Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from WOOR The Jesse Kelly Show.
Let's have some fun on a Monday, A magnificent Monday.
Medal of Honor Monday. I'm so excited to be here.
I hope you had a wonderful, wonderful weekend. We are
(00:23):
going to discuss many things tonight. We're gonna discuss revolutionaries,
communist revolutionaries. Pete haik Seth took one down and it's
a very good thing. We're gonna talk about that. Actually,
in the open, what's Chuck Schumer talking about? JB. Pritzker,
governor of Illinois wanna be president? Said something pretty revealing
(00:45):
about how these people think a scandal that wasn't treated
as if it was a big scandal, not a big
enough one. Yes, I'll talk about the helicopter crash. Trump
says he's getting way in on the Corn and Paxton race.
All that emails so much more, And of course I
think I already mentioned it. Medal of Honor Monday is
about an hour from now. But first I want to
(01:09):
begin here, and I think I hope this will help
all of us, myself included, understand the task we have
laid out before us. All Right, So here it is,
and you're just gonna have to stay with me. Don't
let your eyes glaze over. Stay with me for a
(01:30):
couple of minutes. I'm starting the Jesse Kelly Burger restaurants tomorrow.
I'm actually not, by the way, this is just an analogy.
But tomorrow they start, and let's say, over the next
ten years, we open twenty Jesse Kelly Burger franchises all
across the country, New York to LA. We got twenty
(01:50):
of them. And it's a prosperous company. Of course, it
would be serve it what Chris serving world famous Jesse
Kelly Burgers. We would make a fortune, and so eventually
we'd make so much money all these locations. We start
a corporate office, well headquarter it right here where I
live in the Houston area. We have an office building. Okay,
(02:12):
you with me. So now we have a Burger Company
nationwide corporate office all these satellite locations. Now, through negligence
on my behalf, Chris probably screwed something up. We hire
the wrong CEO. And this CEO has a thing. You see,
(02:35):
this ceo only wants to work with people who have
green eyes. That's his priority. Green eyes. Green eyes are
everything to him, And so when he's looking for somebody
to do the finances, he's looking for only green eyes.
He'll eliminate every other eye color. Remember green eyes, I
(02:57):
believe are I think it's the farrest eye color. So
eliminating these people, Nope, you can't blue eyes, brown eyes. Nope, no, nope,
qualified people after qualified people, the people who are already
hired inside of the company, no matter where they are,
the green eyed people get promoted. You got blue eyes,
brown eyes, other than you're done toast. Here's a ceiling
(03:22):
on your promotion. And this CEO begins to implement this,
implement this policy across the company, and it goes on
for five years. For five years, he is promoting only
the green eyed people. He's hiring only the green eyed people.
Everyone else they're quitting, they're getting fired. We're not placing
(03:43):
a priority on the quality of the burgers, on better prices,
on the cleanness of the restaurant. It's just greon. I
don't care about the latest branch manager's profit loss numbers.
What color are his eyes? Now? Five years after taking
over in his green eyes policy, how are things working
(04:04):
at Jesse Kelly Berger Inc. Or they're not working well.
And it's pretty obvious why they're not working well. We
have made something that is unimportant, the most important thing.
We've lost so many qualified people because they had brown
eyes or blue eyes or something like that. We've lost
(04:26):
the qualified people we had. We're not bringing in new
qualified people because again we're eliminating all the most common
eye colors, sticking with only those green eyed people. The
company's profit is down, the quality of the product is down.
We can't find anybody to make a decent burger because
(04:46):
they're not enough green eyed people out there. Everything down, slow,
steady rot over the course of five years. That's what's
happening at Jesse Kelly Berger's. Now I want to talk
about Rice, Pete haig Seth, the United States of America,
the American government, all of it. You know what Susan
(05:08):
Rice's resume is, Well, here's just I'll tell you what.
I'll just read you her top paragraph from Wikipedia. An
American diplomat, policy advisor, and public official. As a member
of the Democratic Party, Rice served as the twenty second
director of the United States Domestic Policy Council from twenty
(05:29):
twenty one to twenty three. As the twenty seventh US
Ambassador to the United Nations from nine to twenty thirteen,
and as the twenty third United States National Security Advisor
from two thy thirteen to two thy seventeen. And the story,
the reason she's in the news today is Pete hag
(05:51):
Seth just dumped her. Where did he dump her from?
She was sitting on the Defense Policy Advisory Board at
the Pentagon. I didn't mean she was there when Biden
was there. Up until five minutes ago, she was still
there at the Pentagon. Now, what does all this have
(06:12):
to do with the green eyed, stupid Jesse Kelly Berger thing. Well,
we have to discuss how we got to a place
of such rot as a country. Susan Rice, all those
important positions, critically important leadership positions over the years. What
kind of a woman is this? Well, I want you
(06:33):
to listen to this. It's just a little snippet. I
think it's thirty seconds, maybe a minute long. It's Susan
Rice's voice. Tell me when she was at the United Nations,
when she was advising on national security issues, when she
was advising on domestic policy issues, what do you think
this woman was prioritizing?
Speaker 2 (06:54):
Well, if you're a white male, Christian cisgender macho, maga man.
You can be as dump is a rock and be
deemed qualified to serve as Secretary of Defense. That's apparently
what we've learned from this episode. But let's also be
clear there's a serious point here. DEI has been used
as a slur. Anybody who you know fits the mold
(07:18):
of somebody who is not a white Christian cisgender male
is by definition in this administration, deemed inferior.
Speaker 1 (07:29):
I'm going to play it again in a second because
i want you to marinate on that, because it matters
so much for what we're about to talk about, and
just for understanding where we are. Why does it feel
like things are breaking around us and broken around us?
What does it feel like things don't operate like they should?
(07:51):
So many things, It's not just this specific thing or
that specific thing. It feels like things are dying. It
feels like things are breaking. Why doesn't this work like
it used to? Why doesn't this operate the way it
used to? This used to be quality. Now it's crap.
This seems like it seems like we have idiots in
charge of this. Have you ever said something like that?
(08:13):
It seems like morons are running this now. Ever, thought
something like that, said something like that, this isn't about
Susan Rice specifically. So I'm gonna play it for you again,
and I want you to think about Jesse Kelly's burgers
in the green eyed loving CEO, Susan Rice, and people
who think like this. They haven't been on the outskirts
(08:36):
trying to worm their way in. They have occupied critical
positions of power in this country for two decades now,
top to bottom government positions at the Pentagon, National Security,
Central Intelligence Agency, Federal Bureau of Investigation IRS EPA, set
(08:59):
aside the government agencies in the private sector air traffic controllers,
kind of in the news, wouldn't you say? And yes, CEOs,
the world of finance, you name it. This kind of poisonous, sick,
demonic thinking is not something that's on the outside looking in.
(09:20):
It's not some hokey cultural issue that doesn't really matter.
It is the priority of the people who run the
critical systems of the United States of America. And for
twenty plus years, these people have been anchoring themselves in
every single critical position of power, spreading this poison and
(09:42):
promoting this poison everywhere they can find.
Speaker 2 (09:46):
If you're white, male, Christian cisgender, macho maga man, you
can be as dumb as a rock and be deemed
qualified to serve as Secretary of Defense. That's apparently what
we've learned from this episode. But let's also be clear
there's a serious point here. DEI has been used as
a slur. Anybody who you know, fits the mold of
(10:10):
somebody who is not a white Christian cisgender Mayo is,
by definition, in this administration, deemed inferior.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
How did FEMA get to a place where we had
a FEMA employee admit publicly as she was going around
finding out who needed aid, she skipped the homes with
Trump flags? How could someone like that get into such
a critical position at FEMA? For two decades plus, these
(10:49):
monsters have been embedding themselves all across our country, and
that is what we're about to tackle. And I actually
brought that up to bring me to this email. I'll
get to that in a moment. Before I get to that,
I want to get to the brand new IQ Sense,
(11:10):
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I had the first one they ever put out, and
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It's a wireless cooking thermometer. You put it in your
meat and you leave it there. You never check again.
Your phone will tell you when it's done well. This
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(11:34):
one was seven fifty seventy five percent, longer battery light,
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(11:56):
com code Jesse chef i que dot com code Jesse.
We'll be back. You're listening to the oracle. You love
this one. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a
wonderful Monday. Remember you can email the show and I'll
get to one of those in a minute Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com. And and in case you're just
(12:21):
now joining us, I was explaining, and probably a pretty
lame way, that we have years and years and years
of people who believe some really sick things worming their
way into critical positions of power, and I'm going somewhere
with this. And now now we're in a place where
(12:42):
things are rotted. And because things are rotted, and we
continue to discover things that are actually worse than we
thought they were, we're getting disheartened and we're getting frustrated
at times. And I brought up I brought up actually
the FEMA employee. You remember the FEMA employee. This is
a story that proves kind of what I was talking about.
(13:04):
We have gross people who've promoted other gross people for
a long time in various sectors in this country, most
definitely the government sector. And now we have some really
disgusting people in positions of power in this country. And well,
Chris actually he found the audio of the FEMA employee
(13:24):
when remember she did the news cycle after the scandal
came out. Remember we had that terrible hurricane and people
needed aid, and we found out FEMA was just straight
up skipping Trump homes.
Speaker 3 (13:33):
Here she was, and someone feels uncomfortable. We can't go
to that home if you have loose dogs, and someone
on the team was comfortable with dogs and another person
is not, we can't go to that home because of
safety precautions.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
So you feared the Trump houses. The people on FEMA
were fearing the Trump Houses like they were faring people
with vicious dogs in their backyard.
Speaker 3 (13:53):
Exactly.
Speaker 1 (13:57):
I know it's a lot to take in, but these
people are everywhere, and to clean them out is going
to take a ton of work. I got this email,
Dear mister Wright. We got to arrest two judges today,
but it still feels like we're losing the war. Your thoughts.
(14:18):
He's talking about the two judges from last week, and
actually I have more on that. We'll get to that
in a minute. Here, does it feel like we're losing
the war? Well, let me use another analogy, sorry, that
I've used many times before I've compared America's spending. I
usually use it about the spending to basically running a
(14:39):
Dave in Busters with the company credit card for years
and years and years. All the beers paid for the music, slow,
the games are paid for. It's someone else's money. It's
just spend, spend, spend. So I want you to picture this,
this gigantic ten year party at Dave and Busters, where
all the kids, all the parents, everyone's running free. It's
not their money, it's not their club. What does what
(15:03):
does the bathroom look like at the end of that
ten years, How much food is on the floor, how
much stuff has been spilled, rotted? It's bad right. Well,
these people, these vicious little communists, have been worming their
way through our critical institutions for years. And what's happening
(15:28):
right now, and I really want to applaud them for
it is the Trump administration. You know, I've been hard
on them, and I will be again. They are exposing it,
and my sources inside of the Trump administration continue to
tell me, Jesse, you can't even believe what we're finding. Jesse.
It's so much worse than we thought. Jesse, It's so bad.
(15:49):
Every single time they open a new bathroom stall inside
of the federal government, they're mortified by what's staring them
in the face. It's not that we're losing the war
of cleaning out our institutions, of cleaning out our systems.
It's that we are just now starting to address it.
(16:11):
It's that we're just now turning on the lights and
looking at how bad everything is. We're just now walking
into the kitchen and seeing that it hasn't been cleaned
in ten years. The bathrooms, that it's bad it's really, really,
really bad. And you and I because we've had a
complicit media, and because we've had a lame, pathetic Republican
(16:33):
party that won't address the problem. Even though you and
I we've known a little bit about a little bit, right,
we've been able to scratch the surface. Oh, I get
that it's bad there, but maybe not too bad, man,
when you finally take it all in. It's bad when
I tell you the bathroom has it been cleaned in
ten years? You may picture something bad in your mind,
(16:55):
but tell me it's not so much worse when you
actually have to stare at it yourself. Right now, let's
talk about the story out of Wisconsin. Actually, because this
is a great, great way to put this, the story
outa Wisconsin. This judge we have because courtesy of the
Internet slews out there, we actually have this judge. Now,
(17:18):
this is a judge. Remember she sprung an illegal on
purpose from her courthouse. Listen to Pam Bondi saying what
the judge did.
Speaker 4 (17:26):
The judge learns that Ice was outside to get the
guy because he had been deported in twenty thirteen, came
back in our country, commits these crimes, charged with committing
these crimes victims in court. Judge finds out. She goes
out in the hallway, screams at the immigration officers. She's furious,
visibly shaken upset, sends them off to talk to the
(17:46):
chief judge. She comes back in the courtroom here can
believe this, takes the defendant and the defense attorney back
in her chambers, takes him out of private exit and
tells him to leave while a state prosecutor and victims
of domestic violence are sitting in the courtroom.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
Why would you do that? Oh, I have some old
audio of hers that will be pretty revealing. We'll get
to that in a moment. Before we get to that,
let's keep your puppy alive. Dogs. Our dogs are part
of our families. And the worst thing in the world
everybody knows it is when your dog dies. It's awful.
(18:27):
I buried plenty of them, So why not push that
day out as far as possible. I certainly hope Fred
sticks around as long as possible. That's why we sprinkle
rough greens on his food. Your dog does not get
nutrition from dog food. Dog food is dead. What color
do what color do the leaves turn when when they die?
(18:50):
Get ready? To fall off. Yeah, same color as the
dog food. For a reason. Brown things are dead. Green
things are alive. Rough Green have live vitamins and minerals
and digestive enzymes and probiotics, omega oils. You will see
so many differences in your dog. Your dog will be
happier and healthier. Start sprinkling it on your dog's food
(19:14):
free jumpstart trial bag at eight three three three three
my dog or go to Roughgreens dot com slash Jesse
We'll be back Jack. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a Monday. Chris, I'm actually glad you just played
some queen. I have a story to tell you, Pal.
(19:35):
I'll get to it in just a second. About my weekend.
Oh oh get ready for Oh get ready, get ready.
I'll get to that in a moment. Had a little
incident with ob I just want to finish this up
with this judge Hannah Dugan, because we're talking about how
these people think and the mess we have to clean up,
and I'm actually giving out kudos. The Trump administration is
exposing it. They are starting to get to it. I'm
(19:58):
not saying they're going to succeed, by the way, I
don't know that it's possible to succeed in cleaning out
this much rotten four years. I'm talking about what they're
dealing with. A Wisconsin judge finds out ice is there
for a criminal. She grabs them and his attorney, puts
them into her office and whisks them out the private
exit and helps them escape. How could a judge do
(20:20):
such a thing? Well, I'm gonna play something for you.
This is Judge Hannah Dugan. This is from a few
years ago. Now, you know how I've been ranting and
raving on the radio about how it doesn't matter what
role they play, It doesn't matter what uniform they put on.
They're communists first. Everything else is ancillary, everything else is secondary.
They're always communists first. You see the general's uniforms at
(20:43):
the draw of the judge's robes or whatever, and think, Wow,
surely with an important role like that, they're gonna do
the job first, and then they'll do, you know, some
democrat stuff on the side. Listen to Judge Hannah Dugan
tell me does she see herself as a jut or
is she in that role for the revolution.
Speaker 5 (21:04):
A law is a real challenge in making sure that
justice happens for people. It's transformative in people's lives, but
it also, especially the United States, is considered a stabilizing force.
It's something that keeps us on a constant path. The
rule of law is how we address our social issues,
(21:26):
how we address our disputes, but also how we grow
as people. I as a person who for a couple
decades or most represented low income people. It is due
process that really equalizes those differences between people. Then we're
able to achieve that equal justice that we are promised
(21:50):
and hope to have continue despite our differences, despite our
class differences, despite our racial and religious differences.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
Does that sound like a judge or does that sound
like a communist revolutionary? And again this is one example.
These people are everywhere, local, state, county, federal government. We've
educated generations of these people, and for generations they've been
(22:25):
warming their way into critical positions of power across the country.
We are now becoming more anti communist, and that's good.
We're opening up our eyes. That's good. We're figuring out
just how bad things are. It's good. All this stuff
is very very good. But as we open up our eyes,
as we open up the bathroom stalls and we see
(22:47):
what's been happening for the last twenty years without a cleaning.
It's going to be hard to take some times, and
it's not going to be fast, and it's not going
to be easy. Cleanup is going to involve more than
one bucket of water in a mop, especially since we're
deporting all the cleaning ladies. Now I'm quit. I'm kidding, what, Chris,
(23:10):
it was a joke. I'm just saying. The cleaning crew
in the building here definitely got wiped out. Trump definitely
took him out. I know you're frustrated with the pace.
I'm frustrated with the pace. It's bad. It's really really bad.
Now we'll continue back on the revolution here in a minute,
but I have to get this queen thing off my chest. Okay,
(23:30):
And I know you're probably gonna think I'm a bad person,
but here it is so aub My wife, Aubrey, she
loves music a lot. Now, maybe you say everyone loves music,
not like Aubrey does, which makes it interesting because in
my house, I won't say music was shunned, but remember
(23:55):
my father, he didn't allow us to listen to music
in the car on road trips. There was no music.
The radio was not on at all. Don't think we
were listening to talk radio. In fact, there wasn't much
talking period, even when it was just him and me.
When we take hunting trips or fishing trips, somewhere we're talking.
You drive five six hours eastern Montana going back to
(24:16):
kill an antelope or something like that. Silence, no radio,
no nothing. Now I can't help but be my father's son. Okay.
I actually prefer lots of the time to not hear
much music, especially when I'm in a car full of people.
(24:37):
I'm trying to explain, Chris, I can't hear you talk
and the music. And when I have to ask you
to repeat yourself, I'm aggravated. When I have to repeat myself.
I'm aggravated when I have to elevate my voice to
talk over the music you've turned up. It makes my
blood pressure spiked through the roof. I know I'm a
bad person. I get that I'm not as musica as obvious,
(24:59):
all right, I'm not as musical. So she finds this
thing where there's a little four person what do you
call it, Chris, A quartet, an orchestra, symphony, something I
don't know. It was a bunch of violin looking things,
big and small ones, that's what it was. And they
(25:19):
this was over the weekend. They were going to perform
queen music for an hour by candlelight. Yeah, and it
was supposed to be in a church, so I thought, Okay,
maybe it will be at least decent. No, it turns
out it's one of these devil worshiping churches that had
(25:40):
Black Lives Matter and Love is Love and all that
stuff on a sign on the side of the church.
So it's one of those real demonic churches. We show
up and we sit there for an hour in the
candlelight as these people were playing queen songs and I
just wanted to die. And ob caught me looking at
(26:00):
my watch three or four times. What Chris, I thought.
I was pretty slick about it. I would do like
the stretch thing, and then I'd kind of put my arm,
you know, you put your arm out in front of you.
Oh did I just glance down. Oh it looks like
another fifteen minutes. I used every technique, but somehow she
got onto it. But she was in heaven, absolute aving
(26:20):
this is the greatest thing ever. I think she almost
teared up at some point in time, she loved it,
loved it, but we were leaving, and I knew that
I had a choice to make in that exact moment,
you see, And I still don't know whether I decided correctly.
I don't know that there is a correct answer to this.
Because as we're getting in the car and we're driving
(26:42):
back home, she says, I thought that was the greatest
thing ever. I want to do that again. Hopefully they
are doing other shows and stuff like that. What did
you think? And now now I had this war inside
of myself. You see, On one hand, honesty's the best policy, right.
(27:09):
Not only is it the best policy, not only is
it morally right to be honest, but if I'm honest,
then it really really decreases the chances she'll ever ask
me to do it again. But lying has incredible benefits too.
Of course, she's on cloud nine at this point. It's
(27:34):
date night. She's having a blast. She's got this glow
on her face. If I just lie and tell her
I had the time of my life and she believes it,
that's kind of the critical. If I can lie well
enough that she believes it, then it will make her
night better. It will help carry her to a wonderful
(27:58):
evening and I did both. Here's what happened. I told her, no,
it was good, it was good. But apparently I repeat
it when I'm lying. I guess whenever do I do that? Chris,
I'm a bad liar, Chris? Am I really dang well?
(28:22):
She picked up on a tubud Okay, she said, I
caught you looking at your watch? What did you really think?
And then I just came out with it and I said,
that was freaking brutal, brutal, you know what. That glow
she had gone disappeared immediately. I don't know whether I
(28:43):
did the right thing, but I did what I did.
Let's get back to talking about communist revolutionaries in col zones.
But first we actually have to pay a tribute to somebody.
We lost a member of the Jesse Kelly Show family.
Hang on, is he smarter than everyone?
Speaker 5 (28:59):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (29:00):
See Kelly Show on a wonderful Monday, of course. Medal
of Honor Monday coming up about ten minutes from now,
going to Korea for this one. That one's always spicy.
Don't forget. You can email the show Jesse at Jesse
kellyshow dot com. So much to get to we'll get
back to the revolutionaries and a lot of that stuff. JB.
(29:21):
Pritzker said something wild, but first we have to do
something a bit heavy, but I wanted to do it.
We like to consider everybody part of a part of
the family. Here, us, you, everybody. We're all in this together,
aren't we. And when we lose one, family needs prayers,
(29:47):
well wishes, things like that. So we got this email
and I'm I'm gonna read the whole thing. The subject
to this one is passing of my son. Hi Jesse,
writing to let you know how important your show was
to my son, James Garrett Terrhun. Sorry if I'm saying
that wrong, but I think I'm saying it right. You
(30:09):
read one of his asked Doctor Jesse questions last year
on the air. Garrett passed away unexpectedly and suddenly last
Thursday the seventeenth, at forty four years old. He had
Type one diabetes since he was twelve, and the coroner
said his cause of death was diabetes related. I assume
a stroke or a heart attack. He recently bought your book,
(30:32):
The Anti Communist Manifesto. It was on his nightstand. Garrett
lived a hard life twenty five don't worry, this has
a better ending. Stay with me. Twenty five years of
addiction and homelessness. Six years ago, he was arrested for
maybe the tenth time, but this time it was for
assault during a meth stoked rage against another user over
(30:54):
a woman. As it turned out, this was the beginning
of a big turnaround. He went through rehab again, but
this time something clicked and he realized he had no
choice but to get straight. During his rehab, he found
a discarded painting of Jesus sitting by a dumpster and
felt it was a sign, and he still displayed this
(31:17):
painting in his home until the end. His last five
years were amazing. He decided to get a CDL. He
found a job with a small company in his hometown
and for three years he valued himself as a working man.
Two years ago, he told me about your show and
like him, I'm a regular podcast listener. In his Facebook profile,
(31:41):
he has anti communist in his profile. Two months ago,
he was able to achieve his ultimate goal of being
a homeowner, and he loved to say he went from
homeless to a homeowner. None of us know why, when,
or how God will call us home, and we still camp.
This happened. I just wanted you to know and thank
(32:03):
you for being part of his amazing turnaround success story.
If you choose to mention this on the air, you
were free to use his name. And again, his name
is James Garrett Terhun. Please, if you will keep this
family in your prayers. Forty four is obviously sudden. It
(32:24):
was sudden, But that that's a happy ending, isn't it.
I know, look, I know it's not easy to lose anybody,
and you never feel like there's enough time. I lost
my dad at sixty nine. He was three week shy,
three week shy of his seventieth birthday, and I lost him.
(32:45):
And I'll be honest, is I've been grieving the past
few months. I've had plenty of moments where I'm like, man,
why couldn't I have my dad? And two I'm eighty
or ninety. I'll see somebody who has theirs and I'll
think I would have liked mine. But when is there enough?
There's never enough time. There's never a date that it
would have been, like, you know what, I'm done with him.
You can take him now. There's never a good time,
(33:06):
but you will be with him again one day, and
that is an awesome story. And I wanted to read
this as an inspiration to everybody out there listening who
might be struggling right now with something in life. And
it doesn't have to be addiction, but maybe it is.
Maybe it's drugs or alcohol. Maybe you're listening to me
(33:27):
in prison right now, and maybe you've lived a rough life.
Maybe it's crime. Maybe that's what you do. Maybe that's
all you've known, what your dad did. Maybe you're going
through a divorce, bankruptcy. Maybe your kid's going haywire. Maybe
you are that kid going haywire. Maybe you're a kid
and your parents are going nuts. Life's hard and you
(33:49):
can be down for a long time and then get
it together. So don't think for a second that this
is just this guy's story. You can get it together too.
It can be ard and it doesn't have to be tonight.
Maybe it won't be tonight. Maybe it'll be tomorrow, next month,
next year. Stay with it. Your story can have a
(34:12):
happy ending to all right. I know forty four is young,
and it certainly doesn't ease the pain of that family,
but that story not only kind of got me, maybe
me smile too, kind of freaking cool guy struggles for
that long terms his life around. So please say a
prayer for the Terrahuon family as they go through this,
(34:33):
and you use that as a motivation to turn yourself around.
Let's do some more emails jahwe before we get onto
Medal of Honor Monday and illegal immigration or all of
that stuff this guy says, isn't discrimination illegal? Jesse the
vest Kelly, isn't discrimination illegal? How is Washington State getting
away with that home loan program? He's talking about the
(34:55):
home loan program that involves forgiveness as long as you're
not white? Well, isn't discrimination illegal? Look, laws should never
be looked upon as things that will actually protect you,
because laws in general will eventually be perverted by evil
(35:18):
men and they will be used against you. Isn't discrimination illegal? Well,
let's talk about the things like the Civil Rights Act.
Then we passed the Civil Rights Act. Why because black
people were being treated like second class citizens in the country.
You can't eat here, you can't sit there, you get
and that's wrong and we knew it was wrong and
(35:38):
we had to do something to stop it. So you
pass this law. You can't do this, you can't do that.
You can't do this, and everyone celebrates it. How long
did it take for evil men, evil women to How
long did it take for evil men to get in
there and figure out a way to use all these
anti discrimination law to discriminate. My point is not even
(36:03):
about necessarily the evil people or a good people, or
a law, this law that act. My point is not that.
My point is we're always trying to come up with
a permanent fix for the problem. We did a permanent law,
We did a law that says this can ever happen.
But that is not the world in which we live.
There is no such thing as that constant vigilance is
(36:26):
what we need.
Speaker 3 (36:26):
This has been a podcast from wor