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February 3, 2026 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
Very Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
We're gonna take a lot of hate want We're gonna
be sued every day, numerous times. I think you will
see the left try to control the media. They're going
to show their first crying female, first crying child, and
say how inhumane we are.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
I just wouldn't say that. I'm so sorry. Only people
who are getting attacted children. They don't understand. They're so sorry.
I wish I could do something, but it can't. I

(00:47):
don't know what to do. I'll try and be there, but.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
They won't talk about three hundred and forty thousand children
that they failed to take care of. They're not going
to talk about the young women who have been murdered
in this country to hands the criminal cartels. They're not
going to talk about the hundreds of angel moms and
dads who bury their children. Want to talk about family separation,
they bury their children. The children were killed by a

(01:17):
member of a member of a criminal cartewer. Someone's not
supposed to be here. They'll tell one side of the story.
They'll try to vilifies, but they're not going to stop them.

Speaker 1 (01:29):
What I can do this. I'm not sure it's really
important to the future of our nation or your life individually.
He lets them Martin Up fights through her, but it's
just kind of one of those train wreck stories you
can't look away from. Jill Biden's ex husband Jill Biden,

(01:53):
the wife of Joe Biden. Her ex husband, has now
been charged with the murder of his wife. First to
re murder. Okay, report of a domestic dispute at the

(02:14):
couple's Delaware home on the night of December twenty eighth.
Wait a minute, this happened five weeks ago and we're
just now finding out about it. Part of living in
twenty twenty six is we get to amuse ourselves and
entertain ourselves with the misery of famous people falling down.

(02:39):
We should never have to wait five weeks on this Romont.
This is not right. We might not get all the
Epstein details, but we get to get all the details
on the lesser known characters. At the couple's Delaware home
on the night of December twenty eighth, William's wife, Linda Stevenson,
was found unresponsive in the living room at about eleven

(03:01):
to fifteen pm. Linda Stevenson sixty four was pronounced dead
at the scene after Newcastle County POPO unsuccessfully administered eight
at the scene. William, that's Joe Biden's ex, reportedly cooperated
with POPO at the time, causing manner of death not release.

(03:21):
Dispatch audio from the incident mentions cardiac arrest. William was
the one who called nine to one one. I'm going
to need to hear that tape because I watch more
true crime that is healthy, and I can always tell
you that that guy's a horrible actor. They try to

(03:42):
cry on command and they don't sound you know. I
think part of the problem is the hormones that are
released when you are scared of getting caught are very
different than the hormones that are released in the moment

(04:04):
of extreme shock and sadness. So the guy who's just
murdered his wife is not very good at sounding like
when he makes his nine to one one call, the
guy who just came home and his wife was murdered.

(04:26):
And I don't know if you know, sometimes they don't
plan it out well. But a lot of times you
think to yourself, you went to all the trouble to
kill your wife, and you didn't even think about what
you were going to say on your nine to one
one call amateur? Do you not listen to podcasts? My

(04:49):
wife always jokes and says, if something happens to me,
y'all check which podcast he was listening to. And we
just laugh and laugh because we do know a lot
more abo about policing than we used to. I'll tell
you that when I my brother, the cop, when I
would suggest to him that, you know, there'd be a
case in the news like this, and I tell him
what was happening, he go, dude, they stop the amateur

(05:12):
slew thing. You don't know as much as you think
you do. And he would tell me they'd show up
to scenes and you know, somebody's car had been stolen whatever,
and they'd show up and they got to file a
report so you can file it with the insurance and
all that. They got to write up a report so
you can follow with the insurance. And people go, well,
aren't you gonna take fingerprints? Say no, no, we're not

(05:36):
gonna take your car was stolen from your from your driveway.
You don't even take fingerprints. No, I understand you're really upset,
but you're my fourth stolen car in the last five hours.
I'm gonna write you a report, I'm gona give it
to you, and you're gonna file it because you know,
we live in a country where crime is commonplace. And

(05:57):
if we do catch the guy, I'm not going to
prosecute it, but we're gonn try to catch him, don't
get me wrong. And that was that. Jill William Stevenson,
seventy seven, was arrested Monday. Who kills their wife when
they're seventy seven years old? Jill married Bill in February
of seventy when he was twenty three and she was
a student at the University of Delaware. Four years later,

(06:21):
they separated and went through a nasty divorce. Joe Biden
married Jill a couple of years later, in June of
seventy seven, when he was a senator from Delaware. Story
goes that she was their babysitter. Yeah, I think I
read that. I I heard that. I think I feel
like I heard that. That's it. That's all you got.

(06:45):
That's the entirety of the story. Well, maybe he's angry
fifty years later that Jill left him for Joe. Maybe
I don't know. That story's not really as interesting as
I'd expected it to be because other than the hook
of it being Joe Biden's ex wife, I mean ex husband,
although I guess it does give Joe Biden an opportunity

(07:07):
to go See, Yes, I dumped that dude for this
invalid who sure is pooping himself and his son is Hunter,
and I've had to live with that all this time.
But at least I'm still alive. For those of you

(07:28):
who were wondering, see, maybe I should have just stuck
with Bill and not Joe, But I'm still alive. See.
I told y'all he was crazy. It took me fifty
years to prove it, and it wasn't until he killed
his next wife, that wold Joe Biden, Joe Biden, It'll

(07:50):
all come out and you and I will be the
only ones paying attention to it. Be like, you know,
finding out what really happened at the JFK assassination. And
I'm still out here going, Hey, you got Yellina, don't
shooting right now? What about that gun? Don't believe that gun?
Why do you leave the gun there? For acquisitions after acquisition?
Put talking about the JFK assassination. The New York Post

(08:13):
reports jfk assassination film held by Feds could be worth
nine hundred million dollars and could prove second shooter on
Grassy Knoll. The eight millimeter film captured by Dallas air
conditioner repairman Orville Nicks, hasn't been seen since nineteen seventy eight,
when it was sent away for analysis by an LA

(08:34):
company and later fell under federal ownership. It blows my
mind how many things happen in our country and they're
known to happen, and people just accept that, Well, that's
the way it is, okay. So why does the federal

(08:58):
government own that film? Why didn't they reproduce it and
give it back so it can't be seen again? Why? Well, Michael,
if the Russians know what we know, then he'll be it.
Then what what will happen? Why is it so important

(09:19):
that that video not be shown to anybody? Michael? It's
a state secret. How you're willing to believe everything's a
state secret? How about tomorrow the federal government comes, confiscates
your home, throws you in a ditch and claims you
were mugged and that's how you died. And when your

(09:39):
family comes asking what happened? It doesn't seem to add up.
We go, oh, state secret, don't tell anybody? It was
real bad. There are people who almost seem to like
the idea that the government gets to hide everything and
anything from us they want because y'all don't know state secrets.
Oh really? Yeah, yeah, we could tell you, but we'd

(10:03):
have to kill you.

Speaker 2 (10:03):
Who.

Speaker 1 (10:05):
Okay, so you're okay if the government hides information from you, well,
you know you don't want that falling into your own hands. Okay,
whose hands is it in right now? Well, people that
know a lot more than me and you. I don't

(10:26):
know what they know where in me. I don't know
who they are. I have no reason to believe that
they're more trustworthy than me or you for that matter.
I can tell you they're not as gullible as you are.
I can tell you there are a lot of gullible people.
You remember when a few years ago it came out

(10:47):
that the Biden administration was spying on senators who were
on committees that funded the spy agencies. I had people saying, well,
can't tell the center of anything. They'll they'll just leak it. Okay,

(11:08):
you don't let the senators investigate the spies. The spies
get to make decisions and they're not elected and you
don't even know their name. Well, I trust them more,
do you? On what basis? Well, the politicians are all liars,
and the spies who are they? Well, they can't be

(11:31):
any worse, and you couldn't be any dumber. That is
literally the worst logic you could possibly employ. The reason
that throughout history man was almost never free in any
real sense. Certainly not writ large, an individual who lived

(11:52):
on his own away from the crowd, maybe, but systems
that were designed to protect individual freedom, and that freedom
is not from one to the other. It's the government,
the collective over the individual. That's what made this system special.
It's amazing that it's lasted to the extent that it has.

(12:12):
And the reason is because so many people will willingly
give up their freedom. They don't realize they're doing it,
but they so desperately seek security or a sense of security. Hell,
we saw that with COVID. Hey if I keep getting
that shot, I won't die. Right, Yes, take this shot,

(12:34):
the expert says, Okay, Well, how come nobody else is
taken it? Because they want to kill your grandmother? Well,
I'm gonna kill them for trying to kill my grandma.
We watched that happen. We watch people who should know better.
You might be married to one of those people. They
might be your parents, or your kids, or your boss

(12:55):
or your employee. I'm never going to forget that. I'm
never going to forget that. That's like saying, well, you
know miss drogan down at the end of the hallway.
During World War Two. She would leap out into the
hallway as the Jew kids would walk past, stab them

(13:16):
and kill them. Those a real tough time. She just
killed the Jew kids that lived here. You know, they
had been her neighbors, but they're Jews. She just reach
out and stab it. I mean blood in the hallway.
That happened during World War two. Wait, the same lady
you were talking to. Yes, yeah, well we just forget
that happened. We just move on from that. Is that

(13:38):
what we're doing orwill next? Died in nineteen seventy two,
and his family continues the legal war to recover his film,
which may hold the key to exposing one of history's
biggest cover ups. Unlike the Zubruder film, sr Zubruder film
showing the moment President John F. Kennedy was shot in
the head. Nix's camera was pointed at the infamous grass

(14:01):
the exact spot where many witnesses thought shots originated. The
Post reports the Next filmed captured first Lady Jackie Kennedy
climbing on the back of the presidential limo immediately after
her husband was shot, and a view of the fence.
Scott Wattnick of wilk Alexander LP, a attorney representing the
Next family, says it's really the only one that is

(14:22):
known to have captured the grassy knoll area of Dealey
Plaza right as the assassination occurs, noting that the film
could bolster a nineteen seventy eight House Select Committee on
Assassinations report that found Kennedy quote was probably assassinated as
a result of a conspiracy. That panel obtained the Next
Film and played a role in the legal saga over

(14:44):
its return. He added that if we subjected the camera
original film to optics technology of twenty twenty six, we
can certainly capture details in the film that we never
could have captured when the committee had the film back
in seventy eight. In the last six decades, the Next
Film has been held by the FBI news outlet UPI, Congress,

(15:05):
and a private firm called the Aerospace Corporation in LA
which analyzed it and says it handed it back to
the National Archives. The National Archives in nineteen eighty eight
said it only had a copy of it, and the
legal discovery process set forth by Court of Federal Claims
Judge Stephens Schwartz in a January fifteenth order, gives lawyers
a chance to try to force the government to reveal

(15:27):
information about its stewardship. Why is it that, well over
sixty years later, they don't simply make everything available. You
don't run this on Why wouldn't you make everything available?

(15:48):
Everyone involved his dead or close enough to it. What
are they hiding? And why? These should be very very
troubling questions and who that we know is still involved
in covering this up. One of my great frustrations is
I don't think most people really understand the true cost
of the things we complain about. Let's take this Somali

(16:12):
fraud in Minneapolis. Who would have thought that story would
die down so fast? Right, so, we know that billions
of dollars were flowing into childcare centers in a neighborhood
where none of the women work, so why do they
need a childcare center. The unemployment rate is the highest

(16:35):
it is in the entire country, so most of the
men don't work, at least not work that they admit to.
So these people are getting unemployment and welfare as not
being able to get a job, and yet we're also
paying a lot of money for their kids to go

(16:56):
to daycare. And then we find out that the daycare
does doesn't even exist, there are no kids there. It's
just millions and millions of adding up to billions of
dollars in fraud, home health care fraud. And we know
intuitively that is wrong, and so we're against it because

(17:17):
it's wrong. But what we don't do a good job
at Bilton Friedman did, Thomas soul did, and you know
Charlie Kirk did. That's why his message was so powerful.
We have to do a better job of this. You
have to personally understand this so you can explain it

(17:38):
to people around you, because there is a lack of
understanding when we talk about the Medicare fraud, the daycare
center fraud, and the home health care fraud. It shouldn't
just be on the basis that it's offensive for people
to do fraudulent things. We need people to understand, you know,

(18:05):
we say in the abstract, it's costing the taxpayers. I
don't think anybody recoils when we say that. But if
we went over to somebody's back pocket, pulled their wallet
out and said I'm taking this, I said, wait, where
you going? I need that? I'm giving it to some
Somali's who came here, who drive at Lamborghini Way. Whoa, whoa, whoa.

(18:29):
But we don't make that connection. It's not just the
money that we take from businesses and individuals, but it's
the spending power of our government. We take it from individuals,
give it to government, and they hand it out to
other people. How much money has the US government borrowed

(18:52):
to stay open? How much would they need if just
the fraud wasn't maked in. How much money is printed
just to cover the fraud that you wouldn't have to print.

(19:12):
How much of the dollar's devaluation which we've witnessed is
due directly to fraud because we borrowed and printed so
much money. How much of that money never needed to
be printed or borrowed because it didn't need to be

(19:33):
handed to the somalis what happens. If you don't do that,
you have less inflation. Inflation is a cancer on your life.
Forget who's president and who's getting blamed. Inflation is that
the one hundred dollars you make that you first had

(19:55):
to give to the federal government, all the taxes you
had to pay, all the expenses you had to pay
before you could ever keep anything for yourself, Federal, state
income taxes, sales taxes, property taxes. So by the time
you're left with a little bit out of that hundred

(20:15):
you may for yourself if you hold on that money,
if you actually try to save it yourself, in a
couple of days, it's worth less than it was. How
can that be? It will buy less than it could

(20:36):
not because businesses are evil and raising their prices. Businesses
can raise their prices to a certain extent and not
make a dime more in profit. That's what inflation does.
It simply costs more to tread water. So what if
people understood that you pay more for things because of

(21:01):
that fraud? That's what inflation looks like ri at large,
over a long period of time. How much of the
affordability crisis is related to that? How much of the
fact that it never feels like your check adds up
to be enough. Just about the time you feel like

(21:25):
you're able to cover your expenses, something hits, kid gets sick,
somebody smashes into you, and I legal alien smashes into
you with no insurance. Now your vehicle doesn't work, your
back gives out. You go in and the doctor says
you got to rupture a disk. You gotta fix this
or it's going to get worse, and you don't have
the money for it. It's not that you don't make

(21:46):
any money. It's that the money you make doesn't go
very far anymore. Why it's not because of the man
the establishment. Well, to some extent it is, but it's
not the way it's described. It's borrowing more money and
printing more money and injecting that money into the economy.

(22:08):
Means that the money that you bought you made yesterday
is less valuable because now everybody else has that amount
of money, and they're bidding against you for goods and services,
so you're losing the auction. You're the ugliest person going
to the school dance. You can't get any girl to
dance with you because they brought in all these models

(22:31):
male models. Now you're stuck. Or as you used to
you could get the girls to dance with you because
you might not have been the cutest boy in the class,
but you weld number eight out of thirty. Now you're
not in the top thirty and there's only thirty girls. However,
you want to make the analogy, this inflation, this affordability crisis,

(22:56):
all of these things are directly related to what dose exposed,
all that NGO spending, all the fraud to the somalis.
If we're going to win in November, if we're going
to win back the hearts and minds, we're going to

(23:19):
have to learn this, understand it, and be able to
explain it ourselves. Not take a clip of some famous person.
I see this all the time. Hey, Michael so and
so said this, and you played it. Can you get it?
And I'll share it with everybody? Why wouldn't you share

(23:42):
it from yourself? Why wouldn't you understand the principles of economics.
This isn't a magic trick, it's the basic fundamentals of economics.
Reduce it to understanding. Spend a little time on it. Oh,

(24:06):
I wasn't good in school. Nobody learned it in school.
Learn it now. These are very important principles and you
should understand them so well that you can explain it
to your kids, your neighbors, your spouse, because if we
don't hell, yes, we're gonna take.

Speaker 3 (24:31):
Your ar fifteen eighty o bao.

Speaker 1 (24:36):
Oh yes, yes, yes, yes. So there is audio making
the rounds of James Telerico. This is probably the single
moment that he earned the title Beto with the Bible
more than any other. This is clip four O one
ro Moon. This is Tallerico on with Joe Rogan. He

(24:59):
said the words, and he should have to answer for
the words. But it is important that it's being trafficked
right now as if it happened this week, and it didn't.
This is actually from over the summer of last year,
before he announced he was running for the Senate. But

(25:19):
he knew and he knew he was going to run
for the Senate. I don't want to quibble over that point.
I don't want to give it too much emphasis or
important importance, but it is it is relevant. I suppose
tall Rico at this point is trying to get ahead
of an issue he's trying to win evangelicals as a democrat,

(25:45):
and this tells you a lot about the state of
the evangelical church today that he believes that is possible.
You will note that he moderates his tone. It doesn't
sound like a democrat here. He doesn't sound like Gavin
Newsom or Bato for that matter. He's trying very hard

(26:06):
not to sound angry. He's trying very hard not sound
like he's on cocaine, sped up, very anxious, very edgy.
He's trying to channel maybe a little Billy Graham if
he can, or at least Chuck Swindell. He's trying to
give you where I believe the modern evangelical church has

(26:32):
largely fallen. The sweats and flip flops service, the odd
times over the top production value, the health and wellness doctrine,
the restaurants and childcare, and bling and blaying at the church,

(26:59):
the pastor with the airplane. And I'm not talking about
the Black church now. I'm talking about what's become of
the formerly Southern Baptist non denominational. The son as pastor
of the church, his daddy was pastor of for ten

(27:21):
years or fifty. It depends on the church. The moving
away from the Baptist doctrine and organization, the split with
the older the elders of the church who built the
church and financed the church, who counseled young, married couples.
This is the new church, the new age church, where

(27:43):
anything and everything goes and Tallarico is trying to channel that.
And I've seen conservatives say he's trying to get Christian votes.
He won't do it, You're wrong. He will do it.
He absolutely will do it. There is the Black Church,

(28:06):
there is the old White Evangelical Church. But there is
a wide lane in the middle that a lot of
folks don't see, and they have shed their denominational attachment
literally and figuratively. The nomenclature now is very aspirational. The

(28:31):
teachings are not doctrinal at all. They're very permissive, very enabling,
very empowering. They're not judgmental. They're not biblical, but they
sound like they are. And that makes people feel good
because we didn't come to church to be judged. We

(28:54):
don't need a sense of conviction. It kind of has
more of a upperware party vibe to it. We'll get
some other people to come, it'll be fun. Lots of
outside activities, lots of amenities being a member of the church.
That's what Talery Goo is doing here. Give this a listen.

Speaker 3 (29:16):
But I think all this in terms in context of abortion,
because before God comes over Mary and we have the incarnation,
God asks for Mary's consent, which is remarkable. I mean,
go back and read this in Luke. I mean, the

(29:36):
angel comes down and asks Mary if this is something
she wants to do, and she says, if it is
God's will, let it be done, let it be let
it happen. So to me, that is an affirmation in
one of our most central stories that creation has to
be done with consent. You cannot force someone to create.
Creation is one of the most sacred acts that that

(29:58):
we engage in as human beings. But that has to
be done with consent. It has to be done with freedom.
And to me, that is absolutely consistent with the ministry
and life and death of Jesus. And so that's how
I come down on that side of the issue.

Speaker 1 (30:15):
Do you understand what he just said. He claims that
he is for abortion because the angel Gabriel asks Mary, Hey, look,
you want to have this baby or not, it's your choice.

(30:38):
Here's a coat hanger. You decide, let us know son
a God or not. That is maybe the most offensive
contortion of the Word of God I've ever heard. That

(31:01):
is perhaps the worst blasphemy I have ever witnessed in
my fifty four years to suggest that you went into
the issue of abortion with a wide open mind, went
to the Word of God and said, Father, lead me

(31:25):
to the right conclusion. And you said, wait a minute, hey,
I never saw it before. God through his angel is
making clear to Mary you could be the mother of God,
or I'll build a planned parenthood right across the street.

(31:48):
I got a DNC waiting for you. Jesus is a choice.
We know that. Just as you can't be a pro
choice Republican and win the national nomination or a major
statewide position in Texas, so too, you can't be pro life.

(32:09):
You must be adamantly pro choice. So he knew that.
So he went searching for some contortion, and in the
process he gave the option to Mary that she could
abort Jesus, suggesting the immaculate conception had occurred, and now

(32:31):
do you want to have this baby or not. It's
up to you. We got Edna Gladney, or you can
murder Jesus. That's how dangerous, fatal what the Bible is
A gentleman, Els has let me thank you and good night,
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