Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and load. Michael
Very Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
There is no denying that the Russians interfered in the election. Right,
whether or not they had willing or unwitting help from
the Trump team, they interfered, and they did so to
help him and hurt me.
Speaker 3 (00:29):
The implications of this are frankly nothing short of historic.
Over one hundred documents that we released on Friday really
detail and provide evidence of how this treason is conspiracy
was directed by President Obama just weeks before he was
due to leave office, after President Trump had already gotten elected.
(00:52):
This is not a Democrat or Republican issue. This is
an issue that is so serious it should concern every
single American. Creating this piece of manufactured intelligence that claims
that Russia had helped Donald Trump get elected contradicted every
other assessment that had been made previously in the months leading.
Speaker 4 (01:11):
Up to the election that.
Speaker 3 (01:12):
Said exactly the opposite, that Russia neither had neither the
intent nor the capability to try to quote unquote hack
the United States election for the presidency of the United States.
Speaker 5 (01:23):
If we look at that, for those vapors, they have
a stone cult and it was President Obama. From what
Chelsea told me, She's got thousands of additional documents. Probably
so President Obama. It was his concept, his idea, but
he also got it from crookt Hillary Clinton was a
(01:44):
three dollar a.
Speaker 6 (01:45):
James Cooney never believed that Trump would pull the trigger
on prosecuting him.
Speaker 4 (01:52):
He never believed.
Speaker 6 (01:55):
I think he believed that Trump would prevent Department of
Justice from putting the effort into investigating him, cobbling together
the case and marching it down and presenting it. Because
(02:16):
for the people in the Georgetown salons, for the people
who make the track from the White House to Congress,
to the media to the corporate boardrooms, one thing you
don't do is anything considered beneath your class. You don't
(02:37):
do that. There's a certain dignity, there's a certain expectation.
It's like small town royalty. They're just there's certain things
you do. You don't marry into that family over there,
you don't show up at that event. You only show
up at this event. There's certain things you do. And
(02:59):
even though oh, what they did to Trump was unprecedented,
they believed that because in Trump one point zero, he
would not have prosecuted them. Trump's come a long way
in public life. Trump was a guy who liked to
be liked, and he was liked. He was very popular.
(03:24):
The Trump before twenty fifteen is a very different Trump
than you know today. That's why he has so many
of these friendships in sports with people like herschel Walker.
That goes back to the generals, That goes back to
the usfl immedia, in movies, in music, in politics. He
(03:46):
knew all these people. He knew everyone. That's why they
can't make the Epstein things stick because he sent him
a birthday card.
Speaker 4 (03:56):
He sent everybody a birthday card.
Speaker 6 (03:58):
He was friends with everybody, the publishers of every major magazine,
the anchors of every major television show.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
He would go on Saturday Night Live.
Speaker 6 (04:07):
Tell me who goes on Saturday Night Live today, who's
not a musician or a movie star or an athlete.
Doesn't happen. This guy was a bon vivant. He was
a society man. He was beloved. Nobody knew his politics,
nobody cared. So when he came into the White House
(04:31):
with the support of what the left called the Hillbillies
and rednecks, backwoods people, angry people, racist people, he was
very eager to prove he could be a real president.
He was very eager to prove that even though he'd
never been elected anything before, he could do this job.
(04:54):
Take him seriously, and it was like some guy that
is being pulled out on the court to play for
the Lakers or the Knicks or the Rockets, and he
wants to show that, Well, y'all don't know what I
can actually play. And so he played by the rules.
He brought in the RNC people, he brought in Lindsey Graham,
(05:17):
he brought in Mitch McConnell, he brought in the Democrats.
He tried to reason with him, He tried. He tried
to be a guy. He wanted to go down in
history as a guy who accomplished good things and worked
with people and could behave. You know, he could dress
up and put on the black tide, show up and behave.
Speaker 4 (05:39):
He could be like Obama. He could be proper.
Speaker 6 (05:43):
But what he came to understand was that's not what
they want. They will destroy you, and they just about did.
And it kind of felt like Liam Neeson telling the
the guys who had his daughter, I have a set
(06:03):
of special skills and I'm going to come and get you,
and I am here to tell you. As long as
him going to get them is in the prosecution of crimes,
I am all for it, full throttle. It should be
obvious that you are as well. But a number of
(06:26):
people on our side, and not on the Democrats side,
a number of people on our side are uncomfortable. There
is a discomfort with things that are unpleasant.
Speaker 4 (06:39):
Let's just move on. You can't just move on.
Speaker 6 (06:44):
This is the mindset that Daniel Penny did not have
when he stops Jordan Neely from harassing all the people
on the bus and had to choke him out. This
is the kind of mindset that allows the guy in
North Carolina to get up and stab the Ukrainian refugee
in the neck and have been on the streets before that.
(07:06):
This is the kind of mindset of Michelle Obama's chief
of staff, who's the head of the school district in Iowa,
where we now find out the superintendent is an illegal.
Speaker 4 (07:20):
Alien, had a gun, he's not allowed to have.
Speaker 6 (07:22):
A knife, Cash committed other crimes, lied about his resume,
and they're defending, well, let's have radical let's have radical subvery.
We have to enforce the law we have to impose justice.
So Jim Comey never believed that Donald Trump, that Trump's
Department of Justice would prosecute him, And so in the
(07:49):
back of his mind he had to know. He knew,
he knew better than anyone that he had committed crimes.
He knew that he was living a lie. We're talking
about the Jusse Smollett man ty Tao. This guy knew
he was living a lot. Jeffrey Epstein for that matter.
(08:15):
But the hope was never No one wants to bring
down the FBI director. He's too big to fail. But
the moment they prosecuted Trump was the moment all deals
were off the table. By all accounts, Nixon should have
been prosecuted. Most people do agree with that Nixon could
(08:39):
have been, maybe should have been, not for anything he did,
but for the things he covered up and the way
he did. By the way, what is forgotten in all
of that is that Erlickman went to prison and Haldeman
went to prison. They took the fall. I think that's wrong.
(09:01):
They simply did what they were told. They didn't dream
the stuff up. I think I don't think John Mitchell
went to prison. I think John Deane went to prison
for a year, and lord knows, we've had to hear
about it for fifty But there were people around who
all went to prison, but not Richard Nixon, because the
(09:25):
idea is, we don't want to criminalize being the president.
The president is a is on a pedestal these people,
so you just sort of assume, almost like a diplomatic community,
that they'll never be prosecuted. And then they went after Trump,
(09:45):
and they went after him in the most vicious way.
And I think that's the moment he said, you.
Speaker 7 (09:51):
Know what, the.
Speaker 6 (09:57):
Rules by which we've been conducting business forever have been
thrown out, and I am going to make sure that.
Speaker 4 (10:08):
Justice is done.
Speaker 6 (10:09):
So here is Jim Comey on CNN this past July
bragging that Trump's never been able to get him.
Speaker 8 (10:17):
I'm still considered a villain in Maga world. I hope
I said that correctly. Although I've offended enough people in
Maga world it doesn't matter at this point. I'm not
sure exactly why that is. I often joke I'm the
relationship that Trump can't get over. Wakes up in the
middle of the night thinking about me and how I'm living.
Speaker 4 (10:35):
My best life.
Speaker 8 (10:36):
I think it had some combination of I really have
had a happy, productive life since then, and then I
spoke out about him and that despite their absolute best efforts,
they were never able to get me.
Speaker 4 (10:52):
Well, would you like to say that now?
Speaker 6 (10:55):
In July of twenty twenty three, he told Jim Pisaki,
who was press secretary for I guess she was technically
both Obama and Biden.
Speaker 4 (11:06):
She was an overlap. He told her that the people
who walked the.
Speaker 6 (11:12):
Grounds of the Capitol on January sixth should be hunted
down and made to pay, even for a misdemeanor.
Speaker 9 (11:25):
Do you agree with the strategy of focusing on the
oath keepers and focusing on prosecuting that group.
Speaker 4 (11:31):
Of individuals first. In order for it to be a deterrent, you've.
Speaker 8 (11:36):
Got to throw the net wide, get all of them,
both the organized groups, crowd boys, oathkeepers, but find everybody
who went into that building. Find them all again. Not
because of my concern that those people committed a misdemeanor,
they're going to go into the community and reoffend. The
message has to be sent of zero tolerance. We will
(11:56):
find everyone and punish everyone who went in there that
no one does it again. We will hunt you to
the end of the earth, even for a misdemeanor, and
make you pay for that. To send that message.
Speaker 6 (12:08):
Hunting people for a misdemeanor, not a felony, a misdemeanor.
That is that language is very loaded. It tells you
a lot about his mindset. Here he is June of
(12:30):
last year on MSNBC, also with Jinn Posaki, telling her
how they would imprison Trump.
Speaker 9 (12:40):
So a lot of people have suggested that there are
a range of factors that would make it difficult to
put a former There's not The system has not been
tested in this way. Do you agree with that that
it would be difficult or nearly impossible for the law
enforcement institutions to put him in actual jail.
Speaker 8 (12:54):
No, they would just put him in a double wide
somewhere out near the fence, out in the grass, and
he would eat there, shower there, he'd exercise there. He'd
be away, as Donia Perry said, from general population.
Speaker 4 (13:06):
But it's obviously doable. Sounds like he's relishing the thought,
doesn't it.
Speaker 6 (13:11):
This is Jim Komi, who on CNN in twenty nineteen
explain that Martha Stewart went to prison for lying the.
Speaker 8 (13:23):
Closer question, though is this one about can you be
held liable for obstruction if there's no underlying crime proved?
Speaker 4 (13:29):
And this is one of the things that confuses me.
Speaker 8 (13:31):
The Attorney General's letter doesn't make sense in light of
my experience. Thousands of people are prosecuted in this country
every year for trying to obstruct an investigation where the
underlying thing that was being investigated doesn't end up proven.
And the reason for that is people obstruct to avoid embarrassment,
to protect family and friends, to protect businesses, because they're
(13:53):
worried the investigators might find something out. Martha Stewart went
to jail for lying about an investigation. I wasn't convicted
of insider trading, but bringing those kind of obstruction cases
are really important because you'd create an incentive to obstruct.
Imagine if the rule were you can only be guilty
of obstruction if we get you on the underlying thing,
well then you better go all in on the obstruction
(14:15):
because then you'll walk away completely. That doesn't make any
sense again, but I want to prejudge it because I
don't know what his thinking was exactly on that.
Speaker 4 (14:21):
I'd like to see the work.
Speaker 6 (14:24):
Jim Comy just gave the reasoning behind why his conviction
is inevitable. I want you to listen to Jim Comey
on ABC News with George Stephanopolis back in twenty eighteen.
This is him laying out what he claims to know
as FBI director, but it is all a complete lie,
(14:50):
and he knows it's a lie.
Speaker 4 (14:53):
Did you believe his denial?
Speaker 8 (14:55):
Honestly, never thought these words would come out of my mouth.
But I don't know whether the current president of United
States with with prostitutes peeing on each other in Moscow
in twenty thirteen.
Speaker 4 (15:04):
It's possible, but I don't know how weird? Was that
briefing really weird?
Speaker 8 (15:10):
I just wanted to get it done and get out
of there.
Speaker 10 (15:13):
Right after leaving the meeting, Comy began to take notes
about Trump's startling behavior, fearing that the president elect might
later lie about what was said.
Speaker 8 (15:23):
I had obviously concerns about that earlier, having watched him
on the campaign that he is someone for whom the
truth is not a high value.
Speaker 6 (15:34):
So again, he briefed Trump on all these salacious allegations
that came from the Hillary campaign, because by.
Speaker 4 (15:43):
Briefing him, he could then claim he could.
Speaker 6 (15:46):
Put them into the public life that Michael, Now we
know that all of it was a lie.
Speaker 4 (15:51):
I think Americans. I was just a norm already for
justice to be done.
Speaker 6 (16:00):
You remember Fang Bang the CCP, the communist Chinese Communist
Party honeypot. A honey pot is a woman who is
used to ensnare a foreign asset to spy, and that asset,
(16:24):
because they're being led around by the wrong head, makes
stupid decisions. Eric Swallwell, who is known to fart in
public on TV, who is an absolute and utter loser.
He's taken the late lately looking exactly like Jeffrey Dahmer
(16:46):
because he's wearing Dahmer glasses. I don't know if that's
the vibe he's going for or just if it just
ends up happening, but he looks like Dahmer, which is interesting. Well,
another day, so he ends up thinking that this Chinese
woman has it out for him, you know, she wants him.
(17:09):
He is the perfect target for a s by a honeypot.
So he ends up with Fang Bang. Lord knows what
secrets he shared. This is one of the problems. You
have congressional leadership. You have House leadership and Senate leadership,
and your intelligence services after cases like this will make
(17:31):
the argument, hey, we can't brief Congress because these people
can't keep secrets. And in this case it's true. But
if you don't have anyone policing the police, then you
have no oversight of your intelligence agencies. And that's not
how I say you talk about our constitution. Our constitution
(17:52):
was meant not for bureaus within departments, but for elected
representatives who are acountable to the people. But when you
have somebody like Swallwell, who's over here with fangbang trading secrets,
you got a real problem. Well Swallwell desperately wants attention.
(18:14):
He says, we need to stand up to the bully
that is Donald Trump, because if he can come after Comy,
he can come after you next.
Speaker 11 (18:24):
James Comy is going to be acquitted or the charges
will be thrown out.
Speaker 4 (18:28):
But that doesn't make what Donald Trump has done any better.
Speaker 11 (18:31):
And for your viewers, I hope the way they see
this is Donald Trump may has not come for you yet,
and he may not get to you for a while,
but if you dissent against him, if you go to
the town square and protest against him, he eventually will
find you that's where this is going. And that's why
we all have to be louder and find strength in numbers.
(18:53):
Don't hide under the bed, stand up to this bully,
and we can muscle through this.
Speaker 6 (18:57):
This is a type of language that incites violence. This
is the type of language that has caused the ice
facility in Portland to come under attack, so that President
Trump has had to send in the FEDS to protect it.
This is the type of violence that gets the President
shot in the head, which he was, and another attempt
(19:19):
on his life, which fortunately was thwarted at the last minute.
Speaker 4 (19:24):
This is the type of inciting.
Speaker 6 (19:27):
This type of violence is what leads to the assassination
of Charlie Kerr. It's a funny choice of words he
uses here. Stand up to the bully. Back when Trump
was indicted, not Jim Comey, but when Trump was indicted,
Swallwell said, Kevin McCarthy's rhetoric would incite violence.
Speaker 11 (19:49):
Kevin McCarthy could get someone killed with his rhetorics. He's
the speaker of the House, is second in line to
the presidency, and he is taking a wrecking ball to
the rule of law, and he is going to inspire
and cite somebody to take up violence against law enforcement
or somebody involved in this case, instead of saying that
(20:12):
exactly what mister Golden just said, which is our rule
of law will withstand this, and if Donald Trump is innocent,
a jury of his peers will find him innocent. Kevin
McCarthy is already casting judgment on the process. I'm worried
about the targets on the backs of so many in
law enforcement. When leaders like McCarthy are siding with Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (20:30):
It's reckless.
Speaker 11 (20:32):
It's lies that he's telling, and it's endangering people who
walk the beat right now.
Speaker 6 (20:41):
Back in twenty seventeen, Pocahontas called for a full investigation
into Donald Trump. So it was the first year of
his presidency. This is his honeyman. He was elected shocking
the political elite, defeating Hillary Clinton, the best laid plans
(21:01):
of meisen Men. Hillary Clinton was supposed to be the president,
and the American people rose up. They didn't take debate,
they didn't get distracted. So Pocahontas says Trump might be innocent,
but the American people should care about getting the truth. No,
(21:27):
the right answer. She is speaking in code that she
doesn't care that Trump is innocent. She wants him prosecuted.
This is a full throated, muscular intimidation threat. These people
(21:50):
fantasize about killing their enemies. I say that because I
mean it.
Speaker 12 (21:56):
We have to start with an independent investigation of Donald Trump.
That's the first step before we go anywhere, is to
find out exactly the relationship between Trump, the Trump campaign,
and a hostile foreign government. Look, a full investigation may
(22:17):
turn out to me there's nothing there, or a full
investigation may mean there's been criminal activity. But either way,
every American Democrat, Republican, independent, everybody should care about getting
the right answer. We need a special prosecutor and we
need him now.
Speaker 6 (22:40):
And they got it, and they harassed him. Remember they
had Mueller. They brought Mueller in, former FBI director, part
of the club. Now Mueller suddenly his family says, oh,
he can't answer questions as to what he was up to.
He's in an insane asylum, he has dementia, he has Alzheimer's.
Speaker 4 (22:59):
Does know where he is? Oh no, no, no, no.
Speaker 6 (23:03):
Everyone has to answer for what they did. Back in
twenty nineteen, NBC News as Kristen Welker reported that Nancy
Pelosi not only wanted an impeachment of Trump. She wanted
him prosecuted after he left office.
Speaker 13 (23:18):
Tonight, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi escalating her war of words
against the president. Politico reporting that during a meeting Tuesday,
she was pressed by Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerry Nadler to
start impeachment proceedings, ANDBC News has learned from a Congressional
source in the room. Pelosi then said about the President,
I don't want to see him impeached. I want to
(23:38):
see him in prison. Pelosi has indicated she wants the
president prosecuted after leaving office. Pelosi is facing pushback from
a growing number of Democrats calling for an impeachment inquiry
up to sixty House members, but Pelosi insists it's too soon.
Speaker 4 (23:54):
For following the facts.
Speaker 14 (23:56):
We'll take them where they need us.
Speaker 13 (23:59):
According to Politic, Judiciary Chairman Nadler told some Democrats he
might subpoena Robert Mueller in the next two weeks. Nabler
has said he's confident Muller will come in soon, but
it will be behind closed doors.
Speaker 4 (24:12):
These people have absolutely abused.
Speaker 6 (24:19):
Every organ of the American government to prosecute Trump, and
make no mistake, it is to destroy him and you
and they must be prosecuted.
Speaker 4 (24:31):
And I'm here for it.
Speaker 6 (24:32):
I'm here for the teeth gnashing, the crying that ode
of them.
Speaker 4 (24:38):
Every one of them.
Speaker 6 (24:40):
As usual, delayed postponed our conversation about what happened with
news earlier today. We are not a breaking news show.
We do not seek to be one. Sean Hannity is,
and that's great. That's what he does. He enjoyed is
that it's not what we do. As you may know,
(25:04):
President Trump was in a meeting with Benjamin Netanyahu earlier today.
They announced the language. There were several different versions of
how that was described, but it's basically that they are
very close to a deal on Gaza. We'll call it
(25:26):
a Middle East deal, a Midi steal. There was some
reference Trump as a promoter, he understands the importance of
a moment like this.
Speaker 4 (25:36):
I think he he said there is.
Speaker 6 (25:38):
A deal, Netting Yahoo kind of still in negotiation mode,
said they're hopeful to get a deal. One of the
things Trump does, and this comes from his business background
and the way he's conducted his business, is to go
public with we have a deal on this issue. And
(26:01):
the other person he's with looks at him like, well,
but wait, we weren't resolved on these three issues. And
what Trump is doing, which is very effective, we haven't
had a president who knows how to operate like this.
The assumptive clothes. He also puts the other person in
(26:22):
an awkward position because if in fact what he just
said is the truth, we have a deal, the media
is going to report, well, this is historic and he says, yes,
historic deal, and everyone cheers.
Speaker 4 (26:40):
And if you're a party.
Speaker 6 (26:41):
To that deal, which would be that in Yahoo, and
you cheer along, and tomorrow you go, hey, wait a second,
we still need to resolve these three issues. Then you
come off as being a guy who's trying to renegotiate.
Get another at the apple, and that does not come
(27:03):
off well.
Speaker 4 (27:05):
So all I'm.
Speaker 6 (27:07):
Saying is, if you were looking for us to speak
on that deal, I think there are still developments to
be had. That is why we don't comment in real
time as news is happening. If you want that, you
have an Internet connection, you can get people telling you
what the latest news is. I caution that you have
(27:30):
to understand that a lot of people will rush to
report things because the first in time gets a lot
of credit, they get reposted, they get credit for having
posted that, but more often than not, that person is wrong.
To me, credibility is everything. So I try to make
(27:53):
it the case that if I claim something to be true,
I thoroughly believe it to be true, rather than just
re repeding what has been said by someone else, because
I have come to learn that there are many people
in the public sphere, even folks who we may like
much of their work, who will claim things to be
(28:15):
true so that they can make a public statement, and
you find out the source they trusted was not worthy
of being trusted. All right, So that's the brief programming.
Note the same Democrats who are now saying it's a
constitutional crisis that Comy has been indicted. These same people again,
(28:39):
the enemy of Trump is their friend. That's the way
they view everything. These same Democrats were attacking Komy back
in twenty sixteen in the Hillary versus Trump election because
the FBI was investigating Hillary Clinton, and by the way,
they should have sent her to prison. She was committing crimes.
Remember Anthony Wayner, Remember whom abadein, Remember GPS fusion, you
(29:03):
remember Podesta. Well, the point is, these same Democrats who
are now telling us that Comy cannot be indicted.
Speaker 4 (29:10):
He's a good man and Trump is a bad man.
Speaker 6 (29:13):
Back then they were saying bad things about him.
Speaker 10 (29:18):
First of all, by the letter, which really broke precedent,
was over the advice of the leaders in the Justice Department.
You know, I'm not challenging mister Colmey's motivation, but I
do think it was unwarranted.
Speaker 4 (29:31):
It was a mistake. He's got a.
Speaker 15 (29:33):
Big burden of proof, so to speak on him for
why he did what seems to be such an appalling
act that goes against the tradition of prosecutors at every
level of government. Was when I heard about it, I
found it hard to believe that Coney, who I thought
had some degree of integrity, would do this.
Speaker 14 (29:50):
I think he made a mistake on this, and he
clearly has a double standard. And these jobs, if you're
not in it for a while, you can't take the
and I think he just.
Speaker 4 (30:01):
Couldn't take the heat from the Republicans.
Speaker 14 (30:03):
It's really unfortunate because I do believe he is a
good person. Maybe he's not in the right job.
Speaker 16 (30:08):
I am so disappointed and call me he has let
the country down for partisan purposes. And that's why calling
that new he Andrew Ruber, because I believe that do.
Speaker 3 (30:19):
You believe that Jim Comy should resign sena reed?
Speaker 16 (30:22):
Of course?
Speaker 4 (30:24):
Yes, of course yes.
Speaker 7 (30:26):
Now let me specifically remind crocodile tears Senator Chucky Schumer
and what he said about James Comy just back in November,
just days before the election, quote, I do not have
confidence in him any longer. To restore my faith, I'm
going to have to sit down and talk to him
and get an explanation for why he did this. Now,
that's just more proof that Schumer the Democrats are full
(30:47):
of it when it comes to James Comy.
Speaker 6 (30:50):
MSNBC is clutching their pearls that Jim Comy will have
to hire expensive lawyers and his life will be for
a few years. Well, how about all those people who
were walking from President Trump's speech over to the Capitol,
singing gospel songs, singing patriotic songs, living out their civic duty.
(31:15):
And those people we now know were entrapped by at
least two hundred and seventy five FBI agents.
Speaker 4 (31:22):
There were others on the perimeter.
Speaker 6 (31:25):
Those FBI agents were put in there to look like
fellow Jay sixers calling for violence when in fact they
were trying to incite violence.
Speaker 4 (31:39):
Those people's lives were destroyed.
Speaker 6 (31:41):
They came back to anywhere and everywhere America to have
their doors kicked down by armed goons, dragged out.
Speaker 4 (31:53):
A lot of them.
Speaker 6 (31:53):
Pled out because they didn't have the lawyer, they had
money for lawyers. A lot of them went to prison.
One guy committed suicide because they knew they didn't do it.
So no, I don't feel sorry for Jim Comey having
to have expensive lawyers now.
Speaker 7 (32:09):
Maybe he cally will end up walking away from this,
but this will still.
Speaker 4 (32:13):
Be expensive, it will be stressful.
Speaker 1 (32:15):
It could ruin Colemy's life for a time, and.
Speaker 11 (32:18):
It seems to be foreshadowing it's Comy's now, who could
be next?
Speaker 16 (32:23):
Right?
Speaker 17 (32:23):
I think that's the punishment. It's the punishment. James Comey
has to have expensive lawyers now and it'll be take
a lot of his time and you know, emotional investment.
But theoretically his liberty will be at stake in this case.
And that's what Look the Justice Department, you know, a
(32:49):
federal indictment is nothing to sneeze at.
Speaker 4 (32:52):
It is like harmon monster that and listen to it is.
This is clearly punishment. He someding, he's going to on
his own tongue.
Speaker 17 (33:02):
James, he couldn't be more explicit, because that's.
Speaker 4 (33:06):
Like road is closing, not trying.
Speaker 6 (33:15):
Why is it only Why do I go in to
Kermit the Frog every time I want to impersonate somebody's voice?
Speaker 4 (33:21):
Can you explain that to them?
Speaker 7 (33:23):
Makes no sense to thank you and good night