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June 27, 2025 • 33 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, the Jesse Kelly Show, final hour of The Jesse
Kelly Show on Blood has been an awesome Friday. Huge
things out of the Supreme Court. It's been an ass
doctor Jesse Friday. We are just I can't get smile
off my face today. What do you want me to
tell you? So this hour it's gonna be a real schmorgasboard,
if you will. Someone disagrees about WW two as far

(00:25):
as helping Germany back up and things like that, shielding
yourself from other people's politics, all that, so much more
coming up on the final hour of The Jesse Kelly
Show on a Friday. In fact, let's get right into
this one right here, Jesse, love your show. On the
subject of controlling the future by reparations or regime change,

(00:48):
I think World War One and World War Two were
one big war and nothing we could have done would
have changed that. There was nothing we could have done
to stop World War two. Even caught them, would not
have stopped it. To think we could control the future
by smaller reparations is blaming us for World War two.

(01:09):
Don't do that, please? Okay? Blaming us for World War two,
don't do that please? Okay. Well, let's think about that.
I love my country a lot, as you know. I'm
sure you feel the exact same way. Love my country,
love your country. But do we do everything perfectly? Of

(01:36):
course not. And if there is a terrible, terrible situation,
a terrible situation anywhere various kinds, maybe it's a personal situation,
nation on nation situation, I think it's very fair to
analyze whether all parties involved did the right thing to

(02:01):
get out of that situation. And I'll tell you what.
I'll use this. In fact, I'm gonna use something that
I heard Darryl Cooper use, my buddy dar Daryl Cooper.
I'm gonna use something that I heard him use that
I thought was a fascinating, fascinating argument along these lines.
Let's say there's a dude who loses his mind, angry,

(02:22):
drugged out, who knows whatever it is, and he takes
his family hostage. He's holding his wife and his two
kids at gunpoint. Okay, so that's a bad guy, admittedly
bad guy, doing a bad thing, and the cops show up,
and the cops, instead of any attempt to calm him down,

(02:43):
they get on the microphone. They start calling him an
idiot and a loser. I bet you don't even have
the guts to kill somebody, and he ends up shooting
his wife and his kids. Now, I think we all
know who the bad guy in that story is. There's
no question about it. You know, the guy holding the
women in kids hostage. It's a bad guy. That's the

(03:04):
bad guy in the story. But are the cops blameless
for all that? I don't think you can say that
at all. I think kicking people or nations when they're
down can have disastrous consequences. You know what, let's talk.

(03:28):
Let's stay on World War Two to make to kind
of prove my point, or at least attempt to prove
my point. Maybe you disagree with me. Why is there
a difference post World War Two between how veterans who
fought in Europe feel about their enemy versus veterans who
fought in the Pacific feel about their enemy Post World

(03:50):
War Two? Obviously Germany was the bad guy, Hitler and
Nazis all those things. There was not a deep, deep
hate tred of Germans and anything German post World War Two,
not by America's veterans. Of course, there are plenty of
veterans disliked Germans afterwards. But I'm talking deep lasting hatred.

(04:14):
That was not a thing. As I pointed out before,
Veterans later on in life would get together with German
army veterans, I have a beer with him, they'd have reunions.
They talk about things that didn't happen with Japan. I
get emails from you all the time of Jesse. My

(04:35):
granddad fought in World War Two and hated the Japanese
to the day he died. Jesse, my great grandpa fought
in World War Two. He didn't speak to me for
a year when I bought a Honda Civic. You cannot find,
at least I've not found. I'm sure it probably happened,
but I've never found one example of a reunion between
American troops and Japanese troops post World War Two. Why

(05:00):
they were both I mean both sides, the Nazis and
the Japanese were racially hatred of the horrible things, you know,
horrible regimes, horrible ideologies. Why don't the Japanese get forgiveness
from the guys who fought it. Why don't they get
forgiveness because of the way they conducted themselves during that war,

(05:25):
the way they conducted themselves with the torture, the rampant
torture of prisoners, the rape of women. They would convince
their people to jump off of cliffs and kill their
babies before American troops took over. The way they conducted
themselves during that war created a burning, lasting hatred, and

(05:48):
in fact, it played a huge part in America deciding
to drop an atom bomb on two Japanese cities. That
decision was made in part because of the despicable condo
by the Japanese during that war. Let's go back to
what we were talking about here. You can defeat somebody

(06:09):
in a fist fight and then help them up, or
at least walk away and be okay. We can meet
out behind the gym after school one day because we've
got a problem with each other, and we can trade hands,
no problem. You know what, lots of times guys will

(06:30):
become good friends with someone they do that with. Did
you know that you go meet out behind the gym,
you have a little fist fight on the grass, by
the way, on the grass, and see these kids today
fighting on the asphalt. You a bunch of morons. That's
a good way to die. Go fight on the grass,
No big deal. You lose tooth breaking knuckle, no big deal.
Hug it out. You'd be okay. But you run up

(06:51):
behind somebody and you sucker punch them in the hallway
in the back. Not only are we never going to
be friends, we're enemies, mortal enemies for life. There is
a way to win a victory, to have a complete
victory over your enemy, and yet still repair that relationship

(07:13):
so you can actually turn out to be friends. Look,
the Japanese example is a great one. We destroyed every
Japanese city, almost every Japanese city. We brought them all
to rubble, and then we rebuilt the country, got them
back on their feet, got them right to this day.
They might be our closest ally in the world. They

(07:33):
are most definitely our closest ally in that region because
we helped them out. What the world did to Germany
after World War One was not right. It is not
right to blame everything on the country that lost. And
that's really why they got blamed for everything they lost.

(07:53):
Austria Hungary started a Germany din' even had started. They
were just allies with them. They blamed the entire thing
on Germany and smashed those people into the ground, and we,
the United States of America, participated in that, courtesy of
Woodrow Wilson, and it was wrong. What we did to
Germany after World War One was dead wrong, and it

(08:17):
got us Adolf Hitler. I will never ever ever agree otherwise.
You don't kick dirt in someone's face when they're down.
When you meet out behind the gym and you trade hands,
if you happen to win, don't spit on him. Don't
kick dirt in his face. I'm not even saying you
have to help him up. But you can win the
right way and walk away, or you might just find

(08:42):
yourself in trouble another day. Jesse, do you ever shield
yourself from knowing another person's politics? Do you avoid taking
the chance of finding out your favorite ballplayer, actor, music
artists might be a leftist, thereby diminishing them in your mind?
His name is Russ. I don't know that I would
say steps to avoid it. It's not like I shield it.

(09:05):
But I also don't consume a lot of pop culture.
It doesn't really interest me like baseball. As I've gotten older,
of course, I've gotten more and more into baseball. I'll
watch more baseball, but I don't watch the players' interviews.
I don't care what they say afterwards when it comes
to actors and actresses unless there's some SoundBite that goes viral,

(09:27):
you know, I don't. I don't really have a favorite
one anyway, because it's just kind of not my thing.
But I just don't pay attention to it. But part
of the reason I don't pay attention is what you mentioned.
I don't want to find out that you're a dirty communist.
I don't want to find out that you're a filthy
America hating communist. I cannot stand it, and it does

(09:49):
diminish it. I'll tell you a quick example. In Iraq,
there were it became the norm that everybody had to
protest Iraq and Iraq and Iraq and whatnot. Well, when
we were over there, that bothered us. Bothered us. We wanted,
you know, people behind us. It's just what we wanted
when we got magazines and it'd be a band. Metallica.

(10:10):
I remember being one of them because I'm a huge
Metallica fan, love Metallica. Metallica was one of them. We
were totally bummed. We were ah no, not them too,
So yeah, kind of all right, Let's talk a little
bit about radio, let's talk about ads, Let's talk about well, illegals,
I mean illegal immigrants. It is the Jesse Kelly Show

(10:32):
and a wonderful, wonderful Friday. Remember you can email us
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Hello Jesse. I'm sixty
years old. I grew up with mature, straight to the
point adult radio hosts before woke took over. I'm now
subjected to immature, silly hosts that play nothing but sound bites,
dumb ai songs, and talk about themselves and their lives

(10:54):
far too much. I found your show about two years ago,
and I cannot tell you how much I appreciate it
being informed and entertained without feeling like I'm listening to
a twelve year old girl with a radio show. Don't
change a thing. I'd like your history segments. Thank you
for making me not feel stupid. As far as the

(11:15):
not feeling stupid thing, there is something that humans are
prone to do. I am you probably are, especially human
beings who have acquired any amount of knowledge or expertise
on anything. It is kind of a human thing to

(11:38):
be prideful about it and to kind of look down
your nose on those who don't, and everybody in every
walk of life does this. This isn't a left or
right thing. If you are an excellent cook, you know
your way around the kitchen, meat and eggs and pasta
and things like that, and somebody doesn't know how to

(11:59):
make spaghetti properly, it's very human. Oh, come on, you idiot,
Everyone knows that. Very human. Gun guys, I'll tell you
this as someone who I know my way around guns,
I certainly would not call myself a firearms expert. Ninety
percent of my friends know more about guns than I do,
but I can handle one, so I can tell you

(12:20):
this from experience. Gun guys might be the worst at this,
the absolute worst at this. If you are a gun guy,
you love to shoot, you have different calibers and hunting
and all these other different things. The second you hear
or see somebody who prefers a different caliber or something,
he's a stupid idiot. You don't even know about the
bullet velocity. The worst. It's very worse, And the same

(12:43):
thing happens with any amount of knowledge about any subject,
including history. When people start to get interested in whatever
kind of history they get interested in and remember, everybody
likes history. If you think you don't, you probably just
haven't found the kind of history you like yet, the
period of time or or the location on the planet.

(13:06):
You know. I have an old I have an oldest son, James.
He loves ancient history, world history. He'll nerd out on
the Assyrians. My youngest son, Luke, could not be less
interested in all that. Even Roman history, no interest at all.
But American history, Oh my gosh, he bleeds red, white
and blue. Everyone has different things. So people who start

(13:28):
to nerd out on history, you start reading books and
maybe listening to podcasts or even listening when I do
history on this show, and so you start to acquire
a certain base of knowledge. When someone doesn't know something,
you can really talk down to him, even if you

(13:48):
don't mean to do so, you can really talk down
to him. And this happens even more often than that.
You can speak over people's heads unintentionally because you kind
of just assume everyone has at least some base of
knowledge on what you were talking about. But that's nuts.

(14:12):
There are lots of people of every age who don't
know anything about the World War One. We brought up
World War One, who don't know anything about the Crimean War.
Remember when I did that history special on the Crimean War. Well,
that's a war from the eighteen hundreds on the other
part of the globe. It's one that I've found fascinating
for a while for a variety of reasons. But there

(14:34):
are a lot of people, a lot of people our
emails were amazing after that, who didn't even know what
the sides were before we did that in the Crimean War.
And so if you've read books on it like I have,
you could easily talk over someone's head. And I've always
found that was disrespectful. Does that make sense? This is

(14:55):
always I think it disrespects people when you just kind
of gloss over the basics and talk over their head.
Did that make sense? I know it did? I did,
didn't it? Chris Hey Jesse? They need a Hall of
Fame contest for the best radio broadcasters for how they
go into commercial You would win, hands down. You do

(15:16):
it better than any of the ones I listen to.
Her name is Laura, Okay. So there are a couple
of different reasons we do ads commercials the way we
do them. First, that's how the show stays on the air.
That's why Premiere allows me to get away with doing

(15:36):
whatever I want here on the show. I get away
with doing it because that needs to be a priority.
If you were in this business, that needs to be
a priority. Take care of your show. Sponsors. They take
care of you. They keep the show on the air,
so you take care of them. So that's that's one,
but two as far as the listener goes, most people,

(15:57):
ninety nine percent of people understand there are going to
be ads, they're going to be commercials. People don't jump
up and down and celebrate that. You're not listening for
the commercials. You're listening for the show. The people are
adult enough, even kids are adult enough to understand. The
show stays on the air because of advertisers support. So
that's always going to be part of a show. At

(16:20):
least unless you get a subscription, that's always going to
be part of a show. So if you have to
make the people listening, if I have to make you
listen to a commercial, in the very least, you can
attempt to make it humorous, make it a little more interesting.
That's not only treating the audience right, that's treating the

(16:41):
sponsor right. It's treating the advertiser, right, you're treating everybody
right when you do that. You, in my opinion, it's
always bothered me. You really do the listener wrong and
the sponsor wrong when you just pick up a piece
of paper. And that's why you should call it. If
it did, that's brutal. As brutal listen to, and it's brutal.
It's not fair to your show sponsors at all. All right,

(17:04):
all right, let's talk about illegals and cutting off their phones.
Next it is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Wonderful Friday,
reminding you that if you miss any part of the show,
you can download the whole thing on iHeart, Spotify, iTunes.
It's all for free. All right, let's do this, hey, Jesse,
there must be an attempt to recoup the moneies illegally

(17:26):
paid to illegal immigrants. The federal government should declare it
it is not only stopping federal funding of illegal immigration,
but will demand that any government agency that illegally paid
out funds to illegals must now be responsible for refunding
the taxpayers from whence those moneies came. Good grief, this
guy is a freaking scholar. He's using words like moneies

(17:47):
and wentce I should have stayed in community college. Obviously,
it would be nice to get that money back. A
lot of that money's already sent to what their home country,
is remittances to Mexico or are something that people who
know illegal immigration, they're aware that it's a gigantic problem.

(18:09):
But the Trump administration really do they really deserve a
bunch of credit. And you know this is from me.
I'm happy to call out crap if I see it.
They have made it. They've made every effort. They have
overturned every stone to get illegals deported, either by US

(18:30):
deporting them or getting them to self deport. Is it enough? No,
it's not enough. It's we have to deport more than
Joe Biden brought in. So no, it's not enough. But
with all the roadblocks thrown and thrown in front of
them by these crazy judges, by America's Blue states, which
are designed to protect them, with every roadblock thrown in

(18:53):
front of them, they have remained steadfast and committed to
deporting illegals. The more illegals we deport, the more American
wages will go up. That is a fact. The more
illegals we deport the more affordable housing will be. I
hated that young people now are never able to afford

(19:14):
a house. In most cases in this country. Every single
metric shows this. Young people can't afford a house, not
at the same age they used to be able to
They used to be you know, twenty five to the
thirty you're starting to buy your starter home. Now that
number is getting up to forty five fifty. That will

(19:35):
change if we get illegals out of this country. Medical care,
this is something that you don't think about till you
get sick. Medical care. Health in general is like this.
You really don't appreciate feeling good and being healthy until
you're sick. But right now I'm perfectly healthy. I don't

(19:58):
remember the last time I had the flu. I'm talking
the bad flu where you're in bed for three four days,
running a fever, puking in a bucket. You know what
I mean, the bad, bad, bad flu. I don't remember
last time I had one, but it's been years. You
know what that's developed in me a lack of appreciation
for feeling good every day. And I will keep that

(20:19):
lack of appreciation for feeling good until the next time
the flu hits me. Like a semi truck and I'm
laying there feeling like I'm going to die, and then
it will occur to me again. Oh my gosh, I
totally took for granted being healthy. The same thing applies
to medical bills. Sorry, I didn't mean to go off
on a tangent. When you haven't gone through any kind

(20:41):
of sickness of any kind, or or you know someone
in your family has, you forget how backbreaking medical care
can be to your finances. It could just it just
destroys your finances, bankrupts. These people have had to sell
their homes. But even if you don't, someone goes to

(21:03):
the hospital, has a break here, has a sickness there.
Insurance covers what they cover, but in the end you've
got you've got to pay fifteen grand out of pocket.
You have fifteen grand laying a round. That's brutal that
you're canceling Baca, Hey kids, no Christmas this year, no nothing.
We're not eating out. It's Kraft mac every every It's

(21:24):
it's very very brutal medical care. The costs will go
down drastically when the American taxpayer gets to stop subsidizing
the illegals who hut the border and use the emergency
room as their family doctor. The cost of everything in
your life will go down, your wages will go up,

(21:45):
the crime will go down. We have been artificially infected
with crime and high prices in this country and low wages,
and it's been done on purpose by Democrats and Republicans.
Obviously Democrats are the worst defenders, but we cannot forget
about Republicans like James Langford, who try to bring in

(22:07):
more people and try to amnesty more people. If you're
mad about the cost of your medical care, blame James Langford.
If you're angry about all the violent crime the illegals
bring into this country, blame James Langford. Start blaming politicians
who've done this to us, and start voting them out
of office. Sultan Jesse, I write to acknowledge what you

(22:28):
accomplished with your show. I change my schedule and stay
in my car extra to hear you finish a thought.
It reminds me of one who sat behind a golden mic.
You weave stories and make sense out of the world's
important things in a way that kills me. If I
can ask doctor Jesse a question, I worked as an

(22:51):
Earth scientist for government, and I won't say where, but
my dad needs more care because of Parkinson's, so I
stepped away to care for him. How do you think
of balancing the needs of your life over the needs
of others. It is really difficult to not have a
daily mission or purpose. How do you suggest I still

(23:12):
do something with purpose for causes I believe in. It's
not on the level of what you guys who serve
face regarding regular life, but I still want to have
a purpose. Thanks for using your talent on loan for God. Well,
maybe caring for your father is your purpose for now.

(23:33):
Purpose has changed in life, you know that. And there
are times where you feel like you're doing a lot
of good. I'll tell you when I was running for Congress.
Remember when I ran for Congress and lost twice. I
woke up every day and it was a lot of work.
It was a grind. I was I busted my butt,

(23:54):
speech is everywhere meeting. I was at every meeting, every speech,
every everything, knocking on doors, really really putting everything into it.
And it was because I felt like I had a mission.
And if you'd ask me at the time, I would
have told you flat out that I was sure I
was going to win and that I was going to
save the United States of America. Obviously, looking back now,
that's pretty naive. And if I had even if I

(24:16):
had one one congressman's not going to do that. But
that's why I was running. I was running for the
right reasons. I'm sure I probably would have screwed everything
up and become corrupt, taking bribes or something like that.
But I was running because I wanted to save my country.
And when I was grinding those days, and we had
two small kids at the time, babies. When I was
grinding at the time, and I'd get home and I'm

(24:39):
rolling around on the floor with the boys and tickling,
I'm gonna having fun and things like that, I felt
so mission focused. I felt like I had such a
great purpose in my life and that my life was
heading directly that way. And yeah, it was just it
felt good to have a mission. Fast forward, going to

(25:00):
go into all the details again, which I've done before,
but fast forward to I'm selling RBS now. I had
a lot of fun selling OURVS. I was able to
pay my bills and feed my family and make my mortgage.
And believe me when I tell you I am not
insulting you if you're in sales at all. I really
respect people in sales. I've encourage you to go into

(25:22):
sales because there's great money in it if you can
handle it. If you can handle that business, there's great
money in sales. But I didn't feel a higher mission
when I was doing that. I didn't feel a higher mission,
and it bothered me. It always bothered me. It's probably
why doing this, when my mentor Michael Berry encouraged me

(25:44):
to do this, it's probably why I dove into this
so hard. It's because, Wow, what if I could What
if I could help in some way? What if I
could get back in the fight in some way. That's
kind of what it felt like. I know that's lame.
I'm just a radio host, but that's what it felt
like that period of time when I was selling RVs.

(26:05):
It wasn't worthless. I may not have felt like I
had this goal. I'm not going for Congress or saving
the country, you know, anything like that, but it wasn't
worthless at all. It was a period of time in
my life where I learned valuable lessons, had time with
my kids in certain ways, got to learn about people,

(26:27):
even more, it was valuable. You're taking care of you.
If you anybody, maybe it's you. Maybe you're taking care
of a sick relative right now, and maybe it just
feels like life kind of sucks. I get it, Believe me,
I get it. It doesn't last forever. It doesn't last forever,
and I think in the end you will find there

(26:49):
was a purpose for it. All right, let's do one
more segment. Somebody has a friend who loves Hamas and
she loves Israel. How do you handle that? Is the
Jesse Kelly Show final segment at the Jesse Kelly Show
on what has been a Friday that is it's tough
not to smile. Look, I know nothing's perfect. I know

(27:10):
we have a lot more fights ahead of us, but
it has been quite an outstanding Friday. I'm gonna let
the Commander in Chief. I'm going to let him take
it over again for a minute and say what he
had to say, because it was a very very good text.

Speaker 2 (27:25):
Thanks to this decision, we can now promptly file to
proceed with numerous policies that have been wrongly enjoined on
a nationwide basis, and some of the cases we're talking
about would be ending birthright citizenship, which now comes to
the fore, that was meant for the babies of slaves.
It wasn't meant for people trying to scam the system

(27:47):
and come into the country on a vacation. This was,
in fact, it was the same date, the exact same date,
the end of the Civil War.

Speaker 1 (27:55):
It was meant for the babies of slaves.

Speaker 2 (27:57):
And it is so clean and so obvious. But this
lets us go there and finally win that case because
hundreds of thousands of people are pouring into our country
under birthright citizenship, and it wasn't meant for that reason,
was meant for the babies of slaves. So thanks to
this decision, we can now properly file to proceed with

(28:17):
these numerous policies and those that have been wrongly enjoined
on a nationwide basis, including birthright citizenship, ending sanctuary city funding,
suspending refugee resettlement, freezing unnecessary funding, stopping federal taxpayers from
paying for transgender surgeries, and numerous other priorities of the

(28:38):
American people.

Speaker 1 (28:40):
It's a good day. Make sure you're smiling this weekend.
It was a good day. Jesse. I don't know what
to do. I am pro Israel one hundred percent. I
have a dear friend who is a wonderful person. If
you are hungry, he'll feed you every time. If you
need and he can provide, he will. He'll give you
the shirt off his back before you even ask. As

(29:01):
caring in good person as I have ever met, who's
helped me more times than I can count. He is
Palestinian and believes hummas. I don't know how to approach
him about the topic. How do I talk to my
friend about it? Love the show, especially the use of
your imaginary friends Chris and Corey. Okay, So his name

(29:24):
is Dennis. I think I called it a woman, but
his name is Dennis. Okay, So why do you have
to approach him about it? And here's what I mean.
This goes way beyond this issue or this particular relationship.
We want our friends to share our value system, of course,

(29:45):
because that's part of what makes them friends. But we
shouldn't strive for universal opinion on every universal agreement on
everything we think. And if you have a wonderful relationship
with a wonderful person but he totally disagrees with you

(30:07):
on any topic, why would you blow up a friendship
over that? Or why would you feel the need to
approach to approach him about it at all? If it
comes up, you can discuss it, but you don't have
to seek out controversy. And I understand when people are

(30:28):
passionate about things, it's tempting to do so, very very
tempting to do so. And in fact, I've done this
fairly recently. So believe me, I'm not judging you at all.
You know how pro life I am. I'm as pro
life as you can possibly get. Like I don't even
believe in exceptions, that's how pro life I am. Well,

(30:49):
you know, I'm not friends really with political people for
the most part because I live I don't live in
DC or New York. I hang out with normal people.
And the top of abortion came up one night and
one of my friends, who is a Republican voted for Trump.
We are friends, or our families are friends. I mean

(31:13):
his kids watch my dog, they watch Fred if I
have to leave town, if we have to leave town
for a night or something like that. Like we're that
kind of close. We've hung out multiple times that we
go to games together, so we're that kind of close.
He is not as pro life as I am at all,
very very you know, kind of one of those well,
as long as it's the first trimester thing, which obviously

(31:35):
I completely disagree with, but I I was in a mood.
He did, he would He didn't challenge me on him,
he didn't want to argue about the whole thing. I did,
and I went in on him about it. Absolutely went
in on him about it. And not only did I

(31:55):
go in on him about it, I went in on
him in front of other people about it, which I
always tell you not to do, and I try to
tell myself not to do. You have disagreements, have them privately.
And I had to apologize. I had to apologize because
I really I had a moment. I have an issue
that I'm passionate about and I believe in it all

(32:17):
the way and he was wrong and I had to
fix that right then. And why did I do that?
I should have let that go. There's no need to
do that at all, Hey, Jesse historian Jesse the Blade Kelly,
I need your historical expertise. It takes roughly three percent
of the population willing to do violence to overthrow a government.
I heard that a while back in glenn Or Bongino

(32:40):
or maybe you that communism is embraced by roughly six
percent of Americans. If true, why haven't American communists overthrown
the government? Yet they haven't just because they're not shooting
and lynching people like they normally do. Can't you make

(33:02):
the argument they took over the government without a shot fired?
How many times have we discussed the voter registry of
federal workers. Federal government is the largest employer in the country.
It's so big, well north of ninety percent of them
are registered Democrats. Why shoot, you can just take a

(33:22):
place over when you can just occupy? All right, all right, now,
enough of that ugliness, enough of everything, enough of Chris
most especially, Go smile and enjoy your weekend. We'll do
it again on Monday. Medal of Honor Monday. Don't forget.
That's all.
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