Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Verie Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
I was waiting on an awesome intro by our creative
director Jim Mudd, and I rose, I don't have one today,
and I'm feeling a little cheated. There's so much good
audio these days. No, we shouldn't go home. We should
we should be grateful that every other day, that every
other day. You know, I have so many things I
(01:01):
want to get to and I'm going to power through
them without much intro in between, because I find all
these things that I want to share with you. There
are days that I just want to talk and there
are things I just want to share with you, and
I want you to listen to this. This is six
pot two Roman. This is the head of the post Office,
(01:22):
Lewis de Joy, and he's talking to rand Paul Ran
Paul's hammering him and he's talking about the US Postal
Service and he tells that the US Postal Service has
seen an eighty percent decrease in the volume of mail,
so they're less busy than ever. So what would most
what would a private company have to do at that point?
At the layoff workers, right, they've seen an eighty percent
(01:46):
decrease in the volume of mail, but they added one
hundred and ninety thousand employees. Only in the government would
this ever happen.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
Mentioned in your testimony that the post Office is different
than other areas of got that it has to operate
like a private business. You also mentioned that about eighty
percent of the volume of first class mail has gone
down over time. Can you think of a private business
where eighty percent of what they're you know, doing to
(02:17):
make money is going down in volume that would actually
increase their employees.
Speaker 4 (02:21):
Yeah, so some of that you keep asking, I mean,
I didn't make the laws that follow up that organized
the United.
Speaker 5 (02:27):
States Postal Service.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
Okay, I came in, as I said, to the condition
that we had, and I'm trying to fix it.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Now.
Speaker 4 (02:35):
You exaggerate the hiring aspects.
Speaker 3 (02:39):
I know of no one in private practice or investors
who you know, give advice to a corporate board who
would say, you have a declining business model, we're going
to increase the numbers.
Speaker 5 (02:50):
But then when you have a choice of.
Speaker 3 (02:52):
Hiring contractors that won't be paid the same wages or
pension benefits or health care benefits.
Speaker 5 (02:59):
That you pay your Emporte.
Speaker 3 (03:01):
You're up one hundred and ninety thousand, You've insourced one
hundred and ninety thousand jobs, and it's just sort of inexplicable.
The whole point that of the reform, of shifting the costs,
it's not really reform.
Speaker 5 (03:15):
It's a shell game.
Speaker 3 (03:15):
We just took a bunch of things that are still
costs on your books, and we put them on somebody
else's books somewhere else in government. It's still a massive
cluster in a way that the debt problem is just
shifted over to another account. But in doing that, the
main thing you were trying to get away from was
healthcare costs and pension, right, And so if you compare
(03:36):
a contractor or a contracted employee to a government employee
and insourced employee, and you compare the health costs and
the pension costs, they're dramatically higher for insource. So by
increasing your number of people who work for the government
as opposed to contractors, you're compounding the same problem you
were here with us three years ago saying we can't
(03:58):
handle all these others.
Speaker 5 (04:00):
We need to shift them somewhere else.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
And so the reform package did that, but in contrast,
then you can continue to hire more people instead of saying,
we have all these extra costs associated with government labor,
why don't we hire labor outside of the government and
use contractors.
Speaker 5 (04:18):
In isolation.
Speaker 2 (04:19):
On one element, I mean, this is the problem. Private
companies and taxpayers are paying all this money into the government.
It's more every year, and the government is just spending
whatever they want and it doesn't matter that none of it.
(04:41):
They don't perform, they don't accomplish anything, they don't succeed.
Nobody gets fired. That's why they're all up in arms
over getting fired, because the concept of a government employee
being fired is horrifying to these people because then they
(05:01):
would have to Then they would have to they would
have to actually provide results, and that that they will
not do. That they can't do. They cannot do it.
Here is five sixteen Stephen Miller, White House Deputy Chief
of Staff on Fox News talking about foreign fraud rings
(05:24):
using fake Social Security numbers to steal billions of dollars
of your money that you work so hard to pay in.
And then we know that Social Security is going bankrupt. Well,
of course it is because it's being defrauded by foreign
fraud rings.
Speaker 3 (05:38):
What are the plans to do so if those records
are obtained.
Speaker 6 (05:43):
Well, as we know, there's a massive amount of fraud
in this country. You have, for example, foreign fraud rings.
These are foreign nationals who come into the United States.
They use fake social Security numbers, they use fake identities
to steal billions in taxpayer benefits. There's no way to
know until DOGE gains full access exactly how much money
(06:05):
we're talking about, But over a ten year in old
budget window, you could be talking about saving over a
trillion dollars by clamping down on massive fraud in our
tax and entitlement systems, included again those carried out by
organized fraud and theft rings. A very important point in
all this is to understand that DOGE are subordinate staffers
(06:28):
of the federal government, their political appointees, just like me,
just like everyone else in the White House that serve
an answer to the president. So we're not talking about
an outside private entity. We're talking about the existing federal
staff of the federal government performing their statutory and constitutional duty.
Speaker 2 (06:45):
And that's the whole point, isn't it. You don't run
your business this way. You don't run your household this way.
You know, the left is very upset that the price
of eggs became a metaphor for what was wrong in
this country because finally, stay at home moms. They always
(07:08):
talk in terms that they try to exclude. Stay at
home moms, y'all are dumb. Y'all, just stay in the house.
You know, you don't need to be bothering the schools
where the experts are teaching your children, or in doctor
any of your children. You don't need to bother with
politics because you're not smart, you're just breeders. Well, what
(07:29):
happened with the inflation issue was stay at home mom said,
you know what, You're not going to call me dumb
anymore because I'm the CEO of this household. My husband's
off at work, and I got to make this budget
work for these kids. And when they got the zoom
into the schools, when they sent the kids home, that
was when the parents, the moms, all of a sudden
saw what was being taught in the schools. Mommies have
(07:50):
taken over American politics. And I'm here to tell you
this is a good thing, because guess what, mommies are smart.
They're the ones that keep the family unit going these
these especially white liberals. These white liberals are dysfunctional. They
can't have a relationship with a man. They can't. It's
all these white liberal women who are so dysfunctional. They're
(08:13):
hated at their work, They're angry at the world. They
shouldn't be making decisions for anybody. Captain something wong, well,
something must be right. You're listening to Michael Berry. I
could literally do an entire show on Leez Elden at
the EPA, on Pulsy Gabbard at d and I. Although
(08:34):
most of what she's going to do you'll never know.
You won't see it all because it's behind the scenes.
Pete hegg Seth a lot of what he's going to
do you're not going to see out front. Although he's
very good, I mean, he's former Fox personality. He's he's
good at telling a story using the media that don't
(08:54):
want to be friendly to him. He's very good at
doing that sort of thing. But I could there's there's
so many people working in concert on this team of
rivals to use the Lincoln or use a Doris Kurns
Goodwin term about the book that the books she wrote
about Abraham Lincoln. Lincoln, the the rival candidates for the presidency.
(09:18):
He brought into his cabinet and we hadn't seen anything
like that before. We had folks that rather than say
I'll bring in my own team and whoever you know
did not quite make it to be president, you'll never
be seen again, he said, no, no, no, come in and
help me fix the country. It's a pretty interesting approach
when when you when you think about it, well, there
(09:40):
are some things that I've been wanting to cover that
that are just piling up on my desk, and I'm just,
for no good reason going to go one by one.
And first one is where is that?
Speaker 7 (09:51):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (09:52):
I don't think we got a chance to get to this.
Last week it was Karen Bass, the mayor of Los Angeles,
who announced that she was going to investigate. This is
on Fox eleven at a loss. She's going to investigate
why she was allowed to leave the country and go
(10:15):
down to Ghana before the forest fires. Now, folks, I
got to tell you, this is as good as Carl
Douglas and and and uh and and Johnny Cochrane saying oh,
you've got a bloody glove right next to the Cole's body,
and there's a bloody glove behind OJ's house. You've got
(10:38):
a limo driver who saw him go behind there. You've
got kato O Kalin, his own his own friend, who's
who's out back of his house, who heard a slamming
against the door when he jumped over the fence. You've
got you got blood on him, You've got Goldman's blood
on him, you got Nicole's blood on him, and all
over his vehicle. Oh well, we can't really argue that, now,
(11:00):
can we. It's arguably the most evidence ever found in
a case in American history. That argument has been made
by law enforcement officials, and there was such an overwhelming
amount of evidence that there was no way. Oh and
by the way, he went on the run, put a
pistol to his head. And the whole time was like, no,
I don't deserve to live after this, after what I've done,
(11:24):
All of these things pile up. Well, you can't argue
the evidence, So what do you do? You go? Hah.
Only way they could have all his evidence is if
they planted it. Oh and eight out of twelve of
the jury or black, Well, it's just a white cop,
Mark Furman who planted it. You know how those white
(11:44):
cops are. So now we don't argue over the evidence.
We just argue that there's no way all this evidence
would exist, right. I mean, it's Eddie Murphy's moment in
was it? Was it delirious or was it raw? Where
the Jedi mind trick. His wife comes home, he's having
(12:06):
sex with another woman, and she leaves and storms out
and he runs back. It wasn't me. It wasn't me.
I saw you in there. Oh it was me. Uh well, yeah,
I was having sack with her, but I make love
to you. Like he had to change his whole story.
He had to do the Jedi mind trick on her. Well,
here we got Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass who left.
(12:31):
Why was she going to Ghana? See, this is what
these people do. Syvester Turner, when he is mayor of Houston,
would do this. They're always on some junket to a
foreign country. There's no trade being done. She's investigating why
they allowed her to leave, By the way she stayed
there after the fires broke out. She wants to know
who allowed her to leave. They shouldn't have allowed her
to she they should have told her to stay here.
Speaker 8 (12:53):
Going to go to Ghana, which I know you've said
was a mistake now, but I just am curious on
the thought process behind thanks, because we know that there
was warnings about the weather before you went, and you
still went. What was the thought process behind going to Ghana?
Speaker 9 (13:08):
So let me just tell you a couple of things.
First of all, when the White House called and asked
me if I would represent the president, I said yes.
It was going to be a very very short trip
over a weekend and.
Speaker 10 (13:20):
Two business days.
Speaker 9 (13:22):
We need to look at everything about the preparation and
all of that for the fires, because I think when
we evaluate that, we will find that although there were
warnings that I frankly wasn't aware of, although there were warnings,
I think our preparation it wasn't what it typically is,
(13:43):
meaning that before there's a major weather event. For example,
last week, when we knew we were going to get
into the rains, you saw us come together and us
talk about, you know, get your sandbags, bring the k
rails out. That type of preparation didn't happen.
Speaker 2 (13:58):
If that had will.
Speaker 9 (14:00):
Tell you, Alex, I wouldn't have even gone to San Diego,
let alone leave the country.
Speaker 8 (14:04):
But what don't mean, there were warnings you weren't aware of,
because I know we were talking about it on the news.
A lot of people were talking about the problems, a
warning that this was going to be a.
Speaker 9 (14:11):
Huge So when I talked about it with the fire chief,
what she said is is that we don't.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
Go from there. She's mad at everybody else that she
left and stayed out. Might I remind you this is
how cities elect bad mayors and keep them there because
they'll buy this nonsense. Might I remind you that Mary
and Barry went to prison and still got re elected
to city council afterwards. Remember the old Chris Rock bit.
Speaker 10 (14:42):
And get a.
Speaker 5 (14:50):
Get it.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
You know what that means. I'll find us out. We
had a crackheadles.
Speaker 10 (14:57):
Did what you want? You're knowing right?
Speaker 2 (15:12):
How how many American is job back? Smoke Crack got
job back? How the hell that happened?
Speaker 11 (15:19):
I mean, if you get caught from the craig of McDonald's, you.
Speaker 2 (15:22):
Can't get your job back.
Speaker 6 (15:25):
That's right.
Speaker 2 (15:26):
They're not gonna trust you around the.
Speaker 10 (15:27):
Happy meals, Send your master hearties.
Speaker 2 (15:33):
Smoke Crack got his job all over. The whole was
so bad. Who ran against him? So that they lost
who was so bad? They lost to a crackhead? Why
are they.
Speaker 5 (15:45):
Campaigns like who?
Speaker 12 (15:46):
They are heading?
Speaker 9 (15:53):
Both for me?
Speaker 2 (15:58):
Both for me? Don't oh krak bus man? Man, come on, man,
gonna tell little kids and not get high one a
man's o cast don't get high, will be done.
Speaker 5 (16:16):
I'll be man.
Speaker 10 (16:17):
Listen, Tom Wallis.
Speaker 2 (16:24):
What crazy? As you still remember the name douglu Ellen.
He'd wait outside the courtroom. Would you get the reaction
the party's case in the court the people's court judge
Chloseph Walker who was born on this day, I'm sorry,
died on this day eight years ago, twenty seventeen. He
(16:50):
would live to be ninety eight years old. That's amazing.
He's born in nineteen nineteen. And what's amazing is he
seemed old back then. Imagine him continued always had that
very stern look. But when he would cut a joke,
it was like the the dean of the school was
(17:11):
always so stern. And when that guy like you know,
when when when Trump cuts a smile, when he when
he when he allows a little bit of a smirk
while he's telling the joke, it's so much more powerful
because he's always so serious and so stern all the time. Anyway,
(17:33):
I loved the People's Court, and I mean who didn't
I mean, who didn't set their way? Who hasn't said
one minute to Wattner the actually weird we don't get
in listening. Yeah, she looks.
Speaker 11 (17:45):
Normal, possible. Put your hands on to shut up and
stand there.
Speaker 10 (17:57):
Down there.
Speaker 7 (18:01):
Good afternoon, madam Donald Clemens from the ac Nielsen company.
Speaker 2 (18:05):
You're familiar with her work.
Speaker 7 (18:06):
Nielsen you mean the TV rights Man's exactly. And now
you've been selected as a preliminary candidate to become our
next Nielsen family in the Tri County area. And you selected,
you'll share the responsibility for shaping television programming viewed by
our entire nation, in return for which you receive a
check in the amount of two hundred and eighty six.
Speaker 5 (18:25):
Dollars each month.
Speaker 7 (18:28):
That that that that would be my partner, mister Bainbridge,
who doesn't simple.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
It's boy, that's it, you bloy. You don't get program fish.
Speaker 11 (18:46):
Were in there, you had it all the legal history,
le legal history.
Speaker 10 (18:56):
What is going on out here?
Speaker 2 (18:58):
I'm sorry, I'm very sorry about that.
Speaker 5 (19:01):
That man right there is my brother.
Speaker 7 (19:02):
If he doesn't get to watch People's morning. About thirty
seconds he's gonna throw a fit right here in your
porn show. And you can help me, or you can
stand there and watch it happen.
Speaker 2 (19:13):
That movie, you know, the point of film and theater
and is to create attention. You know, a good guy,
bad guy. You're you're so moved by your brother. You
watch that film and you can't help but love you
love Raymond, but you feel for Tom Cruise's character. Such
(19:34):
a good such a good movie. It really is. Bill
Hicks one of the most influential comedians of all time.
I never found Bill Hooks to be that funny, like
just laugh out loud funny, but much like Carlin. Carlin
was more of a thinking man's comedian. Just like Carlin,
Bill Hicks had so much influence on the comedy of today.
(19:58):
But since I love Elvis, and this is actually one
of my favorite Bill Hicks bits, I love Elvis.
Speaker 13 (20:03):
Elvis is a king with that doubt the king. You
know what he gave away over one hundred and sixty
cadillacts in his career.
Speaker 10 (20:08):
Anybody know that one hundred and sixty.
Speaker 13 (20:10):
They're probably thinking, what did he give those two try
total strangers?
Speaker 12 (20:16):
Given me?
Speaker 13 (20:17):
Correct one hundred and sixty Cadillacs gave him what I
think that's what killed Elvis.
Speaker 2 (20:26):
It wasn't drugs.
Speaker 13 (20:27):
He got that bill from General Motors. Oh man, how
many Cadillacs that I give him away? I got a
tour again. I can't even fit my jump dude, man,
I can't even get up. Sonny Red, get the dolly
shnning Red, get the butter and the crowbar. Pup the king.
(20:50):
How you doing to eat? Kind of hot out? Huh yeah,
maybe you feel cooler and a brand new Cadillac elie
quid it. I'm just trying to be nice, wow, Sonny,
because you're giving away too many cadillacsy Sonny, you.
Speaker 2 (21:04):
Look a little tens well I am ten see. Well,
maybe you'd be less tense and I ran new cattlewa.
Speaker 10 (21:12):
She thinks.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
I think dian was.
Speaker 13 (21:15):
The best career move Elvis ever made. I think, if
he'd lived, you know what I mean, he was getting fatter,
he's getting more unknown. But if he'd lived, but he'd
be like touring with fog hat.
Speaker 2 (21:26):
Now that's actually pretty funny. And by the way, think
about how long ago that was. He died in ninety four,
so it's even Bill Hicks Elvis Well will leave that aside.
(21:46):
It says wrong on the subject. I said wrong on
the subject. I'm going to take a moment if I
could also born on this day the great Jackie Gleeson.
And I'll tell you what of all the great roles
he played to me, nothing like this one.
Speaker 7 (21:58):
I had a couple of cheese vergers of going West
sized team.
Speaker 5 (22:01):
Yeah, I'm gonna tell you, man.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
A dollar and a half to keep kicking. Let me
have I do im go Sam do go back.
Speaker 5 (22:22):
I make it fast.
Speaker 2 (22:23):
I'm gonna I'm gonna tell you something. I realized. The
critics panned this movie and ran it down. Are we going?
But I don't, they say, can't be. I'm gonna make
a leap here and follow them. There was a Jewish
(22:43):
fellow from New York who did not like the Evangelical
Christians of the South being his primary audience. We didn't
like that they were not sufficient to that. And he
said something here at Texas count he called him blank
Hickers that rhymes with spits, and he said some pretty
(23:06):
nasty things. And he basically he remade CBS, which was
number one in the ratings, but had things like Beverly
Hillbillies and Green Acres and key Haul and he kicked
all that off and remade to the station. But there
is smoking the Bandit. When it came out, there was
this belief that you wanted to and you wanted to
(23:27):
make movies that were artistic and the critics would like them.
You would address the social dilemmas. You can't give the
people what they want. You can't dare provide content that
is about a lifestyle that is not your own. I'm
(23:48):
gonna tell you something. I had relatives who drove trucks,
relatives who were cops, relatives who were outlaws, and the
idea of the challenge of getting the beer from Texas,
Canada to Georgia and the cops are on your trail
and the eighteen wheelers are slinging, shotting you and the
(24:10):
CB radio and the dog there's a snowman and Smoky
and you know the trans am. I mean that was
the kind of people who criticized that movie as it's
not a serious movie. The same kind of people who
will never understand the Trump is here, got the door
you've got? They will not understand why Trump was at
(24:32):
NASCAR this weekend. They will not understand why Trump is
beloved at the hockey matches. They will not understand why
Trump is beloved at the super Bowl, and smoking demanded
is a perfect example of that. They couldn't understand where
Duck Dynasty came from. Is the biggest thing on all
the TV. They couldn't understand who are these people watching it?
(24:53):
This is the Michael Berry's show. He's showing before there
was George Floyd, before there were hospital the race hustlers,
and the cases that have been used for race hustling
in the modern era. OJ Simpson being found not guilty.
I mean, my goodness, there was seventeen year old Trayvon Martin.
(25:21):
He was shot to death by the neighborhood watch coordinator
on this day in twenty twelve. George Zimmerman was the
fellow's name in Sandford, Florida, and Barack Obama just like
the what led to the beer summit, saying the police
officer acted stupidly, Barack Obama waded in and should not have.
Speaker 12 (25:43):
My main messages is to the parents of the Trayvon Martin.
You know if I had a.
Speaker 2 (25:50):
Son, he'd looked like Trayvon, and I think they are
right to.
Speaker 12 (25:57):
Expect that all of us as Americans are going to
take this with the seriousness that deserves and that we're
going to get to the bottom of exactly what happened.
Speaker 2 (26:08):
And we did didn't wet. Two months after the death
of Treyvon, we got a call from a lady named Betsy,
and according to Betsy, George Zimmerman was a self confessed
murderer and should have been arrested on the spot. This
is Betsy from Florida. Let's see if you're buying it?
Is that bestie Betsy? All right, what's up? But I'm
(26:32):
just calling to say that I just I can't.
Speaker 5 (26:35):
Even fathom why there was.
Speaker 2 (26:40):
In what case in the Trevon Martin case in Florida? Okay,
who did you want arrest Zimmerman? The one, the self
confessed murderer? But what wait a minute, you're calling in
from Boca Ratan. Yes, you listened to our show from
Boca Raton. Oh I don't. Then how'd you find us?
(27:04):
I found you on the internet today, Yes, really, just
looking around for radio shows. Yeah, oh sounds reasonable. Well
let's pretend you did. Okay, so we should have arrested,
so they should have arrested mister Zimmerman.
Speaker 12 (27:21):
Win.
Speaker 6 (27:22):
They should have arrested him the nights that have happened
on February twenty sixth.
Speaker 2 (27:26):
February twenty sixth, do you know the date? How convenient? Okay,
at what point should they have arrested him? The moment
they arrived? Yeah? Is that?
Speaker 5 (27:35):
Is that? On what basis murderers usually should be arrested?
Speaker 2 (27:38):
Okay, No, Betsy, Betsy, I'm sorry, you're gonna have to understand.
I'm a little emotional about it. I'm sure you know what,
and sometimes emotion is better than reason. But in this case,
let's just use reason. I'm operating at a little bit
of a disadvantage. I have two law degrees, so get
get I get confused by things like the criminal justice
(28:01):
system and the protections afforded an individual. Metsy, Betsy, I
want to make very clear. I want to make very clear.
I think you're right. I think they shouldn't have arrested him.
They should have just shot him on the spot. But
but let's just let let's go back, because I think
this is what, Yeah, why not why bother arrested him?
Just shoot him? I mean, he already he's already a
(28:22):
self confessed murderer.
Speaker 6 (28:24):
Oh, that is not the way the US justice system.
Speaker 2 (28:26):
I'm sorry.
Speaker 5 (28:27):
You said you were a lawyer.
Speaker 2 (28:28):
You failed the bar band? Yeah I did. Betsy, Betsy, Betsy, Betsy,
Betsy here, Betsy, I understand you're frustrated. I understand, But
what was walk me through this?
Speaker 6 (28:39):
You understand?
Speaker 11 (28:40):
What about me?
Speaker 2 (28:40):
I'm sorry, I understand you're frustrated. Okay, Now, Betsy ye
from Boca ra Tom, Florida, who just happened to discover
our show today and knows all the details of this case,
let me ask you this. So, so, when officers arrived,
they should have arrested the man. Is that right?
Speaker 6 (28:58):
They should have arrested George. Okay, at that moment, the
gun standing over the dead body.
Speaker 2 (29:04):
I understand that. Is it typically the case that when
someone is standing over a dead body that an arrest
is made at that moment? I was really on what basis, lawyer?
Speaker 5 (29:17):
No, I didn't.
Speaker 2 (29:17):
I didn't say you were. Are you an officer? Offer
of what?
Speaker 5 (29:23):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (29:24):
I'm wondering on what basis you would assume that in
a case like that an arrest would be made?
Speaker 12 (29:34):
Well, it's irrelevant.
Speaker 2 (29:35):
Do you need a lifeline. I can wait. No, it
isn't relevant, but go ahead. No, no, I'm you're making
a point that mister Zimmerman should have been arrested. I
should he have been arrested at that point? What?
Speaker 12 (29:48):
What?
Speaker 2 (29:49):
Okay? On what basis?
Speaker 9 (29:51):
Because he was standing over a dead body with a
choking gun?
Speaker 2 (29:55):
Oh oh, okay, and we typically arrest people standing over
a dead body with a smoking gun. I would say, yes, okay,
and what percentage of cases?
Speaker 6 (30:06):
I have no idea.
Speaker 2 (30:07):
Okay, but you're you're pretty sure the internet a man, oh.
Speaker 10 (30:13):
If he was a black man?
Speaker 2 (30:14):
Right, okay, all right, now let me ask you this,
what would you then charge? Let's just to say you did?
You did arrest him on the spot, and then.
Speaker 5 (30:23):
Uh, you would because I'm not a police officer.
Speaker 2 (30:26):
No, but but you you you feel comfortable telling someone
else to arrest him. Okay? So when they arrested him,
then should they have charged him the next morning?
Speaker 6 (30:37):
He should have been arranged in the court.
Speaker 2 (30:39):
I don't know what the timeline is in but you
just said it should have all been done. I tell
you what, Betsy, you're in charge. You're the mayor of
the district attorney, the judge everything. What would you do?
Go ahead, I'm not a policeman now, but you're questioning
the actions of I'm actually you.
Speaker 10 (31:00):
Want me to start.
Speaker 2 (31:01):
Are anything you want to be, You're you're everything, You're
what you always wanted to be. You're in charge of everything, George, Okay?
And then what.
Speaker 7 (31:11):
I would have.
Speaker 9 (31:11):
Taken him to the local office for questioning and put
him in jail.
Speaker 2 (31:18):
Okay? How long would you keep him in jail? I
would read him his rights and put him in jail
and tell such time that the court took over.
Speaker 9 (31:29):
I would be done with it at that point, because
the police would want me to be the court.
Speaker 2 (31:32):
Now, yes, and then the court. So you're the lawyer,
what happens that?
Speaker 12 (31:38):
No?
Speaker 2 (31:38):
No, no, no, no, Betsy, I don't know, Betsy.
Speaker 10 (31:42):
I would you're his lawyer?
Speaker 11 (31:45):
What happens?
Speaker 2 (31:46):
No, no, Betsy, Betsy, Betsy, Betsy. I think, I think
what this case boils down to is this man does
not deserve any rights because his victim who he as
you said, Let me ask you this, Betsy. You said
he was a confessed murderer. Is that right?
Speaker 6 (32:06):
Self confessed?
Speaker 2 (32:07):
Self confessed, so no one else confessed it for him?
He confessed it himself.
Speaker 5 (32:11):
Correct.
Speaker 2 (32:11):
Wow, that's the worst kind of confession is when you
give it yourself. And he's a self confessed murderer. He said,
I murdered the man.
Speaker 1 (32:20):
I wasn't there.
Speaker 4 (32:21):
I don't know what he said.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
You said, he's a self confessed murderer. At what point
was that heard on what I heard on tape? Oh?
What tape? Oh? You heard the nine one one tape?
Is that right? Okay? And on the nine one one
tape he said, I did it. I George Zimmerman am
(32:44):
a self confessed murderer. No, no, no, not on the tape.
Speaker 12 (32:48):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (32:49):
Well, then where I'm willing to go along with whatever
you say? You just have to say it.
Speaker 1 (32:56):
I can't.
Speaker 2 (32:57):
We don't. People.
Speaker 10 (32:58):
Don't you know?
Speaker 2 (32:59):
You were prepared for this one.
Speaker 5 (33:01):
I wasn't there.
Speaker 2 (33:02):
You're correct, But if I was the police officer, I.
Speaker 6 (33:04):
Would have heard it.
Speaker 2 (33:05):
You would have. Yeah, he said, I shot the guys.
What well? I do know? Okay, just so you know, sweetheart,
shooting someone is not murder. Okay, it isn't fair, unarm
you're running away from the work, is it?
Speaker 7 (33:19):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (33:20):
Oh you know, what do you call it?
Speaker 12 (33:22):
No?
Speaker 2 (33:23):
No, no, Betsy, Betsy, Betsy. I wouldn't dare. I wouldn't
dare two little law degrees. I don't know crap about anything.
You clearly you know, Betsy. This would be a good
point in the conversation for you to stop making attempting
to make rational arguments. Thank you, and good night,