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April 24, 2025 • 32 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, Time, Time, Luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
The Michael Very Show is on the air.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
Because of the obvious threat to untold numbers of citizens,
and because of the crisis which is even now developing,
this radio station will remain on the air day and night.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
There are warnings that the US is dangerously close to
a constitutional crisis.

Speaker 4 (00:41):
I mean, what we are witnessing is a constitutional crisis.

Speaker 5 (00:44):
The media is convinced that the actions of President Trump,
like executive orders and Department of Government efficiency, have created
or will soon create a constitutional crisis.

Speaker 6 (00:55):
Those that have said that we may face a constitutional crime,
I want you.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
To know that the crisis is here.

Speaker 7 (01:04):
Constitutional crisis, grossly unconstitutional.

Speaker 2 (01:08):
This is a genuine constitutional crisis.

Speaker 8 (01:11):
I think this is the most serious constitution crisis the
country has faced, certainly since Watergate. The president is attempting
to seize control of power and for corrupt purposes.

Speaker 2 (01:21):
Well, you can cry the river.

Speaker 9 (01:28):
I do not vote to elect Elmo as a Bond
villain as our president of the United States. We have
to uphold the constitution.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
That's what we're here to do now.

Speaker 9 (01:37):
Republicans have attacked us time and time again because we
model the values of diversity and inclusion. Well, that is
what America is about. Don't let us then tell us
we're not American. We are of the true Americans here.
America is about us. We have to reclaim our country.

Speaker 2 (01:55):
USA, USA, USA.

Speaker 10 (01:58):
Well, this is all about taking over the government in
order to advance the interests of Elon Musk and the
billionaires at the expense of everybody else in America. It

(02:19):
was the big lie and the big betrayal.

Speaker 11 (02:23):
We have got to tell Elon Musk. Nobody elected your
ass Nobody talk to you could get all of our
private information. Nobody told you you could be in charge
of the payments of this country.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
We have told you you've.

Speaker 11 (02:39):
Made enough money off our government yourself.

Speaker 7 (02:43):
Elon Musk is seizing power from the American people.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
You remember the line, don't fire until you see the
whites of their eyes. You've seen William Wallace and Brave Heart.
Wait until the right moment when you're into me. Is failing.
Don't stop him, even if his failing while failing is

(03:13):
offensive to you, let him continue to do what he's doing.
Get listeners very upset that the Democrats are going down
to El Salvador. I expect other people to be upset.
I don't expect you to be upset. I expect you

(03:33):
to be rejoicing. Leave it to the low information voter
to go, hey, listen, I ain't very political or not.
I I don't want to get into all that now.
I know y'all watch Fox New, listen to the radio
and Michael Berry and all that stuff. But I just
I don't want to get into a big conversation about it.
But for me, it don't make no sense in people

(03:55):
going down to El Salvador trying to bring back gang bangers.
We got enough gang bangers here. Make no sense to me.
Let the low information voter see what's happening, root for
them to do this. Don't invest your own emotions. You're
too smart for that. These people are making the worst

(04:16):
blunder imaginable. They are drafting JaMarcus Russell with the first
draft pick and tying up all their cap money. Don't
stop them. You want them to do this. So During
an appearance on CBS News, the vice chairman of the
Democrat National Committee, David Hogg said, democracy is what put

(04:38):
us through school shootings. This whole democracy, this is overrated.
That's how come we have school shootings is because of democracy.

Speaker 12 (04:46):
We go out there as democrats all the time and
say democracy is the most important thing.

Speaker 2 (04:50):
We have to defend democracy.

Speaker 12 (04:52):
We fail to acknowledge that this generation democracy is what
put us through school shooter drills and school shootings. It's
what's put us through the climate crisis and so on
much more. What we have to do is prove that
democracy matters by standing up to the special interests that
are killing the American dream and making our young people
lose faith not only in the our party, but the
future of this country.

Speaker 2 (05:11):
That is why we're doing He also said, trying to
amp up the intensity, which scares most people. He told
Jim Psaki on MSNBC, this is a break the glass moment.

Speaker 4 (05:24):
This is doesn't violate by laws.

Speaker 12 (05:26):
It is something that has and other vice chairs that
have been involved in primaries before.

Speaker 4 (05:29):
Yes, it's something that has angered traditional DNC members.

Speaker 2 (05:33):
Some are you some of them?

Speaker 1 (05:34):
Some of them.

Speaker 4 (05:35):
I don't want to overstate, but how do you think?
I mean, do you are you ready to put that
at risk? I mean, if they said you can't do this,
are you.

Speaker 12 (05:42):
Going to still there to break the glass moment?

Speaker 2 (05:44):
I'm meaning if they.

Speaker 13 (05:45):
Tell you you can't do this.

Speaker 4 (05:46):
You're going to leave your vice chair job.

Speaker 12 (05:48):
Ultimately, if they decide to remove me, I have no
control over that. I'm going to do everything in my
I got elected to this position to fight to win
back our young people and make sure that across the board,
with every single with every single demographic, pretty much except
the elderly and the highly educated, we lost margins this
past election cycle.

Speaker 13 (06:06):
This is a major crisis for our party.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
Right now, and it needs to be met.

Speaker 12 (06:10):
With the ferocity it deserves so that we're able to
win back those young people, win back the margins.

Speaker 2 (06:14):
Yes, yes, everyone says it's we're at a crossroads, it's
the end of the world, and young people think it's
the most important because they've not learned patients. He was
on ABC this week along with Donna Brazil, who ran
al Gore's campaign, and she warned this little contemptible werp
that the people he wants to primary Democrats, that is,

(06:37):
are in seats that women and minorities are holding. Uh ah,
you young people, don't you. You can take it from
the white moderate Democrats, but not from women in minorities.
Uh oh, the sacred cows are clashing.

Speaker 14 (06:54):
Trust in all of our institutions, to media, business, whole
civil societ.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
We're in a crisis.

Speaker 14 (07:02):
I don't know if we want to call it a
constitutional crisis, but we're in, as former President.

Speaker 2 (07:06):
Biden was het an inflection point.

Speaker 14 (07:08):
Look, I think what David is trying to do is
to not just help to re energize the party, but
to help rebrand the Democratic Party. The concern that officers
of the DNC right now they have signed the neutrality pledge.
David did not sign the neutrality pledge, so he's in
hot water with Ken. I told him he threw a

(07:29):
rock in the water and the two of them and
the officers they got to get out of the hot water.
But that's not my position right now. My position is
many of these so called saint blue seats and I
can get in trouble. Many of them are seats that
women and minorities finally had an opportunity to come and
sit in because.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
There were no seats at the table for us.

Speaker 14 (07:48):
So before you start wiping clean the menu in the
place and the seats, be very careful because many of
those seats are in as where we.

Speaker 2 (07:56):
Are party chairman giants.

Speaker 13 (07:57):
How would you handle a vice chair who was going
to well answer and.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
Then I'll explain it. I mean, unfortunately, David, i'd have
you ever removed from the party. This is the Michael
Barry Show. Issues will bubble up to where they become
part of a pattern as they are highlighted. They may

(08:22):
not be happening more than they were before, at least
not much more than marginally so, but it's a hot
topping and it's being discussed. For instance, it was about
twenty seventeen Harvey Weinstein. Turns out Harvey Weinstein was doing
some pretty awful things, and once the lid was blown,

(08:49):
and to be clear, he was doing things for several
years before the hammer came down on him. The first
several women who came out and spoke against him were
not rewarded or honored. In fact, they were slandered and silenced.
But once it became the case that Harvey Weinstein was

(09:12):
awful and that a man in a position with wealth
and power could use that with women who were ambitious
to get sex and in some cases put them in
a situation or lure them in a situation. It doesn't

(09:33):
put them there. They choose to be in the hotel
room with him alone at two o'clock in the morning. Okay,
let's make good decisions. And I don't think ambition alone
is a reason to say, well, I thought it was
just going to be a chat at midnight for me
to come up to his room. No, No, you've got

(09:55):
to make better decisions. Well, he was important and he
was controlling the movie, and I wanted to be in
the movie. You've got to make decisions. You've got to
make better decisions. However, there is no doubt that what
he's doing is awful. It's monstrous, it's terrible, and he

(10:16):
was a monster in many ways. But once that became
the issue, then a lot of people started coming forward
and saying, hey, I've kind of been going through this myself. Boom,
there's a new me too allegation, And so you had
a lot of people. It wasn't that it was happening
more than usual. It was that that was an item

(10:36):
that news directors were looking for, like a hashtag that
was coming up in the algorithm. Well, one of the
things that's coming up in the algorithm these days is
white people speaking out very aggressively about the fact about
black on white crime. And there are a number of

(10:56):
people who are emboldened. And it's also the case that
a number of people are now starting to point out
how there are blacks that are out there basically saying
let's kill the white people, let's do this, and the
lies that come out. This is a healthy market place
of ideas. Now, the reason we haven't had a healthy

(11:17):
marketplace of ideas is that if you speak out and
state facts or even opinions, you were silenced as a racist.
Not because you're wrong, No, the rules of discourse were
redrafted to say there can be no disagreement. This is
like silencing people from Facebook or before Elon owned it, Twitter.

(11:42):
So I came across a video of a zoom call
with ten black people discussing the murder of Austin Metcalf. Now,
Austin Metcalf was murdered by Carmelo Anthony at a track
meet or a school event, who plunged a knife into
Austin Metcalf's art. And they're talking about how this is

(12:04):
horrible that this young black man has murdered this young
white man and it's not fair to black people. And
it doesn't take long till the discussion turns to how
white boys kill blacks all the time and get away
with it, which is just not true. And one woman
used Kyle Writtenhouse as killing of three black people as

(12:25):
an example. The only problem is how written House didn't
kill three people and he didn't kill anyone black. It
was white liberals who were trying to kill him, and
he turned and defended himself. Blacks weren't even involved, but

(12:46):
that didn't stop that conversation. That interesting. Listen to this
name a.

Speaker 15 (12:53):
White person that killed a black person that is not
or have not been held accountable in a last George Zimmerman.

Speaker 1 (13:02):
George Zimmerman wasn't even white.

Speaker 6 (13:07):
Just say one thing. I don't want to answer your question,
you know who killed who or whatnot? Cal Rittenhouse was
seventeen years old white boy that murdered two two or
three black kids in uh, Michigan.

Speaker 2 (13:22):
During a protest. He was acquitted on all charges.

Speaker 6 (13:27):
Uh Jordan Penny, I think that's his name. He choked
out that black homeless man on a train in New
York recently was also acquitted of charges.

Speaker 15 (13:39):
So I guess neither one of those, neither one of
those was killed to stop, you know.

Speaker 6 (13:46):
But but he was playing out like why there is
there could be I know, I know you don't think
it's true, but there could be like a sense of
white power supremacy in this country because sometimes when white
people do certain crimes, they're not held to the same
extent as black people or other people do.

Speaker 1 (14:05):
And so you were.

Speaker 6 (14:06):
Asking him to give names, I gave you two, and
one was actually the same age as the guy, the
black boy that just killed the white guy, and he
was acquitted.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
Of all his charges.

Speaker 6 (14:18):
He was also a seventeen year old white boy in Wiscondin.
And it's like, well, why why was he acquitted when
he actually murdered someone.

Speaker 15 (14:27):
You all are saying that, you know, because they didn't
murder anybody.

Speaker 6 (14:31):
They did, though, what do you mean, no, definitely murdered
two or three people.

Speaker 2 (14:37):
Are you familiar with the story?

Speaker 15 (14:39):
No, I'm not.

Speaker 6 (14:40):
Okay, So you can't just make that statement then.

Speaker 15 (14:42):
Because of the court of law determined that they was
acquitted of the charges, and that means that he's not
a murderer.

Speaker 6 (14:48):
No, that means that the system worked in his favor
based on who he was, because that wouldn't have worked if.

Speaker 15 (14:56):
You just automatically say somebody is when they not when
they got tried in the court of public in the
court of law.

Speaker 6 (15:02):
And the law and the law is always fair, right.

Speaker 2 (15:05):
Absolutely, absolutely it is in this situation.

Speaker 15 (15:10):
Because if that because if the evidence is showing that
he's not guilty, then why why would I say that
he's not guilty. It's until proving guilty in the court
of law.

Speaker 2 (15:22):
Same thing for Daniel Penny.

Speaker 15 (15:24):
I am I am familiar with Daniel Penny. I am
familiar with what happened on the subway over I think
it was over in New York, right, I am familiar
with Daniel Penny. And in and in the case of
George Floyd, the police officer, the white police officer who
was a part of the Blue Gang, the Blue Wall

(15:46):
absolutely got held accountable and he got convicted and he's
in prison today. And I don't even think that that
was a race I don't even think that that was
a race issue. I believe that that was an issue
of visual a cop over exerting his power over somebody
that should not have been in that position in the
first place. But at the same time, it's Tracy Bird.

Speaker 10 (16:09):
Hey, y'allways, you drink, don't drive, do the watermelon crawl
and listen to the TSAR talk, my buddy Michael Berry.

Speaker 2 (16:17):
I can't think of Steven Tyler without Why do people
do it? Why did somebody have to send me a
picture of Steve Tyler's naked feet. Once I got to
look at those gnarl toes, I can't think about anything
but that. And then, man, Aerosmith's songs are so good.
I mean, Aerosmith can put me in a mood like
it can get me feeling good.

Speaker 3 (16:40):
All right.

Speaker 2 (16:41):
So Rob Smith, blackfellow with Turning Point USA, posted a
video apologizing to the white parents of Austin metcalf On,
behalf of the black community. Now, I want to be
very clear here. If a white person shoots, stabs, hangs, murders,

(17:02):
kicks runs over a black person, I do not feel
the need to apologize, to condemn or anything else, just
as I don't feel the need of a white person
does to a white person. I don't feel there's any
need for a black fellow the need to apologize to
these parents. But he did. And I think this gets

(17:26):
to this a much deeper issue than we have time
for today. There is a constantly reinforced sense of tribe
amongst blacks in America, and it comes from a very
dark place, a very cynical place, a very nefarious place.
It comes from a place of trying to control and

(17:46):
corral black people. That's why you will constantly hear reference
to the black community, but never the white community, because
whites won't allow ourselves to be part of a greater hole.
Some community is the black community located geographically in these

(18:07):
zip codes when useful, And what they'll do when they
do that is they'll go into the Section eight neighborhoods,
the poorest black neighborhoods, and they'll say ninety nine percent
of the black community it supports Barack Obama. Well what
about the blacks who don't live in those zip codes
and they live in a neighborhood that's primarily white where
the homes cost two million and up. You don't go

(18:30):
in and ask that guy who he's voting for or
what his views are on welfare or criminal justice reform?
Is that in hisstring? Isn't that interesting? Well here is
Rob Smith and his apology to the parents of Austin Metcalf.
And I've really thought long and hard about this, really
thought long and hard about this, because there's a certain

(18:52):
bravery to a black man, saying, Hey, I just want
you to understand. Not every black person thinks it's okay
that your son was murdered. And I'm embarrassed by the
blacks needing to do this. But I think it speaks
to the tribal nature of how blacks identify and are
described in this country, and I think that's very unhealthy.

(19:13):
I happen to have two black children, and I've made
very clear to them from the beginning. Nobody will tell
you how you are to think because you are black,
because people do that. Oh you ain't black, you don't
feel remember Joe Biden, you don't vote for me, you
ain't black. See, these are all the very very deep
psychological weapons used against black blacks. Oh, if you're black,

(19:37):
you don't feel that way. Well, I don't feel that
way whether you ain't black. Who are you to question
my blackness or his blackness or her blackness or whatever else?
But that's done every day, isn't it. And Rob Smith
felt that he felt appall upon him. I need people
to understand how I feel about this. Here's what he.

Speaker 1 (19:56):
Said on behalf of the black community. I would like
to apologize to the parents Boston Metcalf for making a
hero out of the young man that killed your son.
I apologize that there are so few fathers around, and
so few male figures around to teach the black community
about emotional discipline, about what's right from wrong, about emotional regulation,

(20:19):
about not making a hero out of a thug and
a criminal. I apologize on behalf of the black community
because they are the ones that are raising money for
your son's killer. They are the ones that are funding
this new lavish lifestyle that your son's killer is living.
I apologize on behalf of the black community because they

(20:43):
are so confused about again what's right and what's wrong,
that in some weird, twisted sense of racial solidarity, they
would celebrate the young man that killed your child in
cold blood it.

Speaker 2 (21:01):
I apologize on behalf.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
Of the Black community because you don't deserve to see this.
You deserve to be grieving your child. You deserve to
be remembering your child. You deserve to be able to
share stories about what an amazing human being in young
man he was. But instead you're subject to online mobs

(21:27):
that support the killer of your child. You are subject
to people that are raising money to support the killer
of your child. You are subjected to people in the
black community that are making excuses for the killer of
your child and making your child seem that he is

(21:50):
somehow at fault.

Speaker 2 (21:52):
For being stabbed to death.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
So for what you are seeing on social media, for
what you will continue to see for the next few months,
I apologize to you on behalf of the Black community,
because a lot of us are so bereft of empathy.
A lot of us are so angry, in hurt and

(22:17):
bitter and damaged, in trapped in cycles of pathology that
we would make excuses for a young man that stabbed
another young man to death. And we are so trapped
in that pathology that we don't even know which way
is up. I apologize on behalf of the black community

(22:39):
for their treatment towards your son's killer. And I can
only hope that your child can rest in peace and
that you can remember him as he was.

Speaker 2 (22:52):
So let me be very clear. We have a lot
of black listeners and I notice, I mean, he will
send me an email say I just what you know.
I don't feel that way. You don't have to do that.
I don't put you in a tribe. I don't assume
what jersey you wear, and you shouldn't let anybody else

(23:15):
When people like Al Sharpton or Jesse Jackson, or Barack
Obama or anyone else claim to speak on behalf of blacks.
They are not empowering you. They're doing the opposite. They
are stealing your agency. They are claiming a mantle, a

(23:40):
platform that they have not earned. It is unjust. But
don't think that I ever believe you are an individual.
I assume every individual thinks for themselves. Where I can't
believe he just said that happens to Michael Verie show.
One of the things I'm enjoying a great deal is
watching all Democrats who campaigned for Biden and then Kamala

(24:03):
Harris now claim that Biden, who they told us at
the time, was man, this guy was top of the line.
Poor old morning Joe. I mean, it's just sad, it's pitiful.
After telling us, you know, Mika his mistress, Mikah's family
has known Joe since seventy two, and Joe's sharper than

(24:24):
he's ever been, and now it's coming out that they
all knew the poor fellow ron Klain, who basically was
running the auto pen, who was running the country. Now
says that he would come outside and fall down, and
you know they'd had to go wake him up. It
was just pitiful. Well, Elizabeth Warren was confronted during a

(24:46):
podcast as she stammered and struggled to explain why she's
so obviously lied by claiming that he was He was,
you know, Biden was as sharp as ever. The host
of the podcast. The podcast is called Talk Easy. The

(25:06):
host's name, I hope I'm pronouncing this correctly is Sam Fragoso,
and he does a very very good job of keeping
this interview on point and forcing her to answer the question.

Speaker 13 (25:19):
Do you regret saying that President Biden had a mental acuity,
He had a sharpness to him. You said that up
until July of last year. I said what I believe
to be true. Do you think he was as sharp
as you?

Speaker 2 (25:33):
Wait? Hold on, hold on? Was she sharing her truth? Ramon,
She was sharing her truth. Don't question her truth. That's
what they tell us, right. I believed I didn't kill him.
We have you on video right here killing him. You
shot him eight times, you went over, you put your
I'm just sharing my truth. You have your truth, but

(25:54):
I have my truth. I believe in my truth. You're
not a woman. You got wiener. Okay, you're born with
a wiener, you still have a wiener. But even if
you cut off your wianner, you're still a boy, just
a boy without a wiener, and your DNA didn't change,
and you're still a Wiener. But that's my truth. My

(26:14):
truth is I'm a girl. No, that's not truth. You
can't have your own truth too.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
Well.

Speaker 2 (26:20):
If I throw an apple up in the air and
your truth says there's no gravity, it won't fall, and
the truth, not just mine of science, says it will
fall due to gravity, what do you think happens when
the apple falls in hiss the ground? Well, I still
have my truth. Rewind that that was her truth. Her

(26:42):
truth was that Joe Biden was as sharp as ever. Okay,
well now we know because literally everybody around him is
saying he was demented and didn't know where he was
and he could barely stand up. Well, that's not truth.
But that's not an answer. You see, This is why
you can't accomplish anything with these people. You don't get

(27:02):
to have your own truth. How far was how fast
was the car going before it crashed into the guy?
It never hit the brake, and you watched it go by.
It's gone about three miles an hour. Because he's black
and I'm black. Okay, Well, nineteen other witnesses say it
was going at least one hundred and twenty. That's my truth.
Three miles an hour, it's my truth.

Speaker 13 (27:23):
I said what I believe to be true. Do you
think he was as sharp as you?

Speaker 7 (27:31):
I said I had not seen decline, and I hadn't
at that point.

Speaker 13 (27:38):
You did not see any decline. From twenty twenty four
Joe Biden to twenty twenty one Joe Biden.

Speaker 7 (27:43):
Oh, when I said that he knows it, the thing
is heap. Look, he was sharp, he was on his feet.
I saw him live event, I had meetings with him.
A couple of time.

Speaker 13 (27:59):
On his feet is not praise. He can speak in
sentences is not praise. Fair enough, fair enough? Look, it
is the question is what are we going to do now?

Speaker 2 (28:16):
Okay?

Speaker 9 (28:17):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (28:17):
Yes, let's move forward, let's not look back. That was
my truth. It was also her truth that she was
an American Indian, and she lied and she advanced her career.
She got faculty law positions not easy to get based

(28:39):
on being a woman who was an American Indian. But
then she took a test and she was one oneenty
twenty eighth American Indian. Ho Chi Minh probably was more
American Indian than that. Attila the Hun was probably more
American Indian than that. Vladimir Putin is probably more American

(29:01):
Indian than that. And I'm not even joking. I'm not
even joking, but that was her truth. The death of truth.
You know. When I was a high school senior, I
had a beloved English teacher, and our little country school
had some teachers who cared deeply about us, and Miss

(29:22):
Hardy June Hardy was her name, and she cared deeply.
Most of us were going to go out and be cops,
environment and plant workers and roused abouts. But by God,
we were going to know how to think. We were
going to be willing to think, to question, to dare.

(29:43):
In my senior year of high school, she had us
read Brave New World nineteen eighty four in Fahrenheit four
or five one. Fahrenheit four or five to one was
about the idea Ray Bradbury positive of people who didn't
want history to be repeated, knowledge to be shared, so

(30:05):
they burned all the books because when all knowledge is gone,
we can rebuild in its place our own set of knowledge,
and that will be our truth that will not be
contradicted by Cartesian philosophy, Cartesian understanding, or Euclid or Galileo

(30:29):
or anyone else. We'll be able to create our own
Boys will be girls, and girls will be boys and
brave new world. Alice Huxley was just a glorious look
at how science could be perverted in pursuit of horrible ideology,
and of course nineteen eighty four introducing us to terms

(30:52):
that are still still in our lexicon, like big Brother
does anything, say what big Brother does? In that little phrase.
There are people who use that term and don't even
know where it comes from, much like biblical terms. They
don't have any understanding where that comes from. But if
you've read nineteen eighty four, the idea of the television

(31:13):
that's staring at you and you are under watch like
a panopticon at prison all day long, it's a powerful notion.
I read those before my eighteenth birthday, and I commend
them to you. People will often ask me what to read.
You don't need to read the latest and greatest by
some national talk show host with a ghostwriter. Go read

(31:38):
the classics of our way of thought. Read Atlas Shrug,
read The fountain Head, but start with nineteen eighty four.
That'll get your mind right. Then Fahrenheit four or five
to one. When Ray Bradbury died my son, my son Michael,
was about four or five years old. I took him
to a parking lot and set a book of Fahrenheit

(31:59):
four or five to one on. I said, I want
you to remember this for rest of your life. And
he still to this day he says, that's one of
the creepiest things you ever did. I said, But you
remember it, don't you. And when I'm long gone, much older,
and they're tearing down knowledge and replacing it and telling
you girls or boys and boys or girls, you'll say,
this is what my dad was talking about.
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