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February 12, 2025 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Michael Arry Show is on the.

Speaker 3 (00:13):
Air officially turned around.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Guys. We are back, baby, we are back.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
We are back, Plastic, we are back. Yes that look
at Americastic Love Yes day days.

Speaker 4 (00:38):
Day where we just take a look at at at
all the federal agencies and say, do we really need
whatever it is four hundred and twenty eight federal agencies.

(01:00):
There's so many that people have never heard of well
and that have overlapping areas of responsibility. We should I
don't know, probably we should get I mean, there were
more federal agencies than there are years since the established
in the United States, which means that we've created more
than one federal agency per year on average.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
That seems a lot. That's a lot.

Speaker 4 (01:21):
That's a lot, so we should have that seems crazy.
I think we shouailed to get away with nineteen nine agencies.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (01:32):
That seems a lot, like a lot of agencies, A
lot I know, meant.

Speaker 5 (01:43):
I know, no, mean, we got a message to the
mains of illegal aments that Joe Biden's released in our
country in violation of federal law.

Speaker 2 (01:58):
You better start back.

Speaker 4 (01:59):
And now.

Speaker 5 (02:01):
You're damn right, because you're going home. Well, I got
another message, another message to the criminal cartels in Mexico.
You're smoking a fat and across this country to kill
one hundred and forty eight thousand young Americans. You have
killed more Americans and every terrorist organization in the world

(02:24):
combined and matth. When President Trump gets back in office,
he's going to designate you a terrorist organization. He's going
to wipe you off the face of the earth.

Speaker 3 (02:33):
You're done. You're done.

Speaker 6 (02:50):
There's a chance to course corrected, but it would take
the new Trump administration going after it really hard.

Speaker 2 (02:58):
How would they correct it?

Speaker 6 (03:00):
Well, first of all, you gotta fire you know, you
gotta fire the Chairman of Joint Chiefs, and you gotta
fire this.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
I mean obviously gonna bring in a new Secretary Defense.

Speaker 6 (03:07):
But any general that was involved, general, admiral, whatever, that
was involved in any of.

Speaker 3 (03:11):
The DEI WOP, it's gotta go.

Speaker 6 (03:14):
Either you're in for war fighting that and that's it.
That's the only litmus tests we care about.

Speaker 5 (03:20):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (03:20):
You gotta get DEI c RT out.

Speaker 6 (03:22):
Of military academies so you're not training young officers to
be baptized in this type of thinking.

Speaker 2 (03:27):
Uh.

Speaker 6 (03:27):
And then, you know, whatever the standards, whatever the combat
standards were saying, I don't know nineteen ninety five.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
Let's just make those the standards.

Speaker 6 (03:34):
And as far as recruiting to hire the guy that
you know did top gun Maverick and create some real
ads that motivate people.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
That want to serve. America is back. That's right, and
it felt so empty without Trump.

Speaker 7 (03:58):
We have a new Director of National Intelligence in her
name is Tulsea Gabbard. We have more Americans being released
from Russia. We have moved closer to RFK Jr. Being

(04:22):
our Health and Human Services Secretary. We've had Elon Musk's
son X in the White House while daddy talked a
few feet from President Trump's desk. He stood next to

(04:43):
President Trump and picked his nose for the whole world
to see. And I gotta tell you, it was the
cutest darn thing I've ever seen in the White House.
Because that's what little boys do. They picked their nose,
they're dig in their ears. He might he might pull
his underwear out of his button if he gets stuck

(05:04):
in there. He might touch his juju like he's Kendrick Lamar.
That's what little boys do. They're little boys. They haven't
been corrupted by the world yet. They're they're unkempt and
uncivilized and innocent and glorious. If you were listening the
time that I was talking to Mama Martha, who's Ramona
Roeblis Our King of Ding, I was talking to his

(05:26):
mother about him being a child, and she told this
story on the air.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
After she left, I lift going.

Speaker 8 (05:33):
He was hiding behind the tieving coupid.

Speaker 7 (05:43):
And Ramona has never left that one down. It is
a good time friends. President of Ukraine Vladimir Zelenski said that, Uh,
he's said that well. President Trump tweeted I just spoke

(06:03):
to President Vladimir Zelensky of Ukraine. The conversation went very well.
He liked President Putin wants to make peace. We discussed
a variety of topics having to do with the war,
but mostly the meeting that is being set up on
Friday in Munich Munchin, where Vice President j. D. Vance
and Secretary of State Marco Rubio will lead the delegation.

(06:27):
I am hopeful that the results of that meeting will
be positive. It is time to stop this ridiculous war
where there has been massive and totally unnecessary death and destruction.
God blessed the people of Russia and Ukraine. Blessed are
the peace makers peace through strength, the deal makers, people

(06:53):
who get people together and make things happen. President Trump
spoke to Zelensky. President Trump also spoke to Vladimir Putin.

Speaker 2 (07:05):
A deal is going to be done. Here's a little
bit of that audio. By the way.

Speaker 9 (07:09):
Okay, it'll be great, it'll be wonderful. It'll be an
end to the war. Have a wonderful day, President Putin.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
Thank you very much. President Trump, you too, wish you goodby.

Speaker 9 (07:21):
That's very kind as you. All right, bye bye, bye bye,
vlad Are you still on the line.

Speaker 10 (07:32):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (07:33):
Maybe will you hang up first?

Speaker 4 (07:37):
No?

Speaker 9 (07:38):
I insist you hang up first.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
No, baby's not palet. You hang up, please.

Speaker 9 (07:46):
Lad We've gone over this before. You hang up first,
you hang up? No, you hang up? No, you hang up, please,
Flad hang up the phone.

Speaker 2 (08:01):
No, you came up the phone.

Speaker 9 (08:03):
Donald Flat, I don't know how many times I'm gonna
have to say it.

Speaker 2 (08:08):
Hang up the phone and do it now. No, you
cam up the phone.

Speaker 3 (08:13):
Now, you ing up the phone.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
Guitars, cigars, and.

Speaker 3 (08:24):
A few thoughts from Bizar Michael.

Speaker 7 (08:29):
Chilsea Gabbard was confirmed today fifty two forty eight, with
one Republican voting with the Democrats against her, and that
was Mitch McConnell. If you haven't seen video of Mitch
McConnell recently, I submit earnestly to you that Mitch McConnell

(08:50):
is in greater decline physically and mentally than Joe Biden
ever was on his worst day as president. Mitch McConn
Donald is practically brain dead, but what little colonel of
brain power he still has. He is devoting himself to
doing everything he can to stop Donald Trump, which is

(09:12):
stopping you. And that's the man who was in charge
of the Republican Party in the Senate, that was the
putitive leader of the Republican Party effectively for a number
of years. Do you ever notice how many Republicans go
from being a high official in the party leadership to

(09:32):
the minute their career is over, they run and keep
company with the Democrats. We need to see through these
people while they're still in the position. John Cornyn, John McCain,
Mitt Romney, Adam Kinzinger, Liz Cheney, Dick Cheney. So I'm

(09:56):
going to go back twenty sixteen and tell you a story.

Speaker 2 (09:59):
Some of you know this.

Speaker 7 (10:02):
Hillary Clinton was defeated in O eight by Barack Obama.
It devastated her, but she bided her time, and eight
years later she's running in for the Democrat nomination, and
Obama has cleared the field for her with Joe Biden.

(10:22):
He told Joe Biden, your son's died. You don't You
don't need to, You need to heal, You can't run.
You just you're gonna have to wait. Well, Biden knew
he was too old. You knew that was his last shot.
He'd already had an aneurism, he'd already had a brain surgery,
he was already in decline, bad decline, and he knew it.
So it was basically Barack telling him, you're not going
to be president. So he goes on the sideline and

(10:45):
Obama clears away for Hillary. Hillary again struggles, just as
she struggled in eight against an upstart Barack Obama, who nobody,
nobody knew before that. Because Hillary is unlikable. She's in
incredibly unlikable, and you can't change that. Bill can't change that.
Bill has a likability factor. He does now he's irritating,

(11:08):
and he's pesky and all that sort of stuff. But
he has a likability factor. She has the opposite. Nobody
likes her. Women don't like her, men don't like her.
Nobody likes her. So Bernie Sanders is making gaining ground.
I think he got forty three percent of Iowa against
her and scared her. And so the people who had

(11:30):
rigged the process in the Democrat Convention Democrat National Committee
started siphoning off money and giving it to her. They
started doing things to hurt Bernie Sanders because Hillary was
their girls. Thing was wired. Just like this year, Comma.
They didn't they didn't have a primary. They just had
Kamala chosen. So the next time somebody tells you, but

(11:51):
Elon wasn't elected, he shouldn't get to make decisions.

Speaker 2 (11:56):
Neither was Kamala. She didn't win a primary.

Speaker 7 (12:00):
How did she get to be the nominee because a
powerful group of insiders shows her. So Bernie Sanders is
making ground. And the vice chair number two at the
DNC was a congressman from Hawaii named Toolsey Gabbart, a Democrat.

Speaker 2 (12:16):
She was brought in because she was a military veteran.

Speaker 7 (12:18):
She is a person of color, she's attractive, she's a woman,
and she discovered that the party was violating its own rules,
that they were cheating Bernie to help Hillary, which is
what they were doing. So she stepped down from her
position and she endorsed Bernie Sanders to show the Democrats

(12:40):
you cannot get away with doing this.

Speaker 11 (12:44):
As a vice chair of the DNC, I'm required to
stay neutral in Democratic primaries, but i cannot remain neutral
any longer. The stakes are just too high. That's why
today I'm endorsing Senator Bernie Sanders to be our next
president and command in chief of the United States. We
need a commander in chief who has foresight, who exercises

(13:07):
good judgment, and who understands the need for a robust
foreign policy which defends the safety and security of the
American people, and who will not waste precious lives and
money on interventionist wars of regime change. Such counterproductive wars
undermine our national security and economic prosperity. As these elections

(13:30):
continue across the country, the American people are faced with
a very clear choice. We can elect a president who
will lead us into more interventionist wars of regime change,
or we can elect a president who will usher in
a new era of peace and prosperity. It's with this

(13:51):
clear choice in mind that I'm resigning as vice chair
of the DNC so that I can strongly support Bernie Senders.

Speaker 7 (13:58):
Adam Shifty's shift was on MSNBC with Rachel Madau when
he called Tulsey Gabbard Putin's girl. Everything the Democrats have
blamed on Russia is things that they themselves have done.

Speaker 2 (14:15):
How dare.

Speaker 7 (14:18):
You, little pencil neck shift, how dare you call her
a puppet of our enemy in Russia. She served this
country in uniform. She has shown nothing other than service

(14:38):
and patriotism to this country, to the people of Hawaii
and the people of America. And for doing so when
she ran against Biden in twenty twenty, when she shredded
Kamala Harris. Once they were elected, she was put on

(15:00):
a watch list so that she was being surveilled like
the East German Stazi used to do. She was being
surveilled as if she was an enemy of the state,
as if she was a spy for Pipe, for Putin.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
It's really evil what they've done.

Speaker 7 (15:16):
And I'm going to tell you something I genuinely hope
that she is a vindictive, vengeful person. I, unlike some
of you, am not a turn the other cheek kind
of guy. I am a person that believes in retribution.
And I believe that when people wrong you, if you

(15:36):
do not punch them back twice as hard, they don't
learn the lesson and they do it again.

Speaker 2 (15:44):
A reaction.

Speaker 7 (15:47):
Avoided is a reaction delayed. That was meant to sound
smarter when I started it, ramon, would you get the
point if you don't, If she doesn't punish these people badly,
I want them invest I want them prosecuted, I want
them harassed. I do, I really do, and nothing short
of it. So we got a new Director of National Intelligence,

(16:10):
and I am delighted to know that she's the one
that's going to be whispering in Donald Trump's ear.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
Would you like our whispering yours?

Speaker 9 (16:18):
Or move?

Speaker 2 (16:19):
What do you think that little stree like that?

Speaker 7 (16:21):
We think a little streak of grey going through there,
kind of a Peppe Lapew kind of I like.

Speaker 3 (16:26):
That bizarre of talk radio, the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 7 (16:32):
Folks who listened to the show, who worked seasonal, you know,
might be out during the summer. Small business owners who
work long hours, but have a little more control over
their schedule, so maybe they're moving around during the day,
or they're able to listen to what they want. And
folks who put the AirPods in and listen to the
show while they're out on the tractor working on the farm,

(16:52):
or while they're riding their motorcycle or doing any number
of other things working in their wood shop. But a
lot of our folks work at a company within strict rules,
and that affects your life.

Speaker 2 (17:07):
So my dad.

Speaker 7 (17:11):
Wore a beard his entire adult life, and somewhere along
the way, somewhere in the eighties, DuPont decided in their
infinite wisdom that if a fire ever broke out, or
chernobyl happened or whatever, some little pencil head who's never
been in the plant decided that the mask wouldn't seal

(17:35):
properly with a beard, so my dad had to shave.
So now a grown man was having the choice of
his appearance dictated twenty four to seven, not just when
he was at work. Your beard is gone dictated to
him by some little pencil head at some EPA office

(17:59):
or some little public or some little safety compliance office
eight states away and He was bitter about it, and
for good reason. But he did it because he had
all us boys to take care of. My mom didn't work,
she said, home with the kids. So he had to
comply with stupid rules, a lot of stupid rules all

(18:23):
the time. And if you work for a company, chances
are you got to comply with stupid rules.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
Stupid rules.

Speaker 7 (18:31):
You don't like, things you can't wear, things you can't do,
how long you can poop, how long you need when
you can take your vacation, when you can't, whether you
can post on social media. People understand that part of
working for somebody else is having to deal with their crap.

(18:54):
So I want you to listen to a former Twitter executive.
These people have no clue how the real world works.
And she's talking to Jen Pasaki and she's talking about
how horrible it was when Elon Musk bought Twitter.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
She had to explain to him what she does. She
had to justify her existence.

Speaker 7 (19:16):
Oh my goodness, she had to tell him what she
actually does around here with a fear that she might
get fired.

Speaker 2 (19:24):
Oh ma, I just talked through about some of.

Speaker 8 (19:29):
The very young, in some cases very problematic and their posts.
People that Musk is surrounding himself with to help carry
out his plans, And does any of that surprise you
about what we've learned about these people? And what else
would federal bloys know about the kind of people he
seems to surround himself with.

Speaker 12 (19:46):
I mean, sadly, no, I wish it were surprising, but again,
it's sort of a very tired and old and boring playbook, right.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
Anybody with any sort.

Speaker 12 (19:53):
Of experience is not attracted to the kind of confusing
and toxic work environment. I think it's very appealing to
a certain kind of person. We saw it at Twitter
as well. They were inexperienced engineers from his other companies,
who even knows what the legality of that is coming
in and evaluating, you know, my team's code, other people's code.

(20:15):
You know, we were we had to do performances of
loyalty of literally printing out code, physically standing in line
like we were about to be scolded by a teacher
and sitting there and having to justify our teams. And
I'm hearing parallel stories frankly of you know, multi decade
federal employees having to sit in front of a child

(20:35):
and explain to a child why they shouldn't be fired.
Not only is that demoralizing, it's insulting. It's actually insulting
to the legions of federal employees who do hard work
every day.

Speaker 2 (20:46):
First of all, we don't know if they're doing hard
work or not. Neither do you.

Speaker 7 (20:50):
Secondly, to keep calling someone who's twenty years old a
child is to demean our soldiers, our marines, our airmen
who are out in war at that age. You little
twit literally, you self entitled, you entitled, self important.

Speaker 2 (21:13):
You know.

Speaker 7 (21:16):
Elon bought Twitter and went in and fired over ninety
percent of the employees, I believe it was, and the
media said, oh, Twitter will fall apart, they need all
those people. Turned out, almost every employee had nothing to
do with the proper functioning of the company, of the website.

(21:36):
It had everything to do with silencing your voices. When
a doctor said, hey, I'm treating patients and I'm finding
out that if they take the class shot some of
them are dying.

Speaker 2 (21:49):
Oh we got to get him off of there.

Speaker 7 (21:51):
They were spending all their time preventing anybody from criticizing
Fauci or the Democrats or Ukraine, and he figure it out.
You people are all useless. You're not even needed. So yeah,
you've got to justify your existence. That's what a lot
of you out there have to do. Every single day.

(22:13):
Your company gets bought through, no faulty yours, and you're
the guy that works out in the field, and they
bring you in and go hey O. Every one of
you sit in front of this guy with McKenzie or
this guy with Bain, or this guy with whatever consultant
firm we've brought in, and no, you don't want to
sit with some twenty five year old Harvard grad who

(22:37):
thinks he knows your business better than you do and
explain what you do. But we do it because you
don't own the business. But these people they shouldn't have
to do it because they're Twitter. They're the special kids.
Doosee has now cut a virtual reality course that taught

(22:59):
soldiers our military how to have difficult conversations about DEI.
This is the DEI coordinator for Space Based one, Ugo
Escobar talking about the program. He's the DEI coordinator for
Space but Base one. And sometimes you have to have
difficult conversations about the DEI and we need to have

(23:24):
courses for that and spend millions and millions of dollars
on it because it's very difficult.

Speaker 2 (23:28):
Sometimes he's on his period.

Speaker 13 (23:31):
Is an opportunity to have a difficult conversation when it
comes to deia, there is an avatar, and behind that avatar,
there is a trained individual who is going to have
the conversation. He or she will be able to either
elevate the difficulty of the conversation or back down and understand.
The time that we're living in is we have conversations

(23:53):
that are difficult, specifically dealing with people or differences of opinions.
It's important for us as individual rules and leaders and
service members to have these conversations and allow us to
practice having these conversations that are often very difficult to have.
This is for airman, this is for guardians, This is
for civilians of all ranks. Enlisted an officer.

Speaker 7 (24:16):
That's not the kind of men you want to send
into war because some of the men think they're women,
and some of the men were born as women. This
is not going to be the finest fighting force. Told
you earlier that President Trump winning office has increased recruits

(24:38):
a fifteen year high. People want to serve our country
and wear our uniform because they're proud.

Speaker 4 (24:45):
Four out of five features surveyed said listening to the
Michael Berry Show podcast improved their love life.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
The fifth person didn't deserve one anyway.

Speaker 7 (24:55):
Every day, I don't watch TV live, but our team
pulls all the clips and preps me on what happened,
and I see the heads of liberal media exploding, because
you know, it's like the telephone game where you add
things around er you ever been in you ever you

(25:17):
ever been in a game? And you leave and fans
of the other team will say, you know, we outplayed y'all,
but we lost, And where did you out play us?
Are you witnessed the same event or movie or speech
or whatever and someone has the most different takeaway from

(25:37):
it than you do, and you think, well, that's crazy, right,
That's what's happening. The things that Trump is doing are
doing are driving the left crazy, but they're making him
more popular. The polls show that every individual day, including

(26:00):
when the day of his inauguration, he has better positives
than negatives. He never had that at his peak in
twenty sixteen. He never had that, not amongst the general public,
but he does today and seventy percent of Americans believe,
and this is important that he's doing what he promised
he would do. That means that even the Democrats are saying,

(26:25):
is he is doing what he said he would do.
I got to give him credit. He is doing what
he said he would do. Here is Scott Jennings on CNN,
where he does a great job every day, saying that
Trump showed up with a sledgehammer to the federal government
and guess what, that's what the American people wanted.

Speaker 10 (26:47):
Look, I think this is absolutely America first. It's needed policy,
and it's what people have been asking for for years.
And honestly, politicians have talked about doing this for a
very long time. The only difference is they never do it.
You've had presidents from both parties say I'm going to
make the government smaller. I'm going to go in and
look at the bureaucracy and make it more efficient. I'm
going to trim where I can trim the fat.

Speaker 2 (27:08):
No one ever does it.

Speaker 10 (27:09):
Reports are written and committees meet, people have phone calls,
press conferences are held, and nothing ever happens except the
government gets larger and larger. Lo and behold, Donald Trump
shows up and froze out the sledgehammer the instrument of destruction.
Elon Musk to actually do it, and do it at
lightning speed. This is precisely what voters have been demanding.
Is he going to break a few eggs along the way.

(27:30):
That's fine. They'll have plenty of political latitude to do it,
because the action is what's wanted by the American people.

Speaker 2 (27:35):
Well, I think.

Speaker 10 (27:36):
Certainly Republicans are going to support what effectively amounts to
the most aggressive and needed government audit we've ever had,
no matter what agency it is. So yes, I think
the Party is by and large going to support this,
and I think the Pentagon is an agency that absolutely
should be looked at like any other. I don't want
Elon Musk or anyone else going in and saying we
need to shrink the size of our military or somehow

(27:58):
reduce our national capacity to wage war defend the nation.
But you can't look at a bureaucracy this size and
tell me that there is not waste, fraud, and abuse
that could be ferreted out. If somebody like Elon Musk
and his team were willing to go in and do it,
of course they're going to find things. They'll find things
in every single agency, and I think the American people
are asking for that. And I have no doubt that

(28:19):
you could get rid of some waste, fraud and abuse
in the Pentagon and have no impact on our national
security whatsoever. In fact, maybe you might enhance our national
security by getting rid of some duplicative bureaucracy or some
things where money's being spent on things it shouldn't be
spent on. Maybe redirect those things to more mission critical items.

Speaker 7 (28:37):
I'm going to get criticism, and I understand that, but
it's important. Scott Jennings said. The American people are told
every election, I'm going to get in there and I'm
going to root out the waste in the fraud, or
we're going to get rid of it, and it never happens.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
That's by design.

Speaker 7 (28:57):
This is what is at the root of Trump's popularity.
This is a flashback to Barack Obama after he's elected,
but before he's sworn in.

Speaker 2 (29:10):
It's a three minute clip.

Speaker 7 (29:11):
My apologies, but he's talking about cutting wasteful spending. I
won't play all of it, but I went back and
listened to this. He did nothing of the sort, but
he promised he would. And if he didn't know any better.
He sounds like he means it. The difference is Trump
did give it, give.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
This a well, just a few said President elect Barack
Obama made clear he intends to make good on his
message of change, especially with a federal budget.

Speaker 2 (29:41):
The new way of.

Speaker 14 (29:42):
Doing business is, let's figure out what projects, what investments
are going to give the American economy the most bang
for the buck. How can we protect taxpayer dollars so
that this money is not wasted.

Speaker 1 (29:55):
Mister Obama said he would review each government program and
each line item the budget in an effort to curb
unnecessary spending. He cited a report on farm subsidies as
one example of wasteful outlays.

Speaker 14 (30:08):
There's a report today that from two thousand and three
to two thousand and six, millionaire farmers received forty nine
million dollars in crop subsidies, even though they were earning
more than the two point five million cutoff.

Speaker 2 (30:23):
For such subsidies.

Speaker 14 (30:25):
Now this is true, and this was just a report
this morning, but if it's true, it is a prime
example of the kind of waste that I intend to
end as president.

Speaker 2 (30:35):
Kind of interesting.

Speaker 7 (30:36):
The waste and fraud that he's willing to end is
farm subsidies because farmers were a group of people where.

Speaker 2 (30:46):
He pulled very very badly. Next we're going to.

Speaker 7 (30:54):
Oh, I don't have space there for that. I don't
have space to get into it. Hell, you know what
I will do. I've been wanting to play this for
a while. RFK Junior pointed out, you know how high
home prices are, it's not just a high interest rates.
A while back, he was on the Breakfast Club and
he explained how giant corporations caused the high prices of

(31:14):
homes to scotch rocket and how how we should be
keeping an eye on this.

Speaker 15 (31:19):
Two years ago, the average cost of house in this
country was two hundred and fifteen thousand dollars. Today is
four hundred thousand and the and the interest rates you're
going to pay that a house have gone from one
percent to seven percent, So you're paying ten times as
much that house you were two years ago. I have
seven kids. They're all between twenty thirty five years old.

(31:41):
They should be moving into their own homes, but I
don't know any of them or any of their friends
who are actually buying a home now. And one of
the reasons for why did the price of housing go up. Well,
one because of the inflation, because we spent eight trillion
dollars on wars and sixteen trillion on COVID, which we have,
so they print money, which caused the price for everything

(32:03):
to go up. More importantly, there's three giant corporations, black Rock,
State Street, and Vanguard, which own collectively.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
They own each other, so it's really.

Speaker 15 (32:15):
One giant corporation. But they also own eighty nine percent
of the S and B five hundred. They own everything.
They've now decided to buy every single family home in America,
so if they stay on the current trajectory, they will
own sixty percent of the homes in this country, single
family homes by twenty thirty. They literally are trying to

(32:37):
buy everything. And the head of a blarry thing, the
CEO of Blackrock, is on the board of World Economic Forum.
And what they know. They've said, we want this great reset,
which is you will own nothing and you will be happy. Well,
they're on their way to making sure that we don't
own anything. So you all probably have heard of people

(32:58):
who are about to buy a home mhm, and somebody
comes in with at the last minute with a calf
cash or offer and stases off the out of the market,
and it's usually an LLC with an ambiguous name, but
if you trace that up you'll find it's owned by
black Rock and they are, and because they have a

(33:18):
huge bank book, the cost of money and interest in
them is tiny, which means they can outcompete your children.
Your kids do not have a chance to buy that
at home because they can't outcompete Blackrock.
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