Episode Transcript
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0:06
And now the world's most
0:08
exciting podcast, The Savage Nation.
0:11
Home of borders, language, culture.
0:15
Here he is, Michael Savage.
0:19
I need something to get me going. If
0:21
I don't like Rock'n'Roll, I'm going to shift to Romstein. If I
0:23
don't like Romstein, I'm going to shift to... I know what. I
0:26
know what I want. After the show last
0:29
night in my hidden location, a
0:32
distant neighbor was playing opera
0:34
very, very, very loudly
0:36
in a very large estate. And
0:40
I made a Dr. Savage, a large
0:42
Dr. Savage, which consists of one-third vodka,
0:44
one-third fresh orange juice, and one-third club
0:47
soda. And I took the
0:49
Doc Savage with me over to the far end of the
0:51
lawn over by a lemon tree. And
0:53
I listened to the opera, and I became so inspired
0:55
by the opera and the tragedy and
0:57
the comedy and the fabulousness of the
0:59
voices. It was probably Pavarotti. I
1:02
don't know exactly who it was. Certainly
1:04
one of the contemporary opera stars that
1:06
I began singing La Doni Moble in
1:09
an archway. And of course, the resonance was
1:11
fabulous. My dog
1:14
Teddy probably didn't respond that well because he probably
1:16
heard me goof around a little before, so it
1:18
was nothing new to him. But a dog at
1:20
the place I was visiting sat
1:22
there looking up at me like RCA
1:24
Victor, like his master's voice. It was so
1:27
cute to see this cockapoo
1:29
looking up at me with like big
1:31
Dumbo bozo face on, like, wow,
1:33
man, you're great. How do you
1:35
do that? Man, I like that.
1:38
And then he like trailed me around wanting
1:40
me to like sing opera for him again. So not being
1:44
a type that would want to fail a dog, I mean,
1:47
in this case, three dogs, it was Teddy and his companion
1:49
Tasha and then the friend there,
1:51
the cockapoo. I filled, I
1:53
made another Dr. Savage and it was
1:55
one third vodka, one third orange juice,
1:58
one third club soda. in
2:00
a piece of fresh lemon from the
2:02
garden, stir and cock
2:05
that elbow up to the heavens, and
2:07
then I sang a little bit more. Savage. Michael
2:10
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o-l-l-y.com. What
2:49
I'm getting at is you can listen to Rom's thing, you
2:51
can listen to Latin music, you can listen to opera, you
2:54
can listen to it all because there are all of these
2:56
things and elements within you. Don't you understand that? I'm trying
2:58
to get at you. And this is
3:00
why we control the next election. The
3:02
reason my audience will control the outcome of
3:05
the next election is because I
3:07
actually resonate with the largest
3:10
population. The largest under-listened-to population
3:12
in America is my audience.
3:15
Notice that nobody will come on this radio
3:17
show who thinks they could be president. They'll
3:20
go on shows where they get softball questions and
3:22
they figure it's safer, but they're not getting anywhere,
3:24
they're not gaining traction. You're
3:26
the audience that stopped illegal immigration. You're the audience
3:29
that stopped the Dubai ports deal. You're the audience
3:32
that stopped the appointment of Harriet Meyers to the Supreme Court.
3:34
I can give you four or five things you did. Now
3:38
what they don't understand is they have to come
3:40
before you in order to win this election. And
3:42
some of them will get it very, very close
3:44
to the election when they realize that
3:46
their tires are spinning in mud. They're
3:48
going nowhere. And the reason is because they haven't touched you
3:51
yet. How can they reach you if they don't come through
3:53
the show? They can't. They can continue
3:55
to go on Larry King and they can go
3:57
on The Golf, or they can go on Wollbanger.
4:01
This audience is, is, is a this shirt. So
4:03
you sure there's an overlap with, uh, with
4:05
very unique. And unless they come before
4:07
this audience and they let me ask them questions, they can't
4:10
get you. They're not going to get your vote. And
4:14
I mean, I don't know what they're afraid of. How hard is it to figure out what
4:16
I'd ask them? What
4:18
are you going to do to stop illegal immigration?
4:20
Now, what, why can't Giuliani come on the show
4:22
and answer that question? What
4:25
are you going to do on homosexual marriage? How are you going
4:27
to protect the traditional family? Mr.
4:30
Giuliani, how hard is that to answer? You
4:33
don't have to do the Waldorf Astoria bob and weave
4:35
to answer that. Tell us what you're going to
4:37
do to stop this, uh, the
4:39
downward slide of America's morality. And
4:42
how are you going to defend family values? You can say, oh, well,
4:45
what do you mean by family values? You remember how
4:47
they co-opted that? The
4:49
left said, well, a family is
4:51
something different in America today. A family
4:54
is no longer mom, pa, kettle. A family can be
4:56
two men. It could be two women. It could be
4:58
a dog and a hydrant. So they
5:01
debased family. They stole the word family. They just
5:03
steal the word marriage. But
5:05
not on this show. You don't
5:07
steal those words from my audience. And they're waiting for
5:09
someone to come on the show and answer those questions.
5:13
And someone will, mind you, at the end of the day,
5:15
mark my words. I won't even have to look
5:17
for them. They're going to look for me. And
5:19
they're going to come on the show to gain your support. And
5:22
so now it comes back to what I was talking about. Opera,
5:24
Rammstein, Rock and Roll, blah, blah, blah. Because
5:28
your mind is active. Because
5:30
your mind is active, you're listening to what
5:33
people actually say, and you want the truth. And you
5:35
don't hear it from any of the politicians. Do you understand
5:37
that? Now, before I take this first
5:40
caller or whatever, I'm, oh, the woman who got out of a ticket,
5:42
I owe it to her. Donna
5:44
in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, I'm sorry, let's go back to
5:46
you. I didn't mean any joke about your deceased
5:48
father. How did you get out of the ticket? You
5:51
did that. I got out of tickets. God bless you. I'm
5:54
50 years Old, So I was 49 years
5:56
old last year. I Got the first ticket of
5:58
my life. Curl
6:00
up with you! I had to
6:02
euthanize my sixteen year old mix
6:05
breed dog and you comforted me.
6:08
But. I'm a nurse and I smoke and
6:10
I was nervous so. I drove
6:12
in a small town missiles Forge
6:14
and I. Kind of split
6:16
toothless stop sign. I did
6:18
exactly that. And I
6:21
was sobbing. And I was crying. And and.
6:23
Two officers him. Up same one was
6:25
the on the animal was a woman on
6:27
an incline I just hung up with you
6:29
may be sixteen minutes before done overweight and
6:31
as a to me that i went to
6:34
a stop sign a this stuff sleazy and
6:36
i said i am so sorry in that
6:38
group sex and the of course the woman
6:40
is more the it'll. Say have
6:42
more feelings I think that a man.
6:44
It's funny. What is wrong with
6:47
you And I said I just euthanized
6:49
my dog I said i have are
6:51
here and I get her cremated and.
6:53
I get our asses and I took a
6:55
for her last Friday and I said i
6:57
I just as she said are you gonna.
7:01
Almost as to savage. Any
7:03
future she said. Thought.
7:06
We were crying when we heard the
7:08
story. Oh My. God. I believe the
7:11
city offices been listening. To. You
7:13
on the radio crying about the
7:15
euthanizing? Stop you. And this year,
7:17
approximately sixteen to twenty minutes later.
7:21
And they had just heard me crying
7:23
to you about euthanizing my sincere, well
7:25
that. Then I got out of
7:27
the ticket. I thank you for that. I thank
7:29
you for the education I play few daily. I
7:31
wish I could get through every day. There's so
7:33
many things but if you would give me a
7:35
minute which is like to hear out of beauty
7:37
to area put in for my dogs. Yes
7:39
Yes Yes Yes! Go ahead of.
7:42
Us because you're a dog lover,
7:44
some and a beast on the
7:46
field And he said behold, man
7:48
created in my image therefore adores
7:50
him yourself. Protect him in the
7:53
wilderness, separate his flock to watch
7:55
over his children, are companies his
7:57
him as he may. Go. The
8:00
An Anti Civilizations you shall be his
8:02
companions, his allies. a slave to do
8:04
these things got said I didn't tell
8:06
you with these. Instincts on com
8:09
and other. Be safe from
8:11
us. Devotion. And
8:13
understanding surpassing those of
8:15
man himself. list. Is
8:18
is. This is interesting. To
8:20
you really think that a dog? Since
8:22
we certainly didn't disappear, Man, with faithfulness.
8:24
the motion and that's a given. I
8:27
usually think dogs have an understanding greater than
8:30
man. Because.
8:33
I heard somebody say that to me I because
8:35
I ask how does my dog how the understand
8:37
the following. And they said to me
8:39
because dogs can understand and dimension, we can't even
8:41
understand them. You believe that? I.
8:43
Believe. It I would cry. If
8:46
I sat on my dad's but when
8:48
the woman looked my tears. She
8:51
was it. Continued you get
8:53
another. Do you have the best you're here is get back
8:55
in an hors did you get another dog? is. Six
8:57
point. Six pounds. Wow Wow Wow.
8:59
Ah. Up when what you mean.
9:02
What kind of dog did you? Did you use a nice
9:04
did you say screw? The large like a
9:06
collie shepherd. And. Now you went
9:08
to a small dogs. Wow there
9:10
were partners sleep. She was
9:12
abused Korean. Ah now you
9:15
have real trouble on your hands because a lot
9:17
of they they going to be trouble or your
9:19
life know some of these abuse dogs you know.
9:22
I don't want to get into the a very hard to
9:24
take care of my noi A lot of people have sympathy
9:26
for them anyway. Donna that is a very touching story. I'm
9:28
glad I got you on him a ticket and God bless
9:30
you! I can't believe that story. Was.
9:33
Dirty. I've told you that and they should be judged by
9:35
how it treats his animals. I told you that. America
9:37
has a soft spot for animals. Does it make
9:40
as a bunch of smokes and idiots know, I
9:42
think it makes his great people. The.
9:44
Way we treat our pets tells us that with the best
9:46
people on the planet. The. Chinese eat them.
9:48
The Koreans eat them. I'm sorry you don't want to
9:50
hear a good inherent. They. Beat him to death
9:53
in the country sunshine a while and living in a
9:55
cage to this is a me taste better. So.
9:57
This is what you can expect to the suits or if we continue
9:59
to be. That is a roll over to us. All
10:01
of our enemies don't want a beating you in a
10:03
Cajun cooking you. As far as I'm concerned,
10:06
And. Dot. You.
10:08
Know that when you see this thing with Vic the way
10:10
he treated dogs, you know you don't know which way to
10:13
current anymore. How do you get a woman
10:15
on one hand like Donna and a guy like Vic
10:17
on the other that uses dogs as meat and fodder
10:19
for for dog or. You know
10:21
that says the human condition is amazing To
10:23
me? But. As
10:25
the story of people you don't know who
10:27
the person is really and said you get
10:30
to know that person is really. When.
10:32
I returned. Please go on Michael
10:34
Savage them to pick a story
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hims.com/Michael. I
12:34
have my stethoscope on the heartbeat of America. I really
12:36
do. Which is probably why the candidates won't
12:38
come on the show. I mean, they want to go on Larry
12:40
King and pull a malarkey.
12:42
And they're probably happy to do that
12:44
figuring that the
12:48
rationale is, you know, so they won't get all
12:50
of the voters, but they'll get enough to win
12:52
if they stay away from the truth. And
12:54
they'll do what they are told to do anyway because they're
12:57
marionettes. They're not going to do it. The
12:59
reason they can't do it, they promise you, is they have no
13:02
power. I don't know whether you've
13:04
recognized this for a while now, but the president
13:06
is fundamentally a figurehead to a large extent,
13:08
very much like the queen of England is a figurehead. Where
13:11
is the real power? Where does the real power of
13:13
America reside? I'll let you figure that one out.
13:15
I don't think it's in the marionettes
13:17
that come out every four years.
13:21
You know, Dayton, Ohio. Eric, you're on the
13:23
Savage nation. Go ahead, please. Dr.
13:25
Savage, what can I do nutritionally
13:27
to treat my chronic psoriasis? All
13:30
right. First the caveat is it is open mic to
13:32
mic Friday, so I have to take any caller that
13:35
gets on. Secondly, I cannot give you
13:38
medical advice on the radio. However, I
13:41
can advise some ideas that you
13:43
should investigate. Is that fair enough?
13:46
Oh, sounds good. All right. It's a collagen
13:48
disease. How bad is it? Up
13:50
to 70% of my body at times. Oh,
13:52
my God. Have you
13:55
had a nutritional physician look at your
13:57
copper levels? No, sir.
14:00
Okay, the first thing you should do, do you have any
14:02
arthritic changes? No, sir. Okay,
14:05
that's good. But you have
14:07
lesions at your elbows, your knees,
14:09
your belt buckle, et cetera? Yeah,
14:12
I had pretty much anywhere, nails. Have
14:14
you tried sunlight exposure? Yeah,
14:17
and I did not respond to it at all. Did
14:19
not respond to it at all, all right. Are
14:22
you on any medication? Are you on methotrexate? I
14:25
took methotrexate, had limited success. So
14:29
the biologics, I'm on something called Umarrow right
14:31
now, and I'm getting pretty good results from
14:33
it. All right, well, let me just say
14:35
that when I was a nutritional doctor, and
14:38
I was involved in the orthomolecular movement a
14:40
number of decades ago, I
14:42
remember reading about psoriasis, and at
14:45
that time, excess copper and deficient
14:47
zinc and sulfur
14:49
were considered to be one metabolic factor.
14:52
And they found that psoriasis patients probably
14:55
required more than the usual amount of zinc
14:57
to restore their serum levels to a normal
15:00
of 100 micrograms per cent. And
15:03
I would recommend that you look into
15:05
this. Psoriasis is a
15:07
very serious disorder. It's not treatable by
15:09
over-the-counter drugs. And
15:12
yeah, it'll respond to
15:14
glucocorticoids, but the side effects
15:16
of the steroids relegate steroids to a kind
15:18
of last resort, and I wouldn't recommend them.
15:21
There were studies that did find that zinc
15:23
was markedly decreased in the outer layers of the
15:26
skin of patients with psoriasis. If
15:28
I remember correctly, 1956, done
15:31
by Brown and Falco, Prawn and Falco.
15:33
That was confirmed in 1966 by,
15:36
if I remember correctly, Panareva,
15:38
who found high levels of zinc in the scales of
15:40
people with psoriasis. I mean, I have a fairly good
15:42
memory on this, on recall on
15:44
this. And again, I'm not
15:46
diagnosing nor treating, but I
15:49
would recommend that you get a nutritional
15:51
physician that's a medical doctor who
15:53
practices nutritional medicine in your community and
15:56
ask him to look into serum copper levels
15:59
and serum- zinc levels because
16:02
many experts in that field suspected
16:05
that excess copper deficient zinc
16:08
was one metabolic factor and they then recommended
16:10
220 milligrams of zinc sulfate morning and night
16:16
and enough B6 to produce normal dream
16:18
recall. And I'm going to pause at that, Eric. I
16:20
hope it's of some value. Again, I don't want to
16:22
turn this into a health show, but
16:25
I don't want to diminish the power of
16:27
nutrients in medicine which have been
16:30
overlooked and diminished in our generation. They were
16:32
very, very big in the 70s and 80s.
16:35
And then the medical pharmaceutical establishment unified
16:39
and started to put out false studies showing
16:41
that vitamins were not only not helpful but
16:43
harmful with distorted fake studies
16:45
with corrupt doctors. And
16:47
they've come up with all sorts of theories as to why
16:49
you shouldn't use vitamins, all of which are false. And
16:52
the problem is that many of you don't know which
16:54
vitamins to use and how. Truthfully,
16:57
I mean, that's the way I see it. So I mean, you're going
16:59
to want me to do a pitch? I'll do a pitch. Buy
17:02
healing children naturally. It's all about
17:04
vitamins, nutrition, and diet as
17:06
a first line against certain problems.
17:12
I'm not saying throw away all of modern medicine by
17:14
any means, but for God's sakes, don't
17:16
throw away a thousand years
17:19
of knowledge in the
17:21
form of which foods to eat and not to eat
17:23
with various illnesses. The Chinese have practiced this for ages.
17:27
And in that book, I cull the best
17:29
information for children because I think that they
17:31
were the most vulnerable of communities and also
17:33
the most abused. Take a look at what
17:35
they're doing to excellent ritalin today, which is
17:37
a disaster. It's child abuse to put
17:39
a child in ritalin. Reading
17:42
healing children naturally. And if you're
17:44
not a child and you want to protect your
17:46
brain, your healthy brain, yes, go read reducing the
17:48
risk of Alzheimer's because it's all about nutrition. Go
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This one just came in from Providence, Rhode Island.
19:45
I can't believe this headline. Man
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dies after surgeon operates on wrong side of
19:49
head. Oh my God. An
19:52
86 year old man has died three weeks after a surgeon
19:54
operated on the wrong side of his head and
19:57
state health authorities were investigating whether the mistake.
20:00
contributed to his death. The
20:02
man underwent emergency surgery at Rhode Island Hospital on
20:04
July 30th, the treat bleeding in his brain. But
20:07
a nurse practitioner for Dr. Frederick Harrington
20:09
didn't record which side of the man's
20:12
brain required surgery. When
20:14
another nurse pointed out the missing info,
20:16
Harrington allegedly relied on his memory without
20:18
consulting a CT chart and began
20:20
operating on the wrong side of the man's head. Upon
20:23
realizing the error during the surgery, the surgeon operated on
20:25
the correct side. This would be like going in for
20:27
a hemorrhoid operation and the guy cuts
20:29
off your private part. And he says,
20:32
well, wait a minute, that's not what he came in for. Oh, okay.
20:34
Well, we'll sew it back on and we'll go back to the hemorrhoid.
20:36
This is, is anyone that people have lost faith
20:39
in everything anymore? My God, what a world. Harrington
20:43
also operated on the wrong side of a patient's
20:45
head during... What? Wait
20:48
a minute. I'm not making any of this up. The
20:51
incident marked the third wrong side surgery error
20:53
in the hospital's neurosurgery unit in six years.
20:55
You talk about it, well, it's not brain surgery.
20:58
Health officials have ordered the hospital to hire a
21:00
consultant to review its surgical safety procedures. Harrington
21:03
also operated on the wrong side of a patient's
21:06
head during a surgery at Roger Williams Medical Center
21:08
in September. After reviewing that
21:10
incident, the State Board of
21:12
Medical Licensure and Discipline decided there
21:14
were mitigating circumstances and opted
21:16
to create a remediation plan for
21:18
Harrington rather than publicly sanction him.
21:20
This is unbelievable. This
21:23
is crazy. I
21:25
mean, that's amazing. The number of
21:27
chances they've given this guy, how
21:30
many wrong sided head, wrong head operations
21:32
can he give until I finally throw him out of the
21:34
hospital? Let's see what your chance you take. Let
21:37
us show Mother Teresa did not
21:39
feel the presence of Jesus
21:42
in the last half of her life. I read that yesterday. It
21:44
was a pretty good show. I don't
21:46
want to go into it again. It was poor woman suffered,
21:48
you know. WOR, New York
21:50
City, and you're on the Savage Nation. that
22:00
you say, illegal immigration, the homosexual thing,
22:02
liberalism. I mean, I'm always like with
22:04
you when you're talking, but I don't
22:06
like your attitudes towards women. I just
22:09
have to preface it with something. The
22:11
other day I went out, I bought
22:13
two of your books to support you
22:15
with the San Francisco thing, and I'm
22:17
trying to understand you when it comes
22:19
to regarding women. So... Well,
22:22
okay. Let's deal with it. What do you mean the way my
22:25
attitude towards women? Tell me what you
22:27
don't like. What don't you like? A
22:30
woman has a right on this earth. If
22:32
she decides she doesn't want to have a
22:34
family as she goes through life, like let's
22:36
say she just wants to pursue a profession
22:38
or something like that, that's her God-giving right.
22:40
She's not a coward. Well, wait a minute. When did
22:42
you hear me say she doesn't have that right? I
22:45
didn't hear you say that she didn't have the
22:47
right, but I get the feeling from you that
22:49
women should be like pigeonholed. Maybe I'm wrong, but...
22:52
Not really. I don't think that a family is for
22:54
everyone, nor do I think that a child should be
22:56
born of every woman. I mean, someone who's not made
22:58
to raise children, they just don't want
23:00
them. They're too selfish, too driven,
23:03
or whatever. It's their business. They're not here
23:05
as brood mayors. Yeah,
23:07
that's exactly... That's kind of the impression I
23:09
get, like when I listen to you, that
23:11
you kind of feel like unless it's the
23:14
family, it's nothing. Well, okay.
23:16
That's not to say that I don't think the family
23:18
is the brick of civilization. It is. Yes.
23:21
And it's not saying that every woman has the obligation
23:23
or responsibility to have a baby. I didn't say that
23:25
either. You see? You
23:28
don't have to have one or the other. You can have both together.
23:31
You could still support the traditional family and not
23:33
say every woman must have a child. Although
23:37
I absolutely agree that we need to do what
23:39
the Russians are starting to do, which is reward
23:41
families with tax incentives, and we have to do
23:43
it real fast. And I mean
23:45
only citizen families, not illegal
23:47
alien families, need to
23:49
be rewarded through tax incentives and
23:52
let the gays scream all they want. I really don't
23:54
care. Because if we don't gain
23:56
control of the family unit, we're finished
23:58
as a civilization. else don't
24:00
you like and what else do you like? I
24:02
like everything that you say really. That's the only
24:04
thing because I live my life that way. Like
24:06
I said, I'm 62. I'm a registered nurse. I
24:09
own my own home free and clear. And
24:11
I tell you... So what's wrong with that? So
24:13
you're an independent person who's very self-contained. I
24:15
would be very proud of myself if I were you. I
24:18
guess you get a sense that
24:20
in order to be
24:24
in accordance with my value system, you think that I
24:26
would look down upon you that you don't have a
24:28
family is what you're saying. Yeah, pretty
24:30
much. No, I'm not... I never said that
24:32
in a million years. I'm
24:34
so glad to hear that really. Yeah,
24:36
well, now you feel better. I'll bet forever. Yep,
24:39
I should do, Michael. What you... There's
24:42
another element to this. I think what you're saying
24:44
is that I better be careful before I go
24:46
along with this whole right-wing family value conservative thing
24:48
because they're liable to not really like me because I'm not
24:51
a family woman. That's underlying it all, isn't
24:53
it? I think
24:55
it's just that, you know, in the old...
24:58
Did you start out somewhat liberal, Anne?
25:01
All I know is that when I was a kid that
25:04
the sexual revolution appealed to my heart, that
25:06
I think that the sexual revolution got off
25:08
on the wrong foot, like this business with
25:11
the Hollywood, what so and all that. Yeah,
25:13
well, look where it's led to. Okay, yeah, well, let's talk about
25:15
the arc. Let's start in the 60s. Let
25:18
it all hang out, man. Why not do it in the road of it?
25:20
It feels good. Do it. That's just
25:22
a point where degenerate Hollywood
25:25
are the role model for America. I mean, that certainly isn't
25:28
what we want for a nation, is it? No,
25:30
it isn't. But I was for economic and intellectual
25:32
independence. I was not for sexual... Yeah,
25:34
I hear you. Right, just for sexuality. That was part, and
25:36
I'm going to tell you where that came from, the
25:39
total sexual liberation part of it came from the
25:41
communist movement. I know it's very hard for people
25:43
to understand this, but free
25:45
love, so-called, was one of
25:47
the chief recruiting techniques of the communist movement
25:49
in the 1920s during the labor movements
25:52
they'd go into war calls and the communist women would
25:54
have sex with the men in order
25:56
to get them to sign up for the Communist Party USA.
25:58
I've studied this from the beginning. right until now. And
26:01
this entire arc of sex, sex,
26:03
sex, sex, sex, sex, sex, sex, sex, is
26:06
all part of this psychology to
26:08
break down the traditional values of society,
26:10
break down the family, break down the
26:12
church and let it be reformed in
26:15
the government controlled way, the new way, the
26:17
new world order way. I
26:20
think, like I said- But again, let's
26:22
not, it gets too esoteric. You
26:24
know, I came up with a new word because you, Holly, I
26:27
like that. I'm going to have to write it down. Everyone's
26:30
searching for the right. Well, it's nauseating
26:32
these girls. They're really, they're the ultimate in
26:34
white trash. You've got to admit that. Don't
26:36
you agree, Anne? I agree with you.
26:38
Absolutely. I mean, do you, who
26:40
finds them attractive? Why are they
26:42
in the news day in and day out? Why
26:44
do we have to look at these vermin day in
26:46
and day out? They're the lowest
26:49
level of womanhood the world has
26:51
ever seen. They're beneath prostitution.
26:53
A prostitute performs a service
26:55
for a fee. These
26:58
girls perform nothing for a fee other
27:00
than disgracing womanhood itself. I
27:05
think it's terrible because women are capable
27:07
of so much more. Yes. And don't
27:09
you think that the media moguls who
27:11
continuously show them and capitalize on them
27:14
are in essence the basing women more than
27:16
any man and any man's machismo
27:18
has ever done? Don't you think it's
27:21
the media barons who are really the
27:23
basing womanhood with this constant harping on
27:25
the sexuality and this imagery of these
27:27
holly s... Right. I do. Yep.
27:30
All right. What kind of medicine
27:32
as a nurse do you practice?
27:35
I have practiced as a psychiatric nurse right now.
27:37
I'm working in a nursing home, getting ready to
27:39
retire. Have you ever seen
27:41
a doctor like I read about who performed surgery on the
27:43
wrong side of the head? Yeah. I got
27:45
to kick it out. And then said, wait, then he says,
27:47
whoops, in the middle and then goes to the right side
27:50
of the head. I never heard of anything like this. Yeah.
27:53
He was talking to you because he cut his head off. Right.
27:57
He could have said he came in for a head octomy. And
28:01
then say, well, let me sew it back on. I didn't realize it
28:03
was not this guy. I thought it was a snake. At
28:05
least you're laughing, Ann. Thank you very much for calling.
28:08
Wait, let me send you. You bought the books. I
28:10
don't know what to send her. What do you want, Ann?
28:12
Can I send you a hat, a Savage Nation? Yes?
28:14
The police didn't have the enemy within. All right. You...
28:17
Okay. Ann's getting a free copy
28:19
of the enemy within. Play call for Philip Morris again, because I have
28:21
a caller on it. I want people to get up to speed for
28:23
a minute, then I'll explain it, then we'll take the psychologist from
28:26
L.A. Go ahead. All right. It's
28:28
enough. They got it. It was a...
28:31
Portrayed a... walked around with a tray. And somehow
28:33
that was appealing to men of my father's generation. God rest
28:36
his soul. He smoked Philip Morris two packs
28:38
a day and it killed him. I'm sure it did. Kelly,
28:41
Los Angeles, you're a psychologist. What's the appeal of this... And
28:43
I'd like to know. Go ahead, please. The symbolic of a
28:45
child's illness. I'm not sure. I'm not sure. I'm
28:47
not sure. I'm not sure. I'm
28:50
not sure. I'm not sure. I'm not sure. I'm
28:52
not sure. I'm not sure. I'm
28:54
not sure. The symbolic of
28:56
a child's innocence. Like, you
28:59
can't have a child smoking cigarettes because
29:01
I'm going to be, you know, appropriate.
29:03
So next best thing is a... especially
29:05
somebody with a high voice. So it's
29:07
very symbolic of a little kid. And
29:10
then I think that... But wait. Let
29:12
me follow you because, Kelly, I really don't understand that
29:14
honest to God, this is not even a joke. So
29:17
why would a grown man be attracted to
29:19
a product that is promoted by a kid?
29:24
It's that the little
29:26
person, the high voice, makes it seem
29:28
like it's not bad for you to
29:30
smoke. Interesting. And
29:33
then you identify... See, the thing is that you
29:35
are a little boy. So
29:39
you identify with... See, you got
29:41
this little kid. You got this
29:43
little... With the high voice,
29:45
with the platter, given old
29:48
people, you know, given men cigarettes.
29:51
And so it looks very innocent and how
29:53
could it be wrong? And then you also
29:56
gave your father cigarettes for a present, so
29:58
you identify with the... little
30:00
boy and you was like the little
30:03
see so that's interesting you mean others
30:05
I bought him cartons of cigarettes because
30:07
the made it okay to do so
30:13
you're right no I feel guilty to this day I
30:16
say mom what should I get dad for his birthday
30:18
she's I don't know get him two cottons of cigarettes
30:21
in those days that's what I did little did I know
30:23
I was adding to the fuel to the fire you're
30:25
trying to be a good son what the hell I
30:28
didn't know any better how did I know they were gonna knock
30:30
them off with the cigarettes tell your
30:32
your charming guy you practice psychology
30:34
anymore in LA I work
30:36
with the Department of Corrections so I work with some real
30:39
winners you know oh my goodness
30:42
what you know one of these days I really like
30:44
to speak with someone who sees the real darkest of
30:46
the dark in human nature because
30:48
I don't think American people the American people can
30:50
really take how violent the human being is
30:53
capable of becoming you must see
30:55
all of that huh yeah I do and
30:57
I gotta tell you that's right back to
30:59
the old drug thing you know I 90%
31:01
of its methamphetamine and I
31:04
also work with a lot of a quietly
31:06
mentally ill and I'll tell you what it's
31:08
amazing how many people before I worked with
31:10
the Department of Corrections I just worked at
31:13
private psych hospitals and it was amazing how
31:15
many people I saw were borderline schizophrenic they
31:17
wouldn't have been schizophrenic they probably want to
31:19
be the sharpest tool in the shed but
31:21
they want to be schizo but because they
31:24
got addicted to smoking weed they became schizo's
31:27
and marijuana tips them
31:29
over the edge every time it's a very
31:31
dangerous drug I mean every study that's coming
31:33
out now is proving it and
31:35
people still walk away on movies everyone smokes
31:37
a joint like it's benign it's
31:39
amazing to me the brainwashing it
31:42
is a sure is well thank you dr.
31:44
Savage I appreciate you listen to every day and keep
31:46
up the good work well let me send you a
31:48
free copy of the DVD the freedom of speech award
31:50
Kelly I'd like you to have that that the count
31:52
of some of the darkness that you see is
31:55
I do try to bring light Home
31:57
of Borders language culture. Most
32:00
savage nation. A
32:03
Savage Republic's inside. The Plot To
32:06
Destroy America lays out the threats
32:08
we face, prepare you for what's
32:10
next, and offer solutions to save
32:12
our a public. Please wake up
32:15
and fight back before it's too
32:17
late. You can buy at right
32:19
now on Amazon or on Barnes
32:21
and noble.com A Savage Republic inside
32:24
The Plot To Destroy America by
32:26
Michael Savage died you for listening.
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cancel timeshare.com. W
33:36
San Francisco Nigel, You're on a savage nation.
33:39
Go ahead please. What's on your mind? if
33:41
i guess i was a swap larger use
33:43
metaphors and i feel that today that about
33:45
art of conversation at last and sometimes you
33:48
have to be either yet an affinity for
33:50
metaphors it's to explain things to people and
33:52
that's why like a butcher so you're a
33:54
but you your are your member yesterday show
33:56
where i used a metaphor of the carousel
33:58
on i said some tips the stationary
34:00
horse subject on the horse
34:02
that moves up and down and in the kid
34:04
and some people go through their entire life crying
34:07
with the mother having to hold them on that
34:09
stationary horse others you other shoe horse i was
34:11
joking around but the carousel is
34:13
a good metaphor yeah
34:15
i believe that uh... president bush is would be
34:17
a donkey a very stubborn one in
34:19
the wrong way but but
34:22
but but but it go up and down or
34:24
be stationary it in fact it'd be broken and
34:27
uh... it would probably have uh... you know three other horses
34:29
holding it up and telling it what to do okay
34:32
so the having said that what would the
34:34
metaphor be for hillary clinton uh...
34:37
i'm a couple you
34:39
know uh... you know i don't know in in
34:41
the political zoo i call her uh... something other
34:44
than a bull i call her uh... something else
34:46
i think the leopard of some i
34:49
feel that will also ask you a question
34:51
in the political zoo hillary clinton is named
34:53
the limber leopard peronista
34:55
manipulators as the
34:57
queen of a species this thick legged predator is
34:59
known for a domination of the pack and
35:02
wanted and are one advantage being able to change a
35:04
spot at will i think that was pretty good do
35:07
you know that in the political zoo my
35:09
friend i called you go to have as
35:11
the oily armored toad thick-headed leninista extremely
35:14
poisonous the chevaz resembles a toad but
35:16
his armors thicker and rather than
35:18
swimming in water he prefers to wallow in oil which
35:21
explains his greasy appearance and his ability to
35:23
slip out of tight situations it's
35:25
good as good as johnson swift but don't tell that
35:28
to the average person that you know the man said
35:30
he likes metaphors that's great but you have to tell
35:32
it to an intellectual no an
35:34
educational level of a certain level to understand a
35:36
metaphor number one now let's go to
35:38
level of satire are you satire to say
35:40
let him stop to death if they want to hear you
35:42
know ninety and i say it's satire
35:44
and they don't even know what the word satire means so
35:47
the communist uh... steamed them up and they go
35:49
and they march against me all those communist front
35:51
groups i'll tell you sixteen eighty
35:53
one john drudin great english writer wrote the
35:56
following he wrote that the true
35:58
end of satire is the amendment of by
36:00
correction and he who writes
36:02
honestly is no more an enemy to
36:05
the offender than the physician to the
36:07
patient when he prescribes harsh remedies to
36:09
an inveterate disease. So I provided a
36:11
harsh remedy to the disease of illegal
36:13
immigration and they didn't understand satire
36:15
because they don't have the education level and
36:17
they were manipulated by those who do have
36:19
the education level but chose not to see
36:21
the satire and that's all I'm gonna
36:23
say on that point. Here's
36:26
a very good story for us it's getting
36:28
good every day things are getting
36:30
better get that song ready. Colonel
36:32
wants Haditha murder case dropped San
36:34
Diego and investigating officer recommended Thursday dismissing
36:37
all charges against the Marine accused of
36:39
murdering two girls in assault to kill
36:41
24 civilians in a racket out of
36:43
Haditha. Lance
36:45
Corporal Steven Tatum 26 was charged
36:47
with unpremeditated murder of two girls and negligent
36:50
homozygous vision of the unlawfully killed two men
36:52
and women blah blah blah. So
36:54
the investigating officer Lieutenant Colonel Paul Ware said
36:56
the evidence was two weeks for a court
36:58
martial. He said Tatum did shoot
37:00
and kill civilians but quote he did so
37:02
because of his training and the circumstances he
37:05
was placed in not to exact revenge and
37:07
commit murder. You see the difference here? Go
37:09
tell that to Time Magazine and Newsweek. Now
37:12
listen to what the lieutenant colonel who knows what
37:14
combat is says he says I
37:16
believe Lance Corporal Tatum's
37:19
real-life experience and training on
37:21
how to clear a room took over
37:23
and his body instinctively began firing while
37:25
his head tried to grasp at
37:27
what and why he was firing the colonel
37:29
wrote. By the time he could
37:31
recognize that he was shooting at children his body
37:33
had already acted. Ware's recommendation is done
37:36
binding Lieutenant General James Mattis the commanding general
37:38
overseeing the case's final say about whether Tatum
37:40
will be court-marled and I
37:42
pray that Mattis who was known as the
37:44
patent of the US Marines a
37:46
real good man they love him. General
37:49
Mattis will do the right thing and eventually our
37:53
particular guy Lieutenant Colonel
37:55
Ceaussani will
37:57
be exonerated. Well,
38:02
thank you very much for listening to today's podcast. I
38:05
hope you've enjoyed it. You'll
38:07
learn some new things from it. We have
38:09
about 400 other episodes available for you to
38:11
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And remember this, if you want to listen
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Please visit michaelsavage.com for a
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link. Again, thank you for
38:40
your listenership. This is
38:42
Michael Savage. The
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