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January 6, 2026 • 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.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
Look at me, sure, look at me. Sure, I'm loo
come to know. Sure, sailor, I'm looking right at you.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
My administration has been taking fast, decisive action to solve
this crisis.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
We'll win the fight against the fraudsters. But the political.

Speaker 3 (00:31):
Gamesmanship we're seeing from Republicans is only making that fight harder.
We've got conspiracy theorists, right wing YouTubers breaking into our
daycares demanding access to our children. We've got the President
of the United States demonizing our Smali neighbors and wrongfully

(00:54):
confiscating funds.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
The Minnesotans rely on. It's disgusting and it's day.

Speaker 3 (01:01):
Republicans are playing politics with the future of the state.

Speaker 2 (01:05):
It's shameful.

Speaker 4 (01:10):
In the past three years, eighty seven defendants have been charged,
sixty one convicted. The majority of them are Somali American.
Minnesota has the nation's largest Somali population. The perpetrators are
accused of ripping off state run programs intended to feed
low income kids, house that disabled, and provide services to
autistic children.

Speaker 2 (01:35):
What you're seeing is the ultimate opportunity.

Speaker 5 (01:37):
Cost of electing a vacuus virtue signaler with no skills
at all. While he was pushing tampons and trans and
men's rooms, the Somalis were ripping off a state like
it was a twenty four hour mini bart.

Speaker 3 (01:49):
Because I reflect on this moment with my family and
my team over the holidays, I came to the conclusion
that I can't give a political campaign my all. Every
minute that I spend defending my own political interest would
be a minute. I can't stand defending the people of
Minnesota against the criminals who pray on our generosity.

Speaker 6 (02:12):
You know, Minnesota used to be kind of American Scandinavia,
very white, kind of earnest, you know, kind of that
accentuated Canadian accent, very clean but cold.

Speaker 2 (02:33):
Genuine people, decent people. And what you learn is you
don't this many Somalis on New York.

Speaker 6 (02:48):
The Puerto Ricans will kick them in the nuts, they'll
kind of battle it out. But in Minnesota, they tried
to just love these people to death. The Somalis who
came here came from a broken culture, not just a
broken country, yes, a broken culture, a culture of chaos, disorder, violence.

(03:15):
It's all they've ever known. It's a feral culture. Now,
if you took one person here in one person there,
you brought them into stable families from an early age.
You taught them values, honesty, honor, don't steal, golden rule,
all of those sorts of things. You would raise some

(03:36):
good people, and eventually this was the old melting pot,
they would be inculcated into your values, the way the
English did with the peoples of the world who came
to this country, the savages who were here before that.
We keep, Oh, the pure Indians, good grief. Probably no

(03:59):
more savage people on the earth, and the Indians of that. Michael,
I'm one eighth Indian. No, Elizabeth Warren, you're not. You're
at best one oneenty twelve. You like saying that because
it makes you more interesting. I'm part Cherokee?

Speaker 7 (04:16):
Are you?

Speaker 6 (04:16):
Which part? What exactly about you is Cherokee? You're not
a whole.

Speaker 2 (04:26):
From mom?

Speaker 6 (04:27):
That's not nice. I shouldn't repeat what you say. That's
a wrap a hole. Yeah, oh Navajo, Okay, I got you,
I got you. But my point is I don't know
how I got distracted on all that. Some people that

(04:48):
are new to this show might not know that years ago.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
I had war.

Speaker 6 (04:53):
I had a war cry out for me because I
made the point that Americans who don't like affirmative action,
they don't believe that somebody should get something for free
because they're black, because two hundred years ago, one hundred
and fifty years ago, black people had it rough, and

(05:14):
white people will say that's dumb, we need to do
away with that. But somehow they think that American Indians
should be entitled to things. And my point was they
weren't oppressed. They lost a war, and that is true.
It's not an insult, that's a fact. And oh, the

(05:37):
protests came flying in. Oh, everybody was so upset at me.
And they had a convention and apparently all the tribes
have a national convention. And at the convention they were
selling a T shirt with my picture on a horse
and people around shooting arrows and so they were like
fifty arrows going into me, which which.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
Feels a little bit threatening.

Speaker 6 (06:03):
I mean, you know, just just say it feels a
little They were selling t shirts. Apparently they sold out
because I tried to get one. In fact, I did
get one. Later it was like a voodoo doll of me,
and like what when people bought it where they're like, yeah,
we'll all shoot arrows into him. And the truth of
the matter is, if you know anything about American Indians today,

(06:28):
it's some guy named Bob living in Omaha, Nebraska, who
you know, runs a car dealership, but he holds onto
his you know, I'm American Indian thing.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
And so they got all upset.

Speaker 6 (06:42):
And I didn't have any real credibility, any capitol built
up yet, so I could be criticized, and the company
was trying to accommodate. So I was required to do
an interview with the appointed elder of the chief of
the various consolidated tribes. They got a whole rack, right,
and so here I am with the chief and he's blind.

(07:06):
I don't know why that was relevant, but they told
me it was relevant. I needed to know that, and
we go to break and the chief tries to jack
me up for cash. The deal that was truck was
I would have him on and I would give him
an opportunity. This was back when PC was more PC.

(07:26):
Trump's changed a lot of this, but it was determined
that this was like two thousand and six, it was
determined that my penance that I would pay. My community
service was I would have him on and he would
talk about the beaten down Indian man.

Speaker 2 (07:44):
And how white he was bad.

Speaker 6 (07:46):
So that's what the company required me to do at
the time, and that's what I did.

Speaker 2 (07:51):
And so there he went, and then we go to break.

Speaker 6 (07:56):
And Chief Greedy, I want to know if I could,
if I could pay him, and he would come on
the show and he would offer his Indian wisdom. Yes,
I'll pay you what it's worth. But you're not good
for ratings. You're not very smart, you're not very clever.

(08:16):
You take yourself seriously, and you're kind of like that
Italian dude that cried when they threw down the trash.

Speaker 2 (08:22):
I'm not even sure you're Indians. This is the Michael
Berry Show. To all of our.

Speaker 8 (08:29):
Listeners on w j B O in Baton Rouge or
w r and O just an hour away, across the
Pontre Train in New Orleans, and to Louisiana Nation all
over the country, we wish you a.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
A delightful commencement.

Speaker 6 (08:57):
To Marti Grass, our official coon advisor, Anna Johnson, you
sent me a message this morning that said happy Epiphany.

Speaker 2 (09:07):
That is King's Day. You can now officially eat kingcakes
Every year.

Speaker 6 (09:14):
Marty Gross season begins on Twelfth Night, which is January sixth.
Twelfth Night represents the Christian Holy day of the Epiphany.

Speaker 2 (09:22):
The season is a.

Speaker 6 (09:23):
Time of celebration before Christian Lent and as you know,
lasts until a fat Tuesday. January sixth marks the feast
of the Epiphany, when the Three Wise Men visited the
Christ Child in New Orleans. It also means the launch
of Carnival season or Carnival. So happy Carnival. May the
odds be ever in your favor. Now you might be

(09:47):
thinking to yourself, I thought you grew up on Louisiana border.
I thought you would have known all these seasons. I did,
but maybe not recalling every detail exactly. And my dear
friend Anna knows that she wrote that in such a
manner to remind me of all the details in order
and structure them in case I'd forgotten anything, and make

(10:10):
it so that I could read it to you if
I wanted, or just present it as my own comments.
People do that for me all the time, about Moravian
culture or anything else, any number of things, how cars work,
how ships work, how the military works. Some people think

(10:31):
that everybody else knows everything that they know, and that's
just not true. It's erroneous to believe that everyone should
know everything you know. It'd be boring if we all
knew exactly the same things about everything. I love that
I have areas of knowledge that i'd dork out on
and you don't know anything about. But I also love

(10:52):
that you can tear an engine apart and put it
back together, that you know the difference between this Chevy
engine and this Chevy engine and this Chevy engine, or
this light package from this year to this year, or
you listen to Johnny cash Is one piece of a
time and go, ah, it's actually an error right there.
I love that stuff, absolutely love it. So that is

(11:14):
what I get as show prep from my unpaid producers
as I call them, which is people who care about
the show get a kick out of their name being
mentioned on the air. Although I don't think Anna cares,
but want the show to be as good as it
can and want to share about their culture and the
things that they know about. So with Marty Grass beginning,

(11:36):
I'm sure the Rendazzos will be selling a lot of kingcakes,
whether it's Manny or the X or which of the
heirs has which of the businesses? Now, that's a that
you know, it's fascinating stories like that, the first generation
owner of a business like that as a colorful person,
like a like who's the popeyesk guy Copeland?

Speaker 2 (12:00):
Uh, what's his name? Goshtarr I can't remember, but you
have these companies.

Speaker 6 (12:06):
The Randazzos were that way and you know, uh, he
gets divorced and she takes the name, and he says, no,
you can't take the name. And so one of them
is like Randazzos and one of them is Manny Randazzos.

Speaker 2 (12:18):
Or whatever else and what al Copland?

Speaker 6 (12:21):
Yeah, so they battle over over the names and all.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
I love that. I love that kind of drama. Fascinating stuff.

Speaker 6 (12:30):
Raio's Bakery in Beaumont, long time Big Marti, Gras Cake,
MiG King cake Maker. It's a great tradition, you know, Louisiana,
in my opinion, Louisiana has the most distinctive traditions that
are unique to just them in Louisiana and Texas, in

(12:51):
my opinion, are the two states that have the traditions
that are that are very state and culture specific. And
it's interesting how you talked about a melting pot. How
people ended up in Louisiana that were not from the
Acadian culture that came down from Canada into Louisiana, and

(13:14):
yet they adopted that culture and stayed there and they
became as konnass As the next guy, the mansowers in
uh In, a lot of the Lebanese families, Uh, the
Italian families. It came naturally to But for a French
culture as it started. Eddie Martinez, who's the guy that
got me into radio, still my boss to this day,

(13:35):
still signs my charity. They are as as Louisiana as
it gets. His brother was the head of the state Senate.
He is His dad owned a company, an import company,
an import company on the on the port there in
New Orleans. He went to LSU. Everybody in the family
went to LSU. The Lebanese families came in, Jewish families

(13:58):
came down, UH families can and they all kind of
just they melded into this very cultural identity that was
more cultural. Yes it's Catholic in nature, yes it's French
in nature, but everybody could join in. And I think

(14:18):
that's cool. I think that's what America used to be.
You could be Catholic or Evangelical. You could be black
or white, you could be European or Asian, but you
were American and we shared those values. It was when
people who came here and said, oh, I don't feel

(14:41):
American because I just got here. Let me tear it down,
let me crap all over your culture. I came here
because in my country I couldn't get a job, I
couldn't make any money. The streets were violent, the court
system was unjust, and people were starving. Now that I've
arrived and you've allowed me to live here, I have

(15:04):
no right to be here. You've allowed me to live here.
You give me education, you give me the vote, the franchise,
you give me opportunity.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
I'd like to say I hate it and destroy it.

Speaker 6 (15:18):
And these poor, sad, pitiful white people go, well, don't
say that. Well, how can we change? How can we
make this great country that you came to, because it's
great more like the crap hole you came from.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
What can we do?

Speaker 6 (15:34):
Can we bring everybody from your crap whole country here
overnight and not teach them our language, and not teach
them our values, and not teach them our system of
justice all but you're unique and special.

Speaker 2 (15:48):
Can we do that? Is it okay? If we do that?
Would you like me?

Speaker 6 (15:53):
Then?

Speaker 2 (15:54):
Would I not have to be embarrassed?

Speaker 6 (15:55):
Then in twenty nineteen, when Amy Clombachar, who's I wouldn't
be shocked if she's the next governor of Minnesota, stood
out in a blizzard and warned about global warming, do
you remember what.

Speaker 2 (16:09):
Else she spoke about.

Speaker 6 (16:11):
If you guessed that she pandered to Somalis, you would
be correct.

Speaker 9 (16:16):
In Minnesota, we have the biggest Somali population in the
country and we are proud of that community. A few
years ago, at the height of the angry rhetoric, a
Somali American family of four went out to dinner right
here in Minnesota. This guy walked by. He looked down
at them and said, you four go home. You go

(16:40):
home to where you came from. And the little girl
looked up at her mom and she said, Mom, I
don't want to go home. You said we could eat
out for dinner tonight.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
I don't want to eat dinner at home.

Speaker 9 (16:55):
You think of the innocent words of that little girl.
She only knows and that's our state. She only knows
one home, and that's the United States America.

Speaker 2 (17:10):
She's a sweet Smalie girl, and yes, the whole story
is a lie that was made up, like all the
other hoaxes.

Speaker 6 (17:20):
But maybe she can cry because the worst thing in
America would be a Somali girl told by a white
American you don't belong here.

Speaker 2 (17:33):
Go home.

Speaker 6 (17:35):
It doesn't happen, But if it did, for the sake
of argument, it's a debate technique.

Speaker 2 (17:41):
If it did, would.

Speaker 6 (17:44):
That be worse than a Somali telling a family of four,
I'm about to kill you? Well, of course it would
be worse because white people deserve everything they get because
they're so damn privileged, because in the world is poor.
Because if I can pander to the immigrants and the

(18:04):
non whites and the gays, if I can tell them
that I will turn on everybody that looks like me
and I will be their assassin, then I.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
Will own them.

Speaker 6 (18:16):
They won't just vote for me based on policy. I
won't need policy. It's the deepest identity connection. You feel
left out, you feel otherly here because you're not Christian,
because you're not white, because you're not from here, because
you don't know the music, because you don't know the history,
because you look different, you feel awkward. I will make

(18:40):
you feel right at home. I will turn on the
people who've done no harm to you, no harm to you,
nothing but kindness to you, and I will call them
evil to their face. I will destroy them in front
of you, and I I will be beholden to your interests,
and you, in exchange, will make me the king. See

(19:03):
if I tried to get all those white people that
come from the same community and worship the same way
I do and look like I do, to make me
their king, they won't do it, but you will. So
what I'll do is I'll become the king of you
and will destroy them. White liberals are very, very dangerous people.

Speaker 2 (19:23):
Never forget that, and they're dangerous to you.

Speaker 6 (19:29):
A Portland thug sentenced to life in prison for murdering
his baby mama. He had been in jail for violating
the restraining order against his baby mama by showing up
at her home and assaulting her. When what would happen
when he was in the cage where he couldn't kill her.
A liberal group, a Portland Freedom Fund, paid to bail

(19:53):
him out because they don't like criminals to be in
prison or jail where they need be. So this group
of white women do gooders decided that Mohammed Osman Adn.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
Thirty six years old.

Speaker 6 (20:12):
Should be released from prison so that he could go
back and do what or released from jail, You go
to jail temporarily go to prison to service in its
long term, so that he could be released back and
do the only thing he cared about, which is going
back to beat to death the woman who he had

(20:32):
been beating when they send him to jail. The Portland
Freedom Fund Portland Freedom Fund. I hope that the Portland
Freedom Fund finds justice. I hope that God forbid if

(20:52):
something bad ever happened, and I'm not asking for it
to I'm not suggesting.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
That it should.

Speaker 6 (20:57):
But if anything bad ever happens to the poor and
Freedom Fund, I hope there is the equivalent Portland Freedom
Fund that will support the people who brought them harm.
This woman did not deserve what happened to her. This
is what the Portland Freedom Fund looks like. This is

(21:18):
what white liberals do. You've got to understand they are
not harmless, they are evil.

Speaker 2 (21:26):
Treat them as such.

Speaker 6 (21:29):
The story, if you will from Katu TV in My
Beloved Portland.

Speaker 7 (21:36):
The story begins in twenty twenty two, when Rachel Abraham
reported domestic abuse at the hands of her partner, Mohammed Adan.
He was arrested and then released, later attacking Abraham again,
this time a judge setting his bail for twenty thousand dollars.
The Portland Freedom Fund, a nonprofit that was dedicated to

(21:56):
helping people of color, post bail build him out. Five
days later, a don killed Abraham while their three kids
were in the home.

Speaker 10 (22:05):
Despite that clear danger, the defendant was released from custody
by a group known as the Portland Freedom Fund. I
am sickened and outraged that this group chose to bail
out the defendant. That reckless decision had real world consequences.

Speaker 7 (22:27):
The Portland Freedom Fund disbanded after the controversy over Abraham's murder,
But we were able to get a hold of a
former board member.

Speaker 2 (22:34):
We don't show up though, Hey, this person should really
be let out.

Speaker 10 (22:39):
So you know.

Speaker 3 (22:43):
Of story attempting to flights blame on us as if
we control individual defies f bailed.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
You know, it's a little bit, you know, I al
would say that it's a reach, right.

Speaker 7 (22:59):
Terence Hayes says, his organization would provide employment opportunities in
housing for the people that they'd bail out. He also
says he would vet his clients to make sure they
were committed to being on the right path. Although he
did not bail out Adan. On Wednesday, via email, we
asked the District Attorney's office about that, writing, while the

(23:19):
Portland Freedom Fund did bail him out, he could have
been bailed out by anyone else since he was already bailed.
Isn't the issue a question of bail eligibility at its route?
What is the District Attorney's office doing to address this
hole in the system. The District Attorney's office explained in
part that the crimes he was accused of required setting

(23:40):
some sort of ail.

Speaker 10 (23:41):
The bill laws do need to change. It's something that
I have spoken out on repeatedly that I believe our
bill laws are out of step.

Speaker 7 (23:51):
And we reached out to the Oregon Justice Department and
they pointed us to the twenty twenty two law which
tasked judges to set and bail to a level where
they reach he reasonably feel like the defendant will still show.

Speaker 6 (24:02):
Up to quote where I can't believe he just said
that happens that Michael very show.

Speaker 2 (24:10):
What a time to be alive? I'm told you not
to love what a.

Speaker 6 (24:15):
Time to be alive. Indeed, I got an email from
a fellow named Gary Herod. I don't know Gary Herod,
but he's a listener and I enjoy, as I've said
many times to you, reading emails from listeners. And that
might not sound like much fun to most of you,
but I get to hear from people. There's not a

(24:35):
lot of people that have this this still deal, and
for my skill set and hobbies and passion and interests
and weird peccadillas, it's perfect for me. And people from
all over the country will send me an email. But
this isn't like reading the email from the customer service
at McDonald's.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
You know, hey, my fries were cold.

Speaker 6 (24:57):
The beauty of being a talk radio host, a talk
show host is it's a very intimate medium. I felt
like I knew Rush, even though I didn't know Rush
when Sean Hannity stood up for me because I said,
if they build a mosque on the site of nine
to eleven, which they were threatening to do, which seemed
like a crazy idea back then. Now I'm pretty sure

(25:19):
they'll do it. When I said that years ago, when
they I had a caller who said, I hope they
build a mosque on the size of Muslim guy trying
to provoke me, and I said, if they do, I
hope it's blown up. Well, that didn't sit very well
with a lot of people when I made Good Morning
America the next day, and it threatened my career at
the time, but my company stood by me, and Hannity

(25:40):
called me and he was very it was very supportive
of and I've never forgotten that, and he told me,
you know, kind of how to navigate through this thing.

Speaker 2 (25:51):
And I just when he called.

Speaker 6 (25:56):
We had not talked before, but I felt like I
knew him, I knew the voice, and I felt like
Russia and I were buddies. And Clay and Buck and
I are friends, along with Jesse Kelly.

Speaker 2 (26:08):
There's a few of us that kind of.

Speaker 6 (26:09):
Run together, and we'll gather at Buck Sexton's Christmas party
in Miami, or they've come to my house and we're
kind of the guys, the boys. Even Carol Markowitz, who's
not one of the boys, he's one of the boys
when she's with us. But there is a fraternity of us.
But even if I didn't hang out with him, when

(26:30):
I listen on the air, their show is a hangout
by design, that's the feel. It's very conversation with the
middle of the day. They're not lecturing you. It's not
a ted talk. So when I hear from people, I
feel like they let their guard down and they're very
honest with me and very open with me, and they
share things without regard to whether I'm going to judge
them or whatever else. And this has nothing to do

(26:50):
with judging this email, but people have a random thought
and they'll send it to me. They'll tell me about
their career, they'll tell me they're going.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
Through a divorce.

Speaker 6 (26:58):
They tell me they just buried their mother and how
are their child and how they're feeling about it. And
it can be emotionally draining, but it's also flattering that
people have this level of trust. So I spend a
lot of time interacting with listeners through email because it's
my best form of show prep. If somebody says I'm
a blacksmith and you were talking about blacksmiths the other day,

(27:19):
I start firing off questions, Hey, where are you a blacksmith?
How long have you done that. Can you make any money?
What's the biggest challenge? What's the hardest thing about it?
How's the business?

Speaker 2 (27:28):
I mean, when are you going to have a living,
breathing Sure you can do chat, GPT or grock or
whatever you do, but those things are just data at
the end of the day, They're just data. This is a.

Speaker 6 (27:39):
Living, breathing human being who may not have wanted to
be a blacksmith when he grew up, or maybe his
dad was a blacksmith and he always wanted to be
a blacksmith. But I mean, you're talking about doing something
that goes back to for centuries, right, So anyway, I
do love when you send me emails. Michael Berryshow dot
com is a website and it says, send Michael an email.
It comes straight to me. So I get any from

(28:00):
a fellow named Gary Herod and he says, when will
this eir ever end? Florida congressman indicted was the subject.
I missed this story when it broke. Obviously mainstream media
is not going to cover it. Found the article buried
deep in my local conro paper. Oh this is north
of This guy lives in Houston. While enjoying a nice

(28:21):
lunch at the Greenoes on I forty five North in Conro.
Always a treat when I have time to pop in.
That is a restaurant that he knows. It's owned by
a friend of mine. He has twenty twenty three Text
mex restaurants, very very popular. Text mex has become the
most popular cuisine in Houston. And if you're outside of Texas,

(28:41):
you would call it Mexican food, but it's not Mexican food.
It is a unique blend that is a regional cuisine
that is really special to our region and nobody else
does it well. And I'm sorry for you if you
live outside of Texas, but your text Mex is not
tex mex and your Mexican is not Mexican. It's some
asteridized version. But that's another subject for another day and

(29:02):
why that is the case. But this is about a
congress This was a sitting congressman.

Speaker 2 (29:06):
Florida.

Speaker 6 (29:06):
Congresswoman Sheila Cherfilus McCormick, Democrat from Florida.

Speaker 2 (29:11):
Of course she knew she was a Democrat, was.

Speaker 6 (29:14):
Indicted in November twenty twenty five on federal charges including
conspiracy theft of five million dollars in FEMA funds, money laundering,
false statements stemming from an alleged scheme to disaster relief
funds meant for her family's healthcare company for personal use,
including her twenty twenty one campaign. Every single day there

(29:36):
is something about fraud in government, maybe not on the
scale of the Somali fraud, although I believe there's a
thousand of those around the country, daycare centers that are
getting millions of dollars that don't even exist. And if
you ever notice, the most likely money that is going
to be stolen by Democrats is always in some sort

(30:00):
of a fund or account or intention of do gooderism.
It's always a children's program, it's always a poor people's program.
It's always an emergency relief program, which makes it even
more disgusting if you think about it, but it should

(30:21):
tell you something. These con artists, and that's what they are.
The way they get more money to be spent is
to talk about the children and the poor people. They
may throw in the minorities, I may occasionally throw in
the old people, but usually it's the children and the
poor people. And everybody says, ah ah, here's awesome alms

(30:43):
for the poor. Well do children and poor people, and
then nobody ever follows up and money just pours into
these things. The amount of money that is stolen from
DEI programs we used to call them affirmative action. The
amount of money that is stolen from scholarship funds. The
amount of money that is stolen from do gooder causes

(31:07):
by evil Democrats who constantly talk about caring for people
and compassion. Shut them all down. Shut down the funding
for non government organizations. Americans are tired of handing money

(31:29):
to the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
And guess what.

Speaker 6 (31:35):
Their funding was cut by Congress and they have dissolved
the private quote unquote nonprofit corporation after fifty eight years.
They were getting billions of dollars to tell us that
Americans were racist and Democrats were great, and the Clintons
were heroes and Obamas and now they.

Speaker 2 (31:54):
Don't exist anymore.

Speaker 6 (31:55):
And guess what, that's just the start stop fund being
all of this nonsense. Go into every public school. Cut
the budget in half. No more, illegal aliens go into
every hospital. Cut the illegal aliens, cut the budget. Take
your country back good pray Paul Ready. I love you, folks,

(32:18):
I love everything you stand for. I love your service
to this country. I love your patriotism, I love your votes,
I love your willingness to stand up.

Speaker 2 (32:25):
I appreciate you.

Speaker 6 (32:26):
We get to do what we do because you support
what we do and you support our sponsors, and I
love you for it. Now send me an email, tell
me who you are and where you are, and I'll respondent.

Speaker 2 (32:37):
Good thank you, and good night,
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