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August 20, 2025 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and load. The
Michael Verie Show is on the air. Thankstuary policies have

(00:24):
created more problems in this country than I think most
people understands. When you create an attractive nuisance for criminals,
that is, you create the environment in which they will thrive,
then that's what you're going to grow more of. And
California has become a state where illegals are are russian

(00:50):
to because of all the freebies, because of the protections,
because there's strength in numbers around other people like them.
There's a lot of trafficking, there's a lot of trade
among them, there is comfort, there is understanding that the
police chiefs and the governor and the mayors will protect you. Well,
the results of that are that bad people do bad things,

(01:15):
and you have invited a lot of them in. So
we have an illegal immigrant in this case, he's not Hispanic.
He is what's known as a Curdar or a Sikh.
These are the people who wear turbans. They are an
offshoot of Hinduism. This fellow's name is har Gender Singh.
He entered the United States illegally several years ago and

(01:36):
he got a commercial driver's license in California, which you
should not be able to do. And there's a lot
of Sirdars who are truck drivers. It's a common thing
a lot of folks in Canada, it's common in India.
Servars are known as a very tough cast. They're great

(01:56):
warriors in Indian history. Tend to be tall and big
and tough. A lot of them are from Punjab, which
is a particular state, and Punjabis are notoriously tough folks.
They're rugged folks. In fact, I compare them to Texans
and the image they have there. This particular fellow is

(02:20):
a criminal. Came into the country illegally. Now and this
is the problem with Gavin Newsom's sanctuary policies is once
that guy is in this country illegally, he then travels,
because he's a truck driver, into other states and in
this case, driving like a maniac. He has killed three people.

(02:42):
This is the Attorney General of the Great State of Florida.
His name is James Athmeyer. He was on Fox News
explaining what happened. It's a horrific situation.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
California should not have provided this person the driver's license
and a permit, not just for a car, but to
drive large scale trucks to then drive ive into Florida,
engage in this dangerous behavior and take the lives of
three others is really a tragedy. But it shows how
dangerous the open border policies under Obama and Biden have
been that have continued direct havoc on communities across the country.

(03:14):
We're certainly going to charge that person with the heaviest
crimes we can and make sure that he gets locked
up for as long as possible before then being deported
back where.

Speaker 1 (03:24):
He came from.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
Yeah, and if you watch his footage as you did,
and we just showed, I mean, the people in this
black minivan had absolutely no time to react. It was
a thirty year old, a thirty seven year old and
a fifty year old. Two of them died on impact
and one of them died at the hospital. Absolutely tragic situation.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
And you touched on this.

Speaker 3 (03:41):
Why if you cross into the country illegally, are you
allowed to get a commercial driver's license in the state
of California.

Speaker 1 (03:49):
Well, you shouldn't be able to.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
And we're certainly going to look at ways that we
can go after California fight back and protect our citizens here.
In Florida, if you're illegal, you are not going to
get a driver's license under those circumstances. We made that
law in this state many years ago, and we banned
the opportunity for sanctuary cities.

Speaker 1 (04:07):
So it's a.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
Tragedy, but when it comes from California, nothing surprises me.
These days, Gavin Newsom should focus more on rule of
law than crying and defending these heinous criminals.

Speaker 1 (04:18):
You know, if you want the juxtaposition of good versus
bad in two laboratories in this nation, which is states
competing with different laws, it's California versus Florida. I wish
it was California versus Texas. But our state is not
leading in the way that Florida is, and that disappoints me.

(04:39):
Texas has always been a leader in good policy. Oklahoma,
which does not get as much attention but is doing
good things, is leading. But you compare California to Florida,
and you see wrong over here on the left coast
and right over here on the right coast. If you're
looking at the map, so there's your right coast and
your wrong coast, and you're seeing how many people are

(05:01):
voting with their feet, how many people are fleeing the
state of California to come to Texas, to come to Florida,
and credit where it's due, to come to Tennessee in
an out murder relocating to Tennessee. My fear is that
with such a heavy artistic community density, that Tennessee could

(05:25):
end up becoming more California than Southern. And the reason
is because you get a lot of folks who are
coming from the art scene in California and New York
ending up in Tennessee, and unfortunately, they drag their awful
politics with them, and so I could see it becoming

(05:48):
the case that Tennessee is no longer the great state
that it is with a Southern flair, conservative values, pro business.
Because when people flee New York in California, if they
are a lefty, often they don't realize that it's their

(06:09):
own policies that have destroyed those states. They think, well,
you know, bad things have happened to California, and I'll
just relocate, and then they relocate without readjusting their mindset.
You've just learned that socialism doesn't work. You've just learned
that wide open borders don't work. You would think that

(06:31):
you would say, I don't want to if I move
somewhere anew I don't want to have to flee that
place too because of bad policies. But they don't think
that way. They don't have they're not introspective, they're not
capable of the humility and the self awareness to say
I was wrong. Socialism doesn't work. High taxes don't work.

(06:56):
Government trying to provide every service known to mankind and
taxing people in order to do that. Hey, listen, California's
got the best weather in the world, in the country.
California had beautiful coastline. California had so much going for it,
so much going for it, that you had to work
very hard to destroy that. Our then governor eleven years ago,

(07:19):
Rick Perry, was given a speech famously at at an
economic development convention, and he was talking to a crowd
of guys who are relocation experts about, Hey, we want
you to come to Texas, bring your companies. To encourage
companies to come to Texas. Were a lot of folks
that got into this business that if you said I've
had enough with California, I'm moving to Texas. And he's

(07:40):
standing with his back to the ocean, the Pacific, beautiful
Pacific ocean, beautiful beaches behind him, and it was all
glass behind him, and he's looking out at a crowd
that's looking at him. So they're looking past him at
the ocean, but they're there for work. And at one
point in the middle of his speech, he turned and
he said, guys, look out right there. I've got to

(08:01):
compete with that. And yet y'all have all come here
to listen to me, talk to you know what, because
Texas has better people and better policies. I have to
beat those beautiful beaches. Think how much better my policies
have to be. And that's true. That's how bad California
has screamed this whole another.

Speaker 4 (08:18):
Words of chords aren't shore and the words that were
taken by Robert F.

Speaker 5 (08:22):
Gate thief.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
Children speak Chinese and batist an important concept that oftentimes
can prevent a war or end a war. And and
for all the talk about you know, Trump was going
to end the world and all of this, actually he's

(08:46):
been he's been a man who has brought peace to wars.
Who's who's made it stop. And it's it's just amazing
how he's been able to do that and the Democrats
get this, you know, you know Obama, he won the
Nobel Peace Prize. He's he's looking at him. He's so reasonable,

(09:06):
actually just the opposite. And Trump comes off as a
bull in a china shop, when in fact Trump is
a man of peace and he's proving it again and
again and again. As the people of Ajabajah what they
think about this, it's really just it's it's amazing. This
is five oh four Ramon. This was him on Fox

(09:28):
and Friend. This was the interview. We played a little
bit of this for you before, but this is this
is Trump talking about the fact that the Biden administration
had iced Putin. You can't not speak to the leader
of Russia. You can't just ignore him. This is how

(09:52):
he ends up invading Ukraine. You talk, you have relations,
this is what you do, you communicate. Just blows my mind.
President Trump, during.

Speaker 6 (10:03):
The meeting yesterday when you decided to call Vladimir Putin,
what was the reaction among the other people in the room,
and what was what was President Putin's reaction to, like
being brought into a phone call in the middle of
your meeting.

Speaker 7 (10:18):
Well, I think they expected it. I didn't do it
in front of them. I thought that would be disrespectful
to President Putin. You know, I wouldn't do that because
they have not had the warmest relations And actually President
Putin wouldn't talk to the people from Europe. I mean,
that was part of the problem. They community.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
They had no communication.

Speaker 7 (10:37):
They had no communication with the White House for years
as people died, years with Biden and his people no communication.
Putin told me years it was years that he that
he didn't speak to anybody from the White House, and
it was a long time that he didn't speak to
anybody from Europe. No, it's a fractured relationship. And when
I came in, I always had despite the Russia Russia

(10:58):
Russia hoax, which truly was a very danger thing for
our country, but despite that, I maintained a very good relationship.

Speaker 1 (11:04):
I mean, you saw that.

Speaker 7 (11:05):
When he got off his plane. I got off my plane.
There's a warmth there that you can't you know, there's
a there's a decent feeling, and it's a good thing,
not a bad thing. People would say, oh, that's such
a terrible thing.

Speaker 1 (11:14):
It's not a terrible thing, you know. I researched the
term diplomacy in the history behind it. And what's interesting,
I'm not sure it's necessarily related to what he just said.
Well to some extent it is. It's the idea diplomacy,
the act of engaging in diplomacy, and a person who

(11:37):
does that is a diplomat. And the root of diplomat
is diploma, that thing that you hang on your wall
sheepskin after you graduate from something, and that is an
ancient Greek word which means a paper folded double die

(11:58):
meaning to die and buy the two words that mean
two and ploma coming for a paper plume. It's pretty
interesting concept. Won't bore you with the etymology of it,
but I find it fascinating. It's too late, who already
bored you. Trump will end up having been, at the

(12:21):
end of this term the greatest, having engaged in the
greatest accomplishments in diplomacy of an American president in over
one hundred years. In over one hundred years. This is staggering.
And think what they told you. Think how they told
you that he was going to cause World War three,

(12:43):
that horrible things were going to happen, and in fact
quite the opposite. You see Biden's weakness and willingness to
favor Ukraine. Invited a war. It invited a war, It
induced a war. You gave putin no chance, no choice,
but a war. I'm not glad he did it, but

(13:04):
you put him in a position if you know anything
about him, that he was going to do that. And
as he said in Alaska on Friday, had Trump been
the president, I never would have done So what about
the Ukrainians, Harry into you that there's been a change
at CNN. I know it's hard to believe. Follow me here.

(13:27):
Look at Scott Jennings that they brought Scott Jennings on
and they seem to have given him cart launch to
make fools of the people on that network, and he
does it nightly. He's done a wonderful job. Scott Jennings
is just slicing and dicing their star guests nightly, which
has the effect of reducing their credibility, but it also

(13:48):
has the effect of increasing our enjoyment. So what about
the Ukrainians. We've been told that they want to fight
to the end, That's what we keep being told by Zelenski,
but it's not true. CNN's Harry Inton says that they've
done a one pint eighty in their opinion of the war.
The Ukrainian people are done with this war. The Ukrainian
people want no more of this war. They have completely flipped.

Speaker 4 (14:11):
There have been some absolutely major shifts. The idea that
Ukraine's going to achieve complete victory, that idea has collapsed
within Ukrainian society. What are we talking about here, Ukrainians
on the war versus Russia. You go back to twenty
twenty two, to the start of the war, fight until
Ukraine wins. Look at this, the vast majority, about three
quarters seventy three percent agreed with that position. Negotiate to
end the war as soon as possible, only twenty two percent.

(14:31):
Look at where we are now, it's a complete flip.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
It's the inverse.

Speaker 4 (14:34):
Now, sixty nine percent want to negotiate to end the
war as soon as possible, compared to just twenty four
percent who want to fight until Ukraine wins. That's a
forty nine point drop in this position. Now, of course,
negotiating to end the war as soon as possible, that's
a bit more nuanced, right, Ukrainians don't want to agree
to rush all of Russia's demand, But I think the
idea of even there being some territory that would be
not formally recognized as being given that Russia could in

(14:57):
fact stay and that does have a majority sport. But
the idea for recognition of Russia's man's absolutely not all right.

Speaker 8 (15:02):
Why do you think that this opinion has changed to
the extent that it does.

Speaker 5 (15:06):
Well.

Speaker 4 (15:06):
I think one of the big reasons why opinions have
changed is this idea that this war is going to
end anytime soon. Ah, Ukrainians don't think it will. Take
a look here Ukrainians on the war ending within a year.
Just twenty five percent say that it is likely. Look
at this sixty eight percent. Sixty eight percent say it
is unlikely that the war will in fact end of
the year.

Speaker 1 (15:25):
And you'll notice, Jean, this.

Speaker 4 (15:26):
Sixty eight percent looks a heck of a lot like
this sixty nine percent who say that they want to
negotiate to.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
End the war as soon as possible.

Speaker 8 (15:34):
So President Trump overnight ruled out Ukraine joining NATO seemingly ever,
but what are Ukrainians they feel.

Speaker 4 (15:40):
You know, obviously Ukrainians would like to join NATO. That
has been a goal of theirs for a number of years.
But the idea that Ukrainians that NATO admission will happen
within ten years. Look again, look at the collapse in
this position twenty twenty two with sixty four percent.

Speaker 1 (15:53):
Now it is just.

Speaker 4 (15:54):
Half that level at thirty two percent. So again, this
is one of the goals that you know, Ukrainians since
beginning of the war, they no longer believe that it's
chiev well, the idea that Russia is going to be
forced out of all that land that they're occupying, they
don't necessarily believe that is going to happen. So again,
I think this is one of the reasons why Ukrainians
they certainly don't want to see to every Russian position,
certainly not most of them, but the idea that they

(16:14):
do want to negotiate and enter this war as soon
as possible, that has now gone through the roof. Again
we're talking about sixty nine percent, which is such a
big difference from where we were at the beginning of.

Speaker 1 (16:23):
The war when it was just twenty ten.

Speaker 8 (16:24):
Wanting to negotiate doesn't mean wanting to surrender, means wanting
to discuss and not believing that they'll join it. It
was different than wanting to join in.

Speaker 9 (16:32):
You got it.

Speaker 8 (16:32):
But you could very much see how Ukrainian thinking has changed.

Speaker 10 (16:34):
At absolutely job Michael very Joous.

Speaker 1 (16:39):
The year was nineteen eighty three. Dave Mustaine was part
of the band Metallica Cancel, which he co founded, and
the stories vary, but basically he was consumed, I mean

(17:00):
too many drugs, attending too few rehearsals, causing problems at performances,
and basically not being a good fellow band member. So
say the members of Metallica, I don't know. And the
only reason I say is you don't know if you
weren't there, and so Mustaane. I mean, you get kicked

(17:25):
out of Metallica, what do you do now? I mean,
that's your big shot and you were very involved, arguably
the seminal element, the instrumental point, and you're kicked out,
I mean emotionally, that's got to drain you right. Professionally,
it's probably going to finish you off. It would finish

(17:47):
off most people. So Dave Mustaine what does he do?
He creates another band, Megadeth, of which he is the
front man, and that was night teen eighty five, I
believe eighty three was when he was kicked out of Metallica.
He opens. He starts with a tour in eighty five

(18:10):
under the name Megadeth, and I'd say they've had a
pretty durn good bit of success. And they announced their
farewell tour and their final album. They're taking a victory lap.
They've mustain declared. There's so many musicians that have come
to the end of their career, whether accidental or intentional.
Most of them don't get to go out on their

(18:32):
own on that sor on their own terms on top.
And that's where I am in my life right now.
I've traveled the world, I've made millions upon millions of fans,
and the hardest part of all this is saying goodbye
to them. That statement arrived after last week a teaser
post that read the end is near, well just the

(18:55):
end or megadeath, And you know, I think it's one
of those stories that I love of a guy who
who for whatever reason, was he right were they wrong?
It doesn't matter when you get when you get knocked down,
you get back up. It's just that simple. And I

(19:15):
think that's a great lesson to learn from that. Since
we're on the subject of music, AI is invading every
aspect of our lives and You're not going to be
able to stop it, so don't get depressed over it.
You've got to learn how to thrive amidst it.

Speaker 5 (19:31):
Well.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
CBS This Morning yesterday had a story entitled AI generated
music sparks industry concern, and the story was an AI
generated band these aren't real people called the Velvet Sundown,
racking up more than five hundred thousand monthly listeners on Spotify.

(19:55):
So this has bands frightened because you, too, under this
theory can be replaced by a computer story from CBS
dust On. The band you're listening to is very popular.
This is their photo on all their socials.

Speaker 9 (20:16):
It is a true overnight success story.

Speaker 5 (20:18):
Now Here we are the machines copying people's voices.

Speaker 1 (20:24):
Rick Piato is sure, and now they've admitted that it's AI.
They changed their bio and Spotify, but still they have
one point five million followers. Why are they a verified
artists when they're not even human? That's one of those things.

Speaker 9 (20:36):
He's the popular YouTuber who's testified before Congress about the
impact of AI and has gained millions of followers himself
by talking to Sting and others breaking down songs we're
sitting in this beautiful studio here, but everything in the
studio can be emulated in how many seconds?

Speaker 1 (20:54):
It's probably about two and a half minutes from the
beginning to the end. I'm pretty sure it was used
that this program called soon. Okay, that's something we have
to see. Here's my prompt. Create a square avatar of
a fictitious female alternative slash indie singer and a name
for her. Wow, Sadie Winners, Sadie Winners. Okay. The song
is about walking away from someone who never really saw

(21:15):
her worth. She was going to create the song lyrics. Wait,
how many seconds was that? It's about four seconds? Oh god,
did you even read a of these? You don't care?
I don't care. Put my lyrics in the lyrics that
happen in four seconds? Yes, and then it create.

Speaker 5 (21:33):
Let's listen, this is the world premiere.

Speaker 1 (21:47):
She's a good singer, good singer.

Speaker 10 (21:54):
That's nicety good.

Speaker 1 (21:57):
Where are we rick?

Speaker 9 (21:59):
Where we found ourselves?

Speaker 1 (22:02):
I mean it's pretty amazing. Actually, I hate to say it,
but you know, take some accountability here. Bo Burnham did
a song years ago as comedian about country music has
become so rote, so robotic, so silly. Is that any

(22:22):
better than a human beings performing it. But it's according
to a template written out of New York at a
guy's desk, because it's just as bad to me.

Speaker 5 (22:30):
Any big fans of country music out there, Yeah, I
think country music gets a bad rep. You know, why
is it that when Bruce Springsteen sings about a turnpike
it is art, and then when someone sings about a
horse it's dumb. Inherently, I I think some of the
greatest songwriters all time are country artists Dolly part and

(22:50):
Willie Nelson, you know, and if you're writing honestly, that
is art, and I would never bouch that. The problem
is with a lot of modern country music, what is
called a country music, the sort of Keith Urban brand
of country music, is that.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
It is not honest.

Speaker 5 (23:07):
It is the exact opposite of honest, where instead of
people actually telling their stories, you got a bunch of
millionaire metrosexuals who've never done a hard day's work in
their life, but they figured out the words and the
phrases they can use to pander to their audience, and
they list the same words and phrases off, sort of
mad lib style in every song, raking in millions of
dollars from actual working class people. If you know the words,

(23:30):
you know the phrases, phrases fly, a.

Speaker 11 (23:33):
Dirt road, a cold beer, a blue jeans, a redic,
a rurtal, now simple agitive, no shoes, no shirt, no shoes.
You didn't hear that. It's sort of a mental typho.

Speaker 5 (23:57):
A walk and talk like a field tay, put the
boots somewhere and called three gram. I write songs about
writing tractors from the comfort of a private jet.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
I could sing in man's are in.

Speaker 5 (24:12):
I could steal no U pandering haunting deer chase and
trout a bunlight with the low old face it out here.
That's subtle fans Ali, that's next book. Pander In. I
own a private branch that I prairied use. I'm like

(24:32):
dirt one verse, one chorus in the bag. Now it's
time to talk to the ladies. I'm hoping my southern
charm offsets all these ravy vibes. I'm putting out good
girl in a straw hat with their arms down in.

Speaker 1 (24:50):
A corn field. That is a scarecrow. Thought it was
a human one. I said sorry.

Speaker 11 (24:57):
A cold day, a cold beer, a cold gens last.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
I hope you're pay days. It's a texture.

Speaker 7 (25:10):
I'm not sure what your question was.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
Michael Berries, I lost the plot somewhere you did. It
drives our program directors crazy that we play music for
too long. But you the Reason God Made Oklahoma David
Frazell and Shelley Rest Shelley West County is one of
my favorite songs of all time, and I just needed

(25:37):
to share that with you. It's his pretty a song
as ever there was, and it's just pretty a tribute.
I'm a proud, proud Texan. I know New Yorkers, for
whatever reason, they're still proud of the New York that
they remember from the eighties and won't there go back
there because they'll get mugged and you can't fit in
because you speak English. But I I tell you it is.

(25:59):
It is one of the most beautiful songs. If that's
the first you've ever heard of it, go check it
out later. It's called You're the Reason God Made Oklahoma,
and it's wonderful. But this segment just ramon. Go ahead
and slug this segment as tribute to Oklahoma. I love
everything about Oklahoma. I love the fact that it's the

(26:21):
only state in the Union where all fifty all counties,
only of the fifty states where every county voted for Trump.
The things going on in Oklahoma are just amazing. Everybody
is competing against each other as to who can be

(26:43):
more maga than the next. And I love it. I
love it, absolutely love it. So you know, Oklahoma is
known as where the wind comes sweeping down the plane.
Do not do not try to sweep that woke into
their state. They won't have it. They won't have it

(27:05):
in their schools. They understand it's too important to get
this right.

Speaker 11 (27:10):
And so.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
Let me see if I got the article here. They
in order to keep woke out of their schools, they
have taken the teaching Assessment test in California and New York.
And they say, well, if that's the states where they
indoctrinate the teachers with the leftism, we're going to ask
that question and use the right as wrong and wrong

(27:36):
is right. I love this. I love this. They are
basically saying, we're the anti California. We don't want fruits
and nuts in this state. We don't want them teaching
our kids none of it, none of it. And so
what they've done is they have created their own assessment

(27:56):
to make sure that they get good teachers in the classroom.
I mean it doesn't need to be an in depth
assessment to weed out the wacos pretty fast, everyone, please
take your seats.

Speaker 10 (28:09):
We're about to begin the Oklahoma Woke Educator Assessment. Open
your books please to page one. Please mark your answers clearly.
Number one, as an adult, has your hair color ever
been a color that could be found in a bag.

Speaker 1 (28:22):
Of Skittles candies?

Speaker 10 (28:24):
If you answered yes, please close your book and.

Speaker 1 (28:26):
Leave the facility. We thank you for your interest. I
knew purple was a terrible idea. I knew it.

Speaker 10 (28:30):
Number two, have you ever felt it important to talk
about your sexuality with children? Have you answered yes, Please
close your book and leave the facility.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
We thank you for your interest.

Speaker 10 (28:41):
Number three, have you ever taught and lived, and drove through,
or flew over the states of New York or California?

Speaker 1 (28:46):
If you answered yes, please.

Speaker 10 (28:48):
Close your book and leave the facility.

Speaker 1 (28:50):
My flight was rerouted. We thank you for your interest.

Speaker 10 (28:53):
To the rest of you, congratulations, you've passed the Oklahoma
Woke Educator Assessment, or, as I like to call it, OH.

Speaker 1 (29:01):
Just a little jug can take all that. Teach your
fuddy bot. Your children are given to you by God,
not the community. It doesn't take a village unless the

(29:23):
family breaks down. Teachers are not the ones to raise
your children. You are. It is your place to institute
the values for your children that you hold deer. My
friend Josh Hammer was being interviewed a couple months ago

(29:44):
and he said that he believed that Jews should marry
Jews and share those values and teach those values to
their children. And it created quite a little stink on
the internet. Oh how dare you Jews should marry everybody?
But nope, no, because cultures understand. You don't go to

(30:06):
Saudi Arabia and say, hey, fellow Saudi, y'all should marry
Jews and Hindus and cat. No, they don't do that. Now,
if you want to be a person who says I
think anybody, my kids can marry anybody from any culture,
any religion, any whatever else, that's fine. That's fine for
you to do, and we respect that. But that is

(30:29):
not a better position. It's a different position than saying
I want my children to marry our race, our religion,
our nationality. If we're going to say that. You can
say to your child you can marry across any boundary.

(30:50):
That's fine. But that's not right, and everything else is wrong.
And that's where we that's where we get it incorrect
in this country, allowing the left to say, if you
don't say you'll date a training, then you're a bad person. Nuh,
you get to say that. If a woman can say
I'll only date women, oh so brave, so stunning, then

(31:11):
a man can say I'll only date women too, I'm
not gonna date men. I don't. That's perfectly acceptable. You
have to defend old fashioned, old school values or you
will have none left. That's that's what you that's what
will remain of your society if you are unashamed to

(31:36):
stand up for what you believe in. God bless Oklahoma.
I love this so much. You know we're gonna wake
up one day in a couple of years and realize
that Oklahoma is booming because intellectual capital is going there,
because people of faith are going there, because because you

(31:57):
know what happens when people of faith, people values move
into your communities. You know what, you don't increase crime
crime the left. You look at San Francisco, Los Angeles,
New York, Baltimore, Detroit, Chicago. You look at what has
become of these places. Seattle, a once great American city, Hell,
Downtown Portland, they've destroyed. That's what the left does. The

(32:18):
impotent policies of the left allow the week, allow the
week to be preyed upon by the evil, and that
that just cannot be called Congratulations, Oklahoma. I love this
new story. Love it you love it removed? What do
you love about? Lust us left your good thank you,

(32:42):
and good night.
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