Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time time time, lucking load. So Michael
Verry Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
It's Charlie from BlackBerry Smoke.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
I can feel a good one coming on.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
It's the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 3 (00:26):
Any attempt to restrict drinking and driving here is viewed
by Sun as downright undemocratic.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
Two six packs, Shiner ninety nine, sient putet ladder, luck
as track center.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
Fifth of patrol.
Speaker 4 (00:43):
Us down attic glue cooler.
Speaker 2 (00:46):
Take a guess at all to do?
Speaker 5 (00:49):
I can feel a good one coming on, throwing a
Wildy Hubbard sing a lone red day mother. Any blues
I had before or gone.
Speaker 4 (01:07):
Another working week is over, no choice saying sober.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
I can feel a good one coming on.
Speaker 5 (01:17):
Yet a week Ron, We're gonna get to feeling right.
We gonna keep this party rock until the break of dog.
Speaker 6 (01:29):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:30):
I can feel a good one coming off.
Speaker 4 (01:33):
Just kind of getting calling it when Calcat I put
in a hard day's work, but in eleven foelve hours
a day, and they ain't getting you.
Speaker 1 (01:39):
Truck and the last rain one or two beers.
Speaker 4 (01:44):
Three blongs in a rack top Mustang followed us down
to the lake and didn't have to think about that
too long, skinny dipping in the bride moon out situation,
and couldn't be more right.
Speaker 5 (02:02):
I can feel a good one coming on, Yill. We
we're gonna get to feel it ride. Were gonna keep
this party rock until the break of don Yeah, I
can feel a good one, feel like.
Speaker 6 (02:23):
A good one.
Speaker 5 (02:25):
I can feel a good one coming.
Speaker 7 (02:27):
No, they're making it last where you can't drink when
you want to, You have to wear a seat belt
when you're driving.
Speaker 6 (02:37):
Prison gonna become this country. Whoo yeah, we are alone nice.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
We're gonna get to feed it rid. We gonna keep
this party rock until the break.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
This is gonna be clip number six oh three, Lama.
Speaker 6 (03:05):
Again.
Speaker 8 (03:06):
This is a woman named Jennifer Welch. I confess I've
never heard of her. She's a co host of a
podcast called I've Had It. What's the name of your podcast?
Because everybody else has a podcast too, So she's talking
about she's very upset at Trump's success. These people don't
(03:28):
want happiness in our country. If Trump could make everyone happy,
he could end cancer, end heart attacks, in strokes, end poverty,
it wouldn't matter because they don't want good things to happen.
They don't to them. Government and policy has nothing to
do with any of that. It all has to do
with power. And since Trump represents every bad relationship they've
(03:53):
ever had, every man who didn't ask them out, every
man who swore before he had sex, he'd call him
back in the morning, and the next morning he goes
to them, and so they project all of that onto Trump.
That's Trump is to them. They need therapy over this,
and they're in therapy, and this is why they hate Trump.
(04:14):
And so they say things like this about, you know,
if you're rich, you have to kiss Trump's ass, because
they're so bitter at Trump's success, and they're really bitter
at a strong man's success because they're resentful of the
men who didn't choose them, and that is very, very
(04:39):
difficult for them.
Speaker 3 (04:40):
Here's what she said, every single one of you I'm
watching this, there are a million times more liberated than
a billionaire. And we have this growing up in America.
We think if we're rich, we're free. We think if
we're rich, it will solve all of our problems. There's
no question I've been poor and I've been rich, and
there's no question that having money to pay your bills
(05:01):
makes life easier, but it doesn't make you happy, nor
does it liberate you. And look no further than all
of these billionaires who have made money off of all
of us, all of our hard work, exploited the labor
and then they've tried to demonize people's ability to form unions,
and they demonize the poor, and they don't want to
(05:22):
pay you a livable wage, and everything is built for them,
and this administration will continue to favor them as long
as they humiliate themselves, which I think one of the
worst things on the planet to be right now would
be a billionaire because you'd have to go kiss that
miserable second dementia ridden poop field, diaper, bruised hands, swollen
(05:46):
kankle's ass, and there isn't a bank account big enough
that I would want to do that.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
Oh my, would you like fries with that, ma'am? This
is the drive through?
Speaker 8 (06:02):
Oh my, But she's not the only one. Let's check
in with Governor Timmy Walls from Minnesota.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
He's not doing well either.
Speaker 7 (06:13):
I think the biggest thing is we have a federal
system that we're all in it together, that we help
other states when they need it. But we have a
situation where they are trying to divide us amongst ourselves.
Speaker 1 (06:26):
They're trying to provide specific.
Speaker 7 (06:29):
Aid to states that they like at the moment, which
is absolutely unconscionable. We would, and the State of Minnesota
would do whatever we could to help folks, whether they're
in Texas or whether they're in Iowa, or whether they're
in Massachusetts. States being left on their own is an
untenable situation. We either that or give us our money back,
(06:49):
give us our federal money back, and we'll.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
Deal with it.
Speaker 8 (06:53):
Well, you've become Somalia, so you won't deal with it,
and you're going to require a bailout. And when the
Somali's completely takeover, it'll be a red state. You'll flee too, Yes,
you'll press your way to a red state. I feel
certain here is speaking of people who have Trump delusion syndrome.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
Governor JB.
Speaker 8 (07:14):
Pritzker who says Democrats are not for open borders because
the polls show that Americans are not for open borders.
So he said we're not for open borders, and then
literally ten seconds later, he calls for giving illegal aliens citizenship.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
It starts with that.
Speaker 9 (07:31):
People, anybody who's progressive is for open borders. Some people out, well,
I'll tell you that Democrats are not.
Speaker 1 (07:38):
For open border.
Speaker 9 (07:39):
I mean, we had a real problem and we needed
to do something about the border. But now now we
need to do something about the people who work for
you and work for other people who are here in
law abiding, doing the right thing, and they want to
be good Americans. They want a path towards day in
(08:00):
this country, whether we call it citizenship or just legal residency.
We need to give them that path, and we're not
doing it today. And the Republicans have never proposed this.
Under Donald Trump, he wants to do something about immigration.
He should have come into office and right away he
had control of the.
Speaker 1 (08:14):
House and the Senate.
Speaker 9 (08:15):
The presidency could have passed immigration reformers.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
There's only one place substance. It's so crazy, right, so totally.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
Wago that everybody has a party. The Michael Berry Joe wrapped.
Speaker 10 (08:31):
In cam a flow, staunch defender, the rast sat.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
I grew up a custom to the rail will flag.
Speaker 7 (08:42):
Under the shadow, the crowds.
Speaker 8 (08:45):
Its liberals, the media, the Democrats.
Speaker 9 (08:50):
Some folks to steal mad because the sound is when
people who tried to take down Trump and did so illegally.
Speaker 8 (08:58):
Are being called on the carpet, which tells you they
don't mind lawlessness in pursuit of their grand scheme, their
grand fantasy of ending Trump. But they didn't just try
to end Trump. They also committed crimes. John Bolton is
(09:19):
alleged to have committed what would fall under the category
of espionage and or treason selling state secrets, their state
secrets for a reason, he's not telling them the Orange
is the state flower of Florida, and he's told them,
and now, oh no, now they know he's not even
(09:43):
You know what's interesting. You see this basketball story that
broke with Chauncey Billips out of Portland and d Jones
and some of these other guys. They've done a multi
year investigation into gambling on basketball games. I'm not here
to say the guys shouldn't be punished or that they
(10:03):
should do it. You got the integrity of the sport,
but it's a sport. They gambled on basketball games. And
how many resources did we spend bringing them down? How
many hours were spent with this elaborate scheme to bring
them down? Okay, fine, but why is it that it
(10:28):
takes a citizen journalist to expose comy Leticia James. You know,
Leticia James, the attorney general of the State of New York,
largest state in the Union population wise, was committing.
Speaker 1 (10:43):
Fraud, which is a huge deal. And it wasn't discovered
by law enforcement. It wasn't discovered by investigation.
Speaker 8 (10:51):
It was actually uncovered by a citizen journalist, by a
guy who's an ex felon. And he says it every time.
He Hey, I'm a felon, I could admitted fraud. I
now consult with companies to help them avoid fraud. I
know fraud when I see it. It's got a red
bow attached to it. If you know what you're looking for,
it screams out fraud over here, he points it out. Now,
(11:14):
every prima facia evidence a woman committed fraud, you can
see it. But why why didn't anyone check into that
when it was questionable what she was doing in the
first place. Well, we've got basketball, because that's a good
that's a very good. Basketball is a good distraction. They
(11:39):
don't want you paying attention to what they paid Big
Pharma or who all pushed you to put it in
your arm. They don't want you paying attention to why
we send money to Ukraine and how much we send
and where it ends up. They don't want you paying
attention to what the illegal aliens are doing to our economy,
our neighborhoods, our schools, our.
Speaker 1 (11:57):
Hospitals, our families. They don't want you to too.
Speaker 9 (12:01):
So here's some basketball investigation to keep you good and distracted.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
Well, we're gonna tell you.
Speaker 8 (12:09):
Watching Tiss, James Big Tish, watching John Bolton, who called
for the imprisonment of Donald Trump, watching James Comy the
most arrogant. James Comy is kind of like remember when
he wrote in the Sand at the Beach and oh
it was so clever. James Comy is kind of like
OJ Simpson when he wrote the book If I Did It,
(12:33):
This is How and I Did It was in big letters.
He's too clever by half. He thinks he's real cute
with what he's trying to pull off. But the idea
of Tiss, James, John Bolton, and Jim Comy, whether they
end up in prison or not, they're having sleepless nights
(12:54):
right now because, as I've said many times, they know
what all they've done. Neither Trump nor anyone else does.
They don't know how much the Department of Justice has
on them. They know they got something, but they also
know if they keep picking this gab and digging in deeper.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
There's a lot more under there.
Speaker 8 (13:19):
They're not just scared of being prosecuted, they're scared of
what that prosecution's going to be. And that in and
of itself is part of the punishment. So for people
who say they'll never go to prison, probably won't. Probably won't,
But don't think they haven't been punished. Don't think they
are not crying into their pillows. And I don't mean
(13:40):
biting a pillow Tim Walt style. I mean crying into
the pillow.
Speaker 2 (13:44):
Oh.
Speaker 1 (13:45):
It just watching them scramble.
Speaker 8 (13:47):
Like roaches to figure out a way out of legal liability.
It's all a game to these crooks, and as they say,
play stupid games, win stupid prizes.
Speaker 11 (13:56):
Welcome to America's number game show, No One is above.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
The Law, with the pize his poorer conviction and the
only in show.
Speaker 11 (14:05):
Where the audience gets excited once you're invited.
Speaker 5 (14:09):
And now here's your host, Jimmy Lawful.
Speaker 11 (14:14):
Hello America, Hello, and looks like we have a great
season for you. As the Democrats continue there, lying and crying. Bobby,
the audience is Diana O. Who's our first contestant, Jo.
Speaker 1 (14:26):
Bolton from now.
Speaker 11 (14:29):
Bolton once served as the National Security Advisor for Donald J.
Trump from twenty eighteen to twenty nineteen. Then he turns
out for Bolton when earlier this month he was indicted
on eighteen counts related to improper handling of classified documents.
Those documents, possibly hidden in his giant mustache, were allegedly
transmitted and sent to two individuals unauthorized to view classified documents.
Speaker 1 (14:49):
All right, let's spin the wheel. Now tell him what
he won, Bobby. It's a beautiful eight by ten cell.
That's right.
Speaker 11 (15:01):
His privacy still comes with a comfy two inch mattress
with matching yellow stained pillow in personal year at All. No,
we're gonna be bothered by neighbors as you're concealed and
comfort by a night in Steel Security Gates twenty four
to seven thirty sixty five.
Speaker 1 (15:19):
Jimmy, back to you.
Speaker 11 (15:21):
Congratulations, John Bolton. Next week's contestant James Coney on America's
Favorite game show, No One is a bubble Ball.
Speaker 2 (15:35):
Michael, Do I have a story for you?
Speaker 1 (15:38):
My brother in law, murdered to Native Americans. Michael Berry show,
Now you have my attention.
Speaker 6 (16:05):
I gotta catch up on my blue even burn.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
My hands load. It's hard to be got. You're the man.
Speaker 2 (16:12):
I got girls that can cook. I got girls that
can clean. I got girls they can do anything.
Speaker 12 (16:17):
Getting between, I got it, getting ready, make everything right.
Speaker 2 (16:22):
All my rowdy friends are coming over tonight.
Speaker 6 (16:30):
Hey do you want to money? Hey honey, this is
ready to get the big Honey. We cook the bing
in the grand got.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
I was gonna save this to the last second.
Speaker 8 (16:46):
Because there's a longer audio clip than I normally play.
But then I thought, I don't want to leave you
on a negative note, so let me get through something
really quick. This is gonna be audible. I'm on Bill
Gates seven. Bio in Tech develop one of the quote
unquote vaccines with Pfizer, and this is saying that if
(17:09):
you're fifty to sixty years old, you need a booster
every six months.
Speaker 13 (17:16):
An infection where you'll get a high viral load would
be like vaccination, but you know, to be safe every
six months, you're probably going to be vaccinated.
Speaker 1 (17:26):
As we get more data, they might even.
Speaker 13 (17:28):
Make that shorter for people or you know, say sixty
or over seventy, where the duration seems to be a
bit lower. So we're in for ongoing vaccination to stay
absolutely safe.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
You know, I don't mind a guy trying to make
a buck if you're selling.
Speaker 8 (17:47):
Tires, you know, hey, you really need to get new
tires on your truck every six months, or you really
need to buy a new shirt every six month. No
real harm done if people do it. But in this case,
you're injecting yourself in many cases with pull under the
guise of medical guidance, and I have a huge problem
with that. And then when it was clear the vaccine
(18:09):
didn't work and the well was running dry, he just
sold his stock for a huge profit, and then he
changed his tune.
Speaker 14 (18:16):
The deaths, it's been completely horrific, and I would expect
that will lead the R and D budgets to be
focused on things we didn't have today. You know, we
didn't have vaccines that block transmission. We got vaccines to
help you with your health, but they only slightly reduced
the transmissions. We need a new way of doing the vaccine.
Speaker 8 (18:42):
Oh so we need to get it every six months
or we'll die. And then once he sold it's not
so bad, and then he said the whole COVID thing,
it wasn't turns out not to be as bad as
we originally thought, and told.
Speaker 10 (18:59):
You at that point, we didn't really understand the fatality rate,
you know, we didn't understand that it's a fairly low
fatality rate, and that it's a disease mainly of the elderly,
kind of like flu is, although a bit different than that.
Speaker 8 (19:17):
You didn't understand that, but I did, and you didn't
want to understand that because you were invested in selling
vaccine shots that turned out not to be a vaccine.
It killed my brother and a lot of other people
in this country. And I really do hope there is
a pit of hell you end up in, you bastard.
(19:37):
How much money is enough for you? How many people died?
Speaker 6 (19:44):
You know?
Speaker 8 (19:46):
I was watching the other day nineteen eighty three, Kadaffi
was had there had been threats on Kadaffi. There've been
attempted coups on Kadaffi, and so he had a guy
that he believed was had had gone to the United
States to study and he'd come back and he believed
he was planning a coup who knows it was true enough.
So there was a big basketball game plan, and everyone
(20:07):
had come for the basketball game, and he had the
guy brought out into the middle of the court and
he's bound, his feet are bound and his hands are bound,
and he begs for his life, and the crowd calls
for him to be hanged, and eventually he is. I
would like to see Anthony Fauci tried in a court
of law, and then if found guilty, I would like
(20:29):
to see him hanged.
Speaker 1 (20:31):
Now.
Speaker 8 (20:31):
I don't fantasize about violence against the left because we disagree.
I imagine and believe deeply in justice, and I think
there should be consequences for what Anthony Fauci has done.
And what he has done is, in my opinion, knowingly
(20:53):
intentionally given supposed medical advice as a member of the government,
knowing that it was trusted that he had every reason
to believe, could end up getting people killed. Bill Gates
history of conflating the dire nature of things just to
(21:17):
turn around and say, oh, it's not as bad as
we thought. This guy invested fifty five million dollars in
biointech in September of nineteen.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
How did he know?
Speaker 8 (21:26):
How did he know ahead of time? This was before
COVID was on the radar. But around that same time,
Bill Gates held a coronavirus simulation in New York with
the CIA. How is that the case? Here's RFK Junior
explaining the event to theo VON. Thank god for RFK Junior.
Speaker 15 (21:51):
This is what the National Security Agency is. They believe
that September twelve was the day that it actually began circulating. Okay,
a month later, you have in New York City Bill
Gates hosting a coronavirus pandemic simulation at his co host
(22:13):
is April Haines, the deputy director of the CIA. What
is the CIA doing at a public health forum. They
don't do public health, They do coup decta. Now, April Haines,
it's the top spot in America. She is the and
she is the one who hid the torture, the torture
(22:36):
tapes from Abu Gray, you know, during that CIA scandal,
So that she now is the head of the National
Security Agency, the top spot in the country. She's also
in charge of the coronavirus response. At the simulation, you
have April Haynes, you have people from all the social
media companies. You have people from the pharmaceutical companies Ay
(23:00):
Johnson and Johnson, the biggest one they do. And you
have another guy, peculiar guy, George Gayo, who's the head
of the Chinese CDC oh Man. He s sounds sneaking anybody,
So George Gale must have known, yeah, that this was
circulating at that point. By the way, any of your
(23:21):
listeners who does not believe what I'm saying can go
and look up event to one. It's still on YouTube.
Speaker 1 (23:28):
And this was before the christ It was.
Speaker 15 (23:30):
After it started circulating, but none of us knew about
it Anuary before the This is after the NSA had
said that this had occurred. The NSA now says, looking back,
this it occurs, and that the time they didn't know.
So then we didn't The world did not know until
around January third.
Speaker 1 (23:48):
So then there was a big get together of.
Speaker 15 (23:50):
Some other and they're all together planning what are here's
how we're gonna head to look aroun a virus pandemic
if it happens. Was Fauci there, No, Fauci was not there,
but there were people from his agency there. So and
the interesting thing is there was no discussion of public health.
They weren't saying, how do we going to get repurpose
(24:10):
medications out? Were we going to link eleven million doctors
frontline physicians around the world on a communication grid so
that we can quickly figure out what's working. You know,
what's working at Bangladesh, what's working in Argentina. We are
the best protocols, were the best repurposed medications that seem
effective the right, like what's already working against this type
(24:31):
of thing that we could ask people to get it
prepared and get on now to help themselves. Well, nobody
even when it starts.
Speaker 8 (24:37):
I bet you we've got ten thousands sweet little ladies
of seventy or more that would make a pound cake
that you could eat cold and enjoy.
Speaker 2 (24:47):
Michael Berry's show.
Speaker 8 (25:41):
Well, there are things I didn't get to, and I
keep a stack. I was enjoyed the way Rushwood would
organize his stack. God bless him. I miss him. I
miss his show, and I could get to those things.
But I am mindful that for those of you podcast
(26:04):
listeners this won't be true because you're kind of time shifting,
not shape shifting, time shifting. You could be listening at
any time, But for those listening live on the air.
The chances are you're headed home and it's the end
of the week. And I don't like to send people
headed home in a sour mood. I don't want you
(26:28):
to kick the dog. I don't want you to yell
at your spouse. I don't want you to.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
Be you know less.
Speaker 8 (26:37):
I want I want it to be the Brady Bunch,
where you walk in, honey, I'm home.
Speaker 1 (26:43):
Everyone's excited. Mom or dad is home.
Speaker 8 (26:49):
But I want to say this, a lot of our
folks work on the weekend. A lot of cops, firefighter,
small business owners, ticket takers, whatever it is your job
is detail workers. There are plenty of our people who
work on the weekend, but most of our people have
the weekend off. And while you're resting and relaxing and
(27:10):
going crazy because your college football team is not playing
as well as they should. With all the distractions and
hobbies and working on your old car and gardening and
seeing the grand kids and all the other things you
do on the weekend, it's a great opportunity to really
take stock of one's life and to really take control
(27:34):
of one's life. Obviously, that means your health, sleeping more
and drinking more water is the two first things you
can do that will help everybody get more sleep.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
Drink more water. Everybody can do that everybody.
Speaker 8 (27:50):
Of course, moderate exercise for people who don't, more advanced
exercise for people who do. There are a lot of
things that we could get into cleaning up your diet.
You can still eat good foods, but in moderation. All
of those things are about your physical health. But what
about your mental health? I have noticed, and not just
(28:14):
among young people, not just among liberals, I have noticed
a decreasing stability in the mental state of much of
our population. And I think part of that is our
country is on a roller coaster ride. And you know,
when you get to the end of a roller coaster ride,
(28:35):
you get off and you go, who let me breathe
for a moment. I think that we are on a
roller coaster ride of our own making, and it's jangling
our mind As Hunter S. Thompson would say, our minds
are jangled. We're not balanced, we're not capable of making
(28:56):
good decisions, and it becomes like an addict and it
fits into traditional definitions of addiction that we crave the rage,
We crave the rage that the left gives us nobody
(29:20):
actually watches the view.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
I'm certain of that. No one actually watches the view.
Speaker 8 (29:26):
The view exists for the second hand replaying, and that's
people go they said that on the view, you would.
Speaker 1 (29:36):
Have never known that. Nobody would have known it.
Speaker 8 (29:40):
If a tree falls in the woods and nobody hears it,
did it make a sound. Nobody's listening to the view.
Nobody's watching the view. But as long as the view
serves the purpose as being that the standard for the
most ridiculous thing you can say, then they get clicks,
(30:00):
they go viral, so the view is passed around after
the fact. And that's part of the strategy. You see,
you don't want to be milk toast. You don't want
to be moderate and reasonable and have disagreements.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
No, no, no, no, because we need to hear you be crazy.
Speaker 8 (30:22):
This is why AOC has taken to saying the most
absurd things ever. And now there's a competition. If you
want to be the one that's talked about the most,
you have to say the most ridiculous things. We're gonna
kill Trump. We're gonna hang Trump, We're gonna hang all
his supporters, We're gonna hang the white people.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
We're gonna hang them in. We're gonna and so it.
Speaker 8 (30:43):
Just gets more and more and more ridiculous.
Speaker 1 (30:48):
Don Lemon.
Speaker 8 (30:49):
When Don Lemon was let go from CNN, he couldn't
find his footing. Nobody was paying attention to him, and
he just increasingly started saying more bombasted, disturbing things. And
now he's white men are broken. Maybe only the one
you're sleeping with. But I don't know your position. What
are you talking about? White men are broken? He doesn't
(31:12):
believe that he lays down with one every night, but
he needs to upset you. He's got to push your button.
And if he can push your button, you see in
America today, it's not important that you're respected and admired.
Speaker 1 (31:28):
The only thing is you can't be ignored. And so
in order to avoid being ignored, they're out in the
middle of the street screeching.
Speaker 8 (31:38):
And that's fine. I don't care that they are. You
just need to ask yourself a question. If I don't
react to that nonsensical thing, how will it affect the country.
Because I'll tell you, if you deny oxygen to a fire,
(32:00):
it goes out, But if you keep adding oxygen to it,
you're giving it greater life. I'm not saying to ignore
things that are real threats in our country. I'm saying
everything can't equally be the end of the world. And
(32:20):
more important, is your rage going to contribute to any
part of the solution? And if it's not, why are
you doing it? Or let me ask it another way.
If you're raging over what the left is doing, you
only have so many hours a day, what are you
not doing? It takes a lot of energy to rage.
(32:43):
You gotta go online and post about it. You gotta
tell everybody that I'm so upset. People will come up
to me at a party. They'll come across the room
at a party, we're having drinks, we're away from work,
we're with our families, and they're I'm so mad. What
are you mad about? Pocrat will go over that's the
mad corner over there. I don't wish to be mad.
(33:06):
This isn't a hobby for me. If it is for you, if.
Speaker 1 (33:10):
You're well, I'm just mad all the time. That means
you're not.
Speaker 8 (33:18):
In control of your emotions and your life. It's like
all these people we keep getting all these studies that
people are living paycheck to paycheck, Well, yeah, they've been
living paycheck to paycheck there and lived entire lives.
Speaker 1 (33:31):
I don't feel sorry for that.
Speaker 12 (33:33):
These people don't have food, they don't have enough food.
Speaker 8 (33:36):
They have to have because they don't work, because they
don't save.
Speaker 12 (33:41):
If you have an iPhone and don't have food, if
you have tattoos and don't have food, you make bad decisions.
Speaker 1 (33:53):
But our people were better than that.
Speaker 11 (33:56):
Have a wonderful weekends, Thank you, and good night.