Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
Varry Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
You're gonna make a lot of money, right, yeah right,
that's not yours?
Speaker 1 (00:18):
Well it becomes ours.
Speaker 3 (00:20):
How is that not stealing?
Speaker 1 (00:24):
I don't think I don't think that.
Speaker 4 (00:26):
I'm explaining this very well.
Speaker 1 (00:28):
The seven eleven, right, you can take a penny from
the tray.
Speaker 5 (00:32):
From the children.
Speaker 6 (00:34):
No, that's the jar.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
I'm talking about the tray.
Speaker 4 (00:36):
The you know, the pennies for for everybody, oh, for everybody?
Speaker 1 (00:40):
Yeah, well those are whole pennies, all right.
Speaker 7 (00:42):
I'm just talking about fractions of a penny here, okay.
Speaker 8 (00:46):
But we do it from a much bigger tray, and
we do it a couple of million times, so what's
wrong with that? You know?
Speaker 7 (00:52):
We didn't play a lot of audio from over the
big Beautiful Bill, but one that I haven't found my
I can't stand to hear her voice. So ramon, I'm
going to tell you when to play this, and can
you play fifteen seconds of audio something you know, simple man,
something nice, and then play her and just hit the
(01:12):
danger when you're done, and I'll come back in the
room because I just I can't bear to hear her
voice again.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
It's just such a screechy nap. I can't I know
people that are married to women like this. Ah, can
you imagine?
Speaker 7 (01:24):
So, Senator Pocahonta said, President Trump's big, beautiful bill helps
his billionaire friends at the expense of the working class. Look,
there are lots of things to criticize the bill for,
but that ain't one of them. Or ramone, give me
fifteen seconds to get to the restroom, then you can
play it and ding when you're done, I'll come back.
Speaker 4 (01:42):
These guys are actually out there making history by taking
away from hard working families, from people down on their luck,
from seniors, from.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
Little babies, so that a handful of.
Speaker 4 (01:54):
Billionaires and corporate CEOs can get more giveaways from the
That is the Republican plan. Billionaires win, everyone else lose it.
Speaker 7 (02:10):
I happen to know a few billionaires, and let me
tell you something. None of them work for tips, none
of them get paid hourly, none of them work overtime.
Let me say something. Rich people don't get paid salaries.
If you are being paid a salary, you don't have wealth.
You might have some income. You're doing better than other people.
(02:33):
If you've got a big one. But if you're getting
paid a salary or a bonus or anything of the sort,
you're being taxed at forty percent or close enough to it.
The rich have money, they don't get a paycheck. They
invest it, and they make money off of those investments.
(02:54):
And mostly they reinvest that because they don't need the cash.
And of what they make they pay fifteen percent, not
the forty percent. That's a capital gain. It's a gain
on their capital they've invested.
Speaker 1 (03:09):
So they will.
Speaker 7 (03:10):
Spend their energy increasing the value of their capital, usually
the company that they own, and that company being worth more.
And then when they sell that, that is a capital gain.
And when they realize that gain, that means you hash
it out to spend it.
Speaker 1 (03:25):
They only have to pay fifteen percent of it.
Speaker 7 (03:27):
God, if you wanted to change something, this was what
Trump said, If you wanted to change something, what you
would change is capital gains would be equal to the
highest income tax bracket.
Speaker 1 (03:40):
The minute you did that, you'd bring.
Speaker 7 (03:41):
The income tax bracket down because rich people would.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
Be really upset.
Speaker 7 (03:45):
Now, rich people don't mind high income taxes. And this
is what nobody seems to understand. You know why they
don't mind high income taxes.
Speaker 1 (03:53):
They don't pay them.
Speaker 7 (03:54):
They don't get your income in the way that you do.
They don't get a you or a ten ninety eight.
They earn capital gains. There are wealthy people who in
a year will not pull out any capital gain.
Speaker 1 (04:12):
They don't need to. You think about that and what
they do they it's fifteen.
Speaker 7 (04:18):
Percent, drive it up to whatever it is, thirty seven
and forty percent drive it up with all everybody else
what high earners are making. But high earners are not
influential people. Influential people the Warren Buffets of the world.
Those people live.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
Off capital gains, nuts, not facts.
Speaker 7 (04:35):
Now they're secretary Warren Buffett, Bluffett. Warren Buffett loves to
tell the story that he pays less percentage in taxes
than his secretary does. Okay, there's a provision. You can
write a check for the government. You can pay the
same percentage of your income. His income is off capital gains,
not off the salary. Does that make sense to folks?
And by the way, everybody knows this. When they talk
(04:57):
about billionaires, they all know this. They talk we don't
want millionaires and millionaire. If you cared about millionaire and billionaires,
all you would have to do is is change the capital.
Speaker 1 (05:06):
Gains tax rate.
Speaker 7 (05:08):
But guess what, Really rich people, billionaires favored Democrats more
than Republicans. You know why, because they're guilt ridden and
they're all trying to keep from having to lose their
money to tax. Really rich people are so scared of
losing their money would be. You wouldn't believe how scared
they are of losing their money. They're more scared of
losing their money than you are losing what little bit
you've got. And you're far more likely to lose what
(05:30):
little bit you got than they are to lose theirs.
In fact, that whole point that we're talking about. Dave
Chappelle explained why Donald Trump won by what he said
in the debate, and Chappelle is dead on. Trump was
straightforward on this. Hillary Clinton knows exactly what the tax
(05:51):
laws are and she chose to never address it on purpose.
Speaker 9 (05:55):
And I'm watching the news now that declaring the end
of the trup bearer. Now, okay, I can see out
in New York you might believe this is the end
of his era.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
I'm just being honest with you.
Speaker 9 (06:02):
I live in Ohio amongst the poor whites, now, you
don't understand why Trump was so popular, But I get
it because I hear it every day. He's very loved,
and the reason he's loved is because people in Ohio
have never seen somebody like him. He's what I call
an honest lie on well, I'm not joking right now,
(06:26):
he's an honest liar. That first debate, that first debate,
I've never seen anything like it. I've never seen a
white male billionaire screaming at the top of his mums.
This whole system is rigged, he said, And across the
stage was a white woman, Hillry Clinton and Barack Obama
sitting the way looking at him like, no, it's not.
I said, now wait a minute, Broke, that's what he said.
(06:49):
And I'm already said, well, miss Trump faid, in fact,
the system is rigged, as he suggests, uld be your evidence.
Speaker 10 (06:58):
You remember what he said, Broke, He said, I know
the systems ricked because I use it. I said, dang, and.
Speaker 9 (07:10):
Then put out of Illuminati membership, called chop out of container.
But no one want to say something that true.
Speaker 1 (07:21):
And then he tried to punch me in the taxi.
He said, this man doesn't pay his taxes. He shot
right back, that makes me smart.
Speaker 9 (07:32):
And then he said, if you want me to pay
my taxes, to change the tax code, but I know
you won't because your friends and your donors and shore
the same tax breaks that I do. And with that,
my friends, the star wars born. No one had ever
seen anything like that. No one had ever seen somebody
(07:54):
come from inside of that house outside until all the commoners.
We're doing everything that you think we are.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
Doing it house. He's right back in the house playing
a game again. I love budd Sen. Joe has been
a race driver. Michael Barry funny.
Speaker 7 (08:15):
That's ramon the King of Deans suggested for general audiences.
One thing you hear from former Democrats is they didn't
realize their party was the party of hate and division
until it became personal for them. But we can't wait
for every one of you bastards to come under attack
to finally convert, right, You need to come up. You
(08:38):
need to be able to convert without them having to
attack you based on other people being attacked. Jake Tapper
told Jay Plemons, I don't know who this guy is
about his experience and uh, well, let's see if he
moves to the writer or no doubt it. But he's
talking about how awful the people on the left are,
as if somehow he just figured that out.
Speaker 11 (08:58):
I went on a left leaning podcast that She'll Remain nameless,
and we were talking about my kids, because I think
they were both people without kids. And they asked me
about my son and I said he was you know,
he's a football player and he wants to be a policeman.
And their joke was about my fifteen year old son, Oh,
how does he feel about minorities? Like the idea that
(09:19):
he wants to be a policeman, therefore he's racist my son,
And like you know, that was the big laugh, and
then I got dragged into comments and all that stuff,
and I thought to myself, this is why you're losing elections.
Like my football playing son, who has no political views.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
He's fifteen.
Speaker 11 (09:39):
He thinks about World War two and gaming and playing linebacker.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
That's his world.
Speaker 11 (09:47):
You're deciding he's a racist because he wants to be
a cop.
Speaker 1 (09:51):
And why does he want to be a cop.
Speaker 11 (09:52):
He wants to be a cop because he wants to
help people, you know, and he thinks that's the best
way he can help people.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
And that's how the Democratic Party talks to men, not
just like men, but men.
Speaker 7 (10:03):
You know, Defunding NPR and PBS is such a powerful
move in the grand scheme of things. It doesn't add
up to be that much money, but it is symbolic.
The left claims, because they can't stand this, the defunding
of NPR and PBS is an attack on free speech
and a violation of the First Amendment. No, you, taxpayer
(10:25):
shouldn't have to pay for something that talks about you
like you're a monster. Anyway, It's been a while, but
I don't believe the First Amendment says anything about the
government funding media organizations.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
But let's check, shall we.
Speaker 7 (10:37):
Congress shall make no law respecting number one, an establishment
of religion. Okay, it doesn't violate that or prohibiting the
free exercise thereof Okay, there's no religion trying to be
exercise or abridging the freedom of speech or of the press.
(11:00):
So no one is abridging the freedom to publish. We're
just a bridging taxpayer dollars paying for it. Yeah, we
can make a law of that effect or the right
of the people peaceably to assemble and to petition the
government for a redress of grievances. Nope, nothing in there
about funding media organizations. Now here's an argument I haven't
(11:23):
heard in a while. Former staff writer for the National Review,
David French. Boy, is this sissy, this little wimp. He
was on MSNBC where he said defunding NPR is reminiscent
of the Red Scare. David French is one of these
guys that posed as a conservative for a long time,
as long as conservatives didn't do anything. When the populous
(11:43):
Tea Party started, David French lost his mind. And then
he said, well, I have a black child that I
adopted because he needs credit that he adopted a black child.
And people say bad things about my black child. Please, dude,
that's not true. People say bad things because you are
a supposed conservative. You keep saying that, and all you
(12:04):
do is trash Trump because you have no influence with him,
and because you're not really a conservative, you're part of
the problem, not the solution.
Speaker 1 (12:10):
David, listen to this.
Speaker 8 (12:12):
I've not seen anything like this in my adult lifetime.
I think we're looking at a comprehensive attack on free
speech that is maybe most reminiscent of the Red Scare
and The one thing that is so particularly pernicious about
it is that Donald Trump is very shrewd, politically shrewd
in his attack. He's taking on a lot of institutions
that a lot of Americans don't like.
Speaker 1 (12:33):
So, for example, elite.
Speaker 8 (12:35):
Universities, You're not exactly going to get millions of Americans
in the streets for elite universities or white shoe law firms.
People are going to be in the streets for white
shoe law firms or for big media outlets where he
sued them for defamation, et cetera, or retaliated against them.
So he's choosing many of these politically unpopular targets. But
that's the classic move of the censors. If you go
(12:56):
back to the Red Scare, this was a frontal attack
on free speech, aimed at some of the least popular
speech in America. This is how authoritarianism begins. It begins
not by taking on the popular voices. It begins by
taking on the unpopular voices. And I'm not saying that
NPR doesn't have millions of listeners, and there are many
people who love Harvard, but there are these institutions are
(13:18):
very much in the crosshairs of Trump's base, so he's
claiming to his base here, which makes it politically sustainable,
even while it's a direct attack.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
On the Constitution.
Speaker 7 (13:28):
Every now and again, an old news story will pop
up on social media because of the absurdity of the
person being interviewed, and it'll go viral because somebody will
post it and a lot.
Speaker 1 (13:40):
Of people won't notice, they won't remember.
Speaker 7 (13:42):
But on our team, anytime I try to post something
or say something with something that's years old, Chad will
always catch it and go you can post that if
you want, but you do realize that's for twenty twelve.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
Oh none. I'm always embarrassed, like, why did not check?
Speaker 7 (13:54):
So here's an example about a woman named Sweet Brown
and a fire.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Again, old story, but it's funny.
Speaker 12 (14:02):
One resident describes her horrifying experience when she first realized
the complex was on fire.
Speaker 13 (14:07):
Well, I woke up to go give me a cold pop,
and then I call somebody was barbecued. I said, oh lord,
Jesus is a farm. Then I ran out and I
didn't grab no shoes and none.
Speaker 10 (14:18):
Jesus.
Speaker 1 (14:18):
I'm riding for my life.
Speaker 7 (14:20):
And then the smoke gagger, God brug guid this is well
This isn't that kind of story. This is the story
of seventeen year old Trayvon Johnson. The story is from
back in twenty seventeen. Okay, poor Trayvon was shot and
killed during a home invasion. I don't celebrate that. That's sad.
But you start breaking into people's homes, you're gonna get
(14:41):
shot and killed.
Speaker 1 (14:42):
It's just gonna happen.
Speaker 7 (14:44):
And the story is from CBS Miami. It's making the
rounds again to try to create a George Floyd type
situation until people figure out how old it is.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
It's from twenty seventeen.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
I don't care she had her gun license, her wris.
Any of that day is way beyond law, way beyond.
Speaker 3 (14:59):
Relatives of seventeen year old Trayvon Johnson are angry. The
teenager was shot and killed last night by a homeowner
who police say was protecting her property.
Speaker 2 (15:07):
He was not close to that light. He had a
future ahead of him. Trevon Head goes. He was a
very funny guy. He was very big on education. He
loved going to school, he.
Speaker 4 (15:14):
Loved learning it.
Speaker 3 (15:15):
Last night, Miami Dade police say the d a Dorsey
Technical College student, burgl ris to home south of seventy
ninth Street near I ninety five, just blocks away from
where he lives.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
Detectives say the fifty four.
Speaker 3 (15:25):
Year old homeowner was alerted of the break in by
her security system, with officers already on their way. She
rushed home to check things out, and police say she
was armed. She observed a subject exiting the home through
the rear. According to detectives, there was a confrontation and
one shot was fired. Johnson was pronounced dead at the hospital.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
I was wrong. She did not have to shoe him.
Speaker 2 (15:45):
He's no reason as she should have waited answer. I
think he walked out in the yard, he got ready,
then why won't she shoe him.
Speaker 3 (15:50):
Relatives say they don't believe Johnson stole anything from the home,
but detectives would not confirm that.
Speaker 2 (15:55):
You have to understand, you have to look at it
from every bomb chast point of view that was raised
and the hood. How he gonna get his money to
have clothes to go to school.
Speaker 7 (16:02):
The moment you justify a home invasion by your loved
one as that's the only.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
Way he can make money. You have just told me
that you.
Speaker 7 (16:11):
Are broken, and if a group of people share that belief.
They are broken, they are bankrupt. You cannot exist on
this basis. Well, yeah, of course we broke in and
stold things. You can't shoot us for that. That's our job.
How else are we going to eat for Michael Berry's shows.
Race obsession is a cancer on this country that affects
(16:34):
every aspect of life. We talk everything that should work
and doesn't not everything. Many things are paralyzed or reduced
inefficiency as a result of race policing. You can't get
proper policing in big cities any longer for a number
(16:57):
of reasons. People are hired who have no business being
officers because they have to meet quotas of people who
are not white males. And by the way, it's not
just a black issue. There is also the female issue,
and we don't have enough women doing this, so we
(17:17):
have to stick women doing this. I still think that
it should be required that the NFL should have to
have I mean, women make up half the population and
zero percent of the NFL players.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
Can you believe that?
Speaker 7 (17:33):
I think they should be required to pull from the
powder puff leads and put women and they have to
be on the offensive line. You can't stick them out
at receiver, or you can't just have them be a kicker.
They have to be on the offensive line. And if
one of them's you know, if you got a Warren
(17:54):
Sap coming across that d line or Randy White, the
manster so a bit because there's no difference. Everybody's the same.
And you know, we need boys and girls, and we
need equality and all that. We require it.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
In every other industry. Why shouldn't we require it there.
Speaker 7 (18:14):
This is not to say that women are less than,
inferior than or anything else men. It is to say
there are things that men naturally do better than women
and have historically. And by the way, that also gets
to the percentage of people.
Speaker 1 (18:33):
Who want to do the job.
Speaker 7 (18:35):
You know, people love to point out the seventy percent number.
And by the way, Thomas Sol's the one who said this,
I'm stealing his works, I'm appropriating it. I'm giving it
credit attribution where it's due. The reason for the pay
disparity is not because two people are doing the same
job and the woman is getting paid less. It is
(18:58):
that women have typically in the workforce into jobs that
pay less, and men have entered into jobs that are
more dangerous and tend to pay more. I have a
friend whose son is one of the guys who climbs
up to the top of the cell phone towers and
replaces the light bulbs up there. This is the kind
(19:19):
of stuff that you know, drones and robots are going
to replace. He makes a fortune doing that. Now you
might think to yourself, gosh, he only works whatever it is,
seven days a year. Yeah, but for those seven days,
he's got to climb all the way up there by
himself and climb all the way down. Do you know
(19:39):
why he's paid so much because they think the company,
the cell phone company, thinks he's really really handsome. No,
because the company thinks, you know, this is a guy
who needs to make a lot of money because he
should be able to buy things in his life, and
so we're going to donate it to him. Nope, because
(20:01):
you can't find other people to do it. The reason
minimum wage has to be mandated to be higher than
the market would require is that these are jobs that
anyone can do, and until there is a dearth of
people at that rate, you're asking to be paid more
(20:21):
than the market will bear. So when the demands became
too much, and they involved political pressure and the economics
were not there to justify that, because the same people
who want fast food employees to make twenty thirty forty
make up the number one hundred dollars an hour are
the same people who will complain how much it now
(20:44):
costs at a fast food restaurant. I will complain how
much water burger costs, But I ain't trying to get
the government to demand that people get paid more to
work there, because I understand that those two are in tandem.
The end put of labor is going to cost you more.
But you know what, this is going to be a
(21:04):
moot point in very short order because you now have
robots that can replace the fast food employee.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
You know what worries me about that.
Speaker 7 (21:14):
There are a lot of people working in the kitchen
at a fast food restaurant that when they don't have
a job because a robot has replaced them, what are
they going to do all day? So the issue of
race and how much we struggle with it. Democrat National
Committee Vice Chair David Hogg.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
He's the little kid that.
Speaker 7 (21:35):
Used the school shooting to create glory for himself and
the Democrats lifted him up out of that. He was
on the Breakfast Club where he called that genius Jasmine
Crockett just amazing. Now you may say, why would he
do that? He has to if you're a white liberal,
(21:58):
you have to say that every black politician or anything
of the sort is fantastic. Now, not Wesley Hunt, No,
you don't. You don't have to like a West Point graduate,
black Republican conservative, but Jasmine Crockett.
Speaker 1 (22:12):
You have to say you think she's just swell. Jasmine Crockett.
I love her, She is amazing.
Speaker 6 (22:20):
I think that people want to see somebody who fights
and calls out the Ultimately, I think that's what Jasmine does.
And we need a hell of a lot more people
that are out there that are willing to do just
that and call she's just a warrior. Say, oh my god,
a Republican, she's just a warrior. She is paying this
screw that. We need more people to call out the pool.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
She's a warrior, really fighting for Oh, good job, David.
We may keep you there. You can keep hold of
the black.
Speaker 7 (22:45):
Vote by saying that that this this person who is
an embarrassment to anyone black, that she's great. I just
love her. Oh, I love her so much. Do you
though that seems like a lot, David, I think you're
trying to so the aforementioned Jasmine Crockett was on MSNBC
where she promised to go after Donald Trump's family if
(23:10):
the Democrats take the House next year.
Speaker 14 (23:14):
Sext Chair of the House and or Senate, do you
think they're going to push for investigations into Trump's family
and the whole crypto acquisitions that he has getting.
Speaker 5 (23:26):
Well, Alex, I'm glad you asked. I'm here to listen
so long as we end up taking the House, which
I fully anticipate that we will do, and we are
going to work hard to obviously help our Senate colleagues
as well. Then, as someone who serves on the Oversight
Committee and hopes to lead the Oversight Committee, I can
(23:47):
guarantee you that we will do what we are supposed
to do as constitutionally swarm members of the House, which
means that we will conduct oversight. That means that we
will investigate. We will look at whether or not this
president himself has violated the emoluments Clause as relates to
say such things as getting a four hundred million dollar
(24:07):
plane from the Qataris. We also will make sure that
we're looking into all these business deals that they have
going on. I mean, think about it this way, Alex.
They were going after Hunter because he sat on a board.
Think about how much money they are raking in. Whether
we're talking about the next golf resort that they're setting
(24:28):
up in Qatar, or whether we're talking about them leveling
gaza as they've talked about and talked about how it
would be great beachfront property, whether we're talking about this
crypto scam, the scam that people didn't even want to
walk into and show their faces. Let me tell you
there is no shortage of things for us to dig into.
Speaker 7 (24:49):
I'll tell you what, Jasmine. You can have unlimited power
if you can spell emoluments and tell me what it is.
Did you notice she paused before she said that word.
Speaker 1 (25:03):
She was worried. Now, how did we practice this again?
Speaker 15 (25:09):
And the girls all get pretty At closing time when
you're listening to the Michael Berry.
Speaker 7 (25:13):
Show, we talked about the Saint George Floyd's death. And
what's interesting about that is you remember super spreaders. We
couldn't go to church because church was a super spreader.
(25:34):
But at the very time media was reporting you must
stay home politicians were you must stay home, fauci, you
must stay home.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
But then we.
Speaker 7 (25:46):
Had all these black riots and quote unquote protests that
turned into riots.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
And they were.
Speaker 7 (25:58):
They were allowed, they were condoned, they were covered as
if it was so important. There's so much black anger
and we must let it out. And so we're gonna
have the cops at the at the perimeter and they're
gonna do their thing, and this is gonna be great
until they turned on the cops and the cops had to,
you know, scram because you look who's in charge here. Well,
(26:21):
it made for an interesting paradox. So there was the
juxtaposition of you can't go to church because if people
go into a church, everyone in the country will get
COVID and you'll kill grandma, and we're not gonna let.
Speaker 13 (26:33):
You do that.
Speaker 7 (26:33):
You're just you're reckless. You can't do that, Okay. So
no church, no going to the job, no going to school,
no going anywhere.
Speaker 1 (26:42):
Okay.
Speaker 7 (26:43):
But then George Floyd dies and you got these massive
funerals because he was such a great man. We had
to have funerals everywhere. Wait, how does how does this compute?
Did did COVID was COVID, such a deadly, horrible uh
virus that would kill everybody who got COVID just gonna
die right on the spot. You couldn't get it. There
(27:06):
wasn't a ninety nine point eight percent survival rate, just
like the flu, just like the cold. In fact, it
was no worse than the flu, not as bad as
the flu. But that's okay because some people still don't
believe that, because if you're told something often enough, you
believe it. Don't go ask a Palestinian kid if there
are any good Jews, because the Jews are the devil,
(27:27):
and that's all they've ever been taught.
Speaker 1 (27:30):
And that's it.
Speaker 7 (27:31):
Once that is sufficiently ingrained, it's practically indelible in your mind.
There are still people who believe that COVID was highly deadly.
Speaker 1 (27:42):
Well, that's not true, Michael. I know somebody that died.
We all do.
Speaker 7 (27:46):
But first of all, you don't know if they died
from the shot or COVID. And do you know how
many thousand people die per year from the flu?
Speaker 1 (27:54):
Look it up? Look it up.
Speaker 7 (27:56):
There's a report that came out, I believe, out of
the University of Michigan over this past weekend that said
the COVID shot had a negative efficacy rate of twenty
six point nine percent.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
Do you know what that means.
Speaker 7 (28:10):
That means that the number of people who died from
the shot was higher than the number of people who
are perceived to have lived through COVID or I mean
through the flu as a result. Well, I think the
numbers far worse for COVID, but you'll never find out.
(28:32):
But back to the point, because there's other stuff I
want to get to. So you couldn't go to church
because that made it a super spreader event, but you
could have George Floyd memorials and riots as a result
of it, and it was all condoned, blessed by local governments,
by local media. Here is a montage of the George
(28:54):
Floyd protests versus COVID.
Speaker 2 (28:59):
Racism has been a pandemic for far, far longer than.
Speaker 12 (29:01):
COVID, from the front lines of one pandemic to the
front lines of another.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
All across the country. We're all going to be kneeling
in honor.
Speaker 4 (29:11):
The Black Lives Matter and movement. I don't here.
Speaker 12 (29:13):
The treatment plan is different, but the priority to save
lives is the same, and these are life saving measures.
Speaker 1 (29:26):
What I believe is more a deadly disease than coronavirus.
Is hatred.
Speaker 15 (29:30):
As protesters across the country and around the world raised
their voices over the killing of George Floyd, concerns over
the coronavirus take a back seat.
Speaker 16 (29:39):
Let's verify did the recent protest contribute to the way
from the virus?
Speaker 7 (29:45):
Concerns over the COVID virus take a back seat. The
whole country, we were all gonna die. You had to
close your business. You couldn't go to church. We were
dragging pastures to prison jail, but the P and the
P sounded good.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
You couldn't go to school.
Speaker 7 (30:08):
They weren't allowing you to bury your loved ones. You
couldn't go to the hospital as they died and hold
their hand as they went off to heaven. They had
to die alone because COVID was the worst thing ever.
And concerns you just slipped that. Concerns over COVID have
(30:32):
taken a back seat to what blacks being mad play
this again.
Speaker 15 (30:36):
Concerns over the coronavirus take a back seat.
Speaker 16 (30:39):
Let's verify.
Speaker 1 (30:40):
Did the reason on the world read.
Speaker 7 (30:42):
Read one on about fifteen twenty seconds earlier. I want
to hear that COVID's the worst thing ever. You're all
going to die, and as a result, nothing can happen
in life. You can't get married, you can't bury your
loved one, you can't be there with your loved one
while they're dying. None of that can happen. Y'all don't understand.
This is the worst thing to happen to history main
cun Everything has to shut down. Okay, well they're they're
(31:04):
having riots over there and you're not stopping them. Oh
well yeah, but you got to understand slavery measures.
Speaker 16 (31:15):
What I believe is more a deadly disease than coronavirus
is hatred.
Speaker 15 (31:19):
As protesters across the country and around the world raise
their voices over the killing of George Floyd, concerns over
the coronavirus take a back seat.
Speaker 16 (31:28):
Let's verify did the recent protest contribute to the spike
in coronavirus cases? The study from nber US data from
protest in over three hundred large cities across the US.
The study found no evidence that recent protest have led
to the spike in the number of coronavirus cases.
Speaker 7 (31:48):
It's so powerful the force of the propaganda behind this
and in fact what they've done, which is very powerful.
First you established that racism is Hitler, and we all
know that Hitler should have been killed sooner because then
millions of lives would have been saved in World War
(32:09):
II would have been averted. So first you establish racism
is Hitler, and then all you have to do.
Speaker 1 (32:17):
Is say he's a racist.
Speaker 7 (32:19):
Jim Comey said that the FBI needs to do things
to shut Trump down because Trump is white supremacist adjacent.
So he doesn't want to say he's white supremacist per se,
although many people will, but he's white supremacist adjacent.
Speaker 1 (32:38):
What does this mean?
Speaker 7 (32:40):
Anybody who questions DEI affirmative action, all of this nonsense
that leads to plane crashes, a military that can't function,
everything else. Anyone who questions those race based programs that racist.
Anyone who questions that is then called a white supreme says,
(33:00):
and we all know that's bad.
Speaker 1 (33:01):
That's Hitler, right, that's the klan, that's Hitler. It's awful.
And then the minute that happens, once.
Speaker 7 (33:07):
Racist equals Hitler and you equals racist, I can do whatever,
I can break any law because you're about This is
how this they're really, really evil, And once you understand
how that game is played, and look at the lies
they told over Joe Biden, nothing they ever say should
(33:29):
ever be trusted.
Speaker 1 (33:30):
The illness has little good good anybody. Thank you, and
good night,