Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
So Michael darry Show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
Chance are passed on from parents to offspring, often determining
traits like her color, personality, leave and eye color.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
My chances are blue. Sidney Sweeney hasbe kenes.
Speaker 4 (00:27):
We begin with the backlash of our new ad campaigns
jury actors Sydney Sweeney.
Speaker 5 (00:31):
The ads are for American Eagle and the tagline is
Sydney Sweeney has a great chans Now in one hour.
Speaker 6 (00:37):
The Democrat Party is foundering. We've shown you pole after
pole after poll and is bad. Their approval ratings are
at historic lows since polling began. They are the lowest
they've ever been. Their coffers are drying up. They're running
out of money. That's a real problem for them. Coincidentally,
(00:57):
what are the chances? You know where I'm going with it.
USAID has been closed and I'm sure it's just a coincidence,
But the past three Democrat presidents are embroiled in scandals.
They lack any real leadership to write the ship. So
what have they decided to do? The Democrats are in
(01:20):
real trouble.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
They know it. They're in real trouble.
Speaker 6 (01:24):
So Democrats strategist wan Da Tolliver was on MSNBC and
she said, we got to go all in.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
For Kami Mumdani. Yeah, that's what's going to save us.
Speaker 7 (01:38):
This is a blaring red alarm that Democrats should not ignore.
And I say that thinking about how angry people are,
because Democrats specifically ran on a platform in twenty twenty
four about how dangerous Donald Trump is, how he would
lead an authoritarian type of regime in this administration, and
how he is now acting on that, and Democrats had
(02:00):
yet to formulate an explicit, comprehensive response to someone that
they identified as a threat. They're not treating him as
a threat. There's these attempts to use normal tactics and
politics that no longer apply to the playbook or the
reality that we're experiencing.
Speaker 2 (02:15):
And I think it's.
Speaker 7 (02:15):
Important for Democrats to listen to this and recalibrate, even
including how they treat candidates who do excite voters, who
do expand the number of people engaging in elections. And
of course I'm talking about New York City mayoral candidate,
the Democratic nominee, Zoron Mumdani. The fact that Democrats have
not overwhelmingly endorsed his campaign and then see this type
(02:35):
of polling which showed them down. Means that they need
to reset themselves, not only in responding to Donald Trump,
but also in engaging younger candidates who are expanding the
base and engage in exciting the public, because that's something
that they're going to need.
Speaker 2 (02:49):
Critically.
Speaker 7 (02:50):
In twenty twenty.
Speaker 6 (02:51):
Six, speaking of poor polling, CNN's Jake Tapper as Pennsylvania
Democrat Madeline Dean about the Democrat.
Speaker 2 (03:00):
Party's poor polling.
Speaker 6 (03:05):
You begin to understand why they're doing so badly because
they don't understand why they're doing so badly. And when
you don't understand what's wrong, that's a good contributor to
what's wrong.
Speaker 8 (03:18):
It feels like every few weeks a new polling organization
comes out with a pole saying Democrats are at the
lowest level they've ever been in. The latest was Wall
Street Journal, Democratic approval ratings hit a record role sixty
three voters having an unfavorable view of your party.
Speaker 2 (03:29):
What does your party need to do to climb out
of that? I have to speak to two issues.
Speaker 9 (03:33):
Yeah, what I regret around the Epstein files is nobody
talks about the victims. We need truth, transparency, and justice
every time we talk about this. These now adult women,
they were children. Let's remember this. Many of them were
children who were traffic.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
That's the whole worst. There needs to be justice for
these ones, justice.
Speaker 10 (03:51):
For the women.
Speaker 9 (03:52):
They are just revictimized every single time release the files.
It isn't just Maxwell and Epstein. Who knows what happened
here when you traffic hundreds of girls and women. On
the polling, I haven't seen polling that shows the president
at ninety percent of anything. Some small slice of Republicans,
even his base, is getting very upset with him over
(04:14):
Epstein and the conspiracies and the failure to be transparent.
Speaker 11 (04:19):
What do I make of that?
Speaker 9 (04:20):
Democratic the pol Yes, we're in the dog house yet again.
What I see and what I hear from my constituents,
whether I'm answering the phone in my office or I'm
out of the supermarket, everybody is anxious, upset, worried. They're
worried about Gaza, They're worried about war crimes in Ukraine.
They are worried about tariffs. They can't plan because businesses
(04:44):
can't plan. They're also now worried about things they weren't
worried about. Medicaid. Tens of thousands of my constituents are
at risk of losing Medicaid support, whether it's for substance
abuse or for their disabled child. So they're worrying about
things they didn't have to worry about before, and they
see a president not solving the big issues that are
(05:05):
some of them very man made light.
Speaker 6 (05:07):
And also then you have just remember the ilha aoc.
Remember she wore the tax the Rich dress to the
met ball. Turns out it was given to her. It
was a thirty five thousand dollars gown and you can't
take gifts like that. So she got slapped on the
(05:27):
hand for that. But the idea PJO wrote a book
called Eat the Rich that was making fun of the left.
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson the worst polling mayor in the country.
Speaker 2 (05:38):
I mean, this guy's bad. This is a bad, bad dude.
Speaker 6 (05:43):
Now he has gone all in with his city being
broken with the wealthy must pay their fair share.
Speaker 12 (05:51):
Most important thing that we have to focus in on
is that we have the ultra rich in the city
in the state that have not put enough skin in
the game. And when we look at budget that sits
across this country, we're seeing a stronger call for the
wealthy to actually pay their fair share.
Speaker 6 (06:07):
Democrat troubles continue. You have brother lover ilhan Omar ilhan
Omar calling the American people idiots.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
Oh, this is going to go overwhelm.
Speaker 13 (06:17):
These people are just idiots. I really, you know, I'm
at the point where it's become really hard to have
an intellectual to paint with any of these people because
the level of stupidity that they are displaying every single
day is frankly embarrassing, not just in Congress but as Americans.
Speaker 14 (06:35):
And the fact that these people are allowed to say
just the most ridiculous things tells you that the dumbing
of the United States has arrived, because how else do
we get Trump presidency Again.
Speaker 6 (06:48):
Somali's like ilhan Omar flee Somalia and then they criticize
Americans when they get here. You know, I read there
that day thirty thousand Somali women are getting government benefits
in Mogadishu, which is what they've renamed Minneapolis as single moms.
(07:10):
And apparently what they've done is they have a program
that teaches them when.
Speaker 10 (07:14):
You get here.
Speaker 6 (07:14):
Here's how you get government benefits. So these women aren't
single at all, They just claim to be. Because if
you claim you're a single mom, then you get all
these benefits. So if you have a man in the home,
why wouldn't you claim your single mom. Why wouldn't every
American do this?
Speaker 5 (07:29):
Oh?
Speaker 6 (07:30):
I don't know, because we have a sense of right
and wrong, because we're not what you call a g immigrant,
which is a gimmi gimme, gimme here. These people fled
Somalia because life was so bad and they get here
and want to recreate it.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
It's terrible.
Speaker 6 (07:46):
This is State Representative Democrat Deca d. Lak from from
South Portland, Maine. This is in twenty twenty. But the
sentiment you'll get the this is.
Speaker 15 (08:01):
How can the politics and somebody it can be, you know,
resonate what we have here in the United States, the
democracy that we have. How can you help us, you know,
be a better country and build back what we used
to have back in a long time ago. So hopefully
we will be able to have our country, our former country.
Speaker 16 (08:20):
So Molly, what.
Speaker 6 (08:23):
A maron?
Speaker 2 (08:26):
What an ignorandom?
Speaker 6 (08:29):
Mirank Glunz is a well regarded Polster who's been following
the Trump phenomenon for years, and he told Elex Michaelson
of Fox eleven in Los Angeles, I hope has pronounced
Lex it's e l e X that the Democrats are
failing because they're trying to out trump Trump.
Speaker 2 (08:54):
You know, you see this in every way.
Speaker 6 (08:57):
You see a new, hot, new musical artist burst onto
the scene, and the industry says, oh, in order to
be relevant, we got to be just like that, and
so what you become is a bad facsimile of that.
And Frank Lentz says that's what's hurting the Democrats. They're
trying to be Trump when they're not Trump, and it's.
Speaker 2 (09:18):
A bad, bad look.
Speaker 1 (09:21):
He seems to have made the calculation that the old
Michelle Obama line when they go low, we go high,
is naive and doesn't work, and that Democrats feel like
they're getting their butts kicked by Donald Trump, and so
they need to give those same tactics back. And it
could be great to be so principal, the nuanced and
all the rest of that, but we're losing and that
the country is at stake, and so we need to
(09:43):
punch them in the face.
Speaker 2 (09:44):
Harder than they're punching us. I mean, that seems to
be the calculus.
Speaker 4 (09:47):
Right now, and that's the strategy, and you cannot out
trump Donald Trump, and it will not work. It's why
the Democratic Party has its lowest numbers nationwide, that has
ever had more people resent them, opposed them, refuse to
vote for them than ever before. And the three groups
that have left them, younger voters that were so pro
(10:10):
Democratic hate this negativity, and younger men are.
Speaker 2 (10:14):
Looking to the Republican Party.
Speaker 4 (10:15):
The second group Latinos twice as many Latino voters as
African American voters, almost twice as many soon to be
twice as many, and once again a plurality of Latino
men voted for Trump.
Speaker 2 (10:29):
Never happened before.
Speaker 4 (10:31):
And the third is organized labor unions where they look
and the Democrats in an organizational way have been a
part of labor for years. These voters look to them
and say, why are you talking about transgender Why are
you bringing up the social issues that are part of
our lives.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
Why an't you focusing on us?
Speaker 4 (10:48):
Three groups that are essential to the Democratic coalition that
have left them, and they're not Republican, They're not even
Trump although they voted for him, but they're giving the
other side of try and none of this negativity and
none of this punching them in the face is going
to bring them back.
Speaker 6 (11:05):
More trouble for Democrats. CBS News Chicago is reporting that
former Illinois Democrat Party chair Mike Madigan has been sentenced
for bribery, racketeering, extortion, and fraud. This is cliped six
oh four the story from CBS News Chicago.
Speaker 2 (11:25):
Back now our breaking news in federal court.
Speaker 17 (11:27):
We have just learned former Illinois House Speaker Mike Madigan
has been sentenced to ninety months in prison, so roughly
seven and a half years, along with a two and
a half million dollar fine as well.
Speaker 13 (11:39):
Our Charlie Deamar is live at the Dirikson Federal Building
with more and reaction.
Speaker 18 (11:43):
Charlie took a long time to get to the sentence
with a lot of context from the judge, but now.
Speaker 5 (11:47):
We have it.
Speaker 19 (11:48):
It did.
Speaker 20 (11:49):
This hearing started around one o'clock today. Federal prosecutors were
asking for a sentence about twelve and a half years
and a fine of one point five million dollars. That
find that Madigan will have to pay is two point
five million dollars and he was sentenced to seven point
seven and a half years in jail.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
This is one of my favorite stories. I meant to
get to it yesterday.
Speaker 6 (12:09):
Gavin Newsom has made ending homelessness in California a central
tenet of his campaign, going all the way back to
two thousand and eight. In fact, for the last seventeen years,
he has been promising to end homelessness. This flashback of
(12:33):
two thousand and eight to twenty twenty five, when he
first starts talking, it's two thousand and eight.
Speaker 2 (12:39):
I'm going to include this on the blast. If you
don't get our daily blasts, I'm gonna include this video.
You can sign up. It's free.
Speaker 6 (12:44):
We send it five days a week, six days a week.
You can go to Michael Berryshow dot com. It doesn't
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it that day. It's just a fun little thing we
do to connect with you. But it is a video
(13:06):
flashback that I want you to see.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
The video.
Speaker 6 (13:09):
It starts in two thousand and eight. Gavin Newsome every
election says, yeah, we're going to fix homelessness. And you
watch the years go by as you see the videos,
and he just keeps saying it over and over and
over again.
Speaker 5 (13:20):
Here's what he said, Well, we call a ten year
plan and the chronic hollness in San Francisco.
Speaker 2 (13:26):
Are you nfall homelessness?
Speaker 5 (13:27):
What are you going to do?
Speaker 2 (13:28):
It's a new mayor and I said, well, what are
you going to do?
Speaker 5 (13:30):
Focus on a housing first model, direct access to housing, shelter,
salt sleep, housing with wrap around and support services solve homelessness.
Speaker 2 (13:37):
Homelessness absolutely can be solved.
Speaker 5 (13:40):
Laid out a detailed homeless strategy. There's been no intentionality
on homelessness in the state for decades.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
It's not been a focus. I don't think we can
solve homelessness. I know we can solve homelessness.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
We will reduce street homelessness quickly and humanly through Emergency Act.
Speaker 5 (13:54):
The highest investment of the States ever made is one
billion dollars on homelessness. We are poised to pass budget
in the next few hours that will provide twelve billion
dollars of investments that can literally quantify fifty eight thousand
people that we got on the streets last year, and
none of you would believe it. This state has not
made progress in the last two decades as it relates
(14:17):
to homeless the line, I'm.
Speaker 21 (14:17):
Interested in funding failure. We're not interested in.
Speaker 5 (14:20):
Failing more efficiently when it comes to the issue of.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
Homelessness in the christ on the Street.
Speaker 6 (14:24):
In totally unrelated news, a federal task force has been
formed to investigate possible fraud and corruption involving Oh no,
that issue again, homelessness. Homelessness funds across South Carolina, south
southern California, not South Carolina, Southern California. It turns out
(14:47):
that all the money they get from homelessness appears to
be a slush fund for Democrats. That's why they keep
talking about solving homelessness and throwing more money at it,
because that's what they live on.
Speaker 2 (15:00):
Credit Fox eleven in Los Angeles.
Speaker 1 (15:03):
Federal task force has been formed to investigate possible fraud
and corruption involving homelessness funds across southern California.
Speaker 2 (15:11):
It's being led by the brand new US Attorney Bill A.
Speaker 1 (15:14):
Saley, Fox Lemons, Matthew Sedar spoke to Assaie today he's
live fers in downtown La Matthew, Well, there's.
Speaker 22 (15:21):
A lot of people wonder about all of that money
and if it's being spent the way it's supposed to be.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
We could have some answers here pretty soon.
Speaker 22 (15:29):
The most visible crisis across California now the target of
a federal investigation.
Speaker 6 (15:34):
We will investigate and look at the facts and determine
whether any laws were broken.
Speaker 22 (15:38):
Newly sworn in US Attorney Bill is Saley announcing what
he calls a Homelessness Fraud and Corruption task Force, looking
into billions of dollars of homeless funding spent across southern
California and possible fraud, abuse, and corruption.
Speaker 10 (15:51):
Despite all the money spent and the audits conducted, there's
billions of dollars unaccounted for.
Speaker 2 (15:56):
Local and state officials cannot give us answers.
Speaker 22 (15:58):
A recent independent audit found that Ellie officials cannot accurately
track down about two point three billion dollars in spending
for homeless services, so one more quick question. As a result,
last week, La County voted to stop funding LASSA, waiting
to the resignation of CEO doctor Velissa Adams Kellam.
Speaker 2 (16:15):
How those two billion dollars just go missing. It doesn't,
and we're going to find out where it is. The
number of fullness on the streets is increasing with every
dollar we spent.
Speaker 22 (16:25):
Santa Monica business owner John Alley supports the new task force.
Speaker 2 (16:28):
It's hidden money and it's paybacks. I believe people line
up in jail. American is a nation that can be
defined in a single word. I was gonna put him
of the nine.
Speaker 4 (16:40):
Not only was it authendic, Frontier, Jibbery, PhiX.
Speaker 6 (16:44):
Prest the courage, Michael Barry, Joe. Never forget what they
did to us in the name of public health. My
brother died, I believe from taking the shot, which he
was required to do because he's law enforcements. We'll never
forget how they led to us and who it was
that lied, and in the name of what great institutions,
(17:04):
including our United States government National Institute of Health. We'll
never forget how they tried to isolate us and divide
us the vaccinated and the unvaccinated. The unvaccinated were killing Grandma. Remember,
We'll never forget how they kept us from seeing our
loved ones as they died alone We'll never forget how
(17:27):
CNN tracked down a doctor with the intent to shame
him for spreading misinformation online. As it turns out, he
was right about everything. Did CNN ever do a follow up,
an apology, a correction?
Speaker 2 (17:42):
No, no, they did not.
Speaker 23 (17:45):
So Bide administration has come down hard on vaccine misinformation,
but one Florida doctor has seemingly gone to great lengths
to perpetuate it through sixties. Randy can now with a
story the hunt to find him and the reasons behind
his actions.
Speaker 18 (17:56):
He is the ultimate super spreader, not of the coronavirus experts,
but of misinformation about COVID nineteen.
Speaker 2 (18:03):
His name is doctor Joseph mccola.
Speaker 11 (18:05):
It is very likely that most people in America, if
not you know, the vast majority of people in America,
have seen misinformation that has originated with this super spreader
of lies and misinformation.
Speaker 18 (18:18):
That's exactly why the Center for Countering Digital Hate, a
nonprofit tracking misinformation about COVID online, put doctor mccola, an
osteopathic physician, at the top of its disinformation doesn't a
list of twelve people, The group says we're the source
for sharing sixty five percent of all anti vaccine messaging
on Facebook and Twitter. From February first through mid March,
(18:40):
we try to track down doctor mccola to ask him
about the misinformation he's been posting, like masks may not work,
vaccines could be dangerous, and vitamin C and D can
prevent or treat the coronavirus. We first tried to find
him at his office in Cape Coral, Florida, outside Fort Myers.
Speaker 11 (18:58):
I'm looking for doctor Jessic McCall well.
Speaker 10 (19:01):
Not here.
Speaker 18 (19:02):
Next stop more than two hundred and twenty miles away
Ormond Beach, Florida, which doctor mccola calls home. We found
his house behind a large gate and tried making contact
through the security access pad. Later, we spotted Joseph McColo
riding his bicycle. Once he stopped, we thought this was
our opening to get some answers as to why he's
pushing false claims about masks and the vaccine.
Speaker 2 (19:24):
How are you?
Speaker 18 (19:25):
I'm Randy Kay with CNN.
Speaker 2 (19:27):
Can we ask you a couple of questions.
Speaker 18 (19:30):
We just want to talk to you about vaccines and
what you've been saying about them. If you feel responsible
for people who didn't get vaccinated, possibly got sick and
guyed because of what you told him about the vaccines.
So despite all his bravado online, Mercola suddenly had nothing
to say. Though, after we emailed him questions, he responded saying,
I encourage every person to fully educate themselves to make
(19:53):
individual decisions about medical risk taking. Throughout the pandemic, He's
been quite outspoken. I wanted to go back to this
assert the reason why the mask may not work. In
his email to us, Murcola challenged any suggestion that he
belongs on a disinformation list. Still, by fueling the narrative
that vaccines are dangerous, who knows how many of his
(20:13):
followers chose to skip the vaccine. What Mericola hasn't made
clear to his followers is that, according to the CDC,
the vaccines are safe and effective, though he told us
via email that over four hundred thousand adverse events and
six thousand deaths from the COVID nineteen vaccines have been filed,
a majority of which were filed by medical professionals. To
be clear, the FDA has not established a causal link
(20:36):
to these deaths.
Speaker 6 (20:38):
Remember how they told us it was a pandemic of
the unvaccinated. If you didn't get the vaccine. I'll say
that with their quotes, because it's not a vaccine, doesn't
qualify as a vaccine.
Speaker 2 (20:48):
You would kill all of those who had received the shot.
Speaker 6 (20:51):
Well, how is that if the shot keeps you from
getting it, and I don't get the shot and I
get it, why are you worried I can't give it
to you?
Speaker 24 (21:01):
Right?
Speaker 13 (21:02):
Are the unvaccinated you are the problem?
Speaker 16 (21:04):
It is the.
Speaker 12 (21:05):
Unvaccinated who are the problem, period.
Speaker 9 (21:08):
End of story.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
The only people that you could blame, the only people
who can blame. This isn't shaming, this is true.
Speaker 23 (21:14):
Maybe they should be shamed, the unvaccinated.
Speaker 2 (21:18):
Lame unvaccinated folks, not the regular folks.
Speaker 1 (21:21):
Anyone who came into contact with will blame you, as
will the rest of us who have done the right
thing by getting vaccinated.
Speaker 2 (21:29):
Because Lengthy, we know that we can't trust the unvaccinated.
Speaker 25 (21:32):
You're starting to get our moral house and order, Inderson,
it's the unvaccinated who are the threat.
Speaker 18 (21:37):
Well, the assascinated folks are going to start wearing masks
to protect the unvaccinated folks.
Speaker 2 (21:43):
It's called a Christian value.
Speaker 14 (21:46):
Basically punishing the vaccinated for the sins of the unvaccinated.
Speaker 2 (21:52):
People are not behaving, Honora.
Speaker 14 (21:53):
Believe the unvaccinated are basically saying, well, it's open season
for me.
Speaker 12 (21:57):
I could do whatever I want as well the unvaccined,
and they are basically beating their press and running around
the country saying, ah, we don't care, We're living free
and so forth.
Speaker 2 (22:06):
The patient, but our patience is wearing not vaccinated. They
includes children and people acting like children, and the rest
of us are starting to get kissed off. They're not
about freedom for personal choice.
Speaker 6 (22:21):
Back in April of twenty seventeen, that Devil Bill Gates
was being interviewed by STAT, a medical industry publication. He
told that publication that he advised the newly elected President
Trump not to investigate vaccine safety. Don't worry whether the
vaccine works or not. Why would we want to know
(22:41):
whether it works or not.
Speaker 24 (22:42):
And the second time I saw him was the March
after that, some March twenty seventeen, in the White House.
In both of those two meetings, he asked me a
vaccine for it's a bad thing. Because he was considering
the Commission to look into deal of facts of vaccines.
And somebody whose name is Robert Kennedy Junior was advising
(23:05):
in that vaccines were causing bad things, and I said, no,
that's a dead end, that would be a bad thing.
Speaker 2 (23:12):
Don't do that.
Speaker 6 (23:13):
In twenty twenty four, Bill Gates told CBS Mornings that
elections in America are about more than just America and
that one of the candidates doesn't even believe in climate change.
Speaker 2 (23:24):
You know, this is a guy who wants to depopulate
the world.
Speaker 6 (23:28):
He thinks there are too many people and that's a
bad thing, and then he runs around giving health advice.
Speaker 1 (23:34):
The op ed you recently wrote, which talked about how
elections here in America are about more than just America.
Speaker 2 (23:39):
I think it raises a question of what you would
like to know more when.
Speaker 10 (23:42):
It comes to Kama Harris's approach to the world, her philosophy,
and if you don't know enough already, Donald.
Speaker 19 (23:47):
Trump's well on the issues that my foundation works on
climate change, you know, generosity, continuing the hid medicines that
have saved tens millions of lives. There's a pretty strong
can trust between the candidates. One would continue those programs
and the other one doesn't even see climate changes as
(24:09):
a real thing.
Speaker 6 (24:11):
This is maybe the best thing you'll hear this week
about global warming. The former president and CEO of the
Heartland Institute, Joseph Bast said back in twenty thirteen that
climate change has always been about controlling human beings.
Speaker 16 (24:29):
The Heartland Institute first started to address global warming back
in nineteen ninety three, and back in nineteen ninety three
we identified that.
Speaker 2 (24:37):
As the mother of all environmental scare tactics.
Speaker 16 (24:41):
The environmentalists the left, actually not environmentalists groups on the
left understood that if you can control energy, you can
control human beings.
Speaker 2 (24:50):
And that's what it was all about.
Speaker 16 (24:52):
This was a search for a scientific justification for a
political agenda that was set well back in the nineteen
I would say, the nineteen.
Speaker 2 (25:00):
Sixties and the nineteen seventies.
Speaker 16 (25:02):
Of course it goes back to nineteen thirties, and it
goes back probably to the dawn of human civilization. But
the whole idea is control energy, and if in fact
the combustion of fossil fuels is having a dangerous impact
on climate, you have a recipe for controlling all use
of fossil fuels. That's eighty ninety percent of all the energy.
(25:24):
If you can control that and shut it down, you
can shut down the engines of the world. And that
is no less than what the environmental movement wants to
do and has been trying to do now going on
thirty years on the global Coming day.
Speaker 18 (25:36):
Listening to the Michael Berry Show podcast is sexy, be sexy.
Speaker 6 (25:44):
Meanwhile, Democrats are very concerned as to who will pick
their cotton if the illegals are deported.
Speaker 2 (25:53):
I don't mean literally pick their cotton.
Speaker 6 (25:55):
The modern day version is cook their food, mow they're
grand us, clean their house. Here is State Representative Julie Greenfield,
a Democrat from North Carolina who sounds exactly like a
slave owner circa eighteen sixty.
Speaker 3 (26:15):
And as we have seen as certain states have deported immigrants,
what's happened? The crops are not being picked, the hotels
do not have anyone providing the service.
Speaker 6 (26:31):
Well, but I don't know, maybe find an American to
do that, novel idea. I understand those are the same
arguments that were used by those who didn't want to
end slavery. Remember, so we fixed the audio for you, Julie.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
And as we have seen as certain states have deported slaves,
what's happened?
Speaker 2 (26:57):
The crops are not being picked?
Speaker 3 (27:01):
The hotels do not have any slaves providing the service.
Speaker 6 (27:07):
You know what, this goofy liberal North Carolina woman sounds
like she's so.
Speaker 2 (27:15):
Over pronounces.
Speaker 16 (27:19):
The words.
Speaker 2 (27:21):
Because she's trying.
Speaker 6 (27:25):
To seem like it is so sad that her slaves
have been sent back to Mexico. She sounds like the
teacher when the school, the elementary is on a field
trip and the kids are not listening and they're all
(27:47):
playing grab ass, and she's standing in front of them
as they're all goofing around and they're in a public
place because they've gone to the city park or something,
and she's going, now, children, now listens on my voice
of eyes eyes, eyes.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
Up here, billy eyes up here. Listen, listen.
Speaker 6 (28:11):
We are going to go down this hill and stay
in a single foul line.
Speaker 2 (28:18):
Listen to.
Speaker 3 (28:20):
And as we have seen, as certain states have deported slaves,
what's happened.
Speaker 2 (28:27):
The crops are not being picked.
Speaker 3 (28:30):
The hotels do not have anyone providing the service.
Speaker 25 (28:36):
Lady, you didn't really say the croubs are not being picked.
Good lord, my goodness, you sound like the woman named
Kunta Kintay Toby. You sound you sound like a character
(28:57):
out of a movie that is a slave owner, You
do you even hear yourself?
Speaker 2 (29:05):
What are we going to do? What are we going
to do? William?
Speaker 6 (29:12):
Who is going to pick our crops? And who is
going to cook our food? And who is going to
nurse this baby? William tell me that these people that Trump,
he's running some kind of underground railroad, and we're gonna
(29:33):
be left.
Speaker 2 (29:34):
With this whole fifteen thousand square foot.
Speaker 6 (29:37):
House to clean. It ain't gonna clean itself. And what
are you gonna get out there and mow the grass?
And weed and blood we'd eat and blow. Who's gonna
wash our car? Who's gonna go pick up the kids
at school? What are we gonna do without all these
Mexicans around here? These people are going to make life
(30:01):
very inconvenient for me. Let's listen to her again.
Speaker 3 (30:04):
And as we have seen as certain states have deported slaves,
what's happened. The crops are not being picked, the hotels
do not have anyone.
Speaker 6 (30:17):
Providing the service. I don't feel like we spend enough
time talking about the fact that Pete Booty Gig's name
has butt in it b U T T I G
I E G and even report even the president does it.
(30:38):
He announces that his name is is buddhage Edge or something. No,
you don't let him decide what you call him. You
call him butter Gig, or you call him booty gig,
but you don't call him by some name that he
makes up.
Speaker 2 (30:57):
What are the chances that you.
Speaker 6 (30:59):
Got this gay dude who, along with another gay dude,
bring a child home And he posts a picture of
himself with a big old Phantom of the Opera mask
on his chest, except it's not a face mask, it's
a boob mask. So he's got some big, fake plastic
(31:19):
boob like you just had a mastectomy, and he's holding
a baby. What in the world You can all day
long cancel people for pointing this out, But this is
a freak show, and the entire country knows it's a
freak show.
Speaker 2 (31:39):
And the dude happens to have butt in his name.
Speaker 6 (31:42):
He was on NPR and he was asked if boys
should be allowed to play in girls' sports. Now he
wants to run for president, and the polling shows about
ninety percent of Americans think that's a horrible idea, But
that other ten percent is sorosen the people who want
to destroy the country. So he's in a real pickle here.
He knows that the correct answer for the polling is
to say no, boys should not be in girl sports.
(32:05):
They're born bigger, stronger, faster, able to livet more, and
they can hurt the girls just as simple as that.
And they are hurting the girls. And volleyball girl got
her face crushed. We've seen all sorts of nonsense. So
he's asked, should boys be allowed to play in girl sports?
(32:25):
And he knows the answer is no, But he can't
say no because the people who run the Democrat Party
are freak shows and they answer to Soros and the
people who want to mess up this country with horrible policies.
Speaker 2 (32:40):
So listen to him. It's twenty five seconds spoiler alert.
He doesn't say no. He's very clear.
Speaker 6 (32:46):
He doesn't say no, but he's not clear in how
he answers because he's talking around it.
Speaker 21 (32:51):
Listen when President Trump says something like no boys in girls' sports,
which is a phrase that they use, it sounds like
you're not standing.
Speaker 16 (33:00):
On to that.
Speaker 10 (33:01):
I think that chess is different from weightlifting, and weightlifting
is different from volleyball, and you know, middle school is
different from the Olympics. So that's exactly why I think
that we shouldn't be grand standing on this as politicians.
We should be empowering communities and organizations and schools to
make the right decision.
Speaker 16 (33:21):
Wait what.
Speaker 2 (33:23):
You didn't You didn't try. Let's let's take that to
the break.
Speaker 21 (33:28):
When President Trump says something like no boys and girls' sports,
which is a phrase that they use, it sounds like
you're not standing.
Speaker 16 (33:33):
On to that.
Speaker 10 (33:34):
I think that chess is different from weightlifting, and weightlifting
is different from volleyball, and you know, middle school is
different from the Olympics. So that's exactly why I think
that we shouldn't be grand standing on this as politicians.
Speaker 2 (33:48):
We should be empowering communities and organizations and schools to
make the right decisions.
Speaker 24 (33:56):
What does that mean?
Speaker 2 (33:57):
Thank you and good night.