Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Time, time, Time, Luck and load. Michael Very Show is
on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
He was falsely arrested and removed from the country. So
now they're making up all this stuff about MS thirteen
or you know, let's say he was responsible for the
January sixth at chapter he coordinated the assault one hundred
and forty police officers. They're making up things against a
guy who's never been prosecuted, much less convicted of anything.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
The Vice President the United States tweeted out that he
had a criminal record.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
That was a lie. They're just mining they've gotten caughtline.
Speaker 3 (00:38):
They don't want to admit it, and they have an
obligation to bring him home. But I will say the
President of Al Salvador should not now take it upon himself.
It's to say that he is detaining him for one
more day, because that is kidnapping. I understand that the
Attorney General said that we would provide a plane to
bring him home. So all the President of Al Salvador
(00:58):
has to do now is hand over and release an
innocent man and let them come home.
Speaker 4 (01:03):
Thista.
Speaker 5 (01:04):
There have been a lot of Democrats, the media, Democrat
Party activists who are determined to share the narrative that
the LA riots are not so bad, not so bad
at least they weren't until Trump got involved, and then
they're bad.
Speaker 1 (01:21):
But that's Trump's fault.
Speaker 5 (01:23):
But the people doing it are actually good people, and
Maxine Waters thinks Trump should make them all into citizens.
Very convoluted logic. We hope they continue down this approach.
Trump's going to be more popular than ever as a
result of this. Oklahoma Senator Mullen was on CNN with
Dana Bash. This first cut isn't so much about Mullen.
(01:46):
The cut is about how Dana Bash sets up the question.
She says, the current Los Angeles riot is not a
real riot. The Rodney King riot in nineteen ninety two, now,
that was a real riot, But this is a real riot.
Speaker 6 (02:00):
She says, I just wanted to stay for the record
that what did happen in nineteen ninety two was so
different from what we're seeing now.
Speaker 1 (02:07):
I mean that was that was.
Speaker 6 (02:10):
A real riot that went all across the city of
Los Angeles after a verdict in the Rodney King case.
This is a situation where the La County La County Police,
it's not good, but they're saying that they have it
under control and the President is sending national troops.
Speaker 7 (02:28):
In a way that we can look at it obviously
see that that is not under control. It's not under control.
You and I both see that it's not under control.
And a riot is a riot. They're throwing, they're throwing
all types of objects at law enforcement, and the President
is absolutely right.
Speaker 5 (02:43):
Senator Mark Wayne Mullen from Oklahoma on CNN within a Bash,
was very clear the blame for what's happening is the
lawless governor in California, Gavin News. The weak, lawless governor
running a sanctuary state created a Petrie dish where this
(03:04):
kind of poisonous creature, this poisonous environment occurs.
Speaker 6 (03:11):
Last time the National Guard was federalized was nineteen ninety
two during the La riots. Then it was done at
the governor's request. In fact, the president has it unilaterally
federalized the National Guard since LBJ sent troops to Alabama
in nineteen sixty five to protect civil rights marchers. That's
according to the Brendan Center. So my question for you
is why does this situation justify the president bypassing California's
(03:35):
governor entirely?
Speaker 1 (03:37):
Well, you got two issues here.
Speaker 7 (03:38):
You have a very weak lawless, bleeding governor and Governor
Nwsen who's not enforcing the nation's laws. And then you
had a Biden administration for the last four years that
didn't enforce our immigration laws, which is why we need
to pass this one big, beautiful bill so we can
secure a border and focus on getting these illegals out
of the country, regardless of what they may be doing
(03:58):
right now. They enter the country illegally and therefore they
are illegal, and they are criminals, and they need to
be deported. And I don't know why a governor would
want to try to protect illegal activity inside a state.
And the President has made it very clear if the
governor or the mayor of the city isn't willing to
protect the citizens of his state or the city, then
(04:19):
the president will.
Speaker 5 (04:20):
Let's roll out one of the Obama officials so you
can understand how bad things were under Obama.
Speaker 1 (04:25):
The kinds of people.
Speaker 5 (04:26):
Juliette Kayman I believe it is how you pronounce her name.
She's a former Department of Homeland Security official under Barack Obama.
She told CNN that there's some unrest, but it's mostly solid,
it's mostly lawful protest, it's mostly good. Other than that,
Missus Lincoln, how is the play? It's mostly good evening, right,
I mean, other than your husband Evan head blown off.
Mostly it's pretty good evening.
Speaker 8 (04:47):
Right.
Speaker 1 (04:47):
So there's unrest.
Speaker 9 (04:49):
Let's start with there's protest, lawful protest, which is allowed
in this country. There is some unrest generally dealt with
by local law enforcement, and that there needs to be
state support through state police and sometimes even National Guard
under a governor's authority. What is happening tonight is is unprecedented.
Speaker 5 (05:11):
Juliette came in, the former Department of Homeland Security official
under Barack Obama, said that if we need that, what
we need is an administration that's not going to go
death con one every time they see something they don't
like on TV. You should just let these people burn
Los Angeles to the ground. I mean, that's what the
mayor did with the last with the wildfires. You should
(05:32):
just let it burn to the ground. You shouldn't go
crazy over we should overreact.
Speaker 9 (05:35):
I don't really know how to react to this as
a professional, because it's like it's sort of like what
I mean, I'm not laughing, it's like active duty Marines
for this, I mean, we were just reporting on it.
There's music, that traffic is moving. Most people in LA
probably don't even know that this is going on as
such a big city, and we need an administration that's
(05:57):
not going to get to death con one every time
they see something on TV they don't like. A Secretary
Headset has a tremendous amount of power, and to tweet
that out with what we're seeing active military is a
is a statement. But let's just put it this way.
It's not an operational statement. This is not a statement
about what's on the ground. This is a statement about
(06:19):
power and the use of force and the use of
military in a democracy. I'll let others debate that, but
no rational person in my field in homeland security would
see what we're seeing and think that we're even close
to the.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
Kind of behavior that Headset, that.
Speaker 9 (06:34):
Secretary headsept is now threatening against a civilian society for
protest and some unrest. I'm going to give them that
there is some unrest, and so again the White House
is just lowering the standards for the use of Title
ten National Guard under what we call federalization. And now
in the last ten or fifteen minutes, Secretary Headset I
(06:55):
guess wanted to join the Club Active Marines. That's just
unheard of in the kind of situation you see.
Speaker 5 (07:05):
I'll bet you we've got ten founds sweet little ladies
of seventy or more that would make a palm cake
that you could eat cold and enjoy.
Speaker 1 (07:14):
Michael varioushow.
Speaker 5 (07:22):
MSNBC called the Los Angeles riots misunderstood. Ah, yes, that's
what the mothers of murderers often say. Oh my, Johnny,
he's just misunderstood. It's mostly peaceful families. INSNBC says as
they're showing footage on the screen as they're talking of
(07:44):
the violent protests.
Speaker 10 (07:46):
Most of the crowds again that I saw that I
spoke to, that I was interacting with. These are peaceful
people that want to get their message across. They brought signs.
They're out with families in some places and others are
obviously more adjutant have them, you know. And reportedly I
didn't see this, but reportedly throwing things back at authorities
that are trying to do their jobs.
Speaker 5 (08:08):
Laura Diz Fox eleven in Los Angeles said what she
saw was mostly peaceful families protest, just good old fashioned families.
Speaker 11 (08:19):
You know.
Speaker 5 (08:20):
Sure, someone tried to throw a Molotov cocktail, but it
only started a small fire.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
It's just a small fire. Well, we saw today in
a Paramount there were no problems.
Speaker 11 (08:30):
At one point somebody did throw a Malta cocktail an
attempt and it did not engage you, did not blow up,
but it did start a small fire.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
So where I was was largely.
Speaker 11 (08:41):
Peaceful in Paramount, and I was told for Michael that
it was largely peaceful here.
Speaker 1 (08:46):
So I think it just depends where.
Speaker 11 (08:48):
You are, how many people are assembled, and what the
exchange is.
Speaker 1 (08:52):
It's just the randomness of it all, you know.
Speaker 5 (08:54):
Indeed, we played this yesterday, but I got to play
it again today. This might be the most absurd comment
about a riot that I have ever heard. Uttered It's
from ABC seven in Los Angeles, and it refers to
I mean, most of these people out at these riots,
they're peaceful protests and nice people. It's just people having
(09:16):
fun watching cars burn. You just watching cars burn and
just having fun. And then there comes the National Guard
ruining the fun.
Speaker 1 (09:23):
Large group of people.
Speaker 12 (09:25):
It could turn very volatile if you move law enforcement
in there in the wrong way and turn what is
just a bunch of people having fun watching cars burn
into a massive confrontation and altercation between officers and demonstrators.
Speaker 5 (09:40):
Next we have Kun Law of CNN who gives a
fairly accurate report of what's happening on the ground in
Los Angeles because they couldn't ignore it any longer. They're
showing the footage, but then blamed the National Guard for
some of the protests. So, yeah, it's bad, but it's
really the National Guard's fault.
Speaker 13 (10:00):
There are multiple protests now, or at least we should
call them incursions between the people who've been demonstrating here,
people who've joined.
Speaker 1 (10:08):
In, and law enforcement.
Speaker 13 (10:11):
We are near where all of this began, and what
you're seeing here is a line of a mix of
the predominantly federal agents Department of Homeland Security, Customs and
Border Patrol, as well as the National Guard that brought
out some of these protesters. But you can see they've
created quite some space between them and then these protesters
(10:34):
that violence that you were referring to, Jess. You can
see that there's a car burning in the background, and
while they've made a semicircle here on the street, you
can see that the WEIMO over there has been vandalized
and we understand that some cars over there may also
(10:56):
be waymos that have been set on fire. So this
is part of the night that law enforcement really worries
about because when I look at some of these protesters,
they are not resembling the people who were here when
all of this began earlier this morning in Los Angeles.
This crowd is different, and so now you have a
(11:16):
problem for law enforcement trying to contain these people, whoever
they may be, some of them who may have some
legitimate concerns, but then also other people who are mixed in.
So that is where we are in the evening right now.
But again we are very close to where this all began,
and these federal agents now are just standing here with
some space between them and these protesters.
Speaker 1 (11:39):
And again we're thank you young.
Speaker 14 (11:40):
We're looking live at some of these waymos that are
on fire at the moment. And as Kong noted, this
has taken a turn since she's been out there over
the last several hours. When she saw a different type
of protester that was there in a more peaceful way
a lot of people, things have turned far more destructive
(12:01):
and violent.
Speaker 5 (12:02):
Next to chief law enforcement and intelligence analysts for C
and m John Miller, and he says, yeah, there's a
mix of protesters, but it's not clear what their intentions are.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
It seems pretty clear.
Speaker 5 (12:16):
What their intentions are because they're manifesting themselves in what
is they made for TV? Post apocalyptic riot.
Speaker 15 (12:24):
You have purely protesters for immigrant rights, for migrant rights,
protesting against the government action. You have some Palestinian protesters
who have been part of a protest movement who are
also protesting against the government who have joined in.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
And then in the background you.
Speaker 15 (12:43):
Have some experienced anarchist groups that are very adept at protesting,
but also adept at moving within the crowd and then
breaking away to do things in terms of property damage
and other things that are more provocative than many of
the protesters who shot up might have been intending on.
Speaker 1 (13:03):
And it's exactly as you describe.
Speaker 15 (13:05):
It's a mix that moves as one, but this isn't
necessarily altogether in terms of what their intentions are.
Speaker 5 (13:13):
Next, we have ABC seven in Los Angeles. See, this
is a media covering this thing. This is how they
cover problems every day. They gloss over them when they're
committed by blacks or legal aliens or Antifa because these
are their protected classes. This is them blaming President Trump
(13:34):
for provoking the rioters as they report that the protesters
are making their way into the freeway, onto the freeway.
So sure, they're closing down the freeway, but they're only
doing it because Donald Trump provoked them.
Speaker 12 (13:50):
Put an end to these migrant riots. Order will be restored,
the President writing, the illegals will be expelled and Los
Angeles will be set free.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Speaker 12 (14:01):
So obviously some provocation here from the President in several facets.
As we see here we go, those demonstrators are making
their way down the ramp and onto the one on
one freeway. This is, I think a concern that we
had seen a little earlier. The freeway had been shut
down by law enforcement, and it is now being shut
down by the other side. Demonstrators are on the surface
(14:24):
of the southbound one oh one freeway and blocking traffic.
Speaker 5 (14:29):
So they're all reading from the same script. Here's CNN
calling the riots a cauldron created by the deployment of
the National Guard.
Speaker 1 (14:39):
See if you hadn't.
Speaker 5 (14:40):
Sent anyone in to stop the looting, the fires, the violence,
the brick throwing at cops, if you hadn't done that,
then then they we wouldn't be having all these problems.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
Here's the concern.
Speaker 13 (14:53):
It's the cauldron that has been created today by the
deployment of the National Guard, by how people are feeling
about these ice arrests that occurred on Friday, what that
clash could mean today here on the streets of Los Angeles.
And one thing you asked me, Jim, I just want
to return to it. You asked, what is the LAPD
said about what happened last night?
Speaker 1 (15:14):
What happened last night?
Speaker 13 (15:15):
And the words of the LAPD was the entire protest
wrapped quote without incident.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
So this is a.
Speaker 13 (15:22):
Response that we're seeing after that LAPD Press.
Speaker 5 (15:25):
Relief Michael Very Show. Next we have MSNBC's John Heilman.
He said Trump provoked a riot. See, there wasn't anything
going wrong till Trump provoked it, because peaceful protests are
bad for his administration.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
You know what's crazy about this?
Speaker 5 (15:46):
Do you think anybody at home watching people shutting down
freeways and setting cars on fire? Do you think anybody
sitting at home going you know, you see all these
people out here burning stuff down in Los Angeles. I
don't think we should send them back to their home country.
You see always people carrying the Mexican flag that don't
(16:08):
want to go back to Mexico. I think we should
keep them here to carry the Mexican flag and burn
stuff up here. I think that's what we should do.
You think anybody's at home doing that anyway?
Speaker 1 (16:16):
Here's the audio.
Speaker 16 (16:17):
I think you know you have seen obviously this. There
has almost been like a linear effect here. It's like
the more there's been any kind of as soon as
you got the National Guard, things escalated. Governor Newsmon's right,
there was anything like a riot happening on Friday Saturday.
The thing that provoked this was not yet anything that
approached riot standards. The police farm Yeah, police Commissioner yesterday
(16:39):
said you know that he would reevaluate. He didn't want
the National Guard er initially, but now the circumstances on
the street were getting worse, and he might reevaluate that
decision if you're asked today. And this is what's so
toxic about this environment, right, which is that I think
that Governor Newsman and Mayor Bass understand exactly what this
logic in escalation is. There are not two equal sides here.
(17:02):
Where you have Donald Trump's administration on one side, and
somehow Democrats on the other, Kevin Newsom and Karen Bastard
out of control over what happens on the streets of
Los Angeles. And what Donald Trump has is perfect control
now over the people in his administration. You go back
five years ago, almost to the day is when the
classes happened to Lafayette Square, where we know that Donald
(17:23):
Trump was reposing the notion of him both of the
Interaction Act and shooting protesters in the leg Mark Esper.
Mark Milly said no, there is no one now in
the Trump administration who will say no to Donald Trump.
And in fact, as Jonathan said, you've got this internalist anymore,
there's a big rigu to see who.
Speaker 1 (17:40):
Will be the fastest.
Speaker 16 (17:42):
Pete Hegseth is not going to be Mark Esper in
twenty twenty five.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
And that's where the danger.
Speaker 16 (17:46):
Lies because is as they continue to ratchet up the
force levels on the street. It's not like Governor Newsom
and Karen Bass no matter what they want to do,
can can in some way back off. They don't have
control of what's happening on the streets with the people
who are protesting or rioting whenever it comes to.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
And that's why.
Speaker 16 (18:04):
There's kind of this escalatory, this kind of uncontrollable escalatory
framework that favors in some ways the Trump administration because
I grew Johnson one hundred percent. As long as this
is seen, if the protests are peaceful and seen as righteous,
bad for the administration. If they start to look like riots,
and if they seem to be out of control and
they're violent, they favor the politics, favor the administrations, and
(18:27):
the administration can provoke those with perfect discipline on the
Trump's side, they can provoke those scenes on the streets
to be more violent.
Speaker 5 (18:38):
Listen as CNN's Brad Todd was cut off as he
tried to explain why sanctuary cities are not a state's
rights issue. They don't want him to say this on
the air, so he's cut off.
Speaker 17 (18:55):
Well, we got to this moment because California has a
sanctuary policy. The state law for bids local law enforcement
from cooperating with or local government from cooperating with immigration enforcement.
We have immigration laws that govern the entire land, and
California is willfully ignoring them. California is left wing politicians
set this up. If California had long been cooperating and
(19:18):
helping enforce immigration laws all along the way, this.
Speaker 18 (19:21):
Would not be It's not the whole state. You do
know that some of this is jurisdictions. There are certain
towns they do, but there are certain laws. But there
are certain towns that absolutely have cooperated with federal authorities.
Speaker 1 (19:35):
Shouldn't they all? You know, this is part of the
issue that.
Speaker 18 (19:40):
Is always interesting here is when.
Speaker 1 (19:44):
Republicans want to talk about states rights. It's about states
rights when.
Speaker 18 (19:48):
It is something that they're interested in, and not when
it is something that perhaps Democrats and their states are
interested in.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
And so I think we've all agreed on what immigration
laws are. It's not as a states. We're going to
talk about this more in the hour I want to.
Speaker 5 (20:03):
CNN's Harry Inton says President Trump is eager for what's
playing out in Los Angeles because polling shows the American
public supports his immigration policy. You know what Trump is doing,
He is exposing the chasm, the rift. Pick a side.
(20:29):
You want these people over here, You want them to
come to your town, burn your house down, burn your
cars down, block your freeways, shut your roads down. You
want that, or you want me to continue to get
rid of them. You decide, Donald.
Speaker 8 (20:43):
Trump, the president, picking a fight on this into an extent,
you see Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass a Democrat, and
the California Governor Gavin Newsom pushing back. So what a
voter see in terms of their perceptions of Republicans, the
President or Democrats, say Gavin Newsom on this issue.
Speaker 19 (20:59):
Yeah, an electorate believe that the Democrats don't have a
clue on the issue of immigration. I mean, you could
just take it here closer to trust more and immigration.
Democrats versus Republicans. Got three different polls for you across
the board. They all tell the same story. Republicans lead
on the issue of immigration. You see it here, CBS
(21:19):
plus six, you see it here, CNN plus six. You
see it here, IPSOS even bigger plus nineteen. No matter
what poll you look at, no matter which way you
cut it, the American public is with the Republicans. The
American public is with Donald Trump, and to a much
greater extent than they were in term number one. And
it's not just on the broad issue of immigration. It's
on the specifics as well, in which the American public
(21:42):
is with Donald Trump. And the Republicans, and that is
why Donald Trump is eager to take on this fight
and eager for those scenes at a Los Angeles.
Speaker 5 (21:49):
There's a lot of cell phone footage out there of
the riots, and we've gone through a fair amount of it.
Speaker 1 (21:58):
Most of it is not.
Speaker 5 (21:59):
Useful because it's bad audio because there's not a mic
directly attached to the to the.
Speaker 1 (22:05):
Phone, so it's it's it's not very good.
Speaker 5 (22:08):
But we we found one of a man screaming Allah
akbar at the National Guard troops. Now what's interesting about
this is Mexico doesn't have a Muslim population, So how
is a Muslim taking the side of what was a
(22:35):
Mexican issue. These were these were folks all running around
with a Mexican flag, and this man is carrying a
Mexican flag and screaming a lah acbar.
Speaker 20 (22:47):
Give it a listen, hola, hola hello.
Speaker 5 (23:09):
This next audio has two different points of interest, and
I want to come back to the Alabar. One man
is threatening the families of the National Guard members. Oh,
that's nice, while another man is giving instructions to his
quote unquote comrades, a term used by communists for their
(23:30):
fellow communists.
Speaker 10 (23:44):
Like this side to rush, so you can call.
Speaker 6 (23:49):
Your comrade back.
Speaker 1 (23:57):
Michael Berry.
Speaker 5 (24:03):
Let's go back to the audio of the man screaming
a lah akbar at the National Guard in Los Angeles.
What we're witnessing here is pro Hamas terrorists. What we're
witnessing is pro Hamas terrorists carrying the Mexican flag. So
(24:28):
what's happened is the folks who are coordinating this effort
are bringing in the various elements. Maybe the trainees will
be in next real the real violent end of the
training's the ones that show up and throw stuff at
people and threaten people.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
They may are to be there.
Speaker 5 (24:43):
That'd be interesting to see how the now the Mexicans
respond to that. But they've brought out now the pro
Homas folks because they need some more muscle. And these
folks are interesting because they What we're witnessing now is
(25:05):
the various groups coming together to create chaos. And we're
supposed to believe, well, the pro Hamas people just really
like the Mexicans who are here illegal, illegally, so they're
gonna run around with the Mexican flag. Okay, well, how
about we move you to Mexico If you want to
go to Mexico. We'll send you to me. You can
live in Mexico. How does that sound.
Speaker 1 (25:26):
Well, that's where we are.
Speaker 5 (25:28):
We're supposed to believe that all these people are now
coming out of the woodworks and they're all just they're
all just opposed to deportation of Mexicans. It's like that
scene in Revenge of the Nerds where you know we're
all we're all Mexicans. Now we're all nerds.
Speaker 11 (25:44):
Now.
Speaker 1 (25:44):
Remember I just wanted to say that.
Speaker 21 (25:48):
Now I'm a nerd and I'm here tonight to stand
up for the rights of other nerds, I mean all
our lives who've been laughed at and made to feel.
Speaker 1 (26:00):
Inferior in the night. Those bullards they trashed our house.
Speaker 22 (26:08):
Why because we're smart, because we look different.
Speaker 1 (26:15):
Well we're not.
Speaker 22 (26:19):
I'm a nerd and I'm pretty proud of it.
Speaker 1 (26:24):
Thank Golbert.
Speaker 23 (26:27):
I'm a nerd too. I just found that out tonight.
We have news for the beautiful people. There's a lot
more of us in our view. I know there's alumni
here tonight. When you went to Adams, you might have
been called a spaz, or a doric or a geek.
(26:50):
Any of you that have ever felt stepped on, left out,
picked on, put down. Whether you think you're a nerd
or not, wy, don't you just come down here and
join us?
Speaker 1 (27:01):
Okay, come on, I bet it.
Speaker 22 (27:11):
Just join us, because uh, no one's really going to
be free until the nerd persecution ends.
Speaker 19 (27:26):
I could.
Speaker 5 (27:30):
So we had the Egyptian Muslim who made his own,
you know, homemade flamethrower and and attacked the these Jews.
It's pretty brutal, pretty nasty, brutal. If you see the
actual footage, it's pretty darn rough to watch.
Speaker 1 (27:53):
Well.
Speaker 5 (27:54):
The mainstream media, being as predictable as they are, they
they ABC News ran the following headline, Colorado attacks come
amid record incidents of antisemitic and Islamophobic hate crimes. So
(28:16):
a Muslim man attacked a bunch of Jews and ABC's
approach is, yeah, Jews and Muslims are under attack.
Speaker 1 (28:25):
Wait what.
Speaker 5 (28:28):
They've made the perpetrator's class part of a victim group.
Then ABC News actually goes and talks to Care the
Terror Front, the Front for the Terror for Muslim Terrorism,
to bolster their claim that Muslims are actually the victims here,
(28:50):
the same care that the Biden administration cut ties with
because the group's leadership openly celebrated the October seventh terror
attacks in Israel, which included some Americans.
Speaker 1 (29:07):
I will remind you it's as if.
Speaker 5 (29:12):
It's as if the media doesn't care anything about Muslims
attacking Americans, be they Jew or Christian, because they're worried
that if a Muslim attacks Americans, the Americans will think Muslims.
Speaker 1 (29:29):
Are people who are who are people who attack?
Speaker 5 (29:33):
And what's really upsetting is we don't want Muslims to
be maligned as not good people. That's the point here,
which calls to mind the great Norm MacDonald. The man
could carry out, the man could carry out the delivery
(29:53):
of a joke in a manner that unless you realized
he was telling a joke and that he was landing
it sticking it, you would think that what he was
saying was really dumb in this case, or really objectionable.
But in fact, what he was doing was baiting Margaret
Cho a liberal comedian, into making his point for him.
Speaker 1 (30:19):
And she has no idea that he's duping her. Listen
to this.
Speaker 4 (30:23):
My friend's name, but he said his biggest well, I
can't I can't say my friend's name. But he said
his biggest fear is that Isis or some terrorist group
like that will get a hold of a dirty bomb
and exploded over a major city within the United States
(30:47):
and kill tens of millions of people, because then the
blowback against innocence Muslims would be absolutely terrible.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
Yes, that's rue, that's true. Let's do some joke.
Speaker 5 (31:08):
That is a level of comedic genius. When you can
make a political point through a joke, it will last
much longer because you open people's mind when they laugh
to something that sticks deeper. I guess somebody got bumped into.
(31:34):
Parents got into a brawl at Memphis Elementary kindergarten graduation.
Several parents could be seen throwing punches at each other,
but we didn't see any wigs removed. You'll have to
look this one up for yourself because we don't get
to bring you video, but trust me, it's worth it.
It's from w r EG TV in Memphis.
Speaker 24 (31:57):
This week's graduation at falk Ellen Entry will be one
to remember. And it's not because of the ceremony or
the graduates.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
Oh my god, that was what two or three different
paper fight and it's at a graduation for the kid
that's ridiculous.
Speaker 24 (32:14):
Shocking video shows a group of parents yelling and throwing
punches at each other in front of kids. You can
see parents, children and staff members staring or walking off
in disbelief. Some kids are even heard crying and yelling
stop to the people.
Speaker 1 (32:32):
Involved in the brawl.
Speaker 24 (32:33):
And what do you think that type of message, you
know sends for kids seeing parents fight like that.
Speaker 4 (32:39):
That they can do the same thing as a bad
influence that they're not handling theyself as adult.
Speaker 24 (32:44):
People I spoke to in Wes Smith Is say this
type of behavior since the wrong message to children.
Speaker 1 (32:53):
Thank you, good night.