Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from worn.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 3 (00:05):
Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show. I have a
little cultural update from a personal level to give you
this hour. I'll get to that in just a minute.
We have to have a talk that maybe a little
bit hard to hear. First, we'll get to some emails.
Another bright shining example, why you need to move from
blue to red. Oh, that and so much more coming
(00:26):
up this hour on the world famous Jesse Kelly Show. Now,
I'm going to talk to you about something. And for
some people this is going to be music to your ears.
Maybe this would be music to your ears. For others,
this may be hard to hear. And I understand that.
But you need to start getting more and more comfortable
(00:50):
with firearms.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
Now.
Speaker 3 (00:54):
I understand the veterans who listen to the show. There
are so many. There are so many active duty just
basic hunters. There are so many. Look, the chances you
already own or use guns are very very strong. So
to you, I will say you and I I'm pointing
to me, pointing to me here, you and I need
(01:17):
to practice more. I need to practice more. I need
to go to the range more. I need to practice
with my mantis X more. I need to practice more
with my weapon than I do. I need to work
more with my sons than I already do. And I
work with my sons. The other day, we just did
(01:38):
a quick five ten minutes unload, load, put a magazine in,
some dry fire practice.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
I did it.
Speaker 3 (01:45):
You know what, I don't do it enough. If you
already are familiar with guns, you need to get better
with them. But I'm not here to talk to you
right now. I'm here to talk to you the person
who doesn't like guns. I know it's hard. You're probably
squirming in your chair.
Speaker 2 (02:07):
I get it.
Speaker 3 (02:08):
I'm very, very familiar with how frightening guns can be
for people who didn't grow up around them. They're just
not comfortable around them. I married someone who used to
be like that. My wife was like that. She didn't
come from a gun household at all. When we first
got married, I would clean my guns out in the open,
(02:33):
just like I do now. I'd pull them out, i'd
clean them out in the open, and if I wouldn't
go get a glass of water, even though I didn't
have an ice maker back then, if I went to
go get a glass of water and left the gun
sitting there. Even if it was taken apart on the table,
it wouldn't make her uncomfortable. People who are familiar with
firearms can scoff at that or mock that, and I
(02:55):
certainly did when I was young and stupid. But for
people who aren't familiar with guns and how they work
and guns safety, they are scary when you see them.
They're scary. They're loud, they have the ability to kill.
If it falls over, is it loaded? They're scary. So
(03:16):
I understand what I'm saying right now. It makes you
uncomfortable if you're not someone familiar with guns, but you
need to get familiar with guns. There are more reasons
than I can list right now for you to get
familiar with guns. There's the basic personal protection aspect of it,
(03:41):
and that is very important. We not only have homegrown criminals,
we're importing them in mass But it doesn't matter where
the criminal comes from. Can you stop a person who's
lived his entire life killing and hurting people? Can you
stop him from killing and hurting you? Or if he
(04:03):
chooses to make you his target, are you done?
Speaker 2 (04:06):
Is that it?
Speaker 3 (04:08):
So? That's one aspect of it. Another aspect of it
is it's really really important when it comes to protecting
yourself from the government. That's why we have a second Amendment.
It is not for hunting, it's not even for criminals.
The founders wrote about this all the time in the
(04:30):
Federalist papers. It otherwise. They wanted everyone to own guns.
Thomas Jefferson referred to it as I think it was.
Jefferson referred to it as the whole people. He said,
who is the militia, it's the whole people. It's everyone.
They wanted everyone to own guns because it is the
only thing. I cannot stress this enough. There's not a
(04:52):
second thing. It is the only thing that will keep
government from turning into a tyranny ear eventually. That's how
countries go, that's how governments go. Over a long enough
period of time, the government will turn evil. It will
turn corrupt. It will be led by a bunch of
selfish demons, and if you are unarmed.
Speaker 2 (05:15):
They will kill you. They will hurt you, they will.
Speaker 3 (05:19):
It's not a matter of nationality, religion, it's not a
matter of anything. Anywhere there's a government, over a long
enough period of time, it will turn evil, it will
turn corrupt. And if the people cannot stop the government.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
The government will murder them en mass. They will.
Speaker 3 (05:38):
And don't think for a second these people don't say.
Speaker 1 (05:44):
Brian, I am a gun owner, and Tim Walls, my
running mate, is also a gun owner. We're not taking
anybody's gands away. I support the Second Amendment and I
support reasonable gun safety laws. Part of my approach to
this is I was a career prosecutor for most of
my career. I have personally prosecuted homicide cases. I have
(06:07):
personally looked at autopsies. I have personally.
Speaker 3 (06:11):
Seen what listen, She's about to make it personal. She's
about to speak to you and use your values against you.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
You ready to.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
Assault weapons due to the human body. And so I
feel very strongly that it is consistent with the Second
Amendment and your right to own a gun to also
say we need an assault weapons ban. They're literally tools
of war. They were literally designed to kill a lot
(06:38):
of human beings quickly.
Speaker 3 (06:40):
Yeah, that's the whole point of it. That's one too
literally is please please stop using that word. I can't
take it anymore than literally. But I will say this.
She finished off that long little saying with a very
accurate statement. They were designed to kill a lot of people.
Exactly why you need to own one, because you need
(07:03):
to have the ability to defend yourself from a lot
of different entities out there. And if this makes you uncomfortable,
because again I'm speaking to you, guy girl not comfortable
with guns. You don't have to start out with an
(07:23):
AR fifteen loud and arrange everyone. You don't do that,
don't freak yourself out. Start slow, Start with a hunter
safety course or a gun safety course.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
Just go. You don't have to go shoot anything.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
Go sit down, learn in class the different parts of
a weapon, how to use a weapon safely. That's the
most important thing anyway. But what you will find is
the more you're around them, the more comfortable you will be.
Once you get comfortable, then you can slowly you don't
(08:00):
have to rush anything. You can slowly start ramping things up.
You'll get to a place where you own one, where
you shoot one on occasion.
Speaker 2 (08:11):
It's really really.
Speaker 3 (08:13):
Important given the cultural changes we've been talking about, given
the fact that we are surrounded by a bunch of
mentally ill demons who want to murder us for what
we believe, it's really important that you begin to familiarize
yourself with guns, with weapons. I do not actually celebrate this.
(08:35):
Although I love guns, I love weapons. I don't like
that the fifty year old woman who's listening to me
right now, who's just not a gun lady, never grew
up around them, and she's squirming in her seat. I
don't like that we have to have this talk. I'm sorry.
I wish it wasn't that way. I wish there weren't
violent animals all around you. I wish we didn't have
(08:57):
concerns of various other concerns. I wish it wasn't this way.
But like my old man used to always tell me,
wish in one hand and crap in the other and
see which one fills up first. You can't wish away
the troubles we have. The troubles are here, the bad
people are here, and we need to prepare. And the
(09:18):
everyone this thing who's familiar with guns and uses them
and practices with them. They'll back me up on this,
every one of them. You're gonna end up enjoying it.
I'm not telling you to take up some hobby that's
going to be miserable for you, where you're going to
hate it. You're going to find it that it's a
wonderful stress reliever. You're going to find the community, the
(09:41):
gun ownership community is wonderful, wonderful to each other.
Speaker 2 (09:47):
They are.
Speaker 3 (09:47):
They could get a little bit snobby about the kinds
of guns. You know, you ask a man about barbecue
or firearms, you're gonna get some of the snobbiest responses
in the history of mankind. But for the most the
community is wonderful. It's a healthy way, a healthy outlet.
It's like the people who box in their spare time.
(10:08):
Where's the negative. There's no negative if you don't own them,
if you're not familiar with them. The time to start
is now. Go get on your phone, find a class,
a hunt their safety class, gun safety class, and go begin.
If you're like me, if you're already familiar with them,
you're not good enough yet. And I know we have
some studs who listen, you're not good enough. I'm not
(10:28):
good enough. I'm not ready. We have to practice more.
Let's prepare for the society we've been given, not the
society we want. And that leads me to another cultural thing.
On a personal level. Pretty something awesome happened today. All right,
I'll explain what that is in a moment.
Speaker 2 (10:46):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (10:47):
You know, I told you Chris came over to the
house yesterday.
Speaker 2 (10:51):
He came over again today and.
Speaker 3 (10:56):
Chris Now, he said to me as he was walking
out the door, he said, Okay, I finally get the
rough greens ads for Fred, like I finally understand what
you're talking about. You know why, Because I wouldn't let
Fred go mob Chris like he did yesterday, because he
wants to just go get affection and attention at all times.
I made him sit beside me, and this big seventy
(11:17):
seventy five pound meathead laid by me, with Chris standing
across the room whimpering like a little puppy that he
was not allowed to go get the love and affection
he wanted. That's what Chris now knows. You know, now
you know what I go through. It's this time all day,
every day. My mom gets here tonight, when she leaves town,
he'll be just despondent for a week. He'll just curl
(11:38):
up in a ball by the front door. I don't
even know why I put up with this. I don't
know why I give him rough greens.
Speaker 2 (11:43):
Yeah I do.
Speaker 3 (11:44):
I love him, and then I hope he lives a
long time, and we put rough Greens on his food
because it's an all natural nutritional supplement and he doesn't
get nutrition from his food. Your dog doesn't get nutrition
from its food. Pour rough Greens on your dog's food
free jumpstart trial bags at eight three three three three.
(12:05):
My dog will go to Roughgreens dot com slash Jesse
We'll be back. He doesn't care if you believe him,
but he's right. He's the Jesse Kelly Show on a Tuesday.
You're right, Chris, that is one of the best. That
is one of the best jams. If that song isn't
on your workout playlist.
Speaker 2 (12:25):
Well why are you ge? That's all I have to say.
Speaker 3 (12:28):
All right now, before we get to the emails, I
want to get to some emails, h I have. Speaking
of culture, something pretty awesome happened today. I don't like
to brag, you know. You know, that's the last thing
in the world I would ever do is brag about myself.
But I have an ice maker at the house. It
(12:50):
sits on my count What, Chris, I have an ice
maker at the house, as you know. It sits on
my counter and it makes ice, a lot of ice
and It's.
Speaker 2 (13:03):
Caused some friction in the house.
Speaker 3 (13:05):
Every time I mentioned that I'm getting ice, ob keeps
threatening to throw it away and stuff like that. But
it's a pretty big deal that there's just ice and
ice and ice and ice. And I decided the Jesse
Kelly show's doing so well. Remember you can download the
podcast of the show on iHeart, Spotify or iTunes. We
(13:25):
are moving on up in the world. I decided it
was time. I don't want to be restricted to having
endless ice.
Speaker 2 (13:34):
Just at the house.
Speaker 3 (13:36):
Why shouldn't Chris and I, Why shouldn't we have all
the ice we want here at work? So I made
an investment. Think of it like a like a stock
or a bond, only it's another ice maker and it's
for the studio. And today I was walking in and
(13:57):
I had the ice maker in my hands, was in
this cardboard box and walking towards the elevator in the building,
and these two Mexicans were sitting there and they were
they were oblawn a lot back and forth. But my
hands were full because I had the ice maker in there,
and they had already pressed the elevator button. And I
got on the elevator and these Mexicans got on the
(14:18):
elevator and I could you know, you know how much
I a blaw like what Chris? Anyway, they were ob
blowing back and forth, and I have to I had
to tell him the name of the floor, and I
said Terrey Spoor. Fore R dropped it on there right
like that, Chris, And you could tell they looked at
me kind of strange, but I think it was an admiration.
Speaker 2 (14:40):
I think they were admiring me.
Speaker 3 (14:42):
And as soon as they pressed the button, they reached
over and they hit trace Chris, that stands for three
in Mexican. As soon as they hit the button, I
hammered him with a grasius. Just dropped it on real
subtle like that. I didn't even do it loud because
it's so native for me. Now, I just dropped a
gracius on there. And man, you want to talk about culture,
(15:03):
We are pretty understanding here on the Jesse Kelly Shows.
All I have to say, pretty understanding. Hey, Jesse, tell
Donald Trump if he wants to be a martyr, do
it after he gets elected. Just stay undercover it out
of the public eye. Get the Republicans in. We love you, Donald.
You already have our vote, so I on to Okay,
So this, this guy or lady actually don't know who
(15:24):
this is, wants Trump to stay inside. No more of
this golf stuff, no more of these rallies. And I'm
of two minds about this. I've told you I think
they're gonna kill him. I'm very, very worried. I'm extremely worried.
I don't think this is gonna stop, and so I believe.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
One.
Speaker 3 (15:46):
On one level, I want him to stay inside. I
want the golf to stop. As much as I have
encouraged you to attend Trump rallies, even if you hate Trump,
just to go be around the people and the camaraderie. Honestly,
I want the rallies to step. I don't like it anymore.
He has to operate in an environment as if people
and possibly government agencies want him dead. He has to
(16:09):
operate in that way. So on one level, I'm like that.
But on the other level, he's not going to change
who he is, and he really can't. He's almost eighty
years old. He's lived his life in public speeches and
television and golf. He's a golf freak. He's been a
(16:29):
golf freak forever. There's Trump golf courses across the globe.
It's what he does, it's his passion. So and I
understand your concern, Hey, why doesn't he just stay inside?
And I had the same thought after the second attempt,
I thought to myself, please find a find a Netflix
show you love, and lock your freaking self in mar
(16:50):
Lago with Milania and sit there and watch Netflix and
put out some TV specials on camera, and please just
stay behind the bulletproof glass, surrounded by armed people. With
the food tester. I had the exact same thought. And
I still have that thought. I'm with you there. I understand.
But if you take away critical parts of what a
(17:14):
man does, then you will inevitably take away critical parts.
Speaker 2 (17:22):
Of who a man is. Does that make sense?
Speaker 3 (17:27):
What Donald Trump does speeches and golf and golfs with
all his friends and business partners. It's as famous for it.
That's what he does. The speech is where he feeds
off the crowd. They're not things that you can probably
separate from him and still have him be him. They're
part of what makes him him. So that stuff, as
(17:51):
much as I hate it, and as nervous as I
am about what's coming, he probably has to keep doing it.
And you know, if you ask him, I don't know,
I don't know him personally, he'd probably tell you I'd
rather die than stop doing the things I've loved doing
for eighty years. If you told me that, I'll tell
you the same thing. Hey, stop eating cheeseburgers. Uh no,
just kill me. I think I'm good. Now, here's what
(18:14):
I want you to do. I want you to give
up Verizon today, or AT and T or T Mobile,
whatever the cell phone company is you use. I want
you to switch to pure Talk today. And it's actually
not because pure Talk saves you a bunch of money.
Speaker 2 (18:30):
They do.
Speaker 3 (18:31):
My bill got cut in half when I switch from
T Mobile to Pure Talk. But that's not why I
want you to switch. I want you to switch because
we are gaining ground and gaining momentum in the fight
for the corporate world. We are, we're gaining ground quickly.
If we continue this momentum, the corporate world will continue
(18:51):
to back off. If we back off, they'll go right
back to their evil ways. Switch to pure Talk. They
share your values, they promote your values. They'll save you
money and you won't fund the companies who wit your
guts and when your company asks you why you're switching, tell.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
Them why you're switching.
Speaker 3 (19:09):
Pick up your phone and dial pound two five zero
and say Jesse Kelly Pound two five zero. Say Jesse Kelly,
We'll be back. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on
a Tuesday. Don't tell me I have to start the
show sooner than that, Chris, I was jamming out.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
Then.
Speaker 4 (19:29):
Anyway, you can email the show, and you should Jesse
at Jessekellyshow dot com. Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com,
love Hey, death threats, ask doctor Jesse questions for Friday.
Let's dig into some emails before we get into their
love of censorship.
Speaker 2 (19:49):
Jesse, your premise.
Speaker 3 (19:51):
Of being in the time of assassination is intensely frightening
and upsetting. However, if we keep fervent petition of prayer
with faith to protect President Trump, isn't God more powerful?
Speaker 5 (20:06):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (20:07):
Of course God, it's more powerful. I would never say otherwise.
And I hope that Trump lives to be a very
very old man and dies peacefully in his bed. But remember,
I don't speak for God, and I don't try to
speak for God, and you don't speak for God I either,
(20:30):
And we pray for things all the time, and God
says no, that happens all the time. I hope we
are going to be or I hope he is going
to be okay. And remember when I said that it
wasn't just about him. I believe we are entering a
period of time where it will be the norm, the
(20:53):
norm where Republicans will be murdered in this country, and
that where does that lead us? It of course leads
us to democrats will be murdered. Eventually, there will be
a cultural response where Democrats will be murdered, and it's
just violence and death, and it's awful. It's I hate
that we're here, and it's so important that we try
(21:14):
everything we can do to peacefully reverse where we are now,
because where we are now and so badly. It always
has it just always has.
Speaker 2 (21:26):
Jesse.
Speaker 3 (21:27):
The past few times i've listened to Metal of Honor
Modern day segments, you've treated those honorable men poorly. You
read their specifics and then you go right on to
whatever you were talking about before the segment. I find
that disrespectful to their service and often great sacrifice. Please
don't do that anymore. I want to hear you talk
(21:49):
about the information to help make it clearer. And I
want the playing of taps in rifle fire. The men
who have earned those honors deserve nothing less thank you,
and she gives her an which I obviously won't give.
First of all, taps does not get played unless the
recipient dies. If the recipient dies, taps gets played. It's
(22:12):
to honor the follow That's one, ma'am. Two, If you
would like more information, you have a freaking computer. Go
open it up and find it yourself. I am not
a take vending machine where you can just go up
(22:33):
and put in a couple quarters and pick the specific
bag of Cheetos you've been looking for and get a withdrawal.
If there are things that interest you on there, then
go look dig it up. You might be the one
that makes the change. If you want more done, you
do it. Go right ahead. That is the first time
(22:54):
we have ever gotten a complaint about medal of honor Monday,
Hi Jesse. Oh and in case you thought that was
too mean, I just want to tell you take your
complaint and shove it, Hi Jesse. Illegal aliens brought into
this country may also be part of a slave trade,
in the sense that they work for the cartels. But
unlike the Romans, the American government treats them better than
(23:17):
most American citizens that are literally in the gut or
please don't use that word. These people are given five
thousand dollars cash. Hold on a second, Yes, many of
the illegals are treated better than American citizens. That's because
the government values them more than they value you. That's
why they're bringing them in here. It's all to replace you.
(23:39):
Remember you are an annoying citizen. What does that mean, Well,
you love this country. You have an affinity for your country,
and you believe in rules freedoms. People who just got here,
they don't have any affinity for this country. They don't
stress out, and the government tears through the United States
(24:02):
of America. They're just here to loot the place. So you,
because you care, you have to be replaced and the
government is taking your money, your tax payer money, and
they are replacing you with your money as fast as
they can. Listen to this. This is in Pennsylvania, town
(24:22):
of four thousand gets two thousand imports.
Speaker 6 (24:26):
I think they are trying to get even interpreters to
teach the kids, let alone get to this part. Yeah,
each problem I think it's kind of ridiculous trying to teach.
Speaker 1 (24:36):
There were forty five patients that started in kindergarten this year.
Speaker 6 (24:40):
WHOA, how big is a kindergarten class is probably no
more than sixty at most.
Speaker 2 (24:47):
Just I'll let them keep going.
Speaker 3 (24:48):
But digest that a small Pennsylvania town, the entire kindergarten
class was sixty kids. The federal government stole money from
the paychecks of everyone in that town, in your paycheck,
in my paycheck. They stole our money and flooded the
(25:09):
town with Haitians and added forty five Haitian kindergarteners to
a tiny town that had sixty before. And the government
did it under the cover of the law, and they
did it with your money.
Speaker 2 (25:24):
God.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
Most yeah, in the one classroom is probably like twenty kids.
Speaker 6 (25:30):
I'm thinking maybe twenty five.
Speaker 7 (25:31):
Yeah, wow, So like the majority of the kindgardenization in
what two years or something like that, like yeah, yeah,
and they don't speak English.
Speaker 6 (25:42):
Well, actually, I think the younger kids. They probably the
younger kids.
Speaker 7 (25:49):
Okay, we're talking to a guy tomorrow who he had
to pull his seventh grader out of school because they
like they have resources.
Speaker 6 (25:56):
He was like, I've heard stories like that.
Speaker 5 (25:58):
Yeah, one of the things I guess that about the
the not speaking English like mid grades, midchool, middle school
grades where parents are having a problem because their kids
can't advance because the teachers are having to compensate for
the kids against.
Speaker 3 (26:14):
The up right, the federal government is attacking us with
our own money. Democrats are so evil. Now when they
get elected, they will not only open up the borders
so the drugs, the violence can come across it. Democrats
(26:35):
are so inherently evil. They will take your money and
fly foreigners in in masks and simply take over your town.
They'll take over your school, They'll run up the housing
costs so you can't afford to live there anymore.
Speaker 2 (26:54):
Violent crime.
Speaker 3 (26:55):
And the federal government, run by Democrats, did that to
you on purpose. It's not one of those oh whoopsy,
did this happen on purpose? They did that to you.
That is so deeply evil. I find it hard to
stomach these people. It blows me away. As to your
(27:18):
slave trade, is it a slave trade thing? When we
discuss the remaking of this town, that's the government using
legal immigration to remake and replace Americans. But when it
comes to illegal immigration, the government opening up the border
(27:39):
on purpose so the illegals can flood in here. That
is a slave trade. Those people who aren't the drug
mules those people come across are slaves who live lives.
Speaker 2 (27:52):
Of horror in this country.
Speaker 3 (27:54):
You don't even want to imagine those three hundred thousand
kids the Biden administration lost. You don't want to know
where they are and what they're doing right now. Believe me,
you don't. All right, all right now we have we
have a ton more to get to here, emails and
everything else. In fact, we're going to talk about censorship first, though,
(28:18):
Hang on.
Speaker 1 (28:20):
Feeling a little stocky.
Speaker 3 (28:23):
Yessey Kelly show on a Tuesday. You know, I'll get
to the comedy censorship thing in a moment. I told
you my mom's flying in tonight. As soon as I'm
done with the show, I have to race over and
pick her up from the airport. She's flying in because
I have that Big Tucker Live event tomorrow. Mom wants
to be there. She's here for two nights, two nights.
(28:48):
Nose for those of you who speak Mexican. She checked
a bag. She checked a bag. I don't even know
what to say unless I'm going to a place for
five days plus. I don't check bags. The Kellys don't
(29:12):
check bags. I will pack everything humanly possible in a
carry on or two. I don't add a half hour
when I get there to wait at baggage claim for
some dirtball in the back to choke slam my bag
down on top of everything. I don't do this, and
(29:33):
yet it's unreal. It doesn't matter how short the trip is.
She will pack, and then she'll say things when I
ask them, they Mom, do you why?
Speaker 2 (29:43):
Well? I never know what I'm gonna need. What do
you mean you don't know. We're not going into combat.
We're not walking into.
Speaker 4 (29:50):
The jungles of Vietnam where you have to pack for
every occasion.
Speaker 2 (29:55):
You're down here.
Speaker 3 (29:55):
For two days. You can check the weather. You need
what one pair of pants, okay, if you don't want
to be gross like.
Speaker 2 (30:02):
Me, two pairs of pants. You know the weather, you
need a shirt and some pants. The shoes you can
wear them like you're wearing your shoes. But I understand
she's a woman.
Speaker 3 (30:11):
Let's say you gotta add an extra pair of shoes
because they.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
Gotta look nice. But the okay, fine, this is all
one carry on bag. I don't even understand. I don't understand.
Speaker 3 (30:21):
And now, because it's mom, it's not like I can
do what I would do for a friend, which is
I'll be parked up the road.
Speaker 2 (30:28):
Call me when you have your bag. It's mom.
Speaker 3 (30:31):
So now I've got to get to the airport. I've
got to park my car. And we know that they're
gonna charge you forty five dollars an hour.
Speaker 2 (30:38):
To park your car anymore. Oh, Chris, you know they are.
What are you yelling about?
Speaker 3 (30:43):
What?
Speaker 2 (30:43):
Chris? What it is expensive? When's the last time you
parked your car at the airport? Chris? Last time I
parked my.
Speaker 3 (30:50):
Car at George Bush Airport, I was in town or
I was at the airport for I think a little
bit more than twenty four hours, like thirty hours total, dude,
I think it was over forty dollars. It was over
forty dollars. So don't tell me it's not expensive. I'm
gonna have to park, I'm gonna have to walk in,
I'm gonna have to sit there at baggage claim.
Speaker 2 (31:11):
I don't understand. I don't understand.
Speaker 3 (31:14):
There should be very little checking of the bags. Why
are you checking so many bags? I don't understand it anyway.
I am glad Mom's coming. I'm not glad sensors are here.
Why do they censor? You saw that new movie Matt
Walsh has out. Actually, we're gonna go see it this weekend.
My oldest likes Matt Walsh more than he likes me.
(31:36):
It's a little bit rude. But Matt Walsh has this
new like mockumentary documentary where it's called Ami Racist, and
I'm gonna take the fam to go see it this weekend.
And I saw that movie theaters are starting to cancel
screenings of it. A lot of movie theaters, not all
of them. It's still playing everywhere you can go see it,
but a lot of movie theaters are canceling screenings of it.
(31:59):
And then I this from Hillary Clinton was in that
same interview. But here's what Hillary Clinton said.
Speaker 8 (32:05):
Muller indicted a lot of Russians who were engaged in
direct election interference and boosting Trump back in twenty sixteen.
But I also think there are Americans who are engaged
in this kind of propaganda, and whether they should be
civilly or even in some cases criminally charged, is something
(32:29):
that would be a better deterrence.
Speaker 3 (32:33):
You want American citizens criminally charged, And let's be clear,
American citizens are already sitting in prison because our government
on many levels has turned communists. Douglas Mackie. Douglas Mackie
shared a meme, a political cartoon. He didn't even create it.
(32:55):
He shared a meme online with information that was false
about how to vote. They sentenced him. The United States
of America, the Land of the Free, sentenced him to
seven years in prison. Why do these people want to
shut up the opposition so badly? Why do they always
(33:17):
want to censor you?
Speaker 2 (33:19):
Why?
Speaker 3 (33:20):
Because they lie about everything, and they know they lie
about everything. We talk about the world of make believe
they're building for liberal aunt Peggy. And in fact we
talked about this. When it comes I forget exactly what
the subject was, but we were discussing how she feels.
She feels so strongly about something that's not true because
(33:44):
over time, through our poisonous education system and media and
Democrat politicians, over time, they're building a facade around her,
a fake world around her, like a movie set. They're
building the couch and the walls and the roof and
the windows, and they're slowly but surely building this world
of make believe around her so she can look around
(34:06):
and feel like she's in the real world, even though
she's not. She believes, she believes in things that simply
aren't real. The reason they try to hammer anyone exposing
the truth so badly, the reason they imprison their political opponents,
the reason they don't want you to go see a
documentary about the disgusting DEI. I don't even know what
you want to call it. It's just cultural Marxism, activism,
(34:29):
whatever word you want to put on it. The reason
is the communist is deathly afraid that world of make
believe they've built around Liberal ant Pagy might come down.
Speaker 2 (34:41):
If those walls fall over. And this has happened, You've
seen people.
Speaker 3 (34:45):
Maybe you are one who's converted from being a filthy
Democrat to being someone on the right, somewhere on the right,
wherever you landed. When those walls come down, When liberal
ant Pagy, when she looks around and sees that everything
she previously believed was a lie, those people oftentimes become
(35:07):
the most hardcore anti communists because, on top of the
truth they now know, there's also a deep seated anger
about having been deceived and lied to. Now liberal and
Peggy's looking around and she's ticked that the walls were
fake and the couch was fake, and she ends up
(35:29):
being on a mission to take these people down. That's
why they hammer so hard to silence their opposition, murder
their opposition, arrest their opposition. Don't go see that movie.
This shouldn't be allowed. That guy should be arrested. The
communist is completely invested in you will not you, in
(35:51):
your liberal and Peggy living in that world of make believe,
and he lives in fear of the walls coming down
on
Speaker 2 (36:00):
This has been a podcast from wor