Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the Jonathan and Kelly Show.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Jonathan Rush, Yeah, I was just given a note by
the Secretary of State saying that we're very close to
a deal in the Middle East and they're going to
need me pretty quickly. Kelly Nash, We're gonna win so
much you may even get tired of winning, and you'll say, please,
it's too much winning, and I'll say, no, it is
it and Kelly Show. That is exactly the words that
(00:25):
came to mind yesterday as we're looking at what is
this number seven? Is this the seventh world conflict we're
bringing to an end under the Trump administration?
Speaker 3 (00:33):
You know you're putting the piece before the bombs and
all that.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
You know, you're.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
Rushing to world peace. Donald Trump has not settled the
Middle East conflict.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
Not Yeah, we got seventy two hours to watch a mass. Say, haha,
is that you think that I fully believa will happen.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
I don't think a mass.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
I don't know because Donald Trump made it sound as
if it's like, if Hamas does not go through with it,
I think we start bombing Hamas.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
I don't think we'll have to. I think if Hamas
does it, release the hostages and the remains of those
who died. All of the Arab countries, Turkey and all
the other countries are going to bomb for us, because
Trump has already pretty much told them without coming out
and saying it out loud. If you want access to
the American markets, if you want to tear a deal
(01:19):
that you can live with, we need you to come
to the table with a with a hot poker and
start putting some heat under somebody's ass and Gaza to
make sure that they stay in line. So I think
that they realize they're surrounded by people who are in
close proximity.
Speaker 3 (01:36):
So are you saying then that you think that they
will do this?
Speaker 1 (01:40):
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
But Hamas is going to have to be brought to
the table again by the neighboring countries.
Speaker 3 (01:45):
So Hamas is not going to release the hostages.
Speaker 1 (01:48):
For seventy hours and then, yes.
Speaker 2 (01:50):
Then somebody will strike like Turkey, somebody, somebody. I don't
know if they're gonna they're gonna start picking up the phone.
I can tell you that, brother. I don't know what
you intended to have for lunch today, but we're going
to cook it for you. If you don't come to
the table with those hostages, I mean in the next
half hour. But I think it'll be the heat from
the other countries that finally bring them to the table.
(02:11):
And Trump is bringing the other countries to the table
through the tariff deals. And I'm only supposing here just
listening to the words he said and trying to piece
together exactly what the negotiations was like. But he was
quick to point out it's not him, it's the people
in his administration working with Guitar and Turkey in the like. Well,
(02:31):
I mean, either way, we'll take peace.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
You know.
Speaker 3 (02:33):
As the look Donald Trump's not negotiating personally with these people,
but he did set it in motion, right. You can
only do what your boss asks you to do.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
He gets credit for it.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
Yeah, if Donald Trump wants to end the Middle East conflict,
he makes it a priority. And that's what people work on.
If Donald Trump, well, so right now, I guess what
the pushback would be from Democrats because they hate Jews,
would be if Donald Trump actually cared about America as
much as he cared about Jews, whether we wouldn't have
(03:05):
this government shutdown. But he's not working on that, is it?
He didn't make that a priority. And now we got
airplanes that can't fly, and we have military people who
he calls suckers and losers who aren't going to start
missing paychecks very quickly.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
Didn't we have a complete air tower yesterday? Airport tower closed.
Didn't they go down?
Speaker 3 (03:22):
I don't know if they went completely dark, but I
know that they When I was listening this morning, we
had eighteen hundred flights canceled, I think yesterday, and most
of them seem to be coming out of the Northeast,
like the LaGuardia JFK New York area.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
And that's part of what we've talked about before. MSNBC
always winces and wines and cries and screams. It's the
enemy within. You've got a deep state that goes deep
deep deep state. They're deep rooted and they're not helping.
They're not budget and they want everything you touched to fail.
And if you're a federal employee and you're supposed to
(03:56):
show up to work at Laguaria.
Speaker 4 (03:58):
Today, no I going Donald Trump, that prated it.
Speaker 1 (04:02):
I hear those.
Speaker 2 (04:03):
Little mighty ass Yankees right now, somebody are to drive
to your house personally kick you when they ass Oh,
my gosh, we're over paying you for this stressful job
that Hey, I got an idea. Air traffic controllers. Step
outside of the tower, take a look around. Everybody's under
stress around here. It's called a workaday life.
Speaker 4 (04:23):
Oh, it's so stressful. They have to retire after two
years of service. Well, of course they do and get
eighty percent of their pay.
Speaker 1 (04:30):
Kiss my ass.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
Okay, there's the measured reason tones of when.
Speaker 2 (04:36):
Jonathan rush Look, I get it. We depend on you
to make sure that planes don't fly into each other. Yeah,
here are people on those planes a little stressful. Let
me introduce you to a couple of people over right
now who graduated from the training program at Fort Jackson.
They dropped out of a helicopter in the middle of
(04:57):
a hot zone, armed only with an I'm sixteen. It's
a little stressful over there. So we know about stress
in America. You want to talk about stress, let's talk
about trying to live under Joe Biden and feed kids.
You've got four kids, all of them have a mouth,
and each of those mouths had to be filled with food.
Who's going to do that? Wait in your line, Joe
(05:19):
Biden for your handout, for your socialist program to make
sure that my kids sign up for your indentured servantship
all of their lives. No, we take on the stress
of making money because money makes the world go round,
and those kids need to be fed, and by God,
I'll bust my ass to do it.
Speaker 3 (05:36):
Okay, there again the measured reason tones of Rush eloquently
stating his case. Look again, the bigger picture is the
Democrats again unanimously voted against opening the government. Their position,
and I'll just take it at face value, all right.
I will not enhance it with the Republican's counter argument.
(05:59):
But their argument is we need to settle the Affordable
Healthcare Act payments, and we need one and a half
trillion dollars or else we're going to lose it. And
I think he said, sixty million Americans that's Chuck Schumer's figures,
(06:19):
are going to see their health care costs go up.
I'll just remind the Democrats that two years ago, when
some guy named Joe Biden was the president and you
had the House and you had the Senate, you had
the opportunity in twenty twenty one, twenty twenty two, when
you pass this budget, you could have made those payments permanent.
(06:42):
But you set a deadline, and I don't know why
you did it. Part of me figures because that crew
in Congress recognized if we made this permanent, the CBO
is going to call us out and recognize that we
will bankrupt America. Exactly, you cannot be paying a trillion
dollar dollars a year extra for healthcare. So that's why
(07:04):
you just put a very limited time limit on it. Well,
now we're not going to extend. Those people are so
and the way I look at it, this is an
interesting They want Americans to feel the pain.
Speaker 1 (07:15):
Yep.
Speaker 3 (07:16):
Democrats want you to feel the pain right now. Right now,
you're feeling pain, but the government closed and it's going
to get worse, and they're doing that in the hopes
that it will force the Republicans to pass this one
and a half trillion dollars. Republicans, likewise, want Americans to
feel pain. Republicans want you to feel the pain when
it comes to your rising premiums, because what's going to
(07:38):
happen is people are going to say, oh my god,
what the hell is going on with the healthcare in America?
And they're going to start blaming Democrats because Democrats. This
is your plan. This is obamacare. This is Obamacare without
it making the country go bankrupt. It's very flipping expensive.
Donald Trump has been saying since before he became the
(07:58):
president in twenty sixteen, we have to rework the whole
Affordable Care Act. It cannot be allowed to stand. You'll
bankrupt America. And up until twenty what seventeen, twenty eighteen,
so for like five years, they tried dozens of times
to repeal and replace Healthcare, but the Republicans didn't have
(08:21):
the votes. They knew it, but they all voted unanimously
repeal and replace. Repeal and replace.
Speaker 1 (08:26):
It is a little frustrating.
Speaker 2 (08:27):
And I will remember a phone call that I had
actually with one person that Kelly Nash loves. His name
is Mark Levin. I was seated in my car in
the parking lot at Publics one night listening to Mark Levin,
and I called because they were talking about the Affordable
Care Act and how the House Republicans were pushing back
on it, and then after it was actually passed by
(08:48):
Barack Obama, there was a continued conversation and that's when
I had an opportunity to speak on the air worldwide
with Mark Levin, and I said, Mark, I got to
ask you, what do you think think the chances are
although we do have at that point, I think it
was six House members who are actual medical doctors with
real life experience serving patients in this country from six
(09:11):
different states. What do you think the odds are that
the House Republicans in actually put together what they claimed
to be the answer to fix healthcare in America with
the replacement of the ACA with something that the Conservatives
in the House would have actually proposed and been able
to get passed. And they were the great ones had
(09:33):
the same response. I was afraid he would have my friend,
there's no snowballs chance in hell. And he just went
into a tirade because although we claim we had the plan,
we had no.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
Even nuts and bolts and pieces of a plan.
Speaker 2 (09:48):
There were no ingredients to the pizza that was going
to make the pie that would become the new healthcare plan.
When the Republicans are out there, Talton that they had
the wherewithal, they had the real life experience, they had
the votes, they had the availability of actually coming up
with a better health care plan than the ACA, and
we never did.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
And do we have that available today.
Speaker 2 (10:08):
No, we still have yet to put together any kind
of House subcommittee that would have come up with a
plan to replace the unbelievable waste of money plan we
currently have in place.
Speaker 3 (10:19):
Well, I think that that's because they need the Republicans again,
both parties want Americans in pain. And that sucks to
have to say that, but that's true because otherwise, if
you're if when it's kind of like you on our
other show this morning, this last night, you saw yourself
on television and you didn't like what you saw. Now,
(10:41):
Sally's been telling you to go on a diet for
what five years now, we'll get a little chumpy, and
now you saw it and you don't like it. So
now you're in pain emotionally over the way your belly
has expanded. And so you're going to put yourself in
pain by restricting. You're going to have to go into
a caloric deficit for the next several months or even
a year in order to kind of get back to
(11:02):
the year earlier. Boyish good looks. But the American people,
when you tell them the answer, they don't want to
hear the answer. The answer is there's going to be
people in America who don't get any What we call healthcare,
it's actually called insurance. Healthcare is what you do for you.
Insurance is how people often pay for it. There's going
(11:23):
to be millions. Well currently under the unbelievable Affordable Care Act,
there's still an estimated something like twenty four million Americans
who don't have any insurance. So it didn't do what
it said it was going to do. But of those
that got picked up and added to the plans, that
is bankrupting Americans. So we have to kick poor people
off the plan, and you have to allow young people
(11:48):
to opt out of it, which that nobody likes to
hear that because why, well, then what happens when the
twenty seven year old has blood clots and it's going
to cost fifty thousand dollars in hospital bills?
Speaker 1 (12:00):
Did he get the vaccine by the way, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (12:03):
I don't know, but whatever, But what he has no insurance, Well,
he's going to be in medical debt the rest of
his life. That's what's going to happen with that, and
it's going to ruin his life. But again, the majority,
the overwhelming majority of people in their twenties and thirties,
are not going to buy insurance and they don't need insurance,
and so that means that the healthcare costs, aka the
(12:24):
insurance costs for people in their forties and up, that's
going to get more expensive. So it's it's it's a
painful reality. Everybody is going to have to suck it up.
But that's not a very good plan because nobody likes it.
But that's the way it is.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
I remember hearing Barack Obama in a the town hall
made in describing exactly what he said was the problem.
And we'll go on to explain if you like how
the answer, according to him, was the exact same plan basically.
But he called it a bus policy plan. He's talking
about young people and even some amor outside of the
younger people having nothing but a bus polty plan, which
(13:03):
means if you step out in front of a bus,
you're gonna have coverage. Anything else you're gonna pay for
out of pocket. You got a call, you're gonna go
to the doctor, you gotta pay for it. You step
out in front of a bus. Now you've got multiple
look and bones, you got internal injuries, you're going to
be in the hospital. You have a coverage plan for that,
and you pay a lesser amount of money for Yet. Now,
ironically enough, one of the plans initiated by the ACA
(13:25):
was in zact exactly a bus policy plan. But there
are a couple of things that happened with a bus
policy plan that some people didn't see coming. And this
is where the federal government could actually step in and
clean it up a little bit. If you had stage
four cancer, for instance, they would say, well, because you
didn't go to the doctor previously, you have stage four cancer.
Your hospitalization is not gonna be covered because you're at
stage four. This is particularly home close to me because
(13:49):
I have a family member who just found out because
of the camp was um water exposure cancers. He has
the top four pancreas prostate can be bladder, prostate, kidney,
and lung. Now, outside of the fact the federal government's
got to step up and pay for that because he
was a service member. If you in fact he in
(14:10):
fact has been diagnosed with stage four, he didn't know
that and be going to the doctor all of his
life because he had a good health care policy through
his employer. So there is a way to actually have
stage four cancers without anybody picking up on it until
you've actually find out you're going to have to go
to the chemotherapy or the like. So there's a lot
of different things that happen anecdotally, But the one thing
(14:31):
that we don't have for sure is a plan from
the Republicans who claim that they have all the medical
knowledge they need in order to panel a committee that
can put together a plan. And that's very frustrating for
people like me because we keep being told that Republicans
are the ones who are the adults in the room
and can come put together a plan that can help
Americans well.
Speaker 3 (14:50):
And it also depends, i think, on when you look
at what is the responsibility of the federal government. We
had an argument in the United States back in the
late two thousands. Really started under w in the early
two thousands because the Democrats, well actually it really started
back in the nineties because Hillary Clinton was pushing this idea.
(15:11):
At that time, most Americans who were alive agreed with
the Republican point of position. Healthcare or insurance is not
a right, that is a privilege that thankfully most Americans
can afford. But that argument fought out through the early
two thousands and somewhere around twenty I would say thirteen
(15:33):
twenty fourteen, because by twenty two thousand and nine twenty ten,
when they were passing the Affordable Care Act, most Americans
did not agree with it. But by twenty twelve that
argument had switched and it was now, yes, healthcare coverage
is a right if you're an American citizen, the federal
government owes it to you. That is an unsustainable policy,
(15:57):
and so you know, you're going to have to win
the argument and get people to believe again that it's
not a right, and we're going to kick all of
these people off, and you're going to see people die
and people are going to be very upset about it,
or you can watch the country go bankrupt. And I'll
just point this out, Jonathan. We're currently at thirty seven
trillion dollars. We're at about one hundred and twenty five
(16:17):
percent of GDP debt to GDP. In history, since eighteen eighty,
there's been fifty six countries that have hit one hundred
and thirty percent GDP. Fifty five of the fifty six
went bankrupt, they lost everything. The only one that survived,
and it was not a nice survival, was Japan. Japan survived,
(16:40):
but they had basically forty years of stagnation. Millions of
people died of starvation in Japan. That is coming to
America in the next five years. At the rate we're
going four to five years from now, you're going to
be at one hundred and thirty percent of GDP and
the federal government will have to declare bankruptcy.
Speaker 2 (16:58):
That is a great point. And yesterday I was thinking
on the timeline before we hit the tipping point and
we go upside down and get mortgaged out of our
own house through a foreclosure. I'm wondering if these timelines
could line up. Just brainstorming session here at the Oval Office,
(17:19):
spitball in it with Vessent and MAHA chief or FK Jr. Hey, guys,
what if we do this? What if we took every
entitlement program right now? And I'm using entitlement in a
broad spectrum because I know that Social Security checks are
not an entitlement.
Speaker 1 (17:36):
I've already been taught that I got it.
Speaker 2 (17:38):
But we take every dollar that we send out through
any program, disability, military, social Security, Medicaid, medicare, all of it,
All of those programs, We're going to front load each
of the people in the system now who are looking
to receive a check that's coming fifteenth of this month,
we're going to front load it for three or four
(17:59):
more months. Meaning if you get five hundred dollars a month,
we're going to give you two grand right now, and
with that payment, you're automatically out of the system. Then
we're going to make sure that you have an opportunity
during the next three, four or five months, however much
time we front loaded it. Remember we've already paid you.
(18:20):
You're not losing anything. You're going to have to reapply,
and this time when you reapply, it ain't Joe Biden
signing up every damn body who walks to the front
door without any kind of qualifications. We're actually going to
qualify you for disability. We're actually going to qualify you
for Medicaid, and part of that's going to be citizenship.
But there are going to be other factors, because we
know there are people collecting disability who shouldn't be. Because
(18:43):
the waste, fraud, and abuse has got to be an
incredible percentage of that thirty seven trillion outstanding that Kelly
says is going to take us under So the fastest
way we can save money when you're if you're at
your home budget right now and you've got X number
of dollars to make it to the end of the month,
you're going to do cut back on any expense you
don't have to pay for now. The car doesn't need
(19:05):
an oil change until next Thursday, so we can put
that off for thirty days. Okay, but we have to
have bread, and we have to have peanut butter, and
we may be down to peanut butter and jelly sandwiches,
but we're going to cut back because we only have
X number of dollars. If you made everybody requalify, I
believe you could cut twenty five or thirty percent of waste, fraud,
(19:26):
and abuse out of those programs just by making people
come out of the grave because we know we're paying
debt people and show up in person to apply for
their programs all over again.
Speaker 3 (19:37):
Of Course I hate fraud. Of course everybody hates fraud,
right well, except Democrats. Most people hate fraud. That's why
doge was a popular idea, but without fraud. This was
actually assigned government spending. Since twenty twenty. Since twenty twenty,
(20:00):
the federal government has increased its spending. This is not
fraud spending. That's not this is what they've assigned themselves,
twenty five percent increase. What do you explain that to.
You could say part of that was COVID. You can say,
sure there was an emergency bailout in twenty twenty, Sure
(20:22):
there was something in twenty twenty one, maybe even twenty
twenty two. We had to spend some money. I'll give
you twenty twenty three. Can I give you twenty twenty four? Okay,
I'll give you that. Because Joe Biden was still in office,
Donald Trump's in office in twenty twenty five, we went
up again, why why are we continuing to do you
feel like you're getting twenty five percent more government anything
(20:46):
since twenty.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
Twenty nobody does.
Speaker 3 (20:49):
That is just what the government is doing, and it's
going to kill us. We're all going to be homeless here.
As you say, look at the French Revolution. I was
watching a document around that the other day. Very fascinating
to me to see how ugly and how quickly that
got ugly. It took about a few years for the
(21:11):
peasants to get angry, and when they got angry, and
so I don't by the way, I don't think anybody
in our audience is going to be in that peasant class.
We're not the ones that are going to get that angry.
We're going to be the ones that are shocked by it.
We're going to be the ones that are shocked when
the people in the hood rise up. We're going to
(21:31):
be shocked by the people that you see come out
that whatever the modern day era of pitchforks is, that's
what's coming. And because they are so, when the government
declares bankruptcy and they have no more checks, no more
social Security coming in, the elderly aren't going to be
the ones that are upset. It's going to be the
(21:52):
people who have been on welfare for generations. Meaning I've like,
in order to get welfare, you actually, maybe people don't know,
you have to be unemployed for a minimum of a year.
You can't have a job for a year. So it's
not like you can start on welfare when you're twenty seven. Sure,
you got to start on it as soon as you can,
otherwise you have established any kind of work history that
(22:16):
now you're screwed for a year. You can't take any
income in for a year. Who can make that. So
the people on welfare, they started because their parents were
on welfare, and their parents showed them how to get
on the system. When they are told there's no more
money coming, they're coming out of the hood. When the
people who own the Section eight housing are told that
the federal government's not going to pay for that anymore,
(22:37):
the people who own that Section eight housing are going
to go bankrupt. Billionaires will be wiped out that day.
Everybody's going to lose everything. So they're going to be
the ones that riot. And if you look at that
French Revolution, the guy who started the French Revolution, this
is ironic. Imagine like the Bernie Sanders or somebody like
that of that era, but he would be a younger person.
(23:00):
He's out in the streets screaming, they're taking advantage of us,
they're ruining us. The rich are ruining us. We've got
to stop them. Blood in the streets, Blood in the streets,
and they bring out the guillotines on the streets and
they start beheading the rich. The rich are getting caught
as they leave their little castles or their house, their encampments,
and they're being beheaded and everybody celebrates. It goes on
(23:24):
for three years. One of the last people they dragged
to the guillotine was the guy who started it, because
by the end he was considered rich as middle class
as that guy was. The guy right now, Joe the
plumber of today, he's going to be one of the
last ones that is dragged to the streets. And the
only way you ended that one was Napoleon recognized this
(23:45):
will never end. They're gonna kill themselves, they will kill
the whole country will be gone. And so he said,
I got to turn their rage on something else. What
can we turn the French's rage on? And we'll just
start foreign wars. And that's what they did. You want
to go kill some people, Let's go kill some people.
And they went and killed some people and it went
(24:06):
on for decades. And that's what we're that's what we're
signing up for right now, for the rest of my life,
because I'm in my fifties, I should expect civil unrest,
blood in the streets, in war. That's what's coming to
America because of the current government situation where they cannot
get their finances in order, and the only way they
can get them in order is if they take a
(24:27):
bunch of poor people and tell them, no more health
care for you, and then the middle class has to
be okay. They have to stomach that. They have to say, gosh,
that's a tough thing. It's a tough thing to watch
people die on the streets because they can't go and
get medical coverage.
Speaker 2 (24:43):
But that's what has to happen. Well, we're going to
continue to track a couple of things. Hey, you're on
the claw, Commas b We're going to see we continue
to watch the government not service the American people. And
when they do start servicing it, how much is that
going to add to the national dad?
Speaker 3 (25:02):
And last year we spent six point eight trillion dollars
as a government. That was what they spent last year.
And the freaking right now between now and next year,
they want to add one and a half trillion one
and a half to that to that. Now, we didn't
bring in six point eight trillion, by the way, we
brought in like five trillion.
Speaker 2 (25:21):
And we're still going to be sending the bait goods
to the homosexuals in Indonesia? Is that still part of it?
Speaker 3 (25:27):
Well, I know they're protesting. If you lose it, then
you lose the world. That's true, right, So, and we
need Burton Ernie in Iraq or someplace.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
Now here in South Carolina. And we got four minutes
to talk about this, and won't take four minutes because
you've already talked about it a million times. The ACLU
has launched yet another attack on the South Carolina education system.
Speaker 3 (25:48):
Do you think it's the ACLU or do you think
it's the kids?
Speaker 1 (25:50):
Well, it's the kids this time. The kids out to
the a CLU didn't that.
Speaker 3 (25:53):
They probably contacted the ACLU and said help us.
Speaker 2 (25:56):
Oh no, I think the soou went out and fell
what what? Pretty much the same way they went out
and found that one woman in Orangeburg County who said
that the federal government getting her information through the South
Carolina Legend Commission was an invasion of her privacy. And
we described how stupid that argument could be. That's why
I think she never actually spoke for herself, because she
realized she couldn't get through the argument without laughing out
(26:18):
loud it's idiocy. But nonetheless, we found a couple of
kids here in South Carolina who are just hell bent
and determined they have to be able to go to
their public school library, not the public library on the corner,
the public school library, so they can read some book
called what is it called.
Speaker 3 (26:33):
Against Books of being a Wallflower.
Speaker 2 (26:36):
Which basically describes the daily antics and fun adventure of
three homosexual boys.
Speaker 3 (26:42):
Well one's a bisexual.
Speaker 1 (26:43):
Oh I forgot about that. Yeah, he is a girlfriend.
Speaker 2 (26:46):
Now the acou is saying, And there's even a reference
here that one of the students used to get the
information from their teacher in the classroom, but now she
stopped doing it because she's fearful she's going to lose
her job because she's handing out pornography. What is it
some kind of instructional book? Is it really an instructional book?
It's where the person being a wallflower? Yeah, because it
(27:07):
teaches you how to do different Oh.
Speaker 3 (27:09):
No, no, this is not like a manual. It's just
good from what I didn't watch. The movie It's got
stars Emma Watson, you know, the girl from Harry Potter.
She's in the movie. She's the girlfriend obviously of one
of the bisexuals who ends up in the homosexuals and
then they like to have public sex in the park
and then they try to avoid being caught and then
(27:31):
there's heartbreak and confusion and all that sort of Anyway,
Ellen Weaver in the South Carolina school boards have decided
this is one of the many books that we shouldn't
be putting into the school libraries. It brings no cultural
value to a person to read this book. It's entertaining. Sure,
(27:52):
we have lots of other entertaining books that don't actually
discuss heterosexual or homosexual or bisexual or transgendered sex. There's
lots of entertaining, but we also have other books of important. Now,
these books like Perks of Being a Wallflower are available
in most public libraries. They're also available on audible and
lots of other places that you can get them for free.
You can download them, you could watch the movie. You
(28:14):
got all these options. But the Academic Magnet High School,
there's one student there that's down in Charleston. And then
you have a brother and sister or maybe two brothers
that just says their siblings that go to Greenville High
School obviously up in Greenville, and they're the ones that
the ACLU are suing on behalf of. And you mentioned
the according to the lawsuit before the passage of the
(28:34):
regulation against these books, one student in Charleston was able
to borrow the books from his teacher's classroom collection, but
that ended when the regulation required all educators to catalog
their books, and most teachers stopped providing classroom libraries altogether.
According to the lawsuit, so they're suing because what most
(28:54):
would consider softcore pornography is not available for school library assumption.
That's the lawsuit. That's the gist of saying the third lawsuit, right.
Speaker 1 (29:05):
Is that all we've had. It feels like a hundred before.
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (29:09):
Now they're saying, this is a violation of how many
different amendments have we violated here by not allowing kids
to obtain softcore pornography or, in many instances, hardcore pornography.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
Who's what are we violating? Again?
Speaker 3 (29:22):
I don't even know what we're violating. I thought until
you turned eighteen, you didn't have a right. That's what
my parents taught me.
Speaker 1 (29:29):
That's not what Barack Obama would tell you, really.
Speaker 3 (29:32):
I thought, I just I just remember hearing that. Pretty sure,
you're lucky.
Speaker 2 (29:35):
Enough to get out of the womb, you're a citizen
of the world, and you have your own standing.
Speaker 3 (29:41):
Oh does the world have a Constitution.
Speaker 1 (29:42):
I believe that that's that's the end results.
Speaker 3 (29:45):
It seems like the world has claimed our constitution. As
a citizen of Hamas, I'm allowed my freedom of speech.
Speaker 1 (29:54):
Please pick up right there tomorrow