Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
Michael Very Show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
That American dream is slipping away.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
I don't have to tell you that.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
You're feeling your lives, You seeing your shrinking wages, in
the cost of everything from groceries to healthcare, to college
to filling up your car at the gas station. It
keeps going up and up and up, and the future
keeps receding further and further and further away.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
It really speaks to a lot of pessimism here about
the American dream, how it feels like it's out of reachion.
Speaker 2 (00:46):
Home ownership for too many people in our country now
is elusive.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
You know, gone is the day of everyone thinking they
could actually live the American dream.
Speaker 5 (00:53):
I'm here today with a message.
Speaker 6 (00:55):
Of hope for all Americans. With your vote in.
Speaker 5 (00:58):
This election, I will end inflation, i will stop the invasion.
Speaker 7 (01:02):
And I will bring back the American dream.
Speaker 5 (01:05):
By a lot.
Speaker 4 (01:05):
We're leading by a lot.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
We're leading in the balls.
Speaker 5 (01:08):
Every single state looks like we're doing.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
And with your.
Speaker 6 (01:15):
Supporter, November fifth, America will be bigger, better, boulder, richer,
safer and stronger than ever before.
Speaker 2 (01:22):
You know me, when you're not small and ill your friend,
now help you can.
Speaker 1 (01:36):
For those who abandoned hope, we'll restore hope, and we'll
welcome them into a great national crusade to make America
great again.
Speaker 6 (01:43):
And that's why I'm here today, That's why I'm standing
before you, because we are going to finish what we started.
We started something that was about We're going to complete
the mission. We're going to see this battle through to
ultimate victory. We're going to make America great again.
Speaker 5 (02:09):
Somebody, this election is a choice between whether we will
have a four I think of this four more years
I could could you stand it's four more years of
incompetence and stupidity and failure and disaster, or whether we
(02:31):
will begin the four greatest years in the history.
Speaker 2 (02:33):
Of our country.
Speaker 3 (02:34):
I think we have a real chair make America great again.
Speaker 6 (02:38):
And quite simply put, we will very quickly make America
great again.
Speaker 2 (02:55):
Interesting times, interesting times. Indeed, that's it's just came in.
I was not expecting process the political news. I don't
like to I don't like to respond the minute I
(03:19):
get news because I like to think it through. That's
what the commercial breaks are for. Once you say something
turns out people are listening, and then maybe they're listening
and they walk away, and when they walk away, they
don't hear the rest of your perspective. I don't generally
(03:43):
have a knee jerk reaction to a lot of political news.
I tend to maybe this is my debate background, maybe
it's a law background, maybe it's just the way my
brain processes. I like to take the argument that I
like to take the position that comes naturally to me,
(04:05):
and then I like to flip that and make the
argument against myself to myself and see if in making
that argument, I can talk myself out of my own argument,
And if I can make good arguments, then I can
get back past biases and prejudices and realize that that
(04:28):
was a wrongheaded perspective that I held because of confirmation bias,
or recency bias, or traditionalism. You know. One of my
great frustrations. I give you an example. I have friends
who are either black or Jewish who are Democrats, and
(04:52):
all they want to tell me when they see me
or when they email or we talk is about some
stupid Democrats that they hope loses. And they're very eager
to tell me this. And I always think, well, that's weird. Okay, yeah, hey,
aren't you a Democrat? Yeah, but I hate Sheila Jackson
(05:13):
Lee or Jasmine Crockett or whoever it is. And my
reaction is, okay, well, well, why are you in a
party with people like that? And what it comes down
to is that, especially for Blacks followed by Jews, followed
(05:34):
by labor, is that is that party is part of
their identity and so if the party changes, they still
wear the jersey. So you know, if you are, if
(05:54):
you were a big fan of the late seventies, we
are family Pittsburgh Pirates team, and that's your favorite team,
and you buy, you buy season tickets for life. Then
you don't care that they don't have Dave Parker or
kent To Colby or Willy Stargel any longer. You love
(06:20):
the Pirates and it could be a totally different team.
Or you could be a Saint Louis Cardinals fan of
the eighty small ball teams and you love small ball
and you love watching Willy, you know, slap singles and
steal his way around and score, and that's your kind
of ball. And then they change the whole team, they
(06:42):
change the way they play, and it looks nothing like that,
and they change stadiums, the whole thing, but you still
wear that jersey. We've got people in this country who
are died in the world Democrats, and they can't they
will not change that, even when they recognize how stupid
(07:03):
their candidates are. And that's how you end up with
some of these white liberals in that should know better,
having to defend or feeling like they have to defend
Jasmine Crockett. So last night Democrat primary in Texas, Jasmine Crockett,
(07:30):
she got officials in Dallas, which is in northeast Texas,
which is her county, Dallas County, to keep the polls
open an extra two hours. It's typical cheating, that's all
it is. It's typical inner city, urban corrupt politics. So
(07:53):
they decide to keep the poles open an extra two hours.
That's an unfair advantage in her home county, and our
Texas Supreme Court said no, no, no, no, those last
two hours, we're not counting those votes. So what does
Jasmine saying they cheated? No, you cheated, They stopped you
from cheating. Waiting, hold on, you get more than the
Michael Berry Show. So Democrats don't want to have to
(08:15):
explain away what their party is. But when they're in
a primary, So you had Jasmine Crockett and James tell
Rica when they're in a primary, you've got this situation
where Jasmine Crockett. So you've got a black woman and
(08:37):
a white liberal fellaw against each other and the white
liberals winning, and the white liberals are teaming up together
to help him win, but they don't want to be
called racist because they usually like to use that against
the Republicans. Well, if you're not supporting the black woman,
you're racist, you're racists. Well, of course Jasmine Crockett does
(09:01):
what she's gonna do. She's gonna claim the Republicans are
out to get her. I got news for you, and
this is that, this is the honest truth that, whether
someone will admit it or not, every Republican in Texas
with a brain was rooting for Jasmine Crockett last night.
(09:26):
Now I've got listeners, go, thank god Jasmine lost. You're
not thinking strategically. You want your opponent to put their
weakest candidate out there, not their strongest. You wanted Jasmine
crocket but she drives me crazy. Exactly does James tallerco
(09:49):
drive you crazy. He's worth, He's He's far more dangerous
than she is. He's beato, Jesus, he's Bill Clinton. You
Jesse Jackson, Bill Clinton, did you more harm? Bill Clinton's dangerous?
Barack Obama dangerous. Well, at least Barack Obama doesn't act
(10:11):
like Jesse Jackson or Al Sharpton. That's why he's dangerous.
The ones who can very subtly destroy you are far
more dangerous than the wild eyed crazy that Jasmine Crockett
pretended to be. She's not really that crazy. She's nothing
(10:35):
that aunt esther that she does from San fer instance,
that's not really her. She did that because that got
her on podcasts and it got her on the evening
news and people talk to me. That's not really who
she is. But that's okay, because I wanted a campaign
against that Tallerico's dangerous because he's got a master of divinities.
He'll quote the Bible, and if you're not paying attention,
(10:57):
he'll be quoting the Bible talking telling women that abortions
are good, and that cutting the kids wan or off
or cutting the girl's boobs off were good, and that
his Bible tells himself and he can even put a
little dripping sacharine a Southern accent on it when he
needs to. Oh, he's dangerous, Talla Rica. We wanted Jasmine Crockett,
(11:19):
so for her to say Republicans came out to get me,
actually quite the opposite. Republicans were trying to help you.
Speaker 8 (11:27):
We're not going to have election results tonight, in my opinion,
based upon what specifically has taken place in Dallas County. Unfortunately,
this is what Republicans like to do, and so they
specifically targeted Dallas.
Speaker 2 (11:48):
County and I think we all know why. So I
want you to enjoy yourselves.
Speaker 8 (11:56):
But I won't be back tonight because I have no
idea of when we're going to give results, and I
fully anticipate it won't be until tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
So I love y'all too.
Speaker 3 (12:11):
Thank you so very much for being here.
Speaker 2 (12:16):
And then she talked about cheating because she's a cheater,
therefore she accuses others. Russia was always very good about it.
Whatever they're accusing you of is what they're doing.
Speaker 4 (12:28):
Alred has already stated, we encourage each and every one
of you to remain resilient. We cannot allow this type
of behavior to be rewarded, because so long as they
know that they can win, even if it means cheating, then.
Speaker 2 (12:45):
They will continue to do it. So I am asking you,
I am begging you to make sure that you go ahead.
Speaker 4 (12:52):
And figure out where it is that you are supposed
to vote.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
Stand in line, wait in line. Cheating because she cheats,
because her party cheats, because they're people cheat. Funny how
that goes back and forth between her professional and her
aunt esther stick. Compare this last cut that you just
heard to this montage which was created on x by
(13:19):
someone under the title alx.
Speaker 4 (13:21):
In fact, Ms Perry, I know your organization, the Heritage
Foundation loves Texas.
Speaker 2 (13:25):
Oh they love Texas.
Speaker 4 (13:26):
They always sending us some nonsense bills and to understand
enough about the Constitution to the extent that I'm the
one that's supposed to make the decision, or at.
Speaker 2 (13:34):
Least get old.
Speaker 4 (13:36):
Someone on this committee then starts talking about somebody's bleach blind,
bad built bush body that would not be engaging in personalities.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
Correct, Oh what now, chairman.
Speaker 4 (13:50):
Because we in these hot ass Texas streets. Honey, y'all
know we got governor high wheels down there. Come on now,
and the only thing hot about him is that he
is a hot ass mask.
Speaker 2 (14:06):
Honey, you know we done picking cotton.
Speaker 6 (14:12):
We are.
Speaker 4 (14:13):
You can't pay us enough to find a plantation. But
when we start talking about things that look like evidence,
they want to act like they blind, they don't know
what this is.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
These are our national secrets. Looks like in the sh
of me, this looks like more evidence.
Speaker 4 (14:31):
Of our national secrets, say on the stage at Mary Lago.
So she gonna keep saying trans trans trands so that
people will feel threatened in.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
Child, listen.
Speaker 4 (14:41):
Send them to Texas, they send them to Florida, every
deplorable state that we can think about. They usually coming
out of y'all's think tank. We're talking about his son.
We're talking about someone who is an actual citizen, just
a regular, regular citizen. We're not talking about somebody who
could have passed a background checked.
Speaker 7 (15:00):
Don't tell me to.
Speaker 4 (15:00):
Calm down because y'all talk and then you're out of
control it like baby, you probably need a good black
woman in the room who can check you and tell
you that, first of all, you shouldn't be doing it
on signal or anything else. But babee, babe, y'all got
(15:23):
the white supremacist galore.
Speaker 2 (15:25):
Okay, like all of them. You got the proud boys,
you got, you got the neo Nazis.
Speaker 4 (15:31):
You have people that literally should be classified as domestic terrorists.
The Republicans are going to lose the House, and y'all
run this back for them.
Speaker 2 (15:40):
When they do. Bizarre is on Will Done stuff.
Speaker 6 (15:51):
This is the Michael Barry showieve.
Speaker 2 (15:59):
Yesterday, and they asked my opinion on the Democrat race
Democrat Senate race between Jasmine Crockett and James Talerrico, and
they said taal Rico wins because taal Rico's people were
touting a poll that showed that he won. It was
(16:22):
literally the first round of polls that had him winning.
Every poll before that had Jasmine Crockett winning. Well, there
are a couple of things that happened to turn the
tide there. But I said, well, here's your shocker pick.
I think Jasmine Crockett wins. And I heard from a
(16:45):
lot of people today that said what I would have
expected was ha ha nan nana boobo. You got it wrong.
They didn't say that. They said, why did you say that?
And I said, well, it wasn't because I think a
majority of Democrats support her. I don't. It is because
I think the turnout is going to be lower than
(17:07):
people expect on election day, and I think that black
turnout is going to be high, and they're going to
be excited about the chance to vote for a black
senator from Texas Senate candidate from Texas. And I think
there's something called black girl magic. It's been big in
(17:31):
Texas where black women run against white women and especially
white men who are Democrats on the Harris County Judiciary,
which is the county that Houston is in, and they've
been six for six since twenty twenty. They win every time,
and they have these slates and the way the slates
call they called a pony cart. I used to run
(17:52):
for office. I campaigned in black churches. I know how
the game is played. And you get the pastor gets
little money, and the pastor supports you, and the pastor
lets you hand out and if you're really lucky, the
pastor or the pastor's wife the first lady will pass
out your pony card to the voters and they will
(18:14):
do something called the roll to the polls, and that
is that on Sunday, they'll finish church up early and
then they'll have buses out front, which the campaigns have
paid for, and you take the people straight from church
to the pole. Pastor hands out the pony or the
(18:38):
I don't know why it's called a pony, actually, but
that's just what I was told. It was called a
voting slate, so you know it comes from him, and
then the folks vote, they get back on the bus
and they go back to the church where they're fed
a nice meal, free meal, and it's a nice little
(19:00):
little deal. And you can you can generate a lot
of votes this way, and you're going to get one
hundred percent of the votes. It's hard to get when
you're just trying to win the hearts and minds of
people with speeches at debates and things like that. No
matter what, people will break, you know, some for this
and some for that. When you can get one hundred
percent of people, man, it makes a difference. Well if
(19:24):
if for those of you who were in Texas watching
the returns closely last night, Jasmine Crockett started out fifty
three forty five with the early votes, do you know
who that is? Those are early votes. The way the
voting comes in is you've got we had early voting
for ten days, going through this past Friday and finishing
(19:48):
on Friday at seven pm. And then you've got Saturday, Sunday, Monday,
and then as they call it, election Day on Tuesday,
and so all all the early voting totals are done
by Monday, but they're not released until Tuesday when the
polls close. So when the polls close, you get this
(20:11):
data dump of results. And Jasmincrockett was up fifty three
forty five. The reason she was up early is that's
the slates, that's the people say, that's the Labor Union
telling people, you know, vote for this. That's the churches.
And there are black programs, especially in Harris County, but
(20:33):
Dallas has them in Dallas County is where she's from,
that are very effective at getting people to vote. You've
got you've got mail in ballots which are easily manipulated.
And so I used to watch this happen. There would be,
you know, an older black lady who she would get
everybody to apply or she'd do it for them for
(20:54):
their early votes, and she'd come by and pick them
all up and then she'd go and deliver them. And
surprised these outreach programs like this. How many votes you
can put together, and it doesn't have to be a
million votes. It's worrying to be a million votes, Casper.
When you're getting one hundred percent of a region's votes,
(21:14):
that's a lot of vote. You don't get one hundred
percent of a neighborhood. Ever, you don't get You'll never
get one hundred percent of white people. Ever, I don't.
You could say the sky is blue, you get twenty
five percent, just just contrary and vote against you. Well,
technically it's got some white and then there's Kim trails.
You'll never get one hundred percent. So among black voters.
(21:37):
If you can get one hundred percent of some communities,
and remember, if you split the population Republican Democrat, let's
just make it easy. It's not accurate, but let's say
fifty to fifty. So now in order to win the primary,
you don't need to get fifty one percent of people.
You just need to get fifty one percent of fifty.
So now you only need twenty five. But remember most
(21:59):
people don't vote. It's a very low turnout. So if
blacks only make up nationwide thirteen percent of the population,
I forget what it is in Texas. But let's just
say it's thirteen percent of the population, thirteen percent of
fifty because remember the other half of the Republicans is
twenty six percent, right, if there are all Democrats. Before
(22:23):
you know it, you're getting real close to a victory
just by winning one hundred percent of blacks if blacks turnout.
Now that that was stipulating a lot of things as
facts that aren't necessarily true. You're not going to win
one hundred percent of blacks for Jasmin Crockett. Some we're
going to vote for Taal Rico. That's fact. But it's
a turnout game. So where I went wrong in thinking
(22:44):
Jasmine may pull off a runoff, I may pull off
a chakra. A surprise was assuming that she had a
better get out the vote campaign, and that wasn't her
as a candidate driving that that was in Houston, and
she had Rodney Ellis supporting her, who's the godfather of
Harris County. He has taken over Harris County politics and
(23:07):
he was big in her camp. So the presumption was
he wins elections, he gets people to vote. Now, I
don't know if she had an outreach, a program, a
vote management program like that, it's a lot of blocking
and tackling here, a lot of blocking and tackling. It's
like a ground war. I don't know if she had
that in Austin sand and Tone. I don't know if
(23:28):
she had that in Dallas, and I don't know if
she had it in South Texas. That's going to be
the question because she's relatively new to this process. So
I just don't know. By the way, we love to
have these conversations with you, and the reason we get
to do it is we have show sponsors who believe
in us and want to align with us because they
(23:49):
want to align with you. So thanks for supporting our
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(24:10):
Michael Berryshow dot com, Michael Berryshow dot com. From levisians
to librarians, everyone listens to Michael Berry Show talk about
Got slip Willie's deposition the other day. If you haven't
seen this go look it up. We don't have the
(24:30):
benefit of sharing video with you, so let me paint
the picture. There's all hollowed out Bill Clinton. You know,
since he went vegetarian, got real skinny, and he looks
like the soul he might have once had long before
he was in public life, has drained out of him.
Or maybe it was just being around Hillary. But so,
(24:51):
he was sitting for a deposition, or as I say,
he was being deposed, which is kind of funny because
the word deposed can mean giving our being questioned in
a deposition. It could also mean having your head chopped off.
But anyway, he was being deposed regarding his involvement in
Epstein Island, and everybody knows he's client number one. I
(25:14):
mean he's So there's video of the of the deposition.
And sometimes to refresh your memory, you will be handed
a photo or a document and they'll say, do you
remember this, And it's a technique you use during a deposition.
(25:35):
And so they hand him a document of what is
believed to be naked women or young women, young women
from Epstein Allen and he is supposed to review those
with this serious face. I don't believe I've ever seen
these people before in my life. But somewhere he forgot
(25:58):
the cameras were on it, and he lost himself in
a memory. It was a do you have that audio
where you know, like on the Brady Bunch, whenever they
would remember back to something, and that would be the
that would be how you knew we were going back
in time in their mind, Like something would happen and
they would remember, I remember, yeah, that'll do, that'll do.
(26:23):
Play the hard sport. Well, there is that moment where
Slick Willie is really is remembering. He's looking at the
photo and he forgets anyone is around him, and he
has this most evil grint on his face, and he
pulls the paper closer to himself like he's smelling it
(26:43):
or something. And he reminded me of what I imagine
a serial killer would do. Serial Killers keep trophies from
the people they kill. They'll keep an article of clothing,
a handkerchief, a pair of pines, braw a sock, license anything,
and so they keep it's called a trophy. It's some
(27:04):
part of that kill that they keep with him. You
watch Dexter and so he is holding the page and
he's clearly kind of salivating and happy and remembering, and
his lawyer realizes, oh my god, this is horrible. She
reaches over, like a mother when her kid is unwrapping
(27:28):
a loud candy at church. She read it over, grabs
the paper and pulls it away. But as she pulls
it away, he's like a dog holding his bone, and
you try to take the bone away, he stays attached
on it. He wants it back, like, look, you're the lawyer,
I'm the client here I want to And so there's
a moment where they're fighting over the sheet because he
(27:50):
wants to look at it somewhere. Yeah, yeah, it. I
mean it was as creepy as you can imagine. And
all I could think was that dirty dog, that dirty
you saw, Dirty Bill Clinton. You didn't you didn't get
(28:10):
to I feel your pain, Bill Clinton. You saw right there.
You saw that that old dirty dog would like to
hunt one more time.
Speaker 9 (28:20):
Okay, if we can get underway here, former President Clinton,
we will begin the deposition of your involvement on the
Jeffrey Epstein Island activity involvements the Epstein Island.
Speaker 2 (28:32):
I sure do miss that heavenly placed.
Speaker 1 (28:34):
I can still smell the sun's green coconut oil and
plausible deniability. Oh look at this picture. I remember listening.
I beg your day was Stephanie smelled like a veta roses.
I'll tell you. Oh there's that diving board and we
put baby oil on that one time and had the
girls just sliding right off of it. Hillary wouldn't even
let me base a turkey for five years after that.
Speaker 2 (28:56):
Oh and look you here, Besod and Maggie.
Speaker 1 (28:59):
From Ma to me of a naughty scarlet Johansen. Boy,
those hands could remove a not from an old piece
of road. Oh, here's a jackpot at Staysy Becky, Tash
and Marie and Gi and Heather.
Speaker 9 (29:12):
Together, mister Clinton, for the third time, do you recall
any specifics from being at Epstein Island?
Speaker 2 (29:18):
No, No, I don't recall a thing.
Speaker 1 (29:19):
I'm not me.
Speaker 2 (29:21):
You can and Jesse. Jasmine Crockett would not concede last night,
(29:53):
even though it was clear she had lost in her mind.
There's no way she could lo and she not ready
to exit stage left yet it had to be fraud.
And she is kicking and screaming like a toddler getting
their binkie taken away. Oh so now we're just pretending
this was a normal election.
Speaker 7 (30:15):
Please.
Speaker 2 (30:16):
I did not lose a primary.
Speaker 7 (30:18):
I was strategically inconvenienced by a vast, shadowy right wing
conspiracy perpetrated by my opponent, Jimmy Talinko. You want me
to believe voters just voted. No, no, no, no, this
was coordinating. First it was Yard's signs mysteriously disappeared. Then
it was suspiciously long lines at polling places that I
(30:39):
personally did not design. And now I'm supposed to accept
the results.
Speaker 2 (30:44):
I saw the numbers.
Speaker 7 (30:45):
They were very numbry, too neat, almost as if math
was involved. Have we investigated the calculators, the spreadsheets, the
suspicious overuse of Excel, And don't even get me started
on the weather. It rained in one precinct coincidence or
atmospheric inefemis. You're telling me thousands of people independently decided
that they preferred someone else. That sounds like group think,
(31:09):
organized group think, possibly funded by the white men's. I
demand a recount of everything, the balance, the vibes, the facial.
Speaker 2 (31:16):
Expressions at Poland station.
Speaker 7 (31:18):
Strengthly, I will not rest until we aughter the concept
of arithmetic itself.
Speaker 2 (31:22):
Because I did not lose reality. Simply miscounting, ain't got
no time for this. You know it should go without
saying an infel it's beneath me and you to need
to whatever. So often, maybe never doubt that I think
(31:45):
that because you're black or a woman, or gay or
an immigrant, that you're some idiot, that these people represent
who and what you are. Never doubt for a moment
(32:05):
that I think every black person is like Jasmine Crockett. Actually,
I don't even think Jasmin Crocket's like Jasmin Crockett. That
whole aunt esther act is just an act. That's not
actually who she is. She's well spoken normally. It's sad
that that needs to be an act. Kamala did it too.
Kamala's no idiot. People will tell me, oh no, no,
(32:26):
she's not. She's not an idiot. She played one because
she thought she needed to. And that's sad and cynical.
So just because I make a joke about a woman
or a black person, or a gay person or an
immigrant or whatever else, don't take that as you're a
child of God
Speaker 1 (32:41):
Just like me.