Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
The Michael Arry Show is on the air. It's Charlie
from black Berry Smook. I can feel a good one
coming on. It's the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
Any attempt to restrict drinking and driving deer is viewed
by some as downright un democratic.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
Scott Galloway is a professor at the NYU Stern School
of Business who appeared as a guest on MSNBC recently.
I'll be honest. I was shocked to hear this opinion
about Israel from an MSNBC guest.
Speaker 5 (00:48):
Twenty two hundred American servicemen killed at Pearl Harbor. We
go on to kill three and a half million Japanese,
including one hundred thousand one night, twenty one hundred Americans.
In nine to eleven, we go on to kill four
hundred thousand people in Afghanistan and Iraq. We weren't accused
of genocide. You had if Mexico had elected a Jihatis
cartel to run their country and then they incurred into
(01:10):
Texas and on a per capita basis, killed thirty five
thousand people or the population of the University of Texas,
and on the way back to the freshman class at
SMU hostage and hid them under tunnels. What would we do,
It'd be the Great Sonora radioactive parking lot. But Jews
are not allowed and Israel is not allowed to prosecute
a war, and they are prosecuting a war more humanly
(01:33):
than we have done. The ratio of combatants to civilians
is a civilian death to combatant mortality is lower than
it was in Mosil, lower than it was in Japan,
lower was in Germany. So there's just a different standard
for Jews in Israel when it comes to prosecuting a war.
They're allowed to fight back to a truce, but unlike
(01:53):
America or any other Western nation that has attacked asitiously,
they're not allowed to win a war.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
It's a double standards.
Speaker 4 (02:00):
Had a former Antifa member on his program. They identified
him as Eric. He said that as a member of Antifa,
if you didn't fall in line, your comrades would become
a real problem for you. These people are not about peace,
love and understanding. Like most authoritarians of the left liked this,
(02:23):
these people were violent and evil.
Speaker 6 (02:26):
You know, you're young, and you're idealistic, and you feel
like you don't have a lot of control in your life.
And you know, so if you can go out there
and you know, make yourself a hassle, then that's better
than being an you know, anonymous you know kid.
Speaker 2 (02:44):
That's true.
Speaker 7 (02:45):
So I mean what kind of violence were you guys
getting into, like explosives or vandalism.
Speaker 6 (02:54):
Yeah, so it would have been about ninth grade or so,
get on a few years growing up in Seattle. We
had those the riots in ninety nine, and yeah, I was,
I was ready to go, man.
Speaker 2 (03:11):
I had I had little.
Speaker 6 (03:13):
Moltov cocktails in my bedroom and a coffee of the
Anarchist cookbook that I had photoshops or photo coffee at
the time from a friend of mine's older brother. You know,
like you know, it was it was just at the time,
you know, like, oh, it's just a good time. And
it's only later on that you get more involved with
(03:35):
the ideas, the philosophies, the uh.
Speaker 2 (03:39):
You know, direct action.
Speaker 6 (03:43):
Ideologies that go deeper into you know, later on becoming
like a full blown anarchic communist and syndicalist.
Speaker 2 (03:51):
So what does that mean?
Speaker 8 (03:52):
What was the ideology full blown communism?
Speaker 6 (03:57):
I mean a lot of.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
It is so a lot of it is.
Speaker 6 (04:01):
You know, these are accelerationism. It's it's not the slow
march of the institutions. It is, you know, we want
this and we want it now.
Speaker 2 (04:11):
And one of the.
Speaker 6 (04:12):
Reasons that I got out of it is probably around
two thousand and fourteen fifteen, we started seeing groups come
up to Seattle and Portland from California.
Speaker 2 (04:29):
And they were much more.
Speaker 6 (04:31):
Like, hey, you know, you better get in line with this,
you know, and if you're not, those consequences and there's pressure.
Speaker 8 (04:39):
So you were being forced to take violent action or
else you might have been hurt.
Speaker 6 (04:45):
Oh not only that, but there was there was pressure.
There was ostracization, things of that nature where you know,
you might get into it, say like because you don't
like bigotry in the music scene, and then later on
it's you know, you're going to adhere to these tenants
and you're going to say and think these ways, and
if you're on the fence at all, you know, silences
(05:07):
of violence and you know your comrades are going to
become a problem for you, you know.
Speaker 4 (05:12):
Peter Dousey of Fox News says that the Trump administration
has announced they are engaged in an armed conflict with
drug cartels, and I got to say, this is what
I voted for. I'm tired of the cartels flooding deadly
products onto the streets of America and killing our.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
Young people and many more.
Speaker 4 (05:36):
The number of listeners I have heard from who lost
a loved one to fentanyl is is dramatic. And if
that's in my orbit, imagine how many people aren't sending
me emails but are affected by this while the cartels
get rich killing our people.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
Enough is enough this, It shouldn't come to this.
Speaker 9 (06:01):
The Trump administration says it is now engaged in quote
armed conflict with drug cartels. That's according to a memo
to Congress that was obtained by Fox News. Our Peter
Deucy has got more on the Breaking News Live from
the White House. Peter, I assume this is in response
to the criticisms that have been leveled at the President
for taking out those drug bots.
Speaker 8 (06:20):
Yes, and John, those criticisms come from Democratic lawmakers who
say they are concerned that these cartel members, cartel drug
boat captains are not getting due process before a bomb
drops on their head. President Trump and his team do
not seem moved one bit by that, and so they
drafted this memo making this official to Congress.
Speaker 2 (06:40):
Part of it says, based.
Speaker 8 (06:41):
Upon the cumulative effects of these hostile acts against the
citizens and interests of the United States and friendly foreign nations,
the President is determined that the United States is in
a non international armed conflict with these designated terrorist organizations.
The President directed the Department of War to conduct operations
against them, went to the law of armed conflict.
Speaker 2 (07:02):
And the President just talked about this this week.
Speaker 10 (07:05):
If you try to poisoner our people, we will blow
you out of existence. Because it's the only language they
really understand. That's why you don't see any more boats
on the ocean.
Speaker 2 (07:16):
You don't see any boats. They're on Venezuela. There's the thing.
And it's not just Venezuela.
Speaker 8 (07:22):
The President's team, if it is putting out the word
that cartels throughout the Caribbean are now onloaded.
Speaker 2 (07:27):
They remain scared to death of you, and they remain
scared to death of Trump. Michael Berries show you're not
going anywhere, even if Trump does. You're not FBI directly.
Speaker 4 (07:40):
Cash Mattel sat down with the National News Desk to
talk about January sixth, twenty twenty one, and the two
hundred and fifty FBI agents. They say two hundred and
fiftyeth apparently it's two hundred and seventy four.
Speaker 2 (07:53):
There's some reports that if you.
Speaker 4 (07:55):
Sprinkle in some more of the informants, it gets to
about three hundred, but either way, it's well over to hundred.
And they were sprinkled throughout the crowd that day, and
video reviews are now showing that they weren't just there
walking along. They were trying to get people to tear
stuff up. They were pushing for it, they were encouraging it.
(08:16):
That's evil.
Speaker 11 (08:17):
Some Republicans listened director argue that Nancy Pelosi stage January sixth,
and the Select Committee covered it up based on what
you personally know, what are the verifiable events in the
lead ups? And do you I know, you don't speculate,
(08:39):
you just deal with facts.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
I'm in a unique position.
Speaker 12 (08:41):
Remember I was chief of staff for the Department of
Defense on January sixth. We were responsible for the deployment
of National Guard, and what I was forced to testify
two years ago at great personal cost, has now once again,
just like Russia Gate, been proven true. Because all I
do is speak the truth on January is actually in
the days before or January sixth, we were in the
Oval Office where the President President Trump at the time
(09:04):
authorized pursu into law up to ten to twenty thousand
National Guard. We took that authorization because the law second
part required a request from who Nancy Pelosi and the
Metropolitan Police and the mayor at the time.
Speaker 2 (09:17):
And what do they say?
Speaker 13 (09:18):
No?
Speaker 12 (09:18):
And remember what happened for the next few years. They say, oh,
Cash is lying, Trump's lying? And what do we find
letters of their declination of the national Guard refusing to
have the National Guard show up. So all I could
speak to is the facts, and the facts are those
plus this. Nancy Pelosi and her team were busy filming
a movie on January sixth, while this so caused chaos
(09:41):
around her was going down. If she had just looked
at it this way, if she had said yes to
the National Guard and we had ten thousand uniform military
officers established a secure perimeter, do you think January six
would have gone differently?
Speaker 2 (09:52):
It is intriguing.
Speaker 14 (09:54):
The two hundred and fifty LBI playing cloth agents. We're
inside the Capitol on January six I've saw the President's tweet.
To get to the bottom of it, who placed them there,
what we're doing? Were they inciting violence? What can you
(10:16):
tell us with the director?
Speaker 12 (10:17):
This is a great example of the President's initiative to
solve all the answers on January sixth, and it's another
example of our transparency efforts pursue it to the president.
We investigated the matter and found out why FBI agents
were placed there in the first place. And it turns
out we found documentation and witnesses and whistleblowers that said
(10:39):
we were forced to go there to do riot control Armstrong.
Do you know what the FBI does not do ever?
Speaker 2 (10:45):
Riot control? We don't do that.
Speaker 12 (10:47):
So the prior leadership sent two hundred and fifty some
odd men and women into a situation they're not trained for.
Put them in harms way. Put the individuals out there
in harms way. And also those individuals have collectively responded
or said before him that they were forced to go there.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
They didn't volunteer to do that. You believe them. That's
their word, not mine.
Speaker 4 (11:11):
President Trump could literally say that water is wet, and
Democrats would call him a liar or a racist or
z in aphobe or transphobe or whatever else. It's really
sad for them, but delightful because it's fun to win.
It's really sad for them that they don't have a
counter to anything he does. They're just foolish. It's they
(11:37):
would bring on experts to tell you that Nazis once
claimed that water was wet too, He's a Nazi. Those
experts would then tell you that this line of thinking
was dangerous and that people will die because saying water
is wet it is really dangerous. Then Governor Pritzker would
go on television and tell you that he once tried
to swim in Lake Michigan, but the Great Lake was
(11:57):
too small for him, so he doesn't know firsthand if
the water is wet, but he trusts the experts that
the water is dry, much in the same way he
did with Trump's announcement that vaccines and talanol are connected
to autism.
Speaker 15 (12:13):
Autism is not caused by vaccines. I want to repeat
that so everyone can hear it and hopefully anybody that's
tuning in. Autism is not caused by vaccines. It's not
caused by tylanol.
Speaker 16 (12:31):
If you're pregnant and your doctor recommends a seed of minifit,
let me repeat that word for anybody who doesn't know
how to bring. If your doctor recommends a set of minefit,
you should ignore the recommendation of the President that you
fight like hell not to take it. And his advice
(12:55):
that mothers should avoid doctor recommended medications and just out
during pregnancy is reckless and frankly, it's insulting. Contrary to
RFK Junior's bigoted evaluation, autistic people are not tragedies.
Speaker 2 (13:15):
They are students. They are workers.
Speaker 15 (13:17):
They are neighbors, artists, athletes, and thinkers who strengthen our communities.
Speaker 2 (13:24):
So let me be clear.
Speaker 15 (13:25):
Blaming vaccines or medicine for autism is not just wrong,
it's harmful. It stigmatizes real people and spreads lies that
hurt families.
Speaker 2 (13:38):
Democrats don't really value experts.
Speaker 4 (13:41):
If they did, they would listen to people like doctor
Toby Rogers of the Brownstone Institute.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
I want to add to this debate.
Speaker 17 (13:49):
I watched every single meeting of the Advisor Committee on
Immunization Practices in the Vaccines and Related Biological Products Advisory
Committee in twenty one twenty twenty three, when all these
COVID shots were being authorized for use in this country,
and after a while, the CDC's own research showed that
(14:14):
the protection from the vaccine, if any, was between months
two and six, and by six months it showed negative efficacy.
So I'm watching the hearings on my computer screen at home.
I'm yelling at the screen, the COVID shots have negative
efficacy after six months. Tell me how a shot with
(14:37):
negative efficacy is saving lives and it has the worst
side effect profile of any vaccine in human history.
Speaker 2 (14:45):
So how exactly is.
Speaker 17 (14:47):
A vaccine with the worst side effects and negative efficacy
saving lives.
Speaker 2 (14:54):
That's a preposterous claim.
Speaker 17 (14:55):
What ended the COVID pandemic was the omicron invariant that
was more transmissible but less lethal the vaccine.
Speaker 2 (15:07):
How many people had helped? I think it's an open debate.
It could be a net nagad.
Speaker 18 (15:12):
Well, maybe we can look at the clinical trial data
in which twenty one people died in the vaccine group,
in seventeen died in the placino group.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
I looked at him, and they looked at me, you know,
and I just looked at her, and I have to
just get your stuff and get out to Michael Verry's show.
Speaker 19 (15:25):
I reached over and got a newspaper and I wrote
it up I slapped him on the nose.
Speaker 2 (15:29):
I said, So, this morning I got a call from
a fellow named Vaughan, and.
Speaker 4 (15:38):
Vaughn's voice sounded vaguely familiar, but I didn't think anything
more of it. And he called about He called about.
Speaker 2 (15:50):
What did Vaughan originally called about? Do you remember? I
can't remember?
Speaker 4 (15:56):
But he called on the black line and we talked
for a while, and when we went to break a
friend of mine who lives in College Station named Michael Robinson.
He's a plumbing guy, called Aggie Plumber, and he said, hey,
remember when I texted you about a year ago that
this was one of the top ten all time Michael
(16:17):
Berry shows. You remember that? And I said vaguely? He said,
this guy going he was part of that show. He
called in and I said, tell me more about it.
He said, well, you were talking to him. He's a mailman.
Amongst all the other things he's done in life, he's
(16:39):
a mailman. And he had called on the Black line
and he had done some work in Orange and for
those of you who don't know, that's the little town
in Texas I'm from.
Speaker 2 (16:48):
And so he got to talk.
Speaker 4 (16:49):
And this was in August, before the election, and then
you put him on hold. There was another call that
came in. You offered him to co host the show,
and another call came in from on the black line,
from a fellow named.
Speaker 2 (17:11):
Tyron, And so Tyrone.
Speaker 4 (17:16):
Was talking about how, remember August of last year, you
could tell that Kamala Harris was awful and the idea
that anybody was going to.
Speaker 2 (17:26):
Vote for her was just crazy. But everybody knew there
were people that were going to.
Speaker 4 (17:30):
Vote for her. And these two black guys, I just
sort of pulled back. I turned off my mic and
let them go back and forth with each other because
I had told Vaughan, you know, you're going to host
the show, and we were having a little fun with it,
and you're going to host the show. And so he
welcomed the call and it was a little awkward, but
that made it more authentic in my opinion. And so
(17:55):
those two went back and forth. And you know, when
I was in office, campaigning in what is referred to
as the black community, going to black churches, black barbershop,
black restaurants, you find out that over a period of time,
there's certain blacks that will open up to you, and
you find out that they're willing to talk about things.
(18:17):
There's a there's an unwritten but it's not unspoken, an
unwritten rule that for black folks you don't air the
dirty linen to white folks. We can think Kamala Harris
is a stupid, slutty woman if we want to, and
many do and slept her way to the top.
Speaker 2 (18:35):
And on and on and on.
Speaker 4 (18:36):
But what we won't do is we won't say that
in front of Republicans and white people. We keep that
in house. We can think that Obama's a little fruity,
we can think he was a terrible president, but you
don't say that around the white folks. So for these
two guys to have this conversation, feel comfortable having this
(18:57):
conversation with everything that goes with it, and a big
audience of people listening, was pretty interesting to behold. So
Vaughan called this morning and Jim Mudd, our creative director,
went digging around among the dust heap in the archives
(19:20):
and found their conversation from August of last year. And
I'm going to say this again, this is right before
the election, and now that Trump has won. You can't
imagine that anybody isn't for Trump, right but we have
to remember at this time, we didn't know Trump was
going to win.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
It was still up in the air.
Speaker 4 (19:40):
We were scared the death of how bad it would
be if he didn't. All right, give it a listen, Von,
Before we get to what you were to talk about,
why don't you just co host this segment with me?
Speaker 2 (19:49):
All right there, Well you you host, and I'll help
you where you need it.
Speaker 20 (19:56):
Okay, Well, i'll just get to my point if I'm
going to do that, But Vaughan.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
We really like to have you co host. It's a
big honor. I know it is.
Speaker 20 (20:09):
I just don't even know where to start.
Speaker 2 (20:12):
The door.
Speaker 4 (20:13):
Our first call is Tyrone seven one three nine nine nine,
one thousand. You say Tyrone, welcome to the program, and
then he'll start talking and then you just kind of
respond however you feels natural. But if there's a if
there's a lull, I'll step in. Okay, okay, all right,
go ahead, Welcome.
Speaker 20 (20:27):
To Tron, Welcome to the program.
Speaker 19 (20:33):
Good morning, Thank you for inviting me in the program. Anyway,
what are you doing today? I was working on my van,
but I can't fix it. I got I told my
mechanic to come see if he can fix it. But
this is what I was calling to say, was that
I enjoyed listen to the Michael Barryshow. But I think
(20:54):
we got some concerns with the election coming up for
the presidential race.
Speaker 2 (20:58):
Because I was tall with.
Speaker 19 (21:00):
My family last night. You know, they still want to
go with the stilly woman for presidency, even though you explain,
I explained all kinds of things that she had done,
the stuff that they accused the man of she doing,
they doing deministration, doing that she going to fix problems
when she gets elected when she got the power to
do so. Now they lost our generation. I don't know.
(21:23):
I just hope we have a high turnout and people
vote the right way because it's just a loss right now.
Speaker 2 (21:28):
What I see. Let me ask you a question. You
know you go ahead on.
Speaker 20 (21:33):
Well, you know, Tyrone, we you know, as Blacks, we
have a voting base that are primarily Democrat and most
of us don't even know what the issues are. Just
the word democrats seem to suffice. Anybody can come under
(21:54):
the name Democrat. It could be the devil coming out
of hell and call themselves a Democrat.
Speaker 2 (22:00):
Out knowing they will.
Speaker 20 (22:01):
So you will have a whole line of blacks waiting
to vote on them.
Speaker 19 (22:07):
I can't understand it at all. The stuff they're complaining
about the high price of this and that, and they
voted for that stuff and still trying to vote for it.
I don't understand it at all. Well, yeah, same time
they call. Yeah, they voted at the same.
Speaker 2 (22:24):
Time for different.
Speaker 20 (22:27):
You know, they voted people in office in different states.
They voted themselves out of the state, and now they're
going around looking for a better life. So they're coming
to states like Texas and they're voting the same way.
And that don't make any sense there.
Speaker 19 (22:44):
No, And it's the part that really blows my mind.
They call me cheap because I'm a conservative, But at
the same time they always come in to borrow money
that they never pay back.
Speaker 21 (22:54):
How you like that?
Speaker 7 (22:56):
They tell me a story about the global warming activists
like to Thunberg and al Gore.
Speaker 1 (23:02):
Well, gender neutral child until you tell us her gender.
Much that once was is lost for none now live
who remember it, But for over a thousand generations, climate
activists were the guardians of moral authority in the world
before the dark times, before Trump, climate activists were once
venerated by heads of state and mass media alike as
the voice of a voiceless Mother Earth. She had been
(23:24):
rendered voiceless by a patriarchal society that thought it had
the right to rape her of her resources. The patriarchy
was wrong and evil, as it subjected all women to
its will, including the greatest mother of all, and doing
so it made our world sick with fever. Then, like
a phoenix rising from the ashes, a prophet named al
Gore began to warn the people. Like a voice crying
(23:46):
out in the wilderness, he warned of the coming doom.
The more he spoke of boiling oceans and ten thousand
Hiroshima bombs exploding in our atmosphere.
Speaker 2 (23:55):
Every day, people began to listen.
Speaker 1 (23:57):
These people began to block the traffic of the capitalists
on the weight of their jobs. They threw paint on
priceless works of art to grab the attention of those
killing our world.
Speaker 2 (24:05):
They glued their own hands to the pavement.
Speaker 7 (24:08):
Those were the global warming activists, right, dad.
Speaker 2 (24:11):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (24:12):
The greatest of them all, Greta Thunberg stood in front
of the world and said, how dagn you.
Speaker 2 (24:19):
Did The people listen to her? No, But that didn't.
Speaker 1 (24:22):
Deter her, she continued to her work, telling the people
that if they didn't change their ways, they would all
die within twelve years.
Speaker 2 (24:29):
Did that work No, The people.
Speaker 1 (24:31):
Rejected her, but the liberal world leaders and their media
apparatus adored her. They passed legislation to rid the world
of fossil fuels to stop the planet from dying.
Speaker 2 (24:40):
What happened next, Well.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
The people rejected the liberal world leaders and elected a
new leader named Donald Trump, and he hunted down and
destroyed global warming activists by going after their funding.
Speaker 7 (24:50):
So without the global warming activists, no one has been
fighting to save Mother Earth for the past fifty years.
Speaker 2 (24:57):
That's right, and it's been ski dad.
Speaker 7 (25:01):
I'm curious, but if we only had twelve years to
live fifty years ago, maybe the global warming activists were wrong.
Maybe when they stopped traffic and destroyed priceless works of art,
they were wrong to do So, maybe the global warming
activists were the bad guys all along.
Speaker 2 (25:18):
Shut up and go to sleep, little girl, No one
asked you, pokin.
Speaker 4 (25:23):
The left's reaction to the James Comy indictments compared to
how they reacted to Trump's indictment, has their hypocrisy on
full display. Tom Elliott put together a fantastic montage of
the left talking about Trump's indictment, and Ramone wants you
(25:47):
to know that he added a music bed to the montage.
Speaker 2 (25:50):
Thank you Ramone. So now you know Ramone added some
value here. Thank you Ramone.
Speaker 22 (25:57):
This is an example of our judicial I'm working like
it should.
Speaker 2 (26:01):
Work and how it works in.
Speaker 22 (26:03):
Democracies across the globe. We have no reason to believe
call me actually broke any laws here, and we have
no reason to believe that prosecutors in the Eastern District
of Virginia have any evidence that suggests he did.
Speaker 2 (26:17):
In fact, we have reason.
Speaker 23 (26:18):
To believe the exact opposite sign that this country is
on track, that people actually respect the rule of law
and are willing to do their judy. This is such
a horrendous moment for the rule of law, for the
Department of Justice, for the country rit large.
Speaker 2 (26:37):
This is a test of citizenship. Are we a country
of laws? This is the rule of law under assault.
Speaker 24 (26:47):
Kevin McCarthy is already casting judgment on the process. Are
they could get someone killed with his rhetoric. He is
going to inspire and cite somebody to take up violence
against law enforcement.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
Donald Trump has not come for you yet. He eventually
will find you. Trump and many of his.
Speaker 25 (27:06):
Allies have already begun criticizing and accusing the justice system
of being corrupt and biased against him. The fact that
the President was actually able to get the federal government
to do his bidding as a giant step toward eroding
the independence of the justice system and undoing the rule
of law in America.
Speaker 26 (27:24):
I've covered the intelligence community for more than a decade.
Retaining classified information, especially at the level of classification that
we're talking about here, is deeply significant. It is extraordinary
that a former president did this. But a lot of
regular Americans out there are saying when they hear about this,
will didn't Biden do that?
Speaker 2 (27:41):
Didn't Mike pensu It.
Speaker 26 (27:42):
Of course that's not the same, but that's what a
lot of people are saying because they're.
Speaker 2 (27:45):
Not delving into the details.
Speaker 26 (27:47):
Tomi authorized Dan Richmond to talk to reporters, and let's
think about that. Does that matter in the scheme of things.
This case against James Tomy, for the Trump world, in
Maga world, is not about whether he lied to Congress
about leeks. They're using this as a weapon. This marginal
urgery charge to go after Cony because they hate what
(28:09):
he did in investigating Donald Trump.
Speaker 21 (28:11):
There are inflammatory accusations about partisanship and political basis for
these charges, and that should tell you everything that you
need to know about what is motivating Donald Trump and
his supporters.
Speaker 18 (28:27):
Is fundamentally a breakpoint in our system of government, because
even James Comy recognizes that the individual case against him
is far less important than the damage this is doing
and has done to the Department of Justice.
Speaker 27 (28:48):
She u's an indictment to move forward with the potential prosecution.
That's the process. There's nothing political about that. It's never
been political. So now this reaction and is what it is, performative,
It's required, it is expected of them. There's not a
(29:09):
brain cell that kicks in and goes, oh, I have
to say and do the right thing, which is shut
your mouth.
Speaker 28 (29:14):
Visa all the other autocratic activities and behaviors they're engaging in,
while at the same time, to your point, making people
afraid by going after them and by in imputing to them,
they're the offenses of the state.
Speaker 3 (29:32):
This is not a disparate treatment for a former president,
contrary to some who say it's political We have to
see the indictment, but it feels to me like they
are doing what we're supposed to do in America, treating
no one as being above the law. Donald Trump has
thirty four felony convictions. He is now going to go
(29:54):
after the people who are responsible to that. The whole thing,
the lies, the and justice.
Speaker 2 (30:01):
That is not democracy, that's not America.
Speaker 13 (30:04):
People who want to lie their way through this or
claim that any accountability of any kind is automatically a
political prosecution. People around Donald Trump try to take the
first real criminal accountability process that exists and pretended something else.
Speaker 2 (30:19):
My god, what if the law is enforced? What if
it's not.
Speaker 29 (30:23):
We now have the actual indictment, and it's very thin.
It doesn't involve allegations.
Speaker 23 (30:29):
Of conduct, that is to say, action that forms.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
A crime in the physical sense.
Speaker 29 (30:34):
We have the public, likely unlawful demands by Donald Trump
to do what's called selective prosecution, to go after someone
because of who they are, not of the evidence showing
what they did.
Speaker 30 (30:45):
There's a lot of us that still believe that in
this country, no man is above the law.
Speaker 2 (30:50):
They're willing to trash.
Speaker 13 (30:52):
The rule of law all because of a failed reality
TV host.
Speaker 31 (30:56):
For those who are you screaming and crying on the
air about the weaponization of the government, or collusion with
the Biden White House or all sorts of other things
that have led to this moment that are baseless, completely baseless.
Speaker 2 (31:10):
It's not responsible. This is a bogus case and it
is lawfair.
Speaker 30 (31:15):
The only intention is he wants payback and he wants
to make come you pay. And when you see people
like the Vice president going out, there's a right on
the law. It's just it's ridiculous.
Speaker 2 (31:34):
Thank you, and good night.