Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, time, walking load. Michael very
Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:14):
Yeah, was a bad dude and he ran a bunch
of bad boys.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
The first rule of fight club is you do not
talk about fight club.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
The second rule of fight club is you do not
talk about fight club. Not a joke. And so he's
up on the board, wouldn't listening. I said, hey, Esther,
you off the board. I'll come up and drag you off.
That's all. That's all. Joe Biden lies public house.
Speaker 2 (00:47):
There is.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
You know, there is a coalition.
Speaker 4 (00:53):
The Left is a coalition of godless heathens who love
to mock the Christian faith every chance they get. Well,
I'm going to tell you something. We have tolerated this
nonsense and it needs to stop, and it's not going
to stop by asking nicely. We have to destroy their careers,
(01:16):
we have to destroy their businesses. We have to shame
them into fear, because I'm gonna tell you what you
don't do in this country. You don't go running around
messing with the Jews. You don't go running around messing
with the Muslims, because either one of those will rise
(01:37):
up and have you destroyed. But messing with Christians. See,
Christians want to turn the other cheap. Christians want to
be non confrontational. Christians want Donald Trump to solve the
problem so they don't have to. Well, Jacob Fry, the
little fellow who's about to lose to the I'm the
captain now Somali in the upcoming mayoral election in Mogadishu, Minnesota.
(02:05):
After the Trantifa shooting yesterday, he starts mocking Christians and
the fact that they were praying. Well, I'm gonna tell
you something. I find this very, very offensive. The kind
of offensive where I want I want his career destroyed,
(02:30):
the kind of offensive that I'm willing to do whatever
it takes to make to punish people like him for
that he happens to be Jewish. I think it's time
we stop playing so nice. Jews, don't let you do this, Muslims,
don't let you do this. It's time that these people
(02:54):
fear Christians ruining their business, costing them their jobs. I
want Andy Byron at the Coldplay concert on the kiss
Can level of destruction for his career. I want businesses
to go out of business.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
It doesn't take long.
Speaker 4 (03:16):
See after bud Light cracker barrel figured out.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
Hey, uh hey, angry white liberal woman.
Speaker 4 (03:24):
I'm over here with with pen Life or Mutual of
Omaha or whoever else owns the stop, and I got
an eight percent position in your stock?
Speaker 1 (03:34):
Could you knock it off? Over there? Could? Could you?
Could you quit?
Speaker 4 (03:39):
I read somebody said of of of Cracker Barrel. He
said he was talking about Cracker Barrel, and he said,
where else can you get cream gravy that tastes like
the plastic bag of mix from which it came? The
name is Dave Alexander. I don't know who he is,
but I thought that was funny. His whole post was.
(04:00):
I haven't said much on this one, mainly because I
think Cracker Barrel sucks.
Speaker 1 (04:04):
But this, this.
Speaker 4 (04:05):
Right here is something I can respect, love the tradition,
the food bites. Where else can you get cream gravy
that tastes like the plastic bag of mix from which
it came? Man, that is quality right there? That is quality.
I think people thought Cracker Barrel was a Christian company.
(04:28):
Have you seen the things they sponsor? Have you seen
the people they've brought in to change their image? They
don't want you as a customer anymore? So why on
earth would you go running back to them. Oh, they
put the old man herschel back on the sign. It
was never about the old man. It was about them
(04:48):
funding causes. And the moment you said, hey, we have
a problem with that, they said to your face, they
don't want you there. They didn't have to bring all
this new stuff in, this woke stuff. They knew you
wouldn't like that. They wanted to show you that you
don't run Cracker Barrel, that they don't want you there.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
You're old and dying off.
Speaker 4 (05:11):
They don't want a bunch of white Christian folks coming
after church.
Speaker 1 (05:15):
Y'all can all go to hell.
Speaker 4 (05:17):
They're bringing in a whole new except here's the problem,
this whole new demographic to whom they're pandury.
Speaker 1 (05:24):
Those people wouldn't be caught dead at Cracker Barrel? Are
you kidding me?
Speaker 4 (05:29):
So they lost the people they had, but can't get
the people they wanted. They wanted to all sit around
with short, spiked up haircuts, wearing wolverines and flannel shirts,
with big fat asses and maybe a wallet hanging from
the chain on the side. It's a weird look, that's
(05:51):
what's riding there. Their Harley's up there. That's who they
wanted there. That and sissy guys. And they don't care
if you leave. They'd rather you leave because they don't
want you complaining about the new people that have come around.
Speaker 1 (06:03):
So that's how I feel about this.
Speaker 4 (06:05):
I'm tired of Christians and our faith being mocked, insulted,
and bullied, and I'm tired of my fellow Christians standing
for it. Have a spine and the worst thing I'll tee.
The thing that gets me the most is how many
people won't stand up for themselves, their faith, their community,
their people, their race, or anything else. And they'll say, yeah,
(06:28):
but that's why I'm glad we got we got Trump,
because he'll say things that I can't how can he
say them?
Speaker 1 (06:35):
And you can't.
Speaker 4 (06:37):
What you mean is because he's willing to accept criticism
for the greater good.
Speaker 1 (06:43):
But I'm not.
Speaker 4 (06:45):
Here's that little weasel. Jacob Fry, the mayor of Minnesota.
Speaker 3 (06:50):
These were Minneapolis families. These were American families, and the
amount of pain that they are suffering right now is extraordinary.
Don't just say this is about thoughts and prayers right now,
these kids were literally praying. It was the first week
of school. They were in a church.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
The Catholic Church of.
Speaker 4 (07:13):
Minnesota asked Tim Walls repeatedly for extra protection at their church,
schools and services and were denied. All the while he
was plowing more money into sex change therapy. That the
state of Minnesota is obsessed with cutting off boys wieners
and making girls into boys, obsessed with it. It's a
(07:34):
real sickness. It's a disgusting, grotesque sickness. So then CNN's
Dana Bash said to forget thoughts and prayers, and then
she says, well, I'll let you hear.
Speaker 5 (07:48):
I mean, he's expressing something that I know you feel
and most people feel, which is a combination of sadness
but raw rage. Forget, forget about thoughts and prayers. These
kids were literally praying when they were murdered through a
church window.
Speaker 1 (08:09):
We are Christians.
Speaker 4 (08:10):
We pray even when you can't imagine, even when you
would be angry at.
Speaker 1 (08:16):
God, we pray. It's what we do. Respect it, you
evil devil.
Speaker 3 (08:22):
Guitars, cigars, and a few thoughts from Bizarre one show.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
The genius of Norm MacDonald.
Speaker 4 (08:33):
Really was that he didn't need you to laugh at
his joke, and he never stopped to point out what
clever thing he had said to get you to laugh
at it. It was as if if you got the joke,
you really appreciated it. And I think a lot of
(08:55):
people didn't. They never understood what he was doing. So
he had I think it was Margaret Show in a
discussion and he made the point it been a series
of Muslim attacks on Americans in America, and he made
(09:21):
the point that, well, I'm worried if they kill almost
every American, then somebody might try to harm Muslims. A
ridiculous reductio ad absurdum, a ridiculous setup, right, And Margaret Chow,
(09:41):
a comedian, lefty liberal, bites because she has no idea.
He's making the point of how absurd their reaction is
and would be, and that is lost on her, And
at that moment you realize it's both a really, really
(10:04):
funny joke but also kind of scary.
Speaker 2 (10:08):
Well, I can't say, 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
(10:29):
the United States and kill tens of millions of people,
because then the blowback against innocent Muslims would be absolutely terrible.
Speaker 1 (10:46):
Yes, that's rue, that's true. Let's do some.
Speaker 4 (10:50):
Jokes point made so CNN's Aaron Burnett had Mogadishu mayor
Jacob fry On, and they did exactly that.
Speaker 6 (11:03):
When you talk about compassion, I just I don't want
to tiptoe around the edge of this. But you know,
the shooter's name was in question, the gender of the shooter.
No one's really sure what's going on there. Five years
ago was Robert, then a name changed to Robin. Okay,
this is being seized in all corners, as you can imagine,
(11:23):
in all sorts of ways. And you know that mare
and perhaps that's why when you spoke about this so
profoundly and powerfully as you are even here now. But
when you spoke about this today publicly, you voice concern
for the transgender community, for the community overall. And obviously
you chose to do that in that moment because you
thought it was important. And I wanted to give you
(11:44):
a chance to say why, to say why you felt
it was important to do.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
That in that moment.
Speaker 3 (11:54):
Obviously, I've heard about the rhetoric and the narrative that
is being pushed out.
Speaker 1 (11:58):
But here's the thing that is going to use this
as an.
Speaker 3 (12:02):
Opportunity to villainize our trans community or any community has
lost touch with a common humanity. We got to be
operating not out of hate for any group, but out
of a love for our children.
Speaker 4 (12:21):
Okay, Jacob Fry who touched the golden coffin of Saint
George Floyd after he died of an overdose in the
middle of committing a felony when officers arrived in Mogadishu.
(12:44):
Jacob Fry is about to lose the mayoral race in
the city of Mogadishue on November fourth, to the captain
in the Tom Hanks movie, whose whole motto is I'm
the captain Now it is. It's comical. If there weren't
(13:12):
such consequences, it would be more fun. But it is
comical to watch white liberals twist.
Speaker 1 (13:19):
And turn.
Speaker 4 (13:22):
To whoever their latest and greatest overlord is. In Mogadishu,
it's Somalis. In New York, it is socialism and Muslims
in a number of states. In number of places, it
(13:42):
is illegal aliens. But the trans lobby is always there.
And if you're not trans, you need to be and
if you can't do that, you need to be an ally.
Speaker 1 (13:59):
Well, first you need to be an advocate. Then you
need to be an ally or you could be adjacent.
Speaker 4 (14:05):
Oh yes, we have lots of terms of things you
must do and your sexuality, including your sex what we
would call gender. Gender refers to nouns. Sex refers to
human beings. But people use that word because sex makes
them uncomfortable. But the technical term was always sex was
for human beings. Gender was for nouns. And it's one
(14:31):
of those things that burst onto the scene out of nowhere.
Global warming took a little while to pick up, but
the whole hormones for children, cross sex dressing. I saw
a chart yesterday that looks like a rocket taking off.
(14:54):
It was number of adult Americans who are self identified
as trans and it goes along real steady at about
zero point one percent, and in the last few years
it shoots up, kind of like getting to Chihuahua after
Paris Hilton's movie where she carried one around. It's it's disturbing, frankly,
(15:25):
to watch how people become consumed with trends and they
become consumed with and this has been the case since
the beginning of time fitting in. People want a community,
they want a tribe. It's why people join cults, it's
(15:46):
why people join the country clubs, why people join all
sorts of things, but to absolutely wreck your body and
change your identity for this attention and community.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
And now we're seeing the effects.
Speaker 4 (16:03):
Why so many of these crimes are being committed by
these people because they're on really, really bad drugs. There's
an old joke that you know the difference between a
doctor and God. God doesn't think he's a doctor. There
is an arrogance about medical professionals. And I'll tell you this,
I think in large part it wasn't of their making.
(16:25):
I think many people want to be children and they
want other people to take care of them.
Speaker 1 (16:32):
I will often hear.
Speaker 4 (16:33):
From people I have to ask my pastor if I
can date that girl.
Speaker 1 (16:38):
Wait, what this is the Christian Church? What are you doing?
You are a Christian.
Speaker 4 (16:46):
You don't need your pastor to answer that to divine
the answer for you. Do you understand the purpose of
the Reformation was that the individual can read the Word
himself and decide for himself. The days of the institution
passing down in a hierarchical system ridiculous. Doctors are useful,
(17:10):
but you have to make decisions for yourself, and you
need to understand that every doctor has a different approach,
and you need to think about your overall health before
the time comes that you're having a problem. The systems
most likely to break down on you are your heart,
your lungs, your brain and your brain, consciousness, your blood.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Start focusing on those things.
Speaker 4 (17:36):
Go get a baseline, Go get a baseline of your hearing,
your testosterone level, your blood pressure, your blood sugar. Those
things aren't your lungs. Know what those things are. That way,
when you get to the point that you're worried you
have a problem, they can look at it and go, oh,
(17:56):
this is where you were, This is where you are now.
You've had a digre degradation, you had deterioration, or it
may be that no, it's same as it's always been.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
Or if you have a number that is an outlier.
Speaker 4 (18:10):
You have a higher blood sugar than perhaps his ideal,
but you've had that higher blood sugar since you were fourteen.
Then at forty five you go in and get checked
because you're worried, and you find out you have the
same blood sugar a one c that you've had your
entire life. That's very different than going in and finding
that you used to have a low number and now
(18:30):
you have a high number. The point of all of
this is this, You've got to be strategic about your
own health, about what you put into your body, what
you do with your body, how you treat your body,
the food that fuels you, the medicine that hopefully heals you,
(18:51):
the things you do to ward off illness. I believe
these are biblical principles. I believe your God. Your body
is a temple that God gave you in the same
way that God gives you children. And it is your
responsibility to be the best parent you can be. That
doesn't mean all hugs and loves and kisses. It means
(19:11):
also disciplining. It means also correcting. It means teaching. How
many people tell me that they're frustrated that the schools
are not good and that their child doesn't know this
or that, And I say.
Speaker 1 (19:25):
Have you taught your child that?
Speaker 4 (19:28):
Well? No, do you understand there was a time before
we had schools, and yet we continued to advance as
a species. Because it is the role of the parent
to teach. Why would you think you can hand that off?
That's absurd. Do you hand off the feeding of your children?
Speaker 1 (19:47):
Also? Do you hand off the putting them to bed
every night?
Speaker 4 (19:51):
These are the responsibilities of a parent, and these are
responsibilities you owe to yourself as well. These are powerful,
important responsibilities that you owe to yourself as well. We've
got to start taking personal responsibility for ourselves and our families.
We are sending off too many kids that we script
(20:12):
and saved and sacrificed to pay to send them to
an institution of indoctrination, and we wonder why they are
monsters when they come home. That was the goal, to
make them a monster. The goal was to break the
cycle of your Christian values, to break the cycle of
your patriotism, of your love of country, of your hard
(20:34):
work and thrift. That was the whole point. To teach
them that everything they knew was wrong, to break them down,
to build them back up to be something they're not.
Your child does not go wayward if you have taught
them well, if you have raised them upright. You know,
(20:55):
I always ask the children of people that I meet
others when I meet their children. You know, if we're
at an event where oh, you know, this is mister Barry,
this one we listen to on the radio. And I said,
what's your name? And Cameron or Morgan or whatever the
kid's name is and they're eight, ten, twelve years old,
Nice to meet you. What does your daddy do for
(21:17):
a living? And I'm shocked how often they don't have
a clue. I don't mean they can't remember if he's
an aerospace engineer or mechanical engineer. I mean they have
no idea, none at all. So what does that child think?
How does that child think? Food is put on the
table and a roof over your head, and automobiles and
(21:39):
fuel and expenses. Do you know that a child is
most likely to grow up and do what their father does?
Why wouldn't you tell them what you do, even if
that's not what you want them to do for a living.
Children often graduate college without any understanding of job skills
(21:59):
and task performance and investment and value added and employment
and management and leadership. Well that's not the school's fault.
I mean, sure they've failed, but the child has been
failed by more than the school, than the system. I
have listeners who will dutifully listen to our show and
(22:21):
every other one and watch Fox News and read every
email from it. It's forward at fifteen times and it's
the end of the world and all things are bad.
But won't spend a moment with their child teaching them
the fundamentals of capitalism, personal health, sexual health, reproduction. Who's
(22:44):
going to teach your child? If you know, we worry
so much about the bad things that the schools teach
our children. I can get people very fired up about
grown men wearing bikinis going in and flopping their waninger
around for element in the elementary. But it's are you
hard to get people to commit to discuss sex and
(23:06):
reproduction with your children. If you don't, who will? If
you don't, who will? Or the other one? People will say,
my dad would roll over his grave if he knew
my kids can't change a tire. You mean, because he
taught you to change a tire and now you haven't.
Where do you think these children are going to gain
this knowledge? Everything that makes you who you are, that's
(23:29):
a good thing. You should share with your children. Everything
that's bad in your life you should use as a
learning experience a teachable moment with your children.
Speaker 1 (23:42):
If we would just raise our children better and yes,
I mean us. I don't mean to them, I mean
to us.
Speaker 4 (23:48):
I've got too many emails from listeners frustrated over.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
Their children who've gone wayward.
Speaker 4 (23:56):
And then when you really drill down, you find out
they didn't drag that kid to church, they didn't drag
that kid to Sunday school, they didn't talk through the
challenges of life, including dating, sex, reproduction, personal finance, how
to make a living, where to spend your money, what
(24:16):
to do if you're pulled over by a cop, even
if you did nothing wrong, or if you did something wrong,
what to do when someone wants to fight, what to
do when someone offers you drugs. It's just as if
a generation or two now just decided, well, I'm just
not going to be a parent.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
I'm going to have this.
Speaker 4 (24:34):
Sort of fantastic view of my parents being really good,
but kids today are not any good. But I'll just
pretend I had nothing to do with that, and it's
not my responsibility. Kind of understand this. We've got to
be the leaders, folks. Our neighbors are watching them.
Speaker 1 (24:49):
Listen to the Michael Berry Show podcast, If you Dare.
Speaker 4 (24:54):
My ear Nose and Throat doctor became nationally famous because
she was prescribing ivermecton during COVID.
Speaker 1 (25:03):
Just this week, the.
Speaker 4 (25:04):
Texas Medical Association again tried to hassle her over there
over that it's insane. And while they're doing that, four
years later all that was happening. Yesterday the House of
Representatives in Texas made ivermectin over the counter legal.
Speaker 1 (25:23):
She was right.
Speaker 4 (25:24):
We spoke to her this morning about ivermectin and how
it might be something you want to consider. Mary Telly
Bowden joins US for a brief update on this case.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
She was our guest a few days ago.
Speaker 4 (25:38):
How did you react when you get the news that
ivermecton over the counter.
Speaker 1 (25:44):
Has gone over over the counter. Yeah, it's unbelievable. Stunned,
a little stunned.
Speaker 7 (25:51):
I didn't think it would ever happen in Texas after
everything that that drug has put me through.
Speaker 1 (25:58):
And how it would I mean, how does it work?
Why does it work?
Speaker 7 (26:03):
Well, it has twenty mechanisms of action. But the key
thing with COVID, and actually this is true with any
RNA virus, it blocks the virus from entering the nucleus
of the cell. It also inhibits an enzyme that the
virus needs. To replicate, so it has broader applications and
(26:24):
just COVID it's it's truly an amazing drug, and it
has a lot of anti inflammatory actions as well.
Speaker 4 (26:30):
We call those off label applications, right. She hates when
I talked MENA makes her crazy?
Speaker 1 (26:42):
So why was?
Speaker 4 (26:43):
Do you know why it was originally used for horses?
If you don't, it's okay. I'm kind of curious how
that started.
Speaker 7 (26:51):
I don't know exactly why. I mean, because you know, parasites,
But I don't know that it was originally I think
it came in combination.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
I don't know that it was first used on animals
from what I.
Speaker 7 (27:06):
Understand, but I could be wrong.
Speaker 1 (27:09):
So let me understand who I mean.
Speaker 4 (27:12):
Who would be a person that might use over the
counter ivermectin. Is this someone that is already sick and
if so, with what? Or is this a prophylactic approach
to overall good health and warding off viruses?
Speaker 7 (27:28):
Well, you know, honestly, it's the best thing we have
for the common cold at this point. So I see
it being used in that in that facility. You know,
people are starting to use it for cancer. It's not
something that I am treating with because I just don't
do a lot of cancer in my practice, but I
do see a lot of people getting ivermectin from the
(27:51):
feed store or Mexico or India to take for cancer.
And you know we're hearing, Yeah, I'm benefits with the
vaccine injured. I had a patient the other day who
I've been trying to help for four years now, I mean,
just really severe symptoms and we finally had a breakthrough
(28:13):
by going on a much higher dose of ibermectum than
I would have normally given him, and he finally got relief.
So I'm see you know, I see the vaccine injured
daily in my office. So we still have a lot
of work to do ivermectin. This is a big win,
but we really need to get these mRNA shots pulled
off the.
Speaker 1 (28:31):
Market, agreed, and they're continuing to job.
Speaker 4 (28:36):
Let's talk about you put something up the other day,
your suggestion to people to find out if they have
spike proteins, and I think you said they could go
to lab Quest or wherever else and get a basic
test done.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
Can you explain that?
Speaker 7 (28:53):
Yeah, so it's lab Core and I would not go
to Quest because the cut off that Quest.
Speaker 1 (28:59):
As much more lower.
Speaker 7 (29:01):
But at lab core you can test your spike protein
and a body level, and we don't have a way
to directly measure spike protein. And the theory is and
the people that got the shots that the body is
continuing to produce spike protein and that's why they continue
to have these symptoms. So the next best thing to
measuring the spike protein itself is to measure the body's
(29:24):
response to that, which is a spike protein and a
body level. And what I am finding and the patients
that got the shots, and these are people, you know,
for the most part, in my practice, I'm seeing people
that got two, maybe three shots total, but years following
these shots, their sky their spike protein and body levels
are sky high. Like when I compared those that got
(29:48):
the shots to those that didn't get the shots, the
spike protein and a body level is ten times higher
than the people and the people that got the shots
than the people that didn't. And in some cases, in
many cases I looked at it, seven percent, the level
was so high.
Speaker 1 (30:04):
That it could not be measured.
Speaker 7 (30:06):
By the test, so over twenty five thousand, which is
not normal when you've gotten the shot so long ago
and you haven't had a recent infection. It's a very
stark difference in what we're seeing and it deserves further research.
Speaker 4 (30:22):
Do you think that people are dying today currently from
side effects of the COVID shot that they took in
say spring of twenty one or four and a half
years later.
Speaker 7 (30:40):
Unfortunately, yes, you look at all calls mortality data, it
continues to rise, Disability data continues to rise. Unfortunately, the
government won't give us up to date cancer data. They're
giving us projections based on old data, but they're not
giving us the most recent data. But from what I'm
hearing amongst friends of mine at M D Anderson is
(31:02):
it's alarming the cancer and the young people. Advanced stage
cancer presenting in young people is something you know more
than they've ever seen.
Speaker 1 (31:12):
All Right, I've got about a minute.
Speaker 4 (31:13):
I want to pin you down on this where exactly
is what exactly is the state of your practice? I
know they've been trying to finish you off. You are
currently practicing? Are you able to continue practicing?
Speaker 7 (31:29):
Yeah, I've moved my office to the west side of
town Spring Branch area, and yeah, I've signed a least
for three years, so I'll go for at least that
long until they can't let me. You know, I don't
think they're going to take my license away, and this
(31:50):
fight is probably going to take years. I mean, I
have to appeal to the state District Court, and then
from there I may have to appeal to the Texas
Supreme Court. And it's already been four years having them
made it to that point, so hopefully I can at
least write out the three year least.
Speaker 4 (32:08):
You and I spoke by email before you were on recently,
and I was under the impression you were no longer
some time ago, no longer accepting new patients as you
dealt with all this. Then a number of people flooded
me with emails wanting to get in. Are you accepting
new patients? And how do people go about that? I
will say on your behalf, so you don't have to.
(32:29):
I know that you became a little frustrated that you
wanted to practice medicine and not have political rallies, and
a lot of people began reaching out wanting to talk
politics in medical politics and all of that when you
wanted to be a practicing physician. So you want to
weed that out.
Speaker 1 (32:45):
I get it.
Speaker 4 (32:46):
You want people who need your medical care, but I've
got thirty seconds. How do people who want to come
and see you see you?
Speaker 7 (32:55):
That's why to call our email, our office front desk
at Breathe and get dot org or seven one three
four nine two two three four zero. I do not
accept new patients online anymore.
Speaker 1 (33:09):
And that had something to do with it.
Speaker 4 (33:15):
Yeah, Les, nice look for two minute like too, and
good night