Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and load. Michael
Very Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
It's Charlie from BlackBerry Smoke. I can feel a good
one coming on.
Speaker 3 (00:24):
It's the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 4 (00:27):
Any attempt to restrict drinking and driving peer is viewed
by some as downright on democratic joy read.
Speaker 5 (00:33):
Is back out.
Speaker 6 (00:34):
The word remember her is over. She's the really dumb
lady that was on CNN. Was she on CNN or MSNBC? Ramon,
do you remember MSNBC?
Speaker 2 (00:44):
You're right?
Speaker 6 (00:45):
And her ratings were so bad that finally they let
her go, So she's back. CNN's putting her on because
if nothing else, she makes you crazy, and when you're crazy,
you're engaged, and then we.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Talk about it.
Speaker 6 (01:00):
So she's not happy that we bombed a sovereign country
that did not attack us. She's very unhappy. She has
become an isolationist in her old age.
Speaker 4 (01:08):
I find it rather extraordinary that we are very casually
having a conversation about the tactical success or failure of
dropping a three thousand pound bomb or two on a
sovereign country that did not attack us, and we are
failing to unpack or even address as we're discussing whether
or not it was effective how we bombed, deron whether
(01:32):
Donald Trump was correct in saying we obliterated their facilities,
and not asking why on earth is the United States
bombing a country that did not attack us? What on
earth are we doing there at all?
Speaker 2 (01:44):
And why is it.
Speaker 4 (01:46):
That there is this arrogance in the West and in
the United States to say that we get to decide
who can have nuclear energy. We get to decide that,
and not just decide it, we get to act on it,
drop bombs on a country that didn't attack us. We
had no business dropping bombs on Iran. And so the
question of whether the tactic worked or not, to me
(02:09):
ignores the fundamental moral question at hand. And I think
that I'm not alone probably among Americans who are saying
that this was something that we had absolutely no right
to do.
Speaker 6 (02:19):
Joy Read then got into it with Attorney Arthur Idalla
over who treats gays better Iran or America?
Speaker 2 (02:27):
She really, you can't make it up.
Speaker 5 (02:31):
How about democracy?
Speaker 3 (02:32):
Why are we doing this because Israel has.
Speaker 7 (02:34):
A democracy like the United States of America?
Speaker 4 (02:37):
Joy, The fact that you bet democracy in the United people,
LGBTQ people can't even serve in the military under the
president you prefer.
Speaker 8 (02:52):
They are.
Speaker 5 (02:53):
They're only a.
Speaker 4 (02:54):
Little bit, They're only a little Joe.
Speaker 5 (02:58):
They're they're allowed to live.
Speaker 4 (02:59):
But they're not all to serve in the United States military.
They're being persecuted. They can't have their story. United States
is not.
Speaker 9 (03:07):
Forgive.
Speaker 6 (03:08):
Then she asks Idalla, where's his evidence that Mamdani, the
guy who is most likely to be the next mayor
of New York, would set New York back to the
nineteen soeuth Where is your information?
Speaker 5 (03:24):
Where do you get this from?
Speaker 4 (03:25):
Your evidence that Mamdani would return New York City to
the nineteen seventies hellhole time square?
Speaker 2 (03:34):
What is their evidence?
Speaker 3 (03:35):
Very simple?
Speaker 7 (03:35):
So he wants to raise taxes on people who make
the most money. What eventually is going to happen is
you're going to lose that tax base. Once you lose
that tax base, our bonds will get degraded. Now the
city budget will not be substantial enough to subsidize not
only the cops, but the fire department, the sanitation department.
Once you start losing Wall Street and people who pay
(03:57):
eleven twelve thousand dollars a month to on.
Speaker 10 (04:00):
These Okay, so you're done let me let me, let
me ask you.
Speaker 7 (04:03):
Back to the seventies when Gerald Ford said, okay, New
York drop day.
Speaker 10 (04:08):
Okay, but Arthur, But Arthur, just just as somebody who
is just listening to you, you raise the taxes on
wealthy people in this city, maybe a couple percent, right,
they're already yeah, they're already And that's exactly what they're
already paying. The hid I know, I know, Arthur, But Arthur,
(04:30):
they are already paying right at this moment, some of
the highest taxes in the country. And you think that
one or two percent is going to cause a mass
exodus out.
Speaker 5 (04:39):
Of New York I started.
Speaker 10 (04:42):
I just want to be clear that that's what you're saying,
because I think that seems pretty extended.
Speaker 5 (04:46):
He's also not going to focus on crime. Right now.
Speaker 7 (04:49):
You have Police Commission of Tish and John Shall, the
chief of the department Crime in the state, in the
city of New York right now is set to break
all records as the lowest ever in recording history for
shootings and murders. Once that starts going up in the
other direction, and the tax base.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
Is done and sanitation has done.
Speaker 6 (05:09):
Socialist democrat Zorin Mumdani told the breakfast Club that if
he's elected mayor of New York City, he will raise
corporate taxes. Well, that's going to be good. And if
companies move their headquarters to avoid that tax.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
It won't matter. He'll chase them down.
Speaker 6 (05:30):
Any business doing business in New York will have to
pay his new taxes because he needs lots of money
to fund his crazy programs. Companies are going to choose
to leave New York and not do business there, and
some of them will never come back. You know, San Francisco,
for instance, when they allowed the shoplifters to come in
(05:54):
and they decided they even changed the law.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
We're not going to prosecute him.
Speaker 6 (05:58):
Spend less than a thousand bucks, seal less than thousand bucks,
and we won't even arrest you. Once that happened, the
theft became so widespread and so antithetical to making a profit,
in which case we can't continue to run this place.
Businesses started closing and moving out. Businesses that had been
(06:19):
in showcase properties in San Francisco for longer than I've
been alive. They shuttered the doors, they left San Francisco.
Never believed that would happen. Well, it is happening. And
when you hear what Zorin Mundani wants to do in
New York, there are going to be people who are
going to give up the once once not once one
(06:41):
sprized market of New York.
Speaker 2 (06:44):
It's going to happen.
Speaker 11 (06:45):
I've proposed is that we raise ten billion dollars to
pay for our entire economic agenda and start to Trump
proof our city because we know he'll use federal funding
his leverage over the city. And we will do so
in two key ways. The first is to match the
state's top corporate tax rate to that of New Jersey.
We are at seven point twenty five percent. They're at
eleven point five percent. Corporations can pay it over there,
(07:06):
they can pay it over here. And the beauty of
it is that it doesn't just apply to corporations headquartered
in New York City, because when you say this, people
will say, well, they're going to go to Florida. Wherever
you are headquartered, as long as you do business in
the state of New York, you are taxable.
Speaker 2 (07:19):
For that corporate tax.
Speaker 11 (07:20):
We're talking about corporations that are making millions of dollars
not in revenue but in profit and the second is
taxing the top one percent of New Yorkers. We're talking
about people who make a million dollars a year more,
taxing them just by flat two percent tax increase. And
I know I fifty cent is listening. He's not going
to be happy about this intense and not like this
tax policy. But I want to be very clear, this
is about twenty thousand dollars a year. It's a rounding ear.
(07:40):
And all of these things together they make every New
Yorker's life better, including those who are actually getting increased from.
Speaker 1 (07:47):
The King of Ding and this other guy, Michael Barry.
Speaker 12 (07:51):
These are the kind of guys You're like a smack
and air ass.
Speaker 5 (07:56):
Tucker Carlson said this week.
Speaker 6 (08:00):
I think it was this week that after he was
let go from Fox, which came as a shock, the
Murdochs who owned Fox, hate Trump so much that they
tried to get him to run against Donald Trump in
twenty twenty four.
Speaker 9 (08:18):
The Murdocks really hate Trump. Lay, Yeah, there's no one
who hates Trump more than the Murdocks. I got fired
in April of twenty twenty three. In May of twenty
twenty three, they asked me to run for president against
Trump and said they would back me. Obviously, I'm not
gone running for any you know, I would never get
elected any.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
Plus, I like Trump. That's the funny thing, is.
Speaker 9 (08:37):
I actually genuinely I get frustrated. I'm frustrated now. So
hold on Trump. You just said that, and people, by
I mean they asked you to run for president against Trump.
Speaker 5 (08:47):
The murders.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
Oh yeah, yeah.
Speaker 9 (08:49):
Lachlan Mark said you should run for We'll back you
the whole thing, the whole the whole Fox News apparatus,
not just Fox.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
But you know, Walstreet Journal, all of the raaper time.
Speaker 5 (08:57):
Everyone.
Speaker 9 (08:57):
Absolutely, we'll back here. And that came right from Do that.
I was already gone, they already canceled my show. I
was still in her contract with the cancel my show.
You should run, We support you, you should run. We
want to stop Trump. Yahus he was running.
Speaker 6 (09:10):
This is just a weird moment that I didn't want
to get away without you hearing. Jim Mudd sent me
an email with the headline, did Tim Walls sell military
technology to the Chinese? Well, here's the story and I'll
(09:31):
play the clip. Reporter Liz Collins told Tucker Carlson that
she spoke to some of the men who served with
Tim Walls, and they told her that they went to
the FBI because they believed that Tampon Tim Kamala, Harris's
vice president, had sold military operation manuals.
Speaker 2 (09:53):
To the Chinese government.
Speaker 13 (09:54):
I've spoken to a couple of people that served with
Tim Walls in Nebraska in that Guard unit, and they
suspect and we've done stories and tried to reach out
to Walls for for comment, but they suspect that perhaps
he took their standard operating procedure, the SP for the Howitzer.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
Army tank he was assigned to.
Speaker 5 (10:17):
This tank.
Speaker 13 (10:19):
Was nuclear capable, and this was all laid out in
the sop that goes missing while he's there and the
missing right, And they had talked to the FBI about
about this as well.
Speaker 2 (10:32):
There's so does any the FBI.
Speaker 13 (10:35):
They think that he's traveling back and forth from China
at this time, and then we also know that this howitzer.
Speaker 9 (10:42):
I know, I sound crazy right now. You don't sound
crazy at all. You're recounting the facts. Yeah, you were
saying that men he worked with in the National Guard
in Nebraska went to the FBI because they believed he
had given classified military secrets to the Chinese government. They
suspect that he did, and well he suspected to the
(11:04):
point they went to the FBI.
Speaker 13 (11:05):
Well, this was all when all these stories are coming
out finally about his background, and they're like, maybe we
should talk about this. These are guys that back then
didn't report this. This was in the early nineties, and
they always talked about it amongst themselves, and I think
that they weren't completely aware of, you know, the potential
threats something like this could post.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
But they always thought this was very strange.
Speaker 13 (11:29):
And then China started producing almost a carbon copy of
this military tank.
Speaker 2 (11:34):
A couple of years later. Come on.
Speaker 5 (11:39):
For real.
Speaker 6 (11:40):
According to all of our research, there is no pride
of authorship on The Michael Berry Show. We will play
clips from any other show, even if they air at
the same time. We do not see as competitors other
content creators, thinkers, analyzers, speakers, strategists, and so oftentimes what
(12:04):
we do is give a platform to other ideas that
we think are interesting or stupid. In this case, very
interesting and it comes from Joe Rogan. Crazy Bernie Sanders
was on with Joe Rogan and Crazy Bernie said it
was absurd that someone like Elon Musk could spend two
(12:25):
hundred and seventy million dollars to elect Donald Trump.
Speaker 14 (12:27):
As a result of the Citizens United Supreme Court decision.
I think that's fifteen sixteen years old. What it says is,
you're a billionaire, you have now the constitutional right because
your money is your freedom of expression right. So you
don't like Bernie Sanders, you can put millions or hundreds
(12:49):
of millions of dollars into a campaign and express your
view about how terrible Bernie Sanders is and you can
buy that election. Right, that's your constitutional right. I think
that's probably the worst decision Supreme Court has have been made.
So what is the result of that decision. The result
of that decision, Let's take us to where we are today,
(13:09):
is that Elon Musk and I know Alan was on
your show and he's here at Losston, Eh, yeah, okay,
And we could talk about Elon, but he spent two
hundred and seventy million dollars to elect Trump as president.
Speaker 3 (13:22):
Okay.
Speaker 14 (13:24):
I think that's absurd that any one person.
Speaker 5 (13:26):
What's the most someone donated towards the Harris campaign.
Speaker 14 (13:31):
They spent a lot of money on Harris's We.
Speaker 5 (13:33):
Spent one point five billion dollars just in the course
of a couple of months.
Speaker 14 (13:36):
You got it, all right, let me talk about it.
So I'm not here just to say it's a republic
and that's my point to you.
Speaker 2 (13:41):
Right, okay.
Speaker 6 (13:42):
Speaking of Joe Rogan, Joe Rogan says Democrats in Congress
all seem fake, like they're all characters. It's an interesting point.
Speaker 5 (13:54):
It just seems fake. There's so much seems fake.
Speaker 9 (13:58):
You know.
Speaker 8 (13:58):
It's like all the new who's just the people that
are politicians. Everyone feels like they're They're like, who's the
fetterman character? This guy is wearing a hoodie and shorts.
That's his That's the wacky neighbor, you know. And then
Jasmine Crockett, she's that loudmouthed lady from down the street.
(14:18):
And they're like, oh, here comes Jasmine, gonna get crazy,
you know. And Maxie Waters like, oh she's old. It's like,
these are fake people. Nancy Pelosi, this giant lady who
wants all the money's been a politic for one hundred
and fifty years.
Speaker 5 (14:34):
There's pictures of her with Kennedy.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
I didn't realize Nancy Pelosi was well in doubt.
Speaker 5 (14:39):
Oh boy, oh boy.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
Really yeah, he's done the research.
Speaker 5 (14:43):
Well there's all these photos where people are calling her,
know what's a guilf of Grandma? But yeah, you never
seen her boobs. No disrespect miss is Pelosi. I admire
her first doc choices, but fantastic those are those are legit.
Speaker 9 (15:07):
You know.
Speaker 2 (15:08):
I got to say, this is a great thought to
the podcast.
Speaker 3 (15:10):
And we aren't even stung.
Speaker 5 (15:11):
I did not know that you're a grown man. Look
at the size of those sweater ham that's incredible.
Speaker 3 (15:17):
That has made me a lot more in favor of color.
Speaker 5 (15:19):
That hold up go to that last picture might have
been but that seems to fake. But it might be
like from the Clinton administration. See these deep state vampires already.
Speaker 15 (15:30):
I though you were going to go somewhere else when
you said deep way, she's going somewhere.
Speaker 5 (15:36):
What else do you want to?
Speaker 2 (15:37):
What do you want you want to?
Speaker 14 (15:41):
Just say the word and I'll throw around the plug.
Speaker 6 (15:44):
Daron Burnett claims that there's a certain friendliness to Irani's
who chant death to America. Yeah they're they're chanting death
to America, but there's a certain friendliness to the way
they do it.
Speaker 16 (15:56):
But the question is whether or not the com can
remain when the regime is still that is still there,
who wants death to America, death to Israel stays in place.
Speaker 3 (16:08):
And that is part of the discussion.
Speaker 12 (16:10):
Right, yes, absolutely part of the discussion. And you know,
I remember Dan at one point being in Tehran years
ago and they're chanting death to America all around me,
even as I say, oh, I'm an American reporting for CNN,
and they were happy to speak to me. So those
two sort of jarring realities of the chant and yet
(16:31):
the friendliness have existed together.
Speaker 2 (16:35):
When I was growing up.
Speaker 6 (16:37):
I was born in seventy, so you do the math.
Segregation was a bad thing, you were. Everybody is supposed
to live intermingled, shouldn't segregate. Somewhere along the way of
late the left wants to segregate again. It's kind of interesting.
(17:00):
Kvue KUTV in Austin had a headline Austin breaks ground
on new affordable housing for LGBTQ plus seniors.
Speaker 2 (17:15):
Wait what is this a bathhouse?
Speaker 6 (17:21):
From the article quote On Wednesday, an Austin based group
broke ground on a new affordable housing development geared toward
LGBTQ thus that's the all encompassing one senior citizens. The development,
which will be known as Iris Gardens, is located at
(17:41):
ten thirteen Montopolis Drive in southeast Austin. It will consist
of one hundred and fifty units for people aged fifty
five and older and will be considered a first of
its kind for Austin. Through a partnership with Family Eldercare
and the national housing developer Mesino Group, it will also
(18:01):
offer on site services, including mental wellness and social connection programs.
Quote that sounds like a dating group. This project just
felt like it was the right thing to do, the CEO,
Aaron Alarcohone said. He said people who are at or
below the thirty to sixty percent area median income will
(18:23):
be accepted. The goal is to give people who live
in the complex a safe and affordable space. At the moment,
there's an uptick of elderly people experiencing homelessness. According to
Austin's Homeless Strategy Officer, Well, when you're the homeless strategy officer,
gets your job to say everybody's homeless, give me more money.
(18:46):
When it comes to Iris Gardens, he says, the city
wanted to focus on a community that was not being
properly served.
Speaker 2 (18:53):
How do you know?
Speaker 3 (18:55):
How do you know that?
Speaker 6 (19:00):
This is the weirdest thing? So what if you apply
to live there? So they go, well, we need to
know if you're homo?
Speaker 5 (19:09):
Do they ask?
Speaker 2 (19:11):
Do they just assume?
Speaker 6 (19:13):
What if there are openings there but not at the
other place and straight people apply. It's kind of weird,
isn't it. It's a housing paid for by the government
on the basis of who you sleep with?
Speaker 2 (19:30):
Gays? I mean, what's the logo?
Speaker 6 (19:35):
Gay seniors don't retire, They just transition from leather to linen.
This old Folks Home gives new meaning to gay old time.
Speaker 2 (19:45):
Emphasis on the old.
Speaker 6 (19:48):
These are the people who came out when streaming meant
tears and Judy Garland albums.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
This is really weird.
Speaker 6 (19:58):
This is this He's up there, you know, just when
you think it can't get any weirder. I'm sure plenty
of old folks homes have gay people in them, but
a gay old folks home seems weird because how do
you ensure that they're gay people? Do you just put
(20:20):
a rainbow flag out front and hope people know? What
if some poor old sap doesn't know what if your
papa finds out he's ready for memory care. He's not
sure what's going on. He doesn't know about the rainbow flag.
He loves a rainbow right after it rains, good rainbow.
He didn't know what to all this is. And he
(20:41):
goes and signs up and the first day there, can
you imagine how weird this is going to be. We
played this earlier in the week, but I kept it
back and I'm not gonna comment on it because I
did it earlier in the week. Was it, yeah, yesterday?
Maybe he might have been Wednesday. It all runs together.
(21:03):
There's so many things that we don't get to that
are crazy things happening out there. I don't spend as
much time on each audio bit as i'd like to.
Sometimes we just play it and let you hear it
in case you missed it, because I want to get
to the next one. But I'm going to play this
and just let it breathe. This is Jamal Bowman, who
is I told you was the congressman who pulled the
fire alarm. He was voted out of office. All he
(21:27):
does is claim race. He's a really dumb guy who
happens to be black. He's not dumb because he's black.
He's dumb and happens to be black. There are lots
of white liberals who do the same thing. But he's
of a broken mindset. He told to see ann panel
that blacks suffer from high rates of heart disease, cancer, obesity,
(21:50):
and diabetes because because of the N word, And as
I noted, then I guess you could say he's sounding
the alarm. It's the use of the N word that
has led to diabetes. I won't comment on this. I'll
just play it and let you hear it and come
to your own conclusion.
Speaker 17 (22:10):
You're not dealing with america original sin and its disease
of hate and racism towards black and brown people and
sexism towards women and LGBTQ sentiment.
Speaker 3 (22:23):
We are not dealing with that.
Speaker 17 (22:25):
Your colleagues in a Republican party do not hold each
other accountable when it comes to the racism that comes
from the party on a consistent basis, And where you
are about this. I'm a black man in America. The
reason why heart is white. Listen to what I'm saying.
Speaker 18 (22:43):
The reason why heart disease and cancer and obesity and
diabetes are bigger in the Black community is because of
distress we carry from having to deal with being called
the N word directly or indirectly every day. If your
colleagues would listen and try to learn and engage and
grow and stop being so hateful, we could have a
(23:06):
better country.
Speaker 5 (23:07):
Jamal.
Speaker 3 (23:08):
Unfortunately we're still here. Jamal. It's coming from one Jamal.
Speaker 5 (23:11):
I feel your passion, and I understand where you're coming from.
Speaker 2 (23:14):
Sincerely, I really really do. It happens on both sides, Jamal.
Speaker 5 (23:18):
You might think it happens more on your side, Jamal, Jamal, Jamal.
Speaker 17 (23:22):
When I leave the show, can I leave the show?
Jamal Twitter, Yes, I mean, and they're acquitted Rodney King, Abner, Louima,
Eric Gardner, Trayvon Martin, black cops in Memphis.
Speaker 5 (23:41):
It's not the same.
Speaker 17 (23:42):
And I don't want to qualify or quantify pain. That's
not what I'm talking about. Everyone goes through pain. But
the racism in this country is the disease that will
destroy us, and it's destroying us right now as we speak.
Speaker 11 (23:56):
Vice.
Speaker 17 (23:56):
Jan You every sixth everybody was pardoned, everybody's parat riots
in LA their insurrectionists, but we probably every one January
Michael Berry's.
Speaker 6 (24:17):
John Boyd came to my attention in the movie Deliverance.
Of course, he's in a lot of other movies. He's
in Midnight Cowboy. I believe he's a hell of an actor.
He has a really pretty of a crazy daughter, and
I think he gets more attention today than he would
based on his acting career. Impressive as it was, because
(24:37):
he's one of the few conservative guys from the movie industry, and.
Speaker 2 (24:43):
He I think this is this week. I heard it
a few days ago.
Speaker 6 (24:48):
He absolutely torched, as the kids say, Gavin Newsom, the
idiot governor of California. This is John Voight's best monologue
since Varsity Blues.
Speaker 3 (25:00):
You're a fool blaming Trump.
Speaker 15 (25:04):
What are you doing for this destruction of these animals
destroying Los Angeles?
Speaker 3 (25:10):
Are you there talking calmly with them, you fool?
Speaker 15 (25:14):
They would burn you down like they're burning the cars
in the American flag with no regard for humanity.
Speaker 3 (25:21):
This is not about Trump.
Speaker 15 (25:23):
This is about protecting the people from these animals and
criminals trying to destroy us and our police force.
Speaker 3 (25:30):
Are they supposed to stand there, let rocks hit them
and kill them. Who's going to save them?
Speaker 15 (25:35):
You President Trump called in the National Guard and the
Marines to help with these destructive, barbaric riots. All you
do is cause chaos for the people. You're a disgrace.
You're nothing but a lying dog for the hopes of
becoming the president one day. And God is my witness,
truth will prevail because of your faults and your incompetence
(25:57):
for California's failures. We the people, we stand. I stand
with Donald Trump to make this state great again. For
we the people choose Donald Trump to save America. And
we're in danger with threats from terrorists now and we
must protect our country. This has now become good against evil,
and evil will lose because our President of the United
(26:20):
States of America was sworn in to protect this nation's
greatest gifts, freedom, safety, prosperity, and he shall he will,
because he is the greatest president since Abraham Lincoln.
Speaker 3 (26:33):
And we the people stand with this nation's honor.
Speaker 15 (26:36):
And respect and with the President of the United States
of America, Donald J.
Speaker 3 (26:41):
Trump. God bless.
Speaker 5 (26:46):
You know.
Speaker 6 (26:47):
With the volatility of oil prices, and you know, in
an era of inflation under Biden and then depleting the
strategic reserves to try to keep prices artificially low, but
compromising our future, and then selling our oil to China,
which again you're taking our rainy day fund and giving
(27:10):
that money to our enemy, and yes, they are our enemy.
It reminded me of the twenty twelve election. Michelle Bachman
was running for president and she said we could get
back to two dollars gas. She said that, and they
(27:32):
mocked her. She was mocked that night, she was mocked
in the press, she was mocked for days, and.
Speaker 2 (27:37):
Lo and behold, it did happen. Here's what she had
to say at the time.
Speaker 4 (27:41):
You will see gasoline come down below two dollars a
gallon again, that will happen.
Speaker 5 (27:48):
Baseless claim, not doable.
Speaker 19 (27:50):
The only way you can bring gas prices to two
dollars is if you've cut the price of gas of
oil a barrel of oil more than in half. And
the likely way to get there is a global depress,
not just a recession.
Speaker 20 (28:01):
Now Bachman is open to government price regulation because that's
the only way we're going to get gas below two
dollars a gallon between twenty twelve and twenty sixteen.
Speaker 21 (28:11):
How can a member of Congress be so disconnected either
she is totally disconnected or she is just flat out lion.
Speaker 3 (28:19):
Does she believe that people are going to believe that?
Speaker 22 (28:22):
You know, I just don't know what world that comment
would come from. You know, we live in the real world.
It's grounded in reality, and gas prices just aren't going
to rebound like that.
Speaker 5 (28:32):
Also, gossic, she sounds pretty confident. Is that really possible?
Speaker 23 (28:36):
And you know what I have to say to Michelle Bachman,
good luck with that, because I think it's easier dead
than done.
Speaker 21 (28:42):
So Bachman's guarantee of two dollars a gallon gas.
Speaker 3 (28:46):
How else do.
Speaker 21 (28:47):
We say this other than it's just coming out of
thin air.
Speaker 23 (28:50):
Gas prices are likely to fall to that two dollars mark,
but only if we fall into another recession. I really
don't think that's the way any of us want to go,
especially Michelle Bachman.
Speaker 24 (29:00):
Mistakes is a kind word when it comes to Michelle Bachman.
Many of the things she says are truly breathtaking demonstrations
of ignorance levels previously unimaginable in a member of Congress
or a graduate of an American elementary school.
Speaker 2 (29:16):
That is completely unrealistic.
Speaker 22 (29:18):
And again, it's talking about things that you know, may
pander to a particular group or sound good at the time,
but it just simply is not.
Speaker 2 (29:25):
Found in reality.
Speaker 20 (29:26):
I mean, I wasn't going to vote for her, but
damn two dollars a gallon gas.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
That's serious, Lewis.
Speaker 21 (29:32):
For Michelle Bachman to insist that she can bring gas
prices blow two dollars a gallon is delusional, psycho doc.
Speaker 6 (29:41):
A story came out this week. Let's see if I
can find the source for this. It was a cut
and paste. I'll find the source and give it to you.
But the headline was Girl Scouts sued after study allegedly
finds heavy metals and pesticides in one hundred percent of
(30:04):
sampled cookies ramone. I think one hundred percent means all
of them. A New York woman has filed a lawsuit
against the Girl Scouts of the US, claiming they are
selling cookies contaminated with heavy metal shot.
Speaker 18 (30:23):
Oh not that.
Speaker 2 (30:25):
Kind of heavy metal.
Speaker 6 (30:26):
No, no, no, this is a different kind of That
would be cool, That would be very very cool. I
will tell you this. The Girl Scouts Are they the Brownies?
Is that the same group? Ramon, That's a different group. Okay, Well,
one of the other One or the other of them
allowed the crazy Randy Winegarden type white liberal women who
(30:48):
take over these organizations to drag them into the abortion discussion,
which lost a lot of their support because it wasn't
white liberals that were Girl Scouts or Brownies, it was
families of faith, and families of faith are not these
people destroy everything anyway. I'm sure you've noticed the Girl
(31:10):
Scouts have been hitting the neighborhoods in the grocery stores recently.
All the classics are still there. You still got the
thin mints, the tagalongs, the samoas. But have you noticed
this year's new flavors. Well, hello girl Scouts with all
the delicious cookie Oh. I was just talking about these
(31:32):
cookies on the golf course with the guys.
Speaker 2 (31:34):
What do we have for sale?
Speaker 5 (31:35):
Girls?
Speaker 25 (31:36):
We've added a few more flavors this year. Our big
cellar is pesticided peanut butter.
Speaker 2 (31:42):
I suppose those wouldn't be bad with a little chocolate
that gat.
Speaker 25 (31:45):
Oh, you like chocolate, then you'll really love Sally and
Sinnmons say Night, cinnamon bites, petroleum peppermints, venomous spanilla, actually
apple comin.
Speaker 3 (32:00):
In flokchine hole, thing, working.
Speaker 26 (32:02):
And praying for the team. My parents have been doling
for years.
Speaker 5 (32:08):
I'm going to sell some cookies.
Speaker 26 (32:09):
It's not their fault. They're over protective. I was born
with the rhythmia. My heart is effective. Only team one
shock can I could be dead from the fear.
Speaker 3 (32:19):
Still, I'm gonna sell some cookies.
Speaker 26 (32:22):
By song, by song grows downs, how thy heart grows wrong?
They have if any game don't wrong to me, can't
soap just trying to found the fact that my heart
could stop Trump ted holiday, if I in.
Speaker 3 (32:41):
My home in areas
Speaker 4 (32:48):
Good