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 Verie Show is on the air for the mayor
in New York City and Chicago. President Trump made it
clearer to userio, We're going to double Donald, triple Donald.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
Sanctuary City ICE will now have a larger budget than
all but fifteen.
Speaker 4 (00:25):
Of the world's militaries.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
Its four year total is more than every military except
for the.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
United States and China.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
This is a direct assault on the civil liberties of
all Americans and will fundamentally undermine our rights.
Speaker 5 (00:39):
Stay like today, I want folks to know we have
you back, and we'll continue to come back and do
what we can to protect our diverse communities, to protect
the spirit that defines the best of this city and
our state, and to push back against this cruelty, to
push back against this cruelty that is being perpetuated by
(01:05):
the President of the United States.
Speaker 6 (01:07):
What you see in those pictures, is it making America safer? No,
it's terrorizing Americans, our friends and neighbors, otherwise known as immigrants,
many of them.
Speaker 4 (01:16):
But these are folks who you know.
Speaker 6 (01:18):
They go to our churches, they work at our grocery stores,
they work on construction sites, They work in childcare, They
work in many jobs that would not be filled had
they not done it. And I also just sit back
and ask who asked for this. Americans were told that
the most violent individuals would be deported, and we're now
seen in the numbers that that is a very small
(01:39):
percentage of who is being targeted.
Speaker 4 (01:41):
We're not helpless. You should meet their chaos with chaos.
Speaker 7 (01:44):
The horrible floods that occurred in central Texas, we call
it the hill country. Now, for those of you who
grew up in Colorado or Arkansas, Tennessee, West Virginia, they're
not mountains, and we're not trying to make a mountain
out of the hills.
Speaker 4 (02:06):
They are hills. We're proud of them.
Speaker 7 (02:07):
We don't have a lot of topographical diversity, but it's
a distinctive and beautiful part of our stak. Unfortunately, this
part of our steak has crevices that have been carved
out of the rock, the unforgiving rock that is the
(02:32):
ground covering for so much of this beautiful area and
beautiful rivers into which the waters flow. The problem is
when the rainfall picks up rapidly, it can flood dangerously
rapidly and both of those things happened, and we're going
(02:57):
to talk about in the coming days and weeks and months.
Speaker 4 (03:01):
Who's to blame if anyone.
Speaker 7 (03:03):
Yes, I do think there is a conversation to be
had about cloud seating. It's not denied, it's occurring, it's
just denied how bad it is, how much of a
difference it makes. Some claims twenty four percent more rain
out of a cloud than otherwise. I don't trust our
(03:24):
government and I'm not going to trust them, and I
don't think you should. I didn't trust them to take
their stupid COVID shot. My brother had to as an
active duty police officer, and he died, and I'm certain
that's why he died, and a number of other people
who were otherwise healthy died as a result of taking
that shot. It not only didn't keep you from getting
(03:46):
the vaccine, many people died and people continue to die
because the RNA strain inside the body is a spike
protein that is very unhealthy and deadly for people who
were not at risk of COVID death because they were
not immuno compromised, they were not morbidly obese, they did
not have an otherwise a factor that put them into
(04:11):
a high risk category. There was no reason. In fact,
there was reasons not to give them a shot. So
I don't trust the government. I don't and I won't.
I don't trust them when they say much of anything.
And I think in a healthy republic, trust but verify.
(04:32):
I think you don't trust anything until they prove that
it's true. And I think enough of us have to
do that because we're the sentinels. We are the ones
who question when others don't want to because it would
be impolite or awkward or require effort.
Speaker 4 (04:48):
We've learned our history.
Speaker 7 (04:51):
That being said, I'm watching this thing unfold, and not
exactly in a dispassionate way. I know a number of
the people and fa families involved in all of this,
and I know a whole lot with one degree of separation.
These are little girls, a lot of whom have died
and more continued to be discovered. And it's a horrible thing.
(05:14):
It's a truly horrible thing that we will remember for
quite some time. But there's something I want to talk about,
and that is that these families. I know people involved
with these families, there with the families as they're grieving,
and news media are knocking on their doors, ringing their
(05:39):
home phones to the point that they're taking them off
the wall, unplugging them. I don't have a home phone
for that very reason. You can't wake me up at night.
I need a good night sleep. I don't keep my
phone around me. They are ringing the doorbell, coming onto
someone's private property, ringing the doorbell and asking for comments,
standing on the front and waiting, pushing in every possible
(06:06):
in violation of every possible social norm for people who
are trying to.
Speaker 4 (06:10):
Retreat and grieve.
Speaker 7 (06:15):
I selfishly need to put you in front of the camera.
I want the big get, but their.
Speaker 4 (06:23):
Daughter just die.
Speaker 7 (06:26):
I think it is time to look very hard at
what kind of culture we have become and whether this
is who we want to be, because these are choices
we make. And if you agree with me that these
families with their little girls who've just passed, shockingly, they
sent their a little girl off to camp, she didn't
come home alive, can you imagine the grief, the guilt,
(06:48):
everything that goes with that. Not that you deserve it,
but that's what you do. You beat yourself up. I'm
going to go further than that and say I don't
like whether it's Democrat or Republican when media or journalists
bogart a congressman as they're walking through the halls of
Congress to go vote, and they ambush them and they
get all up in their face and they stick mics
(07:09):
in their faces. Do you, Because there has to be
a line of decency that we draw as a society,
and I don't think that line is very far from
there to shooting President Trump in the head, which this
Sunday will have been the one year anniversary. Again, that's
why probably out of tune, you do not have to
(07:31):
edit that. This is Mark chestnutt Enjoy Bizaar of Talk Radio.
There is a podcast called Subway Takes Podcasts.
Speaker 4 (07:41):
I was not aware of it.
Speaker 7 (07:43):
And when I tell you I haven't seen a movie,
read a book, watched a podcast, and heard of a band,
some people take that as some sort of a brag
or an insult to that.
Speaker 4 (07:59):
It's not.
Speaker 7 (08:01):
We live in a golden age of content creation. That
doesn't mean all of it's good, but anybody can create
and distribute content now, and that wasn't always true. If
you wrote books, you had to have a publisher who
could distribute that book.
Speaker 4 (08:19):
For you. If you made movies, you had to have
a way.
Speaker 7 (08:24):
You had to have a movie production company, and it's
expensive to make movies, just be honest, So you had
to have a movie production company with their investors and
all that invest in your movie.
Speaker 4 (08:36):
It's very hard to do. There were gatekeepers. Everything had gatekeepers.
Speaker 7 (08:40):
You had radio in the radio company, the program director
all the way up the chain controlled who got access
to the microphone because they control the distribution. And then
it all changed. Technology democratized con distribution. Not only is
(09:03):
it easier now for anyone to make content, it's a
snap to distribute it, which is amazing. Literally, any one
of you you right now tonight could go home and
start a podcast. That doesn't mean you'll have as many
listeners or subscribers as your favorite podcast. You won't, not overnight.
(09:26):
But if everybody did, a few people would hit it big.
People might become a full time podcaster. Not easy, but
it would happen. It could, and it certainly would happen,
and it would be people in the least likely of places.
It would be a firefighter talking about what it's like
is yours of being a firefighter. That might be a
mommy who says, I've raised, you know, my kids, and
(09:47):
now I'm raising my grandkids. And here's what I learned
about being a mommy. Well that's not Rush Limbaugh stuff.
That's a different audience, a different type of content, but
it would connect with people, some of whom also happened
to have in their Venn diagram overlap been fans of
Rush Limbaugh are listeners of our show. So I just
(10:07):
say that because it's important. When I say I've never
heard of someone, I'm not insulting them. I'm simply pointing
out that's impossible to know. There is so much out
there now. So this guy, Kareem Rama is talking about
a podcast he did with Kamala Harris, and it's so
easy to sweep these things under the rug and forget them.
(10:30):
This is how bad Kamala Harris was. I've never heard
anything like this before. This guy wants to help her
get elected, so he's throwing softball questions and she was
so bad that they did not publish or post the
podcast because he didn't want to be blamed when she
(10:52):
lost or how bad she was in the podcast. And
remember he's a supporter of her. He's trying to help
listen to this.
Speaker 8 (11:01):
He emailed me from the DNC and they said, hey,
Kamala Harrison and Tim Walls are really interested in being
your show.
Speaker 4 (11:08):
I said, that sounds cool. I'll at least get to.
Speaker 8 (11:11):
Tell my daughter that I met the potential president of
the United States. And so I said yes, based on
the fact that it would be a good story, and
also they both had good takes.
Speaker 4 (11:22):
What happened with Kamlin her.
Speaker 8 (11:24):
Take was really confusing and weird and not good, and
so mutually agreed that we shouldn't publish it. I see,
and I got lucky because I didn't want to be
blamed for her losing.
Speaker 4 (11:38):
Her take was that bad.
Speaker 8 (11:39):
It was really really bad, and it was it was like,
didn't make any sense. I can tell you I was
baking bacon as a spice, bacon as a spice.
Speaker 7 (11:52):
It. It is amazing the extent to which Americans support
to push to deport illegals. The media didn't believe it,
and so they say it's not true. The Democrats don't
believe it, and so they continue to double down on
(12:12):
fighting back.
Speaker 4 (12:13):
Now you've got ice agents being shot.
Speaker 7 (12:18):
But the majority of Americans, whose voice is rarely heard
because of this quirk of a system, sort of like
when Saddam Hussein and his both party were leading Iraq.
They represented a very small, very tiny percentage of the population,
but they had control of the influence centers in the military.
Here is Harry Entton with CNN talking about yet another poll.
(12:45):
He keeps rolling out these poles into his credit. He's
fair about the answers, and he says, look, Americans want
these illegals deported, and by the way, they want fewer
immigrants coming here. Now, you can say Americans are awful
people for this, whereas most every other country in the
world would say the same thing about their own country.
But you can say what you want. You can criticize
(13:05):
people's opinion, but don't deny that. If we really are
a self governing democracy, shouldn't what the majority of Americans
think matter.
Speaker 1 (13:15):
So we have slightly different questions, but these were all
taken within the last month, and there's real uniformity here.
That's what I really think you see is see real
uniformity to all immigrants who are here illegally.
Speaker 4 (13:24):
Fifty five percent of New.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
York Times Marquette sixty four percent, CBS News fifty seven percent,
ABC News with a slightly different question fifty six percent.
So what you're seeing essentially here is very clear indication
that a majority of Americans, in fact, when they're asked
us one question, which I believe gets that the underlying feelings,
do in fact want to port all immigrants who are
here illegally. There's no arguing with these different numbers because
(13:47):
they're all essentially the same across four different posters.
Speaker 8 (13:50):
So if they say yes today, ish, how has.
Speaker 4 (13:54):
That changed over time?
Speaker 1 (13:55):
Yeah, this is where I think you get very interesting,
and so we'll take a look at that ABC News
question in particular, because you can really see that there's
been a massive shift from when Trump was first getting
into office eight years ago right to port all undocumented immigrants.
You go back to twenty fifteen, I'm gonna come to
your sizus screen and forty two percent. Hello, go to
twenty sixteen, it was thirty six percent.
Speaker 4 (14:15):
Look at where we are now.
Speaker 1 (14:17):
This was taken at the end of last year, fifty
six percent.
Speaker 4 (14:20):
This is twenty points higher.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
Than it was just before Trump got in office the
first time. So feelings towards immigration in this country, feelings
towards undocumented immigrants and deporting all of them have become
considerably more hawkish, and I think that gives Donald Trump
much more leverage to go with the American people and
sort of have these hawkish, some might say harsh different
rhetoric and also issue based sort of going after immigrants
(14:46):
who are here illegally. And so I think the American
people are going to give Donald Trump the benefit of
the doubt to do what he wants to do, at
least if you believe these blunk questions, including this one.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
How about immigration levels?
Speaker 1 (14:55):
Yeah, okay, so this sort of COEs in line with
that right, which is again trying to get that the
underlying feelings want immigration levels decrease. This includes legal and
illegal immigration. Look at this last year, fifty five percent.
That is the highest level since the nine to eleven aftermath,
you go back just to twenty and it's.
Speaker 4 (15:13):
Again legal and legal goals.
Speaker 9 (15:15):
They want people want less people coming into the country.
Speaker 1 (15:19):
Exactly, they want less people coming into the country. Look
at that, that's a fourteen point rise from twenty twenty three.
You go back to twenty sixteen, when Donald Trump again
was running for president the first time, thirty eight percent.
Speaker 4 (15:29):
That's a seventeen point rise.
Speaker 1 (15:30):
So the bottom line is more folks want people who
are here illegally deported, and their overall feelings towards immigration
have become considerably more hawked since Donald Trump was the
first yet.
Speaker 7 (15:40):
I did of someone proverb now quoted by Sheila Jackson
Lee us.
Speaker 4 (15:45):
I die the Michael Arry Show.
Speaker 7 (15:47):
I have a lot of audio that I have worked up,
and I would like to get into the mix. So
I'm not going to worry with structuring, even though I
attempted to.
Speaker 4 (15:57):
I'm just going to go.
Speaker 7 (15:59):
William Laudge on Fox News clip number six to eleven,
GYM tells.
Speaker 4 (16:05):
How many.
Speaker 7 (16:07):
Illegal alien students illegal aliens are attending US universities.
Speaker 10 (16:16):
So the President's executive order says giving illegal immigrants benefits
deny US citizens is discrimination, and the states don't stop,
they risk losing federal funding. So about half a million
undocumented students attend US universities.
Speaker 4 (16:31):
Two thirds, some three hundred thousand.
Speaker 10 (16:33):
Received taxpayer subsidized tuition. Those in green, twenty three states
in DC offer full in state tuition, those in yellow
offer some assistance. Others have no policy or bar undocumented
students altogether.
Speaker 7 (16:47):
Think about this, You've got people in our community struggling.
You've got roads that are busted overpasses that are failing,
sewers open sewers, clinics that don't have the resources they need.
We've watched a flood in Central Texas. Take the lives
(17:12):
of little girls, and you ask yourself, did we have
every resource available to save their lives? Because their tax payer,
their parents pay millions in taxes. And if we didn't,
where did that money go? Where did we spend that money?
You have to ask those questions. How many people in
(17:32):
this country struggle, can't get ahead in all the while
their dollars they're paying in taxes are going to educate
other children from other countries.
Speaker 4 (17:44):
No other country in the world does this.
Speaker 7 (17:46):
It is the greatest degree of self loathing, self hatred.
This nation has taught people self hatred. And you know,
people who are infected by it, they feel guilty if
they are successful, and they are silenced if they complain.
(18:11):
They are told that to complain, that to have a problem,
that to protest, that, to push back makes them a racist,
a bad person. Well, I'm here to tell you it doesn't.
I'm here to tell you that you are just as
valid as the nationalistic xenophobic people of every other country.
(18:36):
And that's where these people came from. That's where these
people came from. People came to this country against our laws,
broke our laws to get in. That's how you know
they're not going to be a good citizen. They broke
our laws to get in. I got news for you.
(18:58):
If you have an NFL for ball game this Sunday
and you have a whole group of people who break
down the gates and run and find seats, those people
are not going to be ideal fans. They're going to
cause problems throughout. They're probably going to steal other stuff
while they're there. We allowed this to happen, and I'm
(19:19):
gonna tell you how we allowed it. It's a push
and pull. The push is the advocacy of groups that
want to crush this country, collapse it from within.
Speaker 4 (19:29):
A lot of people.
Speaker 7 (19:30):
That's what they have an interest in that foreign in domestic,
they have an interest in that. But the pull, the
pull is that a lot of folks, and some of
you suffer from this, feel guilty. You do it, You're scared.
You don't know if there is any truth to that.
(19:52):
Maybe you were given an advantage, Maybe you were.
Speaker 8 (19:57):
Well.
Speaker 7 (19:58):
Shador Sanders doesn't feel some need feel guilty because his
son is Dion Sanders and he had every opportunity from
the beginning. He doesn't feel guilty about that. He just
wants to make the most of his talent and make
the most money. That's what he cares about. But he
certainly doesn't feel guilty about that, nor would anybody suggest
(20:19):
he should. Right, Americans have been subjected to an intense
propaganda campaign a too prone. These are the good people,
these are the bad people, These are the heroes, these
(20:40):
are the losers. These are the people who need our help,
our support, our money, our forgiveness. And these people over here,
they need to hide, they need to go away, They
need to be ashamed.
Speaker 4 (20:54):
And we saw this.
Speaker 7 (20:56):
We saw this come to the forefront as Little Girl
Rules were dying in the Texas Hill Country and black
women influencers were taking to social media and saying things
like you deserve it, you deserve it, How evil do
(21:21):
you have to be? So the question is how long
are we going to tolerate this? Are we going to
continue to be pushed around? How many blacks feel marginalized,
frustrated because they're told that if you're black, you need
(21:46):
to have these opinions, and if you don't share these opinions,
then you are a sellout to your own race.
Speaker 4 (21:54):
I mean, how crazy is this.
Speaker 7 (21:58):
Black kids are taught that you need to act black,
you need to be tribal toward black people. Support black people,
vote for black people. A quit a black defendant in
a crime, even if that black defendant's victim was black.
(22:19):
If you're a black police officer, you're not supposed to
arrest black people, or you're a turncoat. You're working for
the man. There was a moment in New York where
an intern for Zorn Mumdani a former intern of his
name Hadika r zu Malik. The story involves an Islamist
(22:41):
who screams at an NYPD officer because the officer is black,
because he's stopping rioters from burning down New York City.
How dare you stop the rioters? You're a Muslim man,
you should be supporting us. No, I'm a cop first
six h two of the pigs.
Speaker 4 (23:04):
And the mohammetsys and I'm the loves the pegs. You
can call themselves by the name of a sablets.
Speaker 9 (23:25):
That name, but.
Speaker 4 (23:27):
I'm respect on that name.
Speaker 9 (23:32):
Name.
Speaker 7 (23:39):
You notice there's always streaming, he's always banging. These people
will have mental health issues. I don't care if you're
not white. I don't care if you hate white people.
We need to aggressively arrest, prosecute these people because it
doesn't get better. It's time to take back our country.
For all the talk, there are very few people who
(24:00):
act when the moment comes, and I gotta say Tom Holman.
Tom Holman, as the Borders Are, is one of the
few guys who puts himself out there and actually does
what we believe.
Speaker 4 (24:19):
This is five h two Jim. Listen to him talking.
Speaker 7 (24:24):
What the left is now doing is the left is
no longer saying, you know, we just want fairness, We
just want to you know, we want good policies. It's
not really that bad. The left is now saying we're
gonna fight. You meet me at five o'clock behind the school.
I'm gonna be there. We're gonna fight. Either show up
(24:46):
or I'm coming to find you and we're gonna fight.
The left is now confronting us, and very few people
our side wants to hide behind. Oh my god, I
can't believe they're doing this. Oh my God, it's really bad.
Do you ask how many officers are having to stand
and be spat on ice agents being shot, Officers that
(25:09):
just want to go home to their family, and their mayor.
Speaker 4 (25:12):
Won't give them the tools.
Speaker 7 (25:13):
This is a war, so it's what it is. They
have war being declared upon them. When I say this,
I mean it. Our officers should be given every tool,
and if the mayor won't, the governor should, and if
the governor won't, the president should.
Speaker 4 (25:33):
It will not take long If you.
Speaker 7 (25:37):
Forcibly resist this effort, it would not take long until
it stops.
Speaker 4 (25:43):
I do believe that clip number five. Oh too, Tom Homan, Well.
Speaker 2 (25:46):
I'm going to head to port I'm going out there.
They're not going they're not going to bully us or
you know, we're going to do the job we're doing
in Portland too. But for the mayor of New York
City and Chicago, President Trump made it clear Uisia, we're
going to double donald trickle down the sanctuary cities. Why
not because they're blue, Because we know there are recent
public safety threats to the streets every day, like Florida,
(26:07):
we have we agree with all the sheriff in Florida
they're taking our detainers, they're not releasing illegal alien. Public
safety trusts for calling us so we can send let's
spend less resources in Florida and send them to New York,
to Chicago and the Portland and LA. We're gonna double
down on triple down in sanctuary cities. If we can't
arrest a bad guy in the jail, then we'll go
to community and we'll find him, or we'll do more
(26:29):
work site enforcement. We'll find them at the work site.
And when we do these things, we ramp up that enforcement,
we're gonna find others. Others who aren't a criminal target,
but they're in the country illegally, we're going to arrest
them too. So what you're going to get, sanctuary cities,
it's exactly what you don't want. More agents in your
communities and more collabor rests. That's what we're going to do.
We're doubling down, trippling down. So good for those who
(26:50):
say they want keep outside of the city, good luck
with that.
Speaker 7 (26:53):
This is also exposing how many Republicans claim they were
working against illegal immigration, but really weren't because they were
never in a position where they could stop it. Now
they're being forced to pick sides. A lot of Republicans
stay out of this fight.
Speaker 4 (27:09):
They want no part of it.
Speaker 7 (27:11):
This is President Trump at his cabinet meeting. I believe
this is yesterday, and the question keeps coming up about
farm workers because he's saying that we're now not going
to deport farm workers, which is a divergence of where
we were. We were going to deport people in the
(27:32):
country illegally without regard to what industry they were in.
This is a carve out that makes people, understandably and
I think justifiably, very uncomfortable.
Speaker 4 (27:44):
There's no aemnacy.
Speaker 2 (27:46):
What we're doing is we're getting rid of criminals, but
we are doing a work program.
Speaker 4 (27:50):
Do you want to explain that place?
Speaker 9 (27:52):
Yeah, this morning we talked about of course, this was
the top of min question.
Speaker 4 (27:55):
This morning.
Speaker 9 (27:56):
We talked about protecting the farmers in the farm land.
But obviously this President's vision of no amnesty, mass deportation continues,
but in a strategic way, and then ensuring that our
farmers have the labor that they need. Secretary Chabas Drummer
has been a leader on this. Obviously this comes out
of the Labor Department. But moving toward automation, ensuring that
(28:16):
our farmers have that workforce, and moving toward an American workforce.
Speaker 4 (28:20):
So all of the above, the bombers the people that
need But we're not talking amnesty, so this is not
what was promised. We're now talking about work programs.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
Now.
Speaker 4 (28:39):
I understand we want to support our president. I get that.
Speaker 7 (28:42):
I understand we don't want to fracture our base. What's
going along with Elon and Donald Trump is not a
good thing. However, you have to ask yourself this question.
If President Trump diverges from the promises he made. Oh, Michael,
(29:05):
he wouldn't do that, Okay, I understand, But what if
he did. Are we to protest that and criticize it,
or are we simply to say I voted for the man,
not the policies. I trust him even if he is
doing something that is the opposite of what was promised.
(29:27):
I think every person has to ask themselves that question.
And I will tell you this, It will make a
lot of fellow Americans angry. There are a lot of
people who do not believe that MAGA is anything other
than whatever Donald Trump wants. And I don't care if
(29:47):
it's Donald Trump or anyone else I don't worship man.
I don't worship candidates or officeholders.
Speaker 4 (29:57):
I do not and will not.
Speaker 7 (29:59):
That is as unhealthy as can possibly be. No, I'm
not declaring war on him. I'm not saying I won't
support all the things I love. But I can't imagine
how many people think it is acceptable to simply say, oh,
the policy has changed to the other to the other
(30:22):
party's policy, but it's my guy saying it. Okay, Well,
I love him so much. By the way, Donald Trump
needs us to be thinking, reacting, engaging. We are not
(30:43):
helping him be the best president he can possibly be
if all we're doing is cheering, like seals or whatever
he does. He didn't come up with this farm worker program,
a guest worker program that would have never been mentioned
on the campaign because it would have seemed, as it is,
(31:06):
as a break from the deport all illegals, to port
all illegals all the time unless they're farm workers. We're
going to trust the farmers to do that way. How
come that wasn't brought up? Because the American people want
people deported, every person deported, and they want less legal immigration,
(31:29):
and they want the Epstein list release. This is a
recognition that Donald Trump is not entirely in charge of
the decisions he's making, and that ought to frighten you,
because who are these people