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May 14, 2025 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
Very show is on the air. What goes up must
come down. Spinning wheel got top door out.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
The bottom line is the White House was lying not
only to the press, not only to the public, but
they were lying to members of their own cabinet.

Speaker 3 (00:29):
A painted pony, let the spin and wheel spin.

Speaker 2 (00:33):
They were lying to Democratic members of Congress, to donors about.

Speaker 4 (00:37):
How bad things had gotten.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
And then after the election we found out all of
these things that when you looked at what was going
on with President Biden at the time, it probably doesn't
surprise you the extent to which he was doing.

Speaker 3 (00:48):
Right, A painted pony, let the spin wheel turn.

Speaker 2 (00:52):
So the White House position Doctor Kevin O'Connor was telling
White House aids that President Biden's deterioration his spine, the
degeneration was so significant that if he fell one more time,
that he might have to be in a wheelchair and
serve in a wheelchair.

Speaker 4 (01:09):
I'm twelve.

Speaker 5 (01:09):
President Biden, you know regularly sometimes several times in a week,
will usually several times in a week.

Speaker 4 (01:16):
His mental acuity is great as fine.

Speaker 5 (01:19):
He's as good as it's been.

Speaker 4 (01:20):
Over the years.

Speaker 5 (01:21):
I've been speaking to him for thirty years since he
worked on the Brady Bill, and he saw a weapons
band when I was a young congressman. And he's fine.
All this rightly propaganda that he's mental acuity has declined
as long he's been winning the election.

Speaker 3 (01:37):
His Wait ten just for you, spinning wheel, spinning true dom,
Are you trouble on the river side? Get jam painted
pony on the spinning wheel?

Speaker 4 (01:56):
Have you been tested for some degree of cognitive decline?
I've been testing on constantly. Just look all you.

Speaker 6 (02:05):
All I gotta do is watch me, and I can
hardly wait to compare my cognitive capability to the cognitive
capability of the.

Speaker 4 (02:13):
Man I'm running my hands.

Speaker 6 (02:17):
That's changing the way that Now you're in a situation
where the forty percent fewer people coming.

Speaker 4 (02:22):
Across the border illegally.

Speaker 7 (02:24):
It's better when he left office, and.

Speaker 6 (02:26):
I'm going to continue to move until we get the
total band on the total initiative relative to what we're
going to do with more border control and more President Trump,
I really don't know what he said at the end
of this, and I don't think he knows what he
said either.

Speaker 3 (02:42):
Wait just for you, standing weird.

Speaker 4 (02:50):
Things are so bad for Democrats that now we've got
smarmye Chuck Todd. Oh to hear Rush Limball impoon him
just one more time, Smarmi. Chuck Todd was also on
CNN where he ripped Chuck Schumer for covering for Joe Biden,
which Smrmick Todd did as well.

Speaker 8 (03:14):
He is among the people that are responsible for this,
the leaders of the Democratic Party, the staff of the
White House. And I have to say, I find everybody
now talking to these authors, get out of here, go home.

Speaker 4 (03:27):
You're part of the problem. Now you tell us so,
I just and I find you know the reason.

Speaker 8 (03:33):
Why the Democratic Party has less credibility today. Here's an
unpopular president and the Democratic Party has a worse rating
than the Republican Party with this catastrophic governance that we've
seen over the last one hundred and twenty eight and
yet why is the Democratic Party in worse shape because
of this distrust? Because of this frankly, what the public
feels as if the party leadership let them down and

(03:55):
let them let this happen. He's as responsible as anybody else.
He was a leader in the party. He could have
said something, Senter. We could literally spend a week playing
these clips. We won't, but we could.

Speaker 4 (04:11):
Chuck Schumer wasn't the only person lying who's in meetings
with Joe Biden, who knows how bad it is. Remember
when Amy Klobuchar vouched for Biden's health just hours before
he debated Donald Trump, which is when it was revealed
to the whole world how bad he really was, how

(04:33):
in what horrible shape he was.

Speaker 9 (04:37):
Oh, President Biden is fit to be commander in cheap
Every time there has been a big moment where the
Trump people are predicting some fiasco, every time President Biden
rises to the occasion, making.

Speaker 6 (04:50):
Sure that we're able to make every single solitary person.

Speaker 4 (04:55):
Eligible for what I've been able to do with.

Speaker 6 (04:57):
The cod with dealing with everything we had to.

Speaker 7 (05:03):
Do with Look, if we fully beat medicare.

Speaker 4 (05:13):
What I'm starting to think maybe that corn pop story
wasn't true. I mean, I don't want to get crazy here.
Illinois Governor fat JB. Pritzker told CNN he never saw
how bad things were with Biden, even though he'd been
to the White House several times. He had no idea, as.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
You know how bad things were with President Biden before
the election.

Speaker 10 (05:40):
When you say how bad things were. I mean, what
I can say is I saw him a few times.
I certainly went to the White House whenever there was
an opportunity for me to make the case for something
for people in my state. And I never had the
experience of anything other than a guy who brought to
the table a lot of good ideas about how to
solve problems. So to the extent people are now saying, well, well,

(06:03):
we thought about whether he should have a wheelchair, which
I understand is one of the things that was said.

Speaker 4 (06:09):
I never heard any of that. I never saw any
of that. Fair enough, Yeah, we're just looking forward. Now.
This becomes a very important question. Interim US attorney Ed Martin,
who that bastard North Carolina's Tom tillis sabotaged? Interim US

(06:29):
attorney Ed Martin said President Biden's final hour autopin pardons
are being investigated. The autopin is not him using his
actual signature, but basically them mimeographing it, a facsimile of it,
a printed version of it. And well, I'll let you

(06:54):
listen to what he says.

Speaker 11 (06:55):
We've never seen pardons of the scope, and it looks
at least like something that you could be corrupt when
Bill Clinton pardoned Mark Rich and turns out that Mark
Rich had paid a bowload of money to one of
Clinton's friends and lawyers.

Speaker 7 (07:09):
That's not corrupt.

Speaker 11 (07:10):
It's not criminal because the plenary power of the pardon.
But in the case of Joe Biden and his pardons,
they were so specific back fourteen years, covering everything you've
ever done. I mean when I say specific, they were broad.

Speaker 7 (07:24):
But they had time stuff on them.

Speaker 11 (07:26):
It was very and that least leads to questions because
the plenary power is true.

Speaker 7 (07:31):
But the question is what was going on here? And
I did get responses from some of them, and those
things are ongoing.

Speaker 4 (07:40):
Very interesting the criminality of it all because if Joe
Biden didn't know about the pardons, only the president has
the power to pardon. If Joe Biden didn't know about
the pardons, if he didn't sign the pardons, who did
and what did they get in return? I don't believe

(08:04):
the president should have the pardon power after election day.
I think you should have to pardon everyone you're going
to pardon before the election, so we get a chance
to vote on who you actually pardon. President. I'd like
to teach you how to stay.

Speaker 3 (08:17):
Let's make America great again in Spanish.

Speaker 4 (08:19):
Also that America, Michael Berry America Grande. This is a
slightly low wited clipt and we would normally play so
I warn you of that. But this is Jasmine Crockett,
the leader of the Democrat Party, and she's on Chuck

(08:39):
Todd's podcast, which they call the Chuck Toodcast. Oh how cute,
and she says black men didn't vote for Kamala Harris
because she was a prosecutor. It is her and in

(09:00):
that black men are all just criminals and they don't
like law abiding or law enforcers. Either that's true, which
is really sad. And then I guess everyone else can
say it or it's not true. And what would make
her say that she views black men as being criminals

(09:26):
who don't like the cops who arrested them. She said, So, how.

Speaker 8 (09:32):
Big do you think this black men voter issue with
Kamala Harris? How much of that do you think was
specific to hesitation of voting a black man hesitating to
vote for a black woman.

Speaker 12 (09:45):
I will tell you what I was told, because I
did think that I definitely think that there was misogyny
in this across the board, no matter what color male
you're talking about. I just think that you be an
error to not like know that there was a massage
me that existed. I will say this though, the very
first polling briefing that we had with a polster that

(10:08):
I trust a lot, he briefed the Black Caucus and
he said that one of the issues that he was
running into with black and brown communities was that she
had been a prosecutor.

Speaker 4 (10:20):
And this was more of a resume thing that there was.

Speaker 12 (10:23):
There was definitely some resume stuff that this allowed her
from being able to build the type of rapport of
trust within these marginalized communities that historically have been targeted.

Speaker 8 (10:35):
This was a huge problem in her own campaign for
president during the primaries, which is why she pivoted. She
was trying to get out of that because that was
being used by other Democratic campaigns to say, hey, you know,
she was a prosecutor. She was putting black men in jail,
and the thing is right, which is why she went
down the busing road with you know, she had to
go to some places that she probably wouldn't have normally gone,

(10:58):
but she felt she had to because she was trying
to fix her own biography.

Speaker 12 (11:01):
Issues, so literally early numbers that we were given, and
I promise you, I really do trust this.

Speaker 4 (11:07):
Polster said that.

Speaker 12 (11:09):
So if you think back to my DNC speech, one
of the things that they actually the guidance that I
was given was to actually lean into her being a prosecutor.
And I'm like, oh, hell, I'm like that is not helpful, right,
And so when I did it, I did a bit
of a swing on it right as a criminal defense attorney,

(11:31):
and I explained, like, this is the kind of prosecutor
all would have won it, right, Like, so I built
it that way. But I did talk to some people,
even a prominent rapper who was like, I'm going to
support her, but I don't feel comfortable openly endorsing her,
but I'm going to vote for her.

Speaker 4 (11:48):
And I'm like why. And so he told me that
one of the.

Speaker 12 (11:51):
Issues was just kind of like the prosecutor thing, and
I said, and I made sure to talk about the
things that we had been told.

Speaker 4 (11:58):
Moved the needle with the that's great, that's good. We
get the point. Jasmine Crockett says black men don't like
law enforcers because they're all criminals and they put them
in prison. And again, I'll say it, either that's true
and how sad, or it's not true. And why is

(12:20):
she saying that? I mean, if you listen to what
comes out of these people's mouths, it's either true and
frightening are not true. And you wonder why would she
say that? Well, I'll tell you why. Because they cannot
confront the idea that Kamala Harris lost because her plans

(12:44):
were bad, because in her career she did bad things,
and because she demonstrated that she's a trunk, that she
is condescending, that she is not smart, and that she
stands for nothing, and people voted against that. And so

(13:05):
what people like Kamala Harris and Jasmine Crockett have learned
to do their entire lives is for every time they
don't measure up, which is often every time they fail,
which is often, to blame it on something other than
their own performance and competence, because that would be an

(13:27):
awful look into the mirror, to look into the mirror
and see who you really are. You know, I'm not
good enough to play quarterback for the Houston Texans, But
I don't blame cal McNair, the owner. I don't blame

(13:51):
the coach.

Speaker 1 (13:58):
Go.

Speaker 4 (13:59):
Yeah, you can't throw hard enough or accurate enough. You
can't read the defense, you can't do the checkdowns. You're lazy.
I mean, we'd go for a while and like I
guld be the quarterback room, but we don't. These people
have learned it's important to understand who these people are.

(14:21):
These are the worst of the worst. What we're seeing
is not the rise of blacks in America. What we're
seeing is the worst of the worst blacks in America
being put into positions supposedly representing blacks. You know, if
you were a cynical, conspiratorial person, you would say, this

(14:45):
is how you bring the most chaos to the country.
What about a guy like Wesley Hunt, black congressman representing Houston.
He doesn't need to talk about being black, almost never does,
although they constantly try to ask him about it. Went
to a very very exclusive school in Houston called Saint John's,

(15:06):
where he performed very well. Went to one of the
finest institution of higher learning and military planning in the world,
West Point, where he distincished distinguished himself both as a
young officer to be and as a as an officer

(15:26):
candidate and as a football player, then went on in
the United States Army to serve as an officer as
a helicopter pilot. Is now serving in the United States
Congress with great distinction. But of course you don't know
his name because he's not walking around foul got that,
y'all foul doing nothing, y'all got. We don't meet now,

(15:47):
we don't do that, you all got. He doesn't act
a fool, so we don't have any There's there's no
room for him in in media. There's no room for
Wesley Hunt and a reasonable discussion about policy and foreign afairs,
and these are no no, we want the clowns because
that's that's what that's what the people come to see.

Speaker 6 (16:11):
I feel super connected to launch Michael Berry.

Speaker 4 (16:18):
So here's the point we've reached in American society. And
this is really going to be the inflection point. This
is going to be the gut check. This is going
to be the moment where all of us are going
to be asked, what are you willing to do when
the Civil War breaks out? Because this is what happens.

(16:39):
Jasmine Crockett was on Stephen Colbert when she was asked
about the arrests of the Democrat congressmen who assaulted ice
officers in New Jersey. And what she's saying is we're
going to fight, literally fight. They said this before a lot,

(17:02):
but now they've taken to like the black leaders in
South Africa saying we're going to kill whitey, they're now
taking to saying we're going to get violent. Remember we
got Obama saying when they hit low, when they go high,
we go low. We punch them. Put your mark, put
your combat boots on, get in their face. We've got

(17:26):
Maxine Water saying this. We've got a number of white,
liberal and black politicians calling for violence. And what do
we keep doing gasping, Oh my god, this is so bad. Well,
he or she is saying, in no uncertain term, you're
not going to arrest a congressman, even when they are

(17:48):
caught on video committing a crime. We did what we
did to you in January sixth, and look how many
Republicans would never speak out on it. They immediately condemned
it because they didn't want to have to defend it.
They didn't want to have to admit that the government
had done this, so they made it an insurrection. A
horrible thing because as long as the people at the

(18:11):
Capitol on January sixth were the most violent insurrection in
the history of mankind. As long as that was true,
they could be for law and order. I'm just for
law and order. I just law and order. Man just
for law and order. But it wasn't law and order.
They were unarmed. There were a lot of old people.

(18:31):
They shot and killed Ashley Babbit. Do you notice how
few Republicans spoke out on that issue. So here is
Jasmin Crockett basically saying the law does not apply to us,
and if you expect us to show up for a trial,
if you expect us to She's going to use the
term ten toes down Ramon that is street, that is

(18:54):
street lingo for standing firm, ten toes down.

Speaker 13 (19:00):
Why House has has said that the idea of arresting
members of Congress is on the table. Here, as a
member of Congress, was your reaction to that is?

Speaker 7 (19:09):
Are the people talking about.

Speaker 4 (19:10):
It in the cloakrooms?

Speaker 12 (19:11):
Well, I mean this all just happened over the weekend,
So we go back into session tomorrow. But what I
will tell you is that we are standing tin toes
down for our members.

Speaker 9 (19:19):
Listen, we have jobs.

Speaker 12 (19:20):
And unlike some other people, say the big guy in
the White House who has spent twenty five percent of
his time golfing. Yeah, we actually care about our jobs,
and we are trying to serve the American people, and
we have a duty of oversight over these agencies and
knowing that they are literally just kidnapping people off of
the streets and we don't know what types of accu

(19:40):
conditions they are putting them in. I think that I
actually want to applaud my fellow members of Congress who
don't take their jobs lightly but instead take.

Speaker 4 (19:50):
Them very seriously, especially in this moment, so serious, so serious.
I want you to notice it when she says ten
toes down, kind of like Henry Higgins in My Fair Lady.
I've spent a lifetime studying delivery techniques, timing, exhaling, inhaling,
all of these things, and you can always tell when

(20:13):
someone has a rehearsed line that they're going to deliver,
that they're just waiting for the right moment to use
a phrase. But it doesn't, it doesn't come off as
part of the train of thought that she had. She
wanted this is a headline, Crockett says, dims ten toes

(20:34):
down in quotes for fellow dims. All right, so listen
to it again and notice how she sort of stops
for a moment cocks the hammer before delivering this line.
She's very, very proud of it. She thinks this is
really good. Here we go.

Speaker 13 (20:50):
Dwisas has said that the idea of arresting members of
Congress is on the table here as a member of Congress.
Was your reaction to that people talking about it in
the cloakrooms?

Speaker 12 (21:02):
Well, I mean, this all just happen over the weekend.
So we go back into session tomorrow. But what I
will tell you is that we are standing Tinto's down
for our members.

Speaker 4 (21:09):
Listen. She feels like, Oh, I delivered it. I got
it now. King Jeffery is the leader of the Democrats
in Congress, is now openly threatening that if the law
is enforced against these Democrats. Well, I'll let you listen

(21:30):
to it. To him himself.

Speaker 14 (21:33):
Your statement the other day after there was this incident
in Newark, you said they better not touch or I'm
not it's correct. What happens if they were to go
and arrest these members, or if they would try to
sanction them.

Speaker 4 (21:43):
Do in the House for its non't find out what
would you do? I mean, I don't find out, of course,
I mean it does not broach. You'll find out. That's
a red line. What's the what's the red line? Though?
I mean, I know we have this a red line.
It's very clear.

Speaker 15 (21:56):
First of all, I think that the so called Whole
and Security spokesperson is a joke.

Speaker 4 (22:04):
It's a joke. They know better.

Speaker 15 (22:08):
Than to go down that road. And it's been made
loudly and abundantly clear.

Speaker 4 (22:15):
To the Trump administration.

Speaker 15 (22:18):
We're not going to be intimidated by their tactics to
try to force principled opposition from not standing up to
their extremism. It hasn't happened during the entirety of this
failed term. It didn't happen when Donald Trump temporarily was

(22:41):
sitting high and the immediate after math of the election.
Do you think it's going to happen now when he's
the most unpopular president in American history after his first
one hundred days.

Speaker 4 (22:54):
Give me a break.

Speaker 15 (22:55):
No one's intimidated by this, dude, No one. And so
there are clear lines that they just they're not cross.

Speaker 4 (23:08):
Okay, we're at that moment. We're simply at that moment.
And I want to be clear where I stand on
all of this. This is not trying to be provocative
or entertaining or anything else. I want to be very
clear where I stand on this. I want them arrested.

(23:31):
I wanted them arrested at that moment and taken into
custody for an assault on an officer. I wanted them
held under the strictest conditions. I wanted them tried, and
I want them sent to prison. And whoever physically assaults blocks,
you name it, the carrying out of American policy in

(23:57):
this manner. I want them arrested, charged, and when I'm prosecuted,
I want the book thrown at them. And I'll tell
you what else. I am tired of protesters backing down cops,
surrounding cops, assaulting cops. If that was done by a

(24:17):
J sixer, they would have shot and killed them, as
they did to Ashley Babbitt. I believe the people that
get out in the road and stop traffic and lay
down in the road and refuse to get up, the
cops should show up, arrest them and prosecute them. If
they won't, that's it. Drive over them, and then you

(24:41):
stop this nonsense. We have reached a point now where
we are entire nation pulling out our cameras and filming
something and hoping to defend ourselves in the court of
public opinion with a video. This is what we are
at the mercy of these people because we refuse to

(25:05):
do something about it, to make it stop. This is
the Michael Berry show. Well, it's happening already. With an
autonomous trucking firm launches its service in Texas two weeks ago.
The self driving trucks will be doing regular long haul
routes between Dallas and Houston. The semis have computers and

(25:30):
sensors that can see more than four football fields in
front of them. During the four years of practice halls,
the self driving technology was able to complete over twelve
hundred miles without a human in that truck. Chris Ermson,
CEO and co founder of Aurora, says in a statement, quote,

(25:52):
we founded Aurora to deliver the benefits of self driving
technology safely, quickly, and broadly. Now we are the first
company to successfully and safely operate a commercial driverless trucking
service on public roads. Riding in the backseat for our
inaugural trip was an honor of a lifetime. The Aurora

(26:14):
driver performed perfectly, and it's a moment I'll never forget.
There are two extremes in this discussion. One is the
person who is in love with the idea and wants
no restrictions, guardrails, safety measures, anything, just technology, technology, technology,

(26:36):
limitless possibility. This is the mindset that led to a
massive fraud. About ten years ago, maybe these seven eight
years ago, a guy claimed to have done exactly this.
It was an electric autonomous driving eighteen wheeler. And when

(27:03):
he did the pitch, you know, they all they all
mimic Steve Jobs. Now you know, they come out in
the black turtleneck and they're the rock star and they
got the music going. There's a crowd of you know,
Peanut Gallery who act like they're in and all and
are also impressing. So they so they got the truck
waiting there and they take the top off of it

(27:24):
and it looked cool. Yeah it's a prototype. And he said,
now we're going to move the truck. I want you
to understand. One thing we're not going to do is
move it or it's going to move on its own. Today,
we are not going to move. He made a big deal.
But that is exactly what they did without people knowing it.

(27:45):
It was a complete scam. He raised a fortune and
they never even had one. That vehicle was rolled in there,
It didn't even have an engine in it of any sort,
had no means of moving. Because people were so in
love with the technology that they get snookered. The flip

(28:05):
side of that is the person who is artificially afraid,
unreasonably afraid because there's not a human being there. And
that person says, well, when you've got a runaway truck,
what's going to happen? You need a person in there
to make judgments. Okay, in the one case where there

(28:27):
is a runaway truck, and there will be one, something
will go wrong, There may be people die. You're exactly right.
But if you were king looking out over your society
and you were protecting all your people, and you were
to say, let's say ten people die off autonomous self
driving trucks in a year, and let's look at the
number of people who die because a truck driver falls

(28:50):
asleep huge, because a truck driver is looking in the
back seat for something, and because a truck driver is
mad at another truck driver or car for cutting him
off because the truck driver's on the phone and drops it,
because a truck driver is drunk or under the influence
of pills. What if that number is three hundred, I

(29:13):
don't know them. I'm making something. But what if that
number is three hundred and it's ten fraud? Do you
know that Some people would say, I don't care. Now,
if your argument is we've got a lot of people
that this is a good paying job and we'd like
to keep them in a job, that's fine. Just understand
that the economics will not bear out because you're good

(29:35):
other countries and other companies in other countries. Everyone is
looking for a way to cut expenses. It doesn't make
them bad people. The question is how you go about it.
But part of the competition in commerce is being able
to cut expenses, and labor is a massive expense for trucking.

(30:04):
Products come into the United States at the port on
a container ship. The container ship is unloaded by longshoreman.
It is then put into trucks or it is put
by rail where it goes. But in ninety nine point
nine percent of cases, no matter what you're hauling, you

(30:28):
do not deliver by rail to the end user. Now
that was not always the case. You deliver either immediately
or by rail to the truckers, and then the overroad
truckers are going to take it to its end destination.
Because fixed rail can't get to everybody and where they

(30:49):
need to be, distribution centers and all of that. That
is a massive cost in the supply chain that when
they can replace it, they're going to replace it. My
friend Chance McLean has a cyber truck. I think they're hideous.
I really do. I think it's the ugliest vehicle on

(31:11):
the road. And you gotta understand, I'm a guy that
thinks the pacer looks good. I love the hornet, the pacer.
That whole body of vehicles I think are cool. I
think they're awesome. I would own one. I would love
to own one. Ever so often I get a wild
hair and I go in there, I go online, bring
a trailer or whatever, and try to find me an

(31:32):
old hornet or an old pacer. I think they're fantastic.
The cyber truck is hideous. It's the ugliest vehicle I've
ever seen in my life. Ever, not only is it ugly,
it gives me anxiety. It makes me feel tense, like

(31:52):
graffiti or nails on a chalkboard or sand in the car.
It triggers me. I don't like it at all, the contours,
that the colors, everything about it. But let me tell
you something. You get inside that thing, you get inside
that spaceship, it is something else. It's amazing. I wouldn't

(32:16):
own one because I don't like to draw attention to
myself when I'm off the air, because you just never
know there are people that don't like me. But about
three days after the full self driving, we went out
to see an officer that we brought a check for
about seventy thousand dollars too. He's the one that went

(32:36):
barging in there, charging in there when the woman and
her kids were being pistol whipped by the punks, and
he goes in there and the guy shoots him in
the leg, but they managed to get them. We were
delivering to check him out waller, and we went out
there and he said, you want me to turn it
on as so, let's wait till we get out of town.
Three minutes into just freaking out over the fact that

(32:57):
it was driving itself, I was perfectly so ramon, here's
my question for you, and y'all can email your response
if you'd like a fish paper. Would you feel safe
for driving next to a driverless eighteen wheeler or driving
next to a Honda a Cord driven by an Asian woman. Oh,

(33:20):
I'm married to an Asian woman. I'm allowed to say that.
It's not racism. See that's how that works. You ought
to try it.
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