Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load for
Michael Verie show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
If your political rhetoric encourages violence against our law enforcement,
you can go straight to hell and you have no
place in the political conversation of the United States of America.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
ICE is looking more and more like an American Gestopo.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
They're huddled around the elevator banks in masks without identifying information.
Speaker 1 (00:41):
Whether they're terrifying that these are Gestapo.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
Tactics, but it has created this year as they've seen
the kind of fascist ICE Gestapo militias go around the
Latino American citizens in places like La ICE agents masked
ICE Gestoppo agents getting more funding than any other law
enforcement agency in the history of the United States.
Speaker 1 (00:59):
ICE running gustopo light around our country.
Speaker 3 (01:02):
The Gestapo had the same function. It was there to
draw distinction between us and them. It was not federally,
it was controlled from the by the leader. And we're
seeing undisturbing similarities between this force and the Estope.
Speaker 4 (01:20):
We've got these mass thug cowards kidnapping innocent people and
sending them off to be slaves or tortured in other countries,
Dressing like thugs and acting like thugs.
Speaker 5 (01:29):
People still want to come here, despite the crazy They
still want to come here because they know in this
land their voice is protected, their rights are protected, and
there won't be jack booted thugs coming in wearing masks
over their face to take them off the streets.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
Oh wait, oh wait, I'm sorry. Something that's happening. Oh
it happens. That's happening right now.
Speaker 6 (01:48):
We've got to figure out a way to stop ICE
from what they are doing as soon as possible. We've
got to figure out a way to stop ICE from
what they are doing as soon as possible.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
This is not about the pronoun police.
Speaker 7 (02:02):
This is about the secret police. We're not North Korea,
mister President, We're not the Soviet Union.
Speaker 1 (02:09):
So we continue with the game. We're gonna shut the
government down, shut it down. It's very important in the
middle of a discussion. Let's not call it a debate,
because I think when you think of a debate, people
think of scoring points and winning or losing. Often the
(02:30):
person who wins the structural arguments of a debate, it's
not the person who wins the audience. Having spent a
lot of time in high school in debate having spent
a lot of time studying the art of debate the
(02:50):
Lincoln Douglas debates as they traveled around the state. In fact,
I did Lincoln Douglas debate in high school. The art
of the discussion that we call a debate, the art
of making a statement and rebutting a statement. When to
interrupt someone else or when to let someone continue because
(03:14):
they're hanging themselves. How to interrupt, Whether to interrupt to
throw them off their game, or whether to interrupt and
talk over them to frustrate the point they're making. Whether
to push them to the point of a meltdown, or
(03:35):
simply to push them to uneasiness so that they forget
what they were saying. Whether to continue to make your
point as the other person speaks at the same time
and hope you'll get through, or occasionally little contratempt of
(03:56):
pulling back and saying, okay, you go ahead and talk
if you're going to talk over me. The rug pool
it's called. It's where to make someone look silly. So
now whatever they say after you've said that looks like okay, yeah,
all right, you interrupted me. You won't let me make
my point. Go ahead and make your point. If done correctly,
(04:20):
you can make someone look a fool because now whatever
they were going to say it loses its luster. All
of these things, the pairrying back and forth, the strategy
behind it all, it's all conducted for our amusement. And
(04:40):
what's amazing about this. I've come to this conclusion. When
I tell people this over beers are over a cigar,
a lot of people will kind of concede, Yeah, but
I don't mind. And the reason is NFL football it's
so violent and players are getting older that you really
(05:06):
only have used to be four months. Now it's well
into now it's five. The human body can't hold up
to this, so spring training is really not very interesting.
They try to make it interesting. One of the biggest
events in sports now is the draft. When I was
growing up, they didn't even televise the draft. We didn't
(05:28):
know it existed. We just found out the next morning
our team had drafted Earl Campbell and we were excited
about it, and that was it, and it was you know,
backroom deals. All of this is entertainment. When you go
to the circus, you don't go there thinking if the
trapeze artist sticks the landing, then that's proof that high
(05:55):
taxes stifle innovation. You go do some crazy stuff, do
some flips. Maybe it's ever so often, fall and break
your neck. It reminds us that it's real and it's dangerous. Right,
you know, it's entertainment. Never forget this is all entertainment.
So when the Great Value Obama or Dollar Store Obama
(06:18):
or poor Man's Obama, Hakeme Jeffreys, a Democrat from New York,
screeches about a government shutdown because he just has to
get a moment. This is his moment. He's expected, the
big donors expect him to do something here. You need
to show out, show off. It's okay if you lose
(06:38):
Washington generals, but you need to show off well. To
her credit, Martha Raddits played a video for Hakeem Jeffreys
from the last government shutdown when Democrats were in power
and apparently shutdowns were the end of the world. This
is what you said would be the result of a shutdown.
Speaker 4 (07:00):
Families will be hurt, farmers will be hurt. Border security
and border patrol agents will not be paid. TSA agents
will not be paid. Small businesses will be hurt in
every single community.
Speaker 1 (07:25):
And then why are you doing it? Now this is
the Michael Berry Show. Chiefs make many.
Speaker 8 (07:39):
Words, big chief do nothing like when never bring rain
Focahontas speak with forked tongue on great council, shutdown, hypocrite,
No like shut down before now dance for it like
hungry coyote.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
This is the lesson three bears humping that you must learn.
Speaker 9 (08:06):
The least we can do, the bare minimum that we
can do would be to pass a continuing resolution to
keep the doors open and the lights on. We can
ensure that over a million federal workers aren't simply sent
home for no reason. We can avoid a government shutdown.
This is democracy, and in a democracy, hostage tactics are
(08:29):
the last resort for those who can't win their fights
through elections, can't win their fights in Congress, can't win
their fights for the presidency, and can't win their fights
in the courts. For this right wing minority, hostage taking
is all they have left, a last gasp of those
(08:50):
who cannot cope with the realities of our democracy.
Speaker 1 (08:55):
Oh my god, I haven't heard her or speak in
a while, and I forgot how bad it is. It's
just dripping with desperation. You know, you meet these women
these sad white liberal women, and they've got the short haircut,
(09:20):
and and they all dress the same, like Ellen DeGeneres
or Rachel Maddow or the mayor of Portland, and maybe
they maybe they put some kind of artsy fartsy glasses
and they all end up looking like a little more
wide eyed Andy Warhol at the end of the day.
(09:42):
And it's they they've got this whiny but it's whiny,
but it's constant. And what's happened is it's sort of
like the black guy who fashions himself a victim of slavery,
(10:03):
and you go, dude, it's twenty twenty five. I mean,
the world's your oyster. I don't know what you're mad about.
But they have convinced themselves that everything is against them.
They've come up against the glass ceiling. But actually, let's
take the case of Pocahontas. She got into law school,
(10:27):
and she got faculty positions in law schools hard to
get all on the basis of being an American Indian woman.
She is probably a woman. She is not an American
Indian And in fact, in one of the most spectacular
embarrassing moments, Bruce Jenner in a short skirt and a wig.
(10:52):
Crashing into someone and killing him was less noteworthy and
shameful in the public than one oneenty twenty eighth Focahontas.
But you know, this pattern has become so common that
it's almost not noteworthy. And that's a dangerous thing because
(11:14):
then when you take it for granted, it becomes a
new normal. Fact is, if being a minority was so bad,
you wouldn't have all these white people passing themselves off
as One fact is, minorities have all the privilege. If
(11:35):
you're a minority, you can get hired with lower grades,
lower test scores, lower performance, lower IQ. And so you've
got white people trying to be minorities. You've got white
people Sean white remember that fool Rachel Dolozol, who can
(11:55):
forget how about Rachel Dolisol blowing the win so on her? Hey, guys,
I hate to do this, but uh, Rachel dolls All
you see that's my daughter. Oh okay, yeah, she's white.
(12:18):
Oh she's white. Her mother's white. And you're no, No,
I'm white. I'm like really white. Like I wear tube socks,
white bird, not magic white. I don't drink red soda. White,
I drive a Honda, a cord white like I'm white white.
(12:38):
I'm real white, like I'm pasty white, and my habits
are white. We're we're we're a really really white family.
We're we're Church of Christ white, really white. You know
the name, you know the band Bread. We Our idea
of a good time is to have dinner at the
(12:58):
table as a family. Listen to Bread. Okay, we thought
about being Mormon. That's how white we are. We're really, really,
really white. Yeah, you see what I'm saying. She's our daughter.
She came out of my wife. She's white. She's got
my white blood, my wife's white blood. She's really white.
She grew up really white. Yeah, she didn't work, she
(13:22):
didn't do any of that. No, she's white. She's passing
herself off and we're having to watch this and it's
probably time to blow the whistle. We're not happy to
have to do this. But she's extraordinarily white. She's not
the victim of she's not, in any way the victim
(13:43):
of racism. It is because of all of this that
Fox News reports in a new Quinnipiac poll shows that
only thirty percent of those polled view the Democrat Party favorably.
Speaker 10 (13:59):
Well, maybe this is why the Democrats are having trouble
with their favorability one hundred percent. Only thirty percent of
those polled in Quinnipiac poll favor the Democrat party. Look
at the unfavorable fifty four percent, ten percent said they
haven't heard enough, and six percent refused to participate.
Speaker 11 (14:18):
It's the worst in the history of the Quinnipiac pole
that started asking this question back in two thousand and eight.
It's never been this low for Democrats. And when you
look at both the issue of immigration and crime, Democrats
have not changed their tune. In fact, we're not even
sure that they're going to dial down the rhetoric of
calling Ice agents, Nazis and Gestapo. That is clearly at
(14:40):
this point. I think it's pretty irrefutable. It's played a
part in putting them a greater.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
Rook because people, you know, there's really no debate today.
We're not having debates anymore. You understand this. There's a
bunch of people screeching on the view, a bunch of
crazy old women screeching on the view. And and if
you ever see Late Afternoon the Rose all day women,
(15:06):
you know they've been married three times now they're they're
they're screwing the cabanda boy. They're married to some rich
old dude like Anna Nicole Smith. They're hoping he'll die
any minute because they're going to burn through his money.
They're miserable. The lip injections have gotten so bad that
the lips have turned back and they're blocking their eyesight.
That that's what these these these women of the Democrat
(15:29):
Party who controlled it's it's still Hillary's party. It's amazing.
Michael Arry Show, Now you know why Rush called Kamala Harris.
Willie Brown's mattress. Willie Brown's mattress is out hawking her
book At one stop. She weighed in on Jimmy Kimmel's suspension,
(15:50):
blaming Trump's fragile ego.
Speaker 12 (15:54):
But I'll tell you who refuses to officilate the people
went up resident with the fragile ego, couldn't.
Speaker 5 (16:02):
Take a joke, and brought down the weight.
Speaker 12 (16:06):
Of the federal government to silence the voice of a citizen.
Folks spoke with their pocket books this week, and Jimmy
Kimmel is now back on the air.
Speaker 1 (16:19):
That's not what happened, Not what happened at all. Hollywood
elites wanted to stick it to Trump, so they called
a meeting with Bob Iger of Disney and demanded that
he put him back on, and he and e quaked
and he did. It's as simple as that. No pocketbooks.
Jimmy Kimmel was last in the ratings for his day
(16:40):
part among the major networks. And that's saying something because
it's not strong competition. But you know, there's something about
her mouthing off like this. There's something about mouthy women
like this. And you see the comparisons between her and
Lena Hidalgo. There's a lot of very tough talk. Do
you ever notice this, Kamala Harris said. And the reason
(17:04):
this happened was because this president can't take a joke.
He's weak, he's not tough. Bitch. You're drunk ninety nine
percent of the time. You are mixing a cocktail of
valium and wine and tears to help you get through
(17:28):
every minute. You're married to a beard who knocked up
his babysitter for his daughter. Yeah, yeah, that's who you are.
So here is Kamala Harris claiming people just hand her babies,
(17:51):
they pass them through the crowd. This my baby, Give
this baby to Kamala.
Speaker 5 (17:56):
Kamla's if Kamala was to bless this baby.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
He could just touch him of her garment.
Speaker 2 (18:02):
Oh it be.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
Something else, you know.
Speaker 12 (18:05):
One of my favorite things to see. And it would
always happen spontaneously at our rallies and thousands of people
would come and there it would happen. Is invariably somebody
would want me to take a picture of a husband
child and someone in the back would.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
Hand that they over.
Speaker 13 (18:29):
Up to you, people, hold on, hold on, She's not
just gonna tell the lie what I was saying. She
gonna side eye you. She's gonna show you does she
mean this? She gonna side aye you, and you won't
believe it. People would, they would.
Speaker 14 (18:48):
It's like the pathological liar, remember John love Us. People
would they would, uh, they would, they would. They would
have me they baby really yes yes?
Speaker 13 (19:04):
And and then they would name their baby, ask me
right on the spot six really yes, And then they
would worship be.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
Really oh yes, And then they would they would just
they would just be passing babies. It'll be a sea
of babies. Oh my goodness. It was like a whole
bust full of babies. And somebody hit the brakes and
all the babies flew forward, and they said, Kamala will
catch them.
Speaker 14 (19:30):
She said it because Mama Lo will take care of them.
Speaker 1 (19:34):
She just how long does she live? And she just
hands it up.
Speaker 12 (19:39):
Like past the baby and then past the baby.
Speaker 15 (19:45):
And I don't know.
Speaker 12 (19:46):
There was something about that when it would happen. I mean,
I could very about her right now.
Speaker 1 (19:52):
But Cruci, you know, I don't have body read.
Speaker 12 (19:55):
That we should always fee baby to baba. Children of
the community are the two of the community, Yes, of
all of us, that.
Speaker 1 (20:03):
Our next leaders, our next thinkers, our next and.
Speaker 12 (20:05):
That we all participate in caring about that child and
in caring for that child.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
And there was just something about that travel from the parents.
Speaker 12 (20:18):
Yes, and the parent trusted the stranger that was next
to them, who trusted the next person, and all of
them as though it was their own child. Yes, there
was something so so magical in many ways about that
and about affirming about you can create an environment where
people feel safe and feel a sense of communal responsibility
(20:42):
and community.
Speaker 1 (20:43):
Yeah, you know, many of us had the blessing.
Speaker 12 (20:44):
Of growing up where you know, the neighbors were watching
out for all the kids.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
Right. It was a neighborhood. Your neighborhood was the community
right there.
Speaker 12 (20:51):
So much about where we are right now that has
caused people to feel alone or to feel outside. I
feel like they don't belong. And this was just the
opposite of that. And and I hold on to that.
I talk about that kind of thing in the book,
and I hope that there is something about she just
(21:12):
they just handing, like Mama to take my baby.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
Blessed this shop. Mama still those people. We come through
several videos of her rallies, and it turns out this
odd phenomenon never happened. Ramon has a theory about this story,
and he wrote a song about it. Go ahead on, Ramon,
Go head on. Crowdbrestco SiZ Camoloiti of the Stage gave
(21:46):
it all she.
Speaker 15 (21:46):
Guts, She said, has reached up affeld love so true.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
It wasn't babies, y'all.
Speaker 15 (21:58):
It was by bottles of the nanny proof Boo, pass
me them babies, jim Bean my child, Jack Daniels crying,
I'll jerky running wild dude, Oh Lord, I cradle, I'm
sweet all ride them sloper on. My babies ain't in dabbers,
(22:22):
They're in bottles.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
Ful of rye and cold Mama's in the crowd. Her
daddy is true. They didn't have any chargers. They passed
me booze.
Speaker 15 (22:38):
Little babymakers marb with a passified tar bunches star passing
babies like this.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
It's two lady stuff pass me them babies, Jim and
my child.
Speaker 16 (22:57):
Old granddad laughing, serve the compass miile holding in mas
I I'm running for VP.
Speaker 1 (23:08):
But every baby's bourbons or sing it back to me.
A house on votes, some nurse teath.
Speaker 16 (23:18):
But the babies in mos got one hundred and twenty
proof to agree. Come election when the votes getting tied
out of my baby's clothes and drink them till day like.
Speaker 6 (23:33):
Youpi Youpi, Old Kaya, he's an old college and Michael
Ferry if the old Kay.
Speaker 1 (23:43):
Democrats me have flipped on every issue. Illegal immigration. They
used to be against it, welfare Bill Clinton called for
welfare reform. Now they want more of it. Boys and girls,
locker rooms. They didn't really have positions on that before
because as nobody could imagine, you would take such a
wacky position. When I was coming up as a debater.
(24:08):
One of the things you would do, you'd a task,
you would be given to develop your chops. Was you
would have to take an unpopular position and debate it.
And that's what criminal defense attorneys have to do. Many days.
You've got a guy who's guilty, and he is entitled
(24:30):
by our constitution to a zealous defense, and that's your job.
It is your job. The system is supposed to work.
Let's fry the dude, but first he gets a zealous defense.
It is as if the Democrats have said, all right,
bringing on will take the least favorable opinion on everything.
We'll go against everything that is good and decent. Sexualizing
(24:55):
children will be for that. Trafficking children from third world
countries to bring them here to butt rape them. Yep,
we're for that. Replacing Americans with foreigners in their jobs, homes, healthcare,
we're going to do that too. If someone commits a
(25:16):
rape or a murder, we want them back out on
the street. Uh, we want boys to go in the
girls locker room. Is there anything that they're right on?
I mean, honestly, it's freak show level stuff. What worries
me is at some point somebody's going to start listening
(25:37):
to James Carvill or one of these guys is going
to go, Hey, you guys, knock it off already. Polster
Frank Lutz told Fox News that Democrats not only need
a new message, but a new messenger.
Speaker 17 (25:50):
There are three questions that the public is asking. Number one,
where do you stand? Number two, what would you do?
And number three why should we trust you? None of
that is coming from congressional Democrats. You have a couple
of governors that do communicate effectively.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
Wes Moore out of Maryland and.
Speaker 17 (26:08):
Jared Poulus out of Colorado are examples. But for the
most part, Washington Democrats have Washington solutions to Washington problems.
Let me give you warning for people who are watching
right now. If the government does shut down, the Democrats
are going.
Speaker 1 (26:23):
To get blamed.
Speaker 17 (26:24):
Chuck Schum is going to be held responsible. And I
even hear that there are Democratic senators that may upend him,
may say enough to him because he's so out of touch.
Speaker 7 (26:35):
I got to go, Frank, but but you mentioned Chuck Schumer,
and now I want to just add the trunk of
Chuck Schumer was on TV today saying we got to
keep hitting Trump, but we got to show voters where
on their side on things, and it's tough right, they're
not really doing that.
Speaker 17 (26:49):
Your less words, you have to listen to them, you
have to learn from them before you can lead them.
I say to the Democrats, you need a new message,
a new messenger, and a new approach because the old
stuff isn't work.
Speaker 1 (27:00):
King you think shocking. CNN's Van Jones, a Barack Obama
partisan hack, agrees that Democrats need a new approach.
Speaker 18 (27:18):
If progressives have a politics it says all white people
are racist, all men are toxic, and all billionaires are evil.
Speaker 1 (27:27):
It's kind of hard to keep them on your side.
Speaker 18 (27:29):
And so we might want to think about if you're
chasing people out of the party, you can't be mad
when they leave. And maybe if we had a different
politics we actually said dignity for everybody. Everybody's respected and
we need you more, people might stay.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
Look em they're all cheering. Yay, gosh, that's so impressive.
We're going to play a little game. We're gonna play
some random clips of people without telling you who they are,
and let's see if you can tell which the aisle
they relate to. Go ahead, or mom, they got white men?
(28:04):
What the is wrong with you?
Speaker 5 (28:06):
But you're too dumb to even realize that because you're
lazy and sitting in front of a computer or a
phone and you're just eating it up.
Speaker 1 (28:15):
Oh my gosh, look at what they're doing. All of
a sudden, my heritage is going to be over that.
I won't. I want to live in a country where
there are.
Speaker 3 (28:25):
White kids go to white schools and white people marry
each other.
Speaker 1 (28:30):
What is wrong with that?
Speaker 3 (28:32):
I want to grow up in the country that my
great grandfather grew up in.
Speaker 1 (28:36):
That country doesn't exist anymore. Thus Don Lemon trashing white men,
even though he lays up under one every night. But
you have to be careful when you consume content like
that that you understand what he's doing. If you go
(28:58):
to the circus and you go in the bearded lady ten,
you don't leave out of there and say, oh my god,
that woman is a bearded lady. Well, yeah, that was
that was the coining of the point. It was meant
to shock. Right. Don Lemon lost his gig on CNN.
(29:19):
When you become freelance independent, whatever you want to call it,
cut loose, unmoored out to see if you have a
regular gig. Most of you who listen come back to
this station every day, hopefully at this time. If not
at this time, maybe we caught you because you hung
around after the show before us, or you got here
(29:39):
early for the show after us. But but you come
to the station, you get in your truck, you get
in your van, get in your car, you turn it on,
and the station is on. So we're here. So if
we're halfway any good, we'll hold on to your attention.
But we didn't have to bring you here. You were
already here, and that makes what we do a whole
lot easier. That's why networks still have a lot of influence.
(30:02):
But if you're a person who doesn't have that and
people have to seek you out day in and day
out over a period of time, they just stop doing so.
And that's why it's amazing what Joe Rogan has done,
for instance, to be able to get people to come
to you afresh a new every day, not because you
(30:23):
were already on Fox or CNN or MSNBC, but because
your content is compelling. That is the ultimate compliment to you, Boo.
What I want to focus on here is Don Lemon saying,
white man, you're lazy and dumb and your country doesn't
says Don Lemon, doesn't actually have any fans. There's nobody
(30:45):
who says, I like the gay black guy who walked
out with the N word written on a form. I
like the gay black guy that insults everybody. I like
the gay black guy that said Nikki Haley was too
fat and old to run for president. Like the black
guy who uses race for everything, and he's a constant
victim and he's not engaging or entertaining or very smart.
(31:08):
Nobody says that Don Lemon exists as a foil in
the wrestling world. That's called a heel. Don Lemon's job
is to make you hate him. You're there to root
for your favorite wrestler. For me, that's the Junkyard Dog,
But that's up to you. Don Lemon's job is to
(31:28):
piss people off. But what I love about this is
Don Lemon is finally insulting white people, and I say,
let's stop with the nice talk. I don't like you,
Don Lemon. There's a lot of black people. I don't like.
There's a lot of illegal aliens. I don't like, there's
a lot of there's a lot of Muslim invasion going
on in this country.
Speaker 12 (31:48):
I don't like.
Speaker 1 (31:48):
Let's lay it all let's stop with the pretty talk,
and let's stop caring whether we offend people. I actually
like what Don Lemon did there. Yes, insult me as
a white guy. Sure, yes, white people are horror that
nobody wants to live in a country full of white people.
Everybody wants to live in a country full of black people.
You win the point, Don, I mean, let's let's have
these comfort let's talk it out and kiss people off.
(32:10):
I love it. This has left for good, thank you,
and good night.