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September 2, 2025 • 31 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Verie Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
If you are a politician or your immediate commentator, and
two beautiful babies just got murdered while praying, and your
politics force you to contend prayer in response to it,
you ought to get new politics because something very wrong
has gone on.

Speaker 1 (00:29):
Insign your soul. Don't just say this is about thoughts
and prayers right now.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
These kids were literally praying.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
It was the first week of school, they were in
a church.

Speaker 4 (00:38):
Half of the politicians in our country have little more
to offer than thoughts and prayers.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
That is all they are offering. I'll join all of
us in praying.

Speaker 5 (00:45):
For the victims, was Vice President Jady Vansi's response today.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
That's what he said. That's it.

Speaker 5 (00:49):
Please join me in praying for everyone involved.

Speaker 4 (00:51):
Trump wrote, forget about thoughts and prayers. These kids were
literally praying when they were murdered through a church window.

Speaker 1 (00:59):
Thoughts and prayers just aren't enough here right.

Speaker 5 (01:01):
Now, because these ideas were actually praying.

Speaker 6 (01:04):
At the end of the day, thought some prayers have
led us to having on more of these deaths, more
of these shootings. I actually had a negative reaction to
the mayor's statements today, I think it's wrong, frankly, to
vilify or attack people of faith.

Speaker 1 (01:24):
You said thought some prayers ring hollow.

Speaker 6 (01:25):
I think thought some prayers are the most solid on
days of tragedy for people who live their faith every day.
And I think on a day like today, particularly in
a church community, there are probably people praying harder for
comfort today than they have ever prayed in their life.
And so I think, and I've heard others on the
left today go down this line of attack against people

(01:48):
of faith, sort of denigrating the idea that they might
want to pray today. And so I think his statements
were misguided. And I just thought maybe tonight the most
useful thing any of us can do would take ten
seconds and just sait.

Speaker 1 (02:02):
Quietly and be still, and be.

Speaker 6 (02:05):
Quiet and think about those families, because they are never
going to be the same no matter what we say.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
If you are the praying type, I would ask you
to join me in prayer. I'm just going to say
a prayer for the two little kids who lost their
lives yesterday. And this is a prayer we say a
lot in my church, and I've always found it very meaningful.
It's very short, but eternal rest grantens to them, O Lord,
and let perpetual light shine upon them. May the souls

(02:33):
of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God
rest in peace.

Speaker 7 (02:38):
We will discuss prayer and the Mogadishues shooting, and that
victims were in the middle of prayer when murdered by
the Tranitifa member, the response of the left, the policies
that encouraged it, the breakdown of the family.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
All those things in due time.

Speaker 7 (02:57):
But first, the President today promoting a big press conference
in the early afternoon, at which time he made an
announcement and congratulations are in order for our listeners of
WBHP in Huntsville, Alabama, where President and Trump announced today

(03:22):
the new headquarters of the Space Force. And I got
to tell you, I am so happy.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
For this community. Not only have people who lived there,
but the geniuses.

Speaker 3 (03:41):
You know.

Speaker 7 (03:41):
We had a guy on what was his name, Do
you remember his name? He was like the redneck rocket scientist.
This guy could skin a buck, run a trot line
diagram DNA explained to you the curvature of the Earth.

Speaker 1 (04:02):
I mean, he was the full Monty man. He was it.

Speaker 7 (04:08):
This is really really special for the largest, the most
populous city in the state of Alabama, at about two
hundred fifty thousand people. From twenty twenty to twenty twenty five,
the community grew sixteen percent. Well, this is going to

(04:31):
be a further growth in Huntsville, Alabama, as a community
that is attracting, much as NASA did south of Houston,
as a community that is attracting very smart, very patriotic
Americans who understand that the next frontier in our national

(04:56):
security and national defense.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Must be owned. We cannot afford to fail.

Speaker 7 (05:06):
I think President Trump has a very good grasp understanding
that we cannot just protect America today. We have to
protect America going into the future. I think the President
has a keen understanding of securing the natural resources, intellectual capital,

(05:28):
technology of AI, for instance. And I don't know how
many people in politics, at least who've been president understand that.
I also don't think that was more prescient.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
Than today, because the rapid rate at which change is
occurring that is capable of disrupting entire economies is on
a scale unfathomable. Just a decade or to a go,
we're going.

Speaker 7 (06:03):
To see warfare and to extent we already are conducted
without even using boots on the ground, without ever entering
your airspace. This interconnected use of this one big neurological
connection that's like the world's brain, and the ability to

(06:27):
just cut off an artery here and there and devastate
people is so rapid fire and so existential and profound
in its scale and scope that I am grateful that
we have a president not just advisors around him, but
a president himself who understands.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
What this means.

Speaker 7 (06:52):
The advent of the computer brought about massive change in
American society and in the world. The advent of the
airplane as a means of military, the advent of the
tank on the battlefield, well, for that matter, the advent
of gunpowder, rifles, treboshays. Each of these things, if you

(07:17):
study world history, have altered the course of history. In
the course of civilizations, you could be subjugated as a
conquering people almost overnight as armaments changed. Congratulations, Huntsville, Alabama, WBHP.
We're proud to have I think seven affiliates in the

(07:37):
great state of Alabama.

Speaker 1 (07:39):
And we are honored to be aired in that market.

Speaker 7 (07:42):
Congratulations, New Headquarters of Space force as President Trump's announcement today. Jefferson,
perhaps more than any of the other founders, understood the
importance of media in a self governing society. The butcher,
the baker, the baker, or the cobbler, the gardener, the farmer.

(08:06):
These folks wouldn't have the time, energy, or in those
days even resources to find out what was going on
in government. You couldn't broadcast, You didn't have a c
span that could just flip the switch and you could
watch the proceedings, and even then you wouldn't have any
analysis to have any context or anything. And he believed

(08:27):
that you needed to have an open process whereby there
would be a person who wasn't a butcher, baker, cobbler,
but he would be a journalist, and that there would
be a value to reporting on what was going on.
This is an existential, profound issue that goes back to

(08:49):
our very founding. Now the means of distribution of that
journalism have changed and arguably improved, But what was not
expected was that people would be journalists by name, but
activists corrupt individuals in practice, and that the culture would

(09:12):
become part of an activism that I don't think Jefferson
himself oresaw and that is exactly what we've seen today,
and that is why, for instance, that while we do
have freedom of speech, we still have some form of
oversight because the license to broadcast on television is a
license given by the people that can be regulated by

(09:35):
the people, so that when you abuse that license, just
as if Facebook or Twitter abuses the protections they get
as a platform instead of a publisher, which means that
they have a lot of protections that they wouldn't have
if they were classified as a publisher, well, so to
a lot of protections are given and license granted to

(09:56):
be able to broadcast, and CBS, among others, has abused
that terribly, and we'll talk about how in just a moment,
but we start with Christine Nohum on CBS's Face the
Nation talking about ice flooding into Chicago.

Speaker 4 (10:11):
We've already had ongoing operations with ice in Chicago and
throughout Illinois and other states, making sure that we're upholding
our laws. But we do intend to add more resources
to those operations. I won't disclose the details because they
are law enforcement and investigative folks that are on the
ground there, and I want to make sure we keep
their security our number one priority. But we will continue
to go after the worst of the worst across the
country like President Trump has told us to do, focusing

(10:32):
on those that are perpetuating murder and rape and trafficking
of drugs and humans across our country. Annoying that every
single citizen deserves to be saved.

Speaker 1 (10:40):
Now here's the important part.

Speaker 7 (10:43):
Here is the answer about kilmore Abrego Garcia. Now this
is a really really bad illegal alien. You remember one
Democrat senator flew down Del Salvador to have a margarito
with him, spawning a number of memes and ridicule. Trump
has so twisted the Left into a pretzel that they

(11:04):
are forced to hold hands and be lovey dovey with
the worst in society.

Speaker 1 (11:10):
It really is shocking.

Speaker 7 (11:12):
You think that, say, you know what, let's join in
with Trump and then he can't make us look like fools.

Speaker 1 (11:17):
But no, that's not what they do.

Speaker 7 (11:19):
So here is the answer that CBS aired about that
monster Garcia.

Speaker 4 (11:26):
And the one thing that we will continue to do
is to make sure that he doesn't walk for you
in the United States of America.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
Okay, play that again.

Speaker 4 (11:33):
And the one thing that we will continue to do
is to make sure that he doesn't walk for you
in the United States of America.

Speaker 7 (11:38):
You probably caught it there, all right. Here was the
unedited answer that they didn't play.

Speaker 4 (11:44):
And the one thing that we will continue to do
is to make sure that he doesn't walk for you
in the United States of America. This individual was a
known human smuggler, a MS thirteen gang member, an individual
who is a wife beater, and someone who was so
perverted that he's solicited nude photos from minors and even
as fellow human traffickers told him to knock it off,
he was so sick in what he was doing and
how he was treating small children. So he needs to

(12:06):
never be in the United States of America, and our
administration is making sure we're doing all that we can
to bring him.

Speaker 7 (12:11):
They took a thirty three second answer and reduced it
to six seconds because the Department of Homeland Security secretary
was laying out who this guy is.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
Those issues are not in doubt.

Speaker 7 (12:26):
As a result, President Trump calling for the revocation of
ABC and NBC's FCC licenses over massive bias, and I
suspect he will be joining CBS to that list.

Speaker 5 (12:37):
President Trump, who's won a pair of lawsuits against the
three broad test networks, is now escalating his battle against
two of them, ABC and NBC fake News, two of
the worst and most bias networks in history. Give me
ninety seven percent bad stories.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
If that's the case.

Speaker 5 (12:50):
They are simply an arm of the Democrat Party and should,
according to many, have their licenses revoked by the FCC.
I would be totally in favor of that because they
are so biased and untruthful.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
Fred to our democracy.

Speaker 7 (13:01):
Let's check in on Jasmine Crockett. She's the new star
of the Democrat Party and much like AOC, she's getting
high on the hall and starting to look like one.
All this money in her pocket. She has put on
a lot of weight. I used to hear that. I
had a text Max owner tell me one time that
a young hot latina who you would worry if she

(13:23):
was gonna put on weight when she was It's called
burrito butt because the butt blows up like a burrito.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
Do you know some guys like that? There are guys
like that.

Speaker 7 (13:31):
But Jasmine Crockett has unveiled her new ghetto accent, and
she's not getting advice from anybody solid. She just knows
the stupider she acts, the more attention she gets, kind
of a rubber necking effect. So now she gonna talk
about them Republicans out there, them Republicans and here is.

Speaker 1 (13:48):
Here is what she's trying out for now.

Speaker 8 (13:51):
Maybe because these people they are crazy because they always
talking about how Christian they is. You, I don't know
how many of them on this side are getting divorced
because they getting caught up sleeping with their coworker staff,
with answers all the things.

Speaker 1 (14:01):
Yeah, you ain't got to believe me. Just go Google.

Speaker 8 (14:03):
You'll find some of it, I'm telling you. And the
wives is being messy and petty. They put me the
into divorce. I'm like, who that's got to be true
because YO lawyer would know.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
Did they gonna lose it?

Speaker 7 (14:12):
Imagine being a voter and thinking, yeah, I wont that
misconjugate your b verse.

Speaker 1 (14:15):
That's what I'll ring on.

Speaker 4 (14:16):
What would you do with a brain if your headline
and ring it on because there is nothing here.

Speaker 1 (14:20):
Michael Barry Show.

Speaker 7 (14:22):
The White House released over the weekend President Trump's eleven
Life Changing Lessons directed young people, and I think it's
pretty well said.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
The video is even better.

Speaker 7 (14:32):
You can see it on our Facebook page, and I
think I think it made it into the Blast today.
Darryl Kunda, the Kunda man who puts that together, I
think he put that in there as well. But I
thought these were good life changing lessons that were worth repeating.

Speaker 9 (14:49):
Let me share some of the biggest lessons I've learned
from a lifetime spent building dreams. First, if you.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
Think that you're too.

Speaker 9 (14:56):
Young to do something great, let me tell.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
You that you are wrong.

Speaker 9 (15:00):
You're not too young. In America, with drive and ambition,
young people can do anything. Second of all, and very importantly,
you have to love what you do. I rarely see
somebody that's successful that doesn't love what he or she does.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
Bert thing is to think big.

Speaker 9 (15:15):
You know you're going to do something that you might
as well think big because it's just as hard to
solve a small problem as a big problem, and it's
just as much energy and everything else, except the result
is going to be a smaller one.

Speaker 1 (15:26):
So love what you do, but think big.

Speaker 5 (15:29):
Four is work hard, work hard.

Speaker 9 (15:34):
Fifth is, don't lose your momentum. You just want to
keep it going, and you have to know if you
are losing it. You have to know when you're losing it,
so maybe you stop, and maybe it's time to stop.
Number six, if you want to change the world, you
have to have the courage to be an outsider. In
other words, you have to take certain risks and do
things a little bit differently. Otherwise, if that weren't the case,

(15:55):
everybody would be successful. Number seven is to trust your
instincts common See, you can go very far in life
with common sense. Hey, everybody should believe in the American dream.
It's real, it's there, and it's right before you at night.
Think of yourself as a winner.

Speaker 1 (16:12):
The power of positive think.

Speaker 9 (16:14):
In recent years, too many of our young people have
really been taught to think of themselves as victims. But
in America we reject that idea.

Speaker 6 (16:24):
That anyone is born a victim.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
Our heroes are.

Speaker 9 (16:26):
The ones who take charge of their own destiny despite
the odds.

Speaker 1 (16:30):
And next is to be an original. The old time greats.

Speaker 9 (16:34):
Were people who had the confidence to be a little different.
I don't agree in any one of you, so they
don't try to be someone else. Finally, and most importantly,
never ever give up. I learn that perseverance is everything.
So whatever happens a matter where you are in life.
Stay optimistic and just keep pushable. Never let anyone tell
you that something is impossible, ever, ever, ever, In America,

(16:59):
to the apossible is what we all do best.

Speaker 7 (17:05):
So I can summarize those in a shorter list that
clumps several things together, and I think those are trump
life lessons that are part of the reason he is successful.
Be an outsider, trust your instincts, be an original, never

(17:32):
give up the reason.

Speaker 1 (17:34):
We like the stories that involve an underdog who then
succeeds at the end. You're not an underdog if you
work for a fortune five hundred company. You're not an underdog.
If you're part of an institution. We tend to root.

(17:58):
Americans are unique in this way.

Speaker 7 (18:01):
We love the swashbuckling wildcatter. We love the larger than
life personality of the guy who risks it all, of
the guy who is told they can't do something and
yet succeeds despite that. In fact, that's I think a

(18:25):
common theme in so much of what we do. Part
of the attraction to the Tom Brady mythology is that
here was a guy who, even when he became the
starting quarterback, he was really only the co starting quarterback.

(18:46):
Here's the guy that gets drafted in the seventh round.
Here's the guy that you yourself can look at the
photo and you don't have to be an NFL scout
to go. He didn't look like an NFL player, and
he didn't. But guess what forward a couple of decades,
he's in better shape than anybody in that class by far.

(19:07):
This was a guy who was a second string quarterback
Bledsoe gets a very unfortunate hit and never gets his
job back, and Brady becomes what many consider to be
the goat. I don't know if that's true, because he
had a lot of talent around him, but I think
he's certainly in the conversation.

Speaker 1 (19:28):
But here's a guy, you know.

Speaker 7 (19:30):
This is not a guy that was the star player
throughout his career and coasted on into the NFL based
on god given talent and became great. And interestingly, Brady
loves Trump and vice versa. Here was a guy who
followed those rules. Work hard, love what you do, never

(19:53):
give up being original, think positively, believe in yourself, trust
your instincts. Another thing he talks about is being an outsider.
I've known a couple of billionaires in my life tell
me and for Tita being one of them, a guy
who built a restaurant empire, who didn't go to college,

(20:15):
he didn't work within the system. There is something known
as golden handcuffs. And there's nothing wrong with going to
work for big companies, as nothing wrong with making a
good paycheck. But there is a golden handcuff that keeps
you locked down when you go into the corporate world

(20:35):
and you grow accustomed to the paycheck, and it might
be a good paycheck. You can wear nice suits and
drive nice cars and have a nice house. In fact,
you can just keep taking bigger and bigger debts that
you will never pay off. When I started as a

(20:56):
baby lawyer, I was told by some mentors, you're going
to be encouraged to go buy a big house and
go buy an expensive car, because that'll mean you can
never leave. That's not cynical, that's reality. There's a grind
to practicing law. There's a grind to when you get

(21:18):
out of law school, you get your first job and
you think you're making all the money in the world,
and in a sense, you are, but then you find
out I'm giving up my life and I'm not making
enough to make it worth that, and you're dealing with
clients who work. You know, most lawyers first in the
especially big firm, lawyers first in their class. You've busted

(21:40):
your butt to get to that point. You think you're
making all this money. Lawyers and doctors don't make the
money in this country. The Elon musks do, Zuckerberg does,
Bill Gates does, Donald Trump does. It's people who take chances.
People who take risks. Now, they're not just Dreek corner

(22:02):
Gambers on crack. They're working hard, They've got an idea,
They're doing what it takes to get it done. I love,
I absolutely love this set of life lessons, and unfortunately,
I think a lot of kids never hear these life lessons.
My kids are tired of hearing these life lessons. You've

(22:22):
got to outwork every other kid. I have told my
kids since they were young. You're black. In a corporate
world and business world, most people are going to be white.
The assumption is going to be, whether we like it
or not, you're not as smart, you're not as good.
You're there because your daddy, are you there because your

(22:42):
skin color. You've got to be so good.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
You can't just be as good. You've got to be better.

Speaker 7 (22:49):
I think you want kids to have a chip on
their shoulder, you want.

Speaker 1 (22:53):
Them to work harder them Michael Berry.

Speaker 7 (23:03):
During the break, and I'm not even sure what to
do about this, He writes. Every quarterback who's in the
Goat talk had talent around them. Montana had Jerry Rice, eight,
WN had Emmett and Irvin Manny had Harrison and Wayne.
Brady is the only one who won. With all kinds

(23:24):
of rosters, sometimes stacked, sometimes a bunch of no names.
The constant wasn't the talent. It was Brady. And I
accused him of fanboying, to which he responded, no, no,
I'm not even a big Brady fan. I just think
it's fair to make the point accurately. They may not

(23:47):
have been big names, but Belichick had around him. So
Belichick surrounded Brady with very talented, very well coached teams.
I know people love the Belichick Brady argument. And Brady
goes down to Tampa Bay and wins the Super Bowl.

(24:09):
To me, that's his crowning achievement that he could win
with another team, although to be clear, that was a
super Bowl winning team short a quarterback, and he came
in and did that. You know, Peyton Manning won a
Super Bowl with Denver that was a shell of himself,

(24:31):
not that Tom Brady was. In any case, I don't
know why you dragged me off into this. And I
don't think it's fair to say Belichick's not a great
coach because the team went to crap when Brady lost,
when they lost Brady. And I don't think it's fair
to say that because North Carolina wasn't any good last night,
because it takes a while to build a team, and frankly,

(24:52):
I don't think he's a team builder anymore. I think
you can see this of Tom Landry. I think you
can be a great coach, perhaps the best coach in
the world at some point in time, and some number
of years later you slipping that that happens.

Speaker 1 (25:11):
That is just reality.

Speaker 7 (25:13):
That's also true of boxers, professional pitchers, you name it.
But back to the goat Donald Trump and whether or
not to use another farm reference. He is a lame
duck because well, he can't be reelected again, which is
part of why he keeps threatening and he's going to

(25:34):
run again. Harry Inton with CNN says Trump's now lame duck.
He is a soaring eagle. He is getting things done.

Speaker 3 (25:45):
I think it was this concern among some folks that
Donald Trump would come in for a second term and
kind of be a lame duck. He ain't no lame duck.
If anything, He's a soaring eagle. What am I talking
about here? Let's talk about trump executive orders in twenty
twenty five, He's already signed one hundred and election and
so far that is the most at this point in
a presidency in at.

Speaker 1 (26:04):
Least one hundred years.

Speaker 3 (26:06):
In fact, it's the most in any single year, and
we're only in April since Harry S. Truman in the
early nineteen fifties. The bottom line is, whether you like
Trump or you don't like him, you can't say that
he's comment and not try to deliver on what he
at least believes was his promises on the campaign trail,
and he's doing so in historic fashion.

Speaker 4 (26:27):
How are people reacting to and feel about Trump's approach?

Speaker 3 (26:31):
Yeah, okay, so Trump's approach here? What are we talking about?
Trump's approach to presidential power? I think the American people
recognize what he's doing here is completely different. We're talking
get this eighty six percent of the American public beliefs
that Trump's approach to presidential power is completely different from
past presidents, compared to only fourteen percent who believe it

(26:51):
is in line with president And we're talking about at
least seventy nine percent of Democrats, Independence and Republicans. So again,
you can agree or you can disagree with Donald Trump,
but what you can't disagree with is that he's doing
things very differently. I have used the Frank Sinatra quote before.
He is doing it quote unquote my way, and that

(27:11):
is what Donald Trump has done throughout both of his
presidential terms. And he's certainly doing that cap bolwin in
term number two.

Speaker 1 (27:19):
So completely differently.

Speaker 6 (27:21):
Clearly they agree, but is it taking a step further?

Speaker 4 (27:23):
Do that people think he has too much He's taken
too much power?

Speaker 5 (27:26):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (27:26):
This I think is the real question.

Speaker 3 (27:28):
Right, you can believe that he's doing stuff completely differently,
but do you think that he has a little too
much power or not?

Speaker 1 (27:34):
And this is interesting.

Speaker 3 (27:35):
So Trump's presidential power is too much, the right amount,
too little? Well, forty seven percent say too much, but
then you get thirty six percent who say the right amount.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
Then you get seventeen percent who say too little.

Speaker 3 (27:46):
So you're essentially dealing with a majority of the American
public fifty three percent who do not say that Trump.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
Has too much power.

Speaker 3 (27:52):
They either says he has too little power or the
right amount of power. So the idea, that argument that
Donald Trump is quote un quote a king, that I
don't think holds with the American people. That's hold maybe
we're forty seven percent, but with the majority buck they
believe Donald Trump's doing something completely differently, and they don't believe.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
He has too much power.

Speaker 3 (28:10):
And the executive orders he signed certainly suggests he's no
lame duck. He is, as I said at the beginning,
a soaring eagle.

Speaker 7 (28:17):
You also have to recognize that sending in the National
Guard in Washington, d C. Set off the Democrats, but
the results have been safe for streets when people aren't
being raped or murdered or carjacked.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
They can, they can, they can have their heads filled
full of all sorts of problem nonsense, but it's nicer
to live in a place where you don't get mugged.

Speaker 5 (28:51):
Too.

Speaker 7 (28:52):
Many Americans have become disassociated with government and its action
actual role, and instead they've become fans of sports teams,
I've made this analogy many times over the years, and
I believe it passionately.

Speaker 1 (29:11):
I live in Houston.

Speaker 7 (29:13):
If the Texans win the Super Bowl or go zero
to seventeen this year, it won't actually affect my life.
Now people think it, but it won't. I won't lose
my job, I won't lose my retirement. I won't lose
a loved one to murder or rape. But government has

(29:35):
actual functions, safety in security, roads, transportation, communication regulation, taxation,
actual functions that matter to your life, first and foremost,
the safety and security of the people.

Speaker 1 (29:54):
Right. But the Democrats managed to convince people that none
of them that matters. Cheer for us this team. You're
a girl. Cheer for us. We're girls. You're black. Cheer
for us we're black. You're gay.

Speaker 7 (30:13):
Cheer for us, we're gay. You feel different. You're a Hispanic,
you're an immigrant, you're a young person. Come over here
to our team. Our fraternity is recruiting. Everyone can be
part of our fraternity. And by the way, that group
over there, they're horrible. The Republicans are horrible. It's like

(30:35):
a Palestinian kid. He's never going to believe there's anything
good to come of the Jews. You convince a young
person of this hatred toward other people, and there have
been so many psychological studies done on this.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
There comes a.

Speaker 7 (30:51):
Point that he would literally do anything legal or illegal
to that person because they are subhuman.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
They had been dehumanized to him.

Speaker 7 (31:03):
And so for a lot of Democrats, you wonder, how
is how are forty seven percent of the people still
against Trump? You don't like his hair, or his comments
or anything else. The proofs into pudding. Well, he is
the devil to them. And so they may say, yeah,
I feel safer, Yeah, there aren't illegals here anymore. Yes,

(31:26):
this thing happened, Yes, this thing happened. Yes, be still
don't like him, and they never will and it won't matter.
And when that number, if that number had ever reached
a sufficiently high amount, that we could never win elections,
the country would be lost. Deportation was a twenty year

(31:47):
setback for the Democrats. That was their next round of voters.
They were losing American Hispanics, so they went and got
them some new ones.
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