Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
I think the little mentorian candidate JD. Vance wants to
be president more than anything else. I always wonder what's
going on in the mind of his wife.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Are you okay?
Speaker 1 (00:12):
Please bring blink four times? Yeah, we'll come over here,
We'll save you.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
Honestly, unbelievable, unbelievable. Anyway, there's been massive blowback. Conservatives are enraged.
Trump's supporters are furious. I'm furious, frankly, and I'm with
Maga on this as I usually am, obviously one thousand percent.
Listen now to JD Vance. He was asked by reporters
(00:40):
to respond and listen to what jd had to say.
Roll Cut thirty two Mike.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
Over Whyales Press Secretary Jensagi made some comments suggesting that
your wife, the Second Lady, needed to be saved from you.
How do you feel about comments like that being made
while you're here with the second Lady?
Speaker 5 (00:58):
Oh, I think it's disgraceful. But of course the second
Lady can speak for herself, and I'm I'm very lucky
to have a wonderful wife, and I know, or at
least I hope that my wife feels the same about me.
But we we we are very lucky. To have this
journey or I'm very lucky to go on this journey
with a very loving wife. We're gonna keep on serving
(01:20):
the country together, and I'm hunted to have Usha by
my side on this trip in particular, but always so.
Speaker 3 (01:26):
That was their trip to Israel, their recent trip. They
returned from their trip, but that was, you know, and
she made the comments while they were in the air
flying to Israel. I thought, frankly, his response was very classy.
It was it was to me typical JD. Vance H
And also though effective in his own way. I mean,
he's not Trump, It's you know, nobody is. He's got
(01:48):
a very different personality. But what he's basically saying is
her comments are so disgusting, they're beneath my contempt. I'm
not even gonna give you much of an answer. And
other words, she's so stupid. I don't want to pour
gasoline on the fire of this scandal or this controversy.
And you know, and my wife can defend herself, and
(02:10):
my wife will defend herself. And then I thought the
way he took the high road saying, you know, she's
helping me serve the country and together we're going to
serve the country together and that's all that matters. It
was a presidential answer. Frankly, it was a very polished,
classy answer, and it makes Jensaki now look even worse,
(02:31):
literally even worse.
Speaker 6 (02:34):
Now.
Speaker 3 (02:34):
I want to ask all of you, okay six one
seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight, to the
women in particular, but to everybody, are you tired of
the vilification of motherhood, because that's really what this was.
Do you, as mothers in particular, or as families where
(02:59):
you're wife, your partner has decided to step away from,
you know, the job, the career path to raise young children.
Do you feel criticized or demeaned by society for choosing motherhood?
To me, motherhood is one of the most beautiful, if
not the most beautiful thing you can do. But not
(03:21):
with Jensaki, not with most feminists, and clearly not with
the Democratic Party. Six one seven two six six sixty
eight sixty eight. May in Lexington, Thanks for holding May
and welcome.
Speaker 7 (03:37):
Good morning.
Speaker 8 (03:38):
Jeff, Hi, Hi May, Hi, how are you.
Speaker 6 (03:41):
I'm very good.
Speaker 2 (03:42):
Hi?
Speaker 7 (03:43):
Okay, Well, I just woke up this morning a little
bit ago before going to work, and I heard about
this subject in this topic, and this is something that
I'm very passionate about. I'm also a psychotherapist, and I
myself am educated, and I decided when I was pregnant.
(04:08):
Maybe I was fortunate enough in the sense, but you know,
of course we made cutbacks financially, but I wanted to
be a stay at home mom. It was a choice.
It was a choice that I feel passionate about. I
absolutely love being a mom. I see absolutely nothing wrong.
I don't understand these women who don't want to, I
(04:31):
guess feel the pleasure and experience nature in the sense
of just being a mom. It doesn't make you any
less of a person. It doesn't. It's the most beautiful
thing in the world. However, I just don't understand what
this bashing is all about. And I do believe the
(04:53):
breakdown of the nuclear family is what's contributing a lot
of a lot to a lot of the anxiety and
these illnesses, mental illnesses that are going on with children now.
Children are not playing outside like they used to do.
Everything is being monitored, everything is under the guidance of adults,
(05:17):
and it's programmed. And I just feel like we look
at nature, we look at animals, the baby. The mothers
don't push their baby birds out of the nest. It's hard,
I know. So it seems to be a luxury now
to be able to be a mom at home because
of finances and things like that. My gosh, it's hard.
(05:41):
But I do think that if it was more affordable,
I do think a lot of women would be choosing
to stay home with their kids. That's just my two things.
Speaker 3 (05:51):
Men, May, I couldn't agree with you more. And look,
this is let me. You may agree or disagree with
me on this May and that's fine. I think deep
down Jensaki is envious. If you really want my honest opinion,
I think she's envious. I think, like many feminists, modern feminists,
radical feminists, she looks at someone like Oosha Vance, who
(06:15):
is highly educated, successful, has a loving husband, is actually
happily married, ptrete everything she's trying to claim, and they
have a wonderful young family, and Jensaki doesn't have that
because of the career path. Which is fine, that's her choice. Look,
I believe in choice. I believe women should have the choice.
(06:38):
I'd ever want to force a woman to do something
she doesn't want to do, God forbid, But she bought
into the whole feminist lie that for a woman to
really know, it's the line from Gloria Steinem that a
woman needs a man the way a fish needs a bicycle. Well,
make can you hang on? Because I'm up against a break,
(06:59):
but I want to continued his conversation.
Speaker 4 (07:01):
No Bolaweyes Press Secretary Jensaki made some comments suggesting that
your wife, the Second Lady, needed to be saved from you.
How do you feel about comments like that being made
while you're here with the Second Lady?
Speaker 8 (07:11):
Oh?
Speaker 5 (07:12):
I think it's disgraceful, But of course the Second Lady
can speak for herself, and I am. I'm very lucky
to have a wonderful wife, and I know, at least
I hope that my wife feels the same about me.
But we we are very lucky to have this journey.
I say, I'm very lucky to go on this journey
with a very loving wife. We're going to keep on
(07:33):
serving the country together, and I'm hunted to have Usha
by my side on this strip in particular, but always so.
Speaker 3 (07:40):
That, of course, was JD Vance's response to Jensaki's vile
attack on his wife Usha Vance eight thirty three on
The Great Wrko Jeff Kooner, Boston's Bulldozer six one seven
two six six sixty eight sixty eight. Okay, I want
to go right back to May in Lexington. May is
(08:04):
a therapist, a very successful therapist, but she did temporarily
put her career on hold to raise her wonderful children,
and she said it was one of the greatest decisions
she ever made. One of the problems facing women today,
it's very expensive. I mean, if you used to you know,
you need two incomes. Now many homes need two incomes.
(08:26):
So for a wife, a mother to stay home to
take care of the children, raise the children on one
income is difficult, very difficult. And so May was making
the point that she thinks many women, if they could
financially swing, it would follow in Usha Vance's you know,
path or footsteps, that they would stay home and raise
(08:50):
the children. But just financially it has become so difficult
to do. So May, I've got to ask you this.
Jensak is married. Jensaki, apparently, I'm just going by the
texts has two children, ages eight and six. What I
(09:11):
don't understand is you would think being a mother herself,
having two young children herself, that she would be much
more sympathetic to ushevants and empathic towards ushavants. Instead, she
seems bitter, she seems angry, she seems I mean not
(09:37):
seeing she is, she's nasty. What do you think is
driving this? Why would a mother herself married with two
young children hate another woman for the decision to stay
home and raise their young kids. What's your theory made?
Speaker 8 (09:56):
Well?
Speaker 7 (09:57):
My guests would be if I could just say one thing, so,
I'm a live and let live kind of person. Everybody
has the right to choose their own destiny and their
own lifestyle. As long as you're kind, you're doing you know,
you're you're doing something with yourself to make the world
a better place. I could care less what you choose
(10:17):
to do. My thoughts are that women, especially in academia,
have been conditioned to feel that you know all the blood,
sweat and tears that you're going through, you know that
you're you're doing when your education and maybe post grad
(10:38):
whatever it may be, that this is your life and
this is what you're you know what you're supposed to do,
and therefore choosing to do something else is kind of
of a weaker position. So to speak, if that makes
If that makes sense, I think that maybe Jensaki, you know,
(11:00):
maybe maybe she's jealous, or maybe she's not. Maybe she
just thinks, like, how can you be a woman and
like that? How can you choose to be like that?
You know, I don't know. That's just my thoughts. It
could be a number of things of why she's making
those comments.
Speaker 6 (11:17):
Interesting.
Speaker 3 (11:18):
Look, a lot of people Cooner Country listeners are texting in,
and here's what one of them texted, just to give
you an example. Six one seven, Jeff, Maybe Jensaki is
jealous of the decision that she did not make to
stay home. In other words, you know, maybe deep down
(11:40):
she feels guilty. Maybe deep down she feels envious or
jealous that she looks at her children and she didn't
spend nowhere near as much time with them as Usha
Vance is with her young kids. And maybe deep down
to the resentment to your point that you know, being
college education did feminists, they're reared and raised to think, well,
(12:04):
my god, the last thing you want to do is
you know, put your career on hold and just stay
you know, just just stay at home and raise your kids.
It's an inferior way to live and so she did
that with the feminist told her to do. And she
looks at Usha and maybe she feels deep down barren.
(12:25):
I don't mean barren that she can't have children, but
I mean morally barren, that maybe she feels I should
have been there more for my children. Because you see,
she doesn't have the lack of money as an excuse.
She was financially very successful. In fact right now, I
mean she's made so much money in the media. She
(12:46):
could take a five year hiatus easy and raise your
children financially not a problem. So May, I know you
don't know. Nobody can read into someone's soul, but I
look at her and I'm like, boy to go after
the wife like this, you know, in such a honestly,
(13:08):
in such a vile way. A woman, by the way,
who's done nothing to Jensaki ever, has never said a
word about Jensaki. There's something going on, deep down, there's
something going on. May final word to you, am I wrong?
Speaker 7 (13:26):
No, I'm no. I don't think you're wrong. But first
of all, as a woman who can shame, or as
human being who can shame somebody who wants to stay
home with their kids because they love their kids. Who
could ever shame someone for that?
Speaker 6 (13:43):
Oh, that's a dynamite point.
Speaker 3 (13:45):
Who could.
Speaker 7 (13:46):
It's not like she's sitting back smoking a crack pipe,
you know, and her kids are running around like you know,
she's a mong She seems to be. She appears to
be from what I see, a loving and caring mom.
Who can fault somebody for that?
Speaker 3 (14:00):
Ye dropped the mic? Yeah, jen Psaki can? I mean
that's you know what I mean? Yeah, Jensaki can. If
you can believe it? May outstanding? Call please don't be
a stranger? Call again. Six one seven two, six, six
sixty eight, sixty eight is the number.
Speaker 6 (14:20):
Okay.
Speaker 3 (14:22):
Sandy made a point to me off air, and I
think it's a very good one. She said, Jeff, Look,
they're trying to destroy the nuclear family. That's the goal
of the left, that's the goal of the Democratic Party.
So why would they revere motherhood? Of course, they hate
motherhood because ultimately they want to destroy the nuclear family.
And I think May's point earlier, it was the previous
(14:45):
before we you know, went to break where she said,
the breakdown of the family, the breakup of the family unit.
If you look at so many of the ills that
are affecting our society. Really, it goes go back to
that fundamental breakdown of the family, which is, you know,
it is the basic unit of society.
Speaker 6 (15:08):
The social pathologies that we're dealing with.
Speaker 3 (15:11):
How many children are growing up mentally ill, inexplicably violent.
You don't have a mother and a father parenting children together,
especially if you have drugs involved, or you know, as
may put it, you know you're smoking a crack pipe
and you're letting your kids do whatever they want, or
(15:31):
as common now, they just stick them in front of
a video game and let that kid play for ten, twelve,
fourteen hours a day. Yeah, that's what's causing so much
of the problems in our society. I think there's no question.
So to me, you should look at someone like JD
and Ushavants and say, yeah, that's what we want. You
(15:52):
want a loving father and a loving mother, happily married
in a home raising their kids.
Speaker 6 (15:59):
That you used to be the ideal.
Speaker 3 (16:03):
Remember, you know, you get married, you have children, you
have a home and a white picket fence. I used
to be called the American dream. Now they scoff at it,
they mack it, they ridicule it, they hate it. Six
one seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight is
the number. Okay, I want to read to you something
(16:23):
that my wonderful wife wrote me.
Speaker 6 (16:27):
Jeff.
Speaker 3 (16:27):
If you ask me what is my most cherished possession,
this is from Grace. It is all the pictures I
have of our children and those years that they were
my sole focus. They were the most difficult years and
yet the most precious. Will they ever grasp the magnitude
(16:49):
of my sacrifices for them?
Speaker 6 (16:51):
She asks?
Speaker 3 (16:53):
But I know in my heart it is the greatest
accomplishment of my life, regardless of what anyone else might
ever say. Six one seven two six six sixty eight
sixty eight is the number. You can also text the
cooner man seven zero four seven zero seven zero four
seven zero. The lines are loaded. Let's go to Brooks
(17:18):
in the great state of North Carolina. Thanks for holding
Brooks and welcome.
Speaker 8 (17:29):
Jeff. Can you hear me?
Speaker 6 (17:30):
I can hear you, Brooks? Can you hear me?
Speaker 9 (17:33):
I'm here, brother, Let me switch this fill My batter
is getting a little low here. You know, A couple
of things come to mind here. They pulled this with
Trump and Milania, and it was scary. I mean it
looked like there was a divide, but she came back
with him on his second term and has been by
(17:55):
his side. This is going to pass. This is going
to pass. And let me describe something else. The love
in that cabinet meeting yesterday, how everybody gets along so well.
Is going to embrace JD. They're not going to let
the left is going to try to bully JD and
(18:17):
Usha's marriage, but there's so much love in that cabinet meeting.
Trump's cabinet members, They're not going to put up with it.
People are sick of the left, They're tired of it.
Just look at you know, all of these attempts. I mean,
speaking about vice presidents. I think it's interesting that Pence
(18:37):
is going to be under federal indictment because of him
co conspiring with Bolton, and so there's some real activity
going on with the vice president. Let the media talk
about Mike Pence and how we tried to take down
Trump through secret back doors of communication with Peter Struck.
They can get into this, you know, ridiculous attempt to
(19:01):
take down JD. Vance Corinthians has taught us one thing.
The apostle Paul told us that you can't trick love.
Love is patient, it's kind, it's real. It's the most
holy communion that a man and a woman can take together.
It's sacred. They can't get involved in this, Jeff. It'll
have no bearing because it'll fail. You can't trick love.
(19:25):
It either is or it isn't. JD. Vance is going
to be the next president of this country and it's
going to drive the left insane and it's going to
be fantastically well.
Speaker 3 (19:35):
Brooks, from your lips to God's ears, Brooks, I just
want to ask you this and again, maybe it's me,
maybe it's my upbringing. I don't know, But how do
you attack a woman who is obviously happily married, has
told everybody around her she's happily married, goes on about
(19:56):
what a loving husband and devoted, faithful husband JD is. JD.
Everybody who knows him says he's madly in love with
Usha Vance. They have a you know, I mean a
very tight, close bond. And he didn't ask her to
pull away from her career to raise the children, to
stay home full time as a mother. She volunteered and
(20:20):
he said, are you sure you want to do this?
And she said, my mother did it for me, and
I want to do it for my kids. And she goes,
don't worry because he's like, look, you know, you've got
a very promising career. I mean, you know, Yale Law
School clerking for you know, the Chief Supreme Court Justice,
clerking for Brett Kavanaugh. I mean, you're going to be
arguing cases in front of the Supreme Court. And she's like,
(20:42):
that'll come. But what we've created are little munchkins, those
children of ours. That's our legacy, that's you and me,
that's and I'm going to give them everything that I have.
And on top of that, I mean I got to
say she was with them in Israel, went every Christian
holy site because she's a devout Christian as well. People
(21:05):
don't know that about Usha, but she's a very devout Christian.
They went to every Christian holy site. She defends America.
She represents America extremely well. I mean, why would you
if you want to go after JD. Look, he's the
public figure. Go after JD. I mean, you know, don't
smear the guy. But if you've got to go after somebody,
(21:25):
go after him. But why go after the wife? In
a sense and Brooks she's not even a how do
I say this, It's not like she was Hillary Clinton,
where I don't know she's leading healthcare or you know,
she's taken a public profile position in the administration. She's
(21:45):
the second lady who's a stay at home mom, God
bless her, who doesn't talk about public policy issues at all.
So she's you know, she's a private person. So why
would you go after a mother for wanting to be
a mother? Brooks, what's your theory?
Speaker 9 (22:08):
Versisely, I don't have a theory on that other than
the left, and I think you mentioned it. It might
have been yesterday's program you talked about how communism really
partners with Satanism and this is just another dirty trek
from the left. But you know, isn't it interesting that
(22:30):
I think the friendship between Usha and Charlie Kirk's wife,
Erica was something this nation got to intimately see and
they began to praise each other and comfort each other.
And this is what is offensive to Satanists. This is
what is offensive to what Paul wrote about in Corinthians.
(22:53):
And so love is patient, it's kind, it's holy, and
so you know, for the left to try to attack
it just shows how desperate they are. Jeff, this is
a spiritual battle. This is a spiritual battle between good
and evil. But it you know, the thing is right now.
For some reason, the Lord is allowing us to win.
He's giving us a window of what winning looks like.
(23:15):
And I think that the Left is going to try
these conspiracies. They're gonna they're going to try these kicking
the shins. But they're they're they're they're just it's a
it's a snake without venom, and and they're so they're
so viled, they're so hated, they're so despised. So it's
a it's a cruel trick. But interestingly, Eric Trump is
(23:38):
writing all about this in his new book Under Siege,
and he talks about, you know, the very intimate relationships
between he and Laura and how Trump at one point
himself showed up at her doorstep and he just wanted
to say how happy he was that that they were
starting to, you know, look like they were going to
(23:58):
become a married couple. And so Trump's love is very,
very important to the family. It's very real, and I
think this is expanding out within the cabinet, and I
feel strongly the cabinet is going to protect Vance. And
it's interesting because even Pam Bondi said that yesterday during
(24:19):
the cabinet meeting. She said, there's so much love amongst
us in this group, and it was interesting she said
that because I think it's genuine. I think that they
all I mean Stephen Miller, I mean they're trying to
go after he and his wife good luck.
Speaker 3 (24:37):
Yeah, now there you know, and it wasn't just you know,
one or two. Now that's the line of attack. He's
a Nazi Jew. And you're right, Brooks, this is a
phenomenal call. I gotta tell you. I think you're right.
The cabinet is rock solid. I think it's like almost
you can sense the camaraderie, the sense of mission they
(24:58):
all have, and you're right, the love in the room
for one another.
Speaker 6 (25:03):
And they're gonna, they're gonna.
Speaker 3 (25:05):
They're gonna have JD's back the way he has their back.
And look it's already blowing up in Jensaki's face. I
mean this, honestly, the blowback she's getting. Notice she's not
pushing it anymore. You know how you're going after Usha
Vance for being a loving, devoted mother lady. What is
(25:26):
wrong with you, Brooks, thank you so much for that call.
Really good call. Six one seven two sixty six sixty
eight sixty eight. Okay, quickly before I go to Andrea
in Weymouth. The Kooner Country Pole Question of the Day
sponsored by Marios Mario's Quality Roofing, Siding and Windows. Who
(25:52):
needs to be rescued more Usha Vance or Jensak? I mean,
you know, since ay, since Saki opened the door, let's
walk on through. So who do you think needs to
be rescued? More Usha or Jensaki? A Usha Vance, B Jensaki.
(26:20):
You can vote on our web page wrko dot com
slash cooner w rko dot com slash cooner.
Speaker 6 (26:29):
K u h N is in national Er. Of course,
you can always vote on X again.
Speaker 3 (26:35):
Last night I was very active on X my handle
there at the Kooner Report. All one word at the
Kooner Report. K u h N is in national Er.
I don't vote in these polls. I let you vote,
But if I was to vote, I'm a B. I'm
(26:55):
a Jensaki on this all the way. No, no, Jen,
I'm want to turn the tables wink four times, wake
four times, and we'll rescue you Andrea in Weymouth. Thanks
for holding Andrea, and.
Speaker 8 (27:14):
Welcome to it in thirty seconds. But I'll start. I
was brought up in the late fifties, in the sixties,
that was the broad burning free love, women's live, let's
have abortions on every street corner time. I had all
of those choices open to me. I wanted to raise
a family, have children, raise a family. Yeah, I'm going
(27:37):
to take make an assumption which I shouldn't make. But
my family was built through aduction, and I'm assuming that
most people who do the same things do so because
unfortunately they couldn't have biological children no matter what they
tried to do. And it's a very sad thing when
that happens. So when I hear a puke like Saki,
(28:01):
what I wish for somebody like her is that she
can't have the children that she thinks she wants to have.
Because what Jensaki is, besides being horrible person, is somebody
who wants to parade her kids out there in there
three hundred dollar dresses and then have the nanny go
and take them back upstairs. I absolutely despise people like that.
(28:22):
They have no understanding of life. These people have not.
When you want to have children and you can't, you suffer.
And I suffered and lost pregnancy after pregnancy for four years.
And that's the kind of suffering these people need, because
you can't reach them unless they feel it and they're humboled.
Speaker 3 (28:43):
Well I would. And by the way, I'm very sorry.
I am very sorry for those you know, those miscarriages
or those lost pregnancies. I'm very sorry. I've had many
women tell me this and it's extremely painful, you know, physically,
but especially moral, spiritually, psychologically. And as you know, Andrea,
(29:04):
Grace and I adopted. Both our children are adopted. We
couldn't have children, both Grace and I. We just can't
have children. And I just can only piggyback off of
what you're saying. You know, we took us years to
finally adopt. We tried and we tried, and it's a
long waiting line. And this is the thing I want
people to know. I can't tell you how many meetings
(29:24):
we went to with these adoption agencies. The room is full,
I mean packed, white couples, racially mixed couples, black couples,
Latino couples, Asian couples, young couples, old couples. Really, I'm
telling you, it's across the entire spectrum. And they're praying,
they're praying for a miracle to adopt a child. And
(29:47):
when you see someone like Jensaki and she's got two
children of her own, and you know, look, she's a liar.
I mean, I'm just stating a fact. She lied for
Joe Biden. She's not very smart, you know, she's missus
circle back every question you'd ask of her. She was
so unprepared that she would just say, I'll circle back
to you. I'll circle back to you, I'll circle back
(30:09):
to you. So this is a woman who basically has
lied her way into a multimillion dollar fortune because she
was willing to lie. That was her only talent, was
that she was willing to lie to your face and
to the American people as his press secretary, night after night,
day after day. And then she gets rewarded with this
(30:31):
ridiculous gig on MSNBC where she's paid this obscene amount
of money twenty twenty five million dollars. I think to
do what one show a week or two shows a week?
And you know, okay, fine, listen, you got your twenty
five million dollars a year.
Speaker 6 (30:50):
But you're right, she's exactly.
Speaker 3 (30:52):
The kind of feminist that will put on a three
four hundred dollars dress on her kid, show the kid
off like, hey, do.
Speaker 6 (30:59):
A little or do a little twirrel, or to the boy,
hey come on, show them out. Well you look how
good you look in this?
Speaker 3 (31:06):
And then to have the nanny take them upstairs and
continue with their cocktail party in Georgetown, and to go
after another woman because she made the beautiful decision to
raise her three children and literally is nice to everybody,
(31:27):
is kind to everybody, is loving and compassionate to everybody.
You know, I got to say this, and I know
I'm pretty sure she's an atheist, because that's just how
these people roll. But have you no fear of God?
You know, when you've been given so much and you
(31:47):
just pooh pooh, you just spit at everybody else, and
you're so obviously you're such an ingrate. Honestly, it really
is satanic. You look at the Democratic Party, it's a
satanic party. They hate the family, they hate children, they
hate America, they hate religion, they hate the Jews, they
(32:11):
hate Christians, they hate everything that's good. And decent in
the world. Andrea, final word to you agree disagree?
Speaker 8 (32:22):
Well, Jeff. The day we brought home our son, he
was seven weeks old. A day we brought home our son.
It was still today, and I'm in my seventies now
I'm a grandmother. My son is in his mid forties.
It was the best day of my life. I did
everything I could to only work as much as necessary,
(32:43):
because my husband is a blue collar person, only work
as much as necessary to pay the bills and put
some money aside, a little bit so that we'd be
able to retire one day. My life was devoted and
still is, not only to my son and to his wife,
but my grandchildren. We've done all their child care. We
(33:04):
do everything to make their lives better, because that's what
you're supposed to do. It's not about you, it's for
the next generation. It's not about your politics. Women today,
these younger women, and I don't know, thirty to forty
six year old category, they are so selfish, they are
so like they simply have no concept. And as a
(33:27):
woman now, who's in my early seventies, I've seen so
much of this, but I've never seen it this dead.
It's reprehensible. I don't even want to know these women.
I don't want to see you see them at the
No Kings protesting wherever else they're protesting. Something is missing
from these women, and I think it's the fact that
a lot of them had mothers who were like that
(33:49):
as well, because they drank the koolid, that the media
was pushing them and the Marxists were in the schools
helping them, egging them on, saying yeah, yeah, go go go.
Speaker 3 (34:01):
Andrea, God bless you and thank you so much for
that call. And by the way, your son is very
lucky to have you as a mom. You sound like
an outstanding mom and an outstanding grandmother. And again, God
bless you in your beautiful family. Six one seven two six,
six sixty eight sixty eight is the number. By the way,
(34:22):
I have to say this, uh, you know, with my
two children. I'm not saying I do it every day
or but once in a while I will tell both
of them, you know how lucky you are to have
a mother like Grace. I will tell them that right
to their face. Say we're having dinner or whatever, and
I'll tell them go kiss your mother.
Speaker 8 (34:40):
Now.
Speaker 3 (34:41):
They're like why, because I told you to go kiss
your mother like you're very lucky to have your mom
now to appreciate it. Go give her a kids, because she,
just like Andrea, she lives for the kids. Six one
seven two six six sixty eight sixty eight Richer in
New Hampshire. Thanks for holding Richard.
Speaker 6 (35:03):
And welcome.
Speaker 7 (35:06):
Morning, Jeff.
Speaker 2 (35:08):
I just I just wanted to bring uh something out
that I have been recently reading about it, which is
always say the the sub architect archetypal structures of the subconscious.
Speaker 10 (35:22):
One is the nurturing mother, the other is the terrible mother.
And uh, the what we're witnessing is uh the uh,
this perfidious thing that little miss circle Back said was
it is this whole bringing out of this collective subconscious
(35:43):
of the terrible mother, which is feminism, which is genuine,
This this modernized feminism of the people not rejecting the
nurturing mother, the good mother, the nurturing mother. It is
the the the within, the anima and the animus. One
is feminine, ones is masculine, and the the The point
(36:09):
is is that they have had this bringing out from
what they call the Frankfurt school, which was bringing out
this sub uh, this this Uh, nihilism of Uh, what
we're seeing, the wokeness and all this stuff is the
(36:29):
fruits of this type of thinking which is Marxist based,
and uh, this is just the we're witnessing it. That
what they said yesterday was the quiet part out loud,
or what it was a couple of days ago, something,
the quiet part out loud is that these these people
are empowered by the rejection of the nurtured, the nurturing,
(36:55):
and are empowered by the breaking apart or the eviality
of the terrible mother. I don't know what you think
about that. I don't know if that's makes any sense
to you or no.
Speaker 6 (37:07):
It makes perfect sense. I think you really.
Speaker 3 (37:09):
I mean, it's a it's a deep psychological point that
you're making. But no, I think it makes perfect sense.
And look, I'm going to go even one step further.
And I'm just I know I'm right. I'm just telling
you on this, You're right. I'm telling you're right. You
talk about this nihilism that's driving this, this Marxism, this
this you know, this the bad Mother, and you know
(37:33):
she feels guilty. I'm telling you, deep down, she feels guilty,
and she feels guilty for this reason, not that she
has to work, because a lot of women have to work.
They have no choice. You got to put food on
the table. You know, you have a you know you
have a Let's say just assume they're both the father
and the mother are both working. The father's income now
(37:55):
often is not enough, so the mother has to work. Well,
you got to work. I mean, you gotta work. You
gotta work, so you don't feel guilty about it. But
she has made so much money over her career that
she knows I don't need to work. I really don't
need to work. And I don't mean like she's made
a couple hundred thousand. We're talking tens and tens of
(38:17):
millions of dollars. You could be living in mansions and
going vacationing around the world and you know, putting your
feet up and setting up your children for the rest
of their lives. But she feels guilty because she can.
Speaker 6 (38:32):
It's greed.
Speaker 3 (38:34):
She keeps doing it, and she's neglecting her children, and
she has someone else raising her children when deep down
she feels, you know, I really should be raising my
own children.