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August 19, 2025 37 mins

The US is rejecting student visas from our highest institutions. Phone trapper. Finding the phone trapper in your life and getting rid of them. The trickle down effects of totally removing everything to do with DEI. Medal of Honor: Robert Joseph Modrzejewski

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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly show.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Another hour of the
Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Monday, and we
have well James Comy put out one of the more
creepy things that I've heard in quite some time. We'll
get to that. We'll talk about revoking student visas. The
World Economic Forum types are still on their evil plans.

(00:38):
All that and more coming up in this hour of
the world famous Jesse Kelly's Show. But you know what
time it is. It's Medal of Honor Monday time. It's
time for you and me to learn about a hero,
to honor the man and his deeds, and to hold
that man in his de up in front of other

(01:01):
generations and say, look at that. That's what you're going for.
That's the type of human being you want to do,
you want to be. And remember, on top of emailing
your love, hate and death threats, you can email in
recommendations ones you just love, ones that are close to
you in some way, someone you know, a relative from

(01:23):
your hometown. We got this email. Dear Jesse, please consider
doing a Medal of Honor Monday on Colonel Bob Mogski.
Colonel Bob, as everyone calls him, is retired United States
Marine Corps who served in Vietnam in nineteen sixty eight.
He received the Congressional Medal of Honor from LBJ for

(01:47):
his service as a captain in July nineteen sixty six.
I've only known him the last ten years as a
quiet gentleman who regularly serves communion at our Catholic church
and I don't want to say in San Diego for
a Memorial Day. In twenty sixteen, our local San Diego

(02:09):
Union Tribune ran this piece as their cover story for
a bunch of these other stories on veterans and military service.
His name is Eric. So without further ado, let's find
out what Colonel Bob did, shall we?

Speaker 1 (02:25):
Hey? Honoring those who went above and beyond. It's Medal
of Honor Monday.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
Yeah. And by the way, Chris, I have no idea
why they called him Colonel Bob. I'm pretty sure it's
because his name is Robert Gosh Chris. Anyway, he was
born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. His full name is Robert Joseph Mogiski.
And this is a citation for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity
at the risk of his life above and beyond the

(02:58):
call of duty. On the fifteenth of July, during Operation Hastings,
Company K was landed in an enemy infested jungle area
to establish a blocking position at a major enemy trail network.
Shortly after landing, the company encountered a reinforced enemy platoon

(03:20):
in a well organized defensive position. Major Mojiski led his
men in the successful seizure of the enemy redoubt, which
contained large quantities of ammunition in supplies. That evening, a
numerically superior enemy force counterattacked in an effort to retake

(03:41):
the vital supply area, thus setting the pattern of activity
for the next two and a half days. In the
first series of attacks, the enemy assaulted repeatedly in overwhelming numbers,
but each time was repulsed by the gallant Marines. The
second night, the enemy struck in battalion strength, and Major

(04:02):
Mojiski was wounded in this intensive action, which was fought
at close quarters. Although exposed to enemy fire and despite
his painful wounds, he crawled two hundred meters to provide
critically needed ammunition to an exposed element of his command,
and was constantly present whenever fighting was heaviest. Despite numerous casualties,

(04:25):
a dwindling supply of ammunition, and the knowledge that they
were surrounded, he skillfully directed artillery fire to within a
few meters of his position and courageously inspired the efforts
of his company in repelling the aggressive enemy action. On
the eighteenth of July, Company K was attacked by a
regimental size enemy force. Although his unit was vastly outnumbered

(04:49):
and weakened by the previous fighting, Major Mojievski reorganized his
men and calmly moved among them to encourage and direct
their efforts to hero limits as they fought to overcome
the vicious enemy onslaught again, he called in air and
artillery strikes at close range with devastating effect on the enemy, which,

(05:11):
together with the bold and determined fighting of the men
of Company K, repulsed the fanatical attack of the larger
North Vietnamese force. His unparalleled personal heroism and indomitable leadership
inspired his men to a significant victory over the enemy
force and reflected great credit upon himself the Marine Corps

(05:33):
in US Naval Service. What do you say, chrisy just
turned ninety one? Man just turned ninety one? Little more
than a month ago. Our Vietnam vets getting up there too.
But respect, a lot of respect for those men. All right,

(05:54):
it's a well, let me touch one more word on
this before I move on to other things. This is
one of those things that happened a lot in Vietnam
where we would send a force out and all of
a sudden we would find ourselves surrounded and find ourselves

(06:15):
facing a large number of the enemy, larger than we
ever thought were there. And there are environments, I mean, look,
all war environments are bad in their own way. Don't
get me wrong. If you're fighting on the Arctic, or
on the planes or in they're all bad in their
own way. But one of the worst parts of fighting

(06:37):
in a thickly wooded area I don't just mean jungle,
because Roman armies had to deal with this when they
were dealing with the Dack on Germans. A thickly wooded
area makes it impossible to accurately gauge how many troops
are there, especially when you are facing an experienced enemy,

(07:00):
which the Vietnamese very much were an experienced enemy. Who
knows that's part of their benefit, that's a little notch
in their belt that's a tool in the tool bel
their tool belt. A tool in their tool belt is
we can hide. We can hide large amounts of men
and equipment, ammunitions, And what do you do if you're

(07:24):
an American, If you're an American in Vietnam, you have
to figure out how many are there? So sure, you
can send men out to look around. But even that's
quite dangerous, right, lots of those men die looking around
these long range reconnaissance patrols, which those are awesome, by
the way, if you ever study those guys at all,

(07:45):
they go in these long range reconnaissance patrols because you
can't find out what's there. You can't just fly overhead.
It's the jungle you can't see. So it would happen
a lot. Remember it happened. Remember that movie. It was
a great book before it was a great movie. We
were Soldiers the book it's called We Were Soldiers Once
and Young, but they shortened the movie to just we

(08:07):
were Soldiers. It's that true story of a bunch of
our guys, our helicopter troops, our calve troops, landing in
an area and not finding out till they got there
that there was something like ten times their number of
enemy troops there. You didn't know till you got there
because they were hidden in the mountains, in anything thickly wooded,

(08:29):
you don't know. And the only way to find out
is pick a number of troops and send them in. Hey,
intelligence estimates say, well, how'd you get those estimates? Well, yeah,
have fun when you asked that question. Oh that's what

(08:49):
intelligence estimates say, how'd you get that information that? The
answer to that is never as sophisticated as you think it. Anyway,
back to Vietnam, this is what we struggled with so much,
because Vietnam not only has jungles, it has mountains. And
those are the two environments where you can hide things

(09:12):
most easily. A jungle and a mountain you can just
stash mass quantities of men essentially in it and under it.
And a lot of American troops died because of it
because you showed up. You may be the superior fighting force,
I mean superior skill wise, maybe superior weapons, but quantity

(09:38):
as a quality all its own. When you and one
hundred men, when two hundred men from your company land
and all of a sudden you're surrounded by two thousand,
you are in a great, great deal of trouble, and
that happened to us a lot happened to us a
lot Vietnam veterans, man, if you have one in your life,
most people have one somewhere in their lives, why don't

(09:58):
you send them a text right now? Is saying hey, thanks,
don't you even have to make a phone call? Maybe
you won't don't want to get trapped on the phone.
Maybe the Vietnam veteran in your life was a phone trapper.
Maybe you don't want to get trapped on the phone.
Send them a text message before I make fun of
James Comy. In fact, we're going to have a talk
with phone trappers. It's time to discuss a phone trapper,

(10:21):
what it is, and maybe you are a phone trapper.
I'm going to tell you a sign so you can
stop being one. Before we get into phone trapping, I
want to talk to you about learning about the past.
It's important. It's really, really, really important to understand where

(10:41):
your country came from. We on the right, we love
to discuss the Constitution. We love to bring it up.
It's a great talking point, the Constitution. But why did
they put in the constitution the things they put in there?
What why don't we learn from them? You know, the
founders didn't even up to you know, they'll figure it out.

(11:03):
Oh well, why did you put that? And why did
you put out it? They didn't say we'll figure it out.
They'll figure it out. They wrote it all down. They're
called the Federalist Papers. The Federalist Papers are essentially here's
why we said this, here's why we did this. Did
you know? Hillsdale College has a free course on that.
Right now, you can go learn about the Federalist Papers,

(11:25):
not just the Constitution. Don't just read what's in it,
find out why those things are in it for free.
I think that might help you your kids the rest
of your life. Hillsdale dot edu slash Jesse Hillsdale dot
edu slash Jesse. We'll be back.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
Jesse Kelly returns.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
Next it is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful,
wonderful Monday. Remember if you missed any part of the show,
you can do though the whole thing on i art,
Spotify iTunes. Then we talk really quickly about phone trappers
before we start making fun of James Comy and we
get to emails and things. Listen, I have a rule

(12:14):
in life. You get one phone trap with me, and
you will never get an opportunity for another one. Now,
what's a phone trap? What's a phone trap? This is
what it is. There are people, maybe it's a relative,
a friend, a co worker and acquaintance. There are people.

(12:37):
They want to get you on the phone so they
can just sit and talk to you. I'm not saying
it's wrong to want to talk to people. I'm not
saying it is. But once they get you on the phone,
they won't let you off of the phone. And what
they'll do is they will lay traps. They'll set up

(12:59):
traps for you to get you on the phone. It
will be, uh, hey, do you have a couple of
minutes send me a text message? Hey? Uh I called,
it's I really need to talk to you. Hey, would
you mind giving me a call? Which is no problem
right if it is important. But when they make the
appearance that the phone call is important and you call

(13:21):
and it's not important, then what you're dealing with is
a phone trapper, somebody who's trying to trap you on
the phone. Now, that's fine. There's only one way to
discover somebody in your life as a phone trapper. You
have to get trapped one time. You have to get
that text message. Hey, it's pretty important. Would you give
me a call whenever you get off work, whenever you

(13:42):
get a chance. Oh, okay, and you call and it's
all man, So how you been? Yeah? What's your dog like?

Speaker 1 (13:50):
No way?

Speaker 2 (13:51):
Hey, anyway, I was at this concert. That's what. There's
only one way to discover a phone trapper. Once you
discover them, oh, I have a rule, not saying it
has to be your rule, never ever ever allow them
to trap you again. Only allow a phone trapper to
trap you one time, and after that you can never

(14:15):
allow them to trap you again. Now this is more
of a PSA for people who are phone trappers because
some people like to talk, which I understand, and there's
nothing wrong with liking to talk, not a thing in
the world. Some people like to talk. If you are
somebody who likes to talk to someone else on the phone,

(14:36):
see I prefer to talk in person. But if you're
somebody who likes to talk to someone on the phone,
it's really important, really important that you have a sense
of whether or not that person wants to talk on
the phone. So do you send those text messages? I
just laid out, Hey, you got a couple minutes. Do

(15:01):
you need to talk to him on the phone or
could you text that? Hey, would you mind giving me
a call? When? Did you make it sound important and
it's not important? If that's you, I want you to
know that's why your calls get ignored. Nobody else is
gonna be honest with you. I'm being honest with you.

(15:23):
You get your calls ignored and no one takes them
because you're a phone trapper. What Chris, Chris, that's an
outstanding rule. Jewish producer Chris says, I try to be
off the phone in five minutes. Now me, I take
this to an extreme. If I want to talk to you,
I want to meet in person. I guess I'm maybe

(15:44):
old school that way. Let's go, let's go meet. Let's
grab a cheeseburger, let's go meet and we'll talk. Well,
we can hang out after work, let's watch the game
or something. Let's meet in person. If I'm on the phone,
I make it fast quick. Okay, what's the point of this.
I don't want to sit and talk on the telephone.
But that's too extreme. I like the five minute rule, Chris.

(16:05):
I like the five minute rule, get in, get out.
My own man and I we had this down. We
had this down perfectly. Every week, maybe every two weeks,
he's gonna call me. I'm gonna call him. Hey, you good, Dah,
I'm good. What are you doing, Dad? I'm running around
hardware store, this and that. What are you doing? I've
taken ab out for dinner tonight. We got a new

(16:26):
Cajun place. I've been meaning to try it. I'll let
you know it sounds good, sounds good, everything good, everything good?

Speaker 1 (16:32):
Great?

Speaker 2 (16:32):
Say uh we done? We're done. Now that's a phone
conversation right there. I'm not saying that has to be everybody.
Everybody isn't like me, and everybody isn't like my own man.
I'm just warning you. Do you find that people in
your life won't take your calls if you're being honest
with yourself. Have you phone trapped people? Are you desp'rit

(17:00):
for a long phone call? Are you a phone trapper?
Go look at your text messages. Your text messages will
tell the truth. It's not me telling you the truth,
it's not even you. Because you can't be honest about you.
People who have an impossible time being honest with themselves
about themselves, myself included. I can't do it either. Your
text messages will tell the truth about you. When is

(17:24):
the last time you texted somebody to call you? They
need to call you? Would you call me? And was
it important? Was it important? Or were you laying a trap?
It's all I'm asking. Let's do some emails. Jesse my
son is turning twenty one soon and was talking about

(17:47):
getting his first handgun. That's sweet. What caliber and gun
would you recommend? My first was a ten millimeter. I
recommended he get a burna until he takes a concealed
carry courus thanks in advance. He says, name is Brian One.
Getting a burnout for people. Anybody who wants to protect
themselves has a good idea. It's an unbelievable idea for

(18:10):
people who are trying to get comfortable with firearms. Because
burn is not a gun. It's a pistol launcher. It
shoots tear gas balls or pepper balls. But they also
have practice rounds. My son shoots his in the backyard
all the time, right in our neighborhood. No problem. It's
not a gun legal in all fifty states. But it
also looks like one. Especially their new compact launcher has

(18:35):
a holesterf for you. There are ways you can carry it,
purse backpack, looks like one, feels like one, and they
have like a practice target with these practice rounds that
are full of I think it's baby powder. Highly recommend
it if you're thinking about getting into shooting, or you're
trying to get comfortable, you're trying to get your mom comfortable,

(18:56):
or your daughter or something like that. Everyone should own
a burn a pistol launch. Sure you can travel with
them because they're legal in all fifty states and you
don't need a permit. It'll stop a batman in his tracks,
especially if you're starting to get into guns. B why
RNA burna dot com? And again, let me encourage employers.

(19:18):
How many employees do you have? How many disgruntled people
have you fired? Or let go? B? Why RNA burna
dot com? We'll be back.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
Jesse Kelly returns next.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Wonderful Monday.
Remember if you miss any part of the show, you
can download it on I are Spotify iTunes. We're gonna
get to some emails and revoking student visas here in
a few I I wanted to just talk really quickly
because we're about to talk about James Comey. Sometimes there

(19:58):
are things that are just simply red flags in human beings.
There are red flags, and you don't even necessarily have
the words to describe why all the time, but you
see it, you hear it, you sense it, and it's
a gigantic red flag. Male daycare workers is actually a great,

(20:19):
great example of this. I see every time I see
a news story about the controversy at this daycare, controversy
at that daycare, and I see that there's a male
daycare worker, I think to myself, why is there a
male daycare worker. I understand all men are different. I mean,

(20:40):
the men aren't just one universal thing, the same way
women aren't one universal thing. But dudes, Dudes don't go
to work at a daycare without a specific reason. I mean, hey,
maybe your wife started a daycare and you're there helping out,
trying to make ends meet or something like that. I

(21:02):
get it, I get there. There may be a reason,
but drop a micid off of daycare. Dude, why do
you want to be around other people's kids as a
grown man? Big red flag? Right, I'm gonna play something
for you. And I don't know that I can put

(21:23):
it into words why it creeps me out so incredibly
bad badly. But James Comey, who I know you don't
need any help hating, is the former head of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation. That is a thirty five thousand

(21:44):
employee department in charge of federal law enforcement in the
United States of America. That is a gigantic law enforcement force.
And you know what's wild. It's not just that the
FBI is domestic. The FBI has office offices and personnel

(22:06):
all over the planet working with this country on this
issue and that country on that issue. It is honestly,
you could you could probably argue it's essentially an intelligent
slash military force, an international one. And James Comy had
a parking spot that says director. He was the man

(22:28):
in charge of it. He's also sixty four years old.
I want you to listen to this.

Speaker 3 (22:36):
Hey, everybody, welcome back to my substack. Last week's cold
turns out to have been COVID. Quite a flashback, and
Donald Trump is still president and still humiliating America on
a national stage standing next to Vladimir Putin.

Speaker 4 (22:50):
It's like a dream, a bad dream you can't wake
up from.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
Okay, this is not the main part, all right about ever?
Putin putin Trump, putin Trump, the liberal derangement, and I
got all that. But here's what he wants to talk
about most.

Speaker 4 (23:04):
But I don't want to talk about that bad dream
this week.

Speaker 3 (23:06):
I want to talk about a truly inspirational public figure
named Taylor Swift. I'm in a family's swifty group chat.
I know all her music and I listened to it
in my head.

Speaker 2 (23:17):
I'm in a family swifty group chat. Everyone in my
family knows I'm not sixty four, I'm forty four. That
if you put me in a group chat of any kind,
I will probably leave it. I will almost undoubtedly mute it.
And if you put me in one talking about Taylor Swift,
I will leave it. I will mute it, and I

(23:39):
will block your phone number. This is well known. But anyway,
I'll let them continue.

Speaker 4 (23:44):
Headphones when I cut the grass.

Speaker 3 (23:46):
While our elderly makeup covered president is posting about whether
Taylor Swift is still hot and declaring that he can't
stand her. What's she doing living her best life producing
great music? And as she urged all of us to do.
During the podcast, not giving the jerks power over her mind,

(24:07):
she said something about dealing with internet trolls that stuck
with me. Think of your energy as if it's expensive,
she said, as if it's like a luxury item.

Speaker 4 (24:17):
Not everyone can afford it.

Speaker 2 (24:22):
Are you creeped out? There's I can't put into words
why I find this and so insanely creepy, but not
to look I would find a creepy if any dude
talk like this at any age. I'm gonna stress that
if any one of my friends or my son's honestly
they're fourteen and sixteen, if they came home and they

(24:43):
started talking about swifty and daddy here, but Taylor Swift said,
I would immediately be all, wait what I mean? But
at least with teenage boys, I might dismiss it as
maybe they're into her. You know, they're teenage boys. You
know what it's like moans running wild? Maybe they think
she's hot. Maybe you could dismiss it as that. Why

(25:06):
does a sixty four year old man talk this way? What?
What's wrong with these people? There's something there's something deeply
wrong with these people. I'm never gonna I'm never gonna
let it go. There's something deeply wrong Jesse. Actually this guy,
says Bronco. The subject to this one is getting older

(25:27):
sucks like you. I'm in my forties and I keep
a short haircut because there's not as much on top
as there used to be. A while back, an attractive
young lady in her twenties was very obviously checking me out,
being a happily married guy to a forty six year
old dime. I dismissed it, but I thought to myself,

(25:48):
I'm really bringing my a game today. A couple minutes later,
she came over to me and said, I love that
shirt you're wearing. My dad has the same one. I
told my wife the story and we've been laughing about
it ever since. I can't thank you enough for everything
you do. Since his name is Ray. Look, I want

(26:11):
to stress this again, and this is more of a
message to well, it's for any dude, but it's really
a message for all you politicians, especially you right wing Republicans,
you congressmen and senators, even your state house, state senate,
city council fellas. Fellas. Listen to me, just hear me
out here. You find yourself at a restaurant, bar at

(26:34):
a hotel, lobby, bar at a coffee shop, and you're
in your forties and fifties. If there's some dime who
comes strolling up to you hitting on you, that's a spy. Okay,

(26:55):
that's a spy or a prostitute. I'm sorry, that's the
way it goes. Fellas. The dimes, they're not into us
anymore when we're forty and well, I should say, the
young dimes, the forty year old dimes are and the
fifty year old dimes are. If that happens, sweep her
off her feet and take her to waffle house. If
it's a twenty some year old woman with her fake

(27:16):
eyelashes listening to Taylor Swift, that's an Iranian spy or
something along the lines. You need to immediately, immediately have
red flags pinging all over the place. And I brought
this up because do you know how many politicians, male
politicians getting trapped like that? Remember when it happened to
Eric Swalwell. We all love making fun of Swalwell, when

(27:37):
that Chinese spy, that dime Fang Fang apparently swept him
up with her charms. Your Eric Swalwell, have you looked
in the mirror. Have you heard yourself talk? Did you
just think that some random Chinese dime was that into you?
How did you not know that was a Chinese spy?

(28:00):
I could have the second she was nice to you. Really,
if any woman is ever nice to you, if you're
Eric Swowell, you should understand she's being paid in some
way to be nice to you, because no woman would
put herself in your presence on purpose. If there is
a woman who is kind to you, she is acting.
She is a spy of some kind, and she is

(28:22):
a honeypot, and she's gonna take you down. How could
you not see that? Swallwell, let's talk about revoking people's visas,
and somebody, praise Jesus, somebody discovered a war that isn't
World War Two. We'll talk about that. Before we talk
about that. Let's speaking of getting older. Body hurts every

(28:44):
now and then, doesn't it? It does? Look it just
does it? Just does you know what I did yesterday?
I was kind of restless, and I was kind of
bounce it all over the house. I have so much
energy now. Decided I was just gonna kind of go
for a walk in the heat. I just wanted to go
for a nice long walk, get a good sweat on.
Yesterday made it about a mile, my freaking knee started

(29:04):
to swell up. What does that happen after a mile?
Have you even got new shoes and everything? Like? It
just happens with life, right, it happens with age. Relief Factor.
Relief Factor will get that inflammation, that pain out of
your life, not masking it for a short time. I'm
not talking about a drug, it's one hundred percent drug free.

(29:27):
I'm talking about a supplement that will support what your
body is already trying to do. Your body's trying to
fight that inflammation. Give it, help Take it for three
weeks every day. Take it every day for three weeks.
Watch your pain disappear. You're about to be pain free.

(29:48):
One eight hundred the number four relief or relief Factor
dot Com. We'll be back.

Speaker 1 (29:55):
Jesse Kelly returns next.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Wonderful Monday.
Remember if you missed any part of the show, you
can download the whole thing on iHeart, Spotify, iTunes. The
US has revoked six thousand student visas under Marco Rubio
six thousand already that's a very good start. We have
a long way to go. But my favorite part of

(30:20):
this is, no longer are we going to see, at
least while Trump is in there. No longer are we
going to see such a sense of entitlement from these
people who have student visas. I remember when they first
started snatching up these people on campus who were causing
all these riots and protests. How many of them were
foreigners who were here legally on visas. And that is

(30:44):
just such an amazing thing to me that you would
essentially get a permission slip to come into the United
States of America to go to school here, maybe work here,
maybe do something like that, and you show up here,
it immediately starts rousing and causing disruption in things, and
you don't do that in other countries. And this is

(31:07):
what democrats enable. This is what they enable with how
they talk about immigration, with how they talk about America
being nothing. Everybody should just get to pillage it here.
They want these things happening. And it has always bothered
me when I see it, because you know what always
has gotten to me always an ungrateful guest, actually lack

(31:29):
of gratitude period drives me bonkers. It is one of
my biggest pet peeves in the world. From their earliest age,
we've taught our kids if someone buys dinner, if someone
makes dinner, I don't care what it is you say
thank you. It's an acknowledgment, an acknowledgment that you are

(31:51):
grateful for it. Gratitude means everything. But with our immigration
system in this country, with Democrats and Republicans like James
Lankford of vote Klahoma, where they have allowed this country
to become the world's open sewer and everybody should come here,
what that has bred is a complete lack of gratitude. Frankly,
it's bread animosity. That's why we have person after person

(32:14):
who's come here from some dump and they show up
and they'll openly talk about how much this country sucks
and how much they're gonna change things here because this
country's horrible. It's the lack of gratitude I find to
be so incredibly grating. If you were here in this
country on a work visa, on a student visa, if
you've been allowed to come here legally, you know what,

(32:37):
go clean up the sidewalk and you're off time when
you're not working, Why don't you go make the country better.
Why don't you go volunteer at a soup kitchen. Why
don't you go do something to say thank you? Why
don't you do something to show your gratitude. In fact,
I'll take it a step further. I just talk myself
into this now that I'm being an angry old man
on the radio on Monday. I think it should be

(32:58):
a requirement. I think, especially if you're here on a
student visa, if you were allowed to come here on
a student visa, I think a certain number of community
service hours should be required, or your visa should be
revoked and you should be deported. Does it have to
be extreme? It's not like I want everybody breaking bricks

(33:21):
in the hot sun. Why don't you show up here,
get your education and give something back. Make the place better.
That's what I try to do when I'm a guest
somewhere else. I try to make the place better than
I found it. Certainly not going to make the place worse.

(33:41):
Just the thought. Dear beaver, eat and cheatah fighting Jesse,
I wish you'd tone down the ability to sell ice
cubes to Eskimo's thing. You made hot crispy oil sound
so good that I've found an ordered some on Amazon
within thirty seconds of you talking about it. I can't
wait till it gets it. Don't get me wrong. All
the stuff you advertise is as good as you say

(34:03):
it is. But I'm going broke here. Listen, thank you.
His name is Eric Man. The first time you do
you dribble some of that stuff on eggs, You're gonna
know what I'm talking about. Oh you think hot crispy
oil costs you a lot of money? Did you got
to Cozy Earth yet? Just wait, just wait, You'll buy
one pair of sheets. You'll never Oh my gosh, they're amazing. Anyway,

(34:24):
I don't want to get started. I don't want to
get started. Jesse, When do you think of all that?
When do you think of when you think of all
the jobs that will go away if DEI went away?
Also consider the employees of nonprofits that facilitated all Yes,
we could try, we would fail, but we could try

(34:44):
to put a number on how much money is at
stake with DEI in the country. How many corporate jobs,
how many jobs in corporate America would disappear with that DEI?
How many nonprofit or organizations NGOs? How many would disappear
without DEI look how many media jobs. Honestly, Joyanne Reid,

(35:09):
this is joy Anne Reid, this human being. She's fired now.
She had a show on a major network for years
and years year.

Speaker 5 (35:18):
They can't fix the history they did. Their ancestors made
this country into a slave a slave hell. But they
can clean it up now because they got the Smithsonian.
They can get rid of all the slavery stuff. They got, Prager,
you that can lie about the history to the children.
They can't originally invent anything more than they ever were
able to invent good music. We black folk gave y'all

(35:40):
country music, hip hop, R and B, jazz, rock and roll.
They couldn't even invent that. But they have to call
a white man the king because they couldn't make rock
and roll. So they have to stamp the king on
a man whose main song was stolen from an overweight
black woman.

Speaker 2 (35:59):
That is so deeply unhealthy. It's deeply unhealthy to think
that way. It's so deeply unhealthy to spread that message around.
It doesn't it doesn't make anyone happier, doesn't make anyone
more successful. But all that aside, what is Joyanne Reid?

(36:19):
What is she Without DEI, you would have never heard
her name before. And this is what we talked about
of We still have so much work to do because
there is essentially an entire industry set up and now
people's livelihoods are at stake. And what we've learned time

(36:40):
and time again throughout history is when people's livelihoods are
at stake, if they have to choose between doing and
saying something terrible or paying the mortgage, most people will
choose paying the mortgage. It's a very natural human emotion.
I don't want to starve, I don't want to get
kicked out of the house, I don't want my car repay.
So hey, what do you need me to do? All

(37:03):
go do it. People will choose to pay the mortgage.
We have a lot of work to do to deconstruct
that in the United States of America. All right, let's
go to the World Economic Forum, and let's talk about
the girl Scouts, gay cheerleaders in our cities going down

(37:23):
the tubes.

Speaker 1 (37:24):
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Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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