Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Final hour of The Jesse Kelly Show on
Blood has been a spectacular Friday. I'll finish my little
bear story in just a moment. We'll get back to
some politics stuff and all kinds of America slash history
(00:33):
questions and more coming up in the final hour of
the world famous Jesse Kelly Show. So, in case you're
just now joining us, I'm in Canada. I'm bear hunting.
I'm about sixty feet up in a tree, maybe more. Actually,
I'm way high up in a tree, and a tree stand.
Black bear comes to the base of the tree, starts
sniffing at me, starts coming up the tree. Now he
(00:58):
doesn't come all the way up right away. He doing
this from memory, I would say probably ten feet fast,
faster than you think. Don't ever think that bears are
slow because they look kind of big and fat. They're fast.
He comes up that tree really fast. And now I'm
sitting there thinking, WHOA, now what do I do? He
(01:24):
comes up some more another ten twenty feet fast, really fast,
and he is not snorting and growling and acting aggressive,
if I want to be clear about that. But still I'm
in a tree stand and a bear is crawling up
the tree very clearly after me. Now I have a
(01:47):
rifle in my hands, obviously, that's what I was hunting
bears with. Now I'm at the point where I have
to aim at him. He comes up again. This time
he comes up what I would consider all the way.
He is directly below the tree stand behind it though,
(02:12):
so there's no stand or anything between him and me.
He's behind it. So I'm standing on top of the
tree stand, aiming behind the tree, and now I have
to aim my weapon at his head. I do not
want to kill this bear, as I've already explained, I
have no desire to kill this bear. And now I'm
(02:33):
sitting here having a real internal debate, and I'm all
by myself. There's no guide, there's no dad, there's no nobody,
nobody around for miles. It's me and this bear. I
My weapon is probably maybe maybe six inches from his nose.
That's how close he is to me. That's where we're
at here, and I've just seen how fast he is.
(02:57):
For safety's sake, I should probably just pop him and
be done with it. I don't We have ourselves a
good old fashioned little standoff up there. He's staring at me,
My weapon is staring at him, and my finger is
I mean, I'm already pressing the trigger as lightly as
(03:19):
possible because I've seen how fast he moves. I have
to be ready to squeeze immediately or he's going to
be on me. I mean, look, just falling from a
tree that size, I probably would have died. But no
matter what he would have done with to me, and
God was with me that day. He just sat there,
(03:40):
sniffed and looked and sniffed and looked and sniffed and looked,
scampered back down the tree and took off. That'll get
the old heart pumping' Hey, Jesse been, I've always been
a fan of late night TV Carson and Letterman and
later Cobert and others. After Trump's victory in twenty sixteen,
the Colbert Show quickly became a solid one third of
(04:03):
the show mocking and berating Trump. I always thought going
to bed after some good natured comedy was a healthy thing.
Colbert's show did exactly the opposite. Do you think this
was a calculated attempt to program my fellow geezer population?
Is this how Trump de rangent syndrome was created. Okay, well,
(04:25):
there's there's a lot to what you just said. The
communist knows that he has to repeat the same propaganda
over and over and over and over and over again.
There's something to that. But there's something else, you know,
does Why does Hollywood keep making movies that bomb? They'll
make a kids movie and they'll gay the whole thing
(04:47):
up and it'll bomb. But it's not a one off.
They'll do it again the next month. Kids movie, gay
the thing up bomb, Kids movie, gay the thing up bomb.
Superhero movie, Oh no, instead of a Superman or something
like that, it's a big it's a woman who does
spin kicks, bomb bomb bomb. Colbert losing forty million dollars
(05:11):
a year doesn't change a thing. I want you to.
I want you to. I'll explain it in this way.
I want you to picture. There's a town. In fact,
the town I grew up in is actually similar to
this story. Bozeman, Montana. There was one high school. Montana's
not a big place. Bozeman is considered big for Montana,
(05:31):
but it's not big by any means. There was one
high school. So if you were a high school athlete
and you wanted to play football in high school, you
had one option. Now, the coach was fine. This did
not happen where I grew up. But I want you
to picture this. What if my coach in high school.
(05:53):
What if the high school football coach was horrible and
pretty much abusive to the players, hitting them, screen and
Adam through it doing terrible I'm not not talking hard
nos football things. Abuse to the players, well, that sucks.
But if you live there, that's where your dad found work,
(06:13):
you want to play football. There's no other place to go.
And so this coach for years and years and years
and years and years is cussing and hitting and abusing
the players, and cussing and hitting and abusing the players,
and they never leave because they can't ever leave. Then,
(06:34):
and this actually happened at Bozeman. Another school comes, the
population grew, the town. I think they voted on it.
I don't know what all the details were, but another
high school pops up. You're the head football coach at
Bozeman Senior High. You've only ever coached one way, you
only know one way to do it, and you haven't
(06:58):
ever really suffered a penalty for doing it that way.
Because the kids could never go anywhere, and now it's
the only way. You know, So as kids who don't
want to be abused, who don't want to be hit,
who don't want to be cussed at, as they go
to the high school across town, you still just keep
cussing and beaten and cussing and beaten and cussing and
(07:20):
beaten until you've completely ruined the football program. The mainstream media,
the large When I say mainstream media, let's be specific
the large news organizations television and print. That's ABC, NBCCBS, CNN,
New York Times, Washington Post, LA Times. We can go
down the list, the major media publications. They for decades
(07:44):
in this country were the only show in town, the
only show in town. My buddy Klay Travis had a great,
great little find, research find yesterday, and I'm gonna paraphrase
because I don't want to go digging through my phone,
but haulk Hogan died. As you know, we talked about
it last night, and he talked about Hulk Hogan when
he quote wrestled Andre the Giant at WrestleMania that it
(08:09):
had more people watching it than I forget what Clay said.
It was something crazy like the Super Bowl, the World Series,
and everything else combined this year or something like that.
The numbers were astronomical. Does that show how big wrestling was? Yes,
but it also shows there weren't many channels. Everyone watched
NI because that was all that was on. We all
watched the same things. America's evil communist press, including things
(08:35):
like The Colbert Show, the Late Night Show. All these
people came up and made their bones in an environment
where people didn't have options. If you sat down at
night on my TV. When I was a kid, I'm
forty four, I'm not ancient. When I was a kid,
our TV had one of the little click click click
knobby things. I think there were thirteen fourteen channels on
(08:56):
the knob. We didn't even get that many. You didn't
have options. If you were watching TV at ten o'clock
at night. The Late Show was one of like three
things on. And the people who create our media, for
the major corporate organizations, they're used to being able to
(09:16):
abuse you any way they want, because, just like the
abusive football coach, you can't go anywhere you don't have options.
The problem for them is people do now. People have many,
many options. You have endless options. You're sitting here right now.
(09:39):
Maybe you're listening live on Friday night, maybe it's the
next day, Saturday. Maybe you're a podcaster. But how many
options do you have for things to listen to? Endless?
It's endless. You could be listening to any kind of
music on demand immediately, even any specific song. If you
(10:00):
want a specific song, pull up your Spotify and open
it up. Any podcast on any subject. You could be
listening right now to anything. What that has done is
it's put more power in the hands of the consumer
who can change the channel. The people who make the media,
(10:21):
they're not used to living in that environment and they
haven't adjusted. If you are in charge of CBS, the
second you see your late night comedy show start alienating
half the country, you don't wait. You fire him immediately. Nope,
boom gone, people will leave, people will leave. They kept
him on. Now everyone's gone. Let's talk a little America history.
(10:44):
Are we militaristic? Hang on, Jesse Kelly, Vaccian, It is
the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday, A wonderfu ask
doctor Jesse Friday. And remember, we're still sitting here live
bringing you amazing entertainment. And you can email the show
(11:07):
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Don't shake your head, Chris,
I was only talking about me. Believe me. I wasn't
including you in that at all, Dear Jesse. Actually, this
guy says, dear large handed beaver slayer. I have heard
you refer to past civilizations as warriors and militaristic, for example,
(11:27):
the Spartans, some Native American tribes, and the Mongols. It
made me think, will history remember America as a warrior
nation and a warlike culture. Our national love of guns,
like the Germans calling the Marines devil dogs when they
first saw them shoot, our first instinct to bomb and
(11:48):
invade and fight. I always like to say we are
peaceful and right, but the proof is in the taste
of the pudding or whatever you said it was. What
say you, oracle? His name is Mickey, By the way,
are we militaristic people? Are we a war culture? All right? First,
(12:12):
let me ask you something. Is it bad? If we are?
Now let's talk about this is as men, probably not
as much women, but some women for sure. As men.
When we talk about historical cultures, what ones do we
(12:35):
like to talk about when it comes to Indians, American Indians.
Do you like to talk about the Pueblo or do
you like to talk about the Comanche? I know, yeah,
but we don't talk about the peaceful ones. We talk
about the warl like ones. Right, So okay, so we're fascinated.
(12:59):
Let's set that aside. Morally, were the Commanche wrong and
the Pueblo were right? Now, anyone who knows anything about
the Comanche Indians and their love of torture, they were
huge on torture and rape. I'm sorry to put it
(13:19):
that way, but they just were rape and torture and mutilation.
And so you look at a society like that and
you think, Okay, those obviously are the bad guys. I'm
not saying you're wrong. But if a nation is militaristic,
if the Pueblo are out there making their living by
(13:40):
hunting animals, raising corn, things like that, are they a
morally better culture than the Lakota, the Sioux who ruled
the planes and simply took whatever they wanted from anyone
they wanted to take it from. Are the Pueblo better?
(14:00):
Is Athens a better culture, a more moral culture than Sparta.
It's something to think about, because you mentioned I like
to think of us as peaceful. Well, does that mean
we're right? Are all militaristic cultures wrong and all peaceful
(14:26):
culture is right? I don't know that. I look at
they Let's look biblically, Hey, Chris, we'll stick with the
Old Testament. Let's look biblically the Israelites when they were
settling into the Old Promised Land? Did they come bearing
(14:48):
gifts or did they come bearing the sword? They sent
in spies, they fought wars, wiped out armies, a ra
catered entire cities. Were they wrong? I certainly wouldn't say that.
(15:09):
I don't know that all war is wrong. I don't
know that all conquest is wrong. And I don't know
that all peace is right. Just because you have never
been in a fight, really you think that's good. I
don't know that being nice is correct. Now you want
(15:30):
to be kind. There's two different things. But I don't
know that being nice is correct. I'm not saying you
want to be mean, but is nice right? So back
to your question about America. No, no powerful empire that
I can think of. If you want to hit the
what are the top powerful empires at any point in time?
(15:54):
You could talk about the British Empire. You could talk
about the chemitted Persian Empire. You brought up the Mango.
Let's talk about the Mongols all the way back, the Assyrians,
all the big Chinese ones. Tell me the large empire,
the large powerful empire that is thought of as peaceful.
(16:17):
All the Romans almost forgot the greatest civilization ever. Can
you tell me a large number one power or vying
to be number one power on the planet that is
considered peaceful. They're all looked at as militaristic because you
only gain power in wealth and resources and things like
(16:40):
that through conquest. Historically, that's how it's done. You want
this gigantic chunk of ground that we now know as
the United States of America, Well, I've got bad news
for you. The Brits want it, the French want it,
the Spanish want it, and it's occupied by a bunch
of Indian tribes. If you would like it, you better
pick up a weapon and go take it, because there's
(17:01):
no other way. Oh. I think we'll be looked at
as militaristic in warlike, and I think that will make
us just like every other large empire in history. Do
you want to learn more about Athens and Sparta, maybe
the Roman Empire. Does that stuff fascinate you? You know,
Hillsdale will teach you that stuff for free, like this weekend.
(17:24):
In fact, as soon as this show's done, you can
go start taking free online courses from Hillsdale. They are
so interesting. I want you. I know, right now, you're
probably picturing the most boring teacher or college professor you had,
and you're thinking, why in the world would I ever
do that? Try one Hillsdale course one. Maybe you're not
(17:45):
into military stuff or history stuff. They have capitalism courses, constitution,
whatever period of time, whatever you're interested in. More than
forty free online courses. Try one. Go learn about Sparta.
You know what. Go learn about Sparta and send me
an email. Were they wrong? Were they right? I don't know.
(18:07):
Hillsdale dot edu slash jesse is where you go to
enroll no cost, no cost Hillsdale dot edu slash Jesse.
We'll be back. Get to Care for Rhinos eight days
with the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly
(18:29):
Show on a wonderful, fantastic Friday. Member. If you miss
any part of the show, you can download the whole
thing on iheard Spotify iTunes. You know freedom is not free.
Let's get back to some questions, Jesse. If you were
at a baseball game and caught a foul ball, would
you give it to a kid? No, absolutely not. I
would keep it for myself. And if I saw any
(18:50):
kids that caught a foul ball close to me, I
would take it from them. Jesse. I was just listening
to you talk about wages and what people think they
deserve versus what they are actually worth. I'm a journeyman lineman.
Pay attention, young men, listen to this. Making sixty seven
dollars an hour. Sixty seven dollars an hour. I feel
(19:13):
us linemen deserve and are worth much more than that.
The very few people like me who are physically and
mentally able and willing to do work with high voltage
electricity every day, should get a much higher wage. Doubt
it or double it, and I might start to consider
tolerating it. Without people like us, the world would be
(19:33):
back to the Stone age. What is your opinion on
blue collar guys who actually keep the country running making
way less money than those who sit in an office
in risk nothing. Please don't say my name, love your show,
look forward to it every day, recommend it to all
my friends. Okay, well, I'll put it this way. Risk risk,
(20:02):
the physical risks involved in a job have virtually nothing
to do with what you will be paid. Nothing. You
may want that to be the case, but if that
was the case, then cops had make a million dollars
a year. They don't. What determines what you will be
(20:25):
paid is the scarcity of your marketable skills. Now, you,
as a journeyman, lineman, you have a valuable skill and
it is not that common. That's why you make sixty
seven dollars an hour and not seventeen dollars an hour. However,
(20:46):
it is not so rare that you're going to make
three hundred dollars an hour. That's just the reality of life.
But I have some excellent news for all you men
listening who work with your hands, and as you know,
that's my background, so I respect it. If you hang
(21:08):
on and keep doing a good job, your wages are
going to go up in the coming years, and they're
going to go up astronomically. Do you remember what Micro
told me when we had that Micro interviews from last
week the week before, I forget what it was. Micro
The great Micro of micro Works. Micro came and joined
me on the show because he knows I'm always talking
(21:28):
about trades and I'm a construction guy, so he came
on the show. Micro said, for every five guys who
work with their hands who are retiring, there are only
two to replace them. Now, you can point out that
that's bad for the country. We're not going to have
enough those guys and all that Stuff's true. That's fine,
(21:49):
but you know what else that means. What did we
just talk about what determines your wages? The scarcity of
your marketable skills. Those skills you have, they're going to
get a lot more scarce. They're getting more and more
scarce by the day. Now. I know that may not
be a comfort to you today on Friday, with to
(22:12):
day on Friday, July twenty fifth, that doesn't increase your paycheck.
But you keep working in this field, as everyone else retires,
your wages will go up, up, up, up up. But
I just want to point out again the risk of
your job does not determine your wages. You compared it
(22:35):
to people who sit in an office all day. And
I admit, and I've had these thoughts before when I
always worked those jobs. Well, this isn't right. That freaking
guy's sitting in the office in the air conditioning, in
his khakis. He went to lunch, he had lunch catered
from some nice place like Red Lobster. I'm out here sweating, slaving,
I'm cut, I'm miserable, I'm tired. How's he making more
(22:57):
money than me? His skills are more scarce, that's how
Also remember this, you blue collar guys who are listening.
I know it sucks to work out in the heat
and the cold, and and I know working outside in
the elements parts of that can suck badly. Believe me,
I've done it all. I understand. It's also it can
(23:20):
be a healthier life. You know, you know those Europeans
live longer than us. You know they all smoke. Do
you know that? It's unbelievable how many of these people smoke.
Every time I go over there, everybody's just chainsmoking. Yet
they're all skinny and they live longer than us. How's
that possible? They don't sit as much as we sit.
(23:42):
It's a sitting that kills you. You may look at
the guy with the office job and think to yourself, Wow,
that guy he's really lucking out. You're gonna live longer
than he is. Jesse, can you explain why all the
biggest cities in the USA are sanctuary and are not conservative?
Up in Orange County, California, moved to San Diego in
(24:02):
ninety seven. Both were read what happened? Well, that's a
long complicated answer, but I'll tell you one of the
main things that happen is politicians they make cities a haven.
They try to make cities a haven for the poor.
(24:25):
That's that's generally how that goes. If you're poor, that's
not unique to America. If you're poor, even historically, you
are going to gather in poor areas of a city.
Gives you more access to things like food and things
like that. Well, as the cities get poorer, as you
get a poor element economically, that is going to come
(24:46):
with an increase in the crime element. Do not email
me and tell me you're offended. I don't give a crep.
Everyone knows what I just said is true. With more
poverty comes more crime. Certainly more violent crime, more street crime, robbery, rape, murder,
that always comes with more poverty. What do people do
when they make money? What is one of the ultimate
(25:07):
things about making money. As you get older, you live
where you want to live. That's why the suburbs exist
in every city. You have all these blue cities, and
then you have a safe suburb full of homes that
are nice and gated communities outside of the city. Why
does the suburb exist there? Because the second you make
(25:29):
enough money to escape that crime, escape the bad school,
escape the filth, you pack up the family and you
leave town. Well what's that too, If all the good
people pack up and leave New York City and they
all move to Long Island, which is pretty much what's happened.
They all move out of Manhattan and they all move
out to Long Island. Yes, your individual life is better,
(25:51):
and I've done this. It's not like I live in Houston.
I would never live in Houston. I'm out. But your
life's better. My life's better. I live in a safe
nameghborhood full the guns, where the kids play in the
streets and everyone knows each other and everything is wonderful.
But the net negative is Houston gets worse. New York
gets worse because the good people, the second they can
(26:12):
afford it, they pack up and leave town. So it
becomes one of those self licking ice cream cones, where
it's just the spiral that goes down and down and
down and down and down. The good people leave, more
poor people come in. The good people leave, more poor
people come in. When you combine that with the fact
that these despicable politicians know their power in these big
(26:34):
cities is handing things out to those poor people because
that's where the voting block is, it's just it's very,
very difficult to overcome. Jessie, I'm having such a hard time.
I live next door to two sisters and a brother
in law, all Democrats who've drunk the kool aid and
cannot see the garbage mainstream media is feeding them. I'm
(26:57):
losing what I have in common with them, and periodically
I have to bite my tongue on the snide remarks
that come from them. They refuse to even think about
considering a different point of view. Do you have any
whys this is your daddy talking advice? Well, first, I
(27:18):
am not going to be dismissive over the fact that
that hurts. When that's family, When it's your sisters, you
know you grew up together, it's your sisters, they live
close by. Surely everybody should be close and stay close
right and you feel them separating from you and it hurts.
So I'm not being dismissive of that, but I will
talk to you about that because a lot of people
(27:38):
go through that in a moment, and that's the kind
of hurt that relief factor can't fix. Relief factor what
Chris relief factors for physical pain. It can't help you
deal with the anguish of having a crappy sister, but
it can help you deal with the anguish of having
a crappy back, bad knees, bad feet. What hurts on
(28:02):
you the daily pain? Is it your neck? I know
people like that. Every time they turn they look like
Batman sucks and they stop doing things. Have you stopped
doing things things you love before because it hurts? What
if that pain could be gone in three weeks? Relief
factor is worth trying because all they asked for is
(28:24):
three weeks. For nineteen dollars in ninety five cents. You
by three weeks of it. It's one hundred percent drug free.
You take it every day for three weeks. If that
pain is still there same as it was before, just
don't ever order anymore. You're only out nineteen ninety five.
You might be three weeks away from freedom again one
(28:47):
eight hundred the number four Relief orbelieffactor dot Com. We'll
be back the Jesse Chilly It is the Jesse Kelly Show.
Final segment of The Jesse Kelly Show. But don't worry.
We will be back on Monday. I might. I want
(29:09):
to go ahead and stress. Might. It's gonna depend on
the family schedule a little bit. This weekend. I might
be ready to do the Kamakazi History Show. I've been
promising you. I'm gonna make sure I do it right. Chris.
The other takes some reading, take some research, it takes
it takes some time to do it right. But that
(29:32):
might be coming Monday, maybe Tuesday. We'll roll that out anyway,
we'll see. Look always I'm always at the mercy too
of major news dropping. If there are these huge stories dropping,
I don't want to sit and take off for an
hour and do a history story. But we'll see. Now
(29:52):
back to what this lady's question was, she lives next
to a couple sisters. They're Democrats. Now make they're crappy
little remarks. You're separating from them. Well, I don't have
a great answer that's going to make you feel better.
But you know how we call communism or religion. It
(30:17):
is a religion. It is, and the religion demands followers
adhere to it and reject all others, including family members.
It's one of the most evil parts about communism. Since
(30:38):
its inception, it has divided families against each other, and
in fact, the communists themselves encourage this. We are your
new family, now your old family. Either they're on the
team or not, but you will choose us over them.
American Democrats have this exact same mentality. They are communists.
(31:01):
They probably don't know they're communists. They probably think they're democrats,
are liberals, but they are communists. They've been trained by
other communists, and they will reject you. That doesn't mean
it will last forever. They may wake up one day.
But if you have a family member that's a truly
committed communist like that, you're going to have to as
(31:25):
much as you can keep them at arm's length or
fight it out with them. But what you're not going
to do, because the communists can operate this way, what
you're not going to do is just go along as
if everything's normal. In the way it always was. Remember,
he's fighting a revolution. He doesn't he doesn't set aside
(31:46):
politics because it's Christmas time. No, no, no, no, no, he
doesn't think in those terms at all. That just doesn't
even cross his mind. The only chance you have at
Christmas time of getting your communist's sister to set things
aside is maybe maybe if you got her an IQ
Sense from Chefman, If you got her a wireless cooking
(32:07):
thermometer from Chefman that can handle up to one thousand
degrees fahrenheit, there's a chance, your liberal and pagy she
would love you so much in that moment that she
could she would forget about her sick, demonic religion. There's
a chance. Plus, when you inform her that the IQ
Sense it hooks up to an app on her phone.
(32:28):
And so whatever meat you happen to be cooking oven
smoke er right on the stovetop, you just leave the
thermometer in there. You never take it out, and your
phone tells you when it's done, even tells you when
to rest it. You can even it has recipes in it.
You tell it what it's cooking, it'll tell you what
to cook it too. That might help with your sisters
(32:49):
plus fifteen percent off chefiq dot Com promo code Jesse
chefiq dot Com promo code Jesse Jesse, I enjoy the
visual Jesse Kelly show. It's a hoot. Now. My question,
what is your opinion concerning young boys playing with toys
(33:09):
like male action figures or Gi Joe dolls. I have
mixed feelings as it may cause tiny hands, you know,
but that's not very nice. All right, get your kids
all the Gi Jos. Do Gijo still exist, Chris? They do.
Get your kid all the Gi Joe's. And if he
wants the aircraft carrier, stop being cheap and get him
the aircraft carrier. Gosh, I wanted that aircraft carrier so bad, Jesse.
(33:33):
I have three boys, heges nineteen, sixteen, and nine. I've
never believed in letting them win. They do you ever
let your boys win at anything? No? No. I believe
in smashing them mercilessly, and I always have at whatever
we're doing. If you want victory in the Kelly household,
you will go earn victory in the Kelly household. It's
(33:56):
not just that I believe in winning. I'll cheat to
win if I have to, I'm not at what, Chris,
I'm not above that at all. No, no, no, no, no no.
We're not handing out w's around here. This isn't And
everybody gets a trophy household. If you want it, go
take it. Jesse. You're a great American, you beaver trapper.
You have we seen the pinnacle of our country, the
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US of A. I don't know, nobody knows. And you
can say, well, Jesse, we're on the downturn right now.
And I'm not gonna argue with that. But there are
countries historically that have had ups and then downs, and
then ups and then downs, and then ups and then downs,
and they'll they'll look down and out and they'll look finished,
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but then then they'll rebound. And remember, at one point
in time, the Roman Empire, the greatest civilization ever. The
Roman Empire flat out split up. Everyone thinks it was
split in two. It was more than two, but we'll
just call it two for now. It just split up
east and west. Oh, it's over. It's finished, really, because
constant Antonople, the Eastern Roman Empire, kept on chernin and
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burning quite well for a long time. But it wasn't over.
It was different, certainly, different different locations, different people, but
kept churning and burning. Dear communist segue master, why is
no one bringing up Obama's weaponization of the IRS against
tea party groups in his first term. She's right, She's
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very very right. And obviously that is something we've mentioned
several times on the show. But that's what Obama did,
As we've talked about before, that's how communists operate. It
doesn't matter what level of power you give him, whether
it's the presidency, with a tiny, tiny job somewhere, whatever
power he gets, that's power he believes in using on
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behalf of the revolution. Obama just happened to do it
more viciously and better than other communists have. For Obama,
what's the point of being in charge of the irs
if you don't use that power to go after your
political opponents? What is the point of being in charge
(36:08):
of the CIA the FBI if you're not going to
send them after Donald Trump? That's the only reason to
do that. Hey, Jesse, shouldn't we want these extremists socialists
to win in New York and Minnesota? The National spot
life's been all over these elections. Wouldn't it benefit the
American people? To see what happens when we elect communists.
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The American people have access to endless amounts of books,
television shows, podcasts, YouTube channels, laying out very clearly that collectivism,
in all of its forms, socialism, communism, whatever ism you
want to put on it, that collectivism in all of
its forms ends up in poverty, death, misery, and horror.
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The volume of information showing that out there is amazing,
and yet half the country still chooses communism. We lied
to ourselves and we say, well, this will be such
a bad example. People will change their ways. That's not
always the case. You put your phone down, go enjoy
the weekend, Monday cometh, that's all