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December 10, 2025 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, luck and load. So Michael
Arry Show is on the air. The Democrats need Jasmine

(00:38):
Crockett to run for the Senate in Texas, and Republicans
need Jasmine Crockett to run for the Senate in Texas.
It can be the case that both of those things
are true at the same time. There is a lot
of excitement in Houston that Jasmine Crockett is running for
the Senate because there are black women judges they call

(01:01):
them black Girl Magic, who are running against white Democrats
in the Democrat primary. And the hope is they can
gin up a lot of excitement by black women to
vote into black in the in the Democrat primary. For
the black women candidates, it has worked so far, and
so they will be parading Jasmine Crockett around as their

(01:27):
savior to generate excitement. They'll have her in the churches,
They'll have her at the at the activism events, They'll
have her at the rallies. And you might as well
prepare yourself now for the show that it's going to be,
because when she shows up in an audience like that,

(01:47):
they want her to show out. They want to hear
her say some crazy stuff. So they can say, gone, girl, gone,
keep going, keep going. So what she's doing is going
to be very posts with Democrats, but it's going to
be very difficult come November. I give you an example

(02:08):
here she is on CNN when Laura Coach asked her about, Hey,
don't you need some Trump voters to win? It's a
majority Republican state in the state of Texas.

Speaker 2 (02:19):
How will you make voters who previously have voted for Trump,
particularly given that you have been an outspoken critic and
he has inserted himself Just take your campaign video as is,
he has inserted himself at every turn when it comes
to your commentary, How will you convert those who are
supportive of him to voters for you?

Speaker 3 (02:40):
Yeah, I don't know that will necessarily convert all of
Trump's supporters.

Speaker 1 (02:44):
That's not our you need to.

Speaker 3 (02:45):
Our goal is to definitely talk to people. No, we don't.

Speaker 1 (02:49):
We don't need to.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
Our goal is to make sure that we can engage
people that historically have not been talked to because there's
so many people that you will fight for them.

Speaker 1 (03:01):
Yeah. So, if you're a Trump supporter, the days of
government governing on the basis of anything other than super
serving their tribe. If you're a Democrat, they're over. And
the reason is the Democrats are forced to super serve

(03:23):
their base because that's what their base has become. There
are fewer and fewer normal people who vote Democrat. You
probably notice it in your own lives. A lot of
people who are just going about their business and doing
their job, and they kind of like the Democrats. Those

(03:43):
people have left. They don't want any part of what's
going on. They see the crime, they see the fraud,
they see the illegal immigration. They've been hurt by it,
they've been hit by it. They don't want any part
of it. Jake Tapper asked Shila Jasmine Lee Crockett about
her firm campaign and you know the one with her
looking off to the left of the screen while audio

(04:04):
of Trump insulting her plays. Here's what she said.

Speaker 4 (04:08):
Your official announcement is just a video of you and
then image of you while insults of President Trump of
you play in the background.

Speaker 1 (04:21):
Why that decision?

Speaker 4 (04:22):
I mean, with one of your opponents, tall Ico, he
had a video him with constituents, him with Texans, Why
you solo?

Speaker 5 (04:31):
Yes.

Speaker 3 (04:31):
So there's a couple of things. Number One, I wanted
to do something different because Number one, in order to
flip the state of sexes, we're gonna have to do.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
Something that we've never done.

Speaker 3 (04:41):
So I wanted to say on brand with the fact
that we would be different. I also wanted people to
understand who the president sees as a real threat, and
it is me.

Speaker 1 (04:51):
See he paying attention to me, He know who I am.
She was also on ms now. Somebody thought that was
real clever to name MSNBC when she said that, Mam
Donnie showed how to win an election. Please keep saying
things like this, because when Texan's here that you're taking

(05:12):
your cue for Mamdani, that is not going to be good.

Speaker 3 (05:18):
Let me tell you something, Mandannie has not backed down
whatsoever from his rhetoric against the president in the Oval office.
He stood, he stood there and he said what he
said about him being a fascist. Yet he was able
to win those voters. So Democrats that believe the only
way that you can win is by being soft and
sounding like a Republican, that is not true. What people

(05:38):
are looking for are people that are tough and are
fighters and are going to fight for them.

Speaker 1 (05:44):
There's always so much fighting going on. Who are they
fighting for? Who are they fighting with? What does that mean? Man?
Who are gonna fight for?

Speaker 6 (05:51):
You?

Speaker 1 (05:51):
Who're gonna fight? Fight? Fight? Fight fight? What are you
going to fight for?

Speaker 7 (05:56):
Who?

Speaker 1 (05:57):
The only thing you fight for is illegal aliens in Somali,
fraudsters and criminals. Is that really enough of an audience?
California congress Critter Roe Kanna was on CNN when he
was asked about Crockett. He didn't give her exactly a

(06:20):
ringing endorsement. You listen for yourself.

Speaker 5 (06:23):
Is she the kind of candidate that the party should
get behind to take back the Senate?

Speaker 1 (06:28):
Sure, she's new.

Speaker 8 (06:29):
You know what we don't need.

Speaker 1 (06:30):
We don't need.

Speaker 8 (06:31):
Nineteen nineties or two thousand folks leading us into the future.
We need a new generation.

Speaker 7 (06:37):
Do we need the.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
Old guard to step aside?

Speaker 8 (06:40):
We need a new generation who understand modern technology, who
understand the issues of the base. And Jasmine is certainly
one of those people.

Speaker 1 (06:50):
You support, going to do very well, your supporter.

Speaker 8 (06:53):
I support her, I've worked with her, I support her,
but I also I mean, I respect that tell Rico
should be an open, competitive primary. But I like Kasmine
and I'm supporting her.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
So you're supporting her before you know anyone else who's
in the race. Of course you are, because there's a
black candidate running against a white candidate in the Democrat primary.
It's going to be very interesting to watch how this
plays out because the white liberal Talerico, who's kind of

(07:28):
a Gavin Newsome weasily slick white guy, super liberal. He's
playing nice right now, but she's getting all the coverage
and he's not. And at some point he's going to
have to say what the Republicans are going to say
in the general election. This girl is nuts, She's absolutely crazy,

(07:57):
and he's going to have to say it. And when
he does, there are going to be party elders who say,
you cannot tell a black woman she's unstable, even if
she is. And he's not going to lightly go down.
He's gonna want to win. He's also going to be
careful he doesn't ruin his career because well, be fun

(08:22):
to watch Mike who Berry's show. You know, Michael Masden died.
My brother's a cop. I don't ruin the movie for anybody.
My brother is a cop, and that movie was very
difficult for me to watch because I imagine my brother

(08:45):
being a cop in that scene and it just tore
me up. Crazy Bernie was on CNN with that nasty person,
as Trump called her, Caitlin Collins. I don't think he
was wrong when she asked him if Democrats could win
a Senate seat in Texas. He said Texas should be
one of the most progressive states in America. Really, Bernie,

(09:09):
I knew you were nuts, but man, you just keep
out doing yourself.

Speaker 9 (09:12):
Texas has been this kind of white whale for Democrats
that you've caucused with. Obviously you rightly noted you're an independent.
Do you think that Democrats could actually win a Senate
seat there this time?

Speaker 1 (09:22):
Don't get me going on Texas.

Speaker 6 (09:25):
Texas should be, in my view, one of the most
progressive states in Americans, a working class state. It's a
young state, showing Latino population, should going black population, and
how the Democratic leadership in Texas, and it's changed.

Speaker 1 (09:41):
By the way it has changed.

Speaker 6 (09:42):
But the Democratic leadership previously in Texas was pathetic. I've
been there several times, but I think things are changing,
and I think they're getting their act together, and I
think there is no reason why Texas should not be
a progressive state.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
Can you play that again? Did he play it again?
I'm not sure I heard it right.

Speaker 9 (10:07):
Texas has been this kind of white whale for Democrats
that you've caucused with obviously rightly noted you're an independent.
Do you think that Democrats could actually win a Senate
seat there this time?

Speaker 1 (10:17):
Don't get me going on Texas.

Speaker 6 (10:19):
Texas should be, in my view, one of the most
progressive states in Americans, a working class state. It's a
young state, strong Latino population, strong Black population. And how
the Democratic leadership in Texas, and it's changed by the
way it has changed, But the Democratic leadership previously in
Texas was pathetic. I've been there several times. But I

(10:43):
think things are changing and I think they're getting their
act together and I think there's no reason why Texas
should not be a progressive state.

Speaker 1 (10:51):
I know you know this, but the question related to
is winning the Senate seat in Texas a white whale?
That phrase goes back to Moby Dick and Captain Ahab,
You'll remember was hunting the white well. It was an obsession,
it was an all consuming The state of Texas has

(11:14):
generally been for the last eight years or so, it
has been the prize. It has been the flag that
the Democrats most want to plant, and so they've spent
a fortune on failed candidates in Texas. And it's money

(11:35):
that the good news is it's money that is then
not able to be spent in other states that are
swing states. The Texas media market, it has multiple media
markets that are very expensive, and they're separate markets. There's
no overlap. You've got the Houston market very expensive. You've

(11:55):
got the Dallas for Orth market very expensive. You've got
the Austin send In Tone market not nearly as expensive,
but to compete there you have to spend a lot
of money. And then you've got the Valley. You've got
West Texas, Lubbock, Midland, You've got the Panhandle up north,
and then you've got Southeast Texas Beaumont, Orange Port, Arthur

(12:18):
and South Texas is not a behemoth. You've got multiple
markets along that corridor. So you've got what is the
equivalent in some states to three or four or five
or six states other states. And here is the problem.
We're talking about a Senate seat. Texas gets two Senate seats,

(12:43):
one of them is up for election. That one senator
is no more important in the Senate than the senator
from Vermont it's a whole lot cheaper to spend the
money to win a close Senate race in a small state,

(13:04):
because you can flood the airwaves in Rhode Island or
New Hampshire for a few million dollars. To do that
in Texas, for the money to make a difference in Texas,
you've got to spend one hundred million dollars. Well, hell,
that's that's that's ten states. So yes, we want this

(13:26):
to be their white will. Even though I live here
and I can't fathom the thought of a Democrat representing
me in Senate, in the Senate, I'm willing to take
it on the chin. Democrats, spend all your money in
Texas trying to win this Senate seat for Jasmine Crockett
because that's the prize, that's the white well, that's the

(13:47):
one you always wanted. They did that with Beto A. Rourke,
They did it with Colin already. They they spent so
much money on Beto Auror. And what's important to understand
is these aren't Texans spending this money. Beto was getting

(14:08):
his money from California and New York. That's people that
want to see Schumer as the as the Senate majority
leader and at the time Pelosi as the Speaker of
the House. But they were trying to win the Senate
and they believed that psychologically, if they could tell the

(14:30):
nation even Texas is Democrat now, that all everything would fall.
That's Hitler rolling the panzers through the Czech Republic into Poland.
That is hint. That is the show of force that
is rolling westward through Paris all the way to the

(14:51):
coast and telling the English we're on our way. So
they get preoccupied with this and they get they start salivating.
They're going to win that seat. They're gonna win Texas. Well,
I'm going to tell you something, They're not going to
win Texas because we will do whatever it takes. We
will campaign day and night, we will get every voter

(15:12):
to the polls. And yes, they will cheat, and we've
got to do nothing. Governor named Greg greg Abbott, who
wouldn't get involved when they cheated and won the county
judge race when they took over Harris County, the county
that I live in. And so now we're going to
have fraud on a level we've never seen before in
Harris County and it's going to affect Greg abbot because

(15:32):
he's on the ballot and it's going to affect this
Senate seat. And our Republican governor allowed it to happen
because he wasn't willing to expend any political capital. And
that's what we've got across the country. You go back
to two thousand, Al Gore wins that race, He wins
Florida and wins that race if Catherine Harris, the then

(15:56):
Secretary of State, wasn't willing to battle for Bush to win,
for fairness to win, and then James A. Baker the
third goes to the Supreme Court, they make their argument,
the Supreme Court rules Bush emerges, he's president. That wasn't
until hell, halfway through December, it was. It was over

(16:18):
a month. It was at least thirty seven forty days.
We've got a lot of Republicans that won't go to
bat for us to win and defeat Democrats, and we've
got to have.

Speaker 5 (16:29):
That, mister Michael Berry, Keem.

Speaker 1 (16:39):
Jeffries, the poor Man's Barack Obama was asked as the
leader of the Democrats in the House, if he would
be endorsing anyone in the Texas Senate race. The funny
thing about that is that in Washington, d C. They
might think that Hakeem Jeffries has some influence in Texas.

(17:04):
The truth is, and politicians don't want to believe this
because they want to think that they're very powerful. The
truth is, endorsements by politicians of other politicians tend to
make no difference. Where they make a difference is early

(17:27):
in the race because money people want to know what
the politicians are doing, and they think that's important. So
the money people want to see who the other, you know,
elected officials who they think are so powerful, because in
their world, that is who's powerful. But if you think

(17:48):
a Democrat in Houston, Dallas, San Anton, McCallum, Laredo cares
what Hakeem Jeffries thinks, I assure you they don't. So
here is a Keem Jeffries. He's side stepping the question.
We'll get into why he does that later, but here

(18:10):
is him side stepping the question, which is just kind
of funny that anybody would even ask. Two quick questions.

Speaker 10 (18:17):
One, as Democrats look to retake the majority in both chambers,
are you planning to make an endorsement in.

Speaker 1 (18:23):
The Texas Senate race?

Speaker 10 (18:25):
And two, yesterday commersonman Crockett said that she won't need
to win all the Trump voters in order.

Speaker 1 (18:33):
To win the Texas Senate race.

Speaker 10 (18:35):
And given that state is dominantly read, would you say
that it's vital that any candidate projects their message across
the board to every single voter in order to win
the state.

Speaker 11 (18:46):
Well, I think I'm obviously focused on the House, not
the Senate, and we're only three seats short of taking
back the majority, and we are going to take the
majority back in the next Congress. Republicans have been a disaster.
They're totally on the run. They failed the American people.
The cost of living is out of control. Democrats are

(19:08):
the only group of people in this town and across
the country actually interested in dealing with the affordability crisis.
That's where our focus will continue to be.

Speaker 1 (19:21):
So that's their message right now. You can see their points.
That's what the polls are showing people care about. Stuff
costs too much. President Trump headed off to Pennsylvania. Stuff
costs too much. Here's what we're going to do to
help because stuff costs too much. That's a big issue
right now. Now. Is that a governmental issue? And to

(19:42):
the extent that it is a result of governmental policy,
which party pushed policies that led to that why do
things cost more? Inflation results from pushing too much cash
into the economy. It drives prices up. As it turns out,

(20:07):
to simplify the matter, cash or product costs work on
the curve as well supply and demand. When you put
too much cash into the economy, you drive prices up.
Just that simple. When you pull cash out of the economy,

(20:28):
you see prices come down. Then you've got the fact
that you've got the Fed. Now we had some movement today,
the Fed under Jerome Powell will not be making any
major rate cuts. I don't believe they could. They can
prove me wrong. I hope they proved me wrong. But
Jerome Powell has dug in his feet and he's kind

(20:48):
of like a John robertson this way. He's decided he's
going to have this epic battle with Donald Trump, and
he's gone not going to lower interest rates, which would
really stimulate the economy. But Trump will have his guy.
In next year, interest rates will drop, and when interest

(21:11):
rates drop, furniture Furniture stores will sell more furniture because
people from nance that car dealers will sell more cars,
home builders will sell more homes, more lots will sell,
more clothes will sell. Activity will heat up. And unfortunately,

(21:32):
while you are a principled voter looking at the good
of our nation today and into the future, most voters
simply say, am I doing better than I was yesterday?
And if not, I'm mad at whoever's in power. Doesn't
matter how we got here. I don't know how we
got here. I'm just not doing well. I'll vote against
whoever's in office. That is a larger vote than you

(21:55):
would imagine. It's disturbing to think, but it's true. So
this is going to be a tough year. I mean
next this coming year, twenty twenty six is going to
be a tough year in this country. Adding to that,
we've got a number of congressmen retiring. Everyone else is

(22:19):
clutching their pearls. I don't see that as a bad thing.
Most of those congressmen retiring. Troy Nels would be an
exception to this rule. But most of those congressmen retiring
are congressmen who hated Trump and worked hard against him. Well,
they can't stand to suffer him being president. In Laura, good,

(22:43):
get out of the way. You're hard to beat because
you got a name, idea, and a lot of money.
Let's open the seat up and get some maga conservatives
in there. This is great. Remember when the media tells
you things are really bad for Republicans, they mean things
are really bad for the swamp Republicans that they're friends with.

(23:05):
This isn't a battle of US versus Democrats. This is
a battle of the entire country against Washington d C.
And remember they're the cabal. Don't accidentally repeat their talking points.
What makes them very sad makes us very happy, and

(23:26):
what makes us very sad makes them very happy. So
don't confuse those two. I fell down a rabbit hole.
Turns out Jasmine Crockett things sit John Wayne mccornyan would
make a great senator that she really likes working with him.
She said that I ran down a rabbit hole. From
the seventies or eighties TV shows Starsky and Hudge, all

(23:50):
the great duo TV shows, And I can't remember, for
the life of me, some cop show that was being
promoted for the coming year. See if you can tell
what it is.

Speaker 7 (24:05):
Tonight on ABC, Roquel Welch guest stars and Hilaritian Sues.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
On an all new Mark and Mindy.

Speaker 7 (24:11):
Then an old flame returns, but does she come with
baggage and murder?

Speaker 1 (24:16):
It's all Aboard, an all new Love. Finally, it's the
new show that's sweeping the nation.

Speaker 7 (24:22):
John Wayne mccordon is a crusty old cop trying to
save his job, and his new partner, Jazzy Crockett, is
an unhinged rooky from the ghetto.

Speaker 12 (24:30):
Maybe because these people they are crazy, because they always
look behind Christian Eze You. I don't know how many
am on this side are getting divorced if they get
caught up sleeping with a co workers staffa answering.

Speaker 1 (24:43):
All the things.

Speaker 12 (24:44):
Yeah, you ain't gotta believe.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
Me, You'll find someone.

Speaker 7 (24:46):
Buckle up and go on a ride with John Wayne
mccornan and Jazzy Jasmine Crockett as they tried to save
Texas but end up ruining it All Ronida War. It's
an all new episode of Texas thirty tonight on ABZ.

Speaker 1 (25:04):
Sorry, this Michael Barry Show segment is over. President Film
sat down with Dasha Burns of Politico for an interview
and well, listen to what he says here, and I

(25:29):
want you to ponder this and we'll discuss this. I
think it's important. Well, Europe is a different place.

Speaker 11 (25:36):
What do you mean.

Speaker 5 (25:36):
If it keeps going the way it's going, Europe will
not be in my opinion, many of those countries will
not be viable countries any longer. Their immigration policy is
a disaster. What they're doing with immigration is a disaster.
We had a disaster coming, but I was able to
stop it. You know, we have no people coming through
our borders now, zero seven months.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
I mean, who would believe zero?

Speaker 5 (26:00):
They went from millions of people, in some cases millions
of people a month, but millions of people to.

Speaker 1 (26:05):
Know, Pater, that's not what Europe looks like. The opposite. Yeah,
I know Europe.

Speaker 5 (26:10):
They're coming in from all parts of the world, not
just the Middle East. They're coming in from the Congo,
tremendous numbers of people coming from the Congo, and even worse,
they're coming from prisons of the Congo and many other countries.
And for some reason, they want to be politically correct,
which actually I think is the opposite of politically correct.

(26:30):
But they want to be politically correct and they don't
want to send.

Speaker 1 (26:34):
Them back to where they came from.

Speaker 5 (26:36):
And Europe is If you take a look at Paris,
it's a much different place. I loved Paris. It's a
much different place than it was. If you take a
look at London, you have a mayor named con He's
a horrible mayor. He's an incompetent mayor, but he's a horrible, vicious,
disgusting mayor. I think he's not terrible. If you have London,
it's a different place. I love London. I love London,

(26:58):
and I hate to see it happen. You know, my
roots are in Europe, as you know, right, and I
hate to see that happened. This is one of the
great places in the world and they're allowing people just
to come in and unchecked, unvetted.

Speaker 1 (27:16):
A lot of conservatives don't care for Christopher Hitchens because
he was really intellectually a liberal, not a classical liberal,
but a liberal, particularly as he was younger, and he
was an openly combatively atheistic speaker and writer. And it

(27:41):
wasn't enough that he was an atheist. He felt the
need to rub your face in it. But at least
to his credit, he was a pure atheist. He was
anti theism, he was anti religion. American this will typically
be anti Christian, but they won't dare speak ill of

(28:06):
the religion that if you have a problem with religions,
should give you the biggest problem because of the radicalization
of their application, and that is Islam. Hitchens, the British writer, speaker, influencer,
a personal great influence for all those years, took on

(28:28):
Islam very aggressively. But he went back to the neighborhood
where he had grown up in England and he noted
that in only twenty years it had changed such that
he did not recognize it. Nothing about it was the same.
The buildings were the same, but the people had completely changed,
And he asked, where did they go? Where did the

(28:51):
white people go? Elon Musk has been showing data that
shows white reproduction levels and how low they are across
the country. Now he's certainly doing his part to fix
that problem, but it's an interesting phenomenon. And when you

(29:14):
look at England and you look at the UK and
what those numbers have done, you can see that in
the United States. So the question becomes, should we be
afraid of people who do not look like us? Should
white people be afraid of people who do not look
like us? To what extent well, all non white people
are not the same. Where are they from. I saw

(29:37):
a story in News of a Muslim Man immigrant who
had raped a young girl. She was like ten or
eleven years old, and the Muslim rapists lawyer argued in
court that he should not be prosecuted, should not be

(30:02):
found guilty because in his culture this was acceptable and
he didn't understand American culture. That is the most damning
thing you can say, because if that is true, then
we shouldn't let anybody in from that country, because we
can't even appeal to their better selves. In Finland, they

(30:27):
did a PSA on their television state television stations of
white women saying Muslim men, this is what's acceptable and
what's not. And they made a stupid song about it,
and they basically in the song, you can't grab our boob,
you can't grab us between the legs. If you're allowing

(30:50):
people into your country that you have to explain this to,
you've got a lot bigger problem than rape. You're suicidal
if there is no universality of values that are shared
by other cultures with regard to you don't have sex

(31:11):
with children, you don't rape women. Any group of people
who cannot understand that. I don't care how many of
them live in my country and how many people you
want to pander to. That cannot be allowed, period, end
of story. The lawyer did not argue that this guy
was an outlier in his culture. He said, in his culture,

(31:36):
that is the case. When people tell you who they are,
believe them. When people tell you who they are, believe them.
The same woman with Politico asked President Trump if he
would rule out a ground invasion of Venezuela, and he said,

(31:57):
and I think rightfully so this should always be the policy.
Is not going to discuss military strategy with Politico. If
in fact we are going to invade and put troops
on the ground, the last thing we're going to do
is tip them off as to anything that might be
helpful in them preparing for it. We don't want another

(32:17):
bay of pigs. But this time we're sending our boys,
and this time we're sending our material, our arsenal. I'm
not suggesting that we should. I'm just saying, if we do,
I certainly don't want our boys compromised. Can you rule
out an American ground invasion? I don't in or out.

(32:38):
I don't talk about it.

Speaker 5 (32:39):
Why would I talk to you an extremely unfriendly publication,
if you want to call it, Politico that got eight
million dollars from Obama to keep it afloat?

Speaker 1 (32:49):
Why would I do that?

Speaker 5 (32:50):
Why would I talk about that to Politico? I mean,
I'm doing this because you picked me as.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
A mass.

Speaker 3 (32:56):
Transpiracy for their American people, because a lot of it
are well, I want more transparent Politician.

Speaker 5 (33:03):
Maybe in the.

Speaker 1 (33:04):
World a lot of folks are wondering what our goals are.

Speaker 5 (33:07):
Shoot, but I don't want to talk to you about
military strategy.

Speaker 1 (33:13):
I appreciate the opportunity that you have alternatives, other people.
You could listen to, other people with different life experiences
and areas of expertise. I don't expect you to agree
with one hundred percent of what I say. I expect
you to agree with any of it, But I appreciate
you taking the time to hear what I had to
say and process it, come to your own conclusions, and

(33:36):
hopefully we'll see you back when here A good night
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