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July 31, 2025 • 21 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Janine in Arlington. Thanks for holding Janine and welcome.

Speaker 2 (00:07):
Hi Jeff.

Speaker 3 (00:07):
How are you good? How are you, j oh I
didn't know I was going to be so trendy. I
bought my American Eagle jeans about two and a half
weeks ago, so I'm wearing them today in solidarity.

Speaker 4 (00:20):
So you're ahead of the curve then.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
Uh, I know, I feel so fancy. Now I'm like
twining with Sandy, So I feel really good about that.
So I have a couple points. The first thing is
is that where was all of the outrage when Balenciaga
did their ads in twenty twenty three with the bears

(00:43):
and bondage and the court papers and the ads with
dockets from child abuse cases. You know, nobody, well, I
don't want to say nobody complained about it, but there
wasn't this level of outrage about that, first of all.
Second of all, when we talk about fashion, you know,

(01:05):
you don't Levi's and Doc Martin's and things like that
have their own connotation or like.

Speaker 5 (01:14):
Just like with.

Speaker 3 (01:17):
Skinheads and things like that in punk, look, you know
they their look is gravitated towards like the five oh
one Levi jeens and things like that. And I'm not
saying that Levi Strauss made Genes for that, but certain
groups will choose certain fashions and certain brands to create

(01:40):
their brand, and it's not on the purpose of the
brand that creates the clothing. But I don't see people
complaining about Levi Genes. I don't see people complaining about
Doc Martin's. They're out there buying those. And you know,
we put the word Nazi in front of things that
we don't like to give it attention. And how do

(02:04):
you feel about that?

Speaker 1 (02:07):
Well, I think you're right. Look I where I like
Levi's jeans. I find it comfortable. They fit well for me.
I tend to do chores around the house. I'll put
on my Levi's jeans. I think they look okay on me.
And not that I ever look good in clothes, but
you know, not with my belly, you know what I mean,
But with my love handles, let's put it that way.

(02:28):
But you know they look okay on me. Ashton loves
his Levi's jeans, loves them, loves them, loves them. But look,
you're right, it's fashion, so it's subjective, and that means
certain groups will appropriate certain clothes for whatever reason, that's
not the fault of the person who makes the genes,
the manufacturer. So that's number one. Number two. Look, this

(02:52):
is the party mean that. I just we have to
stop this, like this has to stop. We're not going
to keep repeating a constant cycle of racism, manufactured racism.
There's nothing wrong with being white. I'm sorry, I'm not
one of these. You know. I don't like white power.

(03:13):
I'm not a white nationalist.

Speaker 4 (03:15):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (03:15):
To me, we're all, Literally I'm speaking from the heart
like I'm in the confessional. I believe we're all. All
of us are created in the likeness and image of God.
I think there's a reason why God created many races
because they're all a reflection of Him in some way.
I believe men and women, I mean men and woman
are a reflection of God. I believe ethnic different ethnic

(03:38):
groups or a reflection of God. So to me, that's
why I believe racism is fundamentally a sin, because you're
sitting against God's creation. So to me, you're born black,
God bless you. You're born brown or whatever, Asian or
Native American, whatever difference can color. That's how God made you.

(03:58):
You should be very proud of how God made you,
and what your eye color is, and what your hair
color is, and how you look and your tall, short, medium, whatever,
it doesn't matter. That's how God made you. You should
be extremely proud of.

Speaker 4 (04:10):
Who you are.

Speaker 1 (04:12):
There is nothing wrong with being a white person. There's
nothing wrong with being a white woman, and there's certainly
nothing wrong with having blonde hair and blue eyes. And
think about how silk they used to argue. If we
want to get technical here, let's go if because the
left is pushing this debate, the argument that was made

(04:34):
under slavery was that blacks were inherently too stupid. That
was the argument, too low iq, too stupid to be
able to govern themselves. The argument against Jews, the historic
anti Semitic argument, was that Jews were too treacherous and
a combination of greedy to ever truly be trusted and

(04:57):
be allowed to be full members of society. Okay, the
argument against Latinos and Hispanics historically was they were too lecherous,
they were too sexual, they were too lashivious to ever
be properly trusted and be respectful in society. Now as disgusting,

(05:19):
there are many brilliant black people. Obviously, there are many
chased Latinos. Obviously there are many honorable, virtuous Jews. Obviously,
what they're trying to argue now is now they're trying
to say, because you're born with white skin, you're inherently
you're a fascist. Here are a white supremacist. That it's

(05:42):
in your DNA as a white person that you just
want to conquer other people. You want to dominate and
oppress other people. You want to mass murder other people
and put them in concentration camps. Do you know how sick?
It's not just sick. What it's going to do is
eventually it's going to lead to massive violence against whites.

(06:03):
If enough people begin to believe this, they're gonna say, well,
you know, it's it's what led to the violence against blacks,
It's what led to the persecution of the Jews. You
keep pushing these racial stereotypes and this kind of racial hatred,
what are you gonna get? You're eventually gonna get hatred
among the races. This time it's gonna be whites. And

(06:24):
it's no accident that whites now are being targeted across
the country.

Speaker 4 (06:28):
Look at the brawl in Cincinnati.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
They just they pulverized two white people for nothing. By
the way, one of them, I didn't know this. She
was Russian, literally on a tourist she's a tourist visa.
She's from Russia. Mather, Russia. That was the one that
got knocked out cold beat her to a pulp. She said,
I can't, I can't. I don't want to stay in America.

(06:51):
I don't feel safe. She went back to Russia the
next day. I don't know if you saw the images
of her face what they did to that poor woman.
So you're seeing increasing hate crimes against white people.

Speaker 4 (07:06):
It's a fact.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
Why because they keep spreading the lies in the propaganda.
White people are racist. They're just born racist.

Speaker 4 (07:14):
That's just how they are.

Speaker 1 (07:17):
And that's what they're literally saying now about this ad
in this woman Sydney Sweeney six one seven two six
six sixty eight sixty eight is the number. Okay, just
very quickly because we have a lot of new listeners
that have been coming in last hour a half hour, so.

Speaker 4 (07:33):
So just quick. Uh.

Speaker 1 (07:35):
This is just some some just a small taste of
these woke feminist liberal women, these feminazis who are just
having an absolute meltdown over the Sydney sweeneyad promoting American
Eagle genes. Listen to just here's just a taste of it.
Roll and by the way, this is a white woman,

(07:57):
just so that you know this is a white woman.
Roll cut three, Mike.

Speaker 6 (08:04):
It's still really shocking, like a blonde haired, blue eyed
white woman is talking about her good gens Nazee propaganda,
but a company whose name is literally American Eagle is
making fascist propaganda like this.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
Here's this is a trauma surgeon. I played this earlier,
I want to play it again. So and by the way,
just she's white by blue eyes and blonde hair. Okay,
I would say, Mike, what would you say, early thirties, thirty,
early thirties. Anyway, she's a trauma surgeon.

Speaker 4 (08:41):
Very woke.

Speaker 1 (08:42):
Here is now what she says about Sydney Sweeney's American
Eagle ad campaign.

Speaker 4 (08:49):
Roll cut five, Mike.

Speaker 7 (08:52):
The Sydney Sweeney Arian Eagle ad is not only xenophobic
and racist, it's also scientifically inaccurate. She says, genes often
determine hair color and eye color. I'm sorry, often that's
literally what they do. If they're not determining hair color

(09:13):
and eye color.

Speaker 4 (09:14):
What is.

Speaker 1 (09:17):
Okay, it's an ad. It's not a paper in a
scientific journal.

Speaker 4 (09:24):
You know, there's.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
You know, they're just they're trying to make it seem
like you know, in families, people wear the same gens.
You pass it on from parents to offspring, you know,
like they pass on jeans G E.

Speaker 4 (09:39):
N ees. Well, you just pass on jeans G J
E A N s. Hello.

Speaker 1 (09:47):
Like either they have no sense of humor or they're
really like they're obtuse. The elevator doesn't go to the top.
And look, and I'm convinced of this. This woman hates herself.
I don't know what her problem is, but she clearly has.
She's full of self hatred, She's full of self loathing.

(10:09):
And you know, Sandy made this point to me yesterday
when we were discussing possibly doing this story, and I
thought it was a very very good point. She said, look, Jeff,
these are all rabid, mostly anti Trump leftists, and rather
than confront themselves and the failure of their worldview and

(10:30):
the failure of their ideas and the failure of their ideology,
they would rather keep their head buried in the sand
and just hate, just keep hating. Someone or something else,
rather than confront themselves for who they are, what they

(10:53):
believe in, and what a failure the entire liberal leftist
project has been. And I think that is very, very true.
So look, I think a lot of these you know,
woke feminists who are now going crazy on social media
or you know, on MSNBC or on Good Morning America

(11:16):
or in the Washington Post, in the off ed pages
or wherever. I think many of them obviously hate themselves.
And they look at someone like Sydney Sweeney and it,
for whatever reason, it pushes their buttons and it reminds
them of their own self hatred. And I'm just taking
this trauma surgeon. I don't know why she hates herself.

(11:41):
I look at her. She obviously successful, educated, she's thin,
she looks to me like she works out, she takes
good care of herself. But whatever her brainwashing has been,
her indoctrination, I don't know if it's her upbringing or parents,
I don't know what it is. But she feels very
guilt ridden about the fact that she's a a white

(12:03):
woman and be Scott blonde hair and blue eyes. Now,
if you've got personal issues about you know, your color
of your skin, or your hair, or your eyes, or
that's that's your problem. Don't take it out on society
six one seven two six sex sixty eight sixty eight agree, disagree.

(12:25):
Verna in Arlington, Thanks for holding Verna and welcome.

Speaker 5 (12:30):
Hey, hi there, Jeff, Thanks so much, blessings for this
good morning. Regarding this weight and this advertisement, one brief
comment before I get to that focus, I want to
say that I'm white, I'm ethnically Armenian background, and we
were victims of genocide. So if anybody wants to talk
about genocide, let then come to our history. On the

(12:53):
other side. When it comes to weight issues, I've shared
it briefly a little bit in the past, but I
am in step recovery, and there is twelve step recovery
for food and alcohol and drugs and cigarettes and all
those other compulsive addictive habits and problems. So I found
my way into a twelve step recovery program for food

(13:13):
and weight years ago. I sent you on text photograph
of my historical weight photographs as well as a current
photograph too of me. You'll see it on text if
you look at it. But anyway, I wanted to say
that I over thirty five years ago, my high and
weight was fifty pounds. I could have gone much higher

(13:34):
if I continued. So I've had that excess weight offer
over thirty plus years, and the food plan and the
recovery plan is very healthy and I'm so grateful because
it keeps me healthy. So whatever people want to complain
about with weight or the way they look, there are
ways out of it. For years, I dreamed and imagined

(13:57):
and thought, well if I could only be you know,
a normal weights that was always overweight, and I had
clothes that we're waiting for years to fit. So I
just want to put that out there for people to
realize that. Obviously, there are ways of remedying any particular situation.
People might use. Diet programs, twelve SEP programs are great
because there's personal and spiritual growth aspect to it as well.

(14:21):
But I just wanted to put that out there. And
I'll buy those jeans too. I would probably wear them.
I'm not even someone that wears jeans a lot myself,
but I just wanted to put that out there. If
there's anything, oh no ver.

Speaker 1 (14:35):
Now, look, I think you make a very good point,
and look, you know, I mean I should lose even
more weight. I'm Type two diabetic. I've been watching what
I eat now for a while and I have been
slowly slowly. I want to stress, but I have been
slimming down a little bit and people are commenting on it.
I feel better. I mean, you know, I'm not a looker,

(14:55):
please far from it. But you know, I mean I
even look a little better. People tell me that, they go, hey,
you're looking pretty good there, Jeff, I go, really, yeah,
you know, keep going, so A, you look better? You
just do? I'm sorry, and you just you feel better.
I just I don't know what it is. I just
I feel healthier. I feel better, I move quicker, I
have more energy. I mean, I don't want to sound

(15:16):
like a commercial, but really, I just, you know, being
heavier it's no fun after a while. I mean, you
enjoy the eating, but afterwards you're like, you know, I'm
too heavy. So as my weight begins to come down, yeah,
I agree with you, Verna, Really, you become a different person.
So that's another thing, like, No, we shouldn't want people

(15:39):
to be overweight. We shouldn't want a society that's overweight
or obese. Why would we want that? Everything the left
is pushing. It's bad for society, but it's bad for
women because we're talking about feminists. It's bad for women
in particular. So I'm with you all the way, Verna. Natalie,

(16:02):
hold on, Mike, how much time left? Okay, Natalie, I'm
gonna go to Natalie and Lunenburg. Natalie, please hang on.
We're gonna come right back to you. I'm up against
a heard break. We'll take your call, take all of
your calls, Natalie in Lunenburg. I know you've been holding patiently. Natalie,
thank you and welcome.

Speaker 2 (16:23):
Didn't Freud say sometimes a cigar is just a cigar,
you know. It's like a beautiful blonde girl in a
pair of jeans smoking hot rock in them. People love
that the very fundamental nature of the human being is
to be drawn to something like that. It's no more,

(16:46):
it's no less. It's how human beings are hardwired. And
it's also a beautiful thing. And there are just some women,
and I can say that as a woman, I guess
I have special distensations that are just so angry, so bitter,
so negative, so uptight, that they are overanalyze everything and

(17:07):
make it sinister because they don't approve or they don't
feel they don't measure up. And women are especially vicious
to other women. I worked at a place once and
there was a really beautiful woman. She was a nice figure,
she was lovely, and the women hated her because they
were all jealous of her, you know, and it's like,

(17:27):
you know, she's got it, celebrator, you got it, babe,
let it go. But now they had to bring her down,
they had to tear her down, they had to make
her miserable. I've seen it. That's just it was vicious.

Speaker 1 (17:36):
Oh really, so, Natalie, if you can just expound on
that a little bit more so, you're saying, even at
a place of work or whatever, if there's a you know,
a fit, attractive woman, maybe more attractive, say than some
of the other women, women will then go after that
person just out of a sense of spite or jealousy. Really,

(17:58):
are they honestly, are they that pad? Not all?

Speaker 4 (18:01):
But are some of them that?

Speaker 2 (18:02):
Penny the term mean girls? Jeff, this is what it is.
Oh yeah, yeah, it's because it's the same way that
like other people like bully somebody and tear them down
because they're trying to draw an indirect comparison to themselves,
to show how much superior they are by ripping somebody
else apart. It's the same deal, and I think it's
a case of this. There's no fascism, there's no neo Nazism.

(18:26):
People are hardwired to like attractive people. It's a survival
the way that our species copes and progresses, because if
you have a healthy, fit young woman genetically, that sends
messages that she will produce healthy children that would more
likely to survive. Women like strong men. Well we're not

(18:49):
supposed to anymore, but traditionally we've liked strong, macho men
because they're strong, they'll be able to earn a good living,
you know, provide for the family and protect that sam
you're drawn to that. That's been the traditional model of
human beings throughout history, all over the planet, every single society. Now, personally,

(19:10):
I always thought for decades, it's the most beautiful woman
just my eye that I thought of was Halle Berry,
the actress. She's a woman of color. She's got amazing eyes,
stunning cheekbones, and the body of a goddess. And I
feel secure in my femininity to say that she's really lovely.
She's a woman of color. I think she's prettier than
Sidney Sweeney. But you know that's fine. But you know,

(19:33):
I mean, I don't have an issue with this. And
it's not fascism, it's not neo Nazism. Everybody, give it
a break. This is why people are walking away from
the Democrats, because they're so miserable. They're such kill joys.
You know, we want beauty in our life. They want equity.
Everybody has to be equally ugly. You know, nobody can
be prettier than somebody else because we got to tear

(19:55):
them down. Because this is equity. Everything has to be
mediocre across the board.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
Natalie dropped the mic. Really, I'm telling you, drop the mic.
You just did the whole show in three minutes. You
just really the perfect exclamation point, the perfect punctuation to
the show. Natalie, thank you very much for that call. Look, honestly,
just for the record, because you know, you know, my
wonderful wife that I married, she's of Italian descent. I

(20:22):
don't know why I find Italian women very attractive. Nothing
against Sydney Sweeney, really nothing, but I like, you know,
more of a Mediterranean look, you know, Italian, Greek, you know,
I don't know why that's that's always the one that
I've always found most attractive. But to each their own,
Betty in quinsy, Betty, Ah, I hate to do this

(20:43):
to you. One minute, the floor is yours.

Speaker 3 (20:47):
Go Hey, Jeff, oh my god, this is beautiful.

Speaker 7 (20:51):
This was hitting on all cylinders.

Speaker 2 (20:53):
This was a home run marketing campaign.

Speaker 5 (20:56):
This girl was so good.

Speaker 3 (20:57):
I mean she made me peddle my ass town.

Speaker 5 (21:01):
I almost get on the highway. This was amazing. And
you know, for this black activist, you know, she's a
professional victim. Let's face it.

Speaker 7 (21:09):
This was unbelievable.

Speaker 5 (21:10):
It had everything americaass dot your engines, we are back.
This is beautiful. She did such an amazing job.

Speaker 3 (21:19):
And Jeff, we should be lifting her up.

Speaker 5 (21:23):
We should be lifting her up and celebrating her.

Speaker 1 (21:27):
Betty, very quick almost yes or no? Are you gonna
buy American American Eagle jeans because of this?

Speaker 4 (21:36):
Betty?

Speaker 1 (21:38):
Mike, what do you mean you can't put anybody up?
She's gonna give a yes or no answer, Mike,
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