Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Six seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight is
the number. Okay, by the way, those two Frontier A
lone Frontier Airlines gate agents have now been terminated by
the airlines after this video that we just played went viral.
(00:20):
But still, I mean, at least, you know, I'm happy
they did. They were let go because their behavior was outrageous.
It was arrogant, it was insulting, it was demeaning. Frankly,
it was disgusting. Here you have a customer who arrives,
you know, I think their policy is you have to
be at the check in by, you know, sixty minutes
before the flight departs. Came in about fifty minutes before
(00:42):
the flight departs, and they said, okay, you know, we'll
let your board, but you got to pay the twenty
five dollars surcharge. And he was like, well, why should
I pay the twenty five dollars surcharge? I mean, I'm here,
you're gonna let me board the flight. I already paid
for my ticket. Well, if you're going to be like
d you're not getting on the flight at all. And
(01:05):
he's like, but you just said I could. Well, now
we changed our mind. And he's like like, why are
you treating me like this? And then you know you
heard them. I mean, they were just they're outrageous and
they mistreated him, and the more he tried to appeal
to them, the more nasty and abusive they became, to
(01:29):
the point where you know, she's like, now you're in
my personal space. He's like, I'm at the counter, Like
what personal space? So I've paid for a full ticket
and this is how you treat me as a customer. Now,
my point being, this is happening more and more often.
(01:50):
I'm not saying all the time, I'm not saying everywhere,
but in ca Hair Sandy just told me the story
before we went on the air today. She was at
a pharmacy at a one of her local pharmacies. She
was waiting in line a couple minutes not long, and
there was a customer at the front who was.
Speaker 2 (02:10):
Just being beraded.
Speaker 1 (02:14):
By two of the pharmacy employees, and Sandy was like, look,
I'm telling you, Jeff, I saw the whole thing. The
customer was very polite, did not understand and even said
at one point.
Speaker 2 (02:28):
Why are you yelling at me? Like why are you
not being nice to me? What have I done?
Speaker 1 (02:35):
And you know, she would just ask a certain basic
question and they'd be.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
Like, oh, we don't have to deal with this. Well,
why are you asking you? Are you?
Speaker 3 (02:48):
Are you?
Speaker 1 (02:48):
Are you stupid? You don't understand what we're telling you?
And she's like, no, I just I don't understand. Can
you please explain it to me. Well, no, we're not
going to explain it to you. And they're yelling and
screaming and shouting, and the customers behind this lady cannot
believe how she is being so mistreated and so disrespected,
(03:14):
and then they eventually said, basically to her, get lost,
and then they end up closing the doors for their
lunch break. And then the other customer said, whoa, whoa, wha,
wait wit we be waiting here for ten fifteen minutes.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
What is this? Well, too bad, We're going on lunch
by come back later now.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
Sandy said that they right away complained to the manager
how that poor woman was completely mistreated, completely abused, and
how rude these employees were, how arrogant, how demeaning, And
Sandy said she came back the next day and it
looks like they weren't there. I mean, I don't know
(03:53):
if they got fired or not, but they weren't there.
Now my point is, and this was Sandy's point to
me and are show production meeting, She says, Jeff, I
blame the Democrats. Look at this entitlement culture that they've
been fostering, look at this mentality of me, me, me me,
(04:15):
and this idea that nothing should inconvenience them whatsoever.
Speaker 2 (04:22):
And they can treat people, abuse people.
Speaker 1 (04:25):
Any way they want if they're having a bad day,
too bad for you. If they're slightly annoyed at you,
too bad for you.
Speaker 2 (04:38):
No regard for.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
Other people whatsoever, for their feelings, for their dignity, not
just nothing, no consideration whatsoever. I go back to that call.
So my husband goes in and get take out. He's
got a Trump hat on, okay, and suddenly you kick
him out. You kick the guy out because he's got
(05:01):
a Trump hat. This is how we're gonna treat fellow citizens. Now,
I'm noticing it. People are much ruder now than they.
Speaker 2 (05:14):
Used to be.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
People pop off at each other over nothing and customer service. Again,
I'm not saying everywhere all times, but I am often
shocked at how rude, arrogant, and verbally abusive employees are,
whether it's target, whether it's the grocery store, whether it's
(05:38):
the pharmacy, whether it's at in airport, it really doesn't matter.
And I'm like, you realize that's a pain customer you're abusing. Now,
if the customer is mistreating the employee, Okay, I get it,
but literally, it's just no. They're in a bad mood
and they think they have a right to mistreat you,
(05:58):
and increasingly people just take it. So I want to
ask you, I think it's something in the culture. I
really do. I think it's a lack of socialization. I
think it's a lack of proper upbringing. To me, I think,
no question the prevalence of social media, where everybody's in
(06:20):
front of a screen. Nobody deals with human beings anymore.
And not just that they don't deal with human beings anymore.
Human beings are almost like a commodity. They're expendable, they're
annoying because everything is press button, touch button, you want
something right away, click, and if something goes wrong, people
throw a temper tantrum and they just think, well, I'll
(06:44):
treat anybody the way I want to treat them, because
people really aren't real anymore.
Speaker 2 (06:49):
But part of.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
It is this constant stream of pure and utter hatred
and intolerance the Democratic Party keeps spewing day after day.
You've gotten now Jasmine Crockett, that crazy moonbat from Texas,
(07:10):
giving speeches telling people.
Speaker 4 (07:12):
Pick up a chair, well, just we don't want to
use a chair. You don't like a conservative, you don't
like a Republican, you don't like a Trump supporter, pick
up that chair and walk them right across the head.
Speaker 2 (07:27):
And they're like, yeah, yeah, okay.
Speaker 1 (07:31):
A lot of you are reacting to the clips that
we've played, and overall, the question are you are we
witnessing or do you feel the core sitting of our culture?
And really do you feel that people are often now
being abused and mistreated by employees, whether it be at
(07:55):
you know, at airports, airlines, pharmacies, restaurants, bars, wherever it
may be, and that there's just less of a regard
for other human beings.
Speaker 2 (08:07):
I see it.
Speaker 1 (08:08):
I think it's spreading. But that's me I want to
hear from you. Six one seven two six six sixty
eight sixty eight is the number. Uh, this is from
five oh eight. You can text us seven zero four
seven zero seven zero four seven zero, Jeff. This rudeness
that you're talking about comes from the legacy media, the
(08:32):
movie business, where they glamorize thuggish behavior and one wheel
on the government to educate our kids. The culture is rotten.
My question is who is benefiting while we are all
dealing with this crap? Who benefits? Very good question, very
(08:55):
very very good question. This is from six one seven Jeff.
A major reason why you are seeing people behave the
way they are now is that the kids sorry that
the schools tell the kids in so many ways that
they are smarter than their parents. Just look at the
(09:17):
abortion issue, the trans issue, and the violence that goes unpunished.
Parental rights are being eroded at a rapid rate. This
is becoming the Lord of the Flies six one seven
two six six sixty eight sixty eight. That was a
(09:38):
very famous novel, Lord of the Flies. I read it
when I was in high school, and it's starting to
resemble the behavior a lot of people. I mean, they
just treat people with regard whatsoever, literally whatsoever. Six one
seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight. Have you
(10:00):
you experienced anything like this? Have you been mistreated, have
you been abused? Have you been degraded by an employee
simply because they were having a bad day or they
felt annoyed, and so they just decided to lash out
at you. Six one seven two six six sixty eight
(10:22):
sixty eight and honestly, one last question. Do you feel
the way we treat each other as citizens, as neighbors
as a society has it declined? Especially after COVID? I've
noticed it, but maybe that's just me. Agree, disagree. Caroline
(10:48):
in New Hampshire. Thanks for holding Caroline, and welcome.
Speaker 3 (10:54):
Jeff.
Speaker 5 (10:55):
Hi, Jeff, thank you for taking my call in regards
to their new topic.
Speaker 3 (11:02):
I actually learned early on.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
Caroline.
Speaker 1 (11:06):
We're going to try to reset your voice changed mid sentence.
Not your fault, it's the connection. So you went from
being a human being to sounding like a computer. Mike,
is there any have we can we can we see
if we can make her sound like a normal person again.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
All right, let's go back to Caroline. Caroline, are you there?
Speaker 5 (11:27):
I don't know why it happens to me, but goes again.
Speaker 2 (11:30):
That's okay, go ahead.
Speaker 5 (11:31):
Okay, thank you. First off, I did call about the pope,
but I will tell you that I learned early on
in all honesty, how cool people can be. As a child,
I was one of being teased kids in school really bad.
And you know, it starts at home, and it starts
(11:54):
with upbringing, and it starts with people teaching their children
to become into one another. And oh, ye're a little
emotional because those are very hard years for me and
my mom. But anyways, that being said, I just want
to talk about the pope, if that's okay, because it
does have a lot to do with how people treat
(12:16):
each other, your religion and what your upbringing is, and
your morals and your ethics. But I wanted to just
talk about I wanted to expose just a few things,
if that's okay, because I think it's important for people
to know the truth. And I actually was not a
big Catholic growing up. I really didn't have a lot
of guidance, to be completely honest. But then I was
(12:38):
listening to certain popes online who were teaching the true
values of the Catholic Church, and I'm what jd Vance,
I've come back. I think it's a very important structure
to have, but I think that the Vatican has become
something completely opposite of what it originally intended. To be
(12:59):
and i'd like to get give you some proof. And
I don't like saying this, but I think it's very
important right now for you to know who actually voted
in this pope. And I'm just going to guide y'all
to do your own search on the cardinals in the
Vatican and you can look up orgies, parties, drugs, and
there have been several times when neighbors have had to
(13:20):
call the police to break up, or not break up,
but to go in and they found these parties. That's
the real truth, Okay, the truth needs to be told.
There's also been some particular books written in regards to
the mafia connection with the Vatican. You know who is
controlling the Vatican these days? You know what exactly is
(13:41):
going on. And the other thing is and I know
this is more. It sounds like a conspiracy theory, but
again it's not, and it's coming out more and more,
and that there are other people besides the Pope. There's
the White Pope, which is what he wears. There's a
black volpe which is what he wears, and he is
from I believe, Columbia. And of course there's one called
(14:03):
the Gray Pope, which is the Archini family. That's uh,
these old family so go back a very very very
long time that have integrated within the Catholic Church. So
I'm going to leave that as is. But the other
thing is so the Blessed Mother, she has always spoken out.
(14:24):
If you're Catholic and you believe in the Blessed Mother,
some don't. If you don't, I believe, I suggest you
watch a documentary on it. A man named Already Boil
from Massachusetts called six Months to Live. He went to
Magicoria where the Blessed Mother has been speaking out in
your old country, your ancestors country, what used to be
(14:46):
a communist country, Yugoslavia now Bosnia Herzegovina. And he was
cured of a cancer. It is amazing story and one
of many things that have happened there. But anyway, she
spoke in Fatima. She warned us about this communism, She
warned us that this was coming. And then what happened.
(15:09):
You had a show on the Atlantic talking about that
article about the rosary and if you follow and pray
the rosary, that you're an extremist. And now they're having
in Spain. You can't pray the Rosary around a government
building in the UK, they JD. Vance again mentioned this.
I believe somebody was arrested for praying outside an abortion clinic.
(15:29):
This is ridiculous. And the last thing is, so why
did the pope pick the name Leo? And this pope,
by the way, is one of the popes who was
supportive of removing conservative priest like Father Strickland. He was
a bishop and he was conservative, and they defrocked him.
(15:53):
I'm not sure if he was involved with Archbishop Vigano,
but I'll tell you what, I believe that if this
is the way that things are going, I would actually
before split in the Catholic Church, and I would I would.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
Follow the Caroline. Look, you put your finger on it.
That's my fear. My fear is that we're heading towards
a potential schism. I don't know you've had, you know.
Look there, I'm putting it mildly. You've got two left
wing popes back to back. To me, I would consider
Francis a Marxist pope, perfectly candid. Now again, we'll see
(16:27):
what's going to happen with Pope Leo the fourteenth. But
if you've got two Marxist papacies back to back, I
don't know how the church can survive that. I mean,
it'll survive, but I think it's going to split the church.
The church is already fractured. This is going to polarize
it and divide it even more. Hey, look front page
of today's Daily Telegraph in Britain and this is you
(16:51):
know already it's starting to come out questions now about
Pope Leo the fourteenth covering up for priests.
Speaker 2 (16:59):
In Peru who were.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
Accused of massive sex abuse scandals. So again this issue
is going to haunt him the way it haunted Francis
sal in Framingham. Thanks for holding sal and welcome.
Speaker 3 (17:15):
Good morning Jeff. Good morning Jeff.
Speaker 6 (17:17):
On the topic of you know, people treating people a
certain way or a bad way or whatever, I think
it started. I noticed during COVID when we get back
to work, I work in a type of company where
I'm in different buildings throughout the day, different companies, and
people that didn't normally have any bit of power with
(17:39):
the rules that they had, whereas you had to get
your temperature taken, go up to a screen, wear a mask,
this and that you could tell they relished in having
that power and control and treating you a certain way,
and sometimes in a rude way. And I think it's
just carried over onto you know. And after all that
(18:02):
was all done with, I think people still love and
they relish having any kind of power over other people,
and they get off on it.
Speaker 3 (18:10):
You know.
Speaker 1 (18:10):
It's a really interesting perception on your part. I got
to say, very perceptive, because I've noticed that as well,
that during COVID.
Speaker 2 (18:20):
They were power tripping.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
And I mean to the point you're talking about, you know,
going to work and at the office, but I even
noticed on the streets in the park where you'd see
like these crazy moonbats. I remember there's like one woman
in particular.
Speaker 4 (18:35):
Where's your mask?
Speaker 2 (18:37):
Where's your mask?
Speaker 1 (18:40):
And they just they loved it. They could lord it
over you, they could shame you, they could ostracize you,
they could control you. And I think you're right. I
think it's gotten into people's bloodstream. I think they got
a taste of it, they love it, and now it's
like an addiction.
Speaker 2 (18:58):
They can't get off of it.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
And it's like we become as a society almost addicted
to yelling, screaming, shouting and berating people. Have you noticed
that we just we look, it's like I'm gonna treat
you like dirt and it's almost your right, like we
get off on it.
Speaker 2 (19:20):
It's like a thrill. Oh I really showed them whose boss?
And I'm just.
Speaker 1 (19:26):
Seeing it more and more and more and the other
things out and you tell me if you agree or not.
The way people run their mouth now almost like over
nothing like literally over.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (19:40):
You're in the shopping you know, you're at a at
a grocery store and you're just shopping down an aisle
and I don't know you just I don't accidentally cut
somebody off, and and right away if.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
You mother for you know, who the F do you
think you are?
Speaker 1 (19:55):
And every everybody's running their mouth and and it's almost like,
what do you want to cause an incident? I don't
do you want to start a fight? Do you want
to be you want to go viral on TikTok?
Speaker 2 (20:07):
Is that what it is?
Speaker 6 (20:09):
It's just.
Speaker 1 (20:12):
It's just bizarre, and you know it's rare. Look here,
just something as basic as this, And I know I've
mentioned it before, but it's just very disconcerting when you
work here, even here at iHeart, there are people I know,
I mean, I speak to them. I've had conversations with them.
(20:32):
But you walk down the aisle or sorry, walk down
the hallway, they don't say how do you unless you
say hi to them. They don't say hi to you.
And I don't mean like you just were in a
meeting together. I mean, you know, you know them, You've
had conversations. It's a new day, it's you know whatever,
(20:52):
it's you know, I'm doing my show and I you know,
I'm just it's six thirty seven o'clock in the morning
and you're walking down the hallway and they're looking away
like they don't see you, and it happens again and again,
and if I don't and by the way, they tend
to be in their twenties and early thirties. It's like
gen Z millennials, and it's weird. And they'll just walk
(21:17):
right by you and not even acknowledge you, like you
don't exist unless you say hi. And if you say hi,
they'll nod their head or they'll say hi. But otherwise
they just walk right by you and they don't think
twice about it. And then you know, maybe you'll see
them the next day or two days later at a
meeting or whatever, and they talk to you like your
(21:37):
best buddies. It's weird. People don't shake hands anymore, the
younger generation. I mean here or there, but now it's
it's like COVID. It's like they stay back space and
they'll maybe like lift their hand up and say hi,
but they don't shake hands. That like you're violating their space.
(22:01):
So the ability for us to even connect with each other,
communicate with each other, interact with each other, it's slowly
breaking down. Sally, Am I wrong?
Speaker 6 (22:14):
Oh, you're absolutely right. And I think a lot has
to do with these phones. The younger generation, all they
do is text. They don't talk. They have conversations through
typing and texting. They don't communicate, so they're not learning
how to communicate. And I really believe that.
Speaker 1 (22:32):
Yes, So there's almost as if they're becoming antisocial. You know,
there's an ant and they can't speak in public at all. Again,
I'm pranting with a broadbrush. Of course, there are exceptions,
there's no question, but you know, say there's a business whatever,
an office meeting, and you know, I'm not saying you
have to be an eloquent, powerful public speaker, but to
(22:55):
just you know, okay, so you know what happened this
week or whatever? How are the results on the website
this week? You know, was traffic up? Was traffic down?
More people tuning in? Less people, and they they freeze up.
They can't speak, they don't want to speak. They're painfully shy.
They it's as if it's almost impossible for them to
(23:19):
function on a social level anymore. It's weird. It's really
very very weird. And sow I swear to you. I've
noticed this now since COVID and especially about the last
two or three years. They don't shower or they don't
shower as often. The one thing that used to stand
(23:42):
out about the United States and Canada to be frank
is you know North Americans shower, They're clean.
Speaker 2 (23:50):
They shower.
Speaker 1 (23:51):
For example, if I go work out, I shower twice
a day. You know, I shower, and then if I
work out, I shower again. So you know, North Americans
are known. You know, they're always clean. They're always showering,
always using underarm deodorant, always wearing fresh clean underwear, fresh
clean clothes. I'm noticing now. I don't know if it's
this environmental trend that somehow you can't use detergent or
(24:16):
you can't use hot water or soap and shampoo is
bad for the environment, or they want to go, oh,
you know, everybody's oh naturrelle. I don't know what that is,
but I'm noticing now I've never ever had this before.
You're at a meeting or you're talking to someone and
you're like, a, like, there aren't pits, Like they don't
(24:38):
smell good, they haven't showered. It's been a couple now.
I don't even bother going to it anymore. Why there
are a couple of employees there. Every time I go
to the checkout, they reek and they're young, they're in
their twenties. I'm like, I don't know if they don't shower,
I don't know if they don't use undergarm deordorant. I
(24:59):
don't know what it is, but holy mackerel, what an odor.
It smells like a toilet in there. And so I'm
seeing this more and more. Grace and I a couple
of months ago, went to the movie theater group of
maybe twenty somethings, okay, like I don't know, college kids whatever.
(25:22):
Grace said to me, this has never happened before. She said, Jeff,
can we please leave, like, go somewhere else in the theater.
Speaker 2 (25:28):
She goes. There's an odor. I can't take it.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
It's overpowering, you know, like sweat, like a sweat odor.
And there's like five, six, seven of them sitting right
next to each other. So my wife is overwhelmed with
the stink of someone not showering. The friends don't notice this.
(25:55):
I'm telling you, it's weird. Something is happening. They don't
shower as often, they don't change their clothes as often,
they don't use deodorant as often. It's as if they
all became slobs under COVID and they stayed home and
they felt, well, who cares about personal grooming because I'm
just home all the time. And it's almost as if
(26:18):
now they feel they don't have to, you know, like
care for themselves.
Speaker 2 (26:23):
It's I don't.
Speaker 1 (26:25):
Know, so maybe it's me, but I know a lot
of people now are complaining about it. So it's almost
as if we're becoming decivilized, you know. It's almost as
if we're reverting more and more to a primitive state.
Speaker 2 (26:39):
Final word to you, sell.
Speaker 6 (26:42):
Well you're saying it, it's it's almost like full circle.
It's the hippie revolution all over again from the sixties. Yeah,
all the hippies where they never they never showered, the
Woodstock era, you know, no showering and no cleaning.
Speaker 3 (26:57):
No.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
I know, my dad used to tell me, you know,
because I was born in nineteen sixty nine, so I
kind of miss that. But my dad would say, really,
you have no idea how often people would say in
the late sixties, early seventies to these hippies, you know,
get a bath, take a bath, you know, like like,
for God's sakes, you smell, would you take get a
job and take a bath. That's all they kept telling him.
(27:21):
Get a job and take a bath. We're starting to sell.
It's starting to come back, my friend. It's almost like
the sixties are back. Sal thank you very much for
that call. Six one seven two six six sixty eight,
sixty eight. Let me throw this log on the fire.
(27:42):
Have you noticed that people don't younger, especially those in
their twenties and early thirties, that they don't shower as much,
they don't clean themselves as much, that there's more, you know,
like body odor out there, and what's your theory?
Speaker 2 (27:59):
Why is it? Covid?
Speaker 1 (28:02):
Is it they're just in front of a phone and
they're just oblivious. I mean, what's going on again or
is this just me? Six one seven two six six
sixty eight sixty eight Roman in Boston, Thanks for holding
Roman and welcome.
Speaker 3 (28:22):
Good morning, Jeff. How are you.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
I'm very good. How are you Roman?
Speaker 3 (28:26):
I'm good? Okay. I do want to talk about the
pope a little bit, yes, and one of your previous callers,
she touched on it, but she didn't get there. And
about why he chose his name, Malia the first was
the pope in the flour hundreds and Leo was a
very famous pope. He went and met Attila because Attila
(28:48):
the hun that was going to sack Roman. There was
nothing stopping him. For some reason, Attila backed off and
he ended up dying because he was going to invade
the next season. It's symbolic to me that what he
chose that name is, and it stuck with me all
day yesday, because I know the story very well. He
is Attila representative of Naga and Pope Leo the fourteenth
(29:13):
is now coronated and and given the task of repelling
the barbarian horde. I mean, it's just something that that
that resonated with him. And and I don't know why.
You know, the Left is famous for, you know, love
your neighbor. Jesus Love says, love your neighbors, love yourself.
(29:34):
But I don't think Jesus would be too too fond
of your neighbor rape, pillaging, and plundering your entia home.
And our home is our country. And another one they
use is when Harod went to uh went and killed
all the male Jews who wanted to kill it was
on killing all the male Jew children and gave her
who went to Joseph and said take him to Egypt. Well,
(29:58):
what if Egypt had a while? Well if he egypted
a wald? God, what a Tori downery was sent to
you somewhere else. So you know, that's what I have
to say about that. And Jeff, I've been on the
street for thirty years, and I've seen how society has declined.
People are dirty. They go to soup marking the pajamas
(30:18):
and slip is. They go to the airport in their pajamas.
No one's kept, no kids that look clean. They're out
in dark clothing or gang affiliated clothing. They just look horrible.
And you're right about older it's a thing. It's a thing.
You're young, that's is someone who's supermarket and the smell
(30:39):
is just emanating off of them. Personal hygiene has kind
of gone out the window. I don't know where that
came from, but the Pope's name really stuck with me yesterday.
And like I said, she was a machine gun of information,
but she wanted to get in it and she and
she didn't get there, and I just wanted to you.
Speaker 1 (31:00):
No Roman looking, you're making two again, I think two
very interesting points. Number One, You're right, personal hygiene has
gone out the window, and I'm seeing it more and more,
and I'd love to know what's driving this. I think
I'm just thinking it's I'm noticing it more since COVID,
so I'm assuming it was COVID.
Speaker 2 (31:20):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (31:20):
It could be something even deeper, but you're right, and
again it's mostly again, not all, but I'm just saying
it's I'm noticing, Yeah, quite a few gen zs, like
people in their twenties. I'm like, don't you care about
your appearance? And you're right, pajamas and sandals, it's the
weirdest thing. You go shopping or wherever you go grocery shopping,
(31:44):
and it's like she's like twenty four, he's twenty four
to twenty five, or she's twenty four to twenty five.
They look like they just rolled out of bed and
it's four o'clock in the afternoon, and they're in their pajamas,
like they're pajamas the pajamas, and their hair is messy.
They look like they haven't chowered, washed their face, brushed
(32:06):
their teeth, and they don't care, like they just don't care.
It's it's weird anyway. But to your other point about Leo,
what the Pope's office is saying, I'm just going by
what they're saying. He chose Leo the fourteenth in honor
(32:26):
of Leo the thirteenth, you're going all the way back
to the original Leo. But they're saying, no, he wants
to see himself as a pope of the workers, as
a social justice pope, as a pope of the migrants,
of the marginalized, of the poor, of the oppressed. So again,
(32:48):
and this is his office saying this, that he's going
to be very much a pope in the vein of Francis,
and that's why he took Leo the fourteenth to succeed
Leo the thirteenth. Now, what they're not telling you is that, yes,
Leo the thirteenth and his famous eighteen ninety one Letter
(33:10):
on the Condition of Labor was critical of industrial capitalism
the mistreatment of workers. Said you should have a living wage,
you should treat workers with dignity and fairness. But what
they leave out is that Leo the thirteenth was adamant
saying socialism is not the answer Marxism, communism is the devil.
(33:36):
In other words, yes, he was critical of capitalism. Yes
he wanted workers' rights in the sense of giving them
a living wage, healthy, clean conditions where they work, safe
conditions where they work. But he also was a staunch
opponent of socialism. That part they're leaving out completely. So
(33:59):
in a way, again forgive my way of saying it,
but it's a bastardization and a perversion of the message
and social teaching of Leo the thirteenth. But again it's
again it's the migrants, it's the illegals, it's social justice,
(34:20):
which is really a code for socialism. It's a continuation
of Francis's legacy, which is to push the church in
a very progressive direction, almost a socialist direction.
Speaker 2 (34:34):
And what they.
Speaker 1 (34:35):
Don't seem to understand is that this is going to
lead to a massive split and schism in the church.
They don't see this coming, and I thought they were
going to correct with a conservative, traditionalist pope. Instead they haven't.
Now again, he just was elected. Maybe he'll change, Maybe
(34:58):
the Holy Spirit will go. There's many factors, but from
everything that I'm seeing, everything that I'm hearing, this is
going to be Francis two point zero, maybe even worse.
He is very anti Trump, very anti MAGA. You got
to see what he wrote about George Floyd. He basically
(35:20):
said we should all take the knee for George Floyd.
He's very pro Black Lives matter. He is a radical
on climate change. He is very anti capitalist, very anti
free market. But his big issue is he does not
believe there should be borders, that they have any kind
(35:42):
of border enforcement or mass deportation, up to and including
deporting Ms thirteen gang bangers. That's why the media in
this country is celebrating him. He is backing and championing
the cause of kilmar Abrego Garcia. Now I'm sorry, I
(36:05):
could maybe understand. I could intellectually wrap my mind around
a single mother, young children. Jeff, These are migrants who
just want to come and work for a living. They
come from crushing poverty. I can see the argument. Again,
I don't believe you allow people to come into your
(36:25):
country unvetted. But fine, I can see the argument. I
can't see an argument for a Brego Garcia from a
holy man, a cardinal. He was then a cardinal, now
the pope. I don't see it. He's MS thirteen. Here
there's a new damning video. I mean, they should be
(36:46):
the final nail in the coffin of those trying to
promote this guy. He was caught trafficking seven human beings illegals.
There was a gangbanger that he was working for. This
MS thirteen gang banger has now come out and said
I hired him to traffic illegals for me. They found
(37:12):
fourteen hundred dollars on Abrego Garcia when he was in
that truck.
Speaker 2 (37:16):
That was his payment.
Speaker 1 (37:17):
By the way, they also found drugs, but let that go.
So you're gonna be You're gonna champion the cause of
an MS thirteen terrorist, a known human trafficker, which is
it's modern day slavery, a wife beater, a gang banger,
(37:42):
and you're gonna and you're telling me this is now
what the church is supposed to stand for. Why follow
the money. He's not a stupid man. He's a highly educated,
refined man. He's got a PhD in canon law. The
problem now is the church needs the billions and billions
(38:04):
in billions that they get from through NGOs like Catholic
Charities to traffic migrants all over the world. It's no
longer doctrine talking, it's money talking. And for him to
come out with that ridiculous statement against JD. Vance that
I'm supposed to love Abrego Garcia more or as much
(38:29):
as I do my own wife, or my own spouse,
or my own children, or my own country. That's pure Marxism.
That's insane. I mean, that's insane. So no, this is
the problem. The problem is now the church has been
taken over by left wing globalists. That was the pushe
(38:50):
under Francis, and I'm sorry Francis covered up the sex
ab you scandal he did and now there's stories breaking
as I speak to you,