're about to do
something we haven't done.
Speaker 4 (07:59):
So it's the.
Speaker 9 (08:00):
Nineteenth century and that has had We just finished two
straight one term presidents. The likelihood of this being a
one term presidency is high, not low, because we are
a country that has been voting against We voted against
Hillary Clinton at sixteen and got Trump. We voted against
Trump and twenty and got Biden. I think this is
another vote against election, not to vote four.
Speaker 2 (08:21):
Always died.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
The Michael Ferry just put her head down and she
went to work.
Speaker 2 (08:27):
And I want you to take a moment.
Speaker 10 (08:30):
In process this massive news, the CNN performed an act
of journalism Yep, they actually did, and it involves a democrat.
We'll all know where we were. Remember this moment when
you heard CNN showing that Kamala Harris is running conflicting
(08:55):
ads in two different battleground states. She's pro Israel in
heavily Jewish Pennsylvania, She's pro Homas in heavily Arab Michigan.
Two diametrically opposed ads, two different states. We know that,
we know she's doing that. We're not surprised that CNN
(09:18):
called her on it. That we're surprised by tonight mixed messages.
Speaker 13 (09:22):
A K file investigation this hour finds Kamala Harris is
targeting crucial battleground voters with vastly different messages on Gaza
and Israel. This ad is running in Michigan, which has
the largest Arab population in America.
Speaker 6 (09:37):
What has happened in Gaza over the past nine months
is devastating. We cannot allow ourselves to become numb to
the suffering, and I will not be silent.
Speaker 13 (09:48):
All right, Well, it's a very different story for an
AD in Pennsylvania targeting Jewish voters.
Speaker 3 (09:54):
Let me be clear.
Speaker 6 (09:55):
I will always stand up for Israel's right to defend itself,
and I will always ensure Israel has the ability to
defend itself because the people of Israel must never again
face before that a terrorist organization called Hamas calls on
October seventh.
Speaker 2 (10:17):
Different message. Andrew Kazinski is out front.
Speaker 13 (10:19):
Now, so Andrew, those obviously do sound starkly different to
say the least, tell me more about what you found.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 5 (10:25):
And this, look, this really illustrates the sort of fine
line that the Harris campaign is trying to walk here
in the closing weeks, closing days of this campaign on
the issue of Israel. Here you have two entirely different
constituencies and they are getting two entirely different messages. There
are often times these constituencies have very opposing views on this.
If you are a Jewish person in Pennsylvania, you saw
that ad that you're getting. You are getting that ad
(10:45):
that talks about how strong, strong she is an Israel.
If you're a Muslim voter in Michigan, you are getting
that ad on Facebook that's talking about talking about how
she won't be silent on the issue of Gaza. Now
what's really interesting here is that ad that we just
play the one that's going to jude Jewish voters in Pennsylvania.
Now it sort of sounds like those two clips of
her talking about Israel are together, but they actually cut
(11:07):
part of it out.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
Take a listen to what they cut.
Speaker 6 (11:09):
What has happened in Gaza over the past ten months
is devastating. President Biden and I are working to end
this war such that Israel is secure, the hostages are released,
the suffering in Gaza ends, and the Palestinian people can
realize their right to dignity, security, freedom, and self determination.
Speaker 5 (11:34):
And you've seen too that she obviously could they cut
out that portion of the ad where they talked about
Gaza from her DNC speech, those two ports were together,
they something they cut that part out. Now, Look, she's
also getting hammered a lot on this issue by Republicans.
We talked just a couple days ago about how those
robo calls were airing in Wisconsin that are made to
sound like they're in support of Jill Stein talking about
her position on Gaza, saying that they're highlighting her pro
(11:56):
Israel position and they're sort of trying to siphon those
votes away from her.
Speaker 2 (12:00):
So this is a really delicate issue for her.
Speaker 13 (12:02):
It certainly is, I mean the post and people can
realize they' right to Digney's scurity, freedom and self determination
and being cut out.
Speaker 2 (12:06):
It's important to notice that.
Speaker 10 (12:08):
Roman, I want to change gears real quick because I
want to get this audio in early in the show.
I got a lot of audio that I have worked
up for you, folks, and our team has worked out
for you that I want to get to and I'm
going to be playing a lot of it this evening.
President Trump brought the mother of Mimi Rodriguez Ramirez on
stage at a rally a couple of days ago. Mimi,
the daughter, was killed by an illegal alien last week.
Her mother, Carmen Ramirez, tells the crowd why they need
(12:32):
to vote for Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 (12:34):
My name is Carmen Ramirez.
Speaker 14 (12:36):
I'm the mother of Minelli Soier Rodriguez Ramirez. She was
murdered the last Tuesday.
Speaker 2 (12:43):
I lose my daughter, but I don't lose my face.
Speaker 15 (12:47):
And I know.
Speaker 14 (12:51):
And I know Donald Trump is the best choice for
the USA and.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
Not the best choice.
Speaker 14 (13:06):
He's the only one we need to contave our country.
I just want to let you know that everybody have
to vote and vote because just for talking and don't vote.
Speaker 2 (13:23):
We don't do nothing.
Speaker 14 (13:25):
Take your friends, take your children eighteen years old. Everybody
have to vote because that's the only way when we're
gonna save us country. Okay, And I want to let
you know that Donald Trump is not a choice. It's
(13:46):
just the number one. And Jesus, let me come over
here today to let you know that I have a
twenty five five years daughter with a lot of life,
and somebody stop her life and we have to stop
(14:08):
with this and keep going with Donald Trump. I meet
Donald Trump in person. He's the most wonderful person that
I see that I know right now. He help us,
(14:30):
He be with us all the time as this happened,
and he always be there for my family. That's why
we always go to be for him all the time.
Speaker 2 (14:45):
Thank you for everything.
Speaker 14 (14:48):
Thank you, and don't forget to.
Speaker 2 (14:50):
Go and vote.
Speaker 14 (14:52):
God bless America.
Speaker 2 (14:57):
Please may can pray again.
Speaker 10 (15:05):
Ronald Reagan called this nation the city on a hill.
There's nowhere to run to from here. We've got to
fix it here and it's time now.
Speaker 13 (15:13):
It's the time we are going to supporter.
Speaker 2 (15:17):
We've been to supporter. You haven't been with them. Michael
Ferry and I haven't been to ye.
Speaker 10 (15:23):
Today will be audio centric, lots of audio bits I
want to get to.
Speaker 2 (15:29):
Tomorrow will be call centric.
Speaker 10 (15:31):
And you might have noticed that we don't take a
lot of calls here on the show. We do on
the Morning show, but not on this particular show. Let
me give you the phone number. Put it in your
phone now. Even if you say to yourself, I'm not
a guy that would ever call, tomorrow may be the day.
You may see something tomorrow that you want to share.
(15:52):
Seven one three nine one thousand, seven to one three
nine one thousand, seven three nine one thousand, put it
in as Michael Berry. Then as you're driving when we're
not on the air, you can always leave us a
voicemail anytime, and we use those on the show, as
you may have heard in the past. Seven one three
(16:14):
nine one thousand. Spencer Lindquist of The Daily Wire went
to a Kamala Harris rally and talked to her supposed
supporters as they were waiting to go inside the venue.
And I want you to just listen to this. My
favorite one is the fella at the end, a little.
Speaker 16 (16:36):
Bit about Trump's agenda and what about it is most scary,
most concerning to you.
Speaker 3 (16:41):
He says that he's going to take anybody who disagrees
with him and put them in jail, and from there
he's going to deport them out of the United States altogether.
Speaker 17 (16:50):
And I think he wants to basically turn us into
a white Christian nation, which it is not.
Speaker 4 (16:56):
He hates everyone, he hates his followers.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
He will totally try to.
Speaker 4 (17:02):
Destroy all life on earth before he dies.
Speaker 2 (17:04):
That's who the Trump is.
Speaker 16 (17:06):
Do you think that the rhetoric of him being a
Nazi or a fascist might encourage other people who are
going to try and take him out, you know, violently.
Speaker 17 (17:12):
I mean, I don't know if that's the leap I
would make. I think it is a totally reasonable assumption.
I mean, Elon Musk is wearing a Make American Great
hat in the Nazi farnt that is that was definitely
the vibe there was frightening and disgusting.
Speaker 2 (17:27):
He is He's a Nazi. He's a fascist, of course
he is.
Speaker 17 (17:32):
Yes, I think he's a full fascist authoritarian.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
What I will say to you is, if he wins
in November, it is going to be the birth.
Speaker 2 (17:39):
Of the American Nazi Party with him as the top
of it.
Speaker 16 (17:43):
What do you think America looks like if Trump wins.
Speaker 2 (17:45):
I mean, we've been hearing.
Speaker 16 (17:47):
That he's a fascist or that he's a Nazi. Do
you agree with those characterizations of him.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
Yeah, he's the most repulsive person in public life. He's
a floating island of trash.
Speaker 2 (17:57):
Him and his supporters can't tell.
Speaker 4 (18:00):
Trump is the most blatantly obvious criminal of all time.
You committed treason and we hate your ever guns.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
You have a binary choice.
Speaker 3 (18:09):
You can either vote for a good uh, a good
qualified politician, or you can vote for the Donald Trump,
who is a big red pimple on the end of
the of the American body politics.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
I hope he is Christine. I think he should have
it a person. The guy's a criminal. He is so.
Speaker 10 (18:26):
Corrupt, and we definitely need to not have Trump be
around anymore.
Speaker 18 (18:31):
We have to come out and stop them.
Speaker 4 (18:33):
They don't get to be the Nazis on our street.
They don't get to turn our police into you know,
they're Gestapo.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
They want to They want to bring on the violence
of America. Will kick the.
Speaker 16 (18:44):
Well, thank you very much, any any last message you
want to leave the audience with.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
Yeah, love wins in the end.
Speaker 10 (18:52):
This next bit of audio I want to play for you.
I want you to think about for a moment. It
is a reference to a study that was done at Dartmouth.
It's called the Dartmouth Invisible Scars Experiment. It was done
in nineteen eighty and the basis, you know what, Listen
(19:12):
to it and then we'll talk about it.
Speaker 15 (19:15):
They did an experiment with a group of women and
they put scars on their faces, and they told these
women that they're going into a job interview, and the
purpose of the experiment is to find out whether people
with facial disfigurements faced discrimination.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
They showed them the scars.
Speaker 15 (19:30):
In the mirror. The women saw themselves with the scars,
and as they led them out of the room, they said,
which is going to touch it up a little bit,
And as they touched it up, they removed the scarring completely.
So the women went into the job interview thinking that
they are scarred, but actually being their normal selves. And
the result of the experiment is that those women then
came back reporting massively increased level of discrimination. Indeed, they
(19:52):
many of them came back with comments that the interviewer
had made they felt were referencing their facial disfigurements. And
this is why I think this ideology of victim that
is so dangerous, because if you preach to people constantly
that we're all oppressed, then that primes people to look
for me.
Speaker 10 (20:12):
So we'll make sure you got that. So they tell
these women, we're doing a study because we think that
if you have a scar on your face, people won't
hire you. They don't like people with scars on their faces.
So we want to paint a scar on your face.
(20:35):
Are you okay with that? Yes, So they paint the
scar and they show them in the mirror the scar.
So the women then begin internalizing, yeah, they're not going
to hire me because I have a scar. So they
took a little time and then they said, oh hold on,
(20:58):
let us let us uh, let us touch up the
scar a little bit. And so there's no mirrors in
the room at this point. They touch up the scar.
Actually they removed the scar, but the women don't know
that the scar has been removed. They can't see that.
So then they send the women into the interview, normal interview.
(21:23):
The women come back and they say how did it go?
And they said, all they focused on was my scar.
Remember we know they don't have a scar. They don't
know that.
Speaker 2 (21:36):
Everything.
Speaker 10 (21:37):
The interviewer asked the women who think they have a
scar but don't take as a personal affront an insult
a veiled reference to their scar. When you walk in
somewhere already self conscious for whatever reason, because you're a woman,
(22:04):
because you're black, because you have an accent, and you
already believe that people don't like you because of this
particular thing, then you immediately assume everything related to that
(22:24):
is because of that. I'm not saying I'm the best
parent ever. My wife's the best mom ever. I know that,
But I'm not saying I'm the best dad ever. But
i will tell you this, I have raised two young
boys into manhood. And one thing we don't do, and
we discuss this openly and bluntly, is just because you
(22:49):
get bad customer service, or someone cuts you off in line,
or someone doesn't hire you or pick you or whatever.
It can never be because you're black. It might be
because they had someone else in mind. It might be
because you weren't good enough. It might be We're never
going to assume, is it ever because you're black? Yeah,
at some point it will be. But if you assume
that's the case, Life's going to be real hard.
Speaker 9 (23:11):
Many times I will talk a lot, I will get
caught up in the rhetoric the Michael Very Show.
Speaker 2 (23:16):
I'm a knucklehead at times.
Speaker 10 (23:18):
You know, there's a generational chasm. You either know who
Peanut the squirrel is or you don't. And if you
don't know who Peanut the squirrel is, your life is
probably the better for it. And if you're a person
who's bothered that someone else doesn't know who Peanut the
squirrel is, you probably spend too much time on social media.
(23:40):
I find it quite interesting that people will come up
to me and they'll say, hey, did you see when
they whatever their hot new little you know, current news
cycle generating intense fervor is And I'll say, no, well
you got to see it now. I don't. I don't
(24:02):
stay logged in all day. I think it's very unhealthy.
And by the way, I think that most things that
generate intense passionate interest like this will be forgotten.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
They're not important.
Speaker 10 (24:18):
They're just not important, and we give too much attention
to them. It's become a hobby. It's become this this
fetishistic hobby to fill people's time to keep you enraged.
In fact, a lot of our people spend too much
time being mad at Rick Wilson or Anthony's Carmucci or
(24:40):
David French or Jonah Goldberg, all these people that are
paid a lot of money by rich liberals to pretend
that they used to be conservative and to just tell
you Kamala's winning, Trump's losing, and all of it is
designed to make you angry and demoralize you.
Speaker 2 (25:01):
And it works not with me, but.
Speaker 10 (25:06):
For those of you who do know the story, it
is worthy to understand what happened and why people are
justifiably angry. There's a fellow background. There's a fellow named
Mark Longo. He lived and lives in New York and
(25:27):
not city, out in the country. Lives on a farm.
His wife, she's a German immigrant. It's forgive me. I
don't know how to pronounce this county. I've never seen
it written before, chimung kimung, whether it's che m ung.
Speaker 4 (25:45):
So.
Speaker 10 (25:46):
The county Health Department arrived at his home with a
search warrant, along with the New York State Department of
Environmental Conservation. We later learned that somebody one thousand miles away,
some crazy left wing woman.
Speaker 2 (26:06):
Had called in a complaint.
Speaker 10 (26:09):
So they go and get a search warrant without any investigation.
This like CPS, CPS does his crap. They go get
a search warrant. They come to his house and they
make him and his wife wait outside. They question his
wife on her immigration status. The hell, you're the county
(26:33):
Health Department in the Department of Environmental Conservation. They tear
up his house looking for his pet squirrel and his
pet raccoon. When they find them, they take them and
they kill them. They later claimed they had been bitten,
that they had put on gloves. How are you bitten?
(26:57):
They literally destroy the house looking for this squirrel and
the coon.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
Squirrels name's Peanut.
Speaker 10 (27:04):
Well, the background is Peanut has a massive fan following
online because the owner hangs out with him all day
and Peanut jumps on his shoulder and then runs down
his arm, and he's a cute little squirrel. You can't
help but like the darn thing. It's social media. People
(27:27):
love that sort of stuff. But because he's a Trump supporter,
this left wing nut job woman called in a complaint
and then these jack booted thugs that work for New
York State and for this county Health department show up
and now we have a dead coon and a dead squirrel.
(27:48):
This man's rights have been violated and his wife has
been harassed over her immigration status, and all the while
illegal aliens are running him up. Listen to the story
from NBC four out of New York.
Speaker 13 (28:03):
We have a very disappointing and sad update now on
the Soga peanut the squirrel.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
You might I've heard this. Livil guys been making headlines
this week in New York. State officials now tell us
the pet squirrel has been put down. Sorry, he seized
peanut from a home in Pine City, New York's little
south of Elmira. Apparently they have been multiple complaints. Peanut's
owner says the squirrel's mother was hit by a car
and he'd been taking care of the animal ever since.
The owner runs an animal sanctuary and says he knows
(28:28):
it's illegal to own a wild animal without a license
and says were working to get peanut certified as an
educational animal. Raccoon taken during the same raid also put down.
Speaker 2 (28:37):
The Estate Department.
Speaker 1 (28:38):
Environmental Conservation says all this is done to test for rapis.
Speaker 3 (28:45):
All right.
Speaker 2 (28:45):
That's what Albany's focusing on.
Speaker 10 (28:47):
Mark Longo, who Peanut was so attached to, and his wife, Daniella,
the German immigrant. We're on TMZ telling their side of
the story and listen to this.
Speaker 2 (28:56):
This is crazy.
Speaker 18 (28:57):
We just learned that they have euthanized peanut and raccoon
as well, and the raccoon as well. I am so
sorry this must be really difficult for you.
Speaker 19 (29:12):
Not only tears my family apartment, but Peanut was the
cornerstone of our nonprofit animal rescue and ten to twelve
dec officers rated my house as if I was a
drug dealer.
Speaker 20 (29:23):
I was sat outside my house for five hours. I
had to get a police escort to my bathroom. I
wasn't even allowed to feed my rescue horses breakfast or lunch.
I was sitting set there like a criminal. After they
interrogated my wife to check out her immigration status, then
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proceeded to ask me if I had cameras in my house,
then proceeded to go through every cabinet, nook and cranny
of my house for a scroll in a raccoon.
Speaker 2 (29:51):
They got a search warrant.
Speaker 19 (29:53):
They got a search warrant four departments and a judge
signed off on a search warran for a squirrel in
a raccoon, and then they took them and killed them.
Speaker 21 (30:05):
Why did they go through all that to get a
search warrant for an animal that had been with you
very safely, and the world witnessed this for seven years.
Why now suddenly did they show up with a search
warrant and take these animals.
Speaker 2 (30:20):
We haven't a clue.
Speaker 19 (30:21):
We don't know who made the complaints. Again, Peanut was
an indoor squirrel, not harming anybody. He's been with us
for seven years. Not a single complaint was ever filed
for this animal. We had him for seven and a
half years. He became the world's most famous squirrel. We
weren't hiding him by any means. He was all over TikTok.
He became the first scroll on TikTok to ever hit
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a million followers. He did every new station around the world.
He's helped people, he's helped kids gether joy. And then
we started a non profit animal rescue called Peanuts Freedom
Farm to help animals like Peanut fight a good fight
when they're in a neglected case or they're sitting in
a slaughter auction. And he was the cornerstone of our
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life and our organization. We used his platform to help
raise money for the three hundred animals we have at
our sanctuary.