Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, lock and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Of Michael dari shows are.
Speaker 3 (00:15):
Heroes by the million men who abandon home in vocations
that they may be ready to defend democracy if necessary,
sturdy of body, firm and spirit, seamen, marine soldiers, and flyers.
Speaker 1 (00:28):
The Democrat Party is in the middle of a civil war.
Everything we have accused them of being. The most extreme
elements have now come forward to take up that mantle,
and it makes it very hard for the Democrats who
are trying to keep that dirty little secret quiet. It's
(00:49):
like that family in town where bad things are happening
and everybody wonders, and then suddenly the police are called
and show up and the doors are open, and the
officer see it. And now we can't pretend that that
secret is not wide open. Now the Democrat Party is
in a fight for the heart and soul. Are we
(01:11):
going to be a left wing a party that appeases
the left wing to keep their money in power, but
puts forward a face that says none of what none
of what they believe is what we will openly espouse.
Or are we going to openly say we are socialist,
(01:32):
open borders emptying The jails are we going to just
say that's who we are and drive hard down that lane.
And it appears that more and more of them are
willing to do that. That's what the Mamdani campaign was about.
See it as Jake Tapper asked Crazy Bernie Sanders if
(01:53):
he's lost confidence in Chuck Schumer as the Democrat leader
in the Senate.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
Here's what he said.
Speaker 4 (02:00):
Schumer voted no. She is going to vote no along
with you. He did last night. He's going to do
it again. But a lot of Democrats are blaming him
because he is the leader of the Democrats in the Senate,
and some of your allies like Congressman Rocanna California and
others are saying Schumer should step down from his position
as Democratic leader in the Senate. Do you still have
confidence in him as leader of the Senate?
Speaker 5 (02:19):
Schumer and I have.
Speaker 6 (02:20):
Very fundamental disagreements about where the Democratic Party should be,
and I am strongly supporting candidates for the Senate who
are not part of the Democratic establisher to believe in medicapital,
who are prepared to take on the big money in
trust and fight for working people. All Right, I have
a very different vision of where the Democratic Party should go.
If Schumer steps down, who is going to take this place.
(02:42):
The truth is progressives in the Senate right now are
I think they're about eight or nine of us.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
We are pretty much of a minority.
Speaker 1 (02:49):
Bernie has been encouraged by the socialists win in New
York City of Mamdani and who arguably is really a communists.
Wheresident Trump has made this point and he wants to
replicate that success all over the country. You know, Bernie
(03:10):
looks like a harmless old man, but make no mistake,
what he is pushing is very dangerous for this country.
Speaker 5 (03:21):
So what we have got to do is go above
and beyond what happened yesterday, that terrible, terrible vote, and
understand that, yes, you are parts of the Democratic establishment
well way way out of touch with where the American
people are or where we have got to go. And
our job is to build a political movement. We are
(03:42):
doing it with the three candidates of the Senate. I
expect more to come, with many candidates in the House,
candidates all over this country running for local office. We're
going to build that movement, grassroots movement to do what
Mamdani did in New York City all.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
Over this country.
Speaker 1 (04:02):
So the question is, now that it's over, how do
we convince the American people that this was a victory
for Democrats. Well, first of all, you start declaring that
it's a Democrat success.
Speaker 2 (04:16):
So let's start with six ZHO four rom on.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
CNN's Van Jones says, the Schumer shutdown proves that Republicans
aren't that into America.
Speaker 7 (04:25):
Look, right now, Democrats are going to kick each other
and tear each other up and be mad at each other.
Speaker 2 (04:30):
But when the smoke clears for most.
Speaker 7 (04:31):
Americans, something has been proven here. Republicans are just not
that into Americans right now. I mean, how much pain
were the Republicans willing to let Americans suffer so they
didn't have to They's not that into America. They were
willing to let planes fall out the sky. They're willing
to let children starve. They willing to let federal workers
(04:53):
get evicted from their houses rather than sit down and
cut a deal on healthcare. Like everything that that David
Urban just said is correct. There's a smarter, better way
to do healthcare, and an opportunity was put forward this
past six weeks to sit down.
Speaker 2 (05:07):
And talk about it.
Speaker 7 (05:08):
Republics didn't do it. They were willing Donald Trump and
Republicans were willing to let planes fall off the sky
and children start before they came to the table.
Speaker 2 (05:15):
So when Democrats get.
Speaker 7 (05:16):
Finished beating ourselves up, look at the tattoe you just put.
Speaker 2 (05:20):
On the Republican party.
Speaker 7 (05:21):
They don't care about your health care. And so I
think take the win on this, Democrats and keep moving.
You had a big ye had seven million people in
the streets. But I'll give you a fig of your turn.
But you have seven million people in the streets, that's
a good thing. You kick their butts last week when
it came to the vote, that's a good thing. And
you just expose these guys is not caring about regular Americans.
I think that's a good couple of weeks for Democrats.
(05:41):
But we're still going to be mad each other about.
Speaker 2 (05:43):
It for no reason.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
Obamacare destroyed America's healthcare system destroyed it. People are paying
a whole lot more money and giving a whole lot
less for it. They've lost their doctor, they've lost some
of their treatments. It's increased their anxiety and and and
their illness, and they're furious about it.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
That that's the story has to be told. That's the
reason Democrats a team must listening to Michael.
Speaker 1 (06:13):
Berry as we continue our tribute to veterans on Veterans Day,
Tom t Hall, of course cleaning out veteran Arizona Democrat
Mark Kelly. You know, it's hard to believe that Arizona
has two Democrat senators. That's what I legal immigration did
to that state. Arizona used to be one of the
(06:35):
most reliably Republican states in the country. The residents of Arizona,
the citizens were very conservative, going back to Bury Goldwater
in before, but that has changed. Nevertheless, both Christian Cinema
and Mark Kelly have to because it's more of a
purple state, have had to try to be have tried
(06:58):
to seem less like baby killing whack job communists and
more like someone you might know in the neighborhood. So
it creates a real awkwardness for him that the California
and California New York Democrats are the ones who drive
(07:19):
this party. This is a party of Brandon Johnson, This
is a party of AOC, This is a part of
ilhan Omar. This is the party of people who have
insulted our veterans, thrown them in jail after January sixth,
want to steal your property and give it to an
illegal alien, destroy your healthcare. It makes it real hard
for a guy like Mark Kelly to speak in public
(07:40):
about being a Democrat. So he was asked on MSNBC
if he has confidence in Chuck Schumer amid calls for
Chuck Schumer to step down.
Speaker 2 (07:51):
Notice his.
Speaker 1 (07:53):
Discomfort in this question and when Mark Kelly won't say
that he has confidence in Chuck Schumer, because whoever replaces Schumer,
as bad as humor is, will be even more left winging.
This is how bad their party has it.
Speaker 8 (08:11):
I wonder if, as a result, you believe Chuck Schumer's
leadership is in jeopardy and should it be?
Speaker 4 (08:18):
Yes?
Speaker 9 (08:18):
Yes, Well, as I've said, Chris, we are dealing with
an irrational president. I know people are frustrated. You know,
people could be frustrated with the use of in.
Speaker 1 (08:32):
The cermon we asked about Chuck Schumer. But see first
in sult Trump. There are floods in your state. What
is your thought about all the rain? What should people do? Well,
let's first start with Trump being a bad guy. Okay,
(08:54):
that's kind of your throwdown standard for everything you know
they coached them on this. They sit in front of
a camera and they toss out different questions and here's
how you answered this type of question. Here's this is
not this is rehearsed. This is not his answer off
the cuff. These are carefully rehearsed answers. And no matter
(09:19):
what the question, here are some throwdown things you do.
First insult Trump because Democrats will be grateful to you
no matter what you say. If you first insult Trump,
Trump bad. That's an Orange man mad. That's the first
thing we start with, playing with an irrational president. I
know people are frustrated. You know, people could be frustrated
(09:40):
with leadership.
Speaker 2 (09:41):
In the Senate and the House.
Speaker 9 (09:43):
I'm frustrated with the White House and a president. I mean,
he sued, he filed a lawsuit to keep kids from
getting snap benefits, taking away food from kids for leverage.
Speaker 2 (09:57):
I mean, that's who the.
Speaker 9 (09:58):
American people should be really set with and frustrated with,
is the guy in the White House.
Speaker 8 (10:04):
There's a lot of frustration out there among rank and
file Democrats about the strategic way this was handled. So
let me ask you very directly, do you support truck
Shumer to lead Senate Democrats going forward.
Speaker 9 (10:22):
So Chris, again, we found ourselves in a situation I
don't think the Senate has found itself in before. I
think under any president, Democrat or Republican, they're going to
care about the Americans people healthcare and care if they're
going to be able to put food on the table
and try to bring down costs, not do the opposite
(10:44):
for the American people. So when I hear folks say
things like that, I understand their frustration, but I also
hope they understand that we all need to be on
the same team here.
Speaker 2 (10:58):
And what matters at this point.
Speaker 9 (11:00):
Is restoring these tax credits if we can do in December,
and we're going to work really, really hard, and we're
going to focus on getting the Republican votes necessary to
do that. But beyond that, it's winning the election in
twenty twenty six. This president controls the House and the Senate,
he controls those votes. He's got all the levers of
(11:20):
power here with our government. So we have to win
this election in twenty twenty six, and if we do,
we can hold him an accountable and we can take
some steps to try to improve the situation that millions
of Americans now find themselves in not being able to
afford rent or mortgage payment, or groceries or healthcare.
Speaker 8 (11:43):
A renote Senator that given two opportunities, you did not
voice your unequivocal support for Chuck Schumer. But his job,
at least for the moment, is not over. If this
compromise plan does.
Speaker 9 (11:54):
Lead to the encoverament, well, I will say Chuck Schumer
and the leadership of the Senate are dealing with an
incredibly complex situation where you know it's hard to find
a way out, but I am going to continue to
fight for my constituents and the American people to just
(12:16):
make life affordable for them.
Speaker 1 (12:19):
So you won't tell us if you support Schumer to
continue as a majority leader any longer.
Speaker 2 (12:27):
You know they're coached on how to do this.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
There's a great musical called Best Little Whorehouse in Texas,
and it was about a true story of something called
Chicken Ranch, about an hour and a half west of Houston,
which was truly a whorehouse, but it was a whorehouse
that the winner of college football games, the teams the
alumni would take the boys there and for many of
(12:50):
them that would be their first experience the governor didn't
want to shut it down because you know, there were big,
big money people who it was kind of hiding in
plain sight. And they made movie about it, and they
made a musical about it, and then a movie with
Dolly Parton and Burt Reynolds and Charles Derning, the King
of character actors who, by the way, very moment I'm
(13:11):
in a movie with played the governor at the time,
and it was it was about the governor at the
time that this happened. And the story is he does
a little two step and so they ask him, you know,
do you want the chicken ranch shut down or not?
And he does this little dance where he says absolutely nothing,
(13:33):
but he talks about families and all this and the
people who hear, and he basically talks a lot about
you know, whatever you want to take from what he says,
you can, but the main thing he does and it
is make you feel good about yourself.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
And that's what Mark Kelly does there.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
You know, I just care about people who are struggling
right now, and you know, people have too much gas,
people who are hungry, people who don't sleep.
Speaker 2 (13:56):
Well, and people who aren't getting enough sacks, people who.
Speaker 1 (14:05):
The aforementioned Charles Derning, playing the role of the governor
of Texas, does a little side step.
Speaker 2 (14:12):
Now you see me, now you don't.
Speaker 1 (14:14):
At the end, the reporters look at each other and say,
is he for closing the ranch or keeping it open?
Speaker 2 (14:19):
And they said, we have no idea.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
And in keeping with our theme of paying tribute to
veterans today, he was a veteran who stormed the beach
at Normandy the morning. Joe Scarborough, formerly a Republican congressman,
Boy has he changed, calls the Schumer shut down a success.
Speaker 10 (14:44):
The Democrats is they took crime off the front page
of every newspaper and that was the story, and they
turned it into healthcare.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Yeah, they got you to stop thinking about the fact
that Americans are being slaughtered on the streets every day
because of bad Democrat policies in the cities. Well that's
a that's a great success.
Speaker 2 (15:05):
You should be real proud of that.
Speaker 1 (15:09):
Anna Navarro was on CNN worried that people won't be
able to afford their health insurance. Well, how can that
be the case, because I thought Obama Care fixed that.
Speaker 11 (15:19):
Yeah, that you can get kicked out of healthcare because
of a pre existing condition, the idea that there's no caps.
You know, all of these things are things that we've
all benefited from, particularly the neediest amongst us. Look, I
think this issue is not going to go away, and
we're going to be talking about this because we're going
to hear horrible stories. People are not going to be
(15:40):
able to afford their insurance. I don't think even with subsidies,
they're going to be able to assure to afford the
premiums that are hiking up one hundred, two hundred, three
hundred percent.
Speaker 2 (15:51):
Supposed to fix on people.
Speaker 12 (15:52):
No, well, not without the universal I mean, there's a
more affordable care.
Speaker 2 (15:58):
The Republicans have.
Speaker 11 (15:59):
Been re Publicans have been chipping away at the ACA,
and I think, I think this is going to be
the death of the ACA.
Speaker 2 (16:05):
But it's also going to.
Speaker 11 (16:06):
Be the death of some Americans who don't go get screenings,
who don't get diagnosed early enough in order to get treatment,
who go in and instead of being stage one cancer,
are going to be stage four cancer. And we're going
to hear horrible stories because Americans are going to choose
to drop health insurance that they cannot afford, and we
as a country have got to figure this issue out.
Speaker 2 (16:30):
That's just it.
Speaker 1 (16:32):
Government doesn't solve problems, it creates them. Free markets solve problems.
But Michael, it won't be perfect.
Speaker 2 (16:41):
It never is.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
Why don't we require that everyone gets a car. Why
don't we require that everyone gets a house. We've tried
requirement that everyone gets food, and that's that's one of
the most scandal ridden programs in the country. If you
look at the well fair fraud out of Minneapolis that
the Somali Americans have undertaken there. Oh man, it's always,
(17:08):
it's always.
Speaker 2 (17:09):
To improve the lives of the poor people.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
All of those programs supposedly to improve the lives of
the poor people.
Speaker 2 (17:17):
Just enrich Democrats.
Speaker 1 (17:20):
They're all scams, every last one of them, every last
one of them, including but not limited to Social Security.
And a Navarro was on CNN when she said, remember,
her whole claim to fame is she was supposedly a
Republican Hispanic woman. But the entire time all she does
(17:41):
is promote Democrat policies. But see, we have some diversity.
We have a Republican woman here. So here's what she
said on a panel with Scott Jennings. She said, I
know a lot of Republicans. I know a lot of Democrats.
They're cut from different cloths. Democrats simply don't have the
coldheartedness necessy to see people suffering, to which Scott Jennings replied,
(18:05):
they voted repeatedly to do it. It is very, very
very important that we all understand that the greatest reason
for Democrats success is that they convince middle Americans who
don't pay close attention that they are nice people and
that we are mean people. They want to provide for people,
(18:28):
and we want to take it away. They don't want
anyone starving, and we want them starving. They don't want
anyone suffering, and we want them to suffer. And you
see by claiming this mantle, this moral high ground, that.
Speaker 2 (18:45):
They care about people.
Speaker 1 (18:48):
The naive neighbor, the drive by media, the passive knowledge
American believes, well, you know, I don't like what's going
on in this country, but at least Democrats care about people.
Speaker 2 (19:06):
Republicans are mean because it sounds mean.
Speaker 1 (19:11):
If you're parenting the way you should be parenting your kids,
especially teenagers should not be praising every decision you're making.
They should be praising those decisions in their mid twenties
and mid thirties. If you are the friend of your
teenager and you host the party and you provide the
booze and kids are passed out in the yard. Oh, yes,
(19:33):
you're mister nice guy. You're miss nice guy. But you're
not being the parent your child needs. Children need discipline.
Tough decisions are tough for a reason. Tough love is
tough for a reason. It's not popular. You want to
be popular, Open an ice cream stand and give it
(19:54):
away for free. But making tough decisions, whether you're a
co or a parent or a government, well, that's not
always so popular.
Speaker 2 (20:05):
That's not always so popular.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
And that Anna Navarro who says it Republicans are so mean,
but Democrats are really nice. This is the same woman
who didn't want to hear from another panelist because he
was white.
Speaker 11 (20:19):
Also, I want to respond to you saying that I
was hyperbolic when I talked about a rain of terror. No,
it might be hyperbolic for you as a white man,
it's certainly not hyperbolic for me as a Latino. No,
I'm not being racist. I'm not dismissing your opinion. I
am telling you that what latino the Latino community, the
brown community in America. Okay, well, let me speak with
(20:42):
my voice. I mean, you said I was being hyperbolic.
Let me I'm not being a white man as an.
Speaker 2 (20:47):
Insult you when you're invoke it to dismiss.
Speaker 5 (20:49):
Man being a white man as.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
An insult when you invoke you do you think? Do
you do you think.
Speaker 11 (20:54):
Latinos are living under circumstances that other people.
Speaker 13 (20:57):
Might not be right now in this out to have
a whole conversation about that very thing. But I just
want to make a point that Brad, all she's saying
is that her view of the situation is different from yours.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
I don't think that's an insult.
Speaker 13 (21:12):
She just said, I see it. I see she said
I see it differently from you, which is not an insult.
It's not and it's also not.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
A racial Oh so the black woman's going to tell
us what is and isn't racist. You've got black people,
brown people, yellow people in this country insulting white people
openly that they don't like white people, calling for the
death of white people, calling for the end of white people.
You've got Muslims now more and more emboldened in a
(21:44):
microphone into a microphone with a camera on them, knowing
it will be broadcast saying America will fall to Islam,
we will convert their children to Islam.
Speaker 2 (21:56):
Let me tell you something.
Speaker 1 (21:57):
You will not go to a Muslim nation and say
we will convert your people to Christianity. You would be slaughtered.
The idea that people come to this country and insult
Americans in this manner. The idea that white people sit
around feeling guilty over the fact that you had no
control over your race and you don't owe anyone an apology.
Speaker 2 (22:20):
At Park Michael Berry's show, I.
Speaker 1 (22:26):
Don't have it loaded right now, and we're closing in
on the end of the show. But John Fetterman was
on the view with the Hen Party and they tried
to lecture him. Did Sonny Houston shame him for voting
multiple times to reopen the government.
Speaker 2 (22:41):
He was one of the eight who did, and he
just doesn't take it. He gives it back.
Speaker 1 (22:47):
I think even some Democrats, even if you somewhat reasonable Democrats,
understand how bad these people were trying to destroy our country,
how badly, how determined they are, and some of them
really believe in that they have the best of intentions
(23:09):
and that they're doing this wonderful thing.
Speaker 2 (23:12):
But they're not. They're not.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
Why is healthcare so expensive? Well, fraud certainly doesn't help
keep the cost down. Here's a flashback to June when
Matthew Galliardi with the DOJ Head of Criminal Division, listen
to this.
Speaker 12 (23:32):
We are announcing today charges against three hundred and twenty
four defendants for their alleged participation in health care fraud
schemes involving approximately fourteen point six billion dollars in false
claims submitted to Medicare, Medicaid, and other healthcare program the
(23:53):
largest coordinated health care fraud takedown in the history of
the Department of Justice. To make matters worse, these perpetrators
used the stolen identities of more than one million Americans
spanning all fifty states to perpetrate this scheme and submit
these false claims. But I'm pleased to report that federal
(24:15):
agents intercepted and arrested key members of that organization at
US airports and the US Mexico border, cutting off their
intended escape road.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
So one of the things that has become clear with Obamacare.
Speaker 2 (24:33):
Is that the.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
Is that the insurance industry has made a fortune off
of this. Obamacare is to healthcare. What the entire COVID
effort by the government was for the pharmaceutical industry. You know,
if they were to just hand money to people just here,
(24:59):
here's here's a few billion dollars, that would be bad,
but far less detrimental to your life and mind than
the things that they do out of it. The hassles
they put us through, the deaths of people who had
the cloth shot, the deaths of people who are.
Speaker 2 (25:16):
Sent to wars forever, wars.
Speaker 1 (25:19):
In Afghanistan and Iraq and Vietnam, all so that we
can give money to defense industry companies, the military industrial complex,
and that the welfare industrial complex, and.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
The millions given to them, billions.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
Given to them. It's not just that they're giving away
your money. It is that they're destroying our culture in
the process. You're creating adults who don't have jobs. They
do nothing to keep themselves busy. That is a recipe,
a recipe for a society that is broken and in decline.
(26:00):
Every single one of these people, fat black women complaining
that their welfare benefits are being cut, has nails, lashes, hair,
you know what all that costs. Half of them have
designer bags. They drive up in nicer cars and most
people are driving. This is a video from something called
(26:20):
Real Doc speaks on Twitter explaining how Obamacare, the Affordable
Care Act, Isn't it nice? They always name it something
that sounds good. Well, you don't want to be against
care being affordable, do you? How it was designed so
that your health care costs go up every year.
Speaker 2 (26:39):
Imagine that.
Speaker 1 (26:40):
Imagine if the fact that your healthcare costing more is
not a byproduct, not a glitch, not a bug, It
was the very design it's baked in.
Speaker 14 (26:54):
Where are a health insurance costs called every year? Can
we get one year where it's steady or God forbid
they go down? And the reason for that is it
was designed that way. There's something called in the Affordable
Care I called the medical loss ratio. Medical loss ratio
means that insurance companies must spend between eighty to eighty
five percent of all premium dollars on medical services. That
(27:15):
means they're limited to fifteen to twenty percent for administrative
overhead and profit. So that means that they play a
little game. The higher the top line is, the bigger
that number is. So now all we did was say,
let's charge more each year If you look, each year
the insurance companies.
Speaker 2 (27:30):
The revenues go but every year.
Speaker 14 (27:32):
The second thing they did they get around that was
they started vertically integrated.
Speaker 2 (27:36):
What's vertical integration.
Speaker 14 (27:37):
That's when you start buying companies that are not insurance
companies but in similar businesses. So they started buying pharmacy
benefit managers, which are middleman for the drug companies. They
started buying pharmacies, They started buying physician services and physician groups.
Speaker 2 (27:52):
So why is that important? Well, think about this.
Speaker 14 (27:54):
I'm the insurance company. I want to make it look
on paper like I'm making my medical loss ratio because
if I don't, I'm going to have to pay a rebate.
So what I do is I have my physician over
here who's owned, and I overpay him.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
But he's owned.
Speaker 14 (28:08):
So when I overpay him, all I'm doing is I'm
showing I have an expense here, but it goes back
in my other pocket. Same thing for drugs. I can
take a fifty dollars drug, I can pay two.
Speaker 2 (28:16):
Hundred dollars for it.
Speaker 14 (28:17):
Now I've just gotten around the medical loss ratio because
somehow the government can't figure out how to trace that
dollar beyond the insurance. So that's how they get around it.
And this is why our insurance premiums go up every year,
and they're going to keep going up until we.
Speaker 2 (28:31):
Change the system. Imagine that so many times something in
your life.
Speaker 1 (28:40):
Is made more difficult, not because there's not a solution,
but because it is advantageous for it to be difficult
for you. You're worth more to the pharmaceutical industry sick than healthy,
You're worth more to the healthcare system. So if you're
(29:02):
in the healthcare system and you have zero conscience, which
clearly is the case from many people, you advocate, you lobby,
you bribe politicians to make policies to keep people sick.
Speaker 2 (29:21):
They don't want you healed. They want you sick.
Speaker 1 (29:25):
They want you on blood pressure medication for the rest
of your life. They want you on statins for the
rest of your life. They want you on cholesterol drugs
for the rest of your life. And I realize there
are people who really struggle. You might be one of
them to believe that when I say that, I must
be crazy, because there's no way they could do that.
There's no way they could be that evil. Have you
(29:45):
never been disappointed by anyone for giving them the benefit
of the doubt. I'm not sure how they could say
it any louder. We are more medicated than we've ever been,
We're spending more on prescription drugs and taking more than
we ever have. We have food more plentiful, that is
more corrupted and tainted than we ever have, and we're
(30:07):
not living longer. Quite the opposite. How hard is this
to understand? How many booster shots did you take? How
much money was given to Wuhan? How many lies were
told to you as to where it came from? Sure,
I know this sounds crazy. I wish I didn't have
to say this. I wish these thinges weren't true. I
(30:29):
wish every conspiracy was a sign that someone is nutter
butters and you didn't need to take them seriously. But
what if the conspiracy turns out to be true, as
almost all of them do, then what do you just
choose to ignore it because it's easier, because you don't
want to confront it, because you don't want to have
(30:52):
to argue with people, because you don't want someone thinking
you're kookie, because you don't believe what everyone else believes,
because it's easier to believe and march your death, while
other people, including your government and the people who.
Speaker 2 (31:03):
Bribe them, are getting wealthy.
Speaker 3 (31:08):
Rest tell us next look good King, thank you, and
good night.