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April 29, 2025 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and load. Michael
Vari Show.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
Is on the air for American citizens. January twentieth, twenty
twenty five, is Liberation Day.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
Last here we have last, Thank God the many fears.

Speaker 2 (00:45):
The golden age of America begins right now. From this
day forward, our country will flourish and be respected again
all over the world. We will be the envy of
every nation, and we will not allow ourselves to be
take an advantage of any longer.

Speaker 4 (01:03):
During every single day.

Speaker 2 (01:05):
Of the Trump administration, I will very simply put America first.
Our sovereignty will be reclaimed, our safety will be restored,
the scales of justice will be rebalanced. The vicious, violent,
and unfair weaponization of the Justice Department and our government

(01:28):
will end, and our top priority will be to create

(01:48):
a nation that is proud, prosperous.

Speaker 4 (01:51):
And free.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
America will soon be greater, stronger, and far more exceptional
than ever before. Our return to the presidency confident and
optimistic that we are at the start of a thrilling
new era of national success. A tide of change is
sweeping the country. Sunlight is pouring over the entire world,

(02:16):
and America has the chance to seize this opportunity like
never before. From this moment on, America's decline is over,
and we will immediately restore the integrity, competency, and loyalty
of America's government. Over the past eight years, I have
been tested and challenged more than any president in our

(02:38):
two hundred and fifty year history, and I've learned a
lot along the way. The journey to reclaim our republic
has not been an easy one, that I can tell you.
Those who wish to stop our cause have tried to
take my freedom and indeed to take my life just

(03:00):
few months ago in a beautiful Pennsylvania field and assassin's
bullet ripped.

Speaker 5 (03:04):
Through my ear.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
But I felt then and believe even more so now,
that my life was saved for a reason. I was
saved by God to make America great again.

Speaker 6 (03:18):
The media's covered but Joe Biden, that's what happened.

Speaker 1 (03:22):
Now their excuse for why they covered for him.

Speaker 6 (03:25):
Okay, that's fine, but at least we all admit you
covered for him. Oh well, I guess she wouldn't say.
I guess he wouldn't say that he covered for him.
He would say that they didn't do the job. They
were supposed to do. Okay, this is CNN's Jake Tapper. Boy,
I really dislike Jake Tapper because, unlike the others, Jake
Tapper will occasionally do some things to fool Republicans and

(03:48):
he'll he'll slide over into your DMS and say, oh,
you know a great story on this. He'll slide over
here to a Republican and he's famous for this and say, boy,
it was a really good job. You know, your criticism
Biden was really fair, and so people will take it
easy on.

Speaker 1 (04:03):
Him because I think, oh, he's open minded.

Speaker 7 (04:05):
Every time he comes on stage or they turn to him,
I'm like, Joe, can you get it out.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
Let's get the words out. Though you kind of feel bad.

Speaker 8 (04:11):
For him, how do you think it makes little kids
with stutters feel when they see you make a comment
like that.

Speaker 7 (04:17):
First and foremost, I had no idea that Joe Biden
ever suffered from a stutter. I think what we see
on stage with Joe Biden Jake is very clearly a
cognitive decline. That's what I'm referring to. It makes me uncomfortable.

Speaker 9 (04:30):
You are.

Speaker 4 (04:32):
I think it's so amazing.

Speaker 5 (04:33):
It's so amazing to me.

Speaker 7 (04:34):
That try and figure out an.

Speaker 5 (04:36):
Answer cognitive decline.

Speaker 4 (04:38):
You're trying to.

Speaker 7 (04:38):
Tell me that what I was suggesting was I think
that you were.

Speaker 1 (04:41):
Mocking his stutter.

Speaker 8 (04:43):
Yeah, I think you were mocking his stutter. And I
think you have absolutely no standing to diagnose somebody's cognitive decline.
I would think that somebody in the Prompt family would
be more sensitive to people who do do not have
medical licenses diagnosing politicians from Afar. Plenty of people diagnosed
your father from Afar, and I'm sure it offends you,

(05:03):
your father in law from a farm. I'm sure it
defends you.

Speaker 7 (05:05):
You don't have any standing to say noticing him what
I'm saying, he's talking about.

Speaker 10 (05:09):
A cognitive that clue.

Speaker 4 (05:12):
I have one last question for you.

Speaker 7 (05:13):
You can't times on stage, and it's very concerning to
a lot of people that this could be the leader
of the free world. That is all I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (05:21):
I genuinely thank you.

Speaker 1 (05:22):
Sorry for Joe, I appreciate it.

Speaker 6 (05:24):
But the most withering heat I can apply goes to
Joe Scarborough, who can forget him saying this with a
straight face a matter of months ago.

Speaker 11 (05:37):
I've said it for years now. He's cogent, but I
undersold him when I said he was cogent.

Speaker 4 (05:43):
She's far beyond cogent.

Speaker 11 (05:46):
In fact, I think he's better than he's ever been
intellectually analytically, because he's been around for fifty years.

Speaker 4 (05:57):
And you know, I don't know if people know this
or not.

Speaker 11 (06:00):
I used to be a hothead sometimes that irishman would
get in front of the reasoning. Sometimes he would say
things he didn't want to say. This is and I
don't really you know what. They don't really start your
tape right now because I'm about to tell you the
truth and FU if.

Speaker 4 (06:18):
You can't handle the truth.

Speaker 11 (06:21):
This version of Biden intellectually analytically.

Speaker 4 (06:27):
Is the best Biden ever, not a close second.

Speaker 11 (06:31):
And I've known him for years, the presents mes have
known him for fifty years.

Speaker 4 (06:35):
If it weren't the truth, I wouldn't say it.

Speaker 6 (06:37):
You know, I buried the lead. The biggest story Illinois
Governor JB. Pritzker is he's a big factor. It looks
like Chris Christy. He wants to be president and the
Democrats don't have a good candidate. Well, let me see
if I can find this. I wrote down the details
of a Gallop poll that just came out.

Speaker 1 (06:59):
You see if I can find this.

Speaker 6 (07:02):
Yeah, it was your confidence in an American leader on
the economy. And so the left is going Trump only
gets forty four percent.

Speaker 1 (07:14):
Okay, fair enough.

Speaker 6 (07:16):
Hakim Jeffries, the Democrats leader in the House, he gets
thirty percent, Chuck Schumer twenty five percent, the broad category
of Democrat congressional leaders twenty five percent. Trump's almost twice
what they are. So you know, at the Pope's funeral,

(07:41):
supposedly the word went out that they want you to
wear black to show you're in mourning. And Trump wore
a dark navy blue. So they cut a real tight
shot of him at the funeral and it said the
Vatican asked the president to wear black.

Speaker 1 (07:57):
Buddy war blue.

Speaker 6 (07:59):
Okay, but if you pull back on the photo, you
see that people are wearing white and red and all that. Again,
this is why those people have no credibility. And I
want to be very clear on this, because there are
people that do what I do that are calling on
the media to be better so they can restore their credibility.
I want it shattered, burned to the ground. I want

(08:20):
to I want to extinct. I want them to never
have any credibility again, because I know they will.

Speaker 5 (08:25):
Have you got the Michael Berrys Show. JB.

Speaker 6 (08:29):
Fittsker is a big, fat, bloated, loud mouth scion of
a very very wealthy family.

Speaker 1 (08:39):
And this bloviating Chris Christy looking.

Speaker 6 (08:45):
Guilt ridden rich man who is from a wealthy family.
So he's never had to do anything in his life
other than eat, obviously, and now he.

Speaker 5 (08:58):
Did do that.

Speaker 1 (08:58):
I'll give him credit. He didn't skip back.

Speaker 6 (09:01):
He he wants to be the Democrat nominee for president
twenty twenty eight.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
Just visited in New Hampshire. This is a you go
to Iowa, you go to New Hampshire. That's what you do.

Speaker 6 (09:14):
It's how you tell people you're running for president. And
there are reasons to do that because then you get
a lot of attention. And the thing in America is
there are people who run for president with no intention
of winning. They just run because then you were a
presidential candidate. You get a lot of attention, you can
sell more books, you get paid more on the speaking circuit.

(09:34):
But Pritzker is, believe it or not, one of their
more serious candidates. He's an awful human being, as you're
about to learn but he's a serious candidate because he's
got money, so that means he doesn't have to, you know,
work a side job or worry about money at all.
And he's got the Chicago mafia behind him, you know,

(09:58):
all the all the folks that you know, the kind
of people who brought you Barack Obama. These are very
scandalous folks, and he's got all of them. And the
Democrats are at a weak point right now. Josh Shapiro
is so afraid and a shame of being Jewish that
he hides from it. Even if somebody fire bombs his
house on his kids are in there and says that

(10:19):
they hate Jews, and he still won't say anthing about it.

Speaker 1 (10:22):
It's kind of weird, actually, you know.

Speaker 6 (10:26):
That's why he wasn't the VP nominee with Kamala Harris
is they were afraid it would upset the Hamas terrorist
sympathizers to have a Jew on the ticket, which is
sort of funny.

Speaker 1 (10:37):
Pritzker's Jewish.

Speaker 6 (10:39):
We haven't had a major party candidate who showed well.

Speaker 1 (10:45):
Lieberman, you'll recall, was was he John Kerry's nominee.

Speaker 6 (10:53):
Yeah, and he ended up leaving the Democrat Party and
becoming independent after all of that.

Speaker 1 (10:59):
Very interesting.

Speaker 6 (11:01):
The state of Jews in America today is quite fascinating
because three quarters of Jews have historically been Democrats, and
now the twenty five percent that are Republicans. Some of
them have been very, very influenced, influential in the Republican Party,
raising money, spending money. Ken Melman was head of the

(11:21):
party or NC chairman. So anyway, back to the discussion
Pritzker is, he's trying this is where Democrats get into trouble.
They try to appeal to the very most rancorous, marginal
element of the Democrat Party.

Speaker 1 (11:40):
And you might say, well, why would you do that, because.

Speaker 6 (11:43):
That's where all the energy is, that's where the foot
soldiers are, and they're either with you or against you.
So what he's doing here is trying to get to
the left of AOC and Bernie Sanders. He's trying to
get so far out there that people go because Pritzker
is a wealthy guy. He's in bed as gross as

(12:03):
that might sound, with the power elite, there are a
lot of rich Americans, very rich Americans, who like to
have a good Democrat that you know, they can have
over and and sit around and talk about the really
really poor and them being really really rich and hating
the middle class and the MAGA and that sort of stuff,

(12:23):
because they do. That's that's the group they resent the most,
trying to pull the ladder up so nobody else can
can acquire anything. So Princeker has the image of being
a guy who's probably too business oriented, at least for Democrats,
a guy who's to uh to to fuddy duddy.

Speaker 5 (12:42):
So he is.

Speaker 6 (12:43):
You're going to hear him here. He's basically calling for
BLM to get back into business, burn stuff down, tear
stuff up, kill some people. This is a call for
a riot, and there will be people who will respond,
and people are going to get hurt, people are gonna die,
and he should be charged for it. You have a

(13:04):
right to free speech, you don't have a right to
yell fire in a crowded theater. And that's what he's doing.
He is lighting a match on a tinrebox. It's exactly
what he's doing here. He's going to pay for this.
He's going to pay for this.

Speaker 12 (13:18):
Never before in my life have I called for mass protests,
for mobilization, for disruption, but I am now These Republicans
cannot know a moment of peace. They have to understand
that we will fight their cruelty with every megaphone and

(13:38):
microphone that we have. We must castigate them on the
soapbox and then punish them at.

Speaker 1 (13:44):
The ballot box.

Speaker 12 (13:48):
They must feel in their bones that when we survive
this shameful episode of American history with our democracy intact,
because we have no alternative but to do just that,
that we will delegate their portraits to the museum halls
reserved for tyrants and traders.

Speaker 6 (14:06):
I've read Nietzsche, I've read Hegel, I have read what
the things you should read as the core curriculum or
a degree in political theory, not because it's something to do,
but because these are insights into human nature.

Speaker 1 (14:25):
Once you understand human nature.

Speaker 6 (14:29):
You never want to give the media the power to
tell people what to do ever again. White House Chief
Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, I really liked this guy.
He was asked about Pritzker's remarks.

Speaker 13 (14:41):
Youngnor Prisker just called for mass protests and disruption, saying
Republicans cannot know peace. Cultural Florida crossings are down ninety
by four cent and ice s locking of eight hundred criminals.
It's a Pritzker inciting insurrection and deoj deoj tank action.

Speaker 14 (14:57):
Well, what I would say is that his comments everything
else could they could be construed as a deciding violence.
So President Trump survived two assassination attempts against his life.
Of course, there's been many more credible threats against President
Trump and his family and associates. We've, of course seen
this spate of left wing domestic terrorism all across this country.

(15:19):
By the way, the destruction of property sits directly adjacent
to the tow attacks on humans and physical attacks.

Speaker 10 (15:28):
So there was once you tolerate and once you allow
for attacks.

Speaker 14 (15:31):
On property, you're just a step away from people throwing
multile cocktails into people's smallo tough cackles and people's homes.
And you've even seen some I think one example of
a formally prominent, prominent Washington Post journalist who seem to
be celebrating the murder of a healthcare ceo, Right Health
at Church ceo. And that's that's the point we've reached

(15:53):
in this country, where people are engaging in rhetoric and
behavior that puts the lives of public servants in data,
puts the lives of conservative Americans in danger, and so
that's the first thing I would say. And then of
course secondly, right, just this war that Democrat governors and
mayors are waging against federal law enforcement, I mean, this
is nullificationist behavior, This is successionist behavior. For this thing,

(16:15):
they don't recognize the supremacy of federal law enforcement. There
was a protecting the lives and liveliments of American citizens
against the foreign invasion.

Speaker 10 (16:23):
We've never seen anything like it.

Speaker 14 (16:24):
And of course the result of their contact is that
they're allowing the alienc to go.

Speaker 10 (16:27):
Free and rape and murder their own citizens. So I
can't imagine how.

Speaker 5 (16:33):
I don't have a monkey apopkan'k Baron Dover to wear
my shot. I think Michael Barry Ross.

Speaker 6 (16:43):
Michael Very Show, lots of flights have a lot more
in common than the left would like you to believe,
because they want to keep us divided. And the problem
is a lot of people where you get the real
racism is stupid blacks, and they're stupid white people, but

(17:03):
stupid blacks, which is a subculture of blacks, they do
stupid things and then people respond to that, and some
blacks and white liberals will say, oh, you can't say
that because they're black.

Speaker 1 (17:17):
A stupid person is a stupid person. A stupid behavior
is a stupid behavior.

Speaker 6 (17:20):
You' seen that Carnival cruise line out of Galveston, just
south of Houston.

Speaker 1 (17:24):
It's a bunch of stupid people.

Speaker 6 (17:26):
It's like a Golden Corral, buffet, musical chairs. I mean,
it's it's bad, it's awful, and it's stupid. I don't
care if, oh, you're racist.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
You know what.

Speaker 6 (17:40):
I stopped caring what people said about me years ago.
So try something else. You know, when you know when
someone calls you a racist when they're losing the argument.
But let's have some fun with humor, shall we. This
is comedian Mike Goodwin breaking down the nickname divide.

Speaker 1 (18:01):
And this is so true and so good.

Speaker 3 (18:03):
We try to be funny with nicknames. We call big
people nicknames like tiny slim. We nickname people after food.
I know, a corn bread or pork chop and a
college green.

Speaker 5 (18:15):
I know this one dude. His nickname is boss and
he ain't got no job. I'm like, who you the
boss of yourself? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (18:26):
But I think white dudes have the coolest nicknames.

Speaker 5 (18:29):
I really do.

Speaker 3 (18:30):
Because white dudes' nicknames go with them their entire life.
White dudes have nicknames like Rusty Skill Chip. Now your
nickname could be Chipped. You could be the CEO of
a bank. You can have Chip on your business cards.

(18:53):
The brothers can't do that.

Speaker 4 (18:58):
Hoo.

Speaker 5 (18:58):
He can't be a branch manager. And devant. You don't
trust no money with Poolgie.

Speaker 9 (19:10):
Call.

Speaker 5 (19:10):
I write this way, Doctor june Bug will see you,
and I know he will not what to not go
do with ham me in a room with it? Not
the june Bug.

Speaker 1 (19:20):
That's like democrats. You know we're talking about race here.

Speaker 6 (19:25):
Washington State Reps Jamila Taylor and Christine Reeves feed the
racial divide by arguing in favor of laws like this.

Speaker 15 (19:36):
Maybe they might want to call me a monkey today
because I want to participate in our inclusive economy.

Speaker 1 (19:47):
This is getting ridiculous.

Speaker 16 (19:49):
The people in my community are asking for restorative justice.

Speaker 7 (19:56):
They're asking for us to repair.

Speaker 16 (19:59):
The harms that previous members of this institution, and I
would venture dare to say, mister speaker, some current members.

Speaker 6 (20:11):
I came across this recently and I found it very interesting.
Thomas Soul told stories of blacks from other areas of
the country not wanting Southern blacks to move into their neighborhood.
The book was black, rednecks and white Liberals. Well, here
is an example. This is a video of blacks in

(20:33):
Los Angeles in the nineteen sixties. These are Los Angelinos,
these are California blacks, West Coast blacks, and this is
some West Coast East Coast beef, except in this case
they don't want Southern blacks moving in. And they're worried
because Southern blacks this is Alabama, Mississippi, Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee,

(20:57):
Georgia were moving out to California as a lot of
people work, you know, the the weather in Hollywood and
jobs and all this sort of stuff before the liberals
ruined it. I want you to listen to the blacks
in Los Angeles saying we don't want Southern blacks coming here.

(21:17):
They're not like us. Now does that make them racist?
Because here's the thing. We all have biases. We all
have biases, we all have things we like and don't like.
And what you have to understand is there are people
who are going to claim that your biases are make
you a bad person, But they have them too, and

(21:40):
what you have to learn is what one of my
favorite philosophers once said, Imagine how much good you can
do in the world if you stop caring what other
people think about you.

Speaker 1 (21:52):
Oh no, that's right, that's my quote, Remayn.

Speaker 9 (21:59):
And I know people are concerned about this. They may
not talk about it very often, but I certainly heard
them shudder in church when he said there'd be a
billion Negroes in Montis we show.

Speaker 17 (22:10):
It because we were saying us, the majority of these.

Speaker 18 (22:13):
People are not like we are, and we felt that.

Speaker 13 (22:17):
We maybe some of us felt we left us.

Speaker 17 (22:19):
Out because we were getting away from this problem. We
are a part of this accident too, but we are
little maybe embarrassed by the fact that you were going
to have a mad element come in.

Speaker 18 (22:33):
That's going to create a tremendous social problem in the community,
to which we find a great deal of difficulty in
relating to problem.

Speaker 9 (22:43):
I sound I could do gooder, because I really am not,
and I'm somewhat of strong.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
But I do think that with these people coming.

Speaker 9 (22:52):
In, who are not our intellectual ethos, nor are they
about sociological they're not to be a handicapped for us.
They'll find their own mad and now do sound like
a snob, but I'll need it this way. But they're
used to living a certain way, and they too might

(23:15):
rise up above their origins and might one day be
our association.

Speaker 19 (23:20):
The whole tone of this meaning is we are setting
ourself thus up as.

Speaker 17 (23:25):
Little puppet Jesus.

Speaker 19 (23:27):
We can't help anyone else until we help ourselves.

Speaker 11 (23:31):
The negro has had.

Speaker 19 (23:32):
Two professions to their own medicine, that's the street of
law or psychiatry, and he has the profession of being
a negro. And many of us have come out here
to escape from their second profession of being a negro.
And we are out here a while, and we're working
in our own fields, and then we find out that
here these same problems are falling on the heels.

Speaker 8 (23:55):
Of sixteen hundred negros.

Speaker 19 (23:57):
A month they come into Los Angeles.

Speaker 5 (24:00):
Now this is our problem.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
It's how old you.

Speaker 19 (24:04):
It's the old identify with these negroes that are coming
in with the common bag that times is that the problem.

Speaker 17 (24:11):
This is all basic embarrassment that we as negroes have.

Speaker 18 (24:14):
We want to look together, yet we want to sort
of scatter to the far wind and live amongst white people.

Speaker 1 (24:20):
You're listening to the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 6 (24:25):
I don't know this Fellaw's names, but he posted this
on social media. He's a liberal who moved from Pittsburgh,
where he thought he was a liberal, to Portland, Oregon.
Oh no, you ain't seen liberals till you've been to Portland.
That's when he realized he might not be liberal after all.
This is like an AHA moment. If you will ramone, take.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
Me, take on me. That's another AHA moment already, y'all.

Speaker 20 (24:53):
I moved to Portland, Oregon about four years ago from.

Speaker 1 (24:55):
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.

Speaker 20 (24:56):
Before I left Pittsburgh, I considered myself pretty far.

Speaker 1 (24:58):
Left, and then like COVID, and then I.

Speaker 20 (25:01):
Moved to Portland and saw what far left really looked like.
And I just I feel like the left has lost
all common sense at this point. But all that being said,
like being in Portland, I truly feel like I'm going
at Twilight Zone every day, Like it really exposes like
how ugly the far left can really be, because it's
what I'm surrounded by on a daily basis, Like they're
totally fine with walking past homeless people that are intense,

(25:22):
that are having like mental breakdowns right in the middle
of the street and acting like, oh, that's normal. This
happens in every city, Like I just happened to walk
by it every day to go get my.

Speaker 1 (25:31):
Lotte, No big deal.

Speaker 4 (25:32):
And it's like, dude, I thought the left was supposed
to be empathetic.

Speaker 20 (25:35):
I thought the left care about the environment, because if
you look at what the homeless population out here alone
just does, so the environment is pretty insane. But all
that being said, like I feel like all the morals
have went out the window, all like the things that
like y'all truly fought for went out the window. Now
it's all about like protesting Tesla, hating Trump and like
fighting for men to have babies or something like. It's
literally crazy out here. And I know, like I should

(25:57):
have known this moving out here, but I really thought, like,
you know, we've had I'm Cammon ground considering, like I
used to be like one of you. But if anything,
it just turns me further to the right seeing how
people act out here, seeing.

Speaker 4 (26:09):
Like the point of privilege everybody has too.

Speaker 20 (26:11):
It's literally insane, Like if you don't believe what they believe.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
Then your piece is like it's just a total level.

Speaker 20 (26:17):
In and it's crazy to me that it's been normalized,
And I think like Portland is a perfect example of
why things shouldn't be far left and why we need
to like kind of come back to common ground somewhere,
so you can fix it me all you want, but
you know I'm right, and you know there's plenty of
people that think the same way as me, and Portland's
just becoming a hub of mental illness and a place

(26:39):
for people to go to just be weird. And it's
not the good kind of weird. It's the type of
weird that needs like medical attention.

Speaker 6 (26:45):
I don't like Mark Zuckerberg, not one bit. But when
somebody says something with which I agree and they say it, well,
we're going to share it here on the show. He
was on the THEO von podcast We Like Theo when
he said that college is failing young people. College is
not providing for young people what young people need it
to provide, and yet the prices are going through the roof,

(27:07):
and the students are graduating or not and not able
to pay their money back, and the workforce is not
getting from college graduates what they need out of them.
The system is broken, and Zuckerberg is one of those guys,
you know, the tech heavy companies like Google, Facebook, you know,
they don't look for people with college degrees.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
It's a dirty little secret.

Speaker 6 (27:31):
Google for a while had a practice of almost not
hiring college graduates at all because they don't want to
have them to have to unlearn bad behaviors.

Speaker 21 (27:40):
I do think, like a lot of people, I'm not
sure that college is preparing people for like the jobs
that they need to have today. I mean, I think
that's like there's a big issue on that, and like
all the student debt issues are like really big issues,
and the fact that college is it's just so expensive
for so many people, and then like you graduate, I
when you're in debt.

Speaker 10 (27:58):
Were even guaranteed a job, you would, yeah, at a
certain rate you're paying, you'd be guaranteed some sort of
beginner employement.

Speaker 21 (28:06):
Yeah, And I think that's that's probably the big the
biggest issue with it is it would be one thing
if it were just kind of like a social experience,
but you started off neutral. The fact if it's not
preparing you for the jobs that you need and you're
kind of starting off in this big hole, then I
think that's that's not good. I mean that I think
there's going to have to be a reckoning with and
it's a good point. People are gonna have to kind
of figure out whether that makes sense. But I don't

(28:28):
know people it's sort of been this taboo thing to
say of like maybe not everyone needs to go to
college and because there's like a lot of jobs that
don't require that.

Speaker 1 (28:37):
And but I think people are probably.

Speaker 21 (28:41):
Coming around to that opinion a little more now than
maybe like ten years ago.

Speaker 1 (28:46):
So that's it.

Speaker 6 (28:47):
The first hundred days a phrase uttered in nineteen thirty
three by FDR the end of his first one hundred days. Now,
what will be the legacy of President Trump's first one

(29:07):
hundred days?

Speaker 1 (29:09):
That will be determined by you and me.

Speaker 6 (29:12):
That will be determined by our ability to tell the
story of the successes. See, we have to stop waiting
around on Trump to solve all the problems. We have
to ourselves be part of the solution. And that means

(29:35):
a social media post, that means talking one on one.
I don't think people really understand how important they are,
we all are, to solving the problems in this country.
You know, when you study wars, you know you think
of Germany being at war with Russia. Actually only a

(30:00):
small percentage of Germans. We're in Russia fighting now. The Russians,
on the other hand, they put everything they had into it. Kids,
old people. If you could pull a trigger, trigger, you
were pulling trigger. If you could haul water to the soldiers,
you were doing that. Everybody was in the war effort.

(30:24):
And the difference is a complete and utter mindset of
every person doing our part to take back our country.
Things are so bad, Trump's gonna be gone, and then
what are we gonna do? Because a lot of people
want to cheer for Trump. A lot of people think
they're solving the problem a by cheering for Trump.

Speaker 1 (30:47):
Yeah, you solve all the problems Donald.

Speaker 9 (30:49):
Yeah, he's so good.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
I love him.

Speaker 6 (30:51):
I'm gonna go home and watch eight hours of Fox
News tonight and I'm a cheer for Jesse Waters. Okay,
that's good. All that's good. But we've got to win
the hearts and souls. We've got to serve in offices.
You know, we're getting our clocks cleaned by the Democrats,
in school boards, city councils, state rep seats, state Senate seats.

(31:15):
We're getting our clocks cleaned in parent teacher organizations, we
have got to engage our people.

Speaker 12 (31:23):
You know.

Speaker 1 (31:23):
The thing that gets me crazy.

Speaker 6 (31:25):
People will say, especially folks in Houston, Will says to me, Michael,
it's getting really bad that here's what's going on in
the local school. It's getting really bad. Here's what's going
on in our neighborhood. I'm glad, I'm leaving. I'm glad
my kids graduating from high school. I'm leaving and going
to the country. What if the people ahead of us
had done that. What if the people who could have

(31:46):
have run and hid had done that but they didn't.
So I am proud to be your fellow American. I'm
proud that you're my fellow Americ and I love this country.
That might sound corny, but we're gonna have to ask
ourselves how much we love our country, how hard we're

(32:07):
willing to fight for it, because you're going to be
called a whole lot worse and racist. I got news
for you. You heard what JB. Pritzker said. He wants a
civil war. That's what they are trying to spark. That
is what they're going for here. They want the violence.
That's what their overlords are demanding. That's what sorrows and

(32:27):
those folks. They want the violence, they want the division,
they want you scared.

Speaker 1 (32:32):
Of them, think about.

Speaker 4 (32:34):
That little hell of us.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
Let us little good thank you, and good night,
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