Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. So
Michael Very Show is on the air, and I said
I would never leave you, and you never will. I've
got a job to do too where I'm going. You
can't follow what I've got to do. You can't be
any part of it.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
I'm not good at being noble, but it doesn't take
much to see that the problems of three little people
don't amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
Someday you'll understand that he's looking at you kidding.
Speaker 3 (00:47):
Will you.
Speaker 4 (00:53):
Don't let you.
Speaker 1 (00:57):
Press you?
Speaker 5 (01:07):
My gardener didn't show up, my housekeeper didn't show up.
Oh my farmer's market was closed. Everyone's scared. Well, this
is not gonna just happen in LA.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
And you one percenters that only voted for Trump.
Speaker 5 (01:19):
Because of money, guess what You're gonna have to do
your own dishes, or clean your own house, rom all
your own lawny and owe that wonderful produce, the organic
produce you get for your brunches and all gone. Yeah,
you're gonna actually have.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
To do some work around your house.
Speaker 3 (01:36):
These people are important, will you?
Speaker 6 (01:54):
Yes, we can't let them scapegoat and criminalize immigrants who contribute.
Who are our neighbors, our friends, our churchgoers, our community
around us that we deeply love. Immigrants are us. Immigrants
(02:19):
are us, and we all deserve respect and dignity. If
you look at the food that's on your table, think
about who picked it. If you look at your homes,
think about who built them. If you look at your
vulnerable elders and your kids, think about who's taken.
Speaker 3 (02:33):
Care of them.
Speaker 2 (02:34):
Oh, the old white liberal lady, How.
Speaker 7 (02:47):
Many years have I told you? White liberals are the
problem in this country. Malcolm X used to rail against
white liberals. Used to say that black people should never
trust white liberals because white liberals think you are a pet.
They think they own you. They don't want freedom for you.
(03:11):
They don't want what's best for you. They don't treat
you as they're equal.
Speaker 1 (03:16):
You are a.
Speaker 7 (03:17):
Pawn, You are a prop You are a tool to
get what they want, which is power. They will speak
on your behalf. Oh, we have to grow this side
of the government to help the poor black people. They
will speak on your behalf. They will say things for
you that you don't believe. They will claim to represent
(03:39):
you when they don't. White liberals are broken people. You
will notice there's a study that came out last week,
and my goodness, how many of these studies we've seen.
It doesn't matter who does the study, it keeps coming out.
When you compare people who are self described as liberal
(03:59):
and self described as conservative, the likelihood that self described
people as liberal and some people are liberal who don't
self describe. So let's be clear on that. If you're
a conservative, you're gonna say you are. A lot of
people don't self described as liberal because liberal has become
a dirty word. And I'll tell you when that happened.
(04:21):
Nineteen eighty eight, Michael Ducaccus was running for president. He
was then governor of Massachusetts and it was revealed that
he was a member of the ACLU. And George Bush
had a guy named Lee Atwater who was the Jim
(04:43):
Carville of Republican politics.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
George H. W. Bush was not liked by the base.
Speaker 7 (04:52):
Remember, George Bush had run for president in nineteen eighty
and did not farewell. George Bush was the guy that
called Reaganomics voodoo economics. George Bush was the guy that
Ronald Reagan emasculated. Imagine this. The media would not cover
(05:16):
the debate among Republican candidates.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
In an open primary.
Speaker 7 (05:22):
This wasn't a year where the president's running for reelections,
so nobody cares about a primary challenge. Jimmy Carter was
the sitting president running for reelection. There was a lot
of fervor in the nation. Who are we going to
challenge Jimmy Carter with? So you had a crowded field
in nineteen eighty, and George H. W. Bush was the
establishment's guy, always had been. His daddy was a senator.
(05:46):
The Bush family were aristocracy. They were blue blood American family.
It's quite amazing. In two thousand, they pitched George Bush
as a guy who worked on his ranch out in
Taxis and he's a cowboy here. You're driving around, got
to wonder down at Armaut cause he's detection.
Speaker 1 (06:02):
No really, he's a Yale.
Speaker 7 (06:05):
His degrees from Yelling Harvard Harvard, uh skull and crossbones,
fabulous wealth, yeah, all of those things. But that was
the pitch that was made in any case in nineteen eighty.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
George H. W.
Speaker 7 (06:19):
Bush, the establishment guy, the former CIA director, the former
ambassador to China, the former head of the Republican Party.
He's the establishment's guy against the Donald Trump of that era,
which was Ronald Reagan, whose slogan, I'll remind you, was
make America great again.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
Reagan has to.
Speaker 7 (06:43):
Buy so they're not gonna They're not gonna air the
debate among the candidates.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
So Reagan said, my campaign.
Speaker 7 (06:49):
Will buy airtime on a national network so America can
see us debate.
Speaker 1 (06:56):
When George H. W.
Speaker 7 (06:57):
Bush started droning on attacking Ronald Reagan, Reagan grabbed the
mic and said, this is my mic.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
I paid for it. George H. W.
Speaker 7 (07:08):
Bush was never the same again. There was an image
of him as a wimp. Who wasn't a wimp. It
was a fighter pilot in World War Two. You can
say anything about George H. W.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
Bush.
Speaker 7 (07:17):
He wasn't a whimp, not by any stretch of the imagination.
Played college baseball at Yale. He's a tough guy. He
was shot down in war. He's a tough guy. He's
no doubt about that. But the whimp thing emerged because
Reagan emasculated him at that moment.
Speaker 1 (07:33):
So now you got nineteen eighty eight and.
Speaker 7 (07:36):
Bush is running and Lee at Order needs to make
him look tough. The way you make him look tough
is you make Michael Ducaccus looked like a squish, And
Michael Ducaccus was a card carrying member of the ACLU,
the American Civil Liberties Union. He did everything. He died
earlyer ugh cancer. So if that's why, you may not
(07:57):
know much of him, but he made liberal a bad work.
We'll talk about the white liberals and how evil they
are coming in the.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
Michael Berry The Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 7 (08:10):
Cash Battel, the director of the FBI, says that the
FBI is in possession of documents indicating that the Chinese
Communist Party produced counterfeit US driver's licenses as part of
an effort to influence the twenty twenty election through fraudulent
(08:30):
mail in ballots favoring Joe Biden. FBI Director Cash Betel
reportedly submitted these documents to Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Chuck
Grassley for review. So I guess Hillary and the Democrats
received the help she requested.
Speaker 8 (08:51):
You know, the only other adversary of ours who's anywhere
near as good as the Russians is China.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
So why should Russia have all the fun?
Speaker 8 (09:03):
And since Russia is clearly backing Republicans, why don't we
ask China.
Speaker 1 (09:09):
To back us? I here by tonight ask China.
Speaker 8 (09:11):
That's right, and not only that, China, if you're listening,
why don't you get Trump's tax returns?
Speaker 1 (09:18):
I'm sure our.
Speaker 8 (09:19):
Media would richly reward you.
Speaker 3 (09:24):
Boy.
Speaker 7 (09:24):
That is uh, that is a level of evil. Can
you you know the reason? And I'm serious about this,
Do you know the reason I think Bill Clinton was
not judged more harshly for his many affairs is because
I think every man and most women thought to themselves.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
You know what, that poor bastard. She has to be
the worst woman to live with in the world.
Speaker 7 (09:57):
She is so mean, so nasty, so petty, so angry.
I think at least every man and I argue most
women thought, yeah, it's not good what you did, Bill,
but we're not going to be as hard on you
as we could have been. Investigative journalist John Solomon told
(10:22):
Donald Trump Junior that China saw how easy it would
be to influence our election. Folks, if this is true,
this should be frightening and infuriating, and we should stop
at nothing to expose it and ensure this will never
(10:45):
happen again.
Speaker 9 (10:48):
The most scary thing if you're a repulving in Democrats.
Secretary of state election commissioner County commissioner China saw our
mail in voting system as an extreme vulnerable option to
go attack America.
Speaker 1 (11:01):
That's one thing that you can draw from these documents.
Speaker 9 (11:04):
They saw how easy it would be to change the
outcome or attempt to change the outcome of an election
by using mail in ballots, not machines, not other things.
They saw the weakness in the system right in the
middle of the COVID nineteen pandemic. That should alarm us all.
Anyone in a position of authority election should.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
Read this document.
Speaker 6 (11:20):
Now.
Speaker 9 (11:21):
I'm going to just read one paragram, read all of
the paragraphs that are relevant because the first time, so
the first time I'm seeing the text of this, So it's.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
Is breaking news, guys. So I think it's important.
Speaker 6 (11:30):
I think this is the kind of stuff we got
to make sure that other people share because the mainstream
media will pretend this thing never happened.
Speaker 1 (11:35):
They'll sweep it under the rug, they'll no one new.
Oh yeah, usual bs.
Speaker 9 (11:39):
The report says that this source, it was a collaborative source,
have been in the system for less than a year.
You obtained the information from a from an identified sub
source who claim they attained the information directly from Communist
government officials inside China.
Speaker 1 (11:55):
In late August twenty twenty, the government.
Speaker 9 (11:57):
The Chinese government had produced a large amount of fraudulent
United States driver's licenses that were secretly exported to the
United States. The fraudulent driver licenses would allow tens of thousands,
there's your answer, more than twenty thousands, tens of thousands
of Chinese students and immigrants sympathetic to the Chinese Commist
Party to vote for US presidential candidate Joe Biden despite
(12:20):
suck page together, despite not being able to vote in
the United States. China had collected private US user ID
for millions of TikTok accounts to include name, ID and address,
which would allow the Chinese government to use real US
person's information to create the fraudulent driver's licenses. The fraudual
drivers licenses were to include true ID numbers and true
(12:42):
addresses of US citizens, making them difficult to detect. That's
what came into the FBI in August next US.
Speaker 4 (12:49):
China has been stealing all that data from Americans forever,
so they probably have a perfectly good database of people
who were probably going to be no shows but had
real id, change the name, change the photo.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
There you go. You can go your election in the
United States.
Speaker 7 (13:01):
This idea of outside influence on the American election. You know,
investigators will tell you the first thing you look for
is motive. Did China have a motive to assist in
(13:21):
cheating in our election?
Speaker 1 (13:23):
Yes?
Speaker 7 (13:25):
Yes, Look what Trump's already done. The Chinese economy right
now is in a terrible state relative to where it was.
They are scrambling right now in a big way. And
the reason for that is, well, there are a lot
(13:45):
of reasons for that. They have been papering over a
lot of their weakness in order to show incredible economic strength.
For quite some time, they were continuing a of building
buildings that they ended up never putting people in because
(14:06):
they needed the outside observers to see the level of construction,
because what do cranes mean? What do buildings being erected mean? Success? Boom, prosperity.
So what they were doing was creating a false sense
of prosperity to a level much faster than they were
(14:29):
actually accomplishing. This is like the guy who pulls up
to the restaurant to the meeting with you in a
rented Lamborghini, a four thousand dollars custom suit, brand new shoes,
a thirty thousand dollars watch. Because you're supposed to come
away from that meeting thinking was, shoot, I got old
(14:53):
Chevy Tahoe and my suits off the rack. I don't
have that of money I should. I mean, wow, I
like to do bis with this guy. I like to
live his life. Look at the trophy girlfriend he's got, yeah,
she's from the strip club last night. And that fancy
(15:16):
car he's got, yeah he rented it. And the suit
he's got, Yeah, it's crazy what he's spent on that
all for the purpose.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
Of what you're doing.
Speaker 7 (15:26):
That's Shina's in trouble, and Trump is making their trouble
worse because he's trying to protect American workers in American business.
And yes, I do believe they were part of the
twenty twenty cheat.
Speaker 4 (15:38):
And from all the King of ding It and this
other guy, Michael Barry.
Speaker 10 (15:46):
I reference McDonald's a lot because I go to McDonald's.
I love the silence that follows that statement, like I
just admitted to support dog fighting or something.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
But I Medonald, it's fun tongue. People. You go to McDonald's.
Speaker 4 (16:05):
They least give you that look like, oh, I didn't
know it was better than you know what admits to
going to McDonald's. They sell six billion hamburgers a day.
There's only three hundred million people in this country. It's like,
I'm not a calculus teacher, but I think everyone's flying.
(16:29):
You ever been to McDonald's and you see a friend
for a second, You're.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
Like, oh crap.
Speaker 4 (16:37):
Eventually you're like, hey, what's gone on? And they're just like,
I'm just here for the ninety nights.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
I need GM. What are you doing here, Jim, I'm
just meeting a hooker. Certainly not here, that's for sure. Yeah,
he should be here by now. It is ninety three
years old. He did an interview recently.
Speaker 7 (17:07):
About his longevity hack how do he live to be
ninety three years old? And it turns out that he
consumes an estimated two hundred and fifty two grams of
sugar per day, that is seven times what is recommended
by established medical orthodoxy. He consumes seven hundred calories per
(17:33):
day from Coca Cola alone. He has five cokes, not
diet coke, regular cokes. He eats zero vegetables, says he
doesn't like them. He's ninety three years old and his
net worth is one hundred and twenty billion dollars. He
(17:57):
was asked his secret as to how he's lived so long,
and he said, I get eight hours of sleep, no exceptions,
no early meetings, no late dinners, sleep, beats, diet. He
(18:17):
reads five hundred pages a day. He works twelve hour days.
His blood work, doctors say is perfect. At ninety three,
he appears to be as sharp as ever. He has
announced he's retiring from Berkshire Hathaway. His energy level is
(18:40):
sustained and consistent. He says he drinks far more coke
than water, and he says that his secret, in addition
to sleep, is that you have to love your work,
and he does you should get plenty of quality sleep,
(19:04):
reduce your stress, reduce the things in your life that
stress you out and that's often people, and find daily joy.
He says his greatest investment was in nineteen seventy two
he bought CS candies see apostrophe s you've seen him,
(19:25):
not for the profits for unlimited free chocolates. He says, quote,
I'm basically one quarter Coca Cola, seven hundred of my
daily calories come from coca cola alone. He eats breakfast
at McDonald's every morning, seven days a week, and has
(19:50):
done so for over fifty years. He says he gets
the when stock prices are down. If I have his
fund is down, he says, I get the two ninety
five cent breakfast. When we're doing well financially, I get
the three dollars and seventeen cent one. I splurge. For
fifty four years, he estimates he's had nineteen seven hundred
(20:15):
and ten McDonald's breakfasts. He eats there without fail. He
eats the McDonald's breakfast. He's never dieted in his life.
He drinks five coca colas through the course of the day.
He eats peanut brittle for lunch, and he enjoys ice
(20:36):
cream for dinner. Asked why he keeps this regimen, he said,
I checked the actuarial tables. The lowest death rate is
among six year olds, so I eat like one.
Speaker 1 (20:53):
The reason I tell you that.
Speaker 7 (20:58):
Is because I saw a I saw a meme that
showed a continuum and it was somebody's quote, and I
don't remember who it was.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
It was a Robert F.
Speaker 7 (21:10):
Kennedy kind of statement and said, you're not worth anything dead,
and you're not worth anything healthy. You are worth the
most in a continuous state of needing health care, if
you were to ask. And let's look at third world countries,
(21:32):
and the ones I've studied the most for obvious reasons
are Ethiopia and India. But let's look at any third
world country where the vast majority of people, over ninety
percent live in abject poverty. If you were king and
you loved your people and you wanted them to be
as happy as possible, let's leave healthy aside from moment,
(21:53):
because that's such a subjective. You wanted your people to
be contented. You want them to live without pain. You
wanted them to live a pain free life, disease free.
There are a few things you could do that cost
little or no money, and that is solid sleep for
(22:15):
eight hours or more every single night, without exception, at
a consistent bedtime. Plenty of water. Now that becomes difficult
in places because.
Speaker 1 (22:25):
You have malaria, you have various.
Speaker 7 (22:31):
Water born illnesses, and clean water is a privilege of
the developed world. But every American could get plenty of sleep,
plenty of water, basic simple exercise. It turns out now
that most folks believe that jogging is not part of
(22:52):
and in fact it is often contrary to.
Speaker 1 (22:56):
A good health regimen.
Speaker 7 (22:59):
Reducing your stress, and that usually means reducing stressful people,
eliminating stressful people out.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
Of your life.
Speaker 7 (23:07):
One of the most interesting parts of Camp Hope six
month program Christian based that you fund thank you for
that at the PTSD Foundation of America, is taking away
your phone and taking away your contact with the stressors,
the triggers, and I'm told by David Malsby, the number
(23:30):
one stressor the number one trigger for a veteran who
comes in the door suicidal, addicted to all sorts of
drugs and ready to kill themselves, incapable of surviving, and
they're going to build him up so that in six
months he has the tools to go back out in
the world and survive as a combat vetteran. The number
one trigger is his girlfriend or wife, not because she's
(23:55):
a bad person, but because they've developed in their relationship
certain paths turns that trigger him.
Speaker 1 (24:02):
And the second one is his mother for many of
some reasons.
Speaker 7 (24:06):
So they have to learn to deal with their love
language and how that stresses them.
Speaker 1 (24:11):
All of those things we just described costs.
Speaker 7 (24:13):
Little or no money, and if we really cared about
public health, that's what we'd do. This is the Michael
Berry Show. Do you remember the first time you heard
Barry GiB talk and you realize, oh, he doesn't sound
he doesn't speak in falsetto all the time. Listen, real
(24:36):
men love the Begs, and that's just a fact. Real
men love the Begs. And I'm gonna tell you something else.
Real straight men.
Speaker 1 (24:47):
Love disco.
Speaker 7 (24:49):
Now if you say to me, oh, no, disco is
filling the blank, you are projecting and you're trying too hard.
We've all seen that dude who spends all his time
pounding the Bible talking about to homos and it turns
out he's gay. Nobody likes that guy. Nobody likes that guy,
(25:13):
and we all see it coming. We've all Haggard, who
was the pastor in Colorado. Every Sunday he got up
and told how awful the homos were. He hated the homos.
The homos were terrible. He'd hate gay Dave. How can
you not like gay Dave? Day Dave has emerged as
one of Roma's favorite callers. And I know that because
(25:33):
if there's eight calls on the line, He'll put gay
Dave and it'll still say unknown on the others. He's
trying very subtly, like Jeeves did with Bertie Wooster. He
trying to get you drive my behavior over here. Let's
put gay Dave on because I guess because gay Dave
gives him compliments or sends him beef jerky or who
(25:55):
tickets to concerts or something. So here is the problem.
Disco displaced classic rock and that pissed people off, and
rightfully so, because classic rock was was in was in
the middle of a good phase and then disco takes
(26:18):
over and radio stations ruined everything, and the radio stations
started flipping to playing disco, and so it was sort
of like, yeah, we don't need.
Speaker 1 (26:29):
Any classic rock anymore.
Speaker 7 (26:31):
So if you wanted to be relevant and pay your
bills as a classic rock artist, you had to alter
what you were doing and make disco songs.
Speaker 1 (26:41):
That's what the Stones did.
Speaker 7 (26:43):
You can call it a sellout, you can do what
you want, but at the end of the day, nobody
calls you a sellout for showing up when they tell
you to show up and being back at the time
they tell you to be back. And doing the tasks
that they give you to do. Those guys have to
pay their bills too, and purists just died off. The
(27:04):
reason people hate disco is number one, it displaced classic rock,
and classic rock never recovered, not in the mainstream, not
the way it had. And number two because disco's two
greatest influences were homos and blacks, and you could say
homos and blacks in nightclub music.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
But then what killed disco or what replaced disco?
Speaker 7 (27:34):
What replaced disco was basically British led disco.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
Repackaged. That's still disco. It's not as good as disco.
Speaker 7 (27:47):
But I will tell you this, for everybody that says
they don't like disco, you go to a wedding and
whether it's a DJ or a live cover band, you
watch a disco song being played and you see how
many people run out to the floor. And I'm talking
about people my age and above. People love it. They
(28:10):
love it way more than the eighties. The only reason
anybody likes eighties music is because that's when we grew up.
Speaker 1 (28:17):
You like what is familiar.
Speaker 7 (28:19):
If you didn't grow up in the eighties, you don't
care for the eighties music because by and large, it's
not any good. Belinda Carlisle, that's not going to be
in the in the archives one hundred years from now.
You're not going to see Duran Duran eighty years from now.
And Ramon Irmosron you're not going to see Depeche Mode in.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
A year from now. And I hate to hurt.
Speaker 7 (28:43):
His feelings and h Russell Er Borisfield, you ain't gonna
see you too.
Speaker 1 (28:47):
In every game. Nope, you're not. You're not.
Speaker 7 (28:50):
You know you're gonna see You're gonna see Freddie Mercury.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
You're gonna see Mick Jagger. That was weird.
Speaker 7 (28:59):
You're gonna see Paul McCartney, you gonna see John Lennon.
And at the top, have to go eat through each room. Okay,
you're gonna go through each room and you're gonna go, oh, yeah,
I remember them, but yeah they when were they great?
Speaker 1 (29:09):
Papa?
Speaker 7 (29:10):
Oh they were great in the in the seventies. Right,
You're even gonna see the Eagles in there.
Speaker 1 (29:15):
I'll give you that. You're gonna see the Eagles.
Speaker 7 (29:17):
And with each room as it gets more and more exclusive,
at the end, it's going to open to two rooms
with a divider in the middle, like when Aerosmith and
run DMC did that and they shattered it and you
realize it was really part of all one big room
of greatness.
Speaker 1 (29:34):
At the end, you're going to see.
Speaker 7 (29:36):
Elvis and skinnerd oh yeah, and you're gonna have Elvis
singing over the top of Free Bird, and you're gonna
have Sweet Home, Alabama, and it's just it's gonna be
glorious and all will be as it should be. It
will be the reckoning of time, the ordering of all
(29:57):
that is good. Yeah, your homework assignment. And for many
of you who drive, I understand that you don't have
time to sit still and read.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
Maybe that never appealed to you, and that's okay too.
Speaker 7 (30:13):
I listen to more audiobooks than I do reading nowadays
because my eyes are tired and I just don't when
I get home. I don't want to read as much
as I used to. But I when i'm driving, when
i'm working out, when i'm you know, most anything, whatever
I'm doing, I can put my buds in and listen
(30:34):
to audiobooks. Go to Audible and get Free to Choose
by Milton Friedman and listen to it, and you will
realize that forty six years ago he was stating timeless
truths that are just as accurate and just as relevant
today as they ever were. And then it will hit you,
(30:54):
Wait a second, he's stating very simple pedestrian truths.
Speaker 1 (31:03):
Why am I not hearing this anywhere else?
Speaker 7 (31:06):
Why are we not staying true to the grounding of
what made this nation great? When he talks about in
seventeen seventy six, Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations
that's your next read, laying out the virtue of capitalism
and Thomas Jefferson laying out the virtue of self governance
not a king in the Declaration of Independence. It's not
(31:31):
a coincidence that those two things happen in seventeen seventy six.
The things Jefferson was writing in seventeen seventy five, the
Great Document on the Virginia and his freedom, all of
these things are why we're getting.
Speaker 1 (31:48):
To sit here doing what we're doing. Frightening ls is
you're doing name, Thank you, and good night.