Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Michael Verishow is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:15):
The US is the first time in the history of
the world where.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
A government was.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
Organized with a constitution laying out the rules that the
individual was supreme dominant, and that is what led to
the US becoming the greatest country ever because it unleashed
people to be the best they could be, unlike it
had ever happened. That's American exceptionalism.
Speaker 4 (00:38):
Our resolve is unbroken and our purpose is unchanged to
delivery government that serves the American.
Speaker 5 (00:44):
People better than ever before.
Speaker 2 (00:47):
To win with every single facet.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
We're going to win so much.
Speaker 2 (00:51):
You may even.
Speaker 6 (00:51):
Get tired of winning. And you say, please, please, it's
too much winning. If we can't take it anymore, mister President,
it's too much, and I'll say, no, it is it.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
We have to keep winning. We have to win more.
We're gonna win more.
Speaker 4 (01:07):
We're gonna win so nice.
Speaker 5 (01:08):
It never did think that it.
Speaker 3 (01:13):
Would get together again with that.
Speaker 7 (01:18):
Again.
Speaker 8 (01:22):
It is a tall crowd city, building rocks stronger.
Speaker 9 (01:26):
Than oceans, wind swept, god lift.
Speaker 8 (01:30):
And teeming with people of all kinds living in harmony
and peace. A city with cree ports that hunged with
commerce and creativity. And if there had to be city walls,
the walls had doors, and the doors were open.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
To anyone with the wills and the heart to get there.
Speaker 5 (01:47):
That's how I saw it and see it still.
Speaker 4 (01:50):
And we will restore and renovate our nations once great cities,
making them safe, clean and beautiful again. And that includes
our nation's capital. Never did you, never did that would
never get together.
Speaker 10 (02:08):
Around.
Speaker 4 (02:14):
Under my plan, incomes will skyrocket, inflation will vanish completely,
jobs will come roaring back, and the middle class will
prosper like never ever before.
Speaker 9 (02:25):
And we're going to do it very rapidly.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
I will bring back the American dream. Your expectations are
not big enough, not big enough.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
It's time to.
Speaker 4 (02:38):
Start expecting and demanding the best leadership in the world.
Leadership that is bold, dynamic, relentless, and fearless.
Speaker 5 (02:46):
We can do that.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
We are Americans.
Speaker 4 (02:49):
Ambition is our heritage, greatness is our birthright.
Speaker 5 (02:59):
Get together again with.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
Great humility.
Speaker 4 (03:10):
I am asking you to be excited about the future
of our country.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
Be excited, Be excited.
Speaker 11 (03:21):
Seven police officers were shot last night in San Antonio.
There's almost a complete certainty that some of our listeners
or family members of one or more of those officers.
Speaker 9 (03:34):
Our thoughts go out to you.
Speaker 11 (03:37):
Because I understand it, and I haven't checked in the
last couple of hours. Those officers are all going to survive.
But it's one of these situations. A suicide by cop.
Were an individual a bad guy. He had just been
arrested a few days earlier. He had three prior arrests.
(04:02):
There are certain people who will never be healed. You
cannot fix them because they don't want to be fixed.
And it's a fool's errand to keep letting good people
get sucked into their orbit because you refuse to punish
them properly. The call came in a suicide in progress,
(04:24):
and my thought is I wish they would have allowed
him to complete the job. But when they arrived, he
shot the first officer, and then the second, and then
the third, and the fourth, and then the fifth, and
then the sixth and the seventh. There would be seven
officers shot before he died. I don't think they knew
(04:44):
as of a couple hours ago. The last time I checked,
they weren't sure yet whether it was a self inflicted
wound or an officer a swat officer had killed him
because but.
Speaker 2 (04:54):
I don't know that it matters.
Speaker 5 (04:56):
What I do know is.
Speaker 11 (05:00):
Preparable damage was done to the men and women who
wear the badge during the George Floyd scam. He died
of a drug overdose, and our officers to this day
are under fire from bad people, from illegal aliens, from
(05:20):
gang bangers, from traffickers, from cartel members. Prayers for those people.
Fox News is Bill Malusian embedded with ICE in Boston
as they detained violent illegals. Boston a self proclaimed sanctuary city,
and here's what he reported.
Speaker 2 (05:40):
This is a wing banger.
Speaker 1 (05:42):
It's happening in the early days of this new Trump administration.
ICE officials tell me they're taking what they call a
worst first approach, meaning they're going to target the worst
of the worst criminal alien offenders first. Well, we were
given exclusive access to join the Elite ICE team team
right here in Boston as they go into sanctuary jurisdictions
(06:03):
and enforce immigration law.
Speaker 5 (06:06):
Good morning, everyone, It's.
Speaker 1 (06:08):
A frigid five degrees in the pre dawn hours just
outside of Boston where this team of elite ICE officers
is briefing on their targets for the day.
Speaker 6 (06:17):
We're gonna be targeting some extremely violent offenders today.
Speaker 1 (06:19):
Within moments, the officers are on the move with eyes
on their first targets.
Speaker 7 (06:24):
A movement target vehicle coming around.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
They quickly take him into custody. He's an MS thirteen
gang member wanted NL Salvador for aggravated murder and he
has an Interpal red notice out for his arrest.
Speaker 5 (06:38):
We are targeting very violently threats to our community.
Speaker 2 (06:43):
I'm not going back to Jaden.
Speaker 1 (06:45):
One of those threats is this illegal alien from Haiti.
I says he's a gang member with seventeen criminal convictions
in recent years.
Speaker 2 (06:54):
I mean no Biden.
Speaker 3 (06:57):
The Obama put everything that he's hit.
Speaker 7 (07:02):
Ice.
Speaker 1 (07:02):
Boston quickly takes down its next targets, including this illegal
alien from Brazil who has an Interpol red notice for
armed robbery, This Salvadoran illegal alien charged locally with rape
and released by sanctuary jurisdiction, Say, and this Dominican illegal
alien charged with assault with a deadly weapon and heroin trafficking.
(07:24):
Officers also arrested this Guatemalan MS thirteen gang member facing
gun charges. I says he was released from local custody
just the day before their detainer request was ignored because
of sanctuary policies and in a sign of shifting priorities
with the new Trump administration, this man, who was in
the same apartment as the target, was also arrested after
(07:46):
ICE determined he's also in the US illegally. This is
what ICE calls collateral. So you guys got your main
target just now, but you got somebody else.
Speaker 12 (07:55):
What just happened, Sorry, Maine, target was released twice a
sancturary your six years on a detainer.
Speaker 2 (08:01):
That person was released back into the communities.
Speaker 13 (08:03):
And when we went to go find him, Moskey's with
somebody else who was previously removed from the Uited States.
Speaker 2 (08:10):
So he's going to go today too, And.
Speaker 1 (08:12):
That is exactly what borders our Tom Homan has born
would happen when we find the boat.
Speaker 11 (08:18):
I truly believe that the worst thing that ever happened
to America was slavery the Michael Berry Show, and the
best thing that ever happened to slavery was America.
Speaker 5 (08:26):
And the Republican Party.
Speaker 11 (08:28):
And Democrats are screeching over the Lake and Riley Act.
I am applauding it allows ICE to arrest and detain
illegal aliens accused of theft related crimes and allow state
attorneys general to sue the federal government over federal immigration policy.
(08:52):
Twelve Democrats joined with Republicans, with the final vote being
sixty four to thirty five. In the last Congress, Senate
Democrats refused to bring the bill to the floor, saying
they would not support such a restrictive measure. They don't
like to admit that they want the murderers and rapists
and pedophiles and traffickers to stay here. But when you
(09:15):
actually put that issue to.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
A vote, they will vote.
Speaker 11 (09:18):
Yeah, yeah, we really, we just we want them to
stay here. This is from last week on the Senate floor.
This is John Thune.
Speaker 14 (09:28):
The American people are rightly concerned about the illegal immigration
crisis in this country, and they sent a clear message
in November that they want to see it addressed.
Speaker 5 (09:38):
And that is why the.
Speaker 14 (09:39):
Republican majorities in the House and the Senative made it
our first order of business to take up the Lake
and Riley Act. This bill is a small but critical
step toward resolving the Biden border crisis, the first of
many I might add as present. The Lake and Riley
Act is not a complicated bill. It says that a
legal immigrant involved in a theft related crime must be detained.
(10:00):
That means if someone who is in the country illegally,
in other words, who has already broken our laws commits
a robbery, he or she will be detained. If this
bill had already been law, the illegal immigrant who killed
Lake and Riley would not have been on the streets
the day that he murdered her when he was cited
for shoplifting less than five months before that day. He
(10:20):
would have been detained, and Lake and Riley might still
be alive today. That's what we're trying to do here,
is prevent another tragedy. Unfortunately, it seems that even a
simple and straightforward bill to detain criminal illegal immigrants is
too much for some on the left. Some of our
Democrat colleagues has spent the week searching for a reason,
(10:43):
any reason, to justify voting against this bill. For starters,
we've heard that this bill would cover too many illegal immigrants. Well,
mister President, the admission that there are too individuals on
our streets who have committed a crime after coming into
the count tree illegally is an argument for this bill,
(11:04):
not against it. We've also heard the immigration and Customs
Enforcement lacks the detention capacity for the number of individuals
that this bill will require to be detained. Well, if
resources are scarce, Mister President, the answers to provide those resources,
The answers not to let criminals continue to walk our streets.
(11:24):
Republicans believe that keeping criminal illegal aliens off our streets
is a good investment, and we are currently working on
a bill that will provide ICE with additional agents and
additional detention capacity.
Speaker 2 (11:36):
This President, We've also been told.
Speaker 14 (11:37):
That this bill will overwhelm ICE such that there won't
be enough space to detain violent criminals.
Speaker 7 (11:44):
Once again, this is not an argument against the bill.
Speaker 14 (11:48):
It's an argument for giving ICE more resources and for
quickly deporting criminals.
Speaker 5 (11:54):
This President.
Speaker 14 (11:55):
These arguments say a lot more about Democrats' unwillingness to
crack down on illegal then they say about this bill.
Look at the vote that we took on Wednesday. We
adopted Senator Cornyn's amendment to require illegal immigrants who assawld
a police officer to be detained. Staggeringly, under current law,
(12:15):
this is not the case. But two days ago, twenty
five of our Democrat colleagues could not even bring themselves
to support detaining and an illegal immigrant.
Speaker 2 (12:27):
Who assaults a police officer.
Speaker 9 (12:31):
That's right.
Speaker 14 (12:33):
More than half of the Democrats in the United States
Senate apparently don't believe we should have to detain these individuals.
Speaker 11 (12:41):
That's what it comes down to. That's the real break.
If you want a peaceful, safe, pleasant, free country, you
have to understand you can't just let every mangy, rabid
rapist from the Third World come bargie in here, because
(13:02):
when they arrive, they want what you've got or what
you are. They were not raised of your culture, they
were not raised to respect your loss or the laws
of the country they're from, for that matter. And they're
proven they don't respect your laws when they invade this country.
(13:23):
And there are people around us who will find every
reason why they shouldn't be stopped, punished, and kicked out.
But when it comes down to it, that is what
they want. They want them over you. They want them
over you. And look, this is where it gets tough.
This is where the rubber hits the road, because they're
(13:45):
going to cry as they're leaving, they're going to scream,
they're going to holler. They will have made babies here,
they will have made friends here.
Speaker 9 (13:52):
Some of them.
Speaker 11 (13:54):
They're going to use the drama and the theatrics. They
are going to be folks who say I love this country.
They're going to wrap themselves in America.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
If I love this country, this is my country. I
came here as an immigrant.
Speaker 10 (14:07):
But I love it.
Speaker 7 (14:08):
I love it.
Speaker 2 (14:08):
I just want to stay here. Shows here you have
seven rapes and two murders on your record.
Speaker 9 (14:15):
I love this country.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
What's gonna happen?
Speaker 11 (14:19):
People were taught that when you arrive at the border
through Mexico, this is what you say, I'm here seeking asylumn.
Here's the app you get on. Here's what you say,
Here's how you answer the questions. In Boom, they were
let in. They were coached, part of a pipeline big business,
people moving people, controlling people, selling people, big business, big business.
Speaker 2 (14:46):
So too, they will be taught what to say, how
to perform for the camera.
Speaker 11 (14:53):
It's gonna happen. You must not lose your steely resolve
to do what is right. The guy who commits murder
goes into hiding. He's really good at hiding. Whitey Bulger
great example. Whitey Bulger was a great example of this,
(15:15):
and it takes us years to track that person down.
Maybe as part of their crimes, they hoard enough money
that they never have to work again. They can hide quietly,
and they're good at hiding quietly, And while hiding, in
order to further the scam, they make friends. Maybe they
engage in kindnesses when they mow their grass because don't
(15:37):
want to draw an attention. They mow the wood of
Jones's grass next door. So when it comes time ten
to fifteen years later to come and prosecute them for
the twenty five murders they committed of innocent people, the
neighbors will say, but we knew him as Bill Smith,
and he was the nicest guy ever. You can't why
(15:57):
would you put him in prison. He's a nice because
he hasn't been punished for what was wrong, for what
he did wrong. And we returned to the brilliant words
of that great Scotsman, Adam Smith. Mercy to the guilty
is cruelty to the innocent.
Speaker 2 (16:17):
You owe it to your children.
Speaker 11 (16:18):
And your neighbors to enforce our immigration laws.
Speaker 2 (16:27):
This is the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 11 (16:30):
For those of you who've watched the NFL playoffs a
couple of weeks ago, aj Brown, who's a wide receiver
for the Philadelphia Eagles, was spotted when the camera panned
in on him reading a book during the game, and
there was some commentary, you know, whether you should be
(16:51):
reading a book during the game. Then they zoned in
or zoomed in real tight, and it turned out the
book is called Inner Excellence, Train your Mind for Extraordinary
Performance and the best possible Life, and the announcers were
(17:17):
using the opportunity to I ain't.
Speaker 2 (17:19):
Reading a book a book.
Speaker 11 (17:20):
It believes a a book, and it really it's kind
of funny to me. I grew up a reader because
my mother was a reader. My mother always had a
book beside her. She sat in a chair. My dad
sat in a chair next to it. And my dad reads,
(17:41):
but he didn't read as voraciously as my mom did.
And so that was always good for me because I
could buy her gifts and that would be the gift
I would send her, and she'd be so happy.
Speaker 2 (17:55):
I would pick books that I knew she would like.
Speaker 11 (17:57):
She loved history, which is I think where I got
I love of history, and she loved history. That came
a life of powerful characters larger than life. The circumstances
behind why they did what they did, whether it was
a common person who rose to you know, defend their
entire family or to do something great, or whether it
(18:21):
was a famous person. And she always did that, and
so a love of books has been a part of
my life. But not everybody was lucky as I was
to have that talk to me at a young age.
All the Places Will Go is on her headstone, the
(18:44):
Doctor Seuss and at her grave side service my wife's
brilliant idea, because my wife was one who gave her
the idea to read Doctor Seuss at her funeral. I
mean sorry to put that on her headstone years ago,
because my mom wanted everything paid for for her funeral
ahead of time, not that we couldn't afford it, that
was just her. She didn't want to leave us with
(19:05):
anything to have to pay. So she called my wife
and said, you know what should I put on my
head zone? And my wife said, you love doctor Seuss?
How about the line from Doctor Seuss over the Places
will Go? And my brother laughed at her for that,
but I liked it. So at her graveside service, we
bought that for everybody, and there were only about twenty
(19:27):
of us there. She only wanted about five there, but
there were a few family members that they came in
and you're not going to tell them we're not going
to come. They loved her, she just didn't want to
fustmade over her, and we honored most of her wishes.
So that was one that we cut some slack too.
Some of her friends wanted to be there, and we
passed out the book. We had everybody read it.
Speaker 2 (19:48):
Books are a.
Speaker 11 (19:49):
Way to preserve information and share them. It's information, knowledge, experience,
wisdom that can be reduced by being reduced to writing
can be shared, it can be preserved. Well, now we
do so many things digitally that many people who were
(20:11):
readers now read digitally on a whatever that Amazon Kindle.
Speaker 2 (20:16):
Or are online. But the book, the concept of the
book is to some people almost freakish. Oh my goodness,
a book.
Speaker 11 (20:30):
Well, the truth is there are people down on the
sidelines reading. While they're on the sideline constantly, they're reading
the plays they're looking at they all use Microsoft because Microsoft,
Microsoft is a sponsor. They're looking at at pictures, film
(20:51):
of what happened to play before, why they threw the interception,
what kind of scheme the offense was running? When they
call that play but it was free. Oh my goodness,
has a book a book. I got a book, a book,
and they wouldn't stop talking about it, as if it
was this crazy damn, he must be Einstein, He's got
a book. Well then they find out that, well, the
(21:14):
book is a self help book, inner excellence, train your
mind for extraordinary performance in.
Speaker 2 (21:20):
The best possible life. And the upshot of the story.
Speaker 11 (21:24):
The funny thing about the whole thing is that, as
NBC Philly ten reports, author Jim Murphy says that the
book is now selling massive numbers. People have gone out
to buy the book after all.
Speaker 13 (21:43):
Of that, and I'm super excited for people to get
the message that aj Brown is learning and reading. I'm
super excited for the Eagles fans to get it and
for people all around America to hear the same thing,
learn the same things that I'm working on.
Speaker 5 (21:56):
He's working on.
Speaker 7 (21:58):
So did you know he was a fan of yours?
Did you know he you know, was reading your book ever?
Speaker 10 (22:04):
Because he said, this is a book that he's he's
read before, and he keeps with him and he has
notes and he kind of rereads some of the passages
that he's highlighted.
Speaker 13 (22:11):
Yeah, I knew that he was reading the book, and
you had the book. I sat on the sideline recently,
and so, oh, you know, that's really cool. I didn't
know he was bringing it to every game and reading
it after every drive, So you know, that's that's really neat.
Speaker 10 (22:27):
What was your friends and family's reaction when it became
such a huge focal point of the game, And obviously
I'm sure you've seen, you know, the internet reaction and
and and the memes surrounding it.
Speaker 13 (22:41):
Yeah, yeah, I mean just wondering why I'm not answering
their calls.
Speaker 5 (22:45):
That's that's pretty much the main thing.
Speaker 7 (22:49):
They're saying, your.
Speaker 13 (22:49):
Big your big time now, huh yeah, and us I'm
not answering the calls because I'm talking to you and
everyone else.
Speaker 7 (22:58):
That's hilarious. Oh my goodness.
Speaker 10 (23:01):
Can you talk about just you know, people who are
not athletes or not in the sports world.
Speaker 7 (23:05):
Obviously a lot of people are ordering.
Speaker 10 (23:07):
It now, interested in seeing and reading, you know, just
getting more on his mentality. What is the message that
you want people to get from your book, whether they
are planning on reading it or just you know seeing this.
Speaker 7 (23:20):
On the news.
Speaker 13 (23:21):
Yes, the kind of a thesis for inter excellence is
that that self centeredness is the greatest challenge that we
face and performance and in life it leads to fear
and selflessness is fearless. And that's the essence of inter excellence.
Is how do you develop the habits every day of
(23:43):
thought and action around the person that you want to
become and what's most important to you?
Speaker 5 (23:49):
And how can you be.
Speaker 13 (23:51):
Fully engaged heart, mind, and body in the moment and
unattached to your results that are always temporary and always
in the past and future.
Speaker 7 (23:59):
And where did you kind of learned this mantra?
Speaker 10 (24:02):
Is it meant for people in athletics or a high
competitive world or just your everyday person?
Speaker 5 (24:10):
Yeah?
Speaker 13 (24:10):
Well, I actually spent five years full time writing and
researching this. I went to the desert, got rid of
over half my possessions. It's not a normal story. And
this book was five years full time writing and research,
two and a half years in the desert. First New
Year's I went to live a life of solitude. And
my first New Years I didn't know what day it was.
Speaker 5 (24:29):
I hear noise.
Speaker 13 (24:30):
I'm in my room alone in the empty house on
Year's eve. Journaling and hearing noise that go outside and
I see fireworks and that's when I found out it
was December thirty first, And so it was. You know,
it was a very solid, solitary, lonely time and five
years of working on it. I spent my life savings
and was ninety thousand dollars in debt, and I didn't
(24:52):
know if anyone besides my mom would ever read it.
Speaker 5 (24:54):
And so it was. It was lonely, scary.
Speaker 11 (24:58):
I had a little bit about reason or house.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
I know all about Ramon wants to know what around
the world is.
Speaker 7 (25:03):
Whistling bungholes, spleens, splitters, whisker biscuits, honkey riders, whoskerdoes hohosker,
don'ts nips and dazers with without the scooter stick.
Speaker 2 (25:11):
Or one single whistling kidd he.
Speaker 11 (25:13):
Chaser Adviser's CEO, Albert Borea, was on CNBC and he
was asked how we regain people's confidence in vaccines. Well,
why do we need to regain people's confidence because they
(25:34):
lied to us. You know, there's all this worry that
people don't trust the media anymore because they lied to us. See,
when you lie to us and you burn us we
don't come running back because you're supposed to be someone
we trust, because you keep telling us you're supposed to
be somebody we trust.
Speaker 2 (25:54):
So here's what he said.
Speaker 9 (25:55):
Well, according to.
Speaker 15 (25:56):
CDC, got about twenty one percent of people who have
taken the updated COVID vaccine, about nine percent saying that
they're definitely going to get it. How do we reinvigorate,
for lack of a better term, confidence.
Speaker 5 (26:08):
In vaccines generally, because we're.
Speaker 15 (26:11):
Seeing some of the COVID vaccine concerns spill over now
into other vaccines. How do we regain people's confidence in
vaccines generally win. Let's be honest, A lot of people
know people that had COVID got a vaccine, Steers still
got sick or got injured.
Speaker 16 (26:26):
You're right, and I think the fact that we have
low vaccination rates in the US is going to contribute
to have probably a little bit more COVID and more
severe symptoms as the population immunity will win. I don't
think that people are not getting right now we have
a reduction in the vaccination rates because they have concerns
with the COVID the vaccine. There is a population that
(26:48):
has concerned with coulde vaccine. They never got that vaccine,
but the vast majority they got the vaccine. It's just
that they don't feel compelled to do it because they.
Speaker 5 (26:56):
Don't feel the meat.
Speaker 17 (26:57):
Because, of course, we have controlled COVID so far, because
also there is an oral treatment. So right now we
have even higher scripts and utilization of paxiclovid, which is,
let's say, our oral treatment. Because every time that someone
has COVID, it's very highly correlated with how many scripts
you have.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
Oh, that's one way to spin it.
Speaker 11 (27:17):
People aren't getting boosters because they feel protected from their
previous shots. Oh okay, so the reason they took the
shot was because you told them they had to or
they die. And Joe Biden told them if they took it,
they wouldn't get COVID and they wouldn't spread COVID, all right,
And that wasn't true once they took it, and more
(27:39):
information is coming out and.
Speaker 2 (27:41):
They still got it.
Speaker 11 (27:42):
And now they realize they've been lied to, and you
keep telling them, oh, get another one, and another one
and another one, and they refuse to keep letting you
make a fool of them. You've decided to say, oh no,
that's because they really, really trusted that first one and
they don't think they need another one. We're trying to
convince them they do, but they really, boy, they trust
(28:04):
that first one the same.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
Way we did. That's a lie, you know it. And
by the way, this is the same guy. Let's go
back to the flashback.
Speaker 11 (28:13):
He admitted those shots offered very little protection.
Speaker 18 (28:18):
And we know that the two doors of the vaccine
off for very limited protection if any the three doses
with a booster. They offer reasonable protection against hospitalization and
that's against that's something very good, and less protection against
(28:38):
the infection.
Speaker 11 (28:39):
They didn't work in the first place, but they did
expose you to dian You know what, maybe just maybe
people aren't getting your shot anymore because they're on to you.
You can't scare them that long. But I'm sure it's
(29:01):
the criminals who spread misinformation, right.
Speaker 19 (29:06):
There was some fake news during this period of time
about the vaccines, you know, all sorts of conspiracy theories.
How did you deal with that and how did you
navigate that and where do you feel the primary source
of the sort of fake news was How damaging was
this to us?
Speaker 2 (29:24):
I'm afraid it.
Speaker 18 (29:24):
Was quite rite a lot of damaging, and there was
particular with US. We were targeted by a lot of
let's say dark organizations that you don't really know the ownership.
We suspect that there are some countries behind.
Speaker 9 (29:42):
We were getting a lot.
Speaker 18 (29:43):
Of briefings from CIA, from FBI about attacks that may
happen to US cyber attacks, I mean, but also about
the spread of misinformation. You know, there are two groups
of people right There are the people that they are vaccinated.
They are people that are skeptical about the vaccination, and
(30:03):
both of them are afraid those that they are getting
the vaccine.
Speaker 9 (30:07):
They are afraid of the disease, and they believe.
Speaker 18 (30:11):
That because people are not getting vaccinated, they are increasing
their risk to them.
Speaker 9 (30:16):
They're creaming with the explorer.
Speaker 18 (30:17):
So they are let's say, mad with them that they
don't get the vaccine. Those that they don't get the vaccine,
they're afraid of the vaccine and they are met with
the people that are pressing them to get it. And
there is those I understand, they are very good people,
they are decent people that they have a fear and
(30:40):
they understand it and they don't want to take chances.
But there is a very small part of professionals which
they circulate on purpose misinformation so that they will miss
the lead those that they have.
Speaker 9 (30:56):
Concerned those people are criminals.
Speaker 18 (31:00):
That people are criminals because they literally costed millions of lives.
Speaker 11 (31:05):
Those of us who question, we're spreading misinformation. But you,
mister respected big pharma guy who got rich killing people.
Speaker 2 (31:15):
Yeah, yeah, you're the good guy here.
Speaker 11 (31:18):
Oh it's not the media who carry your water because
you buy advertising on their station, is it? They never
spread misinformation? For years, we'd have on CNN the host
telling us why we have to get the shot, and
then here would be Anthony Fauci, the expert, and he
would tell us why we had to get the shot.
Speaker 2 (31:39):
And then they would go.
Speaker 11 (31:40):
To commercial where they would tell us what a great
company they are and why we need to get the shot.
And we would come back to the supposed news portion,
the content portion, and then tell us why we need
to get the shot.
Speaker 2 (31:50):
We do some breaking news.
Speaker 20 (31:52):
Drugmaker Fiser just announcing the results of its vaccine trial
for adolescence. It says it's coronavirus shot was one hundred
dred percent effective at preventing infection sickness among twelve to
fifteen year olds. This could be a major game changer
for reopening schools across America. So joining us now is
doctor Chris Parnell. She's a public health physician and fellow
(32:14):
at the American College of Preventative Medicine.
Speaker 2 (32:16):
I'm doctor Panell. Great to see you.
Speaker 20 (32:18):
One hundred percent effective?
Speaker 1 (32:20):
Is that?
Speaker 20 (32:21):
I mean, John and I haven't heard numbers like that.
Is that unusual to find.
Speaker 7 (32:25):
That efficacy rate?
Speaker 12 (32:27):
Well, that's even higher than what we were reported when
we had ninety five percent efficacy in adults. Look, we
know these mr Anda vaccines are a game changer. The
technology is different, The technology is very promising.
Speaker 13 (32:39):
I mean, and it's one hundred percent.
Speaker 15 (32:42):
I mean, I mean you know it does not get
any better.
Speaker 11 (32:47):
Yeah, yeah, Look at I mean, we've got clip after
I could do this all day.
Speaker 2 (32:52):
I could do this all day.