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May 6, 2026 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Very Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
And I just want to thank you because you have
very very special people.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
You were here long before any of us were here.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Although we have a representative in Congress who they say
was here a long time ago.

Speaker 3 (00:28):
They call her Pocahontas. But you know what, I like you.

Speaker 4 (00:34):
My aunt Bee has walked by that picture at least
a thousand times. Remarked that he had that her father,
my papa had high cheekbones like all of the Indians do,
because that's how she saw it. And she said, and
your mother got those same great cheekbones, and I didn't.

(00:55):
She thought this was the bad deal she had gotten
in life. Were very much in life with each other,
and they wanted to get married, and my father's parents said,
absolutely not. You can't marry her because she's part Cheroche
and she's part Delaware. And after fighting it as long
as I could, my parents went off. They eloped. It
was an issue in our family the whole time I

(01:17):
grew up about these two families. It was an issue
still raised in my mother's feud. I grew up believing
with my brothers, this is our family's story. My apology
is an apology for not having been more sensitive about
tribal citizenship and tribal sovereignty. I really want to underline

(01:40):
the point tribes and only tribes determine tribal citizenship.

Speaker 5 (01:44):
I keep different TV networks on in the background, and
I flip around, and today it happened to be Fox News,
and it was about noon Central or so, and Milania
Trump was there beside President, but he was kind of
standing back off to the side and letting her lead.

(02:05):
And it was about honoring military mothers the week of
Mother's Day. And you couldn't help but notice she's a
strikingly beautiful woman, even at her age. She has aged
very gracefully, and she's dressed well. She was wearing a

(02:27):
kind of a kind of a pink blazer and a
white shirt and I don't remember what else, but she
had a smile on her face and a very comforting,
reassuring smile to the mothers, who you could look and
see were very nervous. You know, they're at the White House.
And I can't help but notice that she has really

(02:50):
grown into the role of first lady. She wasn't the
first lady the first day. I don't think anyone really
ever is. And I got the impression when they left
in January of twenty twenty one that she was angry
and bitter, and rightfully so, because typically a wife who's

(03:15):
actually a loving wife. I wouldn't put Jill Biden in that,
and I wouldn't put Hillary Clinton in that, and I
wouldn't put Michelle Obama in that. But a wife who
is is first and foremost a wife, not someone looking
out for their own you know, can I get some
glory for myself? They're very protective of their husbands. And
that would be Laura Bush, that would be Barbara Bush,

(03:37):
that would be to an extent, Nancy Reagan, and that
is definitely Millennia. I don't think Milania wanted him to run.
She might not have argued that he shouldn't, but she
certainly didn't want it or need it. You got the
impression that Jill Biden was living for it, I mean,

(03:58):
absolutely desperately wanted it. Now I know I'm going to
get pushed back on this. I don't think Michelle Obama
wanted it. I think she didn't enjoy it. I think
she was angry and bitter about it, and she said
so to the French president's wife and two others. She
did not carry herself a class and dignity in a
sense of no bless obliege that this is the responsibility

(04:20):
if you're going to be the wife of the president.

Speaker 3 (04:25):
But what I noticed.

Speaker 5 (04:28):
Was that Milania has really grown into the role, a
tough role, and that she has reconciled that, yes, there
are very nasty elements of being first lady. I think
every first lady would admit that. When Jacqueline Kennedy, before
she became Onassas, left the White House, her husband, of

(04:49):
course had been assassinated, and it's very very public. She'd
been part of Camelot and everything was perfect and then
it wasn't. And then Jack wasn't there.

Speaker 3 (04:59):
John F.

Speaker 5 (04:59):
Kennedy was there, and and I do think they had
a lot of problems in their marriage. Most people know that.
And and yet they had these young children and she
didn't know what to do, and Kennedy's were overbearing, and
the public was was fine. I think aristotle on Nassis
offered her a way to leave it all behind. And

(05:20):
so she was criticized rather roundly and in a very
nasty fashion. What are you doing marrying this this older
Greek not not in any way proper American society? What
are you doing? But I think he swept her off

(05:42):
her feet in a way, from from the madness that
she needed out of. She couldn't just live in the
in the funeral home where John F. Kennedy's body was
lying in wake, and back to my I'm curious to

(06:04):
know your thoughts, but I think I got the sense
that the first term she was a little deer in
the headlights. Remember, she hadn't been a first lady of
a state. She hadn't been a governor's wife, she hadn't
been a congressman's wife. This was all new to her.
And while she had been his wife and they had
gone to balls and galas and all of that, now

(06:26):
all of a sudden, she was being unfairly attacked, which
is part of the role of being the first lady,
and her husband was having these horrible attacks on him.
And I got the impression that when he got shot
in the head, that's when everything changed. That's when she decided,
that's when the mama bear came out. That's when her

(06:46):
fierce nature protecting her husband came out. But I also
noticed that her fierce nature and kind of strong gritty
teeth have evolved into I need to be a pleasant face.
I am. I am the lady the country's looking at it.

(07:07):
If they don't like me, they don't have to like me.
But there are lots of people who do. And I
want to be here and I want to be a
good first lady for Donald. And I have to say
I saw her today and it felt like one of
the few times she was having fun.

Speaker 3 (07:20):
She was enjoying it. She's risen to the occasion. I said,
I don't have some big wrap up. That's it.

Speaker 5 (07:26):
We were kids all admired the champion Marble shoot of
the fastest runner, big league ballplayers.

Speaker 6 (07:33):
The Tuckers, Fox mitter Michael Berry.

Speaker 3 (07:36):
American level.

Speaker 5 (07:39):
Well, it's been nearly two months since Congressman Anna Paulina
Luna announced that John Thune, the Republican leader of the
Senate majority, had given her assurances that the standing filibuster
would be used to pass voter ID. Is this going
to happen or not?

Speaker 3 (07:58):
Based on her discussion, it sounds like your movie tour.

Speaker 7 (08:00):
Yes.

Speaker 3 (08:00):
Based on our discussion. Right now, we're moving towards it. Also,
too we got.

Speaker 4 (08:04):
We got assurances on the standing filibuster, which is recolorible important.
I don't know if you guys remember when I was
talking about inherent content, but a lot of people didn't
know what that is.

Speaker 8 (08:11):
The standing filibuster is an old school parliamentary procedure, but
it's a way to break through what we consider tradition
nor to get voter ide passed.

Speaker 3 (08:19):
I think that it's brilliant that they came up with.

Speaker 9 (08:21):
It, but exactly that's why we kind of have these
discussions and we're very happy about that coast.

Speaker 10 (08:25):
There should be a standing filibuster, and I'll soon and
I would actively.

Speaker 11 (08:30):
Check to Senator Fune's office to ask.

Speaker 3 (08:32):
Him about that because they have different plays in Sunny
Well Digity Yes tomorrow on the rule.

Speaker 10 (08:36):
Yeah, as of right now, we feel very comfortable where
we're at it based on what we are discussing.

Speaker 5 (08:42):
Okay, let's start here. She's kind of cute, I give
her that, but she's not a major moving force in
the house. She's not at the table. She's an easy
access guest. So for her to be saying these things,

(09:07):
they're telling us there's going to be a vote and
that it's going to be without the filibuster, So all
you'd need is fifty votes.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
But how do you do that, Michael?

Speaker 5 (09:18):
How do you get it passed with fifty if there's
one hundred senators?

Speaker 3 (09:21):
Because JD.

Speaker 5 (09:22):
Vance would be able as the vice president come in
and break the tie. All right, The most number of
ties broken through it through history by a vice president
is the immediately preceding vice president, which is Kamala Harris.
So if you get to fifty votes, if you do
away with the filibuster, now you have the Save Act,

(09:47):
and that's what's going to take to save our Democratic Republic.
We'll see. I'm not going to get my hopes up.
I don't trust these guys. In less than a week,
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis unveiled his state Florida, their new
congressional maps and got a special session of the legislature
to pass those maps, creating four more Republican seats in

(10:10):
the state, making it the eighth state to complete mid
decade redistricting in the twenty twenty six election cycle.

Speaker 3 (10:18):
Here he is on Fox Well.

Speaker 12 (10:20):
I can tell you this. Last week he threatened Florida
and said that if you.

Speaker 3 (10:25):
Started the Russia three with him.

Speaker 5 (10:26):
He's talking about Hakeem Jeffries, who is the lead Democrat
in the House.

Speaker 3 (10:30):
The he he's talking about, well, I can tell you this.

Speaker 12 (10:33):
Last week, he threatened Florida and said that if somehow
we went through with a map, that you know, we
were going to have hell to pay. He was going
to come down and we were going to pay the
price somehow. And look, those threats may work when you're
running a political machine in Brooklyn in your district.

Speaker 3 (10:50):
Those threats do not work on me.

Speaker 12 (10:52):
And so we released the map on Monday, the legislature
passed it on.

Speaker 3 (10:56):
Wednesday, and that is that.

Speaker 12 (10:59):
And so, but this guy's a real piece of work
because he thinks he can issue threats. He thinks that's
the way people want to see. And a lot of
people don't know who he is around the country. He's
more left than Pelosi. Midterm elections are tough. When you're
the party in power, you always have to battle currents.
But I will tell you, the more voters know that
a vote for Democrats could be a vote to put

(11:22):
Hakem Jeffries and speaker, that is going to help Republicans.
So I've invited him down to Florida. I'll pay for
his travel. We'll say, take him around the state. The
more voter see of him, I think it's better for
our Republican candidate.

Speaker 5 (11:38):
Credit to Louisiana's Governor, Jeff Landry, he has suspended next
month's House primary elections.

Speaker 3 (11:45):
Although technically I guess it would been this month.

Speaker 5 (11:49):
So that state lawmakers can pass a new congressional map first.
After the Supreme Court decision last week that found Louisiana
had unlawfully discriminated by race. Just go look at the
districts and you'll see it. I mean, it's as clear
as day to create a second black congressional seat. And

(12:10):
when I say black congressional seat, I mean a seat
with the sole intention of electing a black congressman.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
That is wrong. That is wrong.

Speaker 5 (12:20):
You cannot have elections where the stats what only people
who are going to ask to vote in this election
will be black people, and we'll run a black candidate
and he'll win. Come on, man, we're not making strides
toward a better nation. We're creating carve outs and winners
and losers. We're creating more racism, more tribalism. It's so stupid,

(12:43):
So other races on the May sixteenth ballot that will
not be affected everything but the congressional map. Good for
him because once that decision came out, the argument was, Okay,
Supreme Court has struped down this race based congressional district,

(13:04):
but we got the election in a couple of weeks,
so let's deal with it later.

Speaker 3 (13:09):
No, we're going to stop right now. We're going to
deal with it right now.

Speaker 5 (13:15):
How many times as a parent, was there a group
of people family gathering a party for their class party
with all their friends, and your kid acted like a
complete brat and did something awful, assuming you wouldn't deal
with it. Not here, not right now. It be too awkward,

(13:38):
and it's rare. I know because I was that dad.
You go, hey, guys, shut this down for a minute.
I got to deal with a problem. Nobody wants to
do that. You're the turd in the punch bowl, but
you gotta do it, and Jeff Leandrey is doing it.
Credit to him for that. Republican governors in Alabama and

(13:58):
Tennessee call law makers into special sessions to redraw their
new congressional districts.

Speaker 13 (14:05):
This is news nation Other Southern states like Alabama and
Tennessee are joining that rush to redraw maps.

Speaker 3 (14:13):
After the Supreme Court ruling.

Speaker 13 (14:15):
The Republican governors of Alabama and Tennessee announcing special sessions
for next week. Alabama facing hurdles with this where they
can only actually act if the Supreme Court clears the way,
but in the meantime, Tennessee's primary isn't until August, giving
lawmakers there plenty of time to redraw that map. And
weeks after Virginia voters passed a referendum to redraw the

(14:36):
state's map, the state Board of Elections was unable to
certify those results as legal challenges are playing out in
the state's Supreme Court. The referendum approved a new congressional
map favoring Democrats ten to one, with two Republican led
lawsuits challenging the legality of it. Because of the map
changes and extra time needed, House election primaries will now

(14:58):
be in August, with early votings starting June eighteen.

Speaker 5 (15:02):
There comes a point where you realize that solving this
country's problems.

Speaker 3 (15:09):
Is going to be.

Speaker 5 (15:12):
A fistfight of sorts. The left is going to say,
you're just not going to deport people. We're gonna start
attacking ice officers. At some point you're gonna have to
shoot one because otherwise the ice officer is going to die.
We're just gonna start creating riots and we're just gonna

(15:32):
throw bricks at officers and rush them, and at some
point you're gonna have to shoot one.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
And that's where as a society're gonna.

Speaker 5 (15:40):
Go, oh, look, I don't like these people, but at
some point they're going to force your hands.

Speaker 8 (15:47):
When they know.

Speaker 14 (15:49):
I'm not sure what your question was with Michael Berries.

Speaker 3 (15:53):
I lost the plot somewhere. You did so much.

Speaker 5 (15:58):
Of what was wrong in this country. But what we're
going to have to fix is not just neglect, It
is intentional collapse. The Department of Justice has shut down
an immigration court in San Francisco because the judges were

(16:19):
basically rubber stamping asylum claims. The judge's approval for asylum
cases were four times the national average. The Department of
Justice has fired at least twenty of the twenty two
immigration judges. This is the story out of San Francisco's

(16:41):
ABC seven.

Speaker 11 (16:43):
Eight months head of schedule, the federal government is officially
close in San Francisco's one hundred Montgomery Street immigration court.
We captured the last hours of service with one person
remaining in line.

Speaker 14 (16:56):
We're talking about fifteen thousand cases that are in limbo
in San Francisco. It's a major hub of immigration in
the United States.

Speaker 11 (17:06):
Before the May first closure, the Department of Justice fired
at least twenty of the twenty two immigration judges at
the Montgomery Street Courthouse. In December, we interviewed one of them,
Jeremiah Johnson, Why do you think you were fired.

Speaker 3 (17:20):
For doing my job?

Speaker 6 (17:21):
Immigration judges preside over removal proceedings.

Speaker 3 (17:26):
That's what the law states.

Speaker 11 (17:28):
Bill Hing, professor of law and Migration Studies at the
University of San Francisco, believes the federal government was following
the record of asylum cases that were granted here.

Speaker 14 (17:39):
They wanted to get rid of immigration judges that were
fair when it came to asylum cases.

Speaker 11 (17:45):
In a statement, the Executive Office of Immigration Review under
the US Apartment of Justice said they determined it would
be more cost effective to relocate its court operations at
one hundred Montgomery Street to the nearby Conquered Immigrant Court
in Conquered. Immigration advocates are concerned this closure will lead

(18:05):
to multiple years of delayed hearings.

Speaker 3 (18:08):
San Francisco.

Speaker 8 (18:09):
They're like one hundred and twenty thousand cases pending in
concord Is how sixty thousand, So that's what we are
right now.

Speaker 11 (18:19):
The Executive Office of Immigration Review said they will begin
issuing new hearing notices to all parties whose cases are
reassigned to the Conquered Immigration Court. Emilie Atkinson, director of
the Immigrant Legal Defense Program at the Bar Association of
San Francisco, said many still don't know where they will go.

Speaker 7 (18:38):
We've had a lot of cases and received a lot
of information about people who have their hearing changed and
they were not aware of it, and they got un
notice afterwards said their case was closed.

Speaker 3 (18:53):
There is.

Speaker 5 (18:56):
Very simple fundamental principle that a mayora because for America,
Japan is for Japanese, Chinese, Chinese for Chinese, and that
you don't just get to jump up and go, hey,
I'm going to live in your country and do what
I want, and anything you give to your people, I'm
going to take for myself and you can't tell me no.

(19:19):
It's a pretty simple, fundamental, straightforward principle. And yet there
are a lot of people in this country who wish
to change that. No, no, no, anyone in the world
can take whatever they want from our country, and you,
an American citizen, can't stop them.

Speaker 3 (19:40):
What are we doing? What are we doing?

Speaker 5 (19:43):
This isn't even a sense of a nation anymore.

Speaker 3 (19:48):
A Lafayette High School.

Speaker 5 (19:50):
Principal is Lafayete, Louisiana, has been placed on administrative leave
for having Liu A Boozy who's apparently going by Boozy
badass now, but that's bad ass with a zz, not
an SS wont to be very clear on that it
is a rap name after all, for having Little Boozy
visit the school. Little Boozy has a lengthy criminal record

(20:11):
that includes several gun convictions, and now the principle is
in trouble. KLFY TV out of Lafayette with the story.

Speaker 10 (20:20):
LPSS officials say there's a clear process for who can
step onto campus within the parish, and this visit at
Northside High School apparently didn't make the cut.

Speaker 3 (20:30):
Now what was meant to inspire.

Speaker 10 (20:31):
Students is turning into a debate over rules, leadership, and accountability.
The Lafayette Parish School System is investigating an unauthorized campus
visit by rapper Lil Boosey at Northside High School. Officials
say the appearance was not approved and did not follow
district policy for guest speakers. School leaders say the visit
contrast with a separate approved appearance by Boosey earlier this

(20:53):
week at Karen Crow High School, which followed proper procedures.
According to LPSS Superintendent Francis two Each had emphasized that
all campus visitors must go through a formal approval process
to ensure student safety and accountability. He released a statement
on behalf of the school board saying LPSS approved a
visit through our standard safety protocols and procedures by Boosy

(21:14):
to car and Goro High School on Tuesday. A visit
to another school campus that had not received prior approval
from LPSS and did not follow standard approval standards is
currently under review. As of this time, the North Side
High School Principle, James Rollins is placed on administrative leaves. Meanwhile,
Boosey is backing the North Side High School principle. In
a social media post, he praises their leadership and concern

(21:36):
for students.

Speaker 15 (21:37):
Hey, I'm doing the drop on my Instagram and I'm
asking that.

Speaker 5 (21:45):
The school board laughhead please.

Speaker 3 (21:50):
Please allowed this man to be press for again.

Speaker 15 (21:54):
His man had no ell wheels towards anything. I did
not wrap. This man was looking out for them students.

Speaker 3 (22:03):
The rapper said.

Speaker 10 (22:04):
The principal simply wanted students to hear positive and encouraging words.

Speaker 15 (22:08):
He said, just give them kids some positive words.

Speaker 3 (22:11):
And that's what I did.

Speaker 15 (22:12):
They asked me positive questions. He had no ill will
towards nothing. He was thinking about them keys. He even
told me no music, no rapping under that.

Speaker 10 (22:23):
And he is now calling on the school board to
reconsider any actions taken against.

Speaker 5 (22:27):
The principal, reconsider, give him another chance.

Speaker 15 (22:30):
And he had great intentions for that school.

Speaker 5 (22:34):
You know, I know Hill Wills. In case you're wondering
if Boozy is in fact his birth name, it's not.
He was born Torrance Ivy Hatch Junior, forty six years ago.
He was originally called Little Boozy, then he changed it

(22:58):
to Boozy, Badass with two z's, or just boozy.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
You know, if you're into the whole brevity thing.

Speaker 5 (23:06):
But I'm just curious what's going on in your life
when you go you know what, everybody, I was Little
Boozy Just so y'all know, thank y'all for coming out
here today. Just want to let y'all know going forward,
I'm not a little Boozy anymore. I'm just Boozy. So

(23:30):
just if y'all could you know, correct the record, I'm
just Boozy now, or if you must give me you know,
if you want my first and my last name.

Speaker 3 (23:38):
It's Booty Badass. But that's two z's, not ess two z's.

Speaker 2 (23:43):
Now.

Speaker 5 (23:43):
You can put a line through it like a dollar
sign if you want. That's up to you, because I'm
about that money. I'm about that money. Boozy about that money,
not a little Boozy Boozy about that money. So just
from now on, just so y'all know, I'm not little Boozy.
That was my name up until like five minutes ago.
But now I'm not little Boozy anymore. I'm just Boozy

(24:07):
or Boozy badass. You call me mister Boozy, send your
Boozy if you want. I'm just I'm just basically just
Boozy and boozy bad ass, but not little Boo.

Speaker 3 (24:18):
I'm not little no more. Okay, it's my point. I'm
I'm I'm Boozy and little Boozy. I mean, I'm sorry, no, no,
not little Boozy no more.

Speaker 5 (24:27):
I'm not I'm Boozy and Boozy bad ass, not little
boozy no more.

Speaker 8 (24:32):
I looked at him and they looked at me, you know,
and I just looked at her and I just get
yourself and get it out.

Speaker 3 (24:37):
To Michael Mary's shows.

Speaker 8 (24:38):
Over and got a newspaper and I wrote it up.

Speaker 4 (24:40):
I slapped him on the nose.

Speaker 5 (24:42):
I said, bad though, man, this song's got it all.
You got, Sammy Kershaw. I think the amazing rhythma Sis
were the first one to record that I love Sammy Kershaw.

(25:03):
This is my favorite version Spending by Russell Smith. But
my favorite line is he said, I'll even tell you
that I love you if you want me to. Man,
you talk about cheating songs, That's it right there.

Speaker 3 (25:20):
That's it.

Speaker 5 (25:23):
A Garland father defends his family shooting and killing a
carjacker and surveillance video captures it all. If you're new
to the show, this is a moment that we have
referred to on this show for twenty years as a
how about them apples moment? We love when the good

(25:43):
guys get over on the bad guys. The story out
of Dallas fort Worth on the Fox affiliate there, Fox four.

Speaker 9 (25:52):
I mean, you would definitely tell that he was not
in his right state of.

Speaker 6 (25:55):
Line Surveillance video shows a man attacking and trying to
carjack a family of eight in Garland Sunday afternoon before
the father shoots and kills him.

Speaker 9 (26:05):
I'm just glad that the man was able to protect himself.

Speaker 3 (26:08):
And his family.

Speaker 6 (26:09):
Tatiana Starks, manages Garland smoke and vape in a shopping
center near Highway sixty six and Darry Road.

Speaker 3 (26:16):
We hired a loud crash.

Speaker 6 (26:17):
Garland Police Department says. The carjacker initially crashed into two
other vehicles.

Speaker 2 (26:23):
While we were responding to the scene, we received more
information that the driver of that car had exited and
he immediately began physically trying to get into other vehicles
in that parking lot.

Speaker 6 (26:34):
Starks says she saw the man breaking into several vehicles
at a gas station, so she took cell phone footage.

Speaker 9 (26:41):
He tried to get in several different cars.

Speaker 6 (26:45):
She stopped recording as the man began walking across the
street toward her. Did you make direct eye contact with you?

Speaker 9 (26:51):
Yes, he was walking very intentionally.

Speaker 6 (26:54):
The family of eight unaware of what was happening and
what was about to happen.

Speaker 9 (26:59):
He ended up going into their car.

Speaker 6 (27:01):
Video shows the carjacker in the peach shirt confronting the
father in the white shirt. The father struggles with the
suspect who's trying to drive off with the family's car
with family members inside, including a baby.

Speaker 3 (27:14):
After nearly a minute.

Speaker 6 (27:15):
Of struggle, the carjacker, who's in the driver's seat, is
shot by the father, who's outside the car near the
passenger side door.

Speaker 3 (27:22):
It seemed to be self defense.

Speaker 6 (27:24):
Police do not expect to file charges against the father.

Speaker 9 (27:27):
It kind of all really happened really fast.

Speaker 6 (27:30):
Starks, a witness to everything, Just grateful. We're talking about
a story in which no victims were hurt.

Speaker 9 (27:36):
It's just a blessing that the kids and the family
walked away with no injuries.

Speaker 5 (27:44):
If every criminal knew they were going to be immediately
confronted and harmed, they'd stop, just that simple, they would stop,
and that would be that. It was a great moment.

(28:04):
A few days ago, this artemis got a lot of attention,
this first time Americans have been focused on space now
so in a very long time, and they got a
lot of attention. Some of it felt manufactured, but I
think that happens a lot, and I heard from a

(28:27):
lot of people who I didn't realize were space nuts.
Houston is space city, so you get a lot of
our listeners were either in the space program, was it
Clayton Anderson? Or are the children of people who were
in the space program or grandchildren? So space in Houston
is a big deal. And for the first time we

(28:50):
had a black person who fill in the blank in
this case, flew so close to the moon to the moon.
So his name is Victor Glover and he was asked
by a young black girl what it was like to
be the first black person to do this. And he

(29:13):
had considered that that question was going to be asked.
And for a young person, especially a young black person,
they have learned to win parental and teacher approval by
asking race based questions. I thought his answer was exactly

(29:34):
how questions like this.

Speaker 3 (29:35):
Should be answered.

Speaker 8 (29:36):
How did it feel to be the first person of
color to fly to around the moon?

Speaker 16 (29:42):
You know the question? I may I thank you for
the question, And I will tell you. One of the
things about swinging for the fence and trying to you know,
hit a home run when the game is on the
line is if you think about that, that that can
add pressure and make you not you know, go up
there and play your best game. And so I focused
a lot on working with this team and trying to

(30:02):
be a good teammate, trying to be a good teammate
to them, and also received from them their good teamwork.
And I think one of the reasons we were as
successful as we did is we spent a lot of
time thinking about us and not us me individually. And
so I would answer this by maybe just making a
visual lesson here that I spent a lot of time

(30:22):
thinking about this patch and this patch and not this patch,
and now we get to be hear and we get
to talk about it.

Speaker 5 (30:29):
Though, and since we are praising black people, let me
close with that where the left has taken this too far,
as with the transgender movement, that's where they lost a
lot of blacks.

Speaker 3 (30:44):
Along the way.

Speaker 5 (30:46):
There was a black woman on a podcast called The
at Whatever. I've never heard of it before, but this
was said to me who talked about the moment that
she walked away from feminism and BLM.

Speaker 3 (30:57):
She saw the light.

Speaker 8 (30:59):
I used to believe I was old reparations due to slavery.
I believe that I couldn't be racist towards white people
because I didn't have systemic power. I believed in Black
Lives Matter, George Floyd, all that stuff. I believed in transgenderism, feminism,
pretty much everything that was black words and now, yeah
that was actually a forty in slipt, but yeah backward,

(31:21):
and now I'm pretty much the opposite of everything. I'm
not for the feminism, I'm not for the stuff. I'm
not for Black Lives Matter or reparations. What happened, Well,
I had a situation back in Chicago where I moved
in an apartment and they originally told me i'd be
assigned a.

Speaker 3 (31:37):
Roommate of the same gender to share a bathroom.

Speaker 8 (31:39):
They actually ended up assigning me a transgender as a roommate,
and I only found out it was a transgender because
the toilet seat was being left up consistently. And when
I reached out to my black housing manager, she told
me they weren't allowed to discriminate and I could move
down the hallway to another room if I had a problem.
And when she used the word discriminate, it made me
think about politics. So I started looking up just what

(32:00):
in politics made illegal for a man to be in
a woman's face, And all of a sudden, I'm seeing
all the evil, racist, Republican white people are the ones
with common sense who don't want his weirdness going on.

Speaker 3 (32:10):
So I found myself voting for Trump, and you became
a wife of twenty three. I do after being a
feminist of all life.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
Good okays for me, thank you, and good night,
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