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May 20, 2025 • 34 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load for
Michael Verry's show is on the air. Hey, come on, man,
wake up.

Speaker 2 (00:13):
I've said it for years now. He's cogent, but I
undersold him when I said he was cogent. He's far
beyond cogent. In fact, I think he's better than he's
ever been. And f you if you can't handle the truth.
This version of Biden intellectually, analytically is the best Biden ever, not.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
A close sucking. And I've known him for years. The
Presents Kings have known him for fifty years.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
If it weren't the truth, I wouldn't say.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
Timothy Oliphant was born on this day. In nineteen sixty eight.
He was Raylan Gibbons in a show that I absolutely
love called Justified, and I saw a clip of him
with I think it was Conan O'Brien. I'm not positive

(01:16):
whoever it was. Asked him if there was anybody who
appeared on that show, because there was some guest appearances,
Sam Elliot being among them that he didn't like, and
he said, I don't want to say the name, but
he might have appeared on your show. He said, the
only person from that show that appeared on this show
was Patton Oswald, and he said, oops, now I will

(01:41):
tell you that Nick Cercy, who was Raylan Gibbons boss
and that TV show is a good friend of mine.
And he said that Timothy Oliphant was not very nice
to deal with on set himself. But I appreciated the
criticism of Patton Oswald because Patton Oswald has turned out

(02:03):
to be a little monster known in his politics. He's
one of these guys. This is true of many white
liberal comedians. He hates the everyman in this country. He
hates people who drive trucks. He hates people who live
in towns that he thinks, you know, aren't fancy enough.
He hates people who get married and have children. These

(02:25):
types of people hate Middle America. And this is a
clip from Justified with Timothy Oliphant, just to remind you
how great this TV show was.

Speaker 4 (02:37):
You're in a motor coach with Robert Quarrels when Duffy
there's a bodyguard out front. But that still doesn't explain
to me how you got your fingerprints on a bullet case.

Speaker 1 (02:47):
I threw a bullet at him. He threw a bullet
at him. Yeah, wait, if you threw a bullet.

Speaker 4 (02:51):
At him, I dropped it on the floor on Duffy.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
So Duffy was on the floor. Yes, he feelt a
miss deity. Well I mentioning it. Now, how do you
get on the floor? I wonder? Look, you want to
know how my prints got on a casing? Now you know? Okay?
Why why did you throw a bullet at him?

Speaker 5 (03:10):
I was trying to make a point, get the hell
out of Kentucky and don't come back.

Speaker 1 (03:15):
I was throwing a bullet at him, going to accomplish that.
Told him the next one might be coming a little faster. Jeopardy.
That might just be the coolest thing I've ever laid hears?
Did you come up with that all on your own?

Speaker 4 (03:30):
Heard on the Johnny Carson Show ones he was telling
some old gangster story.

Speaker 1 (03:33):
I thought it was kind of cool. That just gets
better and better. Huh, it'd be a lot better and
a lot of cooler for it. It actually worked. But
still it's a shame we have to lock you up.

Speaker 6 (03:44):
Hey, I'm gonna run down this quarrels and Duffy and
see if this damn story makes any sense.

Speaker 1 (03:48):
Okay, and I'll get back to work.

Speaker 4 (03:50):
Not so fast, deputy. We need to take a look
at your service weapon for ballistics.

Speaker 1 (03:54):
Are you serious?

Speaker 3 (03:54):
Well, his ballistics you're all on file from the previous
They're on file.

Speaker 4 (04:00):
We just need to check the serial numbers to make
sure you're using the same.

Speaker 1 (04:02):
Wet system killus.

Speaker 3 (04:06):
Wait, you're not gonna throw that one at me, are you.
I don't think I remember to talk about this yesterday.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
I meant to.

Speaker 3 (04:14):
The story is not one hundred percent accurate as of
this moment, because there have been updates. But the point is,
this is the This is DEI in action. This is
in New Orleans, a once great city. New Orleans is
a kind of city that even to this day, people
from there. You meet somebody from New Orleans, you asked

(04:36):
them where they went to high school. It's a totally
normal question. The world begins and ends in New Orleans.
Great food, great culture, great history. It's a wonderful place
that has been destroyed by racial politics.

Speaker 1 (04:55):
And white liberals.

Speaker 3 (04:57):
Think the combination of Mitchland and Reynagen that's the marriage
of where it all went wrong. So you had ten
inmates who escaped from a jail this past Friday, and
investigators believe and I don't know if there's been an
update on this today, but investigators believe that somebody inside

(05:20):
the sheriff's office might have aided them in getting out.
Can you the victims and the witnesses of these escaped inmates,
they've had to go into hiding because if this inmate
gets out and they have a chance to harm you
because you sent them to prison, that's what they're going

(05:43):
to do.

Speaker 1 (05:43):
That's what they've been dreaming of.

Speaker 3 (05:46):
I mean, this is a really really big deal in
it Again, you think as bad as you think our
federal government is, it is the local governments like this,
the racial politics like this that are absolutely destroying this country,
just destroying. The story from WWL.

Speaker 7 (06:04):
TV Wednesday, Jamar Robinson's family celebrated his birthday. Two days later,
they were in hiding after finding out that the man
convicted of his murder had escaped from prison.

Speaker 1 (06:18):
His get all out.

Speaker 8 (06:18):
Foundel was out of the city. We had to get
everyone out of the city. Didn't know what wid was gone,
what was gone?

Speaker 1 (06:25):
Crime devil was dady.

Speaker 7 (06:26):
Two of Robinson's family members spoke with us over the phone.
They asked not to be named for their safety. Robinson
and another man Byron Jackson were shot and killed on
Marty Grass. In twenty eighteen, Derreck Groves was arrested for
their murders. Late Friday mornings, someone they knew called the
family and told them that a group of inmates had
broken out of Orleans Justice Center. Groves was one of them.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
No one, no one until tell us anything. You know,
we had the work. We didn't know what was on
a hand, but we didn't.

Speaker 8 (06:56):
Know how Derrek Roles, so like, what this press of us?

Speaker 1 (07:01):
You think he was coming up for us? We didn't know.
They say.

Speaker 7 (07:04):
They went to a nearby police station and two officers
escorted them home. They grabbed what they could, got the
family's young kids, including Robinson's son, from school, then they left.
By that time, Groves had been out for hours.

Speaker 8 (07:18):
We just didn't look to do a dead part. And
I'm so angry with all these parents prison because he's late.

Speaker 9 (07:24):
When I look at the news, I see the boys
pulling on a door like this prison was just reasonly built,
and you mainta him what adults will get easy to
pull apart, and.

Speaker 7 (07:36):
This is a family that was already exhausted. Groves was
convicted of killing Robinson and Jackson in twenty nineteen, but
the jury wasn't unanimous and a Supreme Court ruling ended
up throwing out the verdict because of it. The next
trial in twenty twenty three was declared a mistrial. The
next one later that year ended with a deadlocked jury.
Then finally in October of last year, Groves was convicted again.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
His sentencing was set for July. It's just crazy.

Speaker 7 (08:07):
As we move off come up now with Grooves on
the run, Robinson's family is trying to figure out what
to do about their jobs and the kids' school. They're
planning to stay hidden well they wait for justice again.

Speaker 1 (08:22):
Listen to the Michael Berry Show podcast if you dare.

Speaker 3 (08:26):
This is one of the weirdest clips in the news
of late Hillary Clinton made news. I guess over the weekend,
I've seen the video. I wish you could share the
video with you, but we're not a video medium. And
she was criticizing Elon Musk and President Trump for wanting
to incentivize women to have babies as our country's population declines.

(08:54):
And then this is at the Newmark Civic Life series.
This bitter old woman who desperately wanted to be president.
She tolerated bills, she put up with every indignity, she
stayed the course, she hung around. She I mean, her
life was miserable. She's miserable, but she just wanted to

(09:15):
be president and Trump took it from her.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
Here's what she had to say.

Speaker 10 (09:20):
As I posted the other day, this very blatant effort
to basically send a message most exemplified by Vance and
Musk and others, that you know, what we really need
from you women are more children.

Speaker 1 (09:36):
And what that.

Speaker 10 (09:37):
Really means is you should go back to doing what
you were born to do, which is to produce more children.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
And they are.

Speaker 10 (09:46):
Talking about, you know, cash benefits for children the more
children you have. This has been tried by the way
in other countries and has not worked.

Speaker 11 (09:54):
Or medals if you.

Speaker 10 (09:55):
Have six children, while they're contemplating cutting medicaid, while they
have no interest in paid family leave or funding quality childcare,
they're cutting head start. I mean, you go down the
list of all the programs that support child rearing and

(10:16):
the care of children and create you know, some safety
net for women who are in the workforce, the formal workforce,
as well as you know, raising children. So this is
another performance about concerns they allegedly have for family life.
But if you had read the Heritage Foundation's Project twenty

(10:38):
twenty five, despite Trump saying he knew nothing about it.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
If you had read it, it's all in there. It's
all in there.

Speaker 10 (10:44):
Return to the family, the nuclear family, return to being
a Christian nation, return to you know, producing a lot
of children.

Speaker 1 (10:56):
Which is sort of odd.

Speaker 10 (10:57):
Because the people who produce the most children in our
country or immigrants, and they want to deport them.

Speaker 1 (11:02):
So none of this adds up.

Speaker 10 (11:04):
But you know, one of the reasons why our economy
did so much better than comparable advanced economies across the
world is because we actually had a replenishment because we
had a lot of immigrants, legally and undocumented who had
a you know, larger than normal by American standards.

Speaker 12 (11:25):
Family.

Speaker 8 (11:25):
So this is just.

Speaker 10 (11:27):
Another one of their you know, make America great again
by returning to the lifestyles and the economic arrangements of
not just the nineteen fifties. I mean, let's keep going
back as far as we can, and you know, see
what happens.

Speaker 3 (11:44):
And then she was asked, she's so bitter. She was
asked if she had any advice for the first female
president of the United States, and she again took the
moment to insult half the country. You know why Hillary
Clinton couldn't win because she hates people and that comes

(12:06):
through She's unlikable. Kamala is unlikable. We will have a
woman president, but it won't be a bitch. It won't
be a dark, evil, bitter, resentful soul like Kamala Harris
or Hillary Clinton.

Speaker 1 (12:22):
What advice do you have because they're a woman, because
they're awful.

Speaker 10 (12:28):
Well, first of all, don't be a handmaid into the patriarchy,
which kind of eliminates every woman on the other side
of the aisle except for very few.

Speaker 1 (12:51):
Yeah, there's a few.

Speaker 10 (12:54):
Look first, we have to get there, and it is,
you know, obviously so much harder than it should be. So,
you know, if a woman runs who I think would
be a good president, as I thought Kamala Harris would be,
and as I knew I would be, I will support
that woman.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
One of the funniest parts of the Hillary Clinton week
was she posted no one gives someone a four hundred
million dollar jet for free without expecting anything in return. Well,
the arbiter of honesty and above board business dealings in
politics remember the Clinton Foundation criticizing Cutter for offering the

(13:37):
US a luxury plane to be used as Air Force one.
She posted, no one gives someone a four hundred million
dollar jet for free without expecting anything in return.

Speaker 1 (13:50):
Be serious? Well, the internet is forever, and a.

Speaker 3 (13:55):
Fellow who posts on her named may's am on X replied
with this video of CNN's report on the Clinton Foundation.

Speaker 13 (14:02):
There's no question the Clinton Foundation has received tens of
millions of dollars from foreign governments. That includes Saudi Arabia,
which gave fourteen point five million dollars. Well, the foundation
says none of that came while Hillary Clinton was Secretary
of State. But you also have Kuwait donating between five
and ten million oman, the United Arab Emirates, Qatar all

(14:25):
donating between one and five million dollars over the years.
Even the Embassy of Algeria donated five hundred thousand dollars.
Is there a common thread?

Speaker 10 (14:35):
All?

Speaker 1 (14:36):
Of course?

Speaker 13 (14:36):
Our Middle Eastern countries with poor human rights records and
poor records when it comes to women's rights, and even
with private companies, there's smoke. Monsanto is a US based
global food giant that has been trying to increase its
worldwide business in the biotech food industry. It's donated between
one and five million to the Clinton Foundation, and while

(14:59):
she was secret Ontario State Secretary, Clinton made general statements
supporting biotech foods as the company was asking for government
help to open up new markets. What we have learned
is that the foundation said it did fail to disclose
a funding source while Missus Clinton was at the State Department.
That donation the five hundred thousand dollars from the government

(15:21):
of Algeria. The foundation called the lack of disclosure and error,
but again said there was no connection between the donations
and the policies of the Clinton State Department.

Speaker 3 (15:32):
While we're on the subject of the Clintons, let's take
a listen to this Beau Loudin video once posted by
President Trump on truth Social and I think he put
it up again this weekend.

Speaker 1 (15:45):
Not positive, but I think he put it up again
this weekend. John F. Kennedy Junior.

Speaker 11 (15:49):
He was declared the front runner for the New York
Senate seat back in nineteen ninety nine. Days later, his
plane crashed into the Atlantic Ocean and his rival Hillary
Clinton was elected. Senator Mary Mahoney was a Clinton White
House intern. She knew enough of the inner workings of
Bill's sexual advancements to be a star witness during the

(16:11):
Clinton impeachment trials.

Speaker 1 (16:13):
She was brutally executed out of Starbucks she was managing
in nineteen ninety seven.

Speaker 11 (16:18):
In nineteen ninety three, White House Council Vins Foster was
found dead in Fort Marcy Park, near DC. He supposedly
killed himself and among a lengthy list of potential balblay
the bullet was never found.

Speaker 1 (16:35):
Michael Berry Good.

Speaker 3 (16:41):
Quite a few of you have asked the dead why
I have not spoken on the issue of the South
African refugees who sought asylum in this country and were
granted it. It's fewer than fifty of them, but it
doesn't matter. I will speak to that now. First of all,
there is open, documented, recorded video and audio of South

(17:07):
African leaders, people in positions of power, leaders of parties
calling for the murder and slaughter of white people. I
also think it sends a strong message from Trump. You
know several times he's been asked, how does it look
for you to bring white people in this country as refugees?

(17:30):
This is what I like about Trump. It's the right
thing to do, and it's time to show people that
we're going to stop slapping white people around, We're going
to stop being ashamed of being white people. You know,
when I was mayor pro tennant city of Houston and
I was getting ready to take over as mayor of

(17:51):
pro tem, the white mayor Democrat called me to his
office and he said, hey, we need to have hispanic
gallon because it doesn't look good for the fourth largest city, Houston,
to have two white guys at the top of the
governance structure.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
And I said, if you do.

Speaker 3 (18:11):
That, I will walk out of here and hold a
press conference and I will declare war on you, and
you will regret it. And he chose to back down.
But imagine the feeling that white liberals have, the guilt
they have that they will bring harm among other white
people so they can show how guilt ridden they are.

(18:35):
You see that Joe Biden's, of Beto O'Rourkes, that Gavin Newsoms,
of Hillary Clinton's. They will all tell you that minorities
have it bad, and they're going to lift up the minority,
and they're going to repress the white guy to lift
up the minority. And that's very important and They're also
self loathing that they buy into this and they think
the minorities love them for that. Let's why it upset

(18:56):
them that minorities voted for Trump. How can you vote
for Trump? We're the ones who've been telling you your
victims all this long. We never denied your victimhood. We
extoll the virtues of your victimhood. How can you not
choose us to be the cecil roads for your for
your Rhodesia. How can you not choose us to be
the king of the down trident? You see, all of

(19:16):
it is designed to amass power over these poor victims.
I'm an okay white guy. I'm one of the good ones.
Remember Oprah wiy said, I'm one of the good ones.
So the American left claims there's not a genocide against
whites in South Africa because they want Donald Trump to
be a racist for bringing in the whites. This is

(19:37):
a South African member of parliament calling for the slaughter
of whites, including women and children.

Speaker 14 (20:05):
You know what.

Speaker 1 (20:15):
We hear that.

Speaker 11 (20:19):
We get anything.

Speaker 3 (20:22):
Former Undersecretary of State Richard Stingle was on MSNBC where
he called bringing in white refugees deeply and morally wrong.

Speaker 15 (20:33):
Because they're white, so deeply and morally wrongheaded and repulsive.

Speaker 1 (20:39):
These are the descendants.

Speaker 15 (20:40):
Of the people who created the most diabolical system of
white supremacy in human.

Speaker 1 (20:44):
History at Pritheid.

Speaker 15 (20:46):
They're not directly responsible for it, but it was a
system that actually moved black people off of the arable land,
so they inherited the land.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
That the black people had to give up. That was
called called forced removal.

Speaker 15 (21:00):
It's something called a Bantustan policy where they moved black
people out of the cities and farmlands into these remote
areas with non arable land. I mean, it was just
one of the most worst processes ever.

Speaker 1 (21:11):
But what has happened in this.

Speaker 15 (21:13):
Strange, bizarre world we're living in is that the Afrikaners
have become the darling of these right wing white supremacist
movements around the world that it's like the lost cause
for them.

Speaker 1 (21:24):
It's like the old Confederacy.

Speaker 15 (21:26):
They're held up as these white Christians were being dispossessed
of their land. It's like this is a modern replacement
theory in a country where, by the way, white people
make up seven percent of the population and own seventy
eight percent of the farmland.

Speaker 1 (21:41):
So it's actually there's no injustice here.

Speaker 15 (21:44):
As you mentioned, it's taking places away from refugees who
are really being crushed by authoritarian governments and military governments.
For these folks who have never had anything happen to them.
I mean, Trump amazingly called it a genocide, one of
the worst lies I've.

Speaker 1 (21:59):
Ever heard him say.

Speaker 15 (22:00):
There's just been a small handful of farmers that have
been killed over the past ten years. No land has
actually been expropriated, so it's just a forest and a
sham and a moral ugliness.

Speaker 3 (22:13):
Princeton professor of African American Studies Eddie Glaude was on
MSNBC and said, the great replacement theory is driving this.

Speaker 16 (22:23):
You know, I think it's important for us to understand
that the Trump administration is a lot of things, but
one thing it certainly is is a white nationalist project,
and oftentimes we don't want to describe it as such.
I'm not reducing it to it because there's greed, there's graft,
there's all sorts of things happening around it. But we
need to understand the way which great replacement theory is
driving this. There's a sense in which the immigration policy

(22:46):
is all about demographic shifts. There's a sense around the
assault on voter rights and civil rights, it's all about
who will have the decision making power.

Speaker 1 (22:53):
To determine who will run the country.

Speaker 9 (22:54):
And here this idea that the Republic must.

Speaker 17 (22:57):
Remain a white nation is evidenced in this move, which
is so explicit that it cannot be denied. And so
when we don't describe it for what it is, we've become,
in an ironic way, complicit in what they're doing.

Speaker 1 (23:10):
It's a white nationalist segendment, it seems.

Speaker 3 (23:11):
To CNN's Scott Jennings points out the hypocrisy of the
left not caring about millions of illegals flooding into our
country for years. Who suddenly care about fifty refugees coming
in from Africa who happened to be white.

Speaker 6 (23:27):
I don't know if they weigh one against the other
that way. I mean, I do think it's not alleged
discrimination that these people are facing in South Africa. I mean,
the law there absolutely allows their property to be confiscated.
They are subject to racial discrimination, some have been subject
to violence from some reports that I have read. I mean,
we're talking about fifty something people, and the people who
seem to be angriest about this today, had no problem

(23:49):
with twenty million coming here, some of the worst people
in the world coming here, including gang members and so
on and so forth. So I don't have a lot
of sympathy for the folks who are outraged today after
what happened to this country over the last several years,
over fifty something people who are clearly being discriminated against
in South Africa.

Speaker 3 (24:05):
The White House Deputy Deputy Chief of Staff, who have
really really been impressed with Stephen Miller, said, what's happening
in South Africa fits the textbook definition of why the
refugee program was crafted. Unlike people coming from Latin American
countries and many others where they're just coming here to
make more money, get better jobs, get more government benefits.

(24:26):
This is truly people who will be killed if they
don't leave the country.

Speaker 18 (24:31):
What's happening in South Africa fits the textbook definition of
why the refugee program was created. This is persecution based
on a protected characteristic, in this case race, So this
is race based persecution. The refugee program is not intended
as a solution for global poverty, and historically it's been
used that way, wherever there's global poverty or wherever there's
dysfunctional governments, then the US refugee program in comes in,

(24:55):
swoops people up, bring relocates them to America, and you
have multi generational problems that the given into the second
and third generation.

Speaker 1 (25:02):
You have endemic poverty, you.

Speaker 18 (25:04):
Have prime issues, you have integration issues. The US refuge
program in America has been a catastrophic failure. I mean,
if you look, for example, at the the Twits Cities area,
I mean just in terms of the markers of educational outcomes,
in terms of public safety, in terms of welfare use.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
I mean, it's been a complete.

Speaker 19 (25:24):
American's a nation that can be defined in a single word.

Speaker 1 (25:28):
I was going to put him number nine.

Speaker 15 (25:31):
Not only was it authentic frontier Jibberry expressed.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
The courage scene as the day to Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 3 (25:39):
I've said for years, imagine how much good you can
do in the world if you stop caring what they
think about you. Trump is h he has zero FS given.
Shall we say here? He is calling the media out
for not covering the genocide in South.

Speaker 5 (25:55):
Africa because they're being killed and we don't want to
see people be killed. Now, South Africa leadership is coming
to see me, I understand sometime next week, and you know,
we're supposed to have a guess a G twenty meeting
there or something, But we're having a G twenty meeting.

Speaker 1 (26:11):
I don't know how we can.

Speaker 5 (26:12):
Go unless that situation's taken care of. But it's a
genocide that's taking place that you people don't want to
write about. But it's a terrible thing that's taking place.
And farmers are being killed. They happen to be white.
But whether they're white or black makes no difference to me.
But white farmers are being brutally killed and their land

(26:33):
is being confiscated in South Africa, and the newspapers and
the media, television media doesn't.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
Even talk about it.

Speaker 5 (26:40):
If it were the other way around, they talk about it,
that would be the only story they talk about. And
I don't care who they are. I don't care about
their race, their color. I don't care about their height,
their weight, I don't care about anything.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
I just know that what's happening is terrible.

Speaker 5 (26:54):
To have people that live in South Africa they say
it's a terrible situation taking place.

Speaker 1 (26:58):
So we've essentially.

Speaker 5 (27:00):
Extended citizenship to those people to escape from that violence
and come here.

Speaker 3 (27:07):
So we're back on the issue of white people owing
black people. Either they owe them that, you know, black
people need to beat them up and they won't be punished.
Either white cops should be punished for George Floyd committing
a felony again and then overdosing, or then there's just

(27:28):
the raw power grab of give us money because we're black,
And that's a statement that is made in polite company nowadays.
Here is Congressman Summerly saying, look, reparations is not about slaves,
or you don't need to have ever been the descendant

(27:49):
of a slave.

Speaker 1 (27:50):
White people just need to give black people money, just period.
Right here. That's why I'm gonna say it right now.

Speaker 20 (27:54):
Exactly what does your resolution really aim for? Is it
that Black Americans of a certain economic level are they
being black arige targeted?

Speaker 1 (28:04):
Is it everyone?

Speaker 20 (28:05):
Basically, it doesn't matter as to what economic level.

Speaker 1 (28:07):
It's pretty much all black Americans.

Speaker 20 (28:08):
What about those individuals of any race that have a
lineage going back to slave in America, it doesn't matter.

Speaker 21 (28:14):
So to be very clear, whether or not a black American,
a black American, a black descendant of American Chattle slavery
were able to break into the middle class. They are
still and they were able to do that despite the harms,
despite the passing. Justice is done to them, so they
are not excluded from the reparation and the remedies they're in.

Speaker 1 (28:29):
When we think about who traces.

Speaker 21 (28:30):
Their lineage back, that is again a debate that is
used to try to silence the rest of this movement.
It's a distraction tactic because what we want to do
is instead of focusing on again what the system did,
who did it, and what the impact of it was,
we'd rather get bogged down and well, should they make
twenty five dollars an hour or should they be paid
below a living wage?

Speaker 15 (28:49):
Right?

Speaker 21 (28:49):
Should they had been educatedor if they're educated at that
this quint fum.

Speaker 1 (28:51):
No, they're black.

Speaker 21 (28:52):
If they are black and their descendants of slaves, then
they were directly in the lineage of harm. If they
are descendant of Jim Crow Jenkopoula seas in this country,
they're the direct descendants and current living recipients of that harm.
If they are living today, then we are still harmed
by inequtable funding schemes of public schools. We're still harmed
by being black or brown, or poor and living nearer
to environmental hazards all over this country. If you are

(29:13):
black in this country right now, you are still less
likely to be able to acquire a loan. The interest
rates are still higher for black folks who are attempting
to buy homes or go to school. We are still
discriminated because of our heir, because of our names. When
we go to get jobs.

Speaker 3 (29:25):
Then there is black democrat Ayana Presley. She's the cue ball,
the bald one. She again, you white people, you owe
black people money, and she's going to say it because
that gets her reelected.

Speaker 22 (29:38):
And discrimination against black people. We are in a moment
of anti blackness on steroids, and we refuse to be silent.
We will not back down in our pursuit of racial justice.
The antidote to anti blackness is to be pro black,
and we will do it unapologetically. The United States government
owes us a debt, and we need reparations now.

Speaker 3 (29:55):
The systemic racism of blacks toward whites today is so
widespread and so accepted. Here is the awful mayor of Chicago,
a city that's burning down and killing itself, a city
that has failed and bankrupt, talking about how generous black
people are and that's why he hires them.

Speaker 12 (30:17):
Them detractors that will push back on me and say,
you know, the only thing that the mayor talks about
is hiring the black people.

Speaker 1 (30:24):
Know what I'm saying is when.

Speaker 12 (30:25):
You hire our people, we always look out for everybody else.
We are the most generous people on the planet. I
don't know too many cultures that have play cousins. That's
how generous we are. We just make somebody a family member, right,
This is how we are. And so business and economic

(30:47):
neighborhood development. The deputy mayor is a black woman. Department
of Planning and Development, it's a black woman. Infrastructure Deputy
mayor is a black woman. She operations office. There is
a black man budget director, it's a black woman. Senior
advisor is a black man. And I'm laying that out

(31:09):
because when you ask how do we ensure.

Speaker 1 (31:12):
That our people get a chance to grow their business?

Speaker 3 (31:16):
I can't remember who remembered it. Maybe it was Romo
and maybe it was Jim, could have been Darrel, could
have been Chad. But this clip, which I'd completely forgotten
about from George Carlin about liberals liking to put labels
on things, and how it's dishonest and it's not useful.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
In fact, it's contrary to that.

Speaker 19 (31:38):
I also don't say African Americans. I find it cumbersome
and confusing. Which part of Africa are we talking about?

Speaker 1 (31:43):
Egypt?

Speaker 19 (31:44):
Egypt is in Africa, But Egyptians aren't black. They're like
the people in India. They're dark brown white people, but
they're Africans. So why wouldn't an Egyptian citizen who becomes
the I'm sorry, an Egyptian who becomes a US citizen
be called an African American.

Speaker 1 (31:57):
The same one apply to South Africa. I suppose a white.

Speaker 19 (31:59):
Racist from South Africa becomes an American citizen.

Speaker 1 (32:01):
Couldn't he call himself an African American if for no
other reason than just to bother black people?

Speaker 19 (32:11):
And what about a black person born in South Africa
who becomes an American citizen. Is he an African American
or is he a South African American? Or is he
simply a South African American African American.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
You know, it's just so much more tedious liberal labeling.

Speaker 19 (32:24):
Liberals should be taught that labels divide people, And I
think we could probably do with fewer labels, not more.

Speaker 3 (32:30):
And finally, let's go back three years. Ted Cruz, Senator
Ted Cruse from Texas is talking to a chief diversity
officer named Gina Abercrombie Winstonly and it emerges that being
a straight Christian white man.

Speaker 1 (32:52):
Was a disability.

Speaker 3 (32:55):
There might have been a time where it was harder
to get hired if you were a woman than a man.

Speaker 1 (32:59):
Not today.

Speaker 3 (33:00):
There might have been a time it was harder to
get hired if you were black than a white Not today,
quite the contrary. It might have been a time where
it was harder to get hired if you were gay.
Not today, quite the contrary. Today there is open discrimination
against straight white Christian men. That is a fact. Many

(33:20):
of you have experienced it. Listen to this exchange.

Speaker 1 (33:23):
It's nothing more than brazen discrimination.

Speaker 14 (33:26):
You were appointed in April twenty twenty one, and as
you extensively testified this morning, you introduced fundamental changes to
the State Department hiring practices. A senior State Department official
broadly distributed what I consider to be a very troubling email.
I have a copy of that email next to me.
Let me read from a part of the email. The

(33:46):
email says that hiring practices have developed inside the state Department,
so that and I'll quote that certain candidates could not
be hired because they have a disability. They are white men,
are straight white men, they are not of the quote
right religion. All of these ther gerbatim quotes.

Speaker 1 (34:07):
I've never seen that before.

Speaker 14 (34:09):
You've never seen the email before, so you didn't know
it had been said. I believe as a result of
your work, Are you aware these practices are happening at
the State's party soon?

Speaker 1 (34:19):
As right? I can't comment.

Speaker 14 (34:22):
So you're the chief diversity officer and you're arguing you
are certain discrimination is not happening at the state park.

Speaker 1 (34:27):
Is that rightness? Thank you and good night.
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