Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
Vary Show is.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
On the air.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
You love is the greatest thing in the world. But
that's not what he said. He distinctively said to blave,
And as we all know, to blave means to bluff.
So you're probably playing cards and he cheated, Lia Lia January.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
You can't.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
Angels so overwhelmed this nation.
Speaker 4 (01:01):
For so many years, it was a problem that many
Americans had become resigned to. Many Americans have decided to
figure out how to kind of make it work for them.
We kept being told there's only so much Biden can do.
We kept being told that the problem couldn't be solved
(01:24):
because it was too complex. The only way to solve
it was a comprehensive immigration plan. Immigration, mind you, was
always focused on getting the most number of people here
from third world countries who would reliably vote Democrat and
(01:46):
who would provide cheap labor for companies who did not
want to comply with American loss. That's what it comes
down to. Why do you have so much cheap Chinese
crap in your house? Because those products can it be
made in this country and put on a shelf for
you to buy at the prices you want.
Speaker 1 (02:08):
I ain't mad at you, but let's call it what
it is.
Speaker 4 (02:11):
Our labor laws are putitive when it comes to manufacturing.
Just the fact of the matter, but the supply of
cheap labor and reliable voters led the Democrats to do
everything possible to collapse this nation through illegal immigration. The
(02:33):
corporate media kept telling us this is clip six h
seven gen. Corporate media kept telling I mean, we can't.
Biden can't really do anything about it.
Speaker 3 (02:42):
Republicans keep saying Biden doesn't need Congress, he can stop
what's happening at the border all by himself.
Speaker 5 (02:48):
Can you fact check that for us, because we here all, No,
that's not true.
Speaker 2 (02:52):
Republicans have been saying largely wrongly right because saying that
the president can close the border unilaterally on his own,
president actually doesn't have the author under law.
Speaker 5 (03:00):
To do that.
Speaker 6 (03:01):
There's only so much President Biden can do with executive action,
and he did try to do whatever he could.
Speaker 1 (03:09):
They actually are doing everything they can. The president hans
aren't tied. There's only so much that he can do.
Speaker 7 (03:14):
President Biden has issues or executive orders, but there's only
so much he can do within his purview.
Speaker 8 (03:19):
What an intractable a problem this is for the president with.
Speaker 1 (03:23):
No easy solutions. No easy solutions here.
Speaker 9 (03:25):
There are no easy solutions here, folks.
Speaker 3 (03:27):
The president insisting there's only so much he can do
without Congress. How much can actually be done quickly without
Congress acting? How would this happen without the power of
the purse, without Congress getting involved.
Speaker 9 (03:39):
They need Congress to act to fix the broken immigration system.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
This cannot happen without Congress resourcing this.
Speaker 9 (03:45):
There's only so much a president can do with his
pen and his phone.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
Is that right?
Speaker 4 (03:51):
Because Donald Trump took off this January second, January twentyth
and we're not even two months into this and CBS
National reports.
Speaker 10 (04:04):
Just feet away from Mexico are cameras captured a heavily
fortified US border.
Speaker 4 (04:09):
This has been known for so many years for the
high level of Azamangolian activity.
Speaker 10 (04:16):
That has been true historically, but not anymore.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
The activity is very slow.
Speaker 4 (04:20):
There's multiple factors attached to why we have seen a
significant drop in apprehensions recently.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
One of them, of course, as consequences.
Speaker 10 (04:29):
And you believe that is due to new policies from Washington, DC.
Speaker 1 (04:34):
It has a lot to do with that.
Speaker 10 (04:36):
It is quite here at the US Mexico border, where
illegal crossings are down by more than ninety percent from
the same time last year. We have seen border patrol agents,
soldiers and vehicles and barriers, but no migrants. So far.
President Trump has shut down the US asylum system, empowering
officials to swiftly deport migrants without processing their claims. He
(04:58):
has also deployed thousands of to the border and test
the military with deportations. It's a crackdown felt across the
border in Mexico.
Speaker 4 (05:10):
Border patrol says, hardly anybody even trying to come across.
And they told us the president couldn't do anything. Trump Cruise,
Yes he can. So you had to close the border
start there, all right, and then you have to close
the welfare state. We'll go to clip five oh four.
(05:30):
Here's Congressman Virginia Fox, a Republican from North Carolina, asking
Democrat mayors how much their cities spent on illegals. And
I want you to listen carefully to how every one
of these cities is bankrupt. Every one of these cities
is bankrupt, and yet they find hundreds of millions and
wait till you hear in New York, it's gonna blow
(05:51):
your mind. They find hundreds of millions of dollars to
give to illegals.
Speaker 11 (05:56):
Go ahead, Mayor Johnson. In the last four years, how
much has Chicago spent on care for illegal aliens?
Speaker 1 (06:05):
Thank you, Congressman. It's seventy nine million over the last
two and a half years.
Speaker 11 (06:09):
Mayor Adams, same question. How much is New York spent
to care for illegal aliens?
Speaker 5 (06:15):
Approximately six point nine billion dollars went out of all
tax base funds.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
Mayor wu same question.
Speaker 11 (06:24):
How much is Boston spent to care for illegal aliens
in the last four years.
Speaker 12 (06:29):
We do not ask about immigration status and giving city
services and providing that access, so we.
Speaker 6 (06:34):
Do not have a number.
Speaker 1 (06:36):
There, you have it, yeah, don't.
Speaker 4 (06:39):
We don't feel like the taxpayers need to know where
the money's going.
Speaker 1 (06:43):
We're just such good people.
Speaker 4 (06:47):
Congressman Eli Crane, Republican from Arizona, discussing the House vote
to pass the Subterranean Border Defense Act. This basically would
just close the El Choppa Tunnels and the other the
other Coyote tunnels that these people were using to and
I'm sure they still have more. I mean, look, the
(07:07):
cartels have billions of dollars. The Chinese triads got to
get their fitnel on the streets to kill your kids
somewhere or another. But it was a four hundred and
two to one vote. The one vote against it was
Rashida Taliban surprise.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Here's the audio.
Speaker 13 (07:23):
The Subtrading Border Defense Act would help US address the
growing threat of illicit cross border tunnels by requiring annual
reports to Congress on counter tunneling operations fortifying our security
system at the border.
Speaker 1 (07:38):
Put simply, this.
Speaker 13 (07:39):
Would help ensure that Congress has the necessary data to
forge another much needed layer of defense. As transnational criminal
organizations continue to grow in both size and sophistication, ilicit
cross border tunnels along the southwest border of the United
States represent a significant and growing threat to national secure already.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
Congress must address this.
Speaker 13 (08:02):
Deadly threat and ensure US Customs and Border Protection has
the resources needed to acquire counter tunnel technology. Since nineteen ninety,
officials have discovered more than one hundred and forty tunnels
that have breached the US border, with a eighty percent
increase in tunnel activity occurring since two thousand and eight.
Speaker 4 (08:22):
This is Michael Arry Show enjoy it. Stacy Abrams is sweating.
I mean not just because her fraud is being exposed.
She's really fat and she sweats a lot. It's what
Stacy Abrams does. If you've ever noticed her, a fair
(08:45):
extraordinary makeup, it's melting.
Speaker 13 (08:50):
You know.
Speaker 4 (08:50):
The old phrase to save face came from a time
when women's makeup was a cheaper quality makeup than you
know all.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
The cosmetic companies can.
Speaker 4 (09:04):
Create today, and it would be caked onto a woman's face,
and if she came close to the fire, that intense
heat would melt her face and that woman would lose face.
But then they created a barrier in between the fire
(09:25):
and the person who wanted to get close enough to
get warm, and that barrier would keep the heat from
hitting her face directly so that she could save face
and not lose face.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
A history behind that phrase.
Speaker 4 (09:40):
Well, Stacy Abrams is not going to be able to
save face. She will now lose face because this is
a woman who keeps running for office and losing and
claiming she was cheated at the time that democrats say,
you're not allowed to say you cheat, but that's what
she does. This is a not very smart one woman.
You remember the photo of her sitting in the classroom
(10:02):
with the kids and they're all wearing masks and she's not.
She probably would hyperventilated. She's not a healthy looking woman.
That's several hundred pounds on the hoof. That's a lot
going on there. Well, she was on MSNBC's Chris Hayes
after the news emerged that a nonprofit of hers was
(10:25):
funded by the Biden administration's EPA to the tune of
two billion dollars. Prior to that, they had one hundred
dollars in their bank account. That's what they had raised,
this nonprofit, and the Biden administration just threw them two
billion dollars because she helped Biden in Georgia with the
(10:46):
illegal vote machine allegedly. So here she is admitting, Yeah,
they gave us two billion dollars to go out and
buy people new home appliances because that would reduce they
are electric bills. So now we've upgraded from the Obama
phone to buying people entire appliances.
Speaker 1 (11:08):
Just listen to this.
Speaker 6 (11:09):
One of the ironies of the attack on you and
I'm going to play what he did was that my
understanding is the program at the source of this whole
thing is a program to lower costs for people. Do
I have that top line correct?
Speaker 1 (11:22):
You have it absolutely right?
Speaker 6 (11:24):
Okay, So I'm going to play what he had to say,
and I'm going to ask you to explain what the
program is that was such an obvious, ludicrous laugh line
for the Republicans there.
Speaker 1 (11:36):
Take a listen.
Speaker 13 (11:39):
One point nine billion dollars to recently created Decarbonization of
Homes committee headed.
Speaker 14 (11:47):
Up and we know she's involved.
Speaker 13 (11:50):
Just at the last moment the money was passed over
by a woman named Stacy Abrooms.
Speaker 9 (11:56):
Have you ever heard of?
Speaker 6 (11:58):
Okay? But what is this organization? What is your relation
to it? And what does it do?
Speaker 12 (12:04):
In twenty twenty three and twenty twenty four, I led
a program called Vitalizing de Soda. We worked in a
tiny town in South Georgia to demonstrate that by replacing
energy inefficient appliances with efficient appliances, you can lower your costs.
And in fact we accomplish that for seventy five percent
(12:24):
of the community. They got appliances that are lowering their bills.
Speaker 1 (12:27):
Right now, we have.
Speaker 12 (12:28):
One woman who saw her electric bill cut in half
from one point eighty to ninety eight dollars.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
That's what we delivered.
Speaker 12 (12:35):
And based on that program, a coalition of organizations, famous
organizations came together and said to the EPA, if we
can do this here, we can do this for millions
more Americans. Let us invest the money of America in
lowering the cost for Americans.
Speaker 1 (12:54):
And the EPA said, okay, great.
Speaker 4 (12:56):
Go for it, and very it. We're going to save
people money by buying them all new appliances. This is insanity,
and you're handing it to this woman who is returning
political favors, who has no accountability for this money. This
(13:19):
is why our country is bankrupt. This is why we
have trillions in debt. This is what Michael Steele means
by leaving government to those who do government fraud, waste abuse.
I mean we started with the Obama phone. Remember in
(13:40):
Obama's administration, everybody needed a phone, so the government was
going to give them a phone.
Speaker 1 (13:45):
Remember how that worked out?
Speaker 6 (13:47):
Phone?
Speaker 9 (13:47):
Yes, everybody in Cleveland, Oh my nody.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
Get Obama phone.
Speaker 9 (13:51):
You keep a woman president.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
You know you have us a phone to give you.
Let me give you a phone if you.
Speaker 2 (13:57):
Sign up and during you a full steps.
Speaker 15 (14:00):
You want social charity, you got load income, you disability.
Speaker 4 (14:06):
Play that one more time, because this is who these
policies are directed at.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
They're out there going, hey, how can I get MO?
What can I do to get MO?
Speaker 7 (14:15):
What?
Speaker 5 (14:15):
Well?
Speaker 1 (14:16):
Where do I go? How about they gonna give me?
Speaker 9 (14:20):
Yes, everybody in Cleveland, Oh my Nordy.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
Got Obama ba ball. You gotta keep on Boman president.
Speaker 9 (14:25):
You know you give us a phone, but he give
you a phone.
Speaker 2 (14:30):
You sign up for.
Speaker 15 (14:31):
Gring you a full steps, you want social charity?
Speaker 5 (14:33):
Go?
Speaker 1 (14:34):
You got load income? You disability?
Speaker 4 (14:38):
You know you got low income, you disability. And this
is the basis of comments like you're going to hear next.
It's clip number.
Speaker 1 (14:46):
Six O five.
Speaker 4 (14:47):
This is Columbia professor Basil Smichel. He's on MSNBC and
he claims that what Elon Musk is doing saving the
taxpayer's dollars by cutting the waste and fraud is that
it is racist because it's targeting a government once led
(15:09):
by a black man. You see, the government is black
and a government that nearly elected a black woman. So
any attempts to cut the waste and fraud in our
government must necessarily be racist because Barack Obama is our government.
And when you take money from Barack, you are being racist.
Speaker 5 (15:33):
There are people who are charged with trying to find savings. So, yes,
it's an attack on government, but it's also an attack
on this government. What I mean by that is it's
an attack on this government that used to be headed
by a black man. It's an attack on this government
that almost elected a black woman to the highest office
in the land.
Speaker 1 (15:51):
It's an attack on.
Speaker 5 (15:52):
A government that has been more welcoming and more supportive
of people who have come to this country and search
for a better life.
Speaker 4 (16:01):
Oh so you want more black people in every organization
at every and then the minute they're not in that position,
or you attempt to cut back on that or demand accountability,
you're going to scream racism. Wow, you drive a run
marks to librarians.
Speaker 1 (16:21):
Everyone listens to Michael Verry Show.
Speaker 4 (16:26):
This song reminds me of a story we covered this
morning in Houston. It's a Houston story. A mortician, relatively
young woman thirty four years old, was conducting and embalming
and she finds out, if she's in the middle of
the embalming, that the recently deceased was a sexual predator.
(16:55):
Whereupon she proceeded to castrate him and to feed him.
Speaker 1 (17:03):
The fruit of her labor.
Speaker 4 (17:06):
Yeah, won't cover that this evening, But if I've caught
your Lorena Bobbitt follow up curiosity, you can find it
for yourself. It's not hard to find. So Al Green
stood up, hollered and.
Speaker 1 (17:24):
Got kicked out of the.
Speaker 4 (17:26):
House the other day, for which he was censured. I
think there were eleven Democrats who joined in the censure
of him. And he goes on the Breakfast Club, which
is an urban by which in radio format means black
national talk show. But to their credit, they try to
address issues I think a little more thoroughly then maybe
(17:50):
just based simply on the you know this guy good,
this guy bad. You can decide that for yourself. But
Al Green goes on that show and all he's got
to say is that he was removed because of racism.
I got to tell you how tired and tawdry this
(18:11):
whole racism whining is, how sad and pathetic, the last
refuge of a scoundrel when all you've got left is
that the reason you failed, the reason you made a mistake,
the reason people didn't choose you, pick you, you.
Speaker 1 (18:31):
Fell down is racism.
Speaker 4 (18:35):
It really is it really is putting a big l
on your forehead. It's a surrender to your sadness. But
here's what he had to say.
Speaker 7 (18:42):
There is invidious discrimination in the House of Representatives. I'm
a son of the segregated South. The rights that the
Constitution recognized for me, my friends and neighbors denied. I
had to sit in the back of the bus the
balcony of the movie drink from a colored water fountain,
and my relatives, who committed some crimes were locked up.
Speaker 1 (19:04):
In the bottom of the jail.
Speaker 7 (19:06):
I know what invidious discrimination looks like. The clan burned
across in my yard.
Speaker 5 (19:12):
I have.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
I know what it smells like.
Speaker 7 (19:14):
I was in filthy waiting rooms, and I've been in
places where I didn't want to be, and I know
what it sounds like. I've been called all kinds of
ugly names, so I know in vidious discrimination. And when
the speaker decided that I would be removed, and then
there was this motion, this resolution to censure me, it
(19:35):
became obvious to me that I was not being treated
as others were, And candidly speaking, it is invidious discrimination,
harmful discrimination.
Speaker 14 (19:46):
A few years ago, a black woman who worked for
Congressman Algreen as his chief of staff filed a case
against him for sexual harassment and extreme work placed hostility
on the basis that he was.
Speaker 4 (20:06):
Apparently, like l. Gore, allegedly a crazed sex poodle, if
you remember that story, and he promptly filed a lawsuit
back at her as his Oh, really, is that what
you're going to do now? I don't know if she
filed that lawsuit against him for racism because she's a
(20:28):
black woman. I don't know if he filed a lawsuit
against her out of racism because he's.
Speaker 1 (20:35):
A black man.
Speaker 4 (20:37):
But at some point in your life take responsibility. You
stood up and acted an ass and you got thrown
out as you should. It's as simple as that. But
I find it interesting when people who are black claim
that racism is the reason they failed. They lost an election,
(20:59):
they got caught committing a crime, they stole money, they
robbed a bang. But isn't it interesting that if you
have racial stereotypes, people tend to gravitate toward those instead
of away from them when they claim they bring on racism.
(21:22):
Exhibit A Jasmine Crockett. Jasmine Crockett drives a lot of
people crazy, because she says stupid stuff, not me. I
love Jasmine Crockett. She's the best thing to happen to
our way of life in a long time. There's going
to be a Democrat screaming and hollering every day on TV.
I hope it's Jasmine Crockett. I hope it's that creature
(21:44):
that looks like Gargamele with the purple hair. I hope
it's always a whack chop. I hope it's a dude
dressed as a girl and he's got a beard. I
hope it's a complete and utter nut because that exposes
the mindset behind it. You can choose the book by
its cover in that case, because the cover says crazy,
(22:06):
and the book is full of crazy.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
But here is a montage. We didn't do it. I
won't find out who did it and give them credit
because I can't recall.
Speaker 4 (22:16):
Somebody found audio of her three years ago, and then
she gets elected, and all of a sudden she realizes,
oh well, I'm just one of four hundred and thirty
five members of Congress. As a member of Congress, I
don't have any seniority in this body. But if I
become crazy, Black Lady maybe if Sheila Jackson Lee dies,
(22:37):
I can take over that crazy black lady, you know,
the Maxine Waters Eddie Bernice Johnson. Maxine's dentures can't stay
in her mouth long enough for her to talk very long.
And Sheila Jackson Lee had the cancer at the time.
So Jasmine Crockett became the crazy, loud black lady.
Speaker 1 (22:57):
And the thing about it is, you know what it.
Speaker 4 (22:59):
Is as kind of mildly racist that MSNBC and CNN
and NBC and CBS and ABC they will put her
on TV. They know good and damn well what they're doing.
They know that everybody who sees her on there is thinking,
who is the crazy black lady about ready to whip somebody,
(23:20):
rip somebody's weave off. They know exactly what they're doing,
but they put her on because she's she's polarizing. Right,
But did you know that she changed her accent once
she got elected, which seems sort of odd.
Speaker 1 (23:35):
Well, listen to a preself.
Speaker 9 (23:36):
Absolutely, First of all, it's good to see you in
the new year. You know, no one could have told
me that when I went down to Austin now looks
like a little bit over a year ago, that I
would be running for Congress. That's not what my plan was.
But what I've always decided is that I would step
up when there was a need listening. He up there,
(23:58):
he's hearing all kinds of Anne and let me just
be reel and we mightn't gonna sit for there.
Speaker 1 (24:04):
We wouldn't, you know.
Speaker 9 (24:06):
But when she called me and said I think it's
time for me to retire, and you're the one that
I believe should take my seat, I really was kind
of caught off guard.
Speaker 1 (24:15):
I didn't anticipate that.
Speaker 9 (24:17):
If anyone knows anything about the congresswoman, they know we
showed up and if he had some sink then maybe
we would have been about that life. But y'all know, hay,
I no sense, so please give some love. This took
a little bit of coordinating to do.
Speaker 13 (24:31):
For sure.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
We got some cool shirts.
Speaker 9 (24:34):
You know, the congressional seat is over four times as
large as my house seat, and I was just starting
to get into the rhythm of doing constituent services and
things like that.
Speaker 1 (24:44):
We got we got.
Speaker 9 (24:46):
Madam Williams, who just happens to have the honorary seat.
It's not even honorary because she hold me down, y'all,
but the legend himself, John Lewis, that is the seat
in which she currently serves. So she honored his legacy.
This is the message that he wants to send today.
Speaker 1 (25:04):
With his finger on the pulse. The King of Ting
continues on The Michael Berry Show after nine to eleven.
In two thousand and one, George Bush, George W.
Speaker 4 (25:17):
Bush, really lost control of his presidency.
Speaker 1 (25:20):
The warmongers took over, the warhawks took over.
Speaker 4 (25:23):
Now and I don't honestly, I don't think he minded that,
but that really became. All he was able to do
was just send a lot of men and weapons to
Iraq and Afghanistan. And I suppose an assessment of the
Bush presidency would have to be in eight years in office,
(25:45):
what did you accomplish?
Speaker 1 (25:48):
Was Iraq a success?
Speaker 13 (25:50):
Well?
Speaker 4 (25:50):
Sure, we executed Saddam Hussein? But did we leave Iraq
better than we found it? And I know what you're
going to say, but Michael Saddam was such a bad guy. Okay,
what's happening there?
Speaker 2 (26:09):
Now?
Speaker 4 (26:10):
What about Afghanistan? Did we leave Afghanistan better than we
found it? Because there's billions of dollars of our arsenal
there that have fallen into the hands of the Taliban,
and the country is no better than we found it
for whatever reason we went there, and the reasons change
day to day. But before Bush had that happen, he
(26:34):
actually had a good approach to domestic issues in bringing
about change. He gave a speech to the NAACP and
he delivered one of the finest lines of modern politics.
He referred to the soft bigotry of low expectations. When
(26:55):
you assume that a person. Because a person is a female,
she can't be smart. Because a person is black, they
can't be an engineer. The expectations you have for people
will often be what they aspire to become. And this
(27:15):
brainwashing begins long before a kid gets to school, which
is why we've learned that two parent children who are
black both parents at home outperform single parent white children
because two parents tends to mean more adult child supervision time, training, education, mentoring, tutoring.
Speaker 1 (27:42):
It makes a difference.
Speaker 4 (27:44):
So writ large, what we've managed to do, through white
liberals and black race hustlers is tell black people that
when you do something wrong, just claim racism, when sadly,
usually the victim themselves are black. I don't know if
you've seen this video, it's gone quite viral. It's a
(28:06):
Virginia high school track meet and this girl from Virginia
at Elsie Norcombe High School in Portsmouth, Virginia. She comes
up behind another girl, she can't get past her. She's
in third and she takes the baton. It's a relay
race and she drills this girl on the head. Gave
(28:31):
her a concussion. I never seen anything like this, So naturally,
the reaction is, man, you are a bad person. Girl,
Why would you do this. The girl's sprinting around the
track and you're coming up behind her, trying to pass her,
and you can't see you just drill her in the head.
(28:52):
So here is the girl, the victim on ABC talking
about what happened to her.
Speaker 3 (28:58):
Junior Caylin Tucker was running the second leg of the
four by two hundred relay in the Virginia State High
School League Championships when the shocking incident happened.
Speaker 1 (29:07):
That's when she came with the other time.
Speaker 3 (29:10):
Watch again as you see the two sprinters running side
by side as they round the corner with Kaylan on
the outside. Kaylin's mother cheering her on. Just as Kaylan
is passing the other runner, the athlete swings her baton,
striking Kaylen.
Speaker 1 (29:26):
It is the.
Speaker 14 (29:27):
Avank on my head and then I fell off.
Speaker 3 (29:29):
The check immediately Kaylan dropping her baton and reaching for
her head.
Speaker 1 (29:34):
Oh, Colisee, I'm pretty much gas.
Speaker 9 (29:36):
I just jumped about the leaches immediately and ran to
her on the main floor.
Speaker 3 (29:40):
The sixteen year old was later diagnosed with a concussion.
The family says neither the athlete who struck Kaylan nor
the other team's coaches checked on Kaitlin or reached out afterwards.
Speaker 9 (29:51):
To see that they kept running and she not stop
and check on my daughter.
Speaker 1 (29:55):
That was the part I was like, it couldn't have
been an accident.
Speaker 3 (29:58):
The other runner, who attends Ice Norcom High School, has
not been named. Kalen's parents say Norcom's athletic director and
the girl's father apologized in a phone call, but they're
still waiting for the opposing athlete and her coaches to
reach out.
Speaker 13 (30:12):
We definitely want the coaches and a personal apology from
the actual athlete as well, because it is only right.
Speaker 3 (30:20):
The Virginia High School League saying in a statement, we
thoroughly review every instance like this, adding the VHSL membership
has always made it a priority to provide student athletes
with a safe environment for competition.
Speaker 4 (30:35):
Fast forward the girl who clopped the other girl on
the head. She did an interview and she ready for this.
Speaker 1 (30:45):
She's a victim.
Speaker 4 (30:46):
This source is Wavy Wavy TV in Norfolk, Virginia.
Speaker 8 (30:51):
The young athlete in question says, there's more to that
video than meets the eye.
Speaker 15 (30:55):
Everybody has feelings, so you're basically her, but you're not
thinking of my mental right.
Speaker 8 (31:03):
Alaila Everett is a decorated athlete and senior at Icy
High School. She would have never thought her trip to
the Class three track and field state finals last Tuesday
would take a drastic turn.
Speaker 1 (31:15):
They're going off of one angle a.
Speaker 8 (31:17):
Laila visibly emotional because of this video from the meat
This was a four.
Speaker 1 (31:21):
By two hundred meters. Don't actually hit her in the
head on.
Speaker 8 (31:27):
The track when they nearly collided with each other.
Speaker 15 (31:30):
After a couple of times hitting her, my be time
got stuck behind her back like this and it rolled
up her back. I lost my balance and when I
pumped my arms again.
Speaker 1 (31:38):
She got hit. It appears intentional, but.
Speaker 15 (31:43):
I know my intentions and I would never get somebody
on purpose. I would video second video wait to see the.
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Record of her parents.
Speaker 8 (31:54):
Outraged at the back lash, the IC relay team was
disqualified or ruling them.
Speaker 1 (32:00):
Official minds questionable.
Speaker 8 (32:02):
He says a play by playlook shows that the Brookville
athlete was running closely to Alaila.
Speaker 5 (32:07):
If a person comes up on the outside, they got
to be a full stride ahead of me before they
can cut in front of me.
Speaker 8 (32:13):
The other family spoke with the news station in Rowan Oak,
asking for an apology from Alayla, something she wants to give,
but she says the other athlete hasn't been receptive, blocking
her on social media, and instead the Everett family was
served with court.
Speaker 5 (32:27):
Papers and now we have to go to a city
three hours away that everybody hates our guts.
Speaker 15 (32:35):
Already there my character calling ghetto, racist slurs that threats
all of this just because of a nine second video.
Speaker 8 (32:43):
DHSL says they are still reviewing the situation. In Portsmouth
Public School says they will support whatever ruling comes from
the league.
Speaker 1 (32:52):
They call it me ghetto.
Speaker 4 (32:54):
They called me ghetto, Well, curiosity, what what would you
call it?
Speaker 1 (33:03):
Do you have a better term? Misunderstood? Off balance? If
you haven't seen the video, you see the video and.
Speaker 14 (33:11):
Come back and you're before I'm like, God, he can come.
Speaker 1 (33:15):
People are saying that just based on nine seconds.
Speaker 4 (33:17):
How long does it take to knock somebody in the
head that you're running in the lane behind them.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
And attract me.
Speaker 6 (33:24):
But that's his nine seconds.
Speaker 1 (33:25):
I me knocking to hurt, to hear is