Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and Load from
Michael Verie Show is on the air. Look at me, sure,
look at me. Sure, I'm the come to know Sure sailor,
I'm looking right at you.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
My administration has been taking fast, decisive action to solve
this crisis.
Speaker 1 (00:28):
We'll win the fight against the fraudsters.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
But the political gamesmanship we're seeing from Republicans is only
making that fight harder.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
We've got conspiracy theorists.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
Right wing YouTubers breaking into our daycares demanding access to
our children.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
We've got the President of.
Speaker 2 (00:50):
The United States demonizing our Somali neighbors and wrongfully confiscating
funds the Minnesotans rely on. It's disgusting and it's dangerous.
Republicans are playing politics for the future of the state.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
It's shameful.
Speaker 3 (01:11):
In the past three years, eighty seven defendants have been charged,
sixty one convicted.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
The majority of them are Somali American.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
Minnesota has the nation's largest Somali population. The perpetrators are
accused of ripping off state run programs intended to feed
low income kids, house the disabled, and provide services to
autistic children.
Speaker 4 (01:36):
What you're seeing is the ultimate opportunity cost of electing
a Vacuus virtue.
Speaker 1 (01:40):
Signaler with no skills at all.
Speaker 4 (01:42):
While he was pushing tampons and trans and men's rooms,
the Somalis were ripping.
Speaker 2 (01:47):
Off the state like it was a twenty four hour
mini mart. Because I reflect on this moment with my
family and my team over the holidays, I came to
the conclusion that I can't give a political campaign my all.
Every minute that I spend defending my my own political
interest would be a minute I can't stand defending the
people of Minnesota.
Speaker 5 (02:04):
I guess the criminals who pray on our generosity. Timmy
Waltz timpon Tim.
Speaker 1 (02:10):
Trader.
Speaker 5 (02:10):
Tim in Minnesota, the governor said he can't run for
governor because he's going to be so busy chasing down
these fraudsters. That's leg Oh Jase Simpson saying you got
to let me out of jail so I can go
(02:32):
find out who killed Nicole and run.
Speaker 1 (02:37):
That is rich, brother, that is rich.
Speaker 5 (02:42):
We got a lot of audio today to get through,
some of it piled up from yesterday, but things that
I want you to hear. Would like to give you
first person audio as it happened. I think it adds
to the flavor. President Trump told reporters on Air Force
One that the United States military is taking out Somali
pirates the way they've been taking out the narco boats.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
We don't let them take ships anymore.
Speaker 6 (03:08):
You know what, We used to save exact missile for
them that we use on the drug carriers.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
And it's very effective.
Speaker 6 (03:16):
You notice there's nobody capturing ships anymore because as they
head out to go capture the ship, and the ship
doesn't want to fire back because it's very flammable stuff
in many cases. And the insurance company so one because
they've you know, they built a billion dollar ship and
they don't want anybody firing rockets into the ship. But
(03:37):
we're hitting them so hard. And it's very similar, same
same missile system. It's called deadly accurate. And did you
notice that ships aren't being taken anymore. The pirates are thought,
the pirates aren't actually very easy. They head out, We say,
guess what there's pirates being that's the end of the pirates.
(04:00):
Look at the ship be business is coming back because
see these are little things that we're doing.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
And I'm doing it not just for American ships.
Speaker 6 (04:08):
I'm doing it worldwide because we don't want ships. Take
it by Samodiya Samodya pilots pirates.
Speaker 5 (04:19):
In five months. On June fourteenth, Donald Trump turns eighty
eighty years old. That guy has more energy, more focus.
Speaker 6 (04:36):
Than me.
Speaker 5 (04:37):
And I'm twenty five years younger than him, and most
people around me think I have more energy than anybody
they've ever met.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
This guy is twenty five years older.
Speaker 5 (04:50):
And double or. I am in deep, deep admiration for
his commitment. It is true public service. There's no fluff,
no pomping circumstance, no pageantry. This guy is getting it
done because he knows he's on the clock. He said,
(05:12):
when we see a Somali pirate ship, we go bing.
You got that ramon, you got the bing.
Speaker 1 (05:18):
I love it.
Speaker 5 (05:24):
Lynthy Graham was on Air Force one with the President
when the President was describing the Somali ships blowing up as.
Speaker 1 (05:32):
Bing and boil boy, Lindsey Graham.
Speaker 5 (05:35):
He got those googly eyes because you know he he
gets lathered up at war, those boys in their.
Speaker 1 (05:43):
Uniforms and the bombs. It's a weird weird man. Do
not check that, dude.
Speaker 5 (05:49):
Search history. Bing was like poetry to Lindsey Graham's Ears.
Speaker 7 (05:55):
Lindsey Graham's audio diary Today submission Gramnesty. Being on Air
Force one yesterday with President Donald J.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
Trump was magical.
Speaker 7 (06:09):
The sound of his voice describing a sound of Somali
pirate ships.
Speaker 8 (06:13):
Exploding as bing bing. What a beautiful sound. It made
me feel safe being. I've listened to it like fourteen
times with the lights them.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
To a romantic hue being the.
Speaker 7 (06:31):
Sound of bullet makes in the thrones of war, ricochet
off a military helmet being one beautiful word. It's like
romantic poetry to me. Some men write sonnets, but nothing's
more beautiful than Trump's being. How would I'd give to
(06:51):
hear it just one more time?
Speaker 6 (06:53):
You noticed that ships aren't being taken anywhere than pirates are, right,
I thought the pirates aren't put Molly Heart's actually very easy.
They head out and we say, guess what this pirates
and that's the end.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
Of the parance. I'm not a forever war guy.
Speaker 6 (07:22):
You know.
Speaker 5 (07:22):
You think about Bush dragging us into Iraq and twenty
years later we were still losing boys there. You think
about twenty years in Afghanistan, we were supposed to track
down Osama bin Laden.
Speaker 1 (07:34):
He was in Pakistan. The whole time.
Speaker 5 (07:37):
We were sending boys to get into a war that
could not be one and was not one. We left
billions of dollars of assets there that was That was
more military equipment than most nations have in their entire military.
And Trump is said, no, we're not doing all that.
(07:59):
We're going in and twenty minutes later we're pulling him out.
And then we're gonna blow up some Smali warships. We're
going to clean the world up. And you know what,
I'm for this, this even isolation if me can be
for this the Michael Berry Show, the media loves to
tell us how Trump is a mean monster for doing
things like capturing a psychopathic drug lord dictator and bombing
(08:23):
Somali pirate ships. In fact, sixty Minutes is running a
piece this weekend on just how tough these pirates have
it now that Trump's got him in the bulls eye.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
They're just trying to make a living.
Speaker 9 (08:36):
Tonight, on sixty Minutes, we catch up with a Somali
pirate whose life has been turned upside down by President
Trump's attacks and how the President's description of the sound
of bomb makes keeps him sleepless at night.
Speaker 10 (08:50):
My life as a fight. It is essentially over. The
sound of disease is silent to me. No longer can
I spot a boot in the distance, track it down
load my weapons and killed the men and raped the women.
Trump he is an animal. He has indied it all
for me and my family. I am nothing more than
a regular guy.
Speaker 1 (09:09):
Now. His description of the bomb hitting our boats is
being being.
Speaker 10 (09:14):
Now I am traumatized by any being being of the microwave.
Speaker 1 (09:19):
When my popcorn is ready and my wife can no.
Speaker 10 (09:21):
Longer enjoy her favorite character of all time, Chandler Being
from the classic sitcom Friends, we are all truly devastated.
Speaker 9 (09:30):
Next week, on sixty Minutes, we talk with former Venezuelan
president Nicholas Maduro and how the heartless Donald Trump has
him struggling to put food on the table now that
his drug empire has crumbled.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
One of the.
Speaker 5 (09:47):
Great strategic moves that Trump does is you know, his
supporters in twenty sixteen, and I was not among them,
refer to the fact that he was playing three D chess.
And I used to laugh at the kind of word
the cult worship people had for him. But I have
(10:08):
come to appreciate that he sees the game in a
different way. You see great athletes, you know, you see
you see quarterbacks who they're checked down, doesn't even seem
like they're executing on an assignment.
Speaker 1 (10:26):
It seems very natural.
Speaker 5 (10:28):
You see quarterbacks who as the pocket is collapsing, they
can feel the pressure and they can find the space
to get out of there.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
And you go, I'm watching his head, how does he
know there?
Speaker 5 (10:43):
And then you see the guy that he's just standing
there in the pocket and he gets plowed and he
just does it again because he has no sense of it.
Trump's instincts. Coaches will tell you that great players have instinct.
You can't coach instinct. It's not enough to be great
that you have instincts. But if you are otherwise talented
(11:06):
and committed and all the things that go into that,
having instincts to add to that or the icing on
the cake. Trump has great political instincts. And he does
something that I never see that he's done until he's
done it, and that is he creates a situation where
(11:29):
he does something and they have to be against what
he does, and them being against what he does is
being against something that is bad. He has made them
come out in favor of pedophiles. He has made them
come out in favor of criminals, He's made them come
(11:51):
out in favor of illegal aliens and everything that goes
into that Somali fraudsters. And now he's got them. He's
got them having come out for a psychopathic dictator. And
the problem is you've got all these Venezuelans in Venezuela
(12:12):
and here who are saying that guy's a monster. We
lost everything is Castro, right, that guy's a monster, and
y'all are acting like he's a nice guy, and you
need to stop. You know the guy who said, uh,
you know they're saying America is only invading Venezuela for
(12:36):
the oil, Well, why do you think China and Russia
are there for the recipe for our rapis? Which is
a pretty darn good point. Can you see if we
can get a rapis on APIs delivered right now? I
would like some iapis, that'd be good. One of the
memes that's going around is, uh, we're gonna we're gonna
(13:00):
trade some of these ugly democrat women for the Venezuelan
beauty queens. And so you know, there's pageants of Venezuelan
beauty queens and.
Speaker 1 (13:11):
They're lookers, Yeah, ma'am, they are lookers.
Speaker 5 (13:15):
And then you get these these women, these these just
hideous white liberal Democrat women, and they're all crazy. They're
just nuts, They're absolutely nuts. I saw something Matt Walsh
said yesterday. It was something about, you know, some guy
said that Matt needed to go for therapy, and he said,
therapies for women and buy women, you know, sitting around
(13:38):
talking about your feelings, paying someone to sit around and
talk about your feelings with you, who is themselves a mess.
I was reading this morning about divorce counselors and that
the average divorce counselor has been divorced two or more times.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
That's really not.
Speaker 5 (14:00):
The person to be helping you with your marriage, now,
is it. In any case, Democrats have found themselves in
a pickle and now they're having to defend this really
bad guy who is indefensible. And John Fetterman, Democrat, is saying, hey, guys, again,
(14:22):
you're embarrassing me. You're embarrassing me to be a Democrat.
He was on Fox News and he called out other
members of his party and basically said, guys, what are
we doing here?
Speaker 1 (14:35):
Trump can do some things right, you know.
Speaker 11 (14:39):
You can't just acknowledge that it's been a good thing.
Speaker 1 (14:41):
What's happened?
Speaker 11 (14:42):
I mean, I mean I've seen the speeches from whether
it's Leader Schumer or kinds of past tweets from President Biden.
Speaker 1 (14:50):
You know, we all wanted this man gone, and now
he is gone.
Speaker 11 (14:54):
I think we should really appreciate exactly what happened here
and now. Remember we all crats years ago wanted to
eliminate him, and they why have a bounty of twenty
five million dollars if we didn't want him gone? Why
would you do these things if you weren't willing to
actually do something other than harsh languid Let's remember eight
(15:15):
million Venezuelan were displaced and mass chaos, and now they
were shipping drugs to our nation as well too. So
for me, it's like why why as a Democrat, you know,
we can't just acknowledge that it was successful?
Speaker 12 (15:34):
Ramon a King of Ding and this other guy, Michael Barry.
Speaker 5 (15:42):
The Democrats are in such disarray in anything, they're intellectually bankrupt.
The freak elements of their party have taken control to
such an extent that the politicians are scared to death
of them. So they end up having to take marginal
positions that only a small minority of people actually hold,
(16:06):
and yet try to reconcile that with the larger public
because this is an election year that thinks those positions
are freaky. So here is Democrat Maggie Goodlander. Listen carefully
that you're can enjoy this. She was asked on CNN
if it was a good thing that Maduro was captured,
(16:27):
and she tries to deflect because she knows this question
is coming. She deflected by saying that she couldn't be
bothered with all that because her state was busy celebrating
the two hundred and fiftieth anniversary of the Constitution. So
you don't really know if it was a good idea
(16:48):
that Maduro was captured. You're not really sure because you're
so busy with the fact that your state back home.
You live in DC. If you're a US senator or congressman,
you live in d C. You're not the mayor of
your district. People love to do this. You can't really
(17:09):
blame a congressman for the fact that their district is
bad or give them credit if it's good.
Speaker 1 (17:17):
They live in d C. They don't run the local government.
So for her to act.
Speaker 13 (17:23):
Like I don't you really don't know about Maduro right
now because I'm so busy with, you know, the celebration
for the two hunred and fiftieth anniversary. It's it's hilarious,
but it's also insulting.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
Do you think it's a.
Speaker 4 (17:40):
Good thing that mcdurea is no longer in power?
Speaker 14 (17:43):
Maduall was a dictator, He's a thug, and he was
a grave disservice to the Venezuelan people. But look here
in New Hampshire, we're celebrating today the two hundred and
fiftieth anniversary of our constitution. I believe what my state
has shown the world is that a government of by
(18:05):
and for the people themselves is what we should be
aiming towards.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
Remote Could you play that again? Do you think it's a.
Speaker 4 (18:15):
Good thing that mdure is no longer in power?
Speaker 14 (18:18):
Maduall was a dictator, he is a thug, and he
was a grave disservice to the Venezuelan people. But look
here in New Hampshire, we're celebrating today the two hundred
and fiftieth anniversary of our constitution. I believe what my
state has shown the world is that a government of
(18:39):
by and for the people themselves is what we should
be aiming towards.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
What does that even mean? California Democrat Ted lu.
Speaker 5 (18:50):
He was asked about capturing Madua, and he said, this
has weakened America. Sometimes they say things that I have
to admit are so ridiculous that I have to process
(19:11):
in a traditional debate format. How you know your mother
smells of elderberry insult? I mean, it's like, what do
you do with this?
Speaker 15 (19:22):
Certainly, this illegal action by the president does also take
away the moral argument that the United States had against
China and Russia with respect to their aggressive actions towards
other places in other countries, and it also weekends America.
If we were to view the world in terms of
(19:42):
just hemispheres, the world is completely interconnected. And if you're
going to enhance Russia in where it is, it's going
to threaten Europe. And then if you're going to enhance China,
it's going to threaten countries in the Pacific. So it's
not good to view the world in just hemispheres. It
is all interconnected.
Speaker 1 (20:03):
What is that?
Speaker 5 (20:06):
Uh, never mind, it's not it's not worthy of that
much attention. Ms now's Larry O'Donnell called the administration hypocrites
for indicting Maduro because he owned guns in Venezuela.
Speaker 1 (20:24):
Larry, are you stupid?
Speaker 5 (20:26):
Or is the hammering outside your studio finally driving you
over the edge. It's not that he owned guns in Venezuela.
It's that he trafficked them into our country. You either
know that, which makes you a liar, or you don't
know that, which makes you stupid.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
I honestly don't know which it is. The Trump Justice
Apartment indictment of Nicholas M.
Speaker 16 (20:52):
Durero, his wife, and four other defendants who were not apprehended,
accuses them all of drug trafficking without any specificity and
cocaine importation without any specificity, and, in a burst of
Republican hypocrisy, the possession of firearms from nineteen ninety nine
(21:12):
until twenty twenty five, twenty seven years of possession of
firearms in Venezuela can now get you indicted in New York.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
It's not just that that's a stupid position to take.
It is that.
Speaker 5 (21:36):
There are people who are not deep thinkers, for whom
that passes as wisdom who already hate Trump, and they
will go, yeah, yeah, yeah, you heard what he said,
yeah yeah. And I think social media has brought us
(21:59):
closer together other and further apart. It has allowed stupidity
to be broadcast to our phone all day, every day,
and you have to disentangle from it. I was talking
to a friend of mine who's a nationally syndicated talk
show host, and we share ideas and opinions and perspectives,
and you know, sometimes one of the other of us
will say, hey, what do you think about this? And
(22:21):
what do you think about this? And we were talking
about the fact that it can be unhealthy because we
prep so much. You can end up in an echo
chamber of bad, of really bad, a bad place. And
we were talking when your job is also your passion
and your hobby, you end up getting so caught up
(22:44):
in the rage bay, which is why I've spent less
and less time on Twitter. And now I'll post some
stuff on Facebook, but it's more sort of family stuff
and fun stuff. I'm going to play the following audio.
I will tell you I have liked Tucker over the years.
It doesn't matter whether I like him or don't like him.
But I have thought that he was a person who
was willing to entertain interesting and new ideas. I don't
(23:09):
understand what he's saying here. I don't know what it means.
I will offer it, and I'll let you make your
own decision.
Speaker 12 (23:16):
We can safely discount democracy as a reason for affecting
regime changed in Venezuela. We're not going to go kill
Nicholas Maduro because we don't like the way he's treating
his people. It's possible we're mad that he doesn't allow
gay marriage. That is a distinct possibility, but no one
will say that out loud, not defending the regime, just
saying one of the most conservative countries in North or
(23:42):
South or Central America. Only El Salvador really comes close,
which is much smaller, of course. And by the way,
the US backed opposition leader who would take Maduro's place
if he were taken out, is of course pretty eager
to get gay marriage in Venezuela. So those of you
thought this whole project was global homo.
Speaker 1 (24:02):
Not crazy. Actually, why are we trying to stole this swad?
It makes sense sense.
Speaker 12 (24:07):
Well, because she'll bring gay marriage to Venezuela, and that's
that's important.
Speaker 1 (24:12):
I mean, that's what we stand for, Southern pride.
Speaker 5 (24:18):
Southern pride to Michael Barry Show, we'll smoke out the
Deadheads in my voice.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
I don't know we've done that in a while.
Speaker 5 (24:31):
Sometimes we'll play music without reference to it. That is
a very narrow niche or niche, if you like, and
it's the kind of thing that ninety five percent of
people depend on what it is. We'll have no idea
what it is, and we just keep going without ever
mentioning it.
Speaker 1 (24:51):
But there will be a very narrow niche.
Speaker 5 (24:54):
Of people who will say, Hey, you just played my
favorite band and nobody ever plays them, and I followed
them around the country for three years or you know,
I was their biggest fan, and it's always interesting. And
then you scroll down and you see that guy is
the president of a hedge fund, Like, oh, I didn't
(25:15):
see that coming, but I guess you should. This clip
is a little longer, but when we listened to it
in prep, we couldn't find a spot to cut it.
And the reason is we've really grown to like Steven Miller.
Stephen Miller is kind of the intellectual backbone of the administration.
(25:39):
Everybody has their skill set. But Stephen Miller is the
guy that knows what he knows, doesn't claim he knows
what he doesn't know, does not care if you like
his opinion, because he believes it to be true. And
(26:00):
and I admire that, and we need more of that.
I think part of the Trump phenomenon was it a
lot of people who were less political, who don't live
off of politics or the government. We're tired of a
process and a game of words and pageantry and rules
(26:25):
of people who none of them actually stood for anything anyway.
I remember when Trump was running in sixteen and they
asked him his opinion of John McCain, who had just
criticized him, And they said, how can you criticized John McCain,
He's a veteran. He said, I like the ones that
don't get captured. And that was supposed to be the
gotcha moment. All right, we get rid of Trump and
(26:47):
then we can keep the process to ourselves.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
We got Jeb.
Speaker 5 (26:50):
Bush, and he's got all the money, and you know,
we can have our guy, you know, another Bush, very controllable.
We'll talk about patriotism, we'll have some wars, you know,
you know the Bush formula. So I going by the
algorithm having studied politics for so many years, you insult
(27:14):
the veterans, you're done.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
Well.
Speaker 5 (27:17):
He hadn't really insulted the veterans. He had jabbed at McCain,
and I don't think he minted as an insult to veterans.
But I thought, well, based on that, he's probably done.
It wasn't done, far from it. Look where he is now.
But then there was a grab him by the huhu
with Billy Bush and that he had been married before,
(27:40):
and there was this you know, he's a cad, he's
a bad guy. And he won the evangelical Christian support,
and that was hard for people to understand. But Americans decided,
I don't care what you've done in your personal life.
That's yesterday. We're not doing it anymore. I care what
kind of policies you're going to pass. Trump's policies are
(28:01):
very popular. Personally, He's not as popular because if you notice,
the left and the media, they're all one. They attack
him as a human being. He's a bad person, he's hitler,
and that residue is hard to get off of you. Anyway,
(28:22):
This one's a little longer. It's an exchange between Jake
Tapper and Steven Miller on CNN, and I am delighted
to know that Stephen Miller has the President's ear and
the President respects him.
Speaker 1 (28:36):
And listens to him. So here we go.
Speaker 4 (28:39):
The President was very quick to say that the recipient
of the Nobel Peace Prize, opposition opposition leader Machado in Venezuela,
doesn't have the support in Venezuela to become the next
president or the interim leader. And I wonder where he
got that from, given that her basically her cutout guns
(29:00):
Pallas won the election last year over or two years
ago to overwhelmingly seventy percent of the vote or something
like that. Why does the president think that Machado should
not be the next leader?
Speaker 1 (29:11):
Why does he think she's weak?
Speaker 17 (29:13):
First of all, all of Venezuela experts agreed. All Venezuela
experts agree that it would be absurd and preposterous for
us to suddenly flatter her into the country and to
put her in charge. In the military would follow her,
and the security forces would follow her. This is this
is not a serious it's not even a serious question.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
So should there be an election?
Speaker 17 (29:34):
Let me, if you give me the floor for thirty seconds.
Let me tell you what we are doing here, Jake,
the United States.
Speaker 1 (29:41):
This is sort of foundational.
Speaker 17 (29:43):
The United States is using its military to secure our
interests unapologetically in our hemisphere. We're superpower, and under President Trump,
we are going to conduct ourselves as a superpower. It
is absurd that we would allow a nation in our
own backyard to become the supplier of resources to our adversaries,
(30:04):
but not to us to hoard weapons from our adversaries,
to be able to be positioned as an asset against
the United States rather than on behalf of the United
States sovereign. The Monroe doctrine and the Trump doction is
all about securing the national interests of America. For years,
we sent our soldiers to die in deserts in the
(30:26):
Middle East, to try to build them parliaments with Steven
trying to build them democracies, to try to give them
more oil, to try to give them more resources. The
future of the free world, Jake, depends on America being
able to assert ourselves and our interests without apology. This
whole period that happened after World War Two, where the
(30:46):
West began apologizing and groveling and begging, engaging these What
you're talking about, It's what I'm talking about, Jake, is
the idea. And by the way you do, I know
you love doing that smarmy thing, Jake, and I was
hoping to be better than that this time.
Speaker 4 (31:00):
I'm just I asked you about if it should be
an election exactly. I asked you if there would be
an election in Venezuela.
Speaker 1 (31:06):
That's what I asked.
Speaker 4 (31:07):
I said, why was the president so quick did dismiss Machado?
You answer that question, and then I said.
Speaker 17 (31:11):
The objective, Jake, is security and stability for the people
of Venezuela. With our help and leadership, that country will
become more prosperous than it has ever been in this
whole history.
Speaker 4 (31:22):
Venezuela is a woman running in Venezuela right now is
a part of the majority of Regina.
Speaker 6 (31:26):
Off.
Speaker 17 (31:26):
There will be there will be conversations shake about all
of these guy posts along the way. The reason why
I was giving you that speech, which I know you
didn't want to hear, is because you're approaching this from
the wrong frame, this neoliberal frame of the United States
jobs to go around the world and in demanding immedia
elections be held everywhere immediately all the time, right away
to no vacuum.
Speaker 1 (31:46):
That's not what I think.
Speaker 4 (31:47):
But you invaded the country, We took lead later into
the country, and we seized the leader of Venezuela.
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Damn stray we did.
Speaker 4 (31:53):
And I'm saying we're not going to let the US
going to have more elections.
Speaker 5 (31:57):
Is We're not going to.
Speaker 17 (31:58):
Let Tim Pott homonist dictators, send rapists into our country,
send drugs into our country, send weapons into our country,
and we're not going to let a country fall into
the hands of our adversaries. The future of Venezuela working
with America is going to be so bright and so
incredible and so positive that we'll have a conversation about
everything that you read.