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March 3, 2026 30 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
What it's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.
The Michael Arry Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Strong words from you.

Speaker 3 (00:15):
A Senator John Cordon out of Texas, the Republican says
former President Donald Trump can't win the twenty twenty four
general election. For President Cornyan saying, I think President Trump's
time is passing by.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Are you saying don't vote for Donald Trump? You know
it's too important to gamble.

Speaker 4 (00:33):
I do think it's very important that we have a
candidate who can win in.

Speaker 3 (00:37):
Twenty twenty four, and I'm not sure President Trump.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
Is that candidate.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
You've said that you think it's time for the Republican
Party to move on from President Trump.

Speaker 4 (00:47):
You know, in politics, unless you can win an election,
you're pretty much irrelevant to.

Speaker 5 (00:52):
The senator didn't say who he intends to support, but
again double down on who he believes the Republican Party
should not know, and that is former President Donald trumpn
n told Fox twenty six he won't be supporting former
President Trump and neither should all the republic dus.

Speaker 6 (01:09):
I can't tell you that I've worked with Senator Cornyan,
who is a for reelection, a number of times on
a number.

Speaker 2 (01:16):
Of pieces of legislation.

Speaker 7 (01:18):
He's actually not been the worst Republican that you can
find in the Senate.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
To be perfectly honest.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
I know Republican voters, and as I said earlier, really
it's a question of who bothers to show up. If
only the most radical people show up in the primary,
then I think that's going to be a.

Speaker 7 (01:43):
Donald Senator John Cornyan to negotiate with Democrats to see if.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
There is a compromise to be reached.

Speaker 3 (01:49):
Cornan joins a bipartisan group of senators who say they
will work on the issue throughout the Memorial Day recess.

Speaker 4 (01:56):
I expector will be an informed debate about reforms. We
can make a lot like Ford to participate in those discussions.

Speaker 8 (02:04):
I've been working for more than three years on a
red flight statute that seems now to have met its moment.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
Senator John Cordon conservative like you.

Speaker 9 (02:16):
Now, there are some Republicans, including former President Trump, who
are ripping this and ripping.

Speaker 2 (02:21):
You as well.

Speaker 9 (02:22):
The deal on gun control currently being structured and pushed
in the Senate by the radical left Democrats with the
help of Mitch McConnell, Rhino Senator John Corney Texas and others,
will go down in history. Is the first step of
the movement to take your guns away.

Speaker 4 (02:36):
The wall, I have to tell you, jucture is Non'm
going to stop illegal immigration.

Speaker 2 (02:41):
Wall is an immorality.

Speaker 9 (02:43):
What we need is a virtual border, shiant wall from sea.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
To shining sea. Makes no sense. What's the leaping.

Speaker 6 (02:51):
We've got a majority in the House of Majordan, the Senate,
and our guy in the White House.

Speaker 2 (02:57):
This moment will pass. Come Jenny.

Speaker 6 (03:00):
We likely won't have a majority in both houses. Hopefully
we still have our president in the White House, but
we have an opportunity to pass the Save Act. It's
the most important piece of legislation in a long time.
We know the White House was stolen from us in
twenty twenty. We know the Democrats cheat. They know they cheat,

(03:23):
they know we know they cheat. Reminds me of the
Sultan Eatsen quote. But you want to hear the quote.
I keep this quote printed out. Alexander Sultzanitsen Russian dissident
talking about the Russian or Soviet overlords, and he just

(03:45):
just has such a great way of anyway he wrote,
we know that they are lying, they know that they
are lying. They even know that we know they are lying.
We also know that they know we know they are lying.

Speaker 2 (04:07):
Two.

Speaker 6 (04:09):
They of course know that we certainly know they know
we know they are lying to as well.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
But they are all still lying.

Speaker 6 (04:21):
In our country, the lie has become not just moral category,
but the pillar industry of this country. It's not forget
the Democrats for a moment. Republicans in a primary will
always run as if it's November. They will ignore that

(04:42):
we are arguing over the purification of our policy platform,
and they'll say, you got to vote for me or
the Democrats will win. And that's how you end up
with a situation we're in right now, where you got
the immediate past leader of the Republicans in the Senate,
Mitch McConnell, voting against Trump at every turn. You've got

(05:07):
Susan Collins in Maine voting against Trump at every turn.
There's only two senators Trump didn't endorse that were up
for reelection, Cornyn and Susan Collins. You've got Lisa Murkowski,
who lost her Republican primary years ago in Alaska, ran

(05:28):
again as an independent. The Democrats moved over to vote
for her. As an independent. She picked up the Country
Club Republicans but I want you to listen to this
quote because this is everything you need to know about
why primaries are important. This is clip number fourteen.

Speaker 2 (05:45):
Ramon.

Speaker 6 (05:46):
This is John Cornyn on CBS a few days ago,
and he knows he's going to lose in the first round.
He may lose altogether if there's not a runoff. They're
three candidates. But he's talking about people voting in a
Republican primary, and he says, if the radicals show up,

(06:09):
do you know who the radicals are? The MAGA people,
the America First people, You your radicals. If the radicals show up,
he won't win.

Speaker 4 (06:21):
I know Republicans voters, and as I said earlier, really
it's a question of who bothers to show up. If
only the most radical people show up in the primary,
then I think that's going.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
To be a challenge.

Speaker 4 (06:38):
If we get a broad spectrum of Republican voters to
turn out in the primary, I'm optimistic about the Outcomey.

Speaker 2 (06:49):
Radicals.

Speaker 6 (06:52):
The swamp views you as a radical if you actually
believe what you say you do, because they don't.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
They just say it to you. You radicals to get
your vote.

Speaker 1 (07:03):
Lived life, learn doing it big on the Michael Berry show.

Speaker 6 (07:09):
The Texas Senate primary race has to become the most
expensive on record anywhere in the country. According to the
media tracking firm ad Impact, more than one hundred and
twenty five million dollars has been spent on advertising. Cornyin
and the GOP establishment has spent seventy million dollars on ads,

(07:33):
compared to the four million dollars by Paxton, who's leading
the race and his supporters.

Speaker 2 (07:40):
Let me ask you a question.

Speaker 6 (07:44):
This isn't money being spent to beat the Democrats in November.
This is money being spent by DC to choose who
the nominee will be. Let's try to let's simplify this.
They're not saying we want a Republican instead of a Democrat.

Speaker 2 (08:11):
They're saying we want this Republican not the other Republicans.

Speaker 6 (08:22):
It's more important to us to choose which Republican than
to choose Republican versus Democrat. That amount of money one
hundred and twenty five million dollars. Do you realize that
amount of money is being diverted away from other races

(08:43):
in November? There is an elastic demand for political control.
They won't be able to raise the money they need
in November to win the races because they squandered the money.
Why do they squander it? You want to find out
what's important to somebody. You look at where they spend

(09:05):
their money. It is very important to the NRSC National
Republican Senate campaign to pick their people, put their people
in office, and keep their people in office. Let's go
back to the case of Charlie Christ for a moment.

(09:27):
Some of you in California will remember Charlie Charlie had
been a Senator in the early nineties for a couple
of years. He was the sitting governor at the time.
In twenty ten when he was challenged by a Tea
Party guy, Marco Rubio. Chris received a bunch of money

(09:52):
from the NRSC because those were his boys, and that
included John Cornyn Corning and McConnell. Were very keen that
their buddy Christ come to Washington, d C. To join them,
and they were determined that the Tea Party guy at

(10:14):
the time, Marco Rubio, not come. They don't want somebody
crashing the party asking questions. That's the camel's nose under
the tent. They might start going back and telling the
base what's going on. Because you see the Republicans in DC,

(10:35):
they don't really have a problem with the Democrats. They
all have dinner together, they're all buddies. But by day
they have to pretend to fight. Then they load up
in the bus and move this little sham to the
next city. It's the Washington generals and Harlem low trotters.
It's not really not really in doubt who's going to win,

(11:00):
but the match, the game is for your enjoyment. It's
also to keep you believing you have a choice. See
if they were all just one party, then you'd want revolution.
But by making you think that you have a choice,
you're invested in the process. This is as old as

(11:25):
political campaigns. In self governance go, making you feel actually
not just not just political parties. Making the people feel
they have some choice in governance is an important way
to stave off revolution.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
And so it is.

Speaker 6 (11:47):
Very important to the Republican Party that they hold on
to John Cornyn and not let Ken Paxton come in.
It was very important in twenty sixteen that they keep
Trump out.

Speaker 2 (12:01):
You'd think.

Speaker 6 (12:03):
That a very popular Republican bringing all these new people
to the Republican base, working class, black, Hispanic, independent, all
these new voters coming to.

Speaker 2 (12:16):
They they want him. They'd rather lose the race.

Speaker 6 (12:20):
They'd rather lose than have one of these guys coming
in and saying, hey, this is what actually happens. This
is why the biker gangs that are up to no
good don't want to be infiltrated, because now you've got
somebody on the inside able to record and tell exactly

(12:42):
what's going on. On the outside, you might sense, hey,
they're up to no good, but it's not till someone
gets inside. It's not that they love Corning so much,
it's that Corn is one of them. Charlie Crist was
one of them. So Charlie Christ was running for the
Senate and he had a huge lead over this upstart

(13:06):
state rep named Marco Rubio. But Rubio was the Tea
Party guy the first big year of the Tea part
in twenty ten. All of a sudden, Rubio is getting
more and more popular, and this is very, very upsetting
to the Republicans in the Senate, so they start pouring

(13:28):
more and more money into Charlie Crist.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
Didn't matter.

Speaker 6 (13:32):
There was a Tea Party sentiment anti Obama sentiment, and
the idea was we don't trust that Charlie crist won't
get up there and be playing foot seats.

Speaker 2 (13:40):
Or the Obama which was strange foreshadowing.

Speaker 6 (13:45):
Rubio wins the Senate seat, wins the Republican nomination. Do
you know what Chris does. He runs as an independent
because if I can't win the nomination, I'll run as
an independent and pull off some votes and keep Rubio
from winning, because I'd rather the Democrats win. And then
what did he do? By twenty twelve, He's a Democrat.
He's supporting Barack Obama. He would end up becoming an

(14:08):
avowed Democrat and an Obama supporter. But in twenty ten,
he was running as a Republican who was going to
go up there and really give it to Barack Obama
because that's what the voters needed to hear. He ended
up running against Ron de Scientists for governor. He ended
up showing his true colors. And I think those are
John Cornyn's true colors too. And I think the National

(14:30):
Republican Senatorial Committee, the Mitch McConnell's, and the John Thunes
and the Lindsey Grahams and all those, I think they know.
I think if any of them is not allowed to
hold their seat. They would all switch to being a Democrat,
and that should tell you everything you need to know.

Speaker 8 (14:43):
Welcome to a special edition in off Jesus Oh Shopping Network.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
Here's a special Yes, Jazy Crocket Hella.

Speaker 8 (14:53):
All right, all right, shout out February with all fans
for reparation. It's a month, baby, y'all listen, as we
all know, it's Black history months, okay, and your girl
Jazzy is a big part of the black history. So
right now, for a limited time only, I'm giving to
you my future constituents. That's a big word for people
that vote for me. I'm giving you the chance to

(15:15):
own a piece of black history. Now. I want you
to close your eyes for a minute and imagine owning
the actual handwritten notes from Martin Luther King Junior's I
have a dream speed Now, we don't have that, but
I do have something as just as relevant. For forty
two easy payments of twenty nine ninety nine, baby, you

(15:37):
can own the very wig I was wearing in my Cinnamon.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
Housement video leaving and Weave. Okay, y'all, look here.

Speaker 8 (15:44):
This one's forevery budget and a big part of my
black history. It's coming to Valentine's Day for you men
and you women. You'll be seeing the future is bright
when I send you my fox inch eyelash extensions.

Speaker 2 (15:55):
I done war on the Late Show.

Speaker 8 (15:57):
Baby, Now find it something for both side. Look here
two twenties gets you too, Honey's Baby. A frame picture
of yours truly and my personal friend John Wayne McConney,
signed by the both of us.

Speaker 2 (16:13):
Look at him with his big cowboy hat, so serious.
All right, y'all, hurry up and bit on these items.
The blackout saying only good.

Speaker 8 (16:20):
Pep, worry y'all been an excellent lot of.

Speaker 2 (16:26):
What a treat or what a treat? Joyce the Sage
of Sunnyside. Welcome to the program, sweetheart.

Speaker 10 (16:34):
You know, I'm thinking. I'm listening about voting, and I
hear people saying that there's no fraud. But if you think,
if anybody out that think it's no fraud in the
voting situation, ask the lady that will worked the poles
for years and she can tell you about some voter fraud.
That's joysh okay. I wanted to work the pole so

(16:58):
bad and here, so I asked a young man that
was already involved, and I said, how do I get involved?
And he told me how I got involved. So my
first day there and I'm a Democrat at the time,
my first game there, Democrats and Republicans didn't vote on
the same machine. So I walked in Greenish Grass and

(17:20):
it's just one machine. I said, where is the Republican machine?
They said this in the backgroom we are meeting. Put
it up. That happened in Sunnyside. And if it happened
in Sunnyside at a black voting place, it happened all
over this city. And that's that was wrong with that happened.
And I have writtness, so much wrongdoing working at the

(17:44):
polls because I started as a clique, but I ended
up as a judge. And I have written this the wrongdoing.
And I went on one day and I reported at
the headquarters and signed aff David signed everything, and I'm
still waiting on them to call me back. So that's
what happened in this city. The fraud that takes place,

(18:10):
the stuff I witnessed is unreal. And if anybody remember
when Judne Bonye was in runoff with sun Bey Chase Gray,
that just made me sick at that time, I just
stopped working. In Sunnyside, the people came in. They did
not want to vote for Judas Bologna. I mean, you done, Boney,

(18:34):
and these people I was a judge at that time,
they would not allow those people to vote for sun
Bechase Gree. They told her, no, don't vote for her.
She was born with a silver spoon in her mouth.
If that happened in Sunnyside and Black Area, it happened
all over the city. So if anybody know if sun
py Chase Gray is still living, anybody know it, tell

(18:55):
her she didn't lose. That election was stolen. And so
when I first wanted to work, a lady told me,
she said, Joyce, there are elections that are not lost.
Many of them are stolen. I lived to see that day.
And when it comes time from to be Trump, they
called me to be a judge. I said, no, I've

(19:17):
taken down machineles. I am not going to work the
polls anymore. I just got tired of seeing the wrongdoing,
and I'd already reported it, so it wasn't any sense
of me going down reporting anymore. So I just stopped
working the polls because I knew I knew that it
was not going to be honest with Trump running. So

(19:41):
that's my thing about voting. It is so much fraud
ined and to black voters coming sence ought to tell us,
looking at our neighborhood, we are short served, and we
are still we're going today, we're gonna vote Democrats. I

(20:02):
go to church and they have the passer up trash
and Trump and the audience aim then and glory to God.
And I'm sitting there said, when are we gonna learn
they don't care anything about us, nothing but today for
us to go and vote Democrats. They do not care

(20:23):
anything about us. And I don't understand. I had my
first time to walk into a Black church and hear
them vote, I mean, pray for Trump. It's always trash
and Trump and blacks. How do you think that? They
said that blacks don't have sense enough? But then the vote,

(20:47):
I d we don't have cens enough to go and
then we all have we have vote, we have photo ID.
But that's what they think about. They say it's gonna
keep blacks from voting because they don't have no you
know ID, Yes we do. We got social Security checks

(21:11):
and you sure couldn't go down there with the light bill,
because I saw that in working the polls, they come
in with the white light bill and if we tell
them you can't vote with the light buil, they say, well,
we're gonna turn you in. So they turn us in
and so we would be on thirteen. That kind of foolishness.
And it's just time out for the foolishness. And I

(21:34):
don't understand how we at this time in our lives
that we can't see what's going on and to black
sisters and brothers, wake up and stop allowing the Democratic
Party to use us for that vote, and then we

(21:56):
are underserved in our communities and talking about blacks voting
for Jasmine Crockett. You know, I'd listened to this woman
for a while and then somebody told me this woman
is a lawyer. I said, are you kidding me? She
is a stone nutcase. Chessice goes chessa get TOAs she

(22:17):
can be, and Blacks are going to the poles gout
that Fatma Crockett. I wouldn't vote for Jasma Crockett to
be the head of the doll Kings. That's how what
I feel about her. So that's all I have to
offer to day you as We love you.

Speaker 2 (22:35):
Thank you, sir. Please come off, Kama say it's a marry,
go Michael, Marry.

Speaker 6 (22:48):
Kamala Harris came out in support of Jasmine Crockett, Wonder
why with a robocall in the Democrat primary in Texas
today for these seat. And I'm just imagining to myself.
Can you imagine that somebody received a phone call and

(23:09):
it was Kamala Harris telling you to vote for Jasmine
Crockett and that had a positive impact on you.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
Yeah, go ahead and play that audio.

Speaker 6 (23:20):
This was the call that went out to Democrats in
Texas today.

Speaker 7 (23:24):
Hi, this is Kamala Harris and I'm calling to encourage
you to please go vote for my friend Jasmine Crockett
in the Democratic primary today Friday, February twenty seventh, or
on election day Tuesday, March third. Texas has the chance
to send a fighter like Jasmine Crockett to the United
States Senate.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
Jasmine has the experience and record to.

Speaker 7 (23:46):
Hold Donald Trump and his billionaire cronies accountable. But Jasmin
can only do it if people like you vote early
today Friday, February twenty seventh or on election day Tuesday,
March third, it's I'm to turn Texas blue and I
thank you, please take care, bye bye.

Speaker 2 (24:05):
Paid for by Jasmine for Texas. So this is a
theme we hear a lot, especially amongst black politicians.

Speaker 6 (24:12):
She's a fighter. What is she fighting for? Do you
think she's got the experience and the record? What experience
does she have? So let's take it out of this
context for a moment.

Speaker 2 (24:29):
Let's say the Senate is the board of directors of
the government.

Speaker 6 (24:34):
Right, So let's say this fighter that she is, that
you were to submit the budget of the United States
government to her and you were to ask her to
review it. Do you think she could do so? Let's
say you were to ask you were to ask her to.

Speaker 2 (24:55):
Review the.

Speaker 6 (25:00):
Rational initiatives of the major departments. Do you think that
this fighter would she be a good person to do that?
Would you ask her to take a look at your
company and see ways that you could improve profitability? And
what exactly if you were hiring and you ran a

(25:24):
decent sized company, where would you see yourself putting Jasmine
Crockett in that operation? Would you put her as the leader?
Would you put her as recruitment and hr policies which
she has a law degree from the University of Houston
Law Center. Would you make her the general counsel? Would

(25:45):
you have her reviewing the contracts if your company was sued?
Would you have her reviewing the lawsuits and assessing the
likelihood of success or failure and putting a value on
potential settlements. But you have her reviewing the mergers and
acquisitions and by sell agreements.

Speaker 2 (26:07):
I'm just what would you have her do?

Speaker 6 (26:12):
Because the thing is, almost every American understands that Jasmine
Crockett cannot exist at the top level of anything in
this country other than politics. She cannot exist in a

(26:33):
world where her decision making is critical to success or failure.
She's not a fighter. That's that's a word that is
often used in black politics. He a fighter, Floyd Mayweather
is a fighter. Mike Tyson was a fighter. She's not

(26:56):
a fighter. She's a rabble rouser. She's an activist. She
is a loud mouth. She's a bitcher.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
That's what she is.

Speaker 6 (27:07):
All she does is say that this or that person
isn't any good. That's what she does, and usually with
a race based reason. She taps into something that they
very carefully stoke constantly, which is black people you are
victims black people. You have been wronged black people. Look

(27:31):
around you. Notice everybody's poor. Notice everybody's struggling. Notice there's
violence everywhere. Notice the schools are failing. Notice nobody can
read and write. Notice everybody's going to prison. It's somebody
else's fault. And this has been going on, and it
breaks my heart. Not for the white people who are

(27:53):
constantly being accused of being racist, because they eventually move
away from it.

Speaker 2 (27:57):
They eventually disengage from it.

Speaker 6 (28:00):
That's the really sad part about black people that think
white people are out to get them. No, they don't
care about you, and they don't need to. They don't
think about you. Get over yourself. You're sad, poor, fat, fatherless,

(28:20):
in prison, professionally unsuccessful.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
Because of you, not because of anybody else.

Speaker 6 (28:28):
You're not getting hired or promoted or a pay raise,
not because the person doesn't like black people. The chances
are they give you the benefit of the doubt. You
might be where you are because you're black. You're never
going to be prevented from.

Speaker 2 (28:42):
Being where you are because you're black. That's a fact.
Pay attention to work hard.

Speaker 6 (28:51):
The cultural traits that you perceive as being white privilege,
the cultural traits that you as being nerdy white people,
or the cultural traits of successful people, and not just
because they're white, the cultural traits that you think are cool,
which is rappers. You cannot have an organization, a hierarchical

(29:17):
organization based on that.

Speaker 2 (29:18):
Diddy was at the top of the heap.

Speaker 6 (29:20):
You cannot have a country based on Diddy's economics.

Speaker 2 (29:24):
You just can't.

Speaker 6 (29:26):
Get with the program, understand the science of success and
what it takes to get there. But yet here we
are in the political process. It's not just people who
understand organizational structure and effectiveness. It's not just people who
understand what it takes to succeed as a nation and

(29:46):
an individual, or.

Speaker 2 (29:48):
The basics of economics.

Speaker 6 (29:50):
The beauty is everybody gets a vote in our democratic
republican a republic, even the idiots. Now, if you split
the population fifty to fifty, let's just make round numbers
Democrats and Republicans, and let's say you take fifty percent
of them who are Democrats. Now, in order to win
the nomination, you only have to win one half of

(30:10):
one half, So you only need twenty five point one percent,
and with a low turnout, you need far less than that.

Speaker 2 (30:17):
You only need a few percentage permits.

Speaker 6 (30:19):
And who is most likely to turn out people that
think they have the most to gain and who has
been told they have the most to gain by putting
Jasmine Crocket the office.

Speaker 10 (30:28):
Thank you, and good night.
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