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September 15, 2025 • 29 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the Jonathan and Kelly Show.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Jonathan Rush, we need to start now shaping the future.
That means winning the key races of twenty twenty five
by supporting our terrific democratic nominee Zorn Mandanie.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
Kelly Nash, New York Governor County HCl has officially endorsed
Zorn Mom Donnie. New York deserves a mayor who will
stand up to Donald Trump. The Jonathan and Kelly Show.
Now that report says that she has officially endorsed him.
Has she done that online? Because she's supposed to do
it today? I believe with the press conference I'm watching,
flipping back over to MSNBC.

Speaker 3 (00:37):
Do you think that they're going to carry it live?
This is some streaking news, absolutely that the liberals nut
job governor of New York is going to support the
liberal nut job mayor.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
Embraced by supposedly the mainstream that will be Kathy Hukel
And promoted there as well as other candidates he was promoting.
That would have been Senator Van Holland, who we last
saw habit of Margarita with the what's his name?

Speaker 3 (01:01):
The fine Maryland man also known as kilmar Abrego Garcia
sear to be. Is he going? Where's he going again?
He's going somewhere in Africa or something? Wasn't he? It's
not a good this guy.

Speaker 1 (01:13):
If this guy has a case against its attorney, if
anybody's got a case against this attorney gainst this.

Speaker 3 (01:17):
Guy, well he's a human trafficker. So I had no
mercy on him, all right.

Speaker 1 (01:21):
So I'm awaiting that big announcement. I believe that she's
going to get full coverage today. Is she now embraces
and then justifies I guess brings the mainstream of the
Democrat Party even further left? Or is she trying to
bring the further left of the Democrat Party to the mainstream.
I don't know. You got peanut butter in my chocolate.
I got chocolate in my comedy peanut butter. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (01:43):
I don't. I don't know what is going on other
than people are frustrated. So whether they're frustrated with the left,
the right government in general, it people are right now
ready to be taken advantage of. So there are political

(02:04):
hustlers who are taking advantage of your desperation. And mom
Donnie is a perfect example of someone who would do.

Speaker 1 (02:13):
That and make it makes sense again, Kelly, make it
make sense.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
I mean the promises of a Mom Donnie don't even
hold up to the lightest of scrutiny, I mean any scrutiny.
That's why they don't want you to talk. That's what
you know. If your idea can't be challenged, then then
they have to shut you up. So when Mom Donnie
says I'm going to make apartments affordable in New York,
how what is your plan to take an island that

(02:43):
has roughly we'll say Ballpark, well, not even the island
of Manhattan, the five boroughs of New York City, and
we'll say that's roughly what four or five million people
live there, and there's roughly eighty percent of them are
for rent. And of that eighty percent, there's probably one

(03:03):
hundred and fifty percent of the people who want to
rent them. And the average income and in that community
would be, say two hundred thousand a year. How could
you possibly expect anybody to rent an apartment for one
thousand a month. I, as the landowner, purchased this building
in say two thousand and fifteen, and it can only

(03:24):
break even if we're charging twenty four hundred a month,
and I have demand and the capability. I'm not having
any vacancies at four thousand a month, So why in
God's name would we go to one thousand a month
to make it affordable for people who work at the
grocery store. There's no unless you're willing to suspend capitalism. Now,

(03:49):
if you're willing to suspend capitalism, then you have to
have a whole different set of like principles, like what
is the because now we can't reward hard work. Hard
work is no longer the goal. We're not trying to
get the most out of you because we've already said
that we're going to give you a basic what do
they call it? Basic livable wage? If you have a

(04:10):
basic livable wage without having to do any work, why
am I working? Well?

Speaker 1 (04:16):
Bernie Sanders isn't propagating this for decades, so certainly he
has a plan that Mandomie could just take as a
template and then put his name on it.

Speaker 3 (04:24):
There has never been a successful socialist country that I'm
aware of.

Speaker 1 (04:29):
Well, they go to try harder.

Speaker 3 (04:31):
I mean, and you can even look at current socialist countries.
You can try to tinker with the idea of say,
socialized medicine, and you could say, well, Canada has a
form of socialized medicine, and that's true, and so does England,
both Canadians and people from England. If they sustain any
kind of disease that is more than just a basic

(04:54):
type of thing, if they beg to come to America, yes,
they desperately need to come here because they're so their
healthcare system can't handle what they've currently got.

Speaker 1 (05:04):
They weren't able to take that. Michael Moore endorsed Cuba
health Care Plan Cuba Healthcare take that and replicated in Canada.

Speaker 3 (05:11):
It doesn't seem like it's going so well in Cuba either.
So I mean, and these are not socialist countries. These
are forms of socialism inside their country. You can't even
really say, I mean that the closest form to socialism
or communism that we know right now, I think, other
than as I mean, if you're gonna go full blown,
I guess you'd say North Korea. But if you're talking

(05:33):
about like the Chinese government, the Communist the Chinese Communist
Party provides for a capitalist form of commerce that they
needed to implement starting back in the nineteen seventies, to
take advantage of the opening that Richard Nixon was giving them,
and so we've got capitalism inside China. The Dang Party

(05:57):
of Mao said, our ideas are failure. We can't make
it work with one point whatever it was at the time,
it's now up to like one point three or four
billion people live there. And then the other complaint is
it's not big enough. So they've tried them in little
countries like North Korea, and it's not enough people. It's

(06:18):
not the people, it's the programs.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
Well Man domm, he's going to have this unveiling I
guess what the day after the election, because you're right,
he's gonna zip it. Until then, he just is he
I mean, I'm he hasn't described exactly how he's going
to make this happen.

Speaker 3 (06:36):
Oh, I thought I had heard that, Mom. Donnie's going
to use We already use rent control in this city.
We're going to use more of it. I will buy
executive order to create you as the landowner, you've lost
your building. I've seized it that yeah, as the government
and the interest of the public. You have been making
money off the hard work of these people. So no

(06:57):
more free ride for you. Mister landowner. Yes, that's free rights.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
Of all the costs, and as soon as you fall
into bankruptcy, then we'll have the equivalency of the free
grocery stores.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
Or the City of column of New York will purchase
it at a price that we deem we appropriate. Yeah,
we deemed your like mar A Lago is valued at
fifteen million dollars, although currently the land itself is valued
at one hundred and fifty million, but we deemed it
the whole, the building and everything at fifteen million. You
will take the offer or you will go to prison.

Speaker 1 (07:27):
That is a matter of fact, part of a New
York State court record.

Speaker 3 (07:30):
So that's that's the plan. I mean the plan is
we we try to break the rich because they're getting
rich off of the work of the poor. That is
the basic argument of all socialists that there's only rich
people because they take advantage of poor people.

Speaker 1 (07:48):
And he's given you a wink as good as a
nod to a blind horse, because he is going to
raise taxes on white neighborhoods. So that will be what's
a white neighborhood. Well, you got to the fingerprint inside
the zip code to determine the street if you live
on that street, then you're going to have an interesting
little piece of mail coming to you from the state
of New York.

Speaker 3 (08:08):
I mean, it's I used to live in New York City.
I don't imagine. I mean, I know it's changed substantially
over the last twenty twenty five years, but it hasn't
changed to the point where I would imagine you have
all white neighborhoods when I live there. In my apartment building,
which was on fifty seventh Street, which is now called
Billionaire's Row. When I lived on fifty seventh Street in
my apartment building, there was me. Next door to me

(08:31):
was an Indian woman. Across the hallway from me was
an African American. That's three apartments in one building where
none of us are the same color. We have white, brown, black.
That's the only three apartments on that floor. Multiply that

(08:52):
by the entire street of fifty seventh A.

Speaker 1 (08:54):
I don't claim I understand exactly because I haven't been
privy to the behind the scenes.

Speaker 3 (09:00):
I mean, your bribes in public, Well, I'm sure he's
going to target streets like Midtown Manhattan, maybe even parts
of Hell's Kitchen, which has seen a lot of you know,
whitewashing as they would call it, since I lived there,
but gentrification, gentrification came and got it, made it nice unfortunately.
But if the what are you going to do when

(09:22):
you have a guy or a gal living in one
of these quote unquote white neighborhoods who can point to
My grandmother was a sharecropper from Mississippi. My father barely
didn't even graduate high school, was what they call a
shade tree mechanic. And because he was a shade tree mechanic,

(09:45):
was able to fund me to get into my Mississippi
State University. And with my little Mississippi State University degree,
I was able to launch this business. And somehow through
all of that in forty years of hard work, myself
now is a sixty four year year old to live
in Midtown Manhattan and a beautiful apartment that I pay roughly,

(10:05):
you know, eight nine thousand dollars a month for you're
telling me you're going to kick me out.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
You're going to give it to the appeal process available.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
Oh, the mom Donnis will review it.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
Yes, they'll review it for you. Oh, he will set
up many committees to review many people.

Speaker 3 (10:22):
You're all about to be reviewed.

Speaker 1 (10:25):
There will be a lot of review committees out to
speak directly with you, and all that will be unveiled soon.

Speaker 3 (10:32):
Fifteen hours ago, tweeted, New York City deserves a mayor
who will finally stand up to Donald Trump and make
life affordable for all New Yorkers. That man is Jorhan.
Mam Donnie, thank you, Mom, Donnie. He's going to stand
up to Trump. He's going to stand up to the
net in Yahoo. He is going to as the mayor
of New York City. He's going to set international policy

(10:53):
and have net in Yahoo arrested as a war criminal.
And you and I were joking off the here. I
hope that three or four days after the election, mister
Netta who arrives in midtown Manhattan and takes himself right
on over to the Mayor's mansion and presents himself. I
was just here. I heard you were looking for him.

Speaker 1 (11:12):
You're looking for me.

Speaker 3 (11:13):
I'm right here. What do you plan to do, mister,
Momtalla m h Are you gonna try to arrest me?

Speaker 1 (11:18):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (11:18):
He will, Oh, I don't think I'm going to let
you arrest me today. To quote a great movie.

Speaker 1 (11:24):
So over the weekend and my I had a pretty
good planned I did not realize that it was going
to be foiled at every moment possible by Sally. I
was going to put my phone down, and particularly on Sunday,
as Charlie Kirk suggested that we take a day of arrest,
but even on Saturday, and I even have a plan

(11:44):
where I'm I'm babysitting, so I've got plenty to keep
my attention. I've got to stay focused on these two
kids because the youngest one's crawling now, so he's in everything.

Speaker 3 (11:54):
Mm.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
But Sally was so hung up on social media. I
mean every time I turned around, she had another video
for me to watch. And I saw one girl. I
believe she's from the state of Georgia because she mentions
Georgia power in her not in her nonsensical ravings. But
and I wondered at one point and said openly, lou Graham,

(12:17):
where are you? We need a follow up to Jukebox Hero.
I want to be a tick talk Hero. Everybody wants
to be a TikTok hero. Stars in his eyes. I
think that was the next line.

Speaker 3 (12:31):
I can't recall all the lyrics to the foreigner hit
Jukebox Hero.

Speaker 1 (12:36):
Went to number one. So and I'm wondering where is
lu Graham because we need an updated version of that.
There was a woman, one of the crazy leftists on
the on video saying why did you start? Her main
message was why did you stop there? So you killed
Charlie Kirk? Why'd you stop there? I mean, he's got
a wife, and he's got who plainly believes like he does.

(12:57):
He's got two kids she's gonna raise. They have to
be killed. And why did you stop there? Why don't
you go back and find his grandmother? Because somebody raised
him the way that he is. She needs to be killed.

Speaker 3 (13:08):
Is this like somebody actually putting this out there?

Speaker 1 (13:11):
Oh? Yeah, this woman was incensed. Well she was output
by the Democrat Party or put out as you'd say,
But because they didn't they stop there? Why'd you stop there?
That was the hook? Why did you stop there? And
you got to kill them all? Why did you stop there?
And then she went on to talk about corporate America.
I think she went into a rant about Georgia Power.
I mean that CEO's got to be killed, all of

(13:33):
them had to be killed. And I remembered I believe
Kelly Nash explained to me the good news about the
at least on X if I remember correctly that your
influence would not your your position in the ex world
would not gain by comments made by others on your
particular post unless they were followers of yours. Is that correct?

Speaker 3 (13:56):
That is the apparently the way. No, Actually, what happens
is you are penalized, okay for making comments on somebody's
post that you don't follow. Oh gotch, So your reach
is limited.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
See. I thought that was going to be the downfall
for her re singing my re singing the foreigner hit
TikTok hero. I thought it was going to actually penalize
her in her postings. But it penalizes persons who post
because she got a lot of posts on that. Now,
I'm sure most of all those people did not follow her,
but she got a lot of comments on her post

(14:34):
about why'd you stop there?

Speaker 3 (14:36):
There's a there is a trend amongst I don't even
know if these people are on the left or they
just take leftist positions. But in order to gain a
lot of what we'll call heat, that's what the pro
wrestlers call it heat. When you get people commenting, they
will take extreme positions like there was a lady who

(14:58):
was doing this, probably six months ago. I saw her
posts numerous times, and she would say, and she's a
little chunky, she's a little mousey. Imagine a mousey, chunky
girl who's about thirty eight years old. Okay, that's who
I believe. She was a thirty eight year old, chunky,
mousey looking person. And she would always post a picture

(15:22):
of herself, like holding a margarita or something, or maybe
she was out at a bar. She was doing something
that was like fun and wild, like something you would
do with when you're twenty two, and she would her
caption would say something like the right can't stand it
that I find true joy living my truth. You know,

(15:42):
every Friday and Saturday night with my girlfriends. We are strong,
independent women who don't need a man for nothing. I
have no idea if she actually believed that. What my
wife showed me later on is that girl was making
one hundred thousand dollars a month based off the comments
of people called you know, you dumb c word you

(16:02):
you'll never be happy, exactly like this other girl. Yeah,
and and so that's what they're looking for. So I've
I now refrain from commenting Harry Harry Sisson is that
his name. I will not comment on his posts no.

Speaker 1 (16:18):
Matter what he says. No, he could say I am
a huge fan of Kelly, and Kelly wouldn't even like it.

Speaker 3 (16:24):
No, no, I give you no love, no love. All right.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
So, by the way, I know that there is a
it's going to be an incredible memorial service for Charlie
Kirk Sunday, and that's going to be in Arizona, and
I believe they will have seventy two thousand people there.
Now I haven't seen, or maybe it's because I put
my phone down. When is the Democrat Party celebration of

(16:48):
death service? Do we have the schedule for that up yet?

Speaker 3 (16:52):
Did they send the t's and p's. I think that's all.
You're going to get the t's and peace. You might
get the don't. You might not even get the ts
and piece because they don't like to t's and peace.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
Now, I like, well, I'm continuing to monitor so we
could see Kathy Hokeel here. I want to hear that
come out of her mouth. The Democrat Party to monitor. Yeah,
the Democrat Party's going to fall to its knees and
kiss the Socialist ass right here on national television. We
are going to have some I guess some news coming

(17:21):
out of a behind, behind closed doors meeting of the
Clemson Board of Directors. They're going to talk about a
couple of professors who are tenured. I'm sure that gives
them the availability of having super First Amendment powers.

Speaker 3 (17:34):
I saw Alan Wilson, the Attorney General, put out a
thing on his social media today that the whatever the
name of the law is in South Carolina, you know,
something like the political firings law that we have. I
guess that's the name of it. That does not protect
you from celebrating the murder of anybody. And so if

(17:55):
you celebrate the murder publicly in any way, whether you're
a tenured professor, the CEO of a company, whatever they are,
with cause to fire.

Speaker 1 (18:06):
You know that Ralph Norman had a statement. I believe
Nancy Mace had a statement. I liked Lindsey Graham's statement.
I wish I had it in front of it because
I don't want to miss quot him. But it's a
good one. But we're going to have a closed door meeting.
I guess that's going on now or maybe just after
lunch in Clemson. I know we had the Greenville Greenville

(18:28):
school teacher. He was dismissed promptly. So we're going to
see more fallout from the social media interaction as we
get closer to Sunday. I'm sure it will kick back
up again. I did do myself a favor and tried
to stay out of the fray as much as possible,
because I only found it insulting for no reason.

Speaker 3 (18:51):
Why would I allow.

Speaker 1 (18:52):
I'm not going to allow what you're saying about college football.
Don't allow.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
Well. I got that one from Alan Wilson too. Alan
Wilson broke up with his girlfriend at the time because
she was a Missouri fan who grew up and attended
the University of Missouri. He's obviously a Gamecock and we
didn't play in the same conference back then. But there
was a bowl game and in the first half, the
game Cocks were winning and he was giving her to
business and she took it well. Second half, the tide

(19:19):
turned and Missouri ended up winning that bowl game, and
she was given him the business and he did not
respond well and it ended up in a big fight
and her saying, don't ever call me again, and she
left and He's like, fine, why would I ever call
you again? And he woke up the next morning and said,
you're an idiot. You just broke up with a girl

(19:41):
who you love because she's a Missou fan. This is
the dumbest thing ever. And he said that's when we
implemented the eighty twenty rule. And I said, I don't understand,
because the eighty twenty rule can mean a lot of things.
Eighty percent of your business comes from twenty percent of
your customers, eighty percent of your problems come from twenty
percent of your employees. Whatever. He said, it's we're not

(20:01):
going to allow eighty twenty year olds to dictate our happiness.

Speaker 1 (20:04):
That's right.

Speaker 3 (20:05):
And so that's the eighty twenty rule.

Speaker 1 (20:08):
So we will see up are we're gonna go no, no, no,
We're gonna talk about them from last night and we
had a couple of thousand dollars. This what she cost
the Boys and Girls Club, one of the winners, because
she wanted to say f ice and they didn't edit it.

Speaker 3 (20:22):
To my knowledge, who's.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
That Emily whatever? I don't even know what show she's on.

Speaker 3 (20:28):
She said f like but didn't say f She said
the fore word on television.

Speaker 1 (20:32):
At least the replayoffs on all social mediation on it,
because they realized that these people are holly volatile, particularly
at this moment.

Speaker 3 (20:41):
But isn't it a just cause to say that, I mean,
can you really edit.

Speaker 1 (20:45):
That which she probably have lawsuits for suppressing my free
speech and edited.

Speaker 3 (20:50):
Yeah, I am fighting the monarchy. I am fighting.

Speaker 1 (20:57):
It was f I something else in free Palestine, and
that she went over her forty five minutes allotted time
in her winters, in her winter's speech time allotment. And
if you've been following the whole thing about the Boys
and Girls Club, that cost the Boys and Girls Club roughly.

Speaker 3 (21:13):
It was twenty six thousand dollars. They were in the hole. Yeah,
so I guess they were gonna have to stroke a
check one hundred thousand dollars donation. They were going to
have to give away twenty six thousand, but.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
They Forgatzi kicks in two hundred and fifty thousand at CBS.
I guess for the beat, maybe kicked in the extra
hundred thousand, I mean three hundred and fifty thousand dollars
paid to Boys and Girls.

Speaker 3 (21:32):
So they should show the people who were so self
absorbed that they should. They couldn't just say thank you
for this honor love the Boys and Girls Clubs of America,
and then that'd be the end of the speech. And
then because it was one thousand dollars, for every second
you went under forty five and for every second you
went over, you lost a thousand for the Boys and
Girls Club. That's right, And I know people want to
thank everybody. In all honesty, nobody cares. The people that

(21:55):
you're being thanked probably care. Like if you say, I
want to thank my grandfather and my grandmother, and I
remember and old you know, missus so and so in
the third grade used to say that nobody cares. I
don't know missus so and so, and I'm never going
to meet your grandparents.

Speaker 1 (22:10):
You could have told them afterwards, Oh but you wouldn't
have the honor of recognizing them on national television. Well
you didn't say their name, You said my grandmother. Which one?

Speaker 3 (22:20):
Did you think Jesus? Yeah, I hope you think Jesus.

Speaker 1 (22:23):
I know that there were no comments about I don't
think there are any comments about Jesus. I wouldn't be surprised,
but there were no comments about Charlie Kerr.

Speaker 3 (22:33):
No, you what are you going to say? Yeah, you
get in trouble.

Speaker 1 (22:36):
If you the celebration on social media, you would have
thought they had taken the national stage on CBS and
a major network to be able to dance.

Speaker 3 (22:43):
But we already taught them that they get in trouble.
You get in trouble for that. So freedom of speech
has been killed in America because you're not allowed to
celebrate the death of you know, political figures, people who
wanted Charlie Kirk hated all blacks, all gays, all trainees.
He hated these people, and that's why he needed to die.
That's so not true.

Speaker 1 (23:03):
By the way, wasn't it an amazing the number of
people that you realized had never actually seen Charlie Kirk.

Speaker 3 (23:09):
Well, I was thinking, you know, I guess it was
Friday or Saturday. The thought hit me. Everybody's talking about
Charlie Kirk as if they knew him. What is the
percentage of people who knew his name? Maybe I'm going
to guess thirty percent of Americans had heard the name
and recognized it with some sort of political thing. Turning
point USA, that's probably in the twenty percent range, probably,

(23:31):
And then you start talking about, like, what did Charlie
Kirk actually ever say? I would guess it was less
than fifteen percent of Americans had ever heard anything about
Charlie Kirk.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Wasn't an amazing how many conversations you would get into
about Charlie Kirk. And then halfway through the conversation, or
at least presented several Pretty early in the conversation, you
realize these people have never actually seen Charlie Kirk interact
with anybody, in particular on the college campus. Turna well,
it's easy to believe.

Speaker 3 (24:05):
Certain positions. So, like I saw a woman arguing with
Charlie Kirk and he was offended by her because she
was offended by him, and so she was talking directly
to his face, which is great, and she said something
to the extent of I'm not going to like allow
you to say you're racist rhetoric right to my face.

(24:28):
And he said, what did I say to you that
was racist? Please point it out and I'll apologize. I
never mean to say anything racist. And then she said
something about I'm a black woman, and you said something
about I'm not worthy of the president, and he said,
I never said you're not worthy of the president. And

(24:49):
she said, you went on and you said this, that,
and and then he goes, hold on. So you're taking
like an entire thing where I put through a long
list of people who are living and make leave Land.
And part of make Believe Land was that Kamala Harris
is smart enough to be the president of the United States.
That's make believe Land. That's not real life. Kamala Harris

(25:11):
is not, by anybody's assessment, including the leadership of the
Democrat Party, not a smart person. She's not a likable person.
She's not qualified to be the president. That's what I
didn't say. You're not qualified to be the president. I
don't know you. You might be qualified to be the president,
but the way you're interpreting this conversation, I'm assuming you're not.

(25:32):
And she was none to but he was like, you know,
I'm not going to back down from this. I'm not
saying a racist thing. I am commenting on an individual
who happens to be a certain race.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
She's a black female unlike you, and you are a
black female. But I am not taking Kamala Harris on
my description of her, attaching it to you in any way,
shape or form.

Speaker 3 (25:51):
Could Conda Lieza Rice be the president. I bet you
Charlie Kirk would have.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
Said, yeah, yes, he would have.

Speaker 3 (25:57):
So, I mean it's again, you know a lot of
has been made about his DEI comments, and I hear
that often that Charlie Kirk says, if you see a
black pilot, you have to assume that they're DEI hires.
And that's not quite what he said. What his point
was was that when American Airlines and United Airlines started

(26:19):
taking the position that we agree with the Biden administration
that the goal is to hire black pilots, so that
because visibility is important, and they there ones who said
we are now lowering the standards because we don't have
enough black college educated pilots that can pass this, we
have to lower it to So now you have to

(26:41):
assume that they weren't there before. You just said you're
changing the standards, and now they're here. Now I have
to assume that they're not qualified. That's what I have
to assume, because you made it that way, not me.

Speaker 1 (26:55):
Particularly since they gave the percentage and you originally started
with of your pilots, we're African American. Now you want
to make sure you get to thirty eight percent. Okay,
Well that's a hell of a void to feel, and.

Speaker 3 (27:09):
You're also doing irreparable damage to the actual qualified black pilots.
There was a group of men and women who met
the standard who are now being diminished by Joe Biden
and United Airlines and anybody else who put this stupid
policy in place.

Speaker 1 (27:26):
Well, you're only making that argument, Charlie because you believe
that for some reason, you didn't measure up for the
standards for the Naval Academy, and you believe that reverse
affirmative action and then the policies that the present laid out,
which plainly makes sense, affected you personally, so you got
to act to grind.

Speaker 3 (27:43):
I mean, I'm sure people said that to him. I
don't know what his rebuttal was to that, but I'm
I'm sure it would have been fantastic whatever his rebuttal was.
But I mean, he was a brilliant debater. But he
also tried very hard to not make you feel small.
Unless you said something that tried to make him feel small,

(28:04):
then he might lash back a little bit. But a
lot of these videos that you see, these clips are
snippets of what was said, not the full and sometimes
I've seen him go as far as where he's trying
to make a point by saying something way out of bounds.
You know, that's like me saying and then they just

(28:25):
pick it up there, you know. And so then I
got him on tape black people can't reade. Charlie Kirk
said it, Well, that was the egregious thing that he
was saying. That what you're saying is the equivalent of
me just saying black people can't read.

Speaker 1 (28:41):
He said it, and then unfortunately, as was demonstrated plainly.
And I hope you're not getting text messages responding to
from Erica, who is claiming that she wants your support because.

Speaker 3 (28:51):
Charlie Kirk's wife is hitting the text trail.

Speaker 1 (28:53):
I bet I got ten text messages on Saturday, another
five yesterday.

Speaker 3 (28:58):
She's more fingers to at night.

Speaker 1 (29:01):
Do not click on that link that is not her.

Speaker 3 (29:04):
How am I going to raise two children? I need you,
I need your help, Jonathan
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