Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from woor. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
such a magnificent Monday, and on tap. For this hour,
We're gonna do a little medal of Honor Monday here
and just a moment, I am gonna do a little bit,
very very brief, little bit of history around that, just
(00:20):
a couple of minutes long, maybe hopefully, and then we'll
talk about some communist violence. I'll put a bow on
that one. Trump said some really good things today. I
don't play a ton of White House audio just because
that's not the kind of radio show we do, but
I'm gonna play some of that. We'll talk about an
ancient altar and why the Left is now defending child sacrifice. Oh,
(00:43):
that and so much more is still to come on
the world famous Jesse Kelly Show tonight. Now the Okinawa
campaign of the Pacific War. Because this is gonna be
our medal of honor citation. I'm gonna get to that
in a moment. Remember time for Medal of Honor money
day every Monday, second hour started the second hour. This
(01:04):
is what we do. We read a medal of honor citation. Well,
the war in the Pacific. Okinawa was the last of
the ground campaigns, the last of it all. The stuff
that really happened after Okinawa was a bunch of bombing,
including the atom bombs. Right, But the last and worst
(01:27):
of the campaigns was Okinawa. And that makes sense why
it would be the worst. If you track our progress
across the Pacific, as we're trying to get closer and
closer to the Japanese homeland, it would make sense that
the final one is the closest one. The Japanese were
painfully aware that if we took Okinawa were practically on
(01:48):
their doorstep, and they were determined to hold it at
any cost. Now, Okinawa is a whole long I could
do a whole show on it. In fact I probably have,
But for the purpose of our conversation, for the purpose
of our Medal of Honor citation, I wanted to explain
that they were not only dug in in caves and
(02:10):
emplacements all over Okinawa, that there was one location Marines
will all know with three hills, three hills that were
used to protect each other. The hills don't worry about remembering.
These names were sugar Loaf, Half Moon, and Horseshoe. They're famous,
(02:32):
that's obviously. That wasn't the official name. Those were the
names the Marines gave to them. Half Loaf, sugar or
sugar loaf, half moon, and horseshoe. Okay. And the Japanese
held these hilltops and they were slaughtering everybody who went by,
and so you had to charge your way up the
hilltop and then they would slaughter you on the way up.
(02:55):
If you happen to make it up and take over
the emplacements, then they would simply counterattack and slaughter you again.
And this was a massacre. More Marines died on these
little hills than you can possibly count. And this is
one of those things we've talked about this before, where
you'd send up whole units and the whole unit would
be gone. Essentially, you'd send up two hundred men, you
(03:15):
get ten back. That's the kind of death we're talking
about here now. Jason or James Day, James Lewis Day,
United States Marines. I'm going to read his citation and
then I'll probably fill in some blanks if I don't
do it along the way, just to set it up
for you. His squad was pretty much wiped out At
(03:39):
first he was down to seven or eight men, and
then he was down to three men, including himself, and
then a mortar round hits, and finally it's just him
and one other guy. Two guys, two guys who get
left on the hill. They can't retreat. There's nowhere else
to go. They're left on the hill, and the Japanese
(04:02):
want them off the hill without further ado. Right, Hey,
honoring those he went above and beyond its Medal of
Honor Monday for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk
(04:23):
of his own life, above and beyond the call of
duty as a squad leader in sustained combat operations against
Japanese forces. On the first day, Corporal Day rallied his
squad in the remnants of another unit and led them
to a critical position forward of the front lines of
Sugarloaf Hill. Soon thereafter, they came under an intense mortar
(04:46):
and artillery barrage that was quickly followed by a ferocious
ground attack by some forty Japanese soldiers. Despite the loss
of one half of his men, Corporal Day remained at
the forefront, shouting encouragement, hurling hand grenades, and directing deadly fire,
thereby repelling the determined enemy reinforced by six men. He
(05:10):
led his squad in repelling three fierce night attacks, but
suffered five additional marines killed and one wounded, whom he
assisted to safety. Uh, pause for a second. He ran
them all to safety anyway. Upon hearing nearby calls for
Corman assistance, Corporal Day braved heavy enemy fire to escort
(05:33):
four seriously wounded marines one at a time to safety.
He's carrying these men off the hill and going back, okay.
Corporal Day then manned a light machine gun assisted by
a wounded marine, and halted another night attack. In this
ferocious action, his machine gun was destroyed and he suffered
(05:53):
multiple white phosphorus and fragmentation wounds. That was when a
mortar round exploded and blew up his gun and killed
the other marine. He reorganized his defensive position in time
to halt a fifth enemy attack with devastating small arms fire.
Now I want to make sure I'm clear on this.
This is now Corporal Day and one other marine ber totally.
(06:16):
I believe the guy's name was who ended up losing
his life later on two marines all alone. The Japanese
know there are only two marines, and they are coming
at these guys repeatedly at night, trying to get them
off of this hill all right. On three separate occasion occasions,
Japanese soldiers closed to within a few feet of his foxhole,
(06:39):
but were killed by Corporal Day. During the second day,
the enemy conducted numerous unsuccessful swarming attacks against his exposed position.
On the third day, a wounded and exhausted Corporal Day
repulsed the enemy's final attack, killing a dozen enemies soldier
(07:00):
at close range. Pause again really quickly. Part of the
one of the ways he was doing this, him and
his marine. It was pitch black and they could hear.
They had to wait until they heard the Japanese coming
up the hill. You didn't want to shoot because then
the Japanese would know exactly where you were, because your
weapon gives off a flash. Him and his buddy were
(07:23):
pulling the pins on grenades and rolling them down the hills,
blowing up Japanese people for three days. Dug into this hill.
On the third day, I wounded an exhausted Corporal Day
repulse the enemy's final attack, killing a dozen enemy soldiers
at close range. Having yielded no ground, and with more
(07:43):
than a hundred enemy dead around his position, Corporal Day
preserved the lives of his fellow Marines and made a
significant contribution to the success of the Okinawa campaign. By
his extraordinary heroism, repeated acts of valor, and quinnisen battlefield leadership,
Corporal Day inspired the efforts of his outnumbered marines to
(08:06):
defeat a much larger enemy force, reflecting great credit upon himself,
end upholding the highest traditions of the Marine Marine Corps
in the United States Naval Service, all alone, three days
on Sugar Loaf Hill fighting off waves of suicidal Japanese attackers,
(08:30):
and he lived to tell the tale. That is a beast,
and he actually survived it. He didn't get the Medal
of Honor until shockingly, he didn't get it till decades later.
I think it was Bush or maybe even Clinton, if
I remember right, one of those two first Bush hw Bush.
(08:50):
It was Bush or Clinton who actually did it. Chris said,
how do you sleep those three days? You don't, You
wake up and you fight the entire time. You live
on only a reno. You don't sleep, you don't do anything.
You expect to die when it's just you and a buddy,
and you've watched all your other buddies be killed or wounded.
You're everyone. You're banking on it being your last one,
(09:12):
and your goal is simply to kill as many and
take as many with you as you possibly can. And
if you're really good at killing people like Day was,
maybe you can kill so many that you can survive.
And he did survive. We don't have to play taps.
We did. We've gotten a couple emails in the past
of people who don't want us to play taps anymore.
For one reason or another. I wish you wouldn't play taps.
(09:32):
Let me be crystal clear that will never ever, ever, ever, ever,
ever ever stop for any reason on this show. If
you're sick of it, turn off the radio and go
listen to something else. We play taps to honor the fallen.
We will always play taps to honor the fallen. If
you don't like it, you can roll it up in
a tight little wad and shove it with the sun
don't shine. Is that perfectly clear. I don't care about
(09:55):
anything you have to say about it. On this show.
That's what we do, not just the medal of honor, guys,
the people die in training. I don't give a crap
whether you like it or not. All right, all right,
we'll touch on a little bit more communist violence. We're
gonna talk about what did some executive at Ford do?
(10:15):
And what's this title? And we're gonna play some trump comments. Next.
You're listening to the Jesse kill It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Chris, what version of that song was that
you just played? Was that? Was it some kind of No?
It wasn't. No, there was Was that some kind of
live version or something like that? Whatever it was? No,
(10:37):
whatever it was, it sucked. Okay, and it sucked. I
can sniff out a live version a mile away. Everyone
knows live music's great in person. It's devastating if you
have to listen to it. No, it is great in person. Chris.
Quit being such a party booper. You're just trying to
save money. No, there's nothing worse than when you download
a song and it turns out it's the live version
(10:57):
and the singer has to make adjustments to how sings
a saw and you have the crowd, Oh my gosh,
he's my favorite. It sucks. Is nothing more worth worse,
especially when you paid a buck for it. What Chris,
what Johnny Cash at fulsome prison is obviously an exception.
Anything Johnny Cash does is an exception, Chris, we already
(11:18):
know that that's built in. Gosh, back to communist violence.
I'm gonna ask you something because we're getting a bunch
of emails some people who don't really understand how they
can justify it. How can you justify it? How can
you justify it? Well, I'm gonna ask you a question,
Chris Corey. I'm gonna ask you both. I have not
prepped them ahead of time. I'm gonna ask everybody a question. Okay,
(11:41):
I'm gonna ask you a question, and don't worry. It's
not complicated. It's not only yes or no. But I
don't want you to think about it. First thing that
pops into your head, okay, the first thing that pops
into your head, yes or no. You know who Captain
America is, right, everyone knows who Captain the fitional character
Captain America. Would you consider Captain America to be a
(12:05):
violent man? Most people say no immediately. Most people would say, well, no,
why not? He beats people up all the time. I
realized it's fictional, but I was reading his comic books
when I was a child, shoots people, beats people up,
(12:28):
blows things up. They even make movies about it and
stuff like that. Now, why don't you consider him to
be violent because he's on the good team and he's
fighting against bad guys, and so look, the bad guys
are violent. Who's the guy with the redhead, red Skull?
(12:51):
That's right, Red Skull. I haven't read comic books in
a long time. Red Skull. Red Skull's violent. Red Skull's
out there killing people. Captain America is not violent. He
only has to kill people to stop red Skull from
killing people. You see, how does the communist justify violence
in his mind? How could you justify that? Why is
(13:14):
it okay to fire Bamba Tesla Dealership? Why is it?
You know what, here's a great example. Remember that Luigi Loser,
the guy in New York City who assassinated the healthcare
ceo United Healthcare ceo. We all watched it. It happened on camera,
was assassinated by this Luigi guy. It's on camera. Everyone
(13:35):
watched it happen. Okay, Luigi's not only getting all these
love letters by in the mail, but CNN sat down
with a Taylor Lorenz. She had a very interesting perspective
on Luigi. Remember remember why you don't think Captain America
is violent.
Speaker 2 (13:54):
So you're gonna see women especially that feel like, oh
my god, right, like, here's this man who who who's
the revolutionary, who's famous, who's handsome, who's young, who's smart.
He's a person that seems as like this morally good man,
which is hard to find. They want somebody to take
on this system. They want somebody to tear down these
(14:17):
barbaric establishment institutions.
Speaker 1 (14:22):
Did you hear what she said? She even called him
morally good. He had two small children. I'm forty three
years old. I lost my father six months ago today.
Six months ago today, I lost my father. I still
can't talk about it. Just guts me. Small children don't
(14:46):
have a father anymore, because Luigi assassinated him on the
streets of New York City. How does this communist see?
Speaker 2 (14:55):
So you're going to see women especially that feel like,
oh my god, right, Like, here's this man who who's revolutionary,
who's famous, who's handsome, who's young, who's smart. He's a
person that seems as like this morally good man, which
is hard to find. They want somebody to take on
the system. They want somebody to tear down these barbaric
(15:19):
establishment institutions.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
How bad can he be when he's fighting the bad guys.
He's not violent. He can't be the bad guy in
the story. In fact, he's morally good. He's taking on
the Nazis. You have to commit acts of violence to
take on the Nazis. Now violence? Why is it that
(15:48):
communists love it? Because? Remember, it's about destroying things. Everything sucks.
This is evil. You have to destroy things. Well, let
me ask you, is there a nonviolent way to destroy things?
Something so simple as a piece of paper. I'm holding
a piece of paper right here. It's just a plain
(16:11):
white piece of paper. I want it. I want it
to go away. Is there a non violent way to
destroy this piece of paper. I have to tear it.
I have to burn it. I have to do something
to destroy it. Destruction is violence. If there's a statue
and I want it gone, is there a nonviolent way
(16:34):
to remove the statue. I have to tear it down.
I have to carve it up. I have to blow
it up. I have to. If I want to destroy
capitalism America, this business, that government, this or that it's
going to obviously involve violence. That's why they commit so
many acts of violence. They have my entire life, and
(16:55):
that's why it's picking up now, and that's why the
media and Democrats themselves will try to run cover for
it by I don't know, calling Antifa an idea. Tifa
is an idea, not an organization. Yeah. By the way,
you know, America's corporations have funded a lot of these
(17:16):
evil violent groups. You realize that, meaning if you patronize
that business, you funded it. And I have to point
fingers at me. I've had Verizon, I've had AT and T.
T Mobile was the last mobile provider I had, So
I've funded plenty of it myself. I don't have them anymore.
(17:37):
I have Pure Talk now. Pure Talk one will save
you a fortune, Chris two. Pure Talk is the patriotic company.
When they give. They don't flood Planned Parenthood with cash
or Black Lives Matter with cash. They make sure to
help out veterans, get veterans medical care, get them back
(17:58):
on their feet, help them with death. If you could
cut your cell phone bill in half and patronize a
company like that, why wouldn't you? It takes ten minutes
to switch dial pound two five zero and say Jesse
Kelly Pound two five zero, Say Jesse Kelly, it is
(18:18):
the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful month. Oh man,
easy for me to say, wonderful Monday. Remember you can
email the show after I clear my throat Jesse at
jesse kellyshow dot com. If you miss any part of
the show, you can also down there the whole thing
on iHeart, Spotify iTunes. I can't wait to get to
(18:40):
the emails, Chris. Somebody had a dream about me. What look,
I'm sure many people do. This one in particular was
awesome and realistic. We'll talk about it in just a
few minutes. I do h Trump said a few things today,
and really sharp things. You know why I don't generally
play a ton of White House audio, a ton of
(19:01):
Caroline Levitt Trump audio. It just kind of seems lazy.
That sound right, lazy. Is there anything easier than doing
a talk radio show where you just played Trump sound
bites all day long? It just kind of seems lazy.
But he had some good ones today. Have you spoken
to President's.
Speaker 3 (19:20):
Let to be served out his offer to purchase more
Patriot missile battle I don't know.
Speaker 4 (19:24):
He's always looking to purchase missiles. You know he's against Listen,
when you start a war, you're gonna know that you
can win the war. Right, you don't start a war
against somebody that's twenty times your size and then hope
that people give you some missiles.
Speaker 1 (19:40):
Let's talk about this really quickly, because this is bigger
than Russia Ukraine. I know you're hot on World War
one because my email inbox filled up last week after
I did that. But World War one, why did it
get so big? Because of this concept of allies. And
(20:00):
it's not that you don't want allies in life as
a person, er, it's not that you don't want allies
as a country, right, Allies can be beneficial, but it's
a very dangerous game to play. And when you point
out that, hey, you want an ally, Okay, let's talk
(20:21):
about this. Let's talk about it with Russia Ukraine. Ukraine
wants an ally, they want allies. They've had allies. In fact,
they've had us, the largest most powerful country on earth,
as an ally, even though they're not part of NATO,
but that's another story. Entirely, they've had us as an ally.
Did it help Ukraine. Have you seen Ukraine with the
(20:44):
exception of Kiev. Go look up the state of Ukrainian cities. Now, Ukraine,
in my personal opinion, is a beautiful country with really
an unbelievable history. It's a very, very corrupt country, I
understand that. But it's a beautiful country with a wonderful history.
(21:04):
Their cities are all rubble. Now, why are they rubble?
Why are they conscripting teenage boys? Why are there guys
my age? They look like balding with gray in their
beard in uniform. Now because all the other young men
are dead, a million and a half people dead. Why, well,
(21:29):
Russia invaded. Yes, that's true. I'm not denying that at all.
It's not just that Russia invaded. Russia invaded and instead
of the smaller, weaker country capitulating. The world doesn't like that,
you see, So the world decided we can't let that
happen again, and the world stepped in and we propped
(21:52):
Ukraine up for three years now and watched all their
young men die. Is Ukraine better off? And now now
they don't want to make peace. They simply don't want
to make Why would you want to make peace if
you're one of the big shots in the Ukrainian government.
If you're Zelenski, you've canceled the election, You're in power.
(22:14):
You're filthy rich. This we know by now. Wonder how
that happened. You're filthy rich, you're super powerful, you're a
worldwide celebrity. You're not dying. You're never in any danger
of dying at all. It's really bad. Anyway, move on
past that. Trump talked about this. This is the right answer.
This is the exact right answer. I wish everyone in
(22:35):
the GOP would speak like this.
Speaker 3 (22:37):
How many illegal criminals are you planning on exporting to
El Salvador?
Speaker 1 (22:42):
And President of Kelly, how many are you willing to
take from the US?
Speaker 4 (22:46):
As many as possible? And I just asked the president.
You know it's this massive complex and he built jail complex.
I said, can you build some more of that place?
As many as we can get out of our country
that we're allowed any by incompetent Joe Biden.
Speaker 1 (23:03):
That's how you answer that question, as many as possible, period,
end of story. That's the right thing. Oh, speaking of which, Bukeley,
Bukeyley whatever. The President of Ol Salvador, he's doing a
really good job. He was asked about, Hey, this this
guy for mel Salvador, the MS thirteen gang member who
(23:24):
the media likes to refer to as a Maryland man,
are you gonna bring him back?
Speaker 4 (23:29):
I'm supposure that suggested that I smuggle a terrorists in
today United States? Right?
Speaker 1 (23:35):
How can I smuggle? How can I return him.
Speaker 4 (23:37):
To the United States?
Speaker 1 (23:38):
Like I smuggle him and to the United States?
Speaker 3 (23:40):
Or what do we do?
Speaker 5 (23:41):
Of course I'm not going to do it.
Speaker 2 (23:42):
It's like, I mean, the questions were busterous.
Speaker 4 (23:46):
How can I smuggle the terrorists at today United States?
Speaker 5 (23:49):
I don't have the power to return him to the
United States.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
Reporter, of course, concerned with bringing a murderer back into
the United States of America, actually asked El salvador A's president, Hey,
can you just bring him back? Bookley answers the question, right,
he's a terrorist. What do you want me to do?
Bring him back into the case not of an American citizen.
Stephen Miller dunked on him pretty good today, as he
(24:13):
usually does. He seems sharp because.
Speaker 4 (24:15):
You know, it's asked by CNN, and they always ask
it with a slant, because they're totally slanted because they
don't know what's happening. That's why nobody's watching them.
Speaker 3 (24:23):
But would you answer that question also much, Yes, gladly,
there's an illegal alien from El Salvador, So with respect
to you, he's a citizen of l Salvador. So it's
very arrogant, even for American media to suggest that we
would even tell El Salvador how to handle their own
citizens as a starting point, and two immigration courts found
(24:44):
that he was a member of MS thirtank. When President
Trump declared MS thir team to be a foreign terrorist organization,
that meant that he was no longer eligible under federal law,
which I'm sure you know you're very familiar with the
iron a that he was no longer eligible for any
form of immigrants relief in the United States. So we
had a deportation order that was valid, which meant that
(25:05):
under our law he's not even allowed to be present
in the United States and had to be returned because
of the foreign terrorist designation. This issue was then by
district court judge completely inverted, and a district court judge
tried to tell the administration that they had to kidnap
a citizen of El Salvador and fly him back here.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
That issue was raised to.
Speaker 3 (25:26):
The Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court said the district
court order was unlawful and its main opponents were reverse
nine zero unanimously.
Speaker 1 (25:37):
That's Stephen Miller destroying CNN. But when you're a CNN,
this is what you've become, and now your hosts have
to open up their shows. This is Dana Bash saying
things like this.
Speaker 5 (25:49):
For the record, since we heard President Trump say in
the Oval Office that CNN hates our country, CNN does
not hate our country. That should go with saying I've
been here for thirty two years and I see a
rhetorical device in him trying to say such a thing.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
Well, of course they do. Democrats hate the country. And
I'm not not just saying that for talk radio. You
know that's true. How many Democrats in your life talk
lovingly about America? How many do you know? Honestly asking
(26:32):
do you know a single Democrat who gets choked up
with patriotism? Maybe during the national anthem, maybe during a
military flyover. Do you know do you know a single
Democrat who flies an American flag from their home you're
(26:52):
driving to my neighborhood. Honestly, of the people, everyone flies
a flag what you do, especially especially during the holidays
like Independence Day. Things like that the American flags go up.
I remember when I lived in a Democrat neighborhood in Virginia.
Couldn't find one. Of course, Democrats hate the country. They've
(27:16):
been top that it's evil. Now let's focus on what's important.
Somebody had a dream about me. We're going to do
that in some emails next time the Jesse Kelly Show.
It's still root to it, T Kelly Show on a
fantastic Monday. Member, you can email the show love, hate,
(27:39):
death threats, ask doctor Jesse questions for Friday. All that
can be emailed in now to Jesse at Jesse kellyshow
dot com. Now it's time someone many people, I'm sure,
but someone had a dream about me. A lady did, Chris,
and she laid it all out and the subject of
(27:59):
this one, I dreamt about you, Jesse. I'm a happily
married woman of twenty six years, but last night I
dreamt about you. Apparently you were my teacher and trying
to be fun, you set us off on a history
scavenger hunt, part of which included gathering items from the
grocery store to make one of your favorite meals. Do
(28:22):
you even like Greek salad? Because I was having a
heck of a time finding the kalamada ollips. Okay, No,
I don't eat salad period, and I definitely don't eat
Greek salad. That's disgusting. If I ever do eat a salad,
it's generally going to be a Caesar salad where I'll
take a few bites or The one exception is if
(28:45):
I'm in Red Lobster. A lot of people don't know
that Red Lobster has probably the best blue cheese dressing
in the history of the world. And so if you
get their salad, you have to get the tomatoes off
of it. But if you get their blue cheese, pep
it up. That's top notch. So already your dream is false.
I would do you really think I would send you
(29:06):
to make me a salad? Gosh? Anyway, at the end
of the dream, a sci fi hovercraft appeared and you
climbed on top. That's real. Wanting to show off for
the class, you jumped off and attempted one of those
crouchy superhero landings. Unfortunately, you landed weird and hurt your shoulder.
(29:28):
Seeing your distress, I went back into the grocery store
to fill a produce bag with ice, and thought, good
thing he has relief factor. I woke up chuckling to myself.
Your podcast is literally the only one I'd never tire of.
But maybe it's time to branch out, says I could
say her name. Her name is Megan. She says, ps, No,
(29:51):
my husband wasn't jealous. One. I wouldn't hurt my shoulder.
If I jumped off of my hovercraft. I would probably
hurt my knee. We'd probably not hurt my shoulder, but
I might not hurt my knee. A lot of people
don't know this about me, and I wish more people did.
I have. Look, I'm not an athletic person. Okay, I'm
(30:11):
very tall, and I know I have broad shoulders, but
I'm slow and I'm not that coordinated. I played basketball
my whole life, in baseball my whole life, and I
obviously I can throw and catch a football. But I'm
not an athlete. I am not an athlete. Okay, I
can play sports just because that's what every guy did.
When in my generation everyone played something, you played everything, really.
Speaker 4 (30:35):
But.
Speaker 1 (30:38):
I have incredible ankles. Shut up, Chris, I have incredible ankles,
and allow me to explain, because maybe you think I'm
over selling this. I'm not over selling it at all.
My ankles, I never hurt them, I never sprained them.
(30:59):
There's never a problem them with them at all. And
I didn't fully realize what a blessing it was to
have super ankles until I joined the Marine Corps. And
in the Marines, you know, you're always humping gear. You're
always putting on a bunch of weight and humping it
through the mountains and through the desert and through the
every Your whole life is humping gear, right, You're always
(31:21):
carrying a bunch of weight. Well, your body's not really
made to carry a bunch of weight, and it's hard
on the joints, and it's dangerous. I found out on
the ankles. You if you step a little weird when
you're walking without sixty pounds on your back, you can
(31:44):
hurt yourself, tweak your ankle a little bit. You step
a little weird with sixty pounds on your back, you
can blow out an ankle, a severe sprain, something torn,
something broken. All the time I saw this happen more
times than I can count. Four years in the United
States Marine Corps infantry humping more weight than most because
(32:07):
I was in the mortars right, heavy weapons, you have
to carry your weapon plus plus mortar gear and everything else.
Humping inhuman amounts of weight. Never hurt my ankles one time?
What why are you shaking your head? Chris? That's a
true story. Never one time. And it's not as if
I didn't never roll it or step wrong. That's going
to happen when you get too exhausted, or you're always
(32:28):
through rough terrain, or you're gonna step on a rock
or off a little ledge or off a stick or something.
You are going to be in a situation where your
ankle rolls. It is going to happen. Never hurt me.
There's something quick rolling your eyes, Chris, there's something I guess.
I just have to give all the glory to God.
(32:49):
To be honest with you, there's something God given about
my ankles. I have. Actually I brought it up to
AB and she actually wasn't that supportive of it. Of
donating my ankles to science. Whenever it's done, listen, I
still want to be buried or cremated. I really don't
care what you do, but I want to be buried,
(33:11):
cut off the bottom of my of my legs, and
donated quitch checking your head, Chris, donate it to science
so they can figure out what's with my ankles. There's
something in there. Maybe God, Maybe God gave me extra tendon.
Maybe I drank a lot of milk when and I
(33:32):
mean a lot of milk when I was a kid.
My parents used to cut me off from milk. That's
how much milk I used to drink. I just loved it.
Not chocolate milk either, I was never allowed to have that,
but just regular milk. I was just Maybe that's it.
Maybe the milk all went right down to my ankles.
I can't explain it. I don't know what it was,
(33:52):
but I have an incredible ankles, maybe the best ankles ever.
Dear Jesse Kelly, I invented my own sandwich can chop up,
chop up Cabasa sausage. I mix it in a bowl
with American cheese and ketchup, I spoon in a hot
dog roll and eat. I call it the Gavin Sandwich,
(34:12):
named after myself. That sounds absolutely awful. That just sounds awful,
doesn't it, Chris? It sounds it's the ket you're exactly right, Chris.
It's the ketchup, maybe with a mayo or something or
I do not ketchup, definitely not ketchup. You have me
(34:34):
until ketchup. That reminds me though. Here's a little breakfast
for you. It's a winter every time. They were known
as eggs like Dad makes in my house because that's
what Dad made. Don't hard boil your eggs. Soft boil.
I usually do three six minutes. That's six minutes, a
six minute boil in a separate bowl and a cereal bowl.
Melt a generous amount of butter, one piece of bread,
(34:55):
you toast it, Pull the eggs out, drop the soft
old eggs in the butter which you've melted in the microwave.
Take your toast out, tear it up into little bits,
and drop the bits of toast in there. Chop it
all up into a big, buttery, eggy, yolky mess in
the bowl. A lot of salt and pepper and some
hot sauce. Breakfast of kings. Right there there you go,
(35:17):
Eggs like Dad makes. Courtesy. Thank you, Dad, I love you.
Speaker 4 (35:20):
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