All Episodes

September 24, 2025 • 31 mins

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

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.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
The Michael Verie Show is on the air.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
The Aristotle once said, find someone in life who loves
you as much as Democrats love the criminal. Now, to
be clear, they don't love the criminal as a person.
What they love is the chaos he brings to society,
because it's in that chaos where they grab power and
money for themselves.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
The whole idea of picking cities based on their partisan
leadership is absurd. I mean, there are lots of Republican
cities in town struggling with crime. Everybody is across the
country always. Crime has always been part of our history.

Speaker 4 (00:52):
Shoes voters care about where does Trump go? Migrant crime, carjackings,
the really lurid, awful stuff that is a crazy visual.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
Don't take the beat.

Speaker 4 (01:02):
How do we deal with mental health and other issues
that drive the sort of random incidence that scare all
of us.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
That's what you should be talking about. That's where you
should be focused.

Speaker 4 (01:11):
Don't take the beat and talking about migrant crime or
carjackings are the things that actually don't matter to that
many America.

Speaker 2 (01:18):
Don't condemn the gang bangers. They've got guns.

Speaker 5 (01:21):
We cannot incarcerate our way out of violence. We've already
tried that, and we've ended up with the largest prison
population in the world without solving the problems of crime
and violence. The addiction on jails and incarceration in this country.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
We have moved past that.

Speaker 5 (01:38):
It is racist, it is immoral, it is unholy, and
it is not the way to drive violence down.

Speaker 2 (01:45):
The breaking news at the bottom of the screen, because
there must always be breaking news. It can never not
be breaking news, which makes you kind of wonder when
something big happens, why don't people pay attention? Because you're
a dreanal Glands become weary from the constant breaking news.

(02:10):
Remember we were walking in Times Square years ago and
my kids were young, you know, maybe six and seven.
And if you've never been, I'll make it really easy.
If you've been to the Sunset Strip in Vegas, it's

(02:32):
that Times five there. If you look up, everything is
neon and there's you know, entire like a TV screen,
but as big as a football field, and it's trying
to get your attention. And then there's lights that are blinking,
and then there's this. This is going on every product,
every show that's in town, every Broadway show, every concert,

(02:57):
they're all trying to tell you what they're doing. The
food restaurants are trying to get you over here. Everybody's
honking because when you leave the United States and you
go to Africa or India or South America, people just honk.
And in some countries a honk doesn't mean, hey, you're

(03:17):
a bad person, you just weaved into my lane. A
honk just mean In India, a honk just means, hey,
I'm over here, I'm about to do something. So it's constant, right,
and you can't hear yourself think you're just your Your
sensory perception is overloaded at all times, and so it's
spinal tap. It's dialed up to eleven at all times.

(03:40):
And so I wonder after a while if people, oh, yeah,
I didn't finish my story. So you're walking along in
Times Square and there's there's these guys. My guess is
there from Guatemala because they're little bitty, dark skinned Hispanic
fellas and they don't speak any English, and they hold

(04:03):
these cards and it's it's like it's it's like a
business card slightly bigger, but it's supposedly for a free drink.
To go into these places where I can only presume
you get somewhere between, you know, a nice smile and
full on sex. I don't know what the ola carte

(04:23):
costs of all that are, but that's kind of the
impression I get. So as I walk along with my
wife and kids, they try to get your attention, but
they don't speak any English. So they take that card
that's in their hand and they pop it on the
other hand and they make a popping noise, and you know,
the first time you hear it, it's it's a distinct

(04:46):
popo and it's different than other things. It's not like
high heels on a on asphalt. It's a different sound.
So you kind of turn and when you do, they
extend it out at you. And so the they kind
of the first one you first time you get one
of them in your hands, you don't know what's happening

(05:07):
because it's just, well, everything is is some way to
get your attention. And then there'll be some dude in
a speedo with a cowboy hat and a flag and
you know he's handing out, you know, whatever his thing is.
And then there'll be two women in bikinis and you know,
they've got the name of the local pizza joint where

(05:28):
and everybody is vying for your attention. Everyone is vying
for your attention, and so there's always break that's what
That's what the television stations are now, the all the
new the cable news channels that are on in the
background everywhere all day, and some of you have it
on in your office. You're exposed to it all the time.
So nothing really ever matters. It's just a constant. There's

(05:49):
always something that has people wound up, but there's never
anything that actually matters in the grand scheme of things.
And so today I noticed that they had the Charlie
Kirk's story is the biggest story they want. They want
to stick with the story because that's what people are
interested in already. The news doesn't tell you what the
news is. They take what you already want to know

(06:10):
about and feed you more of that back. And right now,
at least for Fox, that's Charlie Kirk. People want, they're
craving more Charlie Kirk news, but there's not any news yet,
none that they're willing to give you. So today is
that the guy wrote anti ice on the gun shells
they're making conspiracy theories theorists out of people with this

(06:30):
kind of stuff, because that's either true or it's not,
and you're never going to know. It's somehow supposedly a
salacious detail. But let's just assume for a moment it
is true and not a distraction. Why is anybody surprised
by this? Why is anybody surprised that Jimmy Kimmel went
back on TV yesterday, which, by the way, does anybody

(06:53):
stop and ask what about those people who said he
was fired? What about the people who said he was
fired to get you to click on their site to
tell you about it, or what about the people who
said he was fired? Because Trump's the all controlling dictator,
did Trump let him back on?

Speaker 1 (07:10):
Now?

Speaker 2 (07:11):
Trump's speech at the United Nations yesterday was really, really good.
I was prepping for last night's show. I very rarely
do that day's news or today's news tonight, but I've
spent some time all of last night listening to that speech.
But we're going to go through it. It's noteworking on

(07:33):
the air night. He's starts off, y'all, He's got it all.
During his speech yesterday, President Trump said in twenty twenty four,
the United Nations budgeted three hundred and seventy two million
dollars in cash assistance to support migrants journeying into the
United States. The UN also provided food, shelter, transportation, and

(07:56):
debit cards to illegal aliens. The UN is sposed to
stop invasions, not create them, and not finance them. In
the United States, we reject the idea that mass numbers
of people from foreign lands can be permitted to travel
halfway around the world, trample our borders, violate our sovereignty,
cause unmitigated crime, and deplete our social safety nets. We

(08:17):
have reasserted that America belongs to the American people. If
you don't do it now, there won't be any American
people left on whose behalf you assert it. Tom Homan
announcing a few days ago that two million illegal aliens
have left the country, one point six with a forcible deportation,

(08:38):
four hundred thousand self deporting. So think about this, three
hundred seventy two million dollars a lot of money, A
lot of money. What if you were to give that money,
if you were just determined to give away money to
the broken down countries of these people, what if you

(09:01):
were to make micro loans so these people could start
businesses in their own communities. What if you were to
make micro loans so that these people could invent things.
What if you were to buy C and C machines
or some sort of health monitors, or you were to
establish small lending operations so that they could begin to

(09:26):
invest in their own economies. What if you were to
improve the infrastructure for trade in technology? What if you
were to teach these people to code? Dare I say that?
What if you were to teach these people to code
so they could enter the community the computer generation, so
that these countries would have some form of technology infrastructure. Well, though,

(09:50):
that's how you would spend the money if you cared
about these woebegone people, If you actually wanted to improve
their lives and the lives of their family members they
have to abandoned to come here, that's what you spend
the money on. But this has never been about those
people in improving their lives. Although you have to admire,
you have to deeply admire the mindwarp that is played

(10:13):
on the very naive American people who buy into the
bull that allowing illegal aliens into our country is for
their sake. It's not for their sake. They are foot soldiers,
but they're not the generals. They are the ones doing
the heavy lifting for the benefit of other people. This

(10:36):
is not for their own personal improvement. For most of
those illegal aliens, their lives will be improved in the
sense that they won't have to sweat while they sleep,
they will have three square meals a day. They will
have running water, they can take a hot shower. They'll

(10:56):
have free education and healthcare, and a sell phone and
a bundle of cash every month. All of those things
are true, but there is a deep emotional personal cost
to abandoning the place of your birth and the people
of your family. That is not an easy undertaking. Some

(11:21):
people will do it better than others. You know, Janis
Joplin could go off to San Francisco and be fine.
James Dean you can, or Jack Carroac you can believe
when on the road, but he comes back and lives
his mom on wasn't like he really did anything. Or
you know, throw goes out on Walden, but he still
had people coming to visit. It's hard to abandon your

(11:47):
home and everyone around you to go to a place
where you don't speak the language. You don't know anyone already.
You don't get memos cobbler or impanadas or whatever it
is that's mother smote to you. This was never about

(12:07):
improving the lives of those people. In fact, it's not sustainable,
the brain drain out of countries, pulling people out of
countries where they should have stayed and tried to improve things,
and it's really an option. You're either sending the worst
those countries have here, and we see a lot of that.

(12:27):
We see a lot of these pedophiles and murderers and
traffickers and monsters who were it turns out monsters in
their home country as well, in which case we're not
getting the best. They're not sending the best, they're sending
the worst.

Speaker 5 (12:43):
This is.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
It's like the Maril boat lift where Castro said, oh, oh,
you want us to let some of these people come
and live in Miami. You want them to reunite with
their families. All right, what as a good will offering?
We will release some Cubans to go to live in

(13:09):
the United States, won't We won't hold them back, we
won't shoot them. If they're in the water, well, we'll
let them goodwill, humanitarian effort, we'll let them go. And
what he did is he unloaded his prisons in the
middle of the population. So pretty quickly the Cuban refugees
coming to the United States to start a new life
realize that there were people among them that were the

(13:31):
worst murderers, the worst rapists, and they were sprinkled in
the middle, sent here as a trojan horse full of
absolute terror on this country soil. And to this day
there are still crimes being committed by those people. And
in fact, the movie Scarface was an updated version of

(13:52):
the earlier but this time instead of the original folks
and their crime syndicate, this time it was a Cuban
crime syndicate. Well, Cuban Americans who come here as refugees
are one of the best group of immigrants that come
here from anywhere in the world. They're the best you'd

(14:16):
want them, except for the folks that were the worst
of the worst in Cuba that Castro got rid of
and then laughed about it, and we didn't know it
till they got here. Well, that's what's happening with the
legal immigration. That's what's happening along this underground railroad of
absolute rape and rapaciousness. Ramon. I wouldn't normally sprinkle sprinkle

(14:40):
rapaciousness into a sentence, but since I had already called
it an underground railroad, I wanted to. I wanted an R,
and then I wanted another R for pure alliterative effect.
But I will stand by rapaciousness and rape as to

(15:00):
of the adjectives I would use rapacious, I guess for
making an adjective the two nails that these people that
sort of define who these illegal aliens are. President Trump
spoke at the United Nations yesterday in what is one

(15:26):
of the most important speeches he has ever given. It
was a speech to the world and the world's leaders.
It was a soaring, sweeping tour de force of an

(15:46):
action plan to save not only your nation but the world.
If enough people from the Middle East, Pakistan and Afghanistan
in Latin America leave their countries and storm into Western civilization,

(16:14):
eventually they outnumber the residents, the citizens of the day,
the country won't get better. The problems in Pakistan are
not related to insufficient natural resources. The problems in Pakistan

(16:42):
are related to the culture. Now you can have pakistanis
come here and succeed. I know a number who have.
But what you don't want to do is pick up
Pakistan and drop it into California and make it Californistan,
because you're not going to like what you get. And

(17:05):
the fact that people have been silenced from pointing this
out something that Christopher Hitchins was talking about thirty years
ago when he went back to visit the town in
England from which he hailed. When Angela Merkel allowed, encouraged,
recruited the Middle East into Germany and put pressure on

(17:29):
Greece because they owed Germany so much money to do
the same, the very nature of those nations changed probably forever.
It's no longer safe to walk the streets. Knifings went
up exponentially, Rapings went up exponentially. Why because for some

(17:52):
people in those cultures at far greater numbers than were
present in Greece or Germany, or rapists at nighte point,
you don't have to say not every person from the
Middle East is a rapist, but if significantly more people

(18:13):
are rapists, then we're already present in Germany or Greece.
What do you think is going to happen? Because exactly
what you think is going to happen has happened. Same
in Sweden, Denmark, France, Belgium, Italy, England, Ireland. You know

(18:36):
where it's not happening Poland because Poland says, we're not allowing.
You know where else it's not happening Hungary because they're
not allowing. When the Western world collapses, which it's in
the process of doing, there will be no one to
save the nations from whence those people fled. President Trump

(18:56):
made a very very deep point here. What makes the
world so beautiful is not globalization. We don't need a unanimity,
a bland, faceless language that everyone speaks of the euro

(19:19):
or some international currency. What we need are differences, things
that made us unique, things that made us unlike each other.
That's what made us special, and that's being destroyed by
the globalists.

Speaker 6 (19:36):
Usual, he said, Now they want to go to sharia law,
but you're in a different country. You can't do that.
Both the immigration and their suicidal energy ideas will.

Speaker 2 (19:48):
Be the death of Western Europe.

Speaker 6 (19:50):
If something is not done immediately, they cannot This cannot
be sustained. What makes the world so beautiful is that
each country is But to say this way, every sovereign
nation must have the right to control their own borders.

Speaker 2 (20:05):
You have the right to control your borders as we.

Speaker 6 (20:08):
Do now, and to limit the sheer numbers of migrants
entering their countries and paid for by the people of
that nation that were there and that built that particular
nation at the time. They put their blood, sweat, tears
money into that country, and now they're being ruined. Proud

(20:28):
nations must be allowed to protect their communities and prevent
their societies from being overwhelmed by people they've never seen before,
with different customs, religions, with different everything, where migrants are
violated laws, large false asylum claims or claimed refugee status.

Speaker 2 (20:48):
You know, if you travel to Anywhere America, which is
everywhere America, you can find the same set of fast
food restaurants and the same set of retail establishments, all

(21:10):
next door to each other. And you can drop somebody
down into Anywhere America that's everywhere America, and there will
be your five below, and there'll be your ross dress
for less, and there'll be your burger king McDonald's. Maybe
you've added a Carls Junior. Oh wow, what amazing regional flavor,

(21:34):
And there's nothing of any note, And slowly but surely
that crowds out what made us different, what made us different,
made us interesting and kept us interested. And when that happens,
you lose the patwa, you lose the regional characteristics. You know,

(22:02):
you drive into New Orleans, you hear that Brooklyn, that
that Brooklyn infused Cajun that. Yet it's special, it's neat,
it's cool. You hear a yinser talk. You know, that's
where that got's from. But what what about when all
that become becomes the Canadian accent? I don't want to

(22:24):
live in that. The President said, it is time to
end the failed experiment of open borders.

Speaker 6 (22:31):
According to the Council of Europe, in twenty twenty four,
almost fifty percent of inmates in German prisons were foreign
nationals or migrants. In Austria, the number is fifty three percent.
Of the people in prisons were from places that weren't
from where they are now. In Greece the number was

(22:52):
fifty four percent. And in Switzerland, Beautiful Switzerland, seventy two
percent of the people in prisons are from outside of Switzerland.

Speaker 2 (23:01):
When your prisons are.

Speaker 6 (23:02):
Filled with so called asylum seekers who repaid kindness, and
that's what they did. They repaid kindness with crime. It's
time to end the failed experiment of open borders. You
have to end it now.

Speaker 5 (23:24):
You don't know, I don't.

Speaker 2 (23:25):
You better have the money. You don't bring me my
way with them. Michael Perry. Let me put this whole
illegal immigration thing and how it's changing our country into perspective.
America is Marshall Tucker Band and America with too many

(23:49):
foreigners too fast?

Speaker 1 (23:52):
Is uh?

Speaker 2 (23:54):
I don't know whatever this. I don't know any of
the names. Luke Bryan, Brian Hazley, one of these current
people that Justin Bieber. We've gone from Marshall Tucker Band
and skinnerd and Charlie Daniels talking about Marshall Tucker Band

(24:15):
and Skinnered in songs and Hank Junior talking about Charlie
Daniels talking about Marshall Tucker Band and Skinnered to Justin Bieber.
That's kind of what it comes down to. I mean,

(24:36):
we were once a great country. We think about that.

Speaker 4 (24:42):
And now what.

Speaker 2 (24:45):
You know the big music of that time, late sixties,
early seventies, what I like to call the Skinnerd era,
That was what was being played on the radio. That
was top forty. Think about that. I bet, unless you

(25:07):
have kids or you're weird, you can't name one song
on the top forty, because I sure as hell can.
And if you can, don't be proud of it. There's
a lot of women. I noticed this when we go
to parties. There's a lot of women. They got kids
the age of our kids, and they know some of
the songs about whoever it is. I don't know P Diddy,

(25:28):
who's got songs on the radio right now. It's always
some black dude that's changed his name to little this
or Kiny that, or little so and so or some
other word I can't pronounce with a bunch of jumbled up.
They don't use vowels in between stuff anymore. And then
they got some woman on there, and she's got nails

(25:50):
that looked like you know. When I was a little kid,
we'd read the Guinness Book of World Records, and there
were certain pages you knew where they were. One of
them was that Indian dude that had the nails it
girled up, You remember him. He was on like page
one seven. And so you'd go to the back to
sharpen your pencil. That was sharpening the pencil was great

(26:12):
because it gave you some time to do stuff. Mama,
what are you doing back there?

Speaker 1 (26:18):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (26:18):
I'm sorry, Miss Spencer. I was just sharpening my pencil. Okay,
well hurry up. That's a third time today, you just ma'am.
These aren't number two, Miss Spencer. My mom couldn't find
the number two, so she bought a soft lead. It
doesn't stay sharp, Miss Spencer. I'm I'm mighty sorry. I
am Miss Spencer. But I'll do the washing when the

(26:41):
day is over. If you need, i'd be glad to. Oh,
I don't know, if you have any other tasks, it'll
take me out of the class that I can go
right around and peek in the window, up my buddies
and make googly eyes and amuse them and run around
act stupid anything to get out of this class. Asking
the shackles I feel I'm in sitting in my desk.

(27:03):
I don't know. I'll go dust the erasers, I will,
Miss Spencer. And uh, if you'd like me to go
mimeograph the pop quiz that you're about to throw on
us that I know about because I peeked in your
desk before you got here, I'd be glad to do it,
and I swear I won't take a look at the
questions before we hand them out at all. I won't,

(27:25):
and I swear to you I won't. I won't sniff
that blue ink so long till I get high on it.
I promise I won't. If you'll send me down let
me run a mimeograph machine. Did you ever get sent
to run a mimiograph machine? That was a treat man
who that mimeograph machine would run them through?

Speaker 1 (27:41):
There?

Speaker 2 (27:41):
Pop pop pop, it was like those dude, that's probably
where they got the idea. Those Guatemalans in Times Square.
They heard that pop pop pop of the mimiograph machine
and they got an idea. They're like, oh, they ain't
gonna need there. Well, then, as I said on the Rita,
well pop pop because pop pop pop is also that's

(28:03):
a cognate. That's also pop pop pop in Spanish too. Yeah,
it's yeah, it's your basic onomatopoeia. They're the same in
all the languages. You know, oink and pop and no
sorts of things. They're pretty consistent across the board there.
So anyway, President Trump spoke to another issue that is

(28:24):
at the heart of the globalists, really What this really
is is a tour de force of exposing that the
Emperor has no clothes, the globalists, the wef the black Rock,
the Larry Fink. You know, you got to figure. A
guy's a billionaire running a trillion dollar operation. Couldn't he
afford to get his name changed. He's a little Fink.

(28:48):
He's a little think what a name? No wonder he
turned out such a little weasel when your whole life
you have to answer to Larry Fink. That's a name
from Central Casting for a guy that's a weasel, A
guy that works for you, remember Getsmart, A guy that

(29:10):
works for chaos. You know, a guy that works for
the headquarters of Evil Doctor Doctor Evil's lawyer in Austin
Powers would be named Larry Fink. That's that's the guy
that you already know he's a bad guy, just based
on his name. Here's President Trump talking about their awful,

(29:35):
awful green energy scam. We've gone from presidents including the Bushes,
buying into this bull. It's all bull. I got news
for you. The COVID shot didn't stop you from getting COVID.
COVID wasn't going to kill you any more than the
flu was and the COVID shot will kill you itself.
How about those things? That's still a shocker to somebody.

(29:56):
There's people still good rule. When I saw I was
watching you last night, I record the Jeopardies and I
stay up too late watching Jeopardy, and we'll say crap posting.
And they had something come on that was a COVID shot.
But it's like the new improved code shot. You know
what it is. It's about a half nose with a

(30:19):
bunch of This thing could cause your heart to explode
if you're sixteen. Can you believe people still getting that?
Still getting it anywhere? Here's what President Trump had to say,
a goodnocious way. But it's true. I've been right about everything.

Speaker 6 (30:33):
And I'm telling you that if you don't get away
from the green energy scam, your country is going to fail.
And if you don't stop people that you've never seen before,
that you have nothing in common with, your country is
going to fail. I'm the president of the United States,
but I worry about Europe. I love Europe. I love

(30:53):
the people of Europe, and I hate to see it
being devastated by energy and immigration. This double tailed monster
destroys everything in its way. And they cannot let that
happen any longer. You're doing it because you want to
be nice, you want to be politically correct, and you're
destroying your heritage.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.