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August 7, 2025 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
Time, time, luck and load.

Speaker 1 (00:11):
The Michael Varry Show is on the air.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
I didn't always use so much sound on our show
when we started. It was mostly me talking. But I
noticed that Rush would make points using sound and then
playoff of that. And I noticed, if I told you

(00:48):
you know Howard Stern had built up a lot of
capital with a certain demographic, his tribe, his listeners over
many years. And sure he had alienated a lot of
them over his weirdiness, over COVID and different They a
lot of them just grew out of Stern, and that happens.
I mean, look, there are people I don't care who

(01:09):
you are. In time they tire of listening to you
because they get older, because they change their listening patterns,
because they changed their politics, because whatever that may be.
But Stern laid it all on the line. He didn't
just have Joe Biden on his show. He had a

(01:29):
guy that Jake Tapper writes about as his kind of
Maya culpa that was brain dead.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
This was May of last year.

Speaker 3 (01:41):
This is a matter of days before they smothered Biden
and put Kamala Harrison there. Biden was in such bad shape.
They knew America had learned enough of how bad off
he was that there was no way anybody vote for him.
So they set him up for debate so he would lose,

(02:02):
and that would be the supposed ground swell of organic
calls from the grassroots and the donors and the congressmen,
the coattail politicians to get him off the ticket, and
then it wouldn't look like a few insiders had done
it. It was all set up, but they had to show
the world how braindead, what a vegetable, he was, and

(02:27):
stern knowing that, knowing how bad off Biden was, This
wasn't ten years earlier. This was a couple of deaths
a few days before Biden would be pushed out, and
nobody even argued. Nobody said, well, that's not right, show
some respect for our sitting president. No, they came out

(02:50):
and said, Biden's brain dead. We got to put we
got to put.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
Kamala in there. Kamala.

Speaker 3 (02:57):
She's awful, I know, but he's brain dead and America
knows it. He's going to die any day. And then
there was the awkward question, okay, Kamala has replaced him,
well technically not. Kamala is the candidate for president for
the next four years, but that wouldn't start until January.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
Oh, he's too.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
Brain dead to be the president starting in January. But
he's the president of the United States of America, the
most powerful nation in the history of mankind, and he's
going to be the president for six seven more months. Yeah, okay,
but before that, he goes on Howard Stern Show.

Speaker 1 (03:43):
Do you know that.

Speaker 3 (03:44):
Dana Plato was I think thirty four years old when.

Speaker 4 (03:49):
She went on stern Show.

Speaker 3 (03:51):
I read this sometime back, so I may get this
detail wrong, but I think I'm right. She had less
than a thousand dollars in her bank account. I think
it was a Bank of America account. She had less
than thousand dollars. It was a Mother's Day episode, and

(04:12):
Stern humiliated her, absolutely humiliated her. She was not in
a good place and you can hear it, and she
was not a person who was proud of the life
that brought her to that point. He humiliated her fall

(04:35):
from grace, He humiliated her drug use her as a mother,
hemiliated her.

Speaker 1 (04:43):
Do you know what happened the next day? She took
her own life.

Speaker 3 (04:48):
Okay, I guess you can't blame a guy for every
time they have a tough interview. But this is a
guy who felt the need to expose Dana Plato. Nobody
was asking the little girl from different strokes to make

(05:09):
the decision as to whether we go to war, to
appoint the entire cabinet to represent us to world leaders.
She was just a girl trying to figure out her life,
and sure she'd taken some wrong direction, but he felt
the need to interrogate her and expose her as a

(05:30):
weak person to such an extent that she killed herself.
But roll Joe Biden in weekend at Bernie's and just
sorry to have to play this again, but just listen
to how he basically makes Biden's case for him, and
notice how long he talks. And then at the end

(05:53):
you forget that Biden's in the room right across from him.

Speaker 1 (05:57):
And then by r told we have true education.

Speaker 3 (06:02):
So I, for love, how does how does Howard Stern
with a straight face do this? So yes, I'm glad
he's finished.

Speaker 5 (06:17):
Not only were you a star football player, but you
were lifeguard?

Speaker 3 (06:20):
I mean you, hold on, hold on, not only were
you a star football player. I'll assume because I don't
have the time, right now you know he was not
a star football player. It's one of many lies he
told not only were you a star football player, but
you were a lifeguard. Oh my god, he should certainly
be president. My goodness, he was also a lifeguard. Will

(06:44):
make him president?

Speaker 1 (06:45):
By God? And how do we know he was a
star football player and a lifeguard? Why he told us?
As part of many lies, he.

Speaker 5 (06:53):
Told us not only were you a star football player,
but you were lifeguard. I mean you you really and
you the only white guy who was lifeguarding in this
black community, right.

Speaker 4 (07:04):
They hold on?

Speaker 3 (07:05):
Yeah, that's a really I mean that's a really big deal.
There were all those black people then there you were
the I mean you must have been great to be
a white lifeguard amongst all the black people.

Speaker 5 (07:17):
And you were the one guy I was. Your family
is pretty again, this goes to my point about you know,
the president is the father of our country. That's something
we all say.

Speaker 4 (07:28):
Nobody.

Speaker 5 (07:28):
I think your family is so extraordinary, Oh what Hunter,
because of the way they've conducted themselves and how they
are with you. Good and I feel you have a
lot to give to the presidency. It's pretty it's pretty
amazing family. Yeah, amazing proud. I submit for your approval
that when you have a loving family like that, you

(07:49):
got a lot of You got a lot to give
because you hold on.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
His daughter, bless her heart.

Speaker 3 (07:54):
When she got out of rehab, they found her diary
where she said he came in to her shower late
into her teenage years. Her brother said, how creepy that
was that. Of course, while he's banging his dying brother's
neighbor soon to be widow, gets her hooked on crack,

(08:15):
she takes a.

Speaker 1 (08:15):
Pistol away throws it in there. He fathers a child.

Speaker 3 (08:18):
He yeah, hell of a family there, Howard, hell of
a family.

Speaker 6 (08:21):
Changing the name of the Gulf of Mexico to.

Speaker 5 (08:24):
The Gulf of michael Berry.

Speaker 4 (08:27):
Which has a beautiful way.

Speaker 3 (08:29):
President Trump's twenty twenty four win was a special moment,
a convergence of a number of divergent views, opinions, personalities, factors,
events that seemed to line up with divine intervention.

Speaker 4 (08:47):
At this It certainly seems so to me.

Speaker 3 (08:51):
One of those things you never could have expected was
Joe Rogan, who in the past had flippantly said he
would vote for Bernie Sanders.

Speaker 1 (09:00):
I don't think he meant it.

Speaker 3 (09:01):
I don't think he expected to be taken seriously, but
he said it, and it did have an effect, and
rogan slowly but surely as the Lesson got closer and closer,
with more of an issue's oriented endorsement, but a seeming
endorsement for common sense government with a more libertarian bent

(09:21):
that always seemed to inure to the benefit of Trump.
Don't underestimate the impact that had on a certain demographic
that traditional political conversations like debates and political ads can't
reach into every sinew of society.

Speaker 4 (09:40):
See.

Speaker 3 (09:40):
We tend to think of every voter being just like
we are, but they're not. There are people who never
listen to political radio, who never watched Fox News or
CNN or MSNBC or see CNBC or any of the rest.
Maybe they listen to sports radio, maybe they listen to podcasts,
Maybe they go to WWE or see. How do you

(10:01):
reach those people? Trump managed to reach those people through
certain personalities and through his background in a way that
no Republican has and no Republican will ever again. Not
to that extent. Elon Musk, longtime Democrat, rich tech mindset

(10:22):
that usually goes left and somehow, some way, well we
all know how it happened. He came on board for Trump,
and he came on board with an intention to help
Trump win, and there is no doubt but that he
did so.

Speaker 1 (10:37):
And the media.

Speaker 3 (10:38):
Kept poking at Trump, poking at Trump. Elon is the president,
not Trump. Elon is the president not Trump. And I
do think it bothered Trump. And I do think that
contributed when Elon, fresh off the popularity of the Doge developments,

(10:59):
said the one Big Beautiful Bill is a terrible bill.
It's a boondoggle. It's going to destroy the country. It's
going to run us into debt. We should it should
be redone. And Trump didn't like that. He wanted the
bill passing, wanted to pass now, and he did not
need a guy who he considered was his good friend
working against him. And Elon is not a guy who

(11:20):
plays on a team. He says what he believes. And
so both of them, in a sense, were right. And
it got pretty nasty. He got pretty rancorous. I know
there are people in our audience who believe that that
it was all made up. Was not made up. I
can assure you it was completely authentic. There was bad blood,

(11:40):
but for the good of the country because Elon can
help Trump, he can help the government, he can help
our country, he can help our people, and I want
them to get along. And that's what I want. I
look at the I keep my eyes on the prize,
the bigger picture, not what was said could be said,
who's the king, who's not. It's a team effort. So

(12:05):
I was delighted when President Trump was asked about Elon
Musk's supposed unpopularity, and the President had nice things to say.

Speaker 1 (12:14):
A new Galla Hale says that Hostain non popular.

Speaker 7 (12:22):
Around the White House.

Speaker 6 (12:26):
I don't know the fauls accer. I think he's a
good person. I think he had a bad moment, really
bad moment, but he's a good person.

Speaker 7 (12:33):
I think.

Speaker 6 (12:34):
I believe that.

Speaker 3 (12:36):
Economic news remarkable economic news. Eighty two percent of S
and P five hundred companies have beaten their quarterly earnings.

Speaker 1 (12:49):
We have not seen that in years. Bloomberg News with
the report. Here's a look at earning sexpectations. What ad
chart this is.

Speaker 8 (12:56):
It's been a very strong quarter despite terrifying certainty, with
eighty two percent of S and P five hundred companies
beating us. And it's so far that's the highest rate
since twenty twenty one.

Speaker 3 (13:09):
Well, well, well, for those who predicted that the tariffs
would tank our economy, they were wrong. President Trump brought
Apple CEO Tim Cook up to announce the latest investment
in the United States.

Speaker 4 (13:25):
I don't have time in this segment.

Speaker 1 (13:27):
You know what.

Speaker 3 (13:27):
I will play that here, We'll run it. It'll crash
into the break. But that's okay. That'll be enough of that,
and we'll move on to some more things after that.

Speaker 4 (13:33):
Go ahead.

Speaker 2 (13:34):
Good afternoon everyone, mister President, thank you very much for
having me here today. You've been a great advocate for
American innovation and manufacturing. I'm grateful for your leadership and
your commitment. That's a commitment we share at Apple because
American innovation is central to everything we do. Our products

(13:54):
are designed here, we're hiring and growing here, and we
support four hundred and fifty thousand jobs with thousands of
suppliers and partners in all fifty states. Earlier this year,
we made our largest ever spending commitment, five hundred billion
dollars to the US over the next four years. That's

(14:14):
already yielding results. Earlier this year, we broke ground on
a new factory in Houston, to make advanced AI servers,
and just last month, the very first test unit rolled
off that factory's line, proudly made in America. President Trump
shared some kind words about that work, but he also

(14:34):
asked us to think about what more we could commit
to doing, and mister President, we took that challenge very seriously.
I'm glad to be here with you today, and I'm
very proud to say that today we're committing an additional
one hundred billion to the United States, bringing our total
US investment to six hundred billion.

Speaker 1 (14:54):
Over the next four years.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
As a part of this, we're launching Apple's American Manufacturing Program.
It will spur even more production right here in America
for critical components used in Apple products all around the world,
and we're thrilled to announce that we've already signed new
agreements with ten companies across America to do just that. First,

(15:19):
with today's announcements, I'm proud to say that Apple is
leading the creation of an end to end silicon supply
chain right here in America, from design to equipment, to
wafer production, to fabrication to packaging.

Speaker 1 (15:36):
In Texas, we're.

Speaker 2 (15:37):
Working with manufacturers like Texas Instruments, global wafers America and
applied materials.

Speaker 6 (15:43):
But these people have served years of jail and their
lives have been ruined and many Michael Barry, Joe, listen
to me for a second, stop interrupting.

Speaker 3 (15:52):
How about this news ramon, This is five oh eight,
if you would. The hot Secretary of Homeland Security, Christy Noam,
was on Fox News recently when she announced that they
have lifted the age requirement for those looking to join ICE.

Speaker 9 (16:12):
This is one of the things that I'm so excited
about because we've seen our ICE officers be terrorized by activists,
by violent people who want to do them harm, and
they have continued to go out bravely and do their
jobs and make sure that they're upholding the rule of law.
And so our recruitment efforts to hire ten thousand new
ICE officers has been extremely successful, Lawrence. As of today,

(16:35):
we have over eighty thousand applicants for those ten thousand
positions already, people and patriots across this country that say
we want to join, we want to help and be
a part of this effort. It's overwhelming to see the
amount of response and support that our ICE officers have
gotten and people who want to join their ranks. So
I would tell everybody go to join dot ICE, dot

(16:56):
gov and go there and sign up be a part
of this team that is helping make America safe again
with President Trump. And the other thing Lawrence I would
say is we've removed any of the age barriers. We
no longer have a cap on how old you can
be or you can continue at age eighteen. Sign up
for ICE and join us and be a part of it.
We'll get you trained and ready to be equipped to

(17:17):
go out on the streets and help protect families.

Speaker 3 (17:20):
And what has been the response, well, kind of reminds
me of how young people after Pearl Harbor signed up
to go fight the Germans in the Japanese World War Two.
It reminds me of how the Marcus Latrell's and Morgan
Latrell's and Chris Kyles after the attack on the World

(17:44):
Trade Center, after the Twin Towers went down after nine
to eleven, how young Americans from the cornfields across the
land signed up to go fight for this country. Well,
that's what they're doing now to help deport the bad
guys who have invaded American soil. The numbers a whopping

(18:09):
eighty thousand Americans have signed up.

Speaker 9 (18:12):
Our recruitment efforts to hire ten thousand new ice officers
has been extremely successful, Lawrence. As of today, we have
over eighty thousand applicants for those ten thousand positions already,
people and patriots across this country that say we want
to join, we want to help and be a part
of this effort. It's overwhelming to see the amount of
response and support that our ice officers have gotten and

(18:34):
people who want to join their.

Speaker 3 (18:35):
Ranks among them, and this kind of stuff goes a
long way among them.

Speaker 1 (18:43):
Ramon, did you ever see Lewis and Clark?

Speaker 3 (18:47):
Well, that's part of my lost decades. So I didn't,
But I know who Dean Kane is. And when guys
like Dean Kane say, hey, this is Pat Tillman, this
is guys stepping away from celebrity and saying I will
take on this role, it is not beneath me. It

(19:10):
is honorable. The actor who played Superman on the show
will be sworn in as an ice.

Speaker 1 (19:17):
Agent Superman himself. Dean Kane joins me.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
Now, all right, so this is kind of a big
deal for you in your career.

Speaker 1 (19:25):
What are you going to be doing at ICE.

Speaker 10 (19:28):
Well, let me go back a minute here, Jesse.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
This is all your fault, by the way.

Speaker 5 (19:31):
Yeah, explain why.

Speaker 10 (19:32):
Well, because I put out a recruitment video yesterday. I'm
actually a deputy Shaff, a small deputy Shaff and a
reserve police officer. I wasn't part of ICE. But once
I put that out there and you put a little
blurb on your show, it went crazy. So now I've
spoken with some officials over at ICE and I will

(19:54):
be sworn in as an ICE agent asap. So they'll
have eighty thousand and one recruits for their ten thousand positions.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
Well they can have.

Speaker 11 (20:04):
A better guy than Dean Kane.

Speaker 10 (20:05):
Are you going to be hopping out of ICE fans
and apprehending guys? I will do whatever Director Lions wants
me to do if that's what it takes. Absolutely, I
somehow doubt I'll be in that position, but I would
be there in a heartbeat. These brave men and women
need someone to stand up for them. So rarely, you know,
these days, are we seeing that someone like Daniel Penny

(20:26):
stands up, he gets vilified. Dan Bongino steps up, gives
up five million a year and goes and takes his
position at the FBI. This is the kind of thing
where people have to step up. I'm stepping up. Hopefully
a whole bunch of other former officers, former ICE agents
will step up, and we'll meet those recruitment goals immediately
and will help help protect this country.

Speaker 3 (20:49):
Thirty nine year old Oscar Daniel Rojas Garcia and illegal
alien from Mexico. This is gonna be six eight. Ramon
was arrested by POPO in Florida for possession and distribution
of child porn, including rape and with animals. NBC six
in South Florida has the story about you know these
these nice illegal aliens.

Speaker 8 (21:10):
Coconut Creek Man is facing several charges related to child pornography.
Please say Thirty nine year old Oh God has Gottacia
downloaded files of sexually sexual abuse of children and animals
as well.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
The investigation also shows.

Speaker 8 (21:24):
The suspect uploaded in appropriate photos of himself. They say
hu Has Garcia is an undocumented immigrant from Mexico and
is in the process of being deported from the United States.

Speaker 1 (21:33):
I think we got plenty of freaks here already. We
don't need anymore.

Speaker 3 (21:38):
Illegals don't make us better. We're not getting the best
of other countries. We're getting the pedophiles of rapists, the traffickers,
the monsters. We don't need more. We have enough already.
Illegals will make us better. No, that's the platform of
the Democrat Party. Minnesota State Senator Omar Fate, who's about

(21:59):
to be the mayor of Mogadishu, Minneapolis, said this.

Speaker 12 (22:03):
I heard them being called terrorists, we heard them being
called drug dealers. We heard a lot of insults. We
heard that they're that they're a threat to our national security.
And that's a flat out lie. You want to know
who the real threat is the matter of President, I'll
give you a hint.

Speaker 7 (22:23):
It doesn't.

Speaker 12 (22:24):
They don't look like our chief author. They don't look
like the folks up in the gallery. They don't look
like the folks on the rotunda. They look like many
of the members that sit in the front. And you
don't have to take my word for it. According to
DHS Matter.

Speaker 13 (22:39):
President, the domestic the greatest domestic threat facing the United
States comes from quote racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists, specifically,
specifically those who advocate for the superiority superiority of.

Speaker 12 (22:54):
The white race, not our immigrants.

Speaker 3 (22:58):
All the boogeymen again and the white nationalist that's what
they tell you, so you don't notice the illegal alien Mexican, Haitian,
Somali murdering our people. We're being hunted. And oh, by
the way, he's not the only one who thinks that.
Beto O'Rourke, who ran for Senate from Texas and ran

(23:19):
for governor of Texas just keeps losing ran for president
as well.

Speaker 1 (23:23):
Listen to what he said.

Speaker 11 (23:26):
As the governor prepares another photo opportunity on the border
where he is spending three billion dollars of.

Speaker 7 (23:35):
Your money to demonize and vilify those who come to
this country, very often fleeing some of those brutal conditions
anywhere on.

Speaker 11 (23:47):
This planet, seeking to come choosing a state and a
country of immigrants that is that much stronger and more
successful and yet safer by the presence of those who
have plunged you.

Speaker 1 (24:00):
These are not aspiring inventors. They're rapist and pedophiles and trafficker.

Speaker 5 (24:06):
This is CNN, this is the news, Fuchael Ferring.

Speaker 3 (24:10):
That's why more people are watching the cartoon network Spongebobb
reruns right now. How about the new US Attorney Janine
Pirou for the District of Columbia.

Speaker 1 (24:19):
Kick ass, Janine, kick ass. We're so proud of the
teen Trump is put together.

Speaker 4 (24:25):
She was on with.

Speaker 3 (24:25):
Laura Ingram where she said, violent crime is out of
control in our nation's capital.

Speaker 14 (24:31):
First of all, there was another homicide. So we're now
at ninety nine homicides so far this year. There's no
question that Washington, d C. Has an incredible amount, a
credible number of homicides, you know, And you can say
that violence and crime is down, but the truth is
violent is more lethal than it's ever been. And when
we say it's down down from what really okay, we've

(24:54):
got carjackings that are up one hundred and eleven percent.
The problem in DC. And President and Trump, in his
effort to make DC safe and beautiful, said to me,
I want you to enforce the law to make sure
that there's accountability. And I spoke to the President yesterday
at length about what was going on here. I said,
if you're fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, or seventeen years old, you

(25:15):
get cobbled as you do in most American Democrat cities.
So I can't charge these people. This young kid who
worked at the White House. Was beaten to a pulp.
He's got a broken nose, he's got a severe concussion.
He's battered all over his head. Okay by a gang
of thunk punks. Ten of them, I believe two have
been arrested, Two fifteen year olds. None of them come

(25:35):
to my office, Laura, because they're not considered criminals. They
go to family court where the effort is rehabilitation. The
DC Council and the President is right, they've got to
stop their cobbling. Number one, We've got to lower the
age of responsibility to fourteen. I'm tired of having these
kids commit crimes and their crews not gangs.

Speaker 5 (25:54):
In DC.

Speaker 14 (25:55):
We've got an intern. You said it, and you're open.
He's an intern from in college. He gets shot going
out for McDonald's at ten thirty at night. This kid
is trying to help his girlfriend or his friend to
a car. He gets assaulted and butt for a cop
going by.

Speaker 1 (26:11):
They would have had.

Speaker 14 (26:11):
They gotten him on the ground, they would have stopped
him and finished him. He was able to stay standing.

Speaker 1 (26:17):
This has to end.

Speaker 14 (26:18):
The Council has this Youth Incarceration Act, where we had
a guy who shot a kid on a bus not
justified with an illegal gun. You know what, the sentence was, probation,
the judgement go to college. Okay, he took an illegal gun.
That he should be jailed for the illegal gun. Forget
about the shooting.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
You put that on top of the gun.

Speaker 14 (26:38):
Then what We've got our kids who are out there
who are making fun of all of this, doing carjackings,
and I can't touch them.

Speaker 4 (26:48):
You ever known of someone in a very abusive relationship.

Speaker 10 (26:57):
I have.

Speaker 3 (26:57):
I bet you have too. A woman, maybe she was
your employee, your sister, your mother. Some young people have
to witness their mother being beaten up by someone, could
be their father, or their father passes, or their parents
separate and mom starts dating and this next guy just
beats the snot out of mom.

Speaker 1 (27:19):
It's brutal.

Speaker 3 (27:22):
And what you find out is that in many cases,
that woman, who is a good woman, cares about her
loved ones. But she will love someone to death. She
will love them until they kill her. She will forgive them.

(27:46):
I've seen this in a mother's love for their sons.
I've seen this in a woman's love for her man.
She shows up in the hospital and you can't even
see her eyeball. It's so swollen, jaw, broken, teeth missing.
Would you like to press charges?

Speaker 4 (28:05):
I would not.

Speaker 3 (28:07):
They partly blame themselves, and they make excuses for him.
Oh he just got to drinking. Oh he had a
bad childhood. Oh he's a good person. He just he's
been through a lot. And ye that will lead up

(28:28):
to them eventually being beaten, stabbed, or shot to death
by that same man. This is the mindset of the
white liberal. In the white liberal pantheon of commendable behaviors,

(28:48):
for giving the savage who wrongs you when you've done
nothing to them is a transcendence to another dimension. They
love to tell you they have forgiven the person who
beats their loved one to death robs them, because in

(29:11):
their mind that's commendable. Doesn't matter that you were simply
on your way home from the movies or the bank
and they beat you to death or close enough. If
you can forgive them, you can show that you are
you have graduated to the next phase of white liberalism.

(29:34):
A former Doze staffer, the most famous, which because his
noome the plume was big Balls. His name is Edward Chorstein.
He saw a woman being beaten by about ten. They
called them juveniles. It's amazing, and culture made the point

(29:55):
they called them juveniles. You know how big a fifteen
year old is. You get ten of them, you from
every different direction, beating you to death, You think you'd go, oh,
whether her just juveniles. There was an attempted carjacking. This
man jumped in. This is the guy who found so
much of the waste and fraud and corruption in our government.

(30:15):
He's a brainiac computer programming guy. And they were trying
to do horrible things to a woman, and he stepped
in to stop it. Whereupon, as this demographic often does,
is this subculture of inner city black goons in their teens.

(30:39):
They start beating him, and it's always as a group,
never one on one, and they beat him very, very,
very viciously.

Speaker 1 (30:51):
The popole say.

Speaker 3 (30:52):
The case is under investigation by the Carjacking Task Force,
with multiple suspects outstanding. So far, two fifty year olds
have been arrested, but there are at least eight more
who are expected to be identified and arrested. President Trump

(31:13):
noting that these young punks are not afraid because they
know nothing will be done to them. And then this
is five oh one Ramon.

Speaker 15 (31:26):
He said this, our constitutional duty is to protect the
right to vote for all Americans. Sixty years ago, Congress
passed the Voting Rights Act of nineteen sixty five.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
Oh that's the wrong one, Okay. I asked five that.

Speaker 4 (31:39):
Two denied their rightful act.

Speaker 3 (31:42):
It's five oh one. That was good audio. It just
doesn't fit here, you got it. It's five oh one
eight six two five. President didn't leave those comments to
truth Social because he posted them to truth Social. But
then he he said them multiple times during interviews, and

(32:03):
that federalizing the District of Columbia, the district, I'm gonna
tell you something. I was there this summer. My sons
were interning in Congress, and I'm telling you there were
parts of the district that are the worst areas of Mogadishu.

Speaker 4 (32:17):
Are not this bad.

Speaker 6 (32:19):
By the way, I have to say that somebody from
those was very badly hurt last night. You saw that
a young man who was beat up by a bunch of.

Speaker 4 (32:26):
Thugs in DC.

Speaker 6 (32:28):
And either they're going to straighten their act out into
terms of government and in terms of protection, and we're
gonna have to federalize and run it the way it's
supposed to be run.

Speaker 3 (32:37):
That's exactly right. The district that elected Marion Barry Mayer.
He was caught with the prostitute smoking crack butt naked
in a hot sheet motel, and when they walked in,
he said, bitch, set me up. Didn't didn't even wait
a moment, went to prison, came back out and got
elected the city council.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
These people can't self govern me, right,
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