Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Varry Show is.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
On the air.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
You love is the greatest thing in the world. But
that's not what he said.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
He distinctively said to blave, and as we all know too,
blave means to bluff. So you're probably playing cards and
he cheated.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Liar liar, which genuine.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
We just basically follow the money, you know, we look
at the presence executive orders and we else just follow
the money. So we started looking closely at USCID because
they were completely violating the presence executive orders to suspend
UH foreign foreign aid you know, which what's called figniate,
but in our view is a lot of corruption. We
(00:55):
post the receipts, so it's like this, this action has
been taken. This action has been taken. So when we
get criticisms, say like of what which are lying do
you disagree with? Like which cut cut? Which cost saving
do you disagree with? And people usually can't think of anything.
Speaker 4 (01:15):
There are people who are charged with trying to find savings.
So yes, it's an attack on government, but it's also
an attack on this government. What I mean by that
is it's an attack on this government that needs to.
Speaker 1 (01:26):
Be headed by a black man.
Speaker 4 (01:28):
It's an attack on this government that almost elected a
black woman to the highest office in the land. It's
an attack on a government that has been more welcoming
and more supportive of people who have come to this
country and search for a better life.
Speaker 5 (01:41):
So the next time you feel tempted to trust your government.
A story from News Nation. The US Army sprayed a
predominantly black, low income neighborhood in Saint Louis in the
fifties and sixties with a chemical compound as part of
a Cold War experiment. Now, it takes a while for
these things to come out, but eventually it comes out.
Speaker 1 (02:05):
The fog drifted through the streets like a ghost. That's
exactly what it looked like, a thick fall.
Speaker 6 (02:10):
It was summertime, it was hot. We were just run
through it as fast as we could and try to
just cool ourself off.
Speaker 1 (02:17):
It stuff into you.
Speaker 5 (02:18):
The spray was so foul as far as the older
it made some of us have headaches, nausea, dizziness.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
That's it made me sick. It wasn't the weather.
Speaker 7 (02:29):
It was an eerie smoke descending from rooftops, rolling from
the backs of trucks.
Speaker 6 (02:35):
Regular fact, that truck, but it had a big machine
on the back, and it had a big nozzle that
really sprayed up the.
Speaker 3 (02:45):
Fog.
Speaker 1 (02:45):
You couldn't even see through.
Speaker 6 (02:47):
It was that thick and it really uh, we felt
it as it would adhere to our skin. And as
far as the guys on top of the buildings, they
tried to portray them to us as maintenance workers, but
we were like, what is it maintenace worker doing in
They basically a hass Matt suite and they had masks
and goggles.
Speaker 7 (03:08):
In the nineteen fifties and sixties, in secret, the US
Army sprayed zinc hadmium sulfide into the air of a
Saint Louis housing project, a largely black neighborhood called Pruidigo.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
It was a a little situation for us in Prudigo.
We were subjects. We were subjects.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
They didn't ask for our permission, We didn't ask for
them to spay us for my government ex used me
like I was a gump.
Speaker 7 (03:39):
We're standing out where Pruidigo used to be here in
Saint Louis, and it's hard to believe more than ten
thousand people used to live here. As we bring our
drone up, you can see it's mostly just an empty lot,
now overgrown with trees. This used to be filled with
thirty three high rise buildings. It was all demolished in
nineteen seventy six, and according to the National Research Council,
(04:00):
Saint Louis was chosen for spraying experiments because it had
similar characteristics to Soviet targets like Moscow in terms of
population density and terrain and proximity to a river. The
government now admits to a secretive series of Cold War tests,
including one dubbed Large Area Coverage. More than thirty tests
(04:21):
conducted across the US and Canada spring zincadmium sulfide from planes,
rooftops and vehicles to simulate how a biological attack might spread,
all to prepare for potential warfare against the Soviets.
Speaker 6 (04:34):
Men of US been in the military and had top
secret clearances.
Speaker 1 (04:37):
We know how it works. We have died for americ
We have fault for America. You are a veteran. I
am United States Air Force.
Speaker 7 (04:47):
Better, doctor Starks, You're a veteran as well as is
there a sense of betrayal here?
Speaker 1 (04:53):
Definitely? Definitely here.
Speaker 7 (04:56):
They want to know if those secret tests have anything
to do with what they're observed with their own eyes.
Speaker 5 (05:01):
My loss latoulis to kes, I lost a broadly let's love.
Speaker 6 (05:08):
I've been diagnosed, reaching met with the reform of mphoma.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
I had cancer.
Speaker 6 (05:13):
The left kid had POSU removal of my left kid.
Speaker 7 (05:17):
News Nation reached out to the Army for answers. They
provided a one page response. It says the Army's own
Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine investigated in nineteen
ninety four and found inhalation exposure would not pose a
health risk. They also cite later corroborating reviews, including a
nineteen ninety seven review by the National Research Council. Perhaps
(05:40):
they assumed we wouldn't read the NRC's three hundred and
eighty page report, but we did, and the Army's statement
doesn't show the full picture. In that nineteen ninety seven review,
the National Research Council explicitly says repeated exposure to zinc
cadmium sulfide can cause kidney or bone toxicity or lung cancer.
Speaker 5 (06:02):
Before we get to the issue of transgenders, which oddly enough,
is back in the news. I didn't get this played earlier,
I meant to jd Vance, this is clip five oh
one after the Minneapolis shooting, asked.
Speaker 1 (06:24):
You to join him in a moment of prayer.
Speaker 8 (06:26):
You are the praying type I would ask you to
join me in prayer. I'm just going to say a
prayer for the two little kids who lost their lives yesterday.
And this is a prayer we say a lot in
my church, and I've always found it very meaningful. It's
very short, but eternal rest. Grants unto them a Lord,
and let perpetual light shine upon them. May the souls
(06:47):
of all the faithful departed, through the mercy of God
rest in peace.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
Amen.
Speaker 5 (06:53):
And later he was on Fox News where he made
I think one of his finest statements on the subject.
If your first response, as it was for Jacob Fry,
as it was for MSNBC and CNN, if your first
response when children are dead is to condemn prayer, something
(07:17):
is wrong with your soul.
Speaker 9 (07:19):
If you are a politician or your immediate commentator, and
two beautiful babies just got murdered while praying, and your
politics force you to contemn prayer in response to it,
you ought to get new politics, because something very wrong
has gone on inside your.
Speaker 1 (07:35):
Soul, be honest with you lose a boot, Michael Berry.
Speaker 5 (07:44):
There's so many different stories I never have time to
get to. But John Solomon was on with Sean Hannity
on Fox News and he made the point, you know,
for all the Russia collusion hoax, the Clintons were trafficking
that that Putin was out to get Trump elected president.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
John Solomon says there is now.
Speaker 5 (08:06):
Proof that Ukraine was approached by the Clintons to sway
the election in her favor by.
Speaker 10 (08:15):
A member of the Ukrainian parliament. Talk about the tape recording.
Speaker 11 (08:19):
Yeah, yeah, we don't know much about it because it's
floating around Ukraine, but we do know. The General Prosecutor
of Ukraine, our equivalent of the attorney general, came on
our show this morning. Inside the following there's enough evidence
for me to open up a criminal investigation into the
illicit effort by a Ukrainian to try to influence the
United States election in favor of Hillary Clinton. That's a
(08:40):
profound statement coming from the top law enforcement official of Ukraine.
Why is it important there's a court in Ukraine. It's
already concluded that Ukrainian officials leaked Paul Maniford's financial records
to try to.
Speaker 1 (08:50):
Sway the US election.
Speaker 11 (08:51):
You haven't heard anything about that in the American press,
but that ruling occurred recently. Then a parliamentary member comes
out and says, I have a tape of these law
enforcement officials say they did it specifically to help Hillary Clinton.
That becomes the foundation of the Ukrainian investigation.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
You have talked to people that have heard this tape.
Speaker 11 (09:07):
Correct, Well, the prosecutor himself has heard the tape and
said it was important enough, good enough evidence to warrant
opening the investigation. So the tape, the court ruling, the
top prosecuting Ukraine says there was a foreign power of.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
Separate issues here.
Speaker 10 (09:21):
Number one, Yes, did Ukrainian officials offered us evidence that,
in fact they were involved in election.
Speaker 1 (09:28):
Interference in twenty sixteen.
Speaker 10 (09:30):
To help Hillary Clinton's campaign.
Speaker 1 (09:32):
But anybody in the.
Speaker 10 (09:34):
Media pursue the interference story. And I thought they cared
about interference, but obviously only if it's Russian interference in Trump,
because we know they don't care about the dirty Russian dossier.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
That's right.
Speaker 11 (09:46):
Keep in mind that just a few months ago, Sean,
we reported on your show and Inside the Hill that
Ukraine's embassy in Washington confirmed on the record that back
in twenty sixteen, the Democratic National Committee, trying to help
Hillary Clinton get elected, ask the Ukraine embassy to help
interfere in the election by doing two things, dig up
dirt on Paul Mannifort and have Ukraine's president make a
(10:07):
kerfuffle here in Washington about Maniport and Trump when he
came to visit. Now, the Ukrainians say they rebuffed that attempt,
but Hillary Clinton's campaign, the DNC made that request, according
to the Ukraine Embassy.
Speaker 5 (10:19):
It's almost like our country's leadership is using Ukraine and
Putin as proxies in our domestic battles. You've got a
lot of Republicans, including Lindsay Gramsty over cozying up to
Ukraine and Zelensky and.
Speaker 1 (10:38):
Making Putin out to be the bad guy.
Speaker 5 (10:39):
I don't think he's a good guy, but I don't
see why we should be at war with him, and
then saying that Putin is in some goofy way behind
Trump when that has been disproven. But Putin does make
the point. This is five h seven or one. The
twenty twenty election was stolen because of male and mail
(11:00):
in voting, Andresident Trump's not gonna let that happen again.
Speaker 12 (11:04):
Vladimir Putin said something, one of the most interesting things.
He said, your election was rigged because you have mail
in voting. He said, mail in voting every election. He said,
no country has mail in voting. It's impossible to have
mail in voting and have honest elections. And he said
that to me. It was very interesting because we talked
about twenty twenty. He said, you won that election by
(11:25):
so much, and that's how he got it. He said,
And if you would have won, we wouldn't have had
a war. You'd have all these millions of people alive
now instead of dead. And he said, and you lost
it because of mail in voting. It was a rigged election.
But mail in voting.
Speaker 5 (11:38):
Oh, by the way, six seventeen worth noting. Over the
Labor Day weekend, gas prices under President Trump hit a
five year low. The last time gas prices were this low, well,
Donald Trump was president.
Speaker 13 (11:56):
Yes, what, the prices are going back down. And there's
good to believe, Steve, especially now that we're getting away
from the summer in some of the mixed fuels that
could keep going in the right direction.
Speaker 5 (12:07):
I said we were going to talk about the transgender
issue because it's back in the news again. You know,
the left would do well to get out of little
girl's restrooms, to keep boys out of little girl's restrooms,
and stop trying to cut off little boys weenies, because
they're losing both of those issues really, really badly, and
the fact that they're resolute in their statements doesn't make
(12:28):
it any better for them. Here is Congressman Wesley Bell,
Democratic Missouri on CNN. He doesn't care that men pretending
to be women or using women's bathroom, just doesn't care.
Speaker 14 (12:39):
Bobby Kennedy cares about children. He wants to make sure
children are protected. This guy does not care. He wants
to make sure that trans are protected. We want to
make sure that children are protected from trans and that
we keep men out of girls walkers rooms. That's what
we want to do.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
And go ahead, congressman here, So we're.
Speaker 15 (12:57):
Going back to attacking folks who are already dealing with
challenges that we can't even imagine, and yet we're going
to use them as a punchline. Again, Let's talk about
what's actually happening here. A person with no medical training
is running our health and Human Services department. His top
deputy also has no medical training. This is again, these
(13:20):
are fringe quack theories that are not based in science.
They're not supported by scientists, and so now they have
to look for some other way to justify this ridiculousness.
It's insanity.
Speaker 5 (13:36):
It is our responsibility to destroy the virus that is
the woke mind. It will take your children, it will
ruin your church, it will ruin your business, it will
ruin your neighborhood. Here is Elon Musk with Jordan Peterson
talking about just that responsibility.
Speaker 3 (13:58):
It happened to one of my my older boys where
I was, I was essentially tricked into signing documents, uh,
for one of my older boys, Xavier. Uh. This is
before I had really any understanding what was going on,
(14:19):
and we had COVID going on, and so there was
a lot of confusion, and you know, I was told,
you know, Savor might commit suicide if.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
If that was that was a lie right from the outset.
Speaker 3 (14:32):
Incredibly evil and I agree with you that people that
have been promoting this should go to prison. So I
was I was stricked into doing this, and uh, it
wasn't explain to me that puberity blocks are actually just
sterilization drugs. So anyway, uh, and so I lost my
(14:55):
son essentially, So you know they they call it dead.
Speaker 1 (14:59):
Name for a reason.
Speaker 3 (15:00):
Yeah, all right, I know the reason. That's what dead
naming is because your son is dead. So my son
is Aria is dead, killed by the work mind virus.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
I'm sorry to hear that. Yeah, I can't imagine what
that would be like.
Speaker 3 (15:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 16 (15:20):
So yeah, and there's lots of people in that situation now,
it's not pretty and lots of demolished kids.
Speaker 1 (15:29):
Yes, Okay, Well that's.
Speaker 16 (15:31):
A good that's a good reason to be the final stroll.
Speaker 3 (15:35):
Right, So let's go about to destroy the mind for
the work mine virus.
Speaker 1 (15:38):
After that, then we'll make it some brothers, the King
of Ding and this other guy, Michael Barry. These are
the kind of guys you like to smacking a weekend.
Speaker 5 (15:52):
Randy Winingarden, who's the president of the American Federation of Teachers, well,
speaking at an anti Trump protest in Chicago, you know
Chicago where the mayor doesn't want Trump to send in
the National Guarden because he doesn't want Chicago to be
safe like Washington, d C. Has become and where the governor,
(16:12):
Governor Tublelard doesn't want him coming in because it will
embarrass him. Well, Randy Winingarden, who is you talk about
what's wrong.
Speaker 1 (16:23):
With American education?
Speaker 5 (16:26):
The fact that so many Americans are now switching to homeschooling,
the fact that so many Americans have left public schools
to go to private schools. Across the country, we are
seeing what I consider to be a very very healthy trend,
(16:47):
and that is you take your local Catholic church. That's
where it's happening the most. You take your local Catholic church.
You've got a parking lot that's expensive, You've got buildings
a lot of times with many little rooms. Wouldn't that
be great for a school for a classroom. You've got
(17:08):
a big open space. Oh, we can do assembly in there.
And you've got a membership. And so they're all going
to school somewhere separate from where they're going to church. Well,
if I'm the church and I'm looking at my finances,
I'm going wait a second. We've got a school here already.
(17:30):
We've got a membership. I mean, we've got attendance, a
student body from within our membership, and.
Speaker 1 (17:37):
By the way. We've already laid all the groundwork.
Speaker 5 (17:40):
We've got all the expensive infrastructure out of the way.
All we got to do is increase the air conditioning
during the week and hire teachers. Of the costs, you
have eliminated the goodly portion of it. That's why you've
seen a number of these parish schools. I've seen it
(18:04):
in Louisiana. I've seen it in Mississippi. I've seen in Alabama.
I saw it in uh where did I just sit?
Maybe it was Massachusetts. They're talking about these explosions in
these church schools. And in Houston alone you got Second
Baptist Church, big Southern Baptist Church, and they started this school.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
It's actually where Ted Kruse.
Speaker 5 (18:28):
Graduated high school from because they had all the facilities already.
Speaker 1 (18:32):
And it has become on par with Saint.
Speaker 5 (18:36):
John's King Caid whatever the school in the Woodlands, I
can't remember the name of it at Cooper. It has
become episcopal, one of the schools that is highly respected
for academics and athletics and placement within college and you
name it. So what you're seeing is that increase there
(19:00):
is and here is that word competition. The old days
of the public school being the one and done.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
Just like you're in Bulgaria.
Speaker 5 (19:15):
You can go to the grocery store and if they
have some bread, you get bread, and it says bread
if they bothered to write it on there. Because there's
no competition, as the old Soviet block mindset. That's the
case in a lot of places. But in the United States,
competition made us better. Competition makes an athlete better. You
(19:36):
got to play against better players to get better. Competition
makes businesses better. But public school are the urban public
school where you have the most problems. They didn't want competition.
They wanted bloated budgets. They wanted teachers paying into a
union promising to make their lives better.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
But they weren't making their lives better.
Speaker 5 (20:01):
They were making the lives of the union leaders better,
people like Randy Winingarden. So here is the president of
the Teachers' union, and she's over the weekend. I guess
on Labor Day at a Labor Day event, screeching and
hollering and listen to this, are you.
Speaker 17 (20:20):
Ready Chicago labor to fight? And today as we walk, we're.
Speaker 1 (20:29):
Going to fight a whole bunch of pharaohs.
Speaker 17 (20:32):
Whether it's tesla or target or be lore. What has
happened in this country is that the billionaires don't understand
that this country was created in protests and in resistance
to fight off a king, not to.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
Recreate a king.
Speaker 5 (20:54):
Oh yes, we go back to that theme that George
Soros funded. Trump's trying to be a king. You see,
no kings, We don't want any kings. Well, I'm gonna
tell you something. Randy Weingarten has been living like a
king herself. I saw a statistic that said a report
(21:17):
that said the teachers' union had spent had sent forty
three and a half million dollars to left wing political causes,
And that was laid beside another article that said, as
school begins again, teachers just don't have the money for
supplies for the students, so they're having to spend their own.
(21:41):
You ever notice that spending on schools just keeps going
up and up and up. It's like the defense Department,
but we don't get more for it. Nobody is saying, hey,
we're spending multiples of what we used to on education,
but the results are worth it.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
They're not.
Speaker 5 (22:02):
You look at what a university education costs you today
versus when I graduated from college in ninety three.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
In law school in ninety six, multiples.
Speaker 5 (22:12):
It didn't get better. In fact, in many ways, it
got worse. Not only did they all of a sudden
start veering a hard turn to the left. Not only
did they do that, but they took the university professor
out of the classroom. In many schools, especially the larger schools,
(22:36):
you don't get a professor. You get a teaching assistant.
And who is a teaching assistant a grad student who's
given free education and he has to teach a class
or two. And so what's happened well as your graduate program,
especially in the sciences, As your graduate programs, increasingly, we're
(23:00):
birthing Indian students and Chinese students who were coming here
and doing very well. A number of them went into
faculty positions. And what did they do. They turned around
and hired more Indians and Chinese. And that is why
you started noticing the dominance of Indian and Chinese students
(23:21):
in your university postgraduate programs. You go to the postgraduate
program at any university in this country, in engineering especially,
and you will notice it's all Indian and Chinese. Well
I'm married to a woman from India. I don't have
a problem with Indians. See that's the difference. I don't
(23:41):
treat people differently because I have a connection to that
group of people. You've got to have a system of
fairness and you've got to have a system that makes
sense for your country, and we don't. Increasingly those departments
are largely Indian and then recruiting their own. So what
(24:06):
ends up happening is it's very hard as your average
white guy, black guy, Hispanic guy to break into the
graduate programs and especially the teaching assistant ships in these
universities because it's already held by a group of people who.
Speaker 1 (24:24):
Are keeping it very insolent.
Speaker 5 (24:26):
Once that transition occurred, it's too late to ever change.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
But everybody knows who this guy is.
Speaker 8 (24:34):
Come on, man with.
Speaker 1 (24:36):
The Michael barriers, come on.
Speaker 5 (24:40):
So I've been following the AI situation with increasing interest.
One of the things that comes up out of all
of it is how much energy.
Speaker 1 (24:55):
It demands AI.
Speaker 5 (24:58):
I have a friend named Brian mac who is in
the warehouse business. Well he's in the real estate business,
and one of his big clients is data centers. And
the reason is because the new big thing.
Speaker 1 (25:21):
Is data.
Speaker 5 (25:23):
So I think of it sort of like there was
a time where people rode horses, and if you were
a person of means, you would have a buggy and
you'd have your buggy behind the horse because it's more
comfortable to sit on a cushion. See, And that's the
way things were until the moment there was the automobile.
(25:46):
And there were actually some early versions of electric automobiles,
but they were not very efficient or effective for that matter,
because again, battery technology has always been the challenge. But
then there was the gas powered automobile and like it
took off. So now all of a sudden you had
to have stations where you could get the energy to
(26:08):
fuel this means of transportation. So all of a sudden,
the gas station industry explodes overnight and everything that went
with servicing the personal means of transportation because a horse
was pretty inefficient compared to the automobile, and by that
time you had forms of mass transit train being the
(26:31):
most efficient. But when you got the automobile, it changed everything.
The value of oil all of a sudden, for so
much more than just heating your home for traveling about
throughout history, the ability to travel about has been very,
(26:53):
very important.
Speaker 1 (26:54):
So back to the issue of AI.
Speaker 5 (26:58):
You know, remember around two thousand, the turn of the millennium,
we had this big tech bubble, and things aren't called
a bubble until they burst, and then you go back
and go, oh, that was a tech bubble. People thought
that having a website was going to be everything. And
(27:19):
so you had these these little millennial millionaires who were
getting insane amounts of money because they created a website
or later an app. And so you had kids in
coffee shops sitting in coffee shops banging away on their
(27:39):
keyboard that they put in a backpack and walked in there,
and drinking coffee all day and then beer all night.
And they were flipping these companies to private equity. And
some of them made it and most of them didn't.
Speaker 1 (27:53):
That's all right.
Speaker 5 (27:54):
That still goes on today in different ways. But the
rise of AI, this is on a scale we never imagined.
You wonder know how big this is going to be.
Let me give you an example. So Mark Zuckerberg at Meta,
(28:18):
which may he made his fortune off of Facebook, he
has dedicated I think it's seventy billion dollars. I'll find
it's in the middle of this story. He has dedicated
seventy billion with a B dollars to AI. Well, everybody
(28:38):
is in that in that at that level is investing
in AI. Meta lost a series of folks that went
to work for Elon Musk. In order to get them
to stay, or in some cases he was trying to
(28:59):
recruit them compared the Musk, he offered them you ready
for this.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
Two hundred and fifty million dollars each with a one.
Speaker 5 (29:11):
Hundred million dollar signing bonus, direct access to Zuckerberg. That's
very important for people that do what they do. They
don't want to be stuck in some back office, some
back cubicle when they.
Speaker 1 (29:26):
Have a brilliant idea.
Speaker 5 (29:27):
They want to be able to come in and go, hey,
I need this to be able to make this happen,
and supposedly unlimited resources, and yet they left anyway. They
turned down one hundred million dollars and in a signing
bonus and two hundred and fifty million dollars for each
(29:47):
of the workers for each for a person. They didn't
go to Google, they didn't go to Open a Eye.
They joined a startup with twelve hundred employees, a startup
that at this point has been unwilling to match the
offers that Zuckerberg was making. But as the as the
(30:11):
case study shows, this startup, Elon Musk's Empire, which he
calls XAI, offers them the opportunity to do so much
more and he has a better track record. Well, here's
the data point, Meta or Facebook is spending seventy billion
(30:33):
dollars on.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
AI this year alone.
Speaker 5 (30:36):
They had acquired one startup for fourteen point three billion
dollars from a guy named Alexander Wang. So they are
throwing funny money at things. Despite all this, Elon Musk
stole eighteen of Zuckerberg's best engineers. Zuckerberg lost his mind
(30:57):
offer him two undred fifty million dollars one hundred million
right now. We've never seen anything like this in any
industry ever before. I mean, I guess you could say
the NFL for top players, AI programmers, AI innovators. And
(31:19):
by the way, we're not talking about we're talking about
young people. We're talking about the kind of people that
Trump I mean that Elon brought into DOGE. I had
people say I'd lost my mind when I was talking
about the people Elon brought in to doge, people like
(31:40):
big balls, people like some of those. Let me tell
you something. I don't know where to find those people.
Trump doesn't know where to find those people. You don't
know where to find those people. The government doesn't know
where to find those people. Those people have snopped hanging
out of their nose. They live in places you don't know.
(32:01):
They live online. They're gamers, they're weird, but they got
this little quirky skill set. And you don't take out
an ad on indeed or monster and find them. They
gravitate to their god, King Elon Musk, and he brought
(32:21):
them into the government.
Speaker 1 (32:23):
He brought them into the.
Speaker 5 (32:24):
Government so they could run their little spiders through the
system using terms that only they could figure out. All right,
what if you're getting welfare payments but you're an illegal alien,
you have no identification.
Speaker 1 (32:42):
How do we do that?
Speaker 5 (32:44):
And it runs through all the systems, harvests all the
data and says, here's the addresses of the payments. Would
you like me to shut those payments off? Yes, you
don't have the man power in government employees lazily showing
up late, leaving early and taking a long lunch to
go through and dig out that data.
Speaker 1 (33:06):
Hey, I could do it in an hour. I don't
know how long, in a very short period of time.
It's like lawyers.
Speaker 5 (33:12):
It's not all bad, and this isn't an Elon Musk
worship session.
Speaker 1 (33:18):
Damn home, Lady's on our side.
Speaker 13 (33:21):
We jellmen ells nst for good man, thank you, and
good night,