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May 5, 2025 • 35 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from woor.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
It is Jesse Kelly Show. Another hour of The Jesse
Kelly Show on a fantastic Monday. Of course, it's Medal
of Honor Monday, which I'll get to in just a moment.

Speaker 3 (00:14):
Then we're going to get to actually something that's happening
in here and Germany.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
We'll all explain. I'll get to all that. Just trust me,
it'll be good. Ah that and so much more still
to come on The Jesse Kelly Show. Now, first, before
we do any of that, it's been all of our
Monday time. Every Monday, we take a Medal of Honor citation,
we read it, talk about it a little, and then
we get back to the news and emails and everything else.

(00:41):
But I do get emails from time to time of
people wondering why the Medal of Honor citations all seem
to come from World War Two, Korea, Vietnam, or kind
of the global War on terror A right, A lot
of people seem to want to, hey, why not older Jesse,
where's the Civil war stuff? Where's the where's the you know,

(01:04):
the Spanish Civil War stuff, the Spanish American War. I'm sorry,
where where's the World War one stuff. We get a
lot of those questions. So Chris had the idea. I
think I think it's a pretty good idea to read one.
Don't worry, I'll get to a different one. This isn't
gonna be the only one. But would you like to
know why we don't read the ones older than World
War Two? Allow me to introduce an American hero who

(01:26):
deserves all the credit in the world. He was actually
born in Germany, but became an American fought with the
US Navy in the Spanish American War. So, without further ado, Chris,
would you play the music for a United States Navy
gunners made third class John Davis, right.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
Hey, honoring those who went above and beyond.

Speaker 2 (01:50):
It's Medal of Honor Monday on board the U Marblehead
during the operation of cutting the cable leading from San Fuegos, Cuba,
the eleventh of May eighteen ninety eight, facing heavy fire
of the enemy, Davis sit an example of extraordinary bravery

(02:13):
and coolness throughout his action. That's that's it. That's it
for the citation. That's why we don't read the older ones.
And maybe you're thinking, well, at least go get the
information and tell you. Well, that's the that's the thing.

(02:35):
If I sound frustrated, it's because I am frustrated. Oftentimes
it's not available. We are so used to this information age,
at least I am. I shouldn't put words in your mouth.
I'm so used to the information age that when I
want to know something, it's on my phone. I was
actually messing with my car over the weekend. Had to

(02:58):
spend a little time under the hood. You know, don't
like to brag what Chris, I had to put in
more windshield washer fluid. Anyway, I had to spend some
time under the hood, and I had a question about something.
I just pulled my phone out and looked it up. No,
I didn't have a question about putting in the windshield
washer fluid. Chris, I was looking at I was curious
when I was tweaking the wrenches and stuff under there,

(03:19):
I was curious about anyway. I just looked it up
on my phone. All the information was right there. We're
used to having the information right there. The older stuff
is oftentimes not around. So without further ado, let's do
the real one. This is from the United States. Well,
not that that one wasn't real. That was disrespectful. Let's
do a longer one. This is one that you will
know well. It's from Mogadishu, Somalia, during our operations over there.

(03:44):
And this is the Medal of Honor citation for a
Gary Ivan Gordon. You know he was one of the
Delta Force snipers that did something very very brave that day.

Speaker 4 (03:56):
Hey, honoring those he went above and beyond its Medal
of Honor Monday.

Speaker 2 (04:08):
Master Sergeant Gary I. Gordon, United States Army distinguished himself
by action above and beyond the call of duty. On
the third of October nineteen ninety three, whilst serving as
a sniper team leader, United States Army Special Operations Command
with Task Force Ranger in Bogadishu, Somalia, Master Sergeant Gordon's

(04:30):
sniper team provided precision fires from the lead helicopter during
an assault and at the two helicopter crash sites while
subjected to intense automatic weapons and rocket propelled grenade fires.
When Master Sergeant Gordon learned that ground forces were not
immediately available to secure the crash site, he and another

(04:52):
sniper unhesitatingly volunteered to be inserted to protect the four
critically wounded personnel. Being well aware of the growing number
of enemy personnel closing in on the site. After his
third request to be inserted, Master Sergeant Gordon received permission
to perform his volunteer mission. When debris and enemy ground

(05:15):
fires at the site caused him to abort the first attempt.
Master Sergeant Gordon was inserted one hundred meters south of
the crash site, equipped with only his sniper rifle in
a pistol. Master Sergeant Gordon and his fellow sniper, while
under intense small arms fire from the enemy, fought their
way through a dense maze of shanties and shacks to

(05:38):
reach the critically injured crew members. Master Sergeant Gordon immediately
pulled the pilot and other crew members from the aircraft,
establishing a perimeter which placed him and his fellow sniper
in the most vulnerable position. Master Sergeant Gordon used his
long range rifle and sidearm to kill an undetermined number

(05:59):
of attacks until he depleted his ammunition. Master Sergeant Gordon
then went back to the wreckage, recovering some of the
crew's weapons and ammunition. Despite the fact that he was
critically low on ammunition, he provided some of it to
the dazed pilot and then radioed for help. Master Sergeant
Gordon continued to travel the perimeter protecting the down crew.

(06:23):
After his team member was fatally wounded and his own
rifle ammunition exhausted, Master Sergeant Gordon returned to the wreckage,
recovering a rifle with the last five rounds of ammunition
and gave it to the pilot with the words good luck. Then,
armed with only his pistol, Master Sergeant Gordon continued to

(06:44):
fight until he was fatally wounded. His actions saved the
pilot's life. Master Sergeant Gordon's extraordinary heroism and devotion to
duty were in keeping with the highest standards of military
service and reflect great credit upon him, him his unit
in the United States Army, and he gave his life

(07:06):
for this country. A uh, you know what I've always

(08:02):
thought was really awesome, awe inspiring, really impressive is how
many guys have given their lives for pilots and helicopter
crews and things like that that have gone down in
hostile territory. A lot of this is special operations guys,

(08:22):
rangers do some of this stuff, stuff like that. But
I think about the SAG guys in Vietnam used to
do this stuff all the time. It's something that happens
in the military. But sometimes on these missions, everyone will
be dead. Where you're going. You're going to risk your
life to rescue people who lots of times they're already dead.

(08:47):
But it means so much to the men to get
their bodies back and to bring them back that men
will die in the effort to try to bring people back.
And you already know the story because you're well aware
of black Hawk down. But those two Delta Force guys
in that helicopter, they were above and they were safe,

(09:12):
relatively safe. Okay, not super safe. You can always catch
around from somebody. But where they were flying in that
helicopter above all that. They were not right down by
the ground. They were safe up by where they were.
And those helicopters went down, these two studs practically demanded
they be set down. And I've read stories like that before.

(09:33):
I read one over the weekend of green beret who
his buddy was on the ground and his buddy told
the helicopter pilot leave me, I'm not going to make it.
This is in Vietnam. The Green beret who was still
in the helicopter held a gun to the back of
the pilot's head and said, you set it down. Now

(09:53):
we're going to get him, and he made him, at
gunpoint go down. No, we're going to get my friend.
That's awesome and a lot of men, a lot of
men have died going to do that stuff, and I've
just always really admired it. I think it's really awesome.
All Right, let's discuss something that's happening here and something

(10:14):
that's happening in Germany. Yeah, I know you don't really
care about Germany, but I'm just going to use it
as an example. Before we get to that, let's get
to preborn. Let's get to something good and wonderful. It's
been heavy and dark. Preborn is the light a young mother.
Is there anything more precious and wonderful than a young mother?

(10:35):
And think about this concept. A young woman she's about
to kill her baby preborn comes alongside her and says, hey,
why don't you come in for a free ultrasound. They
have this network of clinics in the high abortion areas
in the country. When that young woman goes in, if
they can get her in the door and she gets
the ultrasound, she chooses life. Almost every single time, goes

(10:59):
from being a young woman who's about to do something
sure regret the rest of her life to being a mom,
a young mom. What's better than that? And that's what
you do when you give the preborn. And it's almost
ridiculous that it's tax deductible. I tell you about preborn
if it wasn't. But you give them whatever you want
and deduct it on your taxes. Preborn dot com slash

(11:23):
jesse twenty eight bucks buys that ultrasound twenty eight dollars
for a life that worth it. Preborn dot com slash
jesse sponsored by Preborn We'll be back.

Speaker 4 (11:35):
He doesn't care if you believe him.

Speaker 2 (11:37):
See Kelly Show on a wonderful Monday, and we're about
to talk about something. It may take me a few minutes,
but you have to stay with me. This is gonna
come to the Trump executive orders saying hey, no more
government money for NPR, no more government money for PBS
and things like that. But before we get to that specifically,
let's discuss what has happened to our country. So I'll

(11:59):
about you to think about it in this way. I
want you to think about your house, or we'll do
my house for the purposes of it my house. Ah,
but I we budget. We have a budget. Don't think
it's anything it's fancy. It's an Excel spreadsheet, probably the
same kind of budget. We all know Chris budgets, but
I'm sure Corey budgets. It's a budget, and it has

(12:21):
on mind same thing that's on yours. Okay, Well, the
car payment's this, and the house payment is that, and
so you have this long list of necessities that are
going to come out every month. Insurance, and it's that
same kind of thing. But then everybody, if you're smart,
you have extras built into your budget that aren't necessities.

(12:42):
For instance, me chips, I say chips, but we will
make it about any kind of junk food. Let's just
make it about chips. That We'll make it about Dorito's
for now, Okay, Doritos. That's obviously not a necessity, So
it doesn't go into a permanent portion of my budget.

(13:03):
It's one of those things that I can do or
do without depending on whether or not money's coming in.
You got it. You got the same thing. But here's
what's happened to the United States of America. You see,
I I don't want my doritos to be optional. In
my mind, my burrito, my burritos, my doritos are as

(13:26):
important to our home as the car payment, the house payment.
They're certainly as important as the kids. We should make
my derrito's part of the permanent budget. It shouldn't be
in the extra budget. And so, year after year after
year after year after year, I've been working on OB

(13:48):
and working on OB and working on OB, and finally
I've gotten to the place where the permanent family budget
has a specific amount of money dedicated to my doritos
every month and it's not optional. Okay, by the way,
I haven't done that, but just think about how ridiculous
that would be. Right. That is what has happened with

(14:08):
American communism when it comes to the budget of the
United States of America. You see, politics, Republican or Democrat
are supposed to be separate. I know it's weird, but
they're supposed to be separate from the government. Once you
have an official government role, once you are the president,

(14:31):
you don't get to politic on behalf of Democrats, not
when you're doing the job a president, right. I know
that's kind of the president makes it weirder, but for instance,
when you're running for Congress, or if you're in Congress,
if you are a member of Congress, a member of
the House of Representatives, did you know you are not
allowed to discuss your congressional campaign or anyone else's congressional

(14:56):
campaign while inside the congressional office office building offices. Why well,
those are taxpayer funded offices. While you're in there, you're
not campaigning, you're not a candidate, you're not helping anyone
else campaign. Your job once you've been elected is simply
to represent the people. The politics, the getting elected, and

(15:17):
all that stuff has to be separate. That's how it
has to work in a country. But if you're an
American communist, well that doesn't work for you. You're looking
for a level of permanence, if you will. You don't
want your doritos to be optional. You don't want your

(15:37):
communism to be optional. You want to find a way
to guarantee that the United States government will pay for
your communism at all times, now, in forever. And the
sad part about that is, over years and years and
years and years and years, they've been insanely successful in

(15:57):
that endeavor. Communists have ensured over years and years that
we the American taxpayer will fund them fund their revolution.
Why did Stacy Abrams Cloimate group get a two billion
dollar taxpayer check. That's why they've put this system in place.

(16:18):
So Trump comes out puts out this presidential order that says, hey,
no more taxpayer money for NPR PBS. That's just not good.
Everyone knows those are like the most two left wing organizations. Ever,
how did the media respond to this kind of stuff.

Speaker 5 (16:35):
It is a fundamental attack on this is Jonathan K.

Speaker 6 (16:39):
Park.

Speaker 5 (16:40):
It is a fundamental attack on our constitution, on the
foundation of this country. People need to understand and remember.

Speaker 2 (16:49):
Just just pause on that for a moment. Think about
that way of thinking. Taking taxpayer funds away from NPR
and PBS. To Jonathan, that's an attack on the constitution.
Do you see. I'll let them go in a moment,
but do you see what they've done in their minds

(17:09):
and in the minds of so many democrats. Democrats they
really think that the government should use your money for
their purposes. And you can hold up NPR as an
example and point out how left wing it is, and
then point out the taxpayer dollars that go to NPR
and you wouldn't get a Democrat to bat an eye

(17:30):
because in their minds, well, that's how it's supposed to work.
And if you're trying to take away the taxpayer money
from my stuff, then my goodness, it's unconstitutional.

Speaker 5 (17:42):
It is a fundamental attack on our constitution, on the
foundation of this country. People need to understand and remember
there is only one profession that is protected in the constant.

Speaker 2 (17:55):
Listening to him talk reminds me. Have you gotten your
testosterone levels checked? Do you want to sound? Do you
want to sound like Jonathan KPart If your t levels
get any lower, you're going to America's losing testosterone at
an alarming rate fifty percent in fifty years. It's in

(18:17):
the water. We can't what do we do?

Speaker 6 (18:20):
Well?

Speaker 2 (18:20):
I know in response to this, of course, we've done
the worst thing possible. There's a new tea clinic on
every corner. Don't do that. That's horrible for you and
you don't need it. Fix things naturally, get all your
levels where they need to be naturally. That's what Chalk
is here for. Go to choq dot com real quick.

(18:41):
You know I'm not even telling you about anything. Go
look at chalk dot com. Choq dot com and go
look at the stuff they have. Whatever you're looking for.
They have an incredible natural herbal supplement to make your
life better. I personally take a male Vitality stack every day.
That's what I'd recommend for the fellas, or a female
Vitalis Lody stack for the ladies. Get a subscription. You'll

(19:03):
be feeling better before you know it. Choq dot com
promo code Jesse We'll be back Oway and happy Sinco
Tomayo once again from us to you here at the
Jesse Kelly Show. And remember if you want to email us,
you can Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com. Celebrating as

(19:27):
only we can. So they're very, very concerned about the
potential for taxpayer money being taken away from PBS and PR.
Jake Tapper doesn't know how kids are going to learn
how to read.

Speaker 7 (19:39):
Peter Johnson has said he would additionally like to cut
funding for public broadcasting PBS, which does does receive.

Speaker 2 (19:47):
Some support from the federal government. I just it's interesting.

Speaker 7 (19:52):
I just have to say, on a personal level, I
learned to read by watching Sesame Street and Mister Rogers
Neighborhood and the Electric Company that's that's literally how I
learned to read as a kid.

Speaker 2 (20:04):
Sessmes literally literally how you learn to read. But we'll
set aside the literally thing. But that's funny because they're
not teaching that the way they used to. In fact,
this is what your child learns now when you sit
them down for Sesame Street. Remember what we talked about with.

Speaker 3 (20:23):
The doritos and slowly moving it into the permanent family budget,
and how America's communists have slowly over the years taken
their communism and ingrained it in the government so you
have to pay for it.

Speaker 2 (20:34):
This is what your money funds now.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
Across the country, people of color, especially in the black community,
are being treated unfairly because of how they look, their
their culture, race, and who they are. What we are
seeing as people saying enough is enough. They want to

(20:56):
end racism and listen, isn't.

Speaker 2 (21:01):
Two Oh you didn't think that was all. Here's some
more Sesame Street.

Speaker 8 (21:08):
Hi Elma and I wanted to share that everyone is
always welcome on Sesame Street. This month and every month,
we want to uplift and celebrate our lgb t q
I A plus family, friends and communities.

Speaker 6 (21:22):
US friendissary lot from our sesame Street family to yours head,
be proud.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
I'm a messian heavy pad on that annoying voice. You
know what happened in Germany. Germany has a party called
the af D Party. Don't worry about remembering that, but
it's kind of consider them the more Trump party, the
more populist. Hey, let's deport the illegalis party. Their spy

(21:49):
agency just classified them as being right wing extremists. Now
German police officers who are members of that party maybe expelled.
You see what's happening here is what has happened in
every single country where communists have taken over. They slowly

(22:12):
but surely move their opinions and make them the law.
They move their politics and they make it the law.
And they do that in large part so they can
use all the force of the law against their political opponents.

(22:33):
It's happened in Germany before. As a matter of fact,
it happened in the Soviet Union. It's happening in America,
it's happening in Germany again. It's happening everywhere. This is
what they do. This is why they do what they do.
Moving the doritos from the optional portion of the family
budget into the required portion of the family budget. Jake Tapper,

(22:56):
of course knows that. He knows that the American media
knows that. But watching the scam be exposed and taken away,
it's too much for the people who have luxuriated under
the scam for a very long time. Let's do some
more emails. We haven't done any Jesse at jessekellyshow dot com.
This guy says, hey, Ice cold ghost killer, do you

(23:19):
like sunflower seeds? I think your perfect teeth, cheap nature,
and tiny hands would make them the ideal snack for
the world famous Jesse Kelly, I don't. I don't like
sunflower seeds that much. And here's the problem. One, it's

(23:40):
a lot of work to get the seed out. I
don't want to have to sit in I don't want
to have to suck on it for a half hour.
And then you have to wait till the shell gets
soft enough. But then once the shell soft enough, the
inside of your mouth is raw, feels like leather. Then
you have to sit there and kind of awkwardly gnaw
on the seed and then you're trying to tongue the

(24:01):
little seed out, and your buddies are looking at you weird.
Oh and if you are successful in getting the seed out,
which is a big if, and if you're successful in
not chewing on part of the shell with the seed,
again a big if, then you have what to do
with the shell. We went to a baseball game a
couple of weeks ago. This isn't about sunflower seeds specifically,

(24:23):
but at the baseball game, they sell peanuts, like any
red blooded American baseball game would be. We go to
sit down in our seats and there were some people
who were sitting in our seats, some husband and wife whatever.
No we did. We said, hey, these are our seats.
That said oh. They looked down, did the same thing
everyone else does, acted surprise, and they got up and

(24:44):
moved it down the aisle. They were in the same aisle.
They were like five seats away. But he had been
eating the peanuts. The peanuts you have to crack, you
have to crack open from the peanut shell. He left
behind in ocean of cracked peanut shell dust all over

(25:04):
my seat, in the floor in front of it. I
don't like the mess that the sunflower seed brings with it.
I just don't like the mess. No, no, I'm not
a sunflower seed guy. It's not that I don't like them.
I mean they're They're fine once you get one out
of there. The juice is not worth a squeeze on
a sunflower seed. Bottom line, chessis I appreciate you for

(25:26):
a couple reasons. One I agree with you on ear everything,
and two you are so positive in a day when
it's easy to be negative, even when the news is sickening.
So thank you. Huh. It's not that I'm I mean,
I guess sometimes I can be positive, sometimes I can
be negative. I just don't think I'll tell you what

(25:47):
I think about the times we live in. I don't
think they're unique. They're unique to us, and they may
be unique to our country. I would agree with that.
But one of the reasons I love history as it
gives me perspective when I read about remember that story,
Remember that history story we did about the Great flood

(26:09):
of China that one time. It was a long time ago.
Don't even bother going to try to find it. I
don't even know where it would be. It's got to
be years old, years old, and look, I've forgotten most
of it by this point. But there was this terrible
flood in China, this river overflowed. Now we're not talking
about a flood that took out a home or two,

(26:31):
and we're not talking about a month or two. Essentially,
a bunch of people in China when this flood happened,
they lived. Have you ever seen the movie water World
where there is no dry land, there's there's just nothing
but whatever. You cobble together as a boat and you
live on the water like water people, that's what you do.

(26:53):
That's how people in China were living. And they reached
such a level Chris, look up the death toll for
this thing. They reach such a level of devastation during
this river, during this river flood that families who were
floating on makeshift rafts and boats up the river, they

(27:14):
would sell their children. They would pick a child and
sell the child to other people, to other boats who
were passing by, so that other boat could eat their child. Now,

(27:36):
I know I just bumped the microphone, chrisy To'll be fine.
Now just think about that for a moment. The level
of despair and desperation. And this is not some crazy story.
It's happened. It's happened. These things have happened throughout history.
So when I look at our problems. It's not that

(27:58):
they're not big. They're enormous and they are important. It's
just what chance, what choice do we have but to
roll with the punches. Man, Let's laugh a little bit,
goof off a little bit. I was gonna do some
COVID stuff with parents. I don't even have the heart to.
Let's talk a little bit about Alcatraz being reopened according
to Trump, and then we'll do some emails and things

(28:18):
like that. Sound good. Hang on the Jesse Kelly Show.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic Monday. Remember,
you can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot
com or downloaded on iheard Spotify iTunes. Okay, so let's
talk about the Alcatraz thing. Everybody's talking about it today

(28:41):
and it's not something you need to focus on at all,
but Trump orders the reopening of Alcatraz. Alcatraz Prison. It's
obviously that famous prison off the coast of San Francisco
that it was for the worst of the worst inmates.
Al Capone was held there for a while. Well, you've
at least seen enough movies to know exactly what I'm

(29:03):
talking about. Alcatraz actually I've never been to it, as
a matter of fact, but it's cool. It's really really cool.
It's an island prison. Now. I'm not going to spend
a lot of time on this because it's really not important.
But if you're one of the people who's upset about it,
and you're pointing out I don't like I don't like
the costs, or I don't like the distraction, or I

(29:24):
don't like this, allow me to remind you again that
Trump he's been shot. This is his last four years.
He is either eighty or pushing eighty. Is he eighty eight?
Chris has got to be close to it these upper eighties.
Doesn't have a ton of time. Let yet, even if

(29:46):
he lives, you know, into his nineties, you're certainly on
the back back end of the whole thing. Donald Trump
has his name on buildings and golf courses around the globe.
He is the once shot, former and current president of
the United States of America. He's going to try to

(30:09):
do big things like we talked about with the buying
greenland stuff and renaming the Gulf of Mexico into the
Gulf of America and taking back to Panama Canal and
the trade stuff. The trade stuff is actually a great
example of this. The trade stuff, all the trade stuff
tariff is and tariff that no tariffs, but we need tariff.

(30:30):
I whatever. Donald Trump intends to leave a mark, a
big mark, and he's going to do big things. Remember
when I told you, Remember when I told you Trump's
two hundred and fiftieth independent state that's next year. Next
year is our two hundred and fiftieth. That Trump is
going to blow it out and do it bigger than

(30:52):
you can imagine. Did you think I was kidding about that?

Speaker 9 (30:55):
A big, beautiful parade, a military pario. We have the
greatest welter people peanuts compared to the value of doing it.
We have the greatest missiles in the world. We have
the greatest submarines in the world. We have the greatest
army tanks in the world. We have the greatest weapons
in the world.

Speaker 2 (31:16):
And we're going to celebrate it. Donald Trump sees things big.
He's always been that way. What do you think he's
going to do with his last four years as president?
He's not running again. He's going to try big things.
Don't sit and stress about dumb things that don't matter

(31:37):
at all, and don't stress about ihan Omar being a
dirt ball either, I know she is, you know she.

Speaker 6 (31:42):
I would say, our country should be more fearful of
white man across our country because they are actually crossing
most of the deaths within this country. And so if
fear was the the driving force of policies to keep

(32:03):
America safe, Americans safe inside of this country, we should
be profiling, monitoring, and creating policies to fight the radicalization
of white men.

Speaker 2 (32:20):
Remember I told you, don't get offended, don't get offended,
don't get offended, don't do that. I can't believe she's
saying that about white people. That's racist. And I got
all that, don't get offended, don't be offended. But be aware,
be aware that this way of thinking, this way of
talking has been ingrained over and over and over again

(32:44):
in the left. I was going to say the American left,
but that's not true. The left in the UK thinks
this exact same way. Germany thinks this exact same way.
These countries have decided that white men are the height
of all evil. And look, you want to know why,
here's a good example. Rasmussen has a new poll out

(33:04):
today about Trump's net approval. Trump's net approval with men.
Married men eighteen to thirty nine is thirty nine percent.
That's ridiculous. Young men between the ages of eighteen thirty
nine who are married love Trump. Unmarried women negative thirty

(33:26):
seven percent is Trump's net approval. They have decided that
men in particular are the height of all evil. Demographically,
they really have narrowed their focus to white men because
for a variety of reasons. One it's how white men vote,
but two, that's the demographic you can attack publicly without

(33:50):
any without any response whatsoever, no repercussions at all. You
can get on and say whatever you want. You can
call white people evil, call them terrorists, say they all
to deserve to be arrested and profiled and die and
know what bad and I if you said that about
any other race or religion or whatnot, you'd immediately have
your whole career destroyed. You already get all that, but

(34:11):
you don't have to get offended. But you do have
to be aware that that's how these people talk. Lots
of them talk this way. The Jasmine Crocketts of the world.
They spread this stuff.

Speaker 10 (34:24):
Instead of publicly calling us the in word, they use
races epithets and suggests that we're ghetto or unqualified or
diversity hires, even though we're all more oftentimes than that,
more educated and qualified than they are.

Speaker 2 (34:45):
That's quite a thing to say, but that's how she is. Hey, Jesse,
I love the show, especially love hearing about Fred, since
it reminds us of our dog Cooper, who we recently lost.
Always needed affection and was anxious whenever someone left for
even a few minutes. Keep up the good work. I
hope Jewish producer Chris is kind enough to pass this

(35:06):
along to you. Says, I can say their names. Their
names are Kevin and Tina. It's freaking dogs, man. They
just become part of your family. It's you know what's
happened to Fred? Fred has? He now has this really
weird misplaced sense of his role in the family because
whenever he gets in trouble by one person, the other

(35:29):
three people in the family will immediately leap to his defense.
So he's never actually in serious trouble because the second
someone raises their voice, everyone else jumps in and says, hey,
he didn't mean to do that. It's really quite pathetic.
This has been a podcast from wor
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