Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and load from
Michael Arry Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
Right that easy trust doc disease that everyone mixed up.
Speaker 3 (00:16):
You think my practologist used to be a photographer?
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Yeah, HEYOK, x Ray tell me to bend over and
say cheese.
Speaker 4 (00:25):
While we didn't know that much about Joe Biden's health,
we know even less about Donald Trump's health. He was
completely untransparent during the twenty twenty three twenty twenty four campaign.
Speaker 1 (00:36):
He has not been transparent that.
Speaker 5 (00:38):
We're in the midst of a presidential cover up of
Donald Trump's mental and physical condition, and it's his doctors
are part of the cover up under his orders.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
That much we know that much his facts, but it
is essential.
Speaker 5 (00:51):
That Republicans especially and I've talked to some Republicans on
the heel, and indeed there are Republicans in the seven
who are furious, concerned, worried about the president and it's
mental health, physical health, and they too want some disclosure
of what the real facts are here. But it's time
for them to step up and demand because we've never
had a presidential crisis of leadership such as this. We
(01:13):
don't know what damage may have been done we don't
know the test to his vital signs. We need full
disclosure and immediately the redal possibility that this is a
time that the twenty fifth Amendment needs to be considered.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
This is a cover up.
Speaker 5 (01:29):
It is a cover up clearly directed by the President
of the United States, whose closest aids in the North
Inn White House and his family.
Speaker 1 (01:35):
There are people in the National.
Speaker 5 (01:37):
Security bureaucracy who are terribly worried about what is going
on in terms of America's adversaries and particularly the Russians
and the Chinese taking advantage of this situation.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
It's ongoing.
Speaker 5 (01:48):
I believe Director Ray is very very the FBI is
very concerned about the President's health, mental and physical, and
how it is undermining this lack.
Speaker 1 (01:57):
Of disclosure the national security interests. This heart disease deserts.
You say he does not have heart disease.
Speaker 6 (02:04):
Does yet you seen him before that shows this cornary.
Speaker 1 (02:08):
But yes, I think so.
Speaker 5 (02:10):
Technically he has non clinical athrostratic cornary h corniathroscorosis.
Speaker 6 (02:16):
Some of this maybe, Samantha Sanderson, I mean, you've heard
these terms before.
Speaker 7 (02:19):
Coronary athoscrosis, coronary.
Speaker 1 (02:22):
Art disease, heart disease. People use these terms interchangeably, and
you know, I think, what what? The test has shown
that he does have a.
Speaker 6 (02:30):
Mild form common form of heart disease.
Speaker 2 (02:32):
Accountability is critical. Accountability is critical. Good parenting is about accountability.
Imposing accountability is very difficult. Being a good coach is
about accountability. If you watch Nick Saban in interviews and speeches,
(02:56):
you will notice that he talks a lot about accountability.
Every person being responsible for their role on every play,
and then you don't need to worry about the scoreboard.
Speaker 1 (03:10):
If you do that, you'll win. It's about execution.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
It's about taking accountability or your own failures, taking accountability
for your job. And when you don't do that, the
government lacks accountability. When nobody can be fired, there is
no accountability when even at private companies, people who show
up late, people who are drunk, people who cause problems
(03:38):
when they can't be fired, or when they're fired and
they sue and they win, then you don't have accountability
in the system. Bad people, under performers, lazy people. They
don't want accountability because accountability will find them wanting, lacking, worthless.
They want a system where there is no accountability. It's
(04:00):
important to understand. So let's hold podcaster and neuroscientist Sam Harris,
a devout Democrat and Biden supporter, accountable for this.
Speaker 6 (04:12):
Listen carefully, and at that point, Hunter Biden literally could
have had the corpses of children in his basement. I
would not have cared. Right, It's like there's nothing. First
of all, it's Hunter Biden, rights. It's like, it's not
Joe Biden. But even if Joe, like even whatever scope
of Joe Biden's corruption is like if you if we
could just go down that rabbit hole endlessly and understand
(04:35):
that he's getting kickbacks from Hunter and Biden's deals in
Ukraine or whatever else, right, or China, it is infinitesimal
compared to the corruption we know Trump is involved in.
It's like it's like it's like a firefly to the sun, right,
I mean, like either there's just it doesn't even it
doesn't even stack up against Trump University. Right. Trump University
(04:56):
as a story is worse than anything that being in
Hunter Biden's laptop in my view, right now, that's not
that doesn't answer the people who say it's still completely
unfair to not have looked at the laptop in a
timely way, and to have shut down the you know,
the New York Post's Twitter account like that.
Speaker 1 (05:14):
That's just a conspiracy.
Speaker 6 (05:15):
That's a left wing conspiracy to deny the presidency to
Donald Trump. Absolutely, it was absolutely right, but I think
it was warranted.
Speaker 2 (05:26):
So hunter Biden could have corpses of kids in his basement.
Pretty gruesome statement, all right, And I would now I
would still support him. This was this was while they
were in the White House. But now he says I
fell for their claims. They lied to me. Well, why
(05:48):
wouldn't they. You've made it clear you were open to
being lied to.
Speaker 6 (05:52):
The separation between the two parts of the job, you know,
the decision making component of the job and the and
the communication slash slash persuasion component of the job. Yes,
the decision making component of the job is important. And
I think as and as I said when I was
talking to Jake and as I said, you know, I
think some years before, when we were all talking about
(06:13):
being Biden being compromised, it's it's at least intelligible to say, Okay,
he's not a good communicator.
Speaker 1 (06:20):
He was never a good communicator.
Speaker 6 (06:21):
He's only getting worse, right, you can't reliably stick him
in front of a microphone and trust that something good
is going to come out of his mouth. But the
truth is that when you sit with him and deliberate
about the war, your war in Ukraine, or anything else,
he is composmentus. He is he clearly understands the issue
as well as he ever did.
Speaker 1 (06:42):
He just doesn't.
Speaker 6 (06:43):
He's just not a fluid speaker, and he's and less
and less fluid by the hour. Right, that is a
neurologically speaking, that is an intelligible claim to make about
a person.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
That's what I assumed was true.
Speaker 6 (06:54):
That because because of how effective this cover up was,
I no longer I no longer believe that.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
To have been true.
Speaker 6 (07:02):
Right, I think I think it's it's quite possible that
he was just just Wally checked out to a degree
that I did not suspect at the time.
Speaker 4 (07:09):
King Ding and this other guy, Michael Barry on.
Speaker 2 (07:16):
The memory of Olivia Newton John, who didn't love Olivia
Newton John. If that's you don't say anything, my goodness,
I'd be ashamed. I wouldn't tell us all. Jake Tapper's
co author of Original Sin, the book Alex Thompson was
on MSNBC.
Speaker 1 (07:37):
Where he decided.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
This is, this is they have a professional strategy message strategy,
strategy messaging going on, strategic messaging going on. And what
they're doing is they have an interview and then they
sit down with the tape and they go, all right,
here's what you need to flip the script. You need
to change this. All right, So now we have flipped
(07:59):
the focus from the Biden cover up, which is the
basis of the book, to President Trump.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
But wait, your book is about the Biden cover up.
Speaker 2 (08:10):
Why are you trying to divert us away from the
thing that your co author, Jake Tapper was covering up
as well, and now trying to turn the attention to Trump.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
I'll tell you I.
Speaker 2 (08:25):
Because for the interest in the book came from people
who wanted to know, really more rubbernecking. They wanted to
see why did the White House crash? So even Democrats
wanted to know, but and Republicans were interested. But Republicans
(08:46):
kind of me the whole thing because their point was,
you were involved in it. I don't want to know
the details. I found that to be interesting, but that's
what happened. Well, now they want to go back and
hang out at the club with all their buddies, and
all their buddies are going. Now, you're hurting the Democrats.
So in order to get back in good with their
(09:07):
running buddies, they've got to flip the coverage to Trump,
because the point is you're distracting from us trashing Trump.
You're talking about how bad the last four years are,
which is giving Trump the leeway to do all these
things and undo the horrible things that were done the
last four years.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
You need to stop. And that's what he shows right here.
Speaker 8 (09:29):
If you take the lessons learned from the book, both
about where the country is on having elder presidents and
more importantly, where the media is. Is there a double
standard in which in the way the media covered Joe
Biden's health versus Donald Trump's health during the campaign and
certainly now, is there a double standard with the way
(09:51):
we are covering it? I mean, are you out there
also investigating and reporting about Trump's health in the same
rigor that you did this book.
Speaker 4 (09:58):
I'm so glad you asked this question, because while we
didn't know that much about Joe Biden's helth, we know
even less about Donald Trump's health. He was completely untransparent
during the twenty twenty three twenty twenty four campaign. He
has not been transparent since, and there is no mechanism
forcing him or any future president to being transparent by
(10:20):
their health. He could be on anything. We really have
no idea, So I think it's like a really vital question.
I will say that, you know, in twenty twenty three
I wrote an entire piece about how Donald Trump had
not been transparent.
Speaker 1 (10:37):
About any of his health.
Speaker 4 (10:39):
Yeah, the last like month or two, I admittedly have
been busy with this book, so I have not returned
to the subject.
Speaker 1 (10:48):
But I think it's completely fair.
Speaker 4 (10:50):
Donald Trump was older on his inauguration day and Joe
Biden was on his Donald Trump's health is completely fair game,
and there should be like incredibly investigation of reporting onto
how it's affecting his job as president.
Speaker 2 (11:04):
Wait, you can't say that because there is no suggestion
that it has in any way, shape or form that
it is anything less than perfect.
Speaker 1 (11:15):
What you're doing is attacking the age issue. John F.
Speaker 2 (11:20):
Kennedy suffered so many I think it was Addison's disease.
Speaker 4 (11:25):
He had.
Speaker 2 (11:26):
His back pain was excruciating. There are tales of him
not being able to stand up, and he wasn't. I mean,
he was in his mid forties. This was a guy
whose health dramatically affected his ability to be president, who
did not have the age problem, whereas Trump is by
(11:49):
all accounts very very healthy. But they got to get
him out of there. They had to get him out
of the White House. So they staged a coup with
an election that was stolen with mail in votes, and
in order to ensure people didn't show up and vote,
because that makes it harder to vote, we had the
(12:11):
COVID push and the lockdowns, the masks. The masks were
the reminder we're in an epidemic. This is the Spanish
Flu of nineteen eighteen.
Speaker 1 (12:20):
We're all going to die. You got to wear the mask.
Speaker 2 (12:24):
Fauci later admitted the mask doesn't work, nothing but a hassle.
The reason everybody had to wear the mask is we
had to remind people we were in a lockdown, and
people are more comfortable in the lockdown because there you
are in your beekeeper outfit. It's frightening, it's post apocalyptic,
(12:47):
which was exactly what they were trying to accomplish exactly.
And then over the weekend we had the Saint George Floyd.
We'll talk about that in the next segment. We had
you know, the Saint George Floyd, which was we needed something.
And this is where you feel bad because Black people
have to vote Democrat in percentages of well over ninety percent.
(13:10):
But more importantly, they have to vote. The over ninety
percent is doable. It's getting them fired up about going
out to vote, especially when there's not the first black
candidate ever running. They never bought that Kamala was a
black candidate.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
They never bought that she was one of them.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
They didn't buy in the way they did for Obama
by November, and that hurt her. She needed It's not
just a percentage of Blacks that vote, it's how many vote.
You can win one hundred percent of blacks, but if
turnout is down thirty three percent, you got a real
problem on your hands. So in order to fire up
(13:52):
votes voters in twenty twenty, the candidate who was polling
the best, an original sin actually does a good job
of pointing this out. Part of the reason Joe Biden
was chosen in twenty twenty was he did the best
with black candidates.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
Kamala dropped out.
Speaker 2 (14:07):
You recall before Iowa, she didn't poll well with blacks,
women or anyone else. Bootigig didn't poll well with blacks
because the Black church is mostly against homos, more against
homos than anyone else. They'll speak about it. White church
is won't. Klobuchar has the Hillary Clinton problem. She's clearly
(14:28):
an unlikable woman and people don't like her and therefore
won't vote for her.
Speaker 1 (14:34):
Did I just repeat myself on mom?
Speaker 2 (14:36):
I said she's clearly an unlikable woman and people don't
like her and won't. Okay, I repeated that, But the
polling showed that Biden could turn out the black vote. Well, uh,
he comes in I think fifth in Iowa, I think
fourth in New Hampshire, and then South Carolina is the
spot and Cliverton turned out the vote legally, illegally, ethically
(15:00):
or who knows. But one of the big things they
had to have to dislodge Trump was they had to
have black turnout and Blacks had to feel they were
under attack.
Speaker 1 (15:11):
So enter Saint George Floyd.
Speaker 4 (15:13):
Five years ago this ride Southern Fried to Michael Barry
Shoe again.
Speaker 9 (15:19):
Thank you, George Floyd for sacrificing your life for justice.
For being there to call out to your mom. How
heartbreaking was that call out for your mom? I can't
breathe because of you, and because of thousands millions of
people around the.
Speaker 5 (15:38):
World who came out for justice.
Speaker 9 (15:42):
Your name will always be synonymous.
Speaker 3 (15:45):
Who do you believe when it comes to civil rights
and police accountability? Mitch McConnell or the lawyer for the
families of Floyd Taylor, George Taylor, George Floyd and Briona Taylor.
Speaker 10 (16:02):
For most of the day Sunday, as you mentioned, the
protests were peaceful, but by night things took a turn,
with businesses badly damaged, fire sets and please say they've
made dozens of arrests.
Speaker 11 (16:16):
The hen of.
Speaker 1 (16:19):
Oh.
Speaker 12 (16:24):
Regardless of the outcome of this trial, regardless of the
decision made by the jury, there is one true reality,
which is that George Floyd was killed at the hands
of police.
Speaker 13 (16:37):
A tension between cops and demonstrators tonight exploding onto Manhattan streets.
There was pushing, There was screaming and faces, some dragged
away in handcuffs. Police vehicles were graffitied fully square was tagged.
Traffic in front of the Criminal Courthouse blocked for.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
Hour, and shall from the.
Speaker 14 (17:16):
Show, but even Doctor King's assassination did not have the
worldwide impact George Floyd's death.
Speaker 15 (17:30):
Pattern of destruction and unrest also affecting businesses and people
living in Midtown that includes Macy's Herald Square. Looters smashed
their way into the store, they set fires, and now
we're hearing at least two hundred people were arrested.
Speaker 16 (17:53):
Loots stormed into Lower Manhattan last night. They destroyed store
windows and soho and lit fires during the another night,
a violent protest.
Speaker 2 (18:21):
Oh yes, for George Floyd's death to galvanize the nation,
we had to make George Floyd a saint, just like
everybody else. The problem was understanding that he was not
a saint. Required revealing the truth, which is how he
(18:47):
lived his life as a felon, as a violent person,
as an absentee baby daddy, as a prison inmate, as
a violent person, as a guy who overdosed on drugs,
which he did a few days before this and was
(19:11):
hospitalized from the effects of fentanyl. The quickened breathing, the
short breaths, the fear that he's dying because he can't
get a breath. In fact, interestingly, there's another stop all
(19:32):
of it on bodycam of an officer I don't know,
about a month before that, I believe.
Speaker 1 (19:39):
And when the.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
Officer pulls up on him, he says, officer, please don't
shoot me.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
Please don't shoot me. Don't shoot me, officer, my mama
just died. Please don't shoot me. And the officer says,
what are you doing.
Speaker 2 (19:50):
I'm not gonna shoot you. Please don't shoot me. When
you look at the bodycam footage, you see that he's
just put a pill into his mouth. All of this
comes out. There's a film about what's the film on Minneapolis.
Speaker 1 (20:06):
The reporter there did it. Her husband was a cop.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
She's a reporter, and she did this film Fall of
Minneapolis something like that.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
Go watch it.
Speaker 2 (20:13):
It's fantastic. But there it is. There he's put the
pill in his mouth because he has to hide it.
When he puts a pill in his mouth and ends
up sending him to the hospital, so he almost dies
on an overdose then, and he says, don't shoot me.
My mom had just died. His mom died years ago.
He says, I was shot by a cop before. That's
(20:34):
also not true. But hey, we're not getting to the
integrity of George flood here. Why would that matter because
if you actually watched the footage in Minneapolis of him
being arrested in the commission of a crime another felony,
A fellon committing another felony, you will see that. When
(20:54):
they show up, he says, don't shoot me. My mom died.
Don't shoot me again. Why do we keep saying that
you've never been shot and your mom didn't just die.
But then they put the cuffs on him because they're
running his background and they've got a hit. They put
him in the back seat of the car and he says,
I can't breathe, I can't breathe. Well, for once, I
(21:18):
don't think he's lying. I think he can't breathe. Fentanyl
has that effect on you. I think his heart felt
like it was gonna explode because he downed his pills
too fast to keep the cop from see him, because
he doesn't want to go back to prison. He's in
the back seat when they say what he keeps saying,
I can't breathe, I can't breathe. Well, they don't know
(21:41):
that he has taken these pills, and most of you
don't know because you don't know because the toxicology report
was never released. Part of the post mortem by the
medical examiner is to do a toxicology report because it's
kind of important to know what drugs somebody has in
(22:03):
their system when they die under these circumstances.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
But the fix was in.
Speaker 2 (22:09):
The story was told, and hey, I'm real sorry, Chauven
you got to go to prison for all this. But
we had to fire the black people up, and this
was how we chose to do it. The w NBA
took a moment to honor George Floyd this weekend.
Speaker 11 (22:27):
Thank you guys for taking a minute to honor the
life of George Floyd.
Speaker 1 (22:31):
George was a father, a brother.
Speaker 11 (22:33):
And his son, and his life, like every life held meaning,
his death exposed the holes that are still in our
justice in criminal institutions today, and his five year anniversary
reminds us that everyone's continue the fight against criminal, racial,
and social injustices.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
Yes, we cannot stay.
Speaker 11 (23:00):
Every life deserves respect in ditity.
Speaker 1 (23:03):
Thank you.
Speaker 2 (23:06):
I think George Floyd, his life has been imbued with
way more than basic respect and dignity. I think it
makes a mockery of common sense. I think it's shameful
and sad. I think that this nation was paralyzed. You know,
(23:27):
I saw a report over the weekend of black deaths
per one hundred thousand people, and it went from our
per thousand people. It went from under eighteen when Trump
began to when he left office twenty twenty. When George
Floyd situation happens, cop stopped pulling black people over because
(23:50):
if the black person started fighting you, you can't win.
They stopped policing in black neighborhoods. That number went up
into the thirties. The white numbers didn't weren't change. The
number of Black people who have died because of the
George Floyd hoax and police not policing and black folks
running among black show it's tragic, but nobody wants to
(24:11):
talk about it. Jill Robertson passed over ken the age
of seventy nine. American professional hunter, businessman, founder of the
Duck Commander Company, and, of course, reality television star on
the Popper popular television series Duck Dynasty. He was also
(24:32):
featured on the television show Duck Commander, a hunting program
on the Outdoor Channel. He served as patriarch of the
Duck Dynasty Robertson family. He attended Louisiana Tech University, where,
of course, he played football quarterback. In fact, it was
him versus Terry Bradshaw. He received a master's degree in
(24:55):
education and spent several years teaching prior to founding Duck Commander,
a hunting equipment company. Robertson was a devout Christian, a
member of an elder at the White's Ferry Road Church
of Christ.
Speaker 1 (25:13):
In West Monroe, Louisiana.
Speaker 2 (25:15):
Let me fix that, the White's Ferry Road Church of
Christ in West Monroe, Louisiana, and was outspoken about his beliefs.
He had various personal problems in his twenties which he
was open about, including excessive alcohol drinking, causing a separation
in his marriage for a period, and he credited a
(25:36):
subsequent religious awakening for his having been able to overcome
his problems. He once said the prayer at the start
of a NASCAR event.
Speaker 7 (25:47):
We got here via Bibles and guns. I'm fixed a
prey to the one who made that possible.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
Father, Thank you for founding our nation.
Speaker 7 (26:00):
I pray Father that we don't forget who brought us
you our faith in the blood of Jesus and his resurrection.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
Help us, Father, to get back to that.
Speaker 7 (26:12):
Help us, Dear God, understand that the men and women
on my right, of the US military, on my right
and on my left, our faith in you and the
US Military is the reason we're still here. I pray, Father,
we put a Jesus man in the White House. Help
us do that, and help us all to repent, to
(26:35):
do what's right, to love you more, and to love
each other.
Speaker 1 (26:39):
In the name of Jesus. I pray abien.
Speaker 2 (26:43):
When I see people speak at rallies to endorse or
promote or introduce a candidate or an officeholder, I often
feel bad for him because what happens is, you know,
a month out, they know they're going to introduce President Trump,
so they get very excited. They tell everybody, and everybody's
(27:07):
patting them on the back. And then on Saturday afternoon,
they sit down two weeks away, they got to put
something down, and their wife gives them some advice, and
their friend gives them some advice, and before you know it,
it's going to be ten minutes. The introduction is going
to be ten minutes long. And that makes all the
(27:29):
sense in the world. When you're in the air conditioning
at your house and you get the TV on in
the background, and your wife brings you some tea and cookies,
and you're having a good time. And what's ten minutes,
what's twenty It's a leisurely Saturday afternoon. Then you get
to the event, and the ten minutes of red remarks,
(27:54):
by the time you deliver them is going to be
fifteen to twenty minutes. That's just the way. Don't give speeches.
Don't understand this. And guess what sixty seconds was too long.
Nobody came for you. They don't know who you are.
They're here for the person you're introducing, and you're like
the guy standing in front of the buffet table. You
(28:17):
are the only thing between them and what they came
here for. They got their ticket, they took off time,
they got to the venue, they parked, they found to
their seat, they found their seat or their spot, and
they have waited for hours and now the time is now.
(28:38):
The event has started, and what they want you to
do is sit down, and you get up and you
go on and on and on, and it seemed like
such a good idea. Phil Robertson in twenty twenty gave
a fifteen second introduction.
Speaker 1 (29:00):
He brief be seated. I got it down to this.
Speaker 7 (29:07):
If you're pro God and pro America and pro Good
and pro Duck Hutton, that's all I want.
Speaker 1 (29:18):
And he walked up. He didn't drop the mic because
the mic was a fixed but he might as well.
That's how you do it. I mean, it's as simple
as that. That is how you do it.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
And I will say, having spoken at a lot of
events and attended a lot of events, I don't anymore,
but I used to. I do occasionally now I see
the same problems pop up women playing events just a fact.
Speaker 1 (29:45):
Men don't do it.
Speaker 2 (29:46):
In fact, if it was left to men, you wouldn't
have local Republican parties. You wouldn't have coffees and tea's
or candidates.
Speaker 1 (29:58):
That's how you k do. Women put them on. They
called them coffees and teas.
Speaker 2 (30:02):
You wouldn't have, you know, cake and cupcakes or cupcakes
and coffee with the candidate.
Speaker 1 (30:07):
None of that.
Speaker 2 (30:09):
Men won't do that. You have to have women do it.
They'll organize it, execute it. It'll be mostly women there.
Some almost dragged their husbands. And so it comes time
for the big annual event, the party event, the corporate event,
the organization's event, and these women are gathering and God
(30:31):
bless them.
Speaker 1 (30:32):
My wife decorated.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
Our house in Americana this weekend, and there was honor
on one wall, and memorial on another, and remember on another,
and flags everywhere and all the story. And she spent
all day getting ready for that. And I spent all
(30:54):
day setting up my home studio because I had bought
a bunch of new equipment. I wanted to get it
all sink in and all that sort of stuff. And
I could watch her out the window in the backyard
setting all this up for everybody to come over and
do this. And I thought to myself, if this was
left to me, nothing would be done. I go see
my dad yesterday. It's a Memorial Day, and you go.
Speaker 1 (31:16):
Down to.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
The big hall where they have it's like a living room,
but it's.
Speaker 1 (31:24):
Where they watch movies.
Speaker 2 (31:25):
It's where they have They were having patriotic songs yesterday.
Yesterday's cultural and Richmond was patriotic songs. And you walk
in there and there's American flags on everything. And you know,
my entire life, I've thought to myself, all that stuff
is silly, the bunting and all that.
Speaker 1 (31:41):
But it creates a festive occasion.
Speaker 2 (31:45):
It does, you know, psychologically trigger you. You know, things
don't look like they normally do. Today is dressed up.
Whether it's inauguration or the church annual Easter.
Speaker 1 (31:56):
It doesn't matter. Women do that. Men will not be involved.
They just won't.
Speaker 2 (32:02):
If it was left to us, there would never be
any bunting, there would never.
Speaker 1 (32:07):
Be any fresh flowers. We just show up. That's just
how we are.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
So we've established without women getting their feelings hurt, that
is the women.
Speaker 1 (32:16):
Running the event. Problem with the event is there's all
these things.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
That they try to stick into the agenda when they
came for the speaker, and that's what drags these hells
Speaker 1 (32:29):
Had us a little fortuity, thank you, and good night