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June 30, 2025 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time time time, time, lock and load.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
The Michael Varry Show is on the air.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
President Biden has spent days locked in intense preparation, surrounded
by his closest advisors at Camp David, and our sources
are telling us tonight that full mock debates are underway at.

Speaker 4 (00:24):
The podium under the lights.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
He's even watching Tate to know exactly what he's going
to see when he steps up to that lecture. This
team shot a video during a walk through the scene
in studio, and as I reported while covering him at
the White House, when Biden prepares, he does so incredibly intensively.

Speaker 5 (00:41):
Oh, we have one thousand billionaires in America, not even
billionaires in America, and what's happening. They're in a situation
where they in fact paid eight point two percent in Texas,
if they just paid twenty four twenty five percent, either
one of those numbers, we made raise five hundred million
dollars billion dollars. I should say, in the ten year
period we've been able to write wipe about his debt.

(01:01):
We'd be able to help make sure that all those
things we need to do, childcare, elder care, making sure
that we continue to supreme starts in our healthcare system,
making sure that we're able to make every single solitary
person eligible for what I've been able to do with
the with the COVID, I was gonna be with dealing
with everything we have to do with Look, if we

(01:28):
finally beat medicare, what's happened. I've changed in the way
that now you're in a situation where the forty fewer
people coming across the border illegally. It's better when he
left office, and I'm going to continue to move until
we get the total band, the total initiative relative to
what we're going to do with more border control and

(01:49):
more astomous. I really don't know what he said at
the end of this, and I don't think he knows
what he said.

Speaker 2 (01:56):
One of many feedes I follow is something called the.

Speaker 6 (02:01):
Letter, and that person had a post up today, and
I'm giving them credit because they said it. I had
been noticing these trends, and I will read from the
Cobas letter, this is wild. We now have a president

(02:23):
who is actively calling for interest rates to be cut
to as low as one percent.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
Will come back to that in just a moment.

Speaker 6 (02:33):
And he is actively stating that he will be replacing
FED Chairman Powell with someone who will immediately cut rates. Meanwhile,
stocks are at an all time high, real estate prices
are at an all time high, US is at an

(02:55):
all time high, and crypto is at an all time high.
If the new FED chair actively cuts rates to one percent,
we are going to witness perhaps one of the biggest
runs of all time in stocks and real estate. There

(03:16):
has never been a time in history where the Fed
cut rates to one percent. With the stock market and
home prices at all time highs in May of twenty
twenty six, so that's less than a year from now,
FED Chairman Powell's term will officially come to an end.

(03:40):
If rates are truly going to one percent, everything is cheap,
of course, then he argues that would have an inflationary effect,
and we can talk about that in the future. But
what's your looking at here is a situation where the

(04:05):
economy is absolutely on fire despite the high cost of
money relative to where it's been.

Speaker 2 (04:18):
So you've got a situation where.

Speaker 6 (04:22):
Monetary policy the cost of borrowing money has typically been
used either restricting how much money is available to be
loaned or dumping a bunch of money into the economy
has been an attempt by the central planners, the policy folks,

(04:44):
to control the economy, to heat it up or slow
it down. Now, if you're the poor sap out here
just trying to get ahead, trying to start a small business,
by a house, trying to do those things, you are
absolutely at the mercy of individuals who are playing puppeteer

(05:10):
with your life, your business, your savings, every bit of it.
Monetary policy has such influence over our lives, and the
folks who determine that policy, the Fed, are hidden behind
a veil of secrecy that very few people in this

(05:34):
country truly understand. If you want to have a dark,
suspicious view of the overlords in this country, spend some
time on monetary policy. Read what, for instance, Ron Paul

(05:55):
has said about monetary policy in this country. And once
you really dive into that, you will be an awkward
fellow at the Domino's game, because then you will start
talking about things that other people don't know anything about
and don't dare question because it's frightening. What if there

(06:19):
really is a boogeyman? What if there really are nefarious players?
What if there really are bad people and their policies
and self dealing enriched themselves and not us. It's sort
of like the moment that you realized that COVID was

(06:39):
not a naturally occurring condition, that it was created in
a Chinese lab, that it was created using gain of
function research which had been forbidden in American labs but
funded with American dollars. When you learned that everything they

(07:00):
told you about whether you could get it or spread
it was a lie. When you learn that careers were
ruined over this whole thing, it makes you into a
person who has a lot of trouble going to the
neighborhood dinner party, the potluck dinner party, because once you

(07:25):
become aware of things like this and you start wanting
to share, you realize your neighbors don't think about these
sorts of things and don't want to think about these
sorts of things, and the way they deal with it
is to call you crazy.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
And some people really can't keep it together.

Speaker 6 (07:47):
Some people are better off not having learned those sorts
of things because they don't have an outlet to share
them with the masses. They don't have a connection with
other people they can talk to. Their wives think they're crazy,
their kids think dad's off his rocker.

Speaker 2 (08:05):
Sometimes it's almost better not to know. The Michael Berry Show,
I played.

Speaker 6 (08:15):
You some of CNN's Michael Smerconish, who's no Trump fan
and no conservative, not even a Republican. I had three
cuts I wanted to get to. I only got to two. Ramon,
this is going to be six h four. This was
the third of the cuts. I just ran out of
time in that segment to get to it. You got
to realize CNN's rooting against Trump. So for them to

(08:40):
say that President Trump has his opponents on the run,
they do so begrudgingly.

Speaker 7 (08:49):
Yesterday, Kim a huge decision from the Supreme Court. The
High Court declared that federal district judges exceeded their authority
when issuing nationwide injunctions against Trump's executive order on birthrights citizenship.
This will, of course strengthen executive power both for Trump and.

Speaker 2 (09:04):
For his successors.

Speaker 7 (09:06):
And finally, a democratic socialist just won the nomination for
mayor of New York City.

Speaker 2 (09:11):
And perhaps you're wondering, well, how does that affect Trump?

Speaker 7 (09:13):
It gives him the perfect foil, someone to play off
in future political battles. This morning's New York Post references
campaign literature for Zuron Mamdani, which advocates for increased taxation
for quote richer and whier neighborhoods.

Speaker 2 (09:28):
Just imagine what Trump will do with that.

Speaker 7 (09:31):
Winning became a punchline that Trump's opponents used to lampoon him.
In his first administration, he was a political novice, then
surrounded by a team with which he was unfamiliar, and
he was probably as surprised as the rest of us
were that he won the election.

Speaker 2 (09:46):
This time is different.

Speaker 7 (09:47):
This time he came with a plan and a cabinet
with senior advisors comprised of loyalists, all well known to
the president, and recently he's exhibited a more layered approach
to governing on both the domestic and international front. No
longer saw only guided by winning each day's news cycle,
by any objective measure, President Trump has his opponents on

(10:07):
the run.

Speaker 6 (10:10):
Amy Coney Barrett, who has been, in my opinion, a
great disappointment on the Supreme Court, had a moment this
past week. She hammered Katanji Brown Jackson in the opinion
of Trump versus Kasa case, which put an end to
the activist judges, putting universal injunctions that trial judges had

(10:33):
invented to block the president. She dismissed Katanji Brown Jackson
in a single sentence as if she is so stupid
it wasn't worth more time than that, which was probably

(10:55):
as powerful a slap down as you could possibly amain engine.

Speaker 2 (11:01):
This is Fox News.

Speaker 6 (11:02):
Is Jonathan Fayee, a former US attorney, talking about that.

Speaker 8 (11:08):
They definitely got this one right, and it's a huge
win from President Trump. They got this right because all
of these things, all of these injunctions have been really
judicial overreach, and this Supreme Court, the Conservatives Supreme Court
under John Roberts, is really restraining the courts and the
lower courts and their authorities because so many of these

(11:30):
things were really just an ascension of the lawfair we
saw before President Trump took office, but these were things
within the executive branch to make these decisions, to make
decisions on you, whether or not certain things should be
going on national security wise, how immigration law should be upheld,
and things like that. So they certainly got it right.
These judges should be restricted to the clients or the plaintiffs,

(11:53):
not clients in front of them, and their case is
specifically not nationwide, and that's what these judges we'redue is
basically ruling nationwide as opposed to just the cases in
front of them, which is an abuse of their power,
and this Court reined it in. So it's going to
not only affect the cases at hand, but probably prevent
a lot more of this.

Speaker 2 (12:13):
And I would again call it law.

Speaker 8 (12:14):
Fair with these groups trying to derail President Trump's agenda
through the court, So huge win for President Trump.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
In every single way. The Court got this.

Speaker 8 (12:23):
Right, and I think it will have a big impact
not only for President Trump, but for future presidents to
be able to allow them to implement their agenda.

Speaker 6 (12:32):
We have been playing for you audio from Michael Smerconish,
who's been a Trump critic. From Jake Tapper, who is
a Trump critic and then writes a book about Biden
being brain dead and sells the book with a straight face.
When he was defending the guy Van Jones talking about

(12:57):
what a great job Trump is doing. Here is.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
Chris Murphy, who Chris.

Speaker 6 (13:08):
Murphy was on CNN talking about how great Joe Biden
was doing in the campaign when the news broke that
they had smothered Biden and kicked him out and replaced
him with Kamala Harris, and he looked like he was
gonna cry. They oh, yeah, Biden's dropped out. He's brain dead,

(13:31):
he's a vegetable. Chris Murphy's job and this, this is
really an unenviable task, is to go out and and
uh defend Joe Biden against reality. And then Biden's out,
and there's Chris Murphy, he's sharing the campaign and Jake

(13:56):
Tapper begins the process of telling the story of what
they knew all along. Joe Biden had been brain dead
for years. And so there's Chris Murphy over there having
said on the air again and again and again, Joe
Biden to be president. You've got mourning Joe over there
saying this is the best Joe Biden ever. Those people

(14:18):
were absolutely smeared with pooh over all of that. But
what you learn is they have no shame. They don't
believe anything they say in the first place. So they
get up the next day and start over on the
next So here is Chris Murphy, who chaired the Biden campaign,
who on live television, as he was telling us how

(14:40):
great Biden was, learned that Biden wouldn't be the nominee
anymore because they told him he had to sit down
because he didn't know where he was, and they gave
him some pudding and he was happy. Here's some putting
in some apple sauce. So here is Chris Murphy on
Meet the Press with Christen Welker.

Speaker 9 (14:57):
You know, border crossings are at low. Do you give
the Trump administration some credit for that?

Speaker 4 (15:04):
And are you when you.

Speaker 9 (15:06):
Look at those figures do you think things are moving
in the right direction at least in that regard?

Speaker 2 (15:10):
Senator No, I don't give.

Speaker 8 (15:12):
Them credit for that, because border crossings are low because
they're violating the.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
Law every day. Bless his heart, go to break with
that again, that's just too good, not too.

Speaker 9 (15:23):
You know, border crossings are at a record low. Do
you give the Trump administration some credit for that? And
are you when you look at those figures, do you
think things are moving in the right direction at least
in that regard?

Speaker 10 (15:36):
Senator No, I don't give them credit for that, because
border crossings are low because they're violating the.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
Law every day.

Speaker 6 (15:42):
You're listening to Michael barrymar You may remember her as
a failed presidential candidate. She'd still like to be a
presidential candidate and be president and sadly their bench is
so bad she may have a chance to win the nomination.
It's this sort of whiney woman from Minnesota. It's it's comical.

(16:12):
But here is a moment where Senator Amy Klobachar says
she wants to keep people on Medicaid. But just remember
when the Democrats argued on behalf of quote unquote people
getting benefits. What they mean by that is illegals. And

(16:32):
until Democrats recognize what they're doing and punish them for
it by voting for the other candidate, which was one
of the reasons Donald Trump won. A lot of Democrats
voted for Donald Trump. Until that happens, a lot of Democrats,
people who typically vote Democrats are going to be hurt

(16:52):
in this country, the working poor being one of them.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
Listen to this.

Speaker 4 (16:57):
Is going to help wealthy people. People on Medicaid.

Speaker 11 (17:02):
They don't want to lose access healthcare.

Speaker 4 (17:04):
One out of.

Speaker 11 (17:04):
Two people in assisted living are actually on Medicaid.

Speaker 2 (17:11):
You know, when my dad was.

Speaker 11 (17:12):
In assisted living, he had some savings. He's married three times,
so a lot of that money had gone away.

Speaker 2 (17:19):
Better for talk about another time.

Speaker 11 (17:21):
But I knew the exact day that that savings was
going to run out. I knew the exact saving day
because I was going to move him over to a
cop of Charity's place that actually took medicaid, because that
was a day that his medicaid would kick in. And
it gave me some solace even though he was in
a place that didn't take medicaid, that I.

Speaker 2 (17:39):
Had a plan for him.

Speaker 11 (17:41):
I had a place for him to go. He worked
hard his whole life, grew up in a hard scrabble
mining town. He deserved to have the end of his
life be a life of dignity.

Speaker 6 (17:55):
Well, maybe we should also discuss the situation with divorce
laws if he kept losing half of what he had.
She made an odd argument there, without intending to Who
will leave that for another time. The Democrat Party is
in a real challenge. The city of New York is

(18:18):
at a crossroads. They have a Democrat who has advanced
very close to being the mayor of New York, the
largest Jewish population in this country. It's not just Jews,
it's financially successful people. New York has more rich people
than anywhere in the country, has more Jews than anywhere

(18:39):
else in the country.

Speaker 2 (18:40):
It's going to be very.

Speaker 6 (18:42):
Very interesting, this socialist, angry person who is getting closer
and closer to the mayor's office. He was on Meet
the Press I'm DONI with Christian Welker when he was

(19:02):
given multiple chances to condemn the phrase global into Fada,
but he wouldn't do it. He wouldn't do it because
deep down he hates the Jews.

Speaker 9 (19:14):
If you an opportunity to respond here and now, do
you condemn that phrase globalize the into fada.

Speaker 4 (19:21):
That's not language that I use.

Speaker 12 (19:23):
The language that I use and the language that I
will continue to use to lead the city is that
which speaks clearly to my intent, which is an intent
grounded in a belief in universal human rights.

Speaker 4 (19:33):
And ultimately that's.

Speaker 12 (19:34):
What is the foundation of so much of my politics,
the belief that freedom and justice and safety are things
that have meaning have to be applied to all people,
and that includes Israelis and Palastanians. His life.

Speaker 4 (19:44):
But do you actually condemn it?

Speaker 9 (19:46):
I think that's the question and the outstanding issue that
a number of people, both of the Jewish faith and
beyond have Do you condemn that phase globalize the intofada,
which a lot of people here is a call to
violence against Jews.

Speaker 12 (19:58):
I've heard from many Jewish New Yorkers who have shared
their concerns with me, especially in light of the horrific
attacks that we saw in Washington, DC and then Colderballer
in Boulder, Colorado, about this moment of antisemitism.

Speaker 4 (20:11):
In our country and in our city.

Speaker 12 (20:12):
And I've heard those fears, and I've had those conversations,
and ultimately they are part and parcel of why in
my campaign I've put forward a commitment to increase funding
for anti hate crime programming by eight hundred percent. I
don't believe that the role of the mayor is to
police speech in the manner, especially of that of Donald Trump,
who has put one New Yorker in jail who's just

(20:33):
returned to his family, Mahamad Khalil, for that very supposed
crime of speech. Ultimately, what I think I need to
show is the ability to not only talk about something,
but to tackle it and to make clear that there's
no room for anti.

Speaker 4 (20:45):
Semitism in the city.

Speaker 12 (20:46):
We have to root out that bigotry, and ultimately we
do that through the actions, and that is the mayor.
I will be one that protects juition New Yorkers and
lives up to that commitment through the work.

Speaker 4 (20:55):
That I do very people quickly.

Speaker 9 (20:56):
For the people who care about the language and who
feel really concerned by that phrase, why not just condemn it.

Speaker 4 (21:04):
My concern is.

Speaker 12 (21:08):
To start to walk down the line of language and
making clear what language I believe is permissible or impermissible.

Speaker 4 (21:15):
Takes me into a place similar.

Speaker 12 (21:16):
To that of the President who is looking to do
those very kinds of things, putting people in jail for
writing an op ed, putting them in jail for protesting.

Speaker 4 (21:24):
Ultimately, it's not language that I use.

Speaker 12 (21:25):
It's language I understand there are concerns about and what
I will do is showcase my vision for the city
through my words.

Speaker 4 (21:31):
And my action.

Speaker 6 (21:33):
And then and then the guy who has New York
on edge, frightened to death of how many people will
be killed, how much.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
Of their savings will be taken, is very upset because
you're picking on the Muslim.

Speaker 13 (21:50):
I get messages that say the only good Muslim is
a dead Muslim. I get threats on my life fund
the people that I love, and I try not to
talk about it because the function of racism, as Tony

(22:11):
Morrison said, his distraction. My focus is always been on
making this a city that's affordable, on making the city
that every New Yorker sees himself. And it takes a
toll because this is a city that every single person
deserves to be in, the city that we all belong
to me. And the thing that's made me floutest in

(22:32):
this get paid is that the strength of our movement
is built on our ability to have built something a
cross Jewish and Muslim workers and Boston workers, all faces,
all backgrounds, of all boroughs.

Speaker 6 (22:46):
This guy, this guy managing to feel sorry for himself
as a Muslim with some of the things he has
said and done. Former advisor to President Clinton and later
to Hillary Mark Penn told Fox News is Laura Ingram
that this guy is a disaster for Democrats if they
don't fix this before election day.

Speaker 2 (23:08):
Well here's what he says.

Speaker 14 (23:11):
Two, that the Democrats are really caught here in a
trap of their own making. They really gravitated toward the
energy of the squad and they enjoyed that, even though
they know their views were too far left. But now
the party's gone left because they didn't really deliver. What
do they do here?

Speaker 10 (23:31):
Well, this is a big problem, and there is a
lot of panic I think in New York generally in
terms of what can they do, how can they get
someone in the general election. Remember these primaries were played with.
This used to be in September and there would have
been a runoff between Johan and Andrew Cuomo in the

(23:52):
old system with much higher turnout. Right now you have
a city of eight million people, four hundred thousand votes
one way or the other. Here is determining an extreme
to the move to the left because this with a
voting system nobody could figure out. Because this has been
played with and moved to the dead of summer when
turnout's going to be low and activists can win the day.

(24:15):
So we need to get our election system back and
right now I think this is a really bad turn
for the Democratic Party. If something isn't figured out here, but.

Speaker 1 (24:25):
Some don't want to hear it, you'll just go ahead
and say it sorry.

Speaker 4 (24:30):
The Michael Verry Show.

Speaker 6 (24:33):
On the Morning Show today, which you may not get
in your market, we do two different shows today. We
talked about how to beat the heat and what people
who work out in it do, and the Houston Heat,
which is our home market, is as bad as it
gets into country, it is awful. And folks shared little
tips on what they do. And we got a call

(24:58):
from a lady and it broke our heart because it
was about her son. And she's glad her son is
in jail because in at least he's more likely to
survive because he mental health issues than if he's out
on the streets.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
And here was that. Cole will close the show on
the Aaron you're up arn, Hello, yep, go ahead, dear, Yes, hello, yep,
you're up.

Speaker 15 (25:23):
Hi my son, my son lives on the streets in
the heat, along with a lot of other mentally ill people.
And when you spoke earlier about the woman sitting out
on the center of I forty five in the heat,
I was impressed by your kindness toward her.

Speaker 13 (25:46):
You know, erin.

Speaker 6 (25:50):
Mental health is something that we joke about, like many things,
because it caused as us discomfort. My heart goes out
to anybody that's in that situation. Very literal people don't
understand that we laugh at things so that we can

(26:11):
own them.

Speaker 2 (26:13):
We laugh as a coping technique.

Speaker 15 (26:16):
Well, you played the funny song, but then you did
you really were kind about it. I'm telling you very
few people are and in your case.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
Your uh and but but I don't I don't think
they mean.

Speaker 15 (26:29):
You were, just the fact that how could she be
out that heat?

Speaker 6 (26:32):
Yeah, I don't think they mean to be mean. I
think we don't know what to do. It's it's like
gay stuff or or or death or we don't really
we struggle to cope with it, and and it is.

Speaker 2 (26:46):
It is tough.

Speaker 6 (26:47):
But let me ask you this, as a mother, how
do you cope with that? That's I can't imagine. I
love my kids so much. I know you love your kids.
How do you struggle knowing your kid is out on this?
I mean, how do you cope knowing your kid is
out on the stree? That's got to be tough right.

Speaker 15 (27:02):
Now, right now? And since January twenty sixth, he's been
safe because he's been at twelve hundred Baker Street in
Harris County Jail. So I know he's safer there than
he was on the street.

Speaker 6 (27:16):
And I just did him on Wednesday, So in it,
I don't want to put words in your mouth. I
want to understand this. So in an odd way, you'd
rather him be in jail because at least he's, as
you said, safer there.

Speaker 15 (27:31):
I feel that way. Yeah, he's in I'm able to
visit him, and he seems okay. He's a very surprisingly
innocent thirty four year old. Yeah, and he was waving
a pocket knife in a McDonald's and the little girl
behind the counter called nine one one, as she should.

(27:54):
She was frightened. But he was waiting at his hallucinations,
not in any body. And he's been in there since
two days before his birthday and will be until they
can bring up a bed in a state hospital. Back
in twenty eleven, he was in an Austin state hospital.
But now you can't get into a state hospital unless

(28:15):
you've committed a crime. And so thankfully he's charged with
attempted or aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, and so
he'll get a bed in a state hospital. That's what
it takes.

Speaker 6 (28:34):
Wow, So how hard is it for you when he's
out under a bridge or wherever it is that he is,
When he's out, as you put your head on the pillow.

Speaker 7 (28:52):
Very very hard.

Speaker 15 (28:54):
He gets SSI And fortunately it doesn't go to him,
it comes to me. And so I pay for a
room for him in a home in Houston. Late, a
wonderful woman named Miss Cynthia is a retired New York
City police person has this home from Generally about seventeen

(29:17):
fifteen to seventeen men live there, and most of them
are have schizophrenia, and most of them are there released
from jail, and then they stay because she's good to them.
But you can't make people take their medicine. And so
he walks the streets and comes back every now and

(29:40):
then for a meal. And I have no idea how
he lives with that, because he's very bright. His brother
and sister wants an attorney, who wants a cybersecurity expert
for the Federal Reserve. And he is that smart, and
he knows that it shouldn't be this way, but sadly

(30:01):
he's come to accept it.

Speaker 6 (30:03):
That's darn my prayers for you. I can't even imagine
what that's like. I can't even imagine that is Uh.

Speaker 2 (30:15):
I gotta change the subject. I gotta change.

Speaker 6 (30:18):
We told you earlier about the alligator Alcatraz story where
they're holding the illegals in Florida. Some of those alligators
used to surround the immigrant detention center are being transported
from the Louisiana Swamps Netflix Netflix documentary is in the
early stages of filming. Today's a big day and they

(30:39):
sent us a clip for the upcoming show.

Speaker 2 (30:41):
And this I believe I will watch.

Speaker 1 (30:45):
As crawfish season has come to an end.

Speaker 2 (30:48):
The Boys of the.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
Louisiana Swamps aimed their crossbones in the direction of gators.

Speaker 2 (30:53):
Admission directed street from the top.

Speaker 1 (30:55):
You know what, I get that callde on my flip
phone from President Trump will five all these gatings when
we transport them over to Florida and Anna gator alcatrash.

Speaker 2 (31:04):
I got pretty excited.

Speaker 1 (31:05):
I called my main man, Boodro, and were going to work.

Speaker 2 (31:08):
Yet it right? He called me and I said, hey, man,
I come down there with President.

Speaker 1 (31:11):
Come he again, Man, we go do them get it?
Peel man translation, Boodreau is happier than Paup Paul in
front of a plate of grits. Gater after gator. The
boys round them up and prepare these beasts for Florida vacation.
You know, we chewed a lot of gators here over
the years, but we chewed them bad. This time we
hit them with that tranquilizer we reserve for Boodro's cousin.

(31:33):
When he gets Armory, he gets the job done, putting
these gays to sleep for a bit, right, Boudreau, Damn man.

Speaker 2 (31:39):
When do we get them and the gate again?

Speaker 5 (31:41):
Man?

Speaker 2 (31:41):
I said, pure pew, and I get a go call.

Speaker 5 (31:44):
Cool.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
As excited as these boys are to get these gators
to Florida's Alcatrazs, they're even more excited that they had
a chance to meet the press. Yeah, we couldn't believe it.
You know. The President said, hey, come on down with
these gators, and I love to shake your hand, I said,
mister President, of that deal, great honor for me and Boudro.

Speaker 2 (32:04):
We could barely keep him in his own paints.

Speaker 1 (32:07):
We had to go buy him a good super a man,
Resident Trump, man, I love that man. Women do you
do what you do?

Speaker 2 (32:12):
The great president?

Speaker 4 (32:13):
Women? Thing he do?

Speaker 15 (32:13):
I can't wait?

Speaker 12 (32:14):
Take it?

Speaker 15 (32:14):
M the credit.

Speaker 1 (32:15):
I really so there you have simple men of the
swamp turned into truth American trapping.

Speaker 2 (32:23):
Next stop noring to I.

Speaker 4 (32:24):
Could trans Oh yeah, I could lave in.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
The car down after that. Thank you, good night,
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