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October 21, 2024 • 36 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from wo R.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
The Jesse Kelly Shaw. Let's have some fun.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
On a Monday. It is a great day.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
I am back.

Speaker 3 (00:18):
I have so missed you. I will explain everything in
a moment. I'm sorry I left you. It's Medal of
Honor Monday. We're gonna have a blast on Medal of
Honor Monday an hour from now, honoring a hero. I
will dig into your emails, which I have missed, voicemails tonight. Obviously,
we're gonna talk a ton tonight about it'll be kind

(00:40):
of centered around Trump's trip to McDonald's, but not in
the same way you've heard all day long. So we'll
talk about that more from the left and how they're
detaching themselves, Why they're detaching themselves, How did that happen.
We'll discuss that tonight. We'll discuss the friend enemy distinction.
Ever heard that phrase, the friend enemy distinction.

Speaker 2 (01:03):
Don't worry if you're confused. We will get to that.

Speaker 3 (01:05):
It's about how the communists think about things, FEMA screwing
everything up. We might even bring up the girl Scouts. Well,
mock Tim Walls. We will laugh, we might cry. We
will try to get through the night.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
In fact, we're.

Speaker 3 (01:20):
Gonna have a blast getting through tonight on the world
famous Jesse Kelly's show. Now I owe you an explanation.
I know you like to give me crap, which is
not nice.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
No, I love it.

Speaker 3 (01:33):
I know you like to give me crap about being
gone whenever I'm gone, whenever the suits call me away,
whenever I take a vacation. I know you like to
give me crap about it. And I understand what that
is like. Remember I for the longest time, especially when
I was working construction out of town, and I'm a
talk radio consumer, a fan, and I had my guys too.

(01:57):
I love this show. This is my favorite show. This
show helps me, helps me get through the day. And
I know what it's like when you sign on and
that guy's gone and it's a substitute host. And thank
you to James T. Harris, who did a wonderful job.
I should know.

Speaker 2 (02:09):
But I know it sucks.

Speaker 3 (02:12):
I know it sucks, and I want you to know
that I do feel a responsibility. I feel an obligation
to you to make your day better. What I do
is not important, but that I do love. I love
making your day better.

Speaker 2 (02:25):
And there was a lot of this, Jesse.

Speaker 1 (02:29):
I had such a bad day at work today and
I was so excited to listen to you, but unfortunately
it's James Harris again tonight. He's great, but he's just
not the same as hearing your voice. You owe me
some freedo bandito, my friend, be back soon.

Speaker 3 (02:43):
We miss you. I do owe you some freedo bandido,
which I'll get to in a while, but I owe
you an explanation.

Speaker 2 (02:49):
So just let me get this out. Okay.

Speaker 3 (02:54):
You know I told you before last week that my
folks had come down to visit. If you listen a lot,
you'll know that my parents, my mom, Dad, Don, Lisa,
they came down to visit us.

Speaker 2 (03:07):
And I'll tell you something.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
My folks never it's just kind of a Kelly thing.
Never ever, ever, ever, ever would stay with us in
our house, and they passed that down to me.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
I'm very much that way. Now.

Speaker 3 (03:22):
I'll stay with my wife's parents. But it's not a
Kelly thing. You don't stay with other people, you don't
wear out, you're welcome, you go get a hotel, you
go get your own place. It's a kelly thing. Not
defending it, it's just it's the way my family has been.
It's the way my dad is. They would never stay
even a night for the most part, in our house.

(03:43):
They came down two weeks ago and for the only
time ever in my forty three years on this planet,
they stayed with us without explanation, my mom, my dad,
they stayed. We had an extra we have an extra
room in the house. They stayed in our house. Last Saturday.

(04:06):
We I don't know, you know what Saturday I'm talking about.
It's not the one we just had. My brain's a
little bit fried right now. Stay with me. Last last Saturday,
my dad, me and my boys, James and Luke, we
went out fishing.

Speaker 2 (04:20):
We went out.

Speaker 3 (04:21):
It was just here in the bay down around Houston.
We just went out fishing and catch must had a blast,
a bunch of laughs. And then got back that day
had the kids in their Grandpa are just so close.
He just dods on them. And honestly, he softened so
much as he got older. He dods on them the
way he never really did with me. He he just

(04:43):
a great grandpa. Right, we get back from that day,
we had a great day. We had a great lunch,
We had a great time. You know, my dad likes
to eat.

Speaker 2 (04:49):
That's where I.

Speaker 3 (04:49):
Learned to eat, you know, It's where I learned my
love of food. I got that from my own man.
We got back that day, hung out with them that night,
said good night to him that night. The next morning
was Sunday. They got up before I got up. I
had my alarm scheduled so I could say goodbye to them.
But my dad is very much like me. It's where

(05:13):
I got it. He wanted to get to the airport.
No big deal. I'll say it about it Jesse later.
I'll call him on the phone. So before my alarm
could go off, he was up. My mom was up,
through their stuff in the car the head of the airport.
They take off. This is this is Sunday. They fly
home that night, have a nice evening, he and my mother.

(05:33):
They go to sleep. He dies that night in his sleep.
My dad died. Woke up Monday morning. It was five AM,
and I had to get up pretty soon. James has
cross country practiced super early every single morning, so I'm
kind of slowly getting to be awake that time of day.

Speaker 2 (05:52):
Anyway, super early in the morning. I woke up that morning.

Speaker 3 (05:56):
I haven't even told you this Chris, I haven't even
told you this story. So I woke up that morning.
It was five am. My phone is always set to
do not disturb, but it'll ring if it's someone on
my short list, short favorites list for just such an occasions. This,
I kind of get jarred awake because my phone is
vibrating and I see it's my mom.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
I'm trying to shake the cobwebs out.

Speaker 3 (06:19):
I reach over and I grab the phone and I'm thinking,
I'm looking at it that it's my mom, and as
I'm trying to wake up, it ends. The call ends,
so I missed it. But I'm thinking to myself, okay,
probably a butt dial. Look, my folks, when you get older,
this happens. I'm sure you maybe you are this grandparent,
or maybe you are this older person, or maybe you

(06:41):
have one in your life. They butt dial, you know,
they leave the phone open. My mom will butt dial
you once a week, she just will. So I thought, okay,
kind of odd, But my mom butt dialed me. As
I'm looking at the phone, the missed call thing pops
up and then I see I have missed a text
message from my mother from two hours earlier. And it

(07:01):
just said, call me. Now, that is not a butt dial.
I don't know what it was. I don't know why
it was, because this is totally unexpected. No one knew
this was coming. But I knew. I knew right then
my dad was dead. I knew he was. I sprung
out of bed, as you can imagine, ran out of
the room because my wife is still asleep. Called my mom.

(07:25):
She answers the phone. Obviously, very very sad dad has died.
Where I was last week is exactly what you would expect.
That morning, I immediately get on my phone. I'm trying
to book a flight. I get a flight up to Bozeman, Montana,
up where they live. My wife, because Aubrey's just a
freaking angel, she's packing my bag for me. I'm running

(07:48):
around the house trying to even put together all this
that my dad has gone. My wife packs my bag
for me. I take off, Bob and the boys flew
up there, and for the last week we have been
up in Montana with family and friends and community. Obviously,
funeral service for my father, which is I don't know

(08:09):
why you would want to do this, but you are
welcome to view it. It's available online and you can
go find it at the funeral home.

Speaker 2 (08:16):
What is it?

Speaker 3 (08:17):
Doc and Nelson? D okk n doc and Nelson is
the name of a funeral home they put there's a
link to his obituary, and there's a link, I believe
to the service. If I yeah, that's right, there's a
link to the service. I'm not asking you to do that.
Please don't feel the need to watch a funeral, right,
especially for someone who didn't know. I did speak there
on behalf of my father. Wasn't many of us who spoke,

(08:38):
but I spoke there, talked about that. If that's something interesting,
you're welcome to. But that's where I was last week,
and trying to make sure my mother is taken care of,
trying to make sure, you know, just lost her husband
of forty seven years, trying to pick up the pieces
as best we can and make sure my mom is
going to be okay, squared away all those things. That

(09:01):
is where I was. We flew back last night. Do
not be worried about me. I got your endless, endless
emails and messages and I have, honestly, just being honest
with you, Chris had a stack of them for me.

(09:22):
I can't believe how many there are as. I walked
into the studio today and I sat down to try
to read them before the show, and I just couldn't
do it. I'm gonna wait, I'm gonna save them that.
It's not that I'm not gonna read them. I have
them all set aside. When I'm off the air and
I don't have to talk anymore and I get some

(09:42):
time tonight, I'm gonna go.

Speaker 2 (09:44):
Home and I'm gonna read them, and thank you.

Speaker 3 (09:49):
A lot of people were telling me, don't come back
to work yet, don't come back to work yet. It
shouldn't be here. Take take some more time off, because look,
I am hurting. But the truth is this, here's just truth.
I feel a responsibility to you.

Speaker 2 (10:07):
I do.

Speaker 3 (10:07):
I feel responsible to you if I feel responsible for you.
So that's part of the reason I'm here. And the
other part of the reason I'm here is you're part
of my family too, and that's it. I just wanted
to be here and talk to you. So now we're
gonna move on. We're gonna talk some politics, we're gonna

(10:28):
do all this. I'm gonna be fine. Don't you worry
about me? All right, All right, enough of that, that's
where I was. Now, let's talk some politics, shall we.
I need to get away from all this and talk
some politics for a little bit. I love you, thank you,
thank you so much. I will be bringing up the
importance of community really briefly next and then we'll talk
about politics. So before we do any of that community,

(10:53):
if you were annoyed by the fact that's been a
theme on this show, get ready to be extra annoyed
because that is going to be ramped up. Surrounding yourself
with people who love you and care for you, and
that includes companies as well. I need to really, really
need to stress that that includes where we spend our money,

(11:15):
our community, we come together. And I talk to you
all the time about Pure Talk, don't I. I talk
to you all the time about them, because I am
so sickened by where these major corporations send our money
and spend our money. I'm sickened by it. Pure Talk.

(11:37):
They're the cell phone company that shares your values. They
care about veterans, they care about family, and not only
are they on the same Vibe network. They'll save you
a pile of money where you can some places you can't,
but where you can spend your money with companies who
share your values. Okay, if you want to switch, I

(12:00):
would recommend it, dial pound two five zero and say
Jesse Kelly, all right, I'll save you a bunch of money.
Switch to pure talk. Now, let's talk about community in
politics next, what Chris, we can make jokes.

Speaker 2 (12:15):
It is the Jesse.

Speaker 3 (12:17):
Kelly Show on a Monday. I am so happy to
be back with you, my fam I appreciate you so much,
and we're going to dig into politics here in just
a quick second. I did want to say one final
thing about the whole father dying death in the family
week I had last week. You know how, we talk

(12:37):
a lot about community. I talk a lot about legal
and local and taking back your community, getting to know
your neighbors, introverts.

Speaker 2 (12:47):
People like me.

Speaker 3 (12:48):
I'm speaking to me to getting to know your neighbors,
having a church community. I talk a lot about that.
We've spoken about that a lot in the important of that.
It's one thing to talk about it, it's another thing
to experience it. Part of the reason I talk about
it is I've seen the experience of it. Last week was,

(13:13):
as you can imagine, the worst week of my mother's life.
Wasn't exactly a wonderful week for myself, for my sister
Mickey either. But the worst week of my mother's life,
husband of forty seven years gone. Where do you even begin?
And that's never going to change. It'd always be the
worst week of her life. But for the last week
I have watched her community surround her and love her

(13:40):
and build her up, her church community. By the time
I got there on Monday, there was an army of
She's in a Bible study with some girl, with some girls,
some ladies in her church and their husbands. They were
all in her kitchen. By the time I walked in
the door, they were there, holding her, holding her up,
come her, talking, laughing, crying. They were there her side

(14:04):
of the family, which they're very, very close. They flew
out like a freaking army. We single handedly sustained the
Bozeman airport for the last week because her family, like
an army, came flying into town. Some of them are
still there as we speak, making sure she's cared for
her neighbors around her. She has this army of people

(14:26):
around her, and an army is probably not speaking. That's
probably not speaking out a turn. Given the amount of
guns in ammunition in that area. There is an army
around her. They're already winter rising her home. They're staying
with her to make sure she's loved and protected and
surrounded by guns and ammunition and just people who love her.

(14:48):
And they're having us over cooking. I saw you see
the importance of community when the chips are down, and
when death in a misery and all this stuff strikes it.
I know you maybe have gone through this in your
life in one way or another as well. This is
the hopefully gonna be the last thing I say about
it for now, But the importance of community cannot possibly

(15:11):
be overstated. Get to know your neighbors. I am guilty
of this too. I don't want to. I want to
stay home. It was a busy work week. I don't
feel like doing this. I don't get to know your neighbors.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
Get involved in your in your.

Speaker 3 (15:31):
Church in a more in a bigger way than just
sitting in the back. Okay, And hey, you want to
talk about pointing fingers here, this is me too. I'm
not involved in any kind of a small group or
anything like that at church. And I'll be frank, it's
just doing me talking A lot of that is because
what I do now, I don't. I don't feel like

(15:52):
I would ever be comfortable sharing something personal and in
some group of people, because you know, I would always
worry that it's just you know what. I'm sure I'm
getting the point across. I'm going to change that neighbors community,
your town. You're just build a community for yourself, not

(16:14):
just for the for the future of someone's going to die. Look,
we're going to start digging into politics now. The government
in this country is really really evil. We have problems
that come that they may come from our own government,
they may come from foreign governments, war, disease. I read

(16:34):
something today. Now you can't really trust anything out of
our intelligence communities. But the intelligence communities are getting very,
very concerned about a massive cyber attack on our election.
Now there's nothing you can do about that. Don't get
yourself in a panic. What's going to come is what's
going to come. But what I'm saying is just picture that.

(16:56):
Picture what happens if electronic voting machines start shutting down
or fritzing out on election day and they can't count
vote totals. Just walk through that in your mind. The chaos, anger,
and anarchy. No matter how that shook out in the end,
President Dome or President Trump, no matter how that shook

(17:19):
out in the end, half the country would be one
hundred percent sure their votes were just cheated. It would
just think what might come from these things? And China
sets off an emp and cooks all the electronics. Who's
going to surround you? Who are you going to surround
build a community? I have to be better about this.

(17:44):
You have to be better about this because for better
or worse, those are going to be your people. And look,
I just told you died in the middle of the
night out of nowhere. You never know when worse is
coming to your doorstep. It comes for all of us, right,
none of us escape it. It comes for all of
us all right now, finally I give you my word,

(18:06):
it's time for politics. McDonald's being out.

Speaker 2 (18:10):
Of touch hang on a.

Speaker 3 (18:12):
Jesse Kelly show on a Monday. So happy to be
back here with you, talking to you, missed you. Let's
do some politics, shall we? We have Medal of Honor
Monday coming up about a half hour from now. A
huge theme on the show is going to be losing
touch with the people, pulling away from reality. How does

(18:35):
this happen? Okay, so obviously I know you have heard
by now unless you have been living in a cave
in the mountains of the Himalayas. You know about Donald
Trump and his trip to McDonald's. Donald Trump quote working
at McDonald's. Donald Trump doing a political stunt at McDonald's.

Speaker 2 (18:54):
Why would he do this? What happened here?

Speaker 3 (18:57):
Well, he did it one because he loves that kind
of a thing too. He did it because Kamala Harris
of course lied and claimed that she had worked there before,
that she worked the fries. And because Trump's specialty is
getting under people's skin and aggravating people, Trump decided he
was gonna show up, do a campaign stop at McDonald's,

(19:20):
throw on an apron, and work there. I'm going for
a job right now at McDonald's. I've had I really
wanted to do this all my life, and now I'm
gonna do it. Because she didn't do it, thank you
very much. All she had me go. And I'll be honest,
I was flying back yesterday and I had been kind
of out of touch with the news. It was just

(19:41):
everything that was going on, and this was one of
the first political things I had seen, and I on
the plane. I'm not gonna look, I'm not gonna brag
about wealth. But I spent the eight dollars for the
Wi Fi on the plane. Oh yeah, Chris, don't It's fine, Chris.
I'm sure you can get I'll be reimbursed. It'll be fine.
Chris is not doing well with that. But I spent
the eight dollars, I got the airplane Wi Fi, and

(20:02):
I decided I should probably catch up on politics. I
pretty much made a scene on the plane, laughing like
an idiot at Trump at Trump's. At Trump, just how
good he is at that stuff. Besides Bill Clinton. Actually
he may have topped to Bill Clinton. He's just one

(20:22):
of the greatest retail politicians I've ever seen in my life.
He's so good at this because you actually have worked
at McDonald's.

Speaker 1 (20:33):
Now now I have worked at I've now worked for
fifteen minutes.

Speaker 2 (20:37):
Worth about you put the resume I ever worked here?
Why would she lie out this sport like that?

Speaker 3 (20:44):
Okay, so let's talk about something. Is it not really
going to be about that? You know that portion of it.
It was funny, it was great, It was hilarious. But
we'll come back to Trump's portion of it. But why
can't they do that? Why are they so bad at that?

(21:04):
Why can't they pull it off? Well, we have had
this discussion in a very different way before, but it's
important to understand some things about how societies work, how
the left thinks, why they fail at certain things. Have
you ever heard a story about an ancient king, a

(21:28):
monarch of some kind who would go undercover amongst the people.
There are many, many, many who have done it. If
you want to look it up, I could give you
a list of names. James the fifth of Scotland. Honestly,
Henry the eighth is rumored to have done it, but
we don't have confirmation of that. Nero remember that here
a history episode Nero used to do it. But the

(21:50):
this is a tiny list. Monarch after monarch after monarch
throughout history have dropped the robes, dropped the gold drop,
the bodyguards, dropped.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
All these things.

Speaker 3 (22:02):
Dressed up as commoners in disguise, left the castle and
went and walked amongst the people, walked in their homes,
walked in their markets, smelled what they smelled, things like that.
Why would you do that? Because mankind has known for

(22:25):
the longest time that physically experiencing something, even if it's
in a tiny, tiny way physically, experience experiencing something cannot
be duplicated. And this is something that people have a

(22:45):
hard time understanding today because we are in the era
of technology, we're in the area of area, We're in
the era. By a quick note, again, my brain is
scrambled eggs right now. I'm gonna I'm gonna screw up
more than I normally do. But we're in an era
of zoom phone calls and these types of things, and
we think we have lied to ourselves and we've convinced

(23:08):
ourselves that this is enough and that it is the same.
But it is not the same. It can get you by,
you can survive on it, it is not the same
if I were Let's talk about construction, because actually we'll
bring it back to Trump. Trump, as you know, is
a rich guy and was a rich kid. His dad
was rich, rich businessman, rich guy, rich kid. Why does

(23:32):
Donald Trump always in a full suit and tie? Why
does he walk into McDonald's and people love it and
he's almost at home. Look, he doesn't work there, has
never worked at McDonald's. That's part of what makes it ridiculous.
But why is he at home? Why do the people
love it? Why does he show up in North Carolina

(23:53):
in a hurricane ravaged place. People haven't been able to shower,
they're starving, and they love it. Why does he walk
into a fire department and they love it? Why does
he go talk to union workers? He just went to
a barber shop in the freaking bronx and they loved it.

Speaker 2 (24:09):
Why?

Speaker 3 (24:10):
Well, Donald Trump's father did to him what those ancient
monarchs used to do. He made Donald Trump step out
of the ivory tower, out of the penthouse. He used
to make Donald Trump physically spend time on his construction

(24:32):
projects at work. You go down there and you smell
what they smell. You understand their hardships, You eat what
they eat. You hear how they talk, their concerns.

Speaker 2 (24:47):
Why would you?

Speaker 3 (24:48):
How does this man grow up to be a billionaire,
almost eighty years old, former president and he can walk
into McDonald's in hand out quarter pounders with cheese and
not just look comfortable with it, look like he's enjoying
himself and the people are geeking out as well.

Speaker 2 (25:03):
How does that happen?

Speaker 3 (25:05):
He has physically walked among them and has learned not
only what they go through, not only at least how
to talk like they talk, even if he doesn't have
those personal concerns in his life.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
It's not only.

Speaker 3 (25:20):
That, but the reason you walk amongst the people as
a king. The reason if you're Donald Trump you walk
in the firehouse and hand out pizzas, you walk into
McDonald's and hand out or Burger Max, Big Max. The
reason you do that is you learn to lose your
disdain for the people. When you are socioeconomically above people,

(25:48):
when you are socioeconomically in a different place, at a
higher place than other people. The easiest thing in the world,
because you are human and I am human, and we
all have egos, the easiest thing in the world is
to eventually consider yourself to be legitimately more important, better

(26:11):
than them, and to kind of resent them and have
disdain for them. Unless you break bread with them, unless
you sit in the barbershop, unless you sit in McDonald's,
unless you sit in East Palestine, Ohio, unless you look

(26:35):
and experience where they eat, where they live, you will
eventually have disdain for them. And then what happens from
there is death for a monarch or death for leadership
will set monarchy asides.

Speaker 2 (26:48):
We don't have that.

Speaker 3 (26:50):
What happens there is death for leadership. What happens is
not only do you not understand them, you will grow
to despise them. It is human nature. The despising them
part is kind of where we're going to go to next.
And we'll talk about why that happened, how that happened.
I want to I want to talk about something else
real quick.

Speaker 2 (27:08):
Speaking of.

Speaker 3 (27:10):
Speaking of those who serve first responders, fireman, I have
a new partner and I'm just absolutely in love with them.
It's called gov X, and I am sorry if you
cannot participate. The gov X is for current and former military,

(27:32):
current and former first responders. Gov X is for the
people who serve and have served. Now what is gov X, Well,
it's not the government it is I should probably apologize
to you right now. I'm probably gonna make you broke.
It's the greatest freaking website I've ever seen in my
entire life. If you are current, former military, current former

(27:55):
first responder, your membership is free. Don't worry your mayor
just go sign up free membership, and you have brands
in gear like you've never seen in your life. You
want some ray band, sunglasses, smoke Ley's. It's on gove x.
You know I always complaining about I want to Yedi cooler.
It's on god K gove x. You wanna take the

(28:15):
family on a cruise, gove x. Want to go to
a theme parks?

Speaker 2 (28:18):
Gove x.

Speaker 3 (28:19):
You want huge discounts on gear, on trips, on whatever.
You served, Go freaking get one at gove x dot com.
You used to promo code Jesse. You get fifteen bucks
off your first purchase as well. Govx dot com. You served,
let them serve you. You cannot imagine the cool six

(28:41):
stuff they have on that website. Govx dot com promo
code Jesse.

Speaker 2 (28:46):
We'll be back the Jesse Kelly Show. I like it.

Speaker 3 (28:49):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Monday. Medal
of Honor Monday coming up ten minutes from now. We
are digging into how the immanists got so out of touch,
why they got out of touch, the danger that comes
with that. Why are they so angry about Trump doing

(29:10):
a political stunt at McDonald's. We're having a long talk
about this right now, So before I get to the
sound bites and explaining it and what noow, we're gonna
we're just having a larger conversation, a wider conversation about that.
Let me explain it to you this way. Have you ever,
ever in your life have you ever complained about a

(29:31):
waiter or a waitress screwing up your order? Look it's me,
you know I have, Chris has, Cory has ever. Everyone has,
So that's understandable. People get mad the restaurants screwed up
their order. Now you know who, never, ever, ever, ever, ever,

(29:51):
I shouldn't say never, who rarely makes a huge scene
about it. They may complain, they may even speak to
the manager, they may get things fit. But you know
who doesn't really make a big scene about that. Somebody
who has worked in a restaurant. Somebody who has worked

(30:12):
as that waitress, as that waiter on your feet all
day long, taken orders, rude customers. These people don't tip.
You didn't screw up the order. The chef didn't read
the ticket right. They screwed up the order. Now the
customer hates you now your tipping. The people who have
lived that life have so much more mercy for what

(30:35):
the waiter and waitress go through. They have understood it,
They have stood in those shoes, They understand what it
is like. But if you have never lived that life,
you've never tasted that life, then what is a restaurant
for you? You walk in, look and I love the restaurant, guy, right,
I love restaurants. What's better than Red Lobster. You walk in,

(30:56):
you sit down at Red Lobster, you order your amazing
seafood f which is going to be incredible, as you know,
and it's just like magic. You're almost it's almost like
you're a king. This waitress, she'll bring me whatever I want. Hey,
I want more water, extra cheddar, baby biscuits. Hey, waitress,
bring me some of those famous Red Lobster cheese sticks.

(31:16):
Hey do this?

Speaker 2 (31:18):
Do that?

Speaker 3 (31:18):
Hey, waitress, I'm ready. And they'll wait on you, hand
and footed. You just hand out orders and eventually food
comes to you. And because it's Red Lobster, it's the
best food in the world. And if you have no
frame of reference and you've never walked in those shoes
and lived in that life, you will be meaner to them,

(31:39):
you will be less understanding to them, your mercy will
be lower. So I'm going to read something to you.
This is courtesy of the rabbit Hole. I want to
make sure they get credit for digging up the information.
They didn't produce it, but it's where I found it,
so I wanted to make sure they get credit. I'm
gonna read this. This is a lot of the information

(32:00):
was in my book, The Anti Communist Manifesto. But these
are the professors. The percentage of them in these fields
that are democrats. Communications almost one hundred percent, Anthropology almost
one hundred percent, religion ninety eight, English ninety seven, sociology
ninety seven, Art ninety seven, music, theater. I'm not even

(32:21):
going to read you the percentages now, but this is art, music, theater, classics, geoscience,
environmental language, biology, philosophy, his history, psychology, POLYPSI computers that
I could go mathematics, call me after CAMMI, after COMMI,
after coming through year after year after year of communist
infiltration and infection, they have slowly but surely taken over

(32:46):
the Ivory Tower institutions, and they've slowly but surely taken
over the gates, the choke points. And yes, if you
are an evil communist trying to conquer and destroy a society,
that's wonderful for you to a point.

Speaker 2 (33:04):
But what can happen from there is.

Speaker 3 (33:07):
You never ever ever have to walk a mile in
the right Winger's shoes.

Speaker 2 (33:14):
You don't know what he goes through. You don't live
his life.

Speaker 3 (33:18):
You end up with complete disdain for the people you've
never been taught about and you've never lived.

Speaker 2 (33:26):
How could they?

Speaker 3 (33:28):
This has been a famous thing that's been going around
for the last week. I do know enough to know
that Kamala Harris is at a rally. She's at a
rally and somebody is there. You'll hear the audio is
not great. Somebody is there shouting Christ is King, Jesus's Lord.
I don't have the exact verb, but I don't remember
exactly what it is, but it's along those lines.

Speaker 2 (33:49):
Now you are Kamala Harris.

Speaker 3 (33:52):
Let's just say, and this is probably the case because
she's a communist. Let's say you hate Christians, you hate God,
nothing but disdain for religious peace?

Speaker 2 (34:00):
What all? Okay, I'll even give you that.

Speaker 3 (34:01):
I'm not gonna argue with. Okay, Let's say that's your fine,
that's your thing. You believe whatever you want to believe,
totally free to do that. You also understand, or at
least you should, that people who practice religion are a
large large portion of our society, A large portion people believe.

Speaker 2 (34:19):
In things above them. They do.

Speaker 3 (34:21):
So when you're running for president, if someone is shouting
something like Jesus's Lord, you know, or at least you should,
that's a moment to be really understanding, or in the
very least you don't dog them. But it just came

(34:41):
out of her. She can't help it. This is what
she said, and they.

Speaker 2 (34:44):
Did as he intended. Oh, you guys are at the
wrong rally.

Speaker 3 (34:56):
How could anybody be that stupid? Yeah, good point, Chris said,
twenty percent of the country alone, it's Catholic twenty percent alone.
How could you possibly be that stupid? How could you
say something like that at a rally and now it's
all across the country being talked about everywhere. How could
you say it? You never went to church, or forget

(35:21):
about church. You have never because of your Ivory Tower upbringing,
you don't have to go to church. You've never been
around Christians, practicing Catholics, Orthodox Jews, honestly practicing Muslims. You
have never, in your atheist Ivory Tower world, you have

(35:43):
never spent any time amongst people who have these beliefs.
In fact, in academia. These beliefs are always talked about
as if the oh, that's what the stupid rubes think.
And so when you have an honest moment at a rally,
it just comes out of you. You've never sat with them,
you've never spoken with them, and the disdain for them
just comes bubbling out of you, pulling yourself away. It's

(36:07):
gonna be a long time to be fascinating talk, at
least I think so.

Speaker 1 (36:10):
This has been a podcast from wor
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