Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Monday, as we try
to sort through things here. I'm still hurting, You're still hurting.
That's life. I promise you. We are going to get by.
I promise you. We're gonna laugh a half hour from
(00:31):
now and we do the Crappiest Country in the World tournament.
And yes, we're gonna talk about all these people getting
fired and many other things, but we're not doing any
more of that right now, Probably now more than ever.
We need a Medal of Honor Monday. Every Monday at
this time, we find an American hero who earned a
(00:53):
Medal of Honor and we honor them. We read their name,
and we read their deeds, and we talk about heroism
and fighting for the country and fighting for your fellow man.
And it is really, really really important now that we
carry that message. I want to really really stress this
because people when they are afraid, and a lot of
(01:15):
people are afraid, maybe you are afraid, they need someone
who is courageous and bold. They will follow that person.
Cowardice is courageous. Is cowardice is courageous? Cowardice is contagious,
and so is courage. Speak to your children about these
(01:37):
men and their deeds. Speak to your office about it,
your church. This is not political. You can get away
with this anywhere. You're the fire department, police department. Speak
about these things, learn about heroism and what people have done.
Now is a time for people of courage to rise
(01:58):
up up this email. Remember we take email suggestions that
they're welcome. There's a long backlog because this thing's gotten
pretty popular, but email us Jesse at jesse kellyshow dot com. Hey, Jesse,
I'm a seventh grader head a school in Minnesota. That
was last year though he's an eighth grader. Now, I
(02:18):
would like you to read the Medal of Honor citation
and play taps for Robert E. Fleming, who served in
World War Two and graduated from this school. And that
he says thanks kid, gloves, menu nerd baldy. Not very
nice either way. Richard Eugene Fleming was born in Saint Paul,
(02:40):
Minnesota in nineteen seventeen United States Marine Corps Reserve and
what I'm about to read for you here took place
in Midway. I want to remind you I know this
is basic. But a lot of people don't know basics.
People wake up in their own time that the Japanese
they didn't just eat us at Pearl Harbor. They thumped
(03:02):
us in the Philippines. They were thumping everybody, the Brits, everybody.
They were expanding rapidly, and they were on their way
to Hawaii. Wrap your mind around that. The Japanese were
coming to Hawaii not for another Pearl Harbor bombing. They
were coming to take it. We can't even we can't
(03:22):
even wrap our minds around that now. But they were
coming to take the Hawaiian islands. And part of their
plan was to ambush us at Midway, well, take out,
take out Midway Island. And we, through our intelligence service,
we were reading there, essentially reading their mail. We pieced
(03:46):
together enough information and figured out, wait a minute, there's
a large force going to attack Midway to ambush Midway.
What if we ambushed them? And so we assembled all
these ships, all these aircraft carriers. But I want you
to keep in mind, attacking ships in a plane is
a very very dangerous affair. Not only are they shooting
(04:08):
at you the ship itself, other planes are shooting at you.
There are endless mechanical failures. It is something that can
end up fatally. The pilots of World War Two, all
of them, but especially the Pacific pilots, should deserve your
unending respect. It was a dangerous, dangerous job and many
(04:29):
of them didn't make it home. And our success at Midway,
when we thumped the Japanese at Midway, it stopped that expansion.
They never expanded again. From then on we started to
push back the tide. So without further ado. Richard Eugene Fleming,
United States Marine Corps, Hey honoring those who went above
(04:52):
and beyond. It's Medal of Honor Monday for extraordinary heroism
and conspicuous intrepidity above and beyond the call of duty
as flight officer, Marine Scout bombing Squadron two forty one
(05:12):
during action against enemy Japanese forces in the Battle of
Midway on the fourth and fifth of June nineteen forty two.
When his squadron commander was shot down during the initial
attack upon an enemy aircraft carrier, Captain Fleming led the
remainder of the division with such fearless determination that he
dived his own plane to the perilously low altitude of
(05:37):
four hundred feet before releasing his bomb. Although his craft
was riddled by one hundred and seventy nine hits in
the blistering hail of fire that burst upon him from
Japanese fighter guns and anti aircraft batteries, he pulled out
with only two minor wounds inflicted upon himself. On the
(05:59):
night of four June, when the squadron commander lost his
way and became separated from the others, Captain Fleming brought
his own plane in for a safe landing at its base,
despite hazardous weather conditions and total darkness. The following day,
after less than four hours of sleep, he led the
second division of his squadron in a coordinated glide bombing
(06:22):
and dive bombing assault upon a Japanese battleship. Undeterred by
a fateful approach glide during which his ship was struck
and set a fire, he grimly pressed home his attack
to an altitude of five hundred feet, released his bomb
to score a near miss on the stern of his target,
(06:44):
then crashed to the sea in flames. His dauntless perseverance
and unyielding devotion to duty were in keeping with the
highest traditions of the US Naval service plane in flames,
ready to blow up or even worse, burned to death,
(07:04):
and he continued on so he could drop his bomb
and try to land one last shot, Captain Fleming, isn't it?
(08:09):
Isn't it crazy? How many of those names we don't know?
You don't know, and I don't know. There were so many,
and it was so long ago, but not just World
War two, right, any conflict? How many names? How many
names of Iraq and Afghanistan? How many do you know?
We did an event with tunnel to towers One time,
(08:29):
I did an event with tunnel to towers in Washington,
d C. Where it was all day long and had
a bunch of different speakers, but there weren't really speeches
that I can remember. The entire day was reading every
name of those who gave their lives in Iraq and Afghanistan.
(08:51):
And I remember as I was looking at my list
before I went up there, I remember thinking to myself,
I didn't know any of these names people who gave
their lives for this country, and I don't know their names.
And it's really, really, really important that we talk about
these people, that we honor their sacrifice and talk about them,
(09:13):
that is part of how we are going to form
a new generation, a better generation, better one than we are.
That's the idea, right, that's the goal. And I'll tell
you I see a lot of the elements there. From
what I see in young people today, I see an
opportunity for the next generation to be so much better
than us, certainly better than me, but so much better
(09:35):
than we are, and bolder and more willing to engage.
We just have to keep bringing up these names. I love.
I love doing it, man, I'm telling you, I love
doing it. It's become an obsession now. On the weekends,
I'll find myself scrolling through them, thinking about Monday, of course,
but scrolling through them, and as you're scrolling through them,
you do, oh, I didn't know that. Oh, I didn't
know that guy. I didn't know that name. I didn't
(09:57):
I didn't know I didn't know it's it's it's anyway.
I'm going to talk about a painful realization that may
be new to you, something I've kind of been aware
of for some time, but everyone wakes up in their
own time, a painful realization about who you share a
country with that is shocking a lot of people. We're
(10:19):
going to talk about that in a moment. Before we
talk about that, I want to talk about preserving memories.
You know those pictures, that box of pictures, the baby album,
the wedding album, the pictures on the wall, the home videos.
It's really easy to think to yourself, they'll always be there.
Speaker 2 (10:43):
I know.
Speaker 1 (10:43):
When we got our box from Legacy Box and Obs
started going through old boxes of things. It wasn't just
hard copy pictures. She started finding old VHS tapes of
her gymnastics meets with her parents when she was a kid.
That stuff was fading a way and lost. Now it's
digitized forever forever. Our kids' kids will get to watch
(11:06):
Ob do gymnastics when she was a teenager. How insanely
cool is that. That's the gift Legacy Box gives us.
You send them your stuff, they hand digitize it, and
then they send you your stuff back, and you have
your stuff forever, no matter the flood, no matter the fire,
no matter the time. Forever. Those pictures are more important
(11:30):
than your car. Those are memories. Keep them forever with
Legacy Box, Legacybox dot com, slash Jesse, Legacybox dot com
slash Jesse. We'll be back this is a Jesse Kelly show.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show, only ten. I almost
(11:54):
messed up my own name. Only ten minutes away from
the Crappiest Country in the World tournament. Remember, you can
email the show Jesse at jessekellyshow dot com. So, uh,
before we get to the people getting fired and things
like that, I forgot to tell you, Chris Corey during
the break, I have some good news and I have
(12:14):
some bad news for you. You know how I told
you we all got together on Saturday night and everybody
had to prepare a dish. Good news is I smoked
a brisket for twenty one hours. It was perfection. I
brought it to the party. It's better than you can imagine.
(12:35):
Bad news is they finished it all, so there's none
left to bring you guys. Sorry, what what I said?
It was good news and bad news. I'm sorry, but
but wait, wait, wait, there's more, Wait, there's more. Ob
her contribution was her homemade oatmeal cream pies. Obviously they
were a huge hit, and she made so many this
(12:57):
time that we do have a bunch unch leftover. And
she just texted me during the break, you need to
bring some leftovers for Chris and Corey tomorrow. But bad
news is I already told her no. So look, it's
a yin and yang thing, like everything can't be perfect,
all right, Just I want you to know the brisket
(13:20):
that you didn't get to have any of was so good.
So that's not very nice, Chris. It was so it
was just juicy. And I mean, I guess I shouldn't
try to put it into words because you really had
to be there, otherwise you wouldn't know. Sorry, you guys
don't get to find out about that anyway. I'm sorry you.
(13:42):
I'm sorry you are finding out that we have monsters
all over our country. I get all these emails, Jesse.
I want a national divorce. I want it now. We
cannot live together, Jesse. I think it's a good thing. Teachers, nurses,
and members of the military are getting fired for celebrating
Charlie's assassination. But these people aren't going anywhere. They still
live in our communities. They're still believe that firing them
(14:05):
doesn't feel like it's going to do anything, just make
them more angry. Again, I fully support it. What happens next,
and so look, I know you've seen the headlines and
I know that from when I've heard from people, from
talking to people, the Democrat response is as heartbreaking as
(14:27):
the assassination itself. People are mortified, not just at the assassination,
but Democrats everywhere. Headline professors defend Charlie Kirk assassination on
Blue Sky it's a social media platform. UCLA places race
and Equity director who celebrated Charlie kirk assassination on leave.
(14:51):
FEMA employee, fired military colonel, suspended headline. At least a
dozen faculty and staff have faced fallout over they called
it insensitive comments. Headline man arrested for sickening act at
Charlie Kirk memorial outside of Turning Point and headquarters in Phoenix.
(15:11):
He went and started kicking over flowers and things like that.
Headline hospital fires healthcare worker for controversial social media posts.
You know, they always try to really fluff up what
these posts, worthies were all posts saying some version of
this either A I'm glad he got shot, I'm thrilled,
(15:33):
or B. You know, he really kind of had it coming.
You see that a lot. He kind of had it coming.
I mean he kind of you know, well, look, here's
a great version this was msnbcis.
Speaker 3 (15:46):
The reason that he is seen as a divisive figures
and why the left has had a reaction as well
in this is because he has been known to make
racist statements, to say that, you know, if he were
to see a black pilot, he wouldn't necessarily trust their
ability to fly a plane. He has also said that
(16:06):
it was a mistake to pass the Civil Rights Act
and has definitely he had it coming.
Speaker 1 (16:13):
You say, it's been everywhere. The responses from Democrats have
ranged to outright celebration to well, maybe not celebrating, but
he kind of deserved it, to oh, I mean, it's
kind of good that he's gone. I don't love that
it happened, but it's good that you've seen it. And
it's not one or two. It's the Democrat in your life,
(16:34):
you know. One. The emails have filled the inbox with Jesse,
I cannot believe what my sister just said. Jesse. That
was a member of my church group. Jesse, I can't believe, Jesse.
You have told me your personal stories of the Democrat
in your life, either cheering for it or being kind
of okay with it, or justifying it, kind of had
(16:55):
it coming, and what this has done is it is
it's brought about a sadness for a lot of people
who didn't quite realize where we were. And everyone wakes
up in their own time with their own experiences. If
you listen to this show, you know I've told you
(17:17):
what these people are for a very long time. I'm
not surprised in the least, not a little bit. But
I understand the lies people tell themselves. You tell yourself
the lie of Okay, well there's one crazy communist out there,
I got Okay, there's a few, but it's not all
them all right, Well, I mean it's it's maybe half,
but half are still really good people. Well, it's just
(17:39):
the people on the media. It's just the politicians it now, No, no,
it is the comfortable majority of registered Democrats in this country.
That is a fact. Every poll shows it. The majority
either cheer for violence, they're okay with violence, we'll commit
(18:01):
acts of violence, a violent place to be. And I
know that has saddened you. But after we do our
crappiest country in the world thing, we'll talk about this more.
I know you're sad, but what you're going through right
now is healthy, and I'll explain after we do our
crappiest country in the world, and after I talk to
you about rough Greens, Today's a day that's really hard
(18:26):
for Fred. It's not that Fred has days that aren't hard.
Everything seems to be stressful and saddening for that pathetic
apile of heur. But today's extra bad because today he
had to get groomed. Every now and then we have
to groom him to keep his hair from getting matted. Now,
you would probably think that's not a big deal because
they're all in love with him, and they all just
(18:48):
love on him and snuggle with him the whole time,
and he essentially gets brushed. But for Fred, it's a
traumatic event and he sits in the corner whimpering for
the rest of the day, as if he's just spent
time in a North Vietnamese prison camp. I don't know
how to explain it, but this was always the day
where he would have digestive problems. No more. He still
(19:09):
does the whimpering without the puking thanks to Roughgreens. Roughgreens
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Do you want a shinier coat, better breath, fewer trips
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lives longer, starts sprinkling Roughgreens on your dog's food. It
is the key to a longer, healthier life. Roughgreens dot
(19:32):
com slash Jesse or two to one four Roughdog promo
code Jesse. We'll be back truth attitude, Jesse Kelly. It
is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Monday. It has
already been quite a Monday as we still sift through
(19:55):
all the the rubble here and talking about this and that.
We already did Medal of Honor Monday a half hour ago.
But it's time to take a break on the heaviness
and take a break on the emails. And since we
need a break because we have something critically important to do,
the Tournament of Tournaments, the crappiest country in the world tournament.
(20:18):
It will not stop. It cannot stop until you and me,
until we dig in and we figure out what is
the crappiest country on Earth. And we have another This
is our second All Africa matchup tonight, Niger squares off
against so I gotta be honest to early favorite Somalia.
Speaker 2 (20:42):
It's the twenty twenty five Crappiest Country in the World competition.
Tonight's matchup is between Somalia and Niger, brought to you
by Alphabet Plungers. Use both ends.
Speaker 1 (21:01):
First, we're gonna go to Niger and something I would
highly recommend you never do. Remember the four levels of
State Department warning Niger comes in at a level three.
But actually that's not entirely fair because regions of Niger
are level four, meaning don't travel there for any reason,
(21:22):
you will die. No one's coming to rescue you. Now
that begs the question, of course which regions. Oh, I'm
glad you asked all the border regions. That's not great,
considering Niger borders seven countries. Essentially, the whole place is
level four, with a tiny sliver of level three where
you only have to worry about crime, terrorism, and of
(21:44):
course kidnapping. Armed robbery seems to be a real specialty there.
And in case you're wondering if it's got kind of
a Mexico thing where the bad guys avoid the touristy areas,
in fact it's quite the opposite. They focus on the
touristy areas, so you might just have a dessert of
kidnapping with your continental breakfast at the holiday inn. I
(22:07):
should also note if you do choose to travel there,
this one's a little bit unique. You have to be
vaccinated for several things, including yellow fever, which probably would
have helped out Eric Swalwell. Part of the reason the
country is such a disaster is remember how I said
they border seven countries. Yeah, they apparently routinely take in
(22:28):
refugees against their will from all seven countries. Not only
are they starving to death, twenty percent of the people
don't even have enough food to live through the day.
More people are coming in every day. Forty five percent
of the country living in extreme poverty. It's a little
rough in Niger, but that brings us to I don't
(22:50):
want to handicap anything. I don't want to I don't
want to make predictions. I don't want to taint the vote,
if you will, But that brings us to Somalia. And
I've got to be honest, I don't know which way
this tournament's gonna go. It's up to you, not me
for the most part, but Somalia has to be considered
(23:11):
a favorite, certainly a number one seed to win the
entire thing. Niger that dump we just talked about squared
off against Somalia, and remember you get to vote on this.
It's on the show's Jesse Kelly Show Twitter page. Somalia
got ninety percent of the vote, which is all the
ironic because whichever warlord currently has the most guns in
(23:33):
Somalia usually gets ninety percent of the vote. Somalia, the
entire thing is level four, you know, run of the
mill crimes we've gotten used to by now, crime, terrorism, kidnapping.
By the way, terrorism is a little bit deeper and
more embedded in Somalia. We're talking car bombs, suicide vests.
Don't think just because it seems peaceful, it is that
(23:57):
SUPERU outback might not be driven Hyah Lesbian might actually
be driven by a Muslim extremist getting ready to set
off that nail bomb in front of you and your family.
Somalia also mixes in a healthy dose of piracy, which
is well known by now Horn of Africa. A bunch
of dirtballs with AK forty seven's driving up the ships,
(24:18):
killing everybody's doing the standard pirate thing. Somalia is so
severe the risk of kidnapping or death is so high
they actually advise that you scrub your social media account
completely if you ever visit there. Why you ask, because
when you get kidnapped, which is almost inevitable, the group
who kidnaps you is probably going to peruse your Instagram account,
(24:42):
and if they see a woman showing her shoulders, she's
probably going to get her head cut off. Female genital
mutilation might be the most disgusting practice I have ever
heard about. I will not explain it on this show
because there are children listening. Just know it's actually worse
than you imagine. It happens in Somalia, but bad things
(25:03):
happen everywhere. Of course, the question is how prevalent is it.
I'm glad you asked. It's ninety nine percent. Seventy percent
of Somalia lives in extreme poverty. The country is run
by war lords and terrorists. The only good news I
have out of Somalia is so many of the bad
people have left Somalia. Of course, the bad news is
(25:25):
they're all now in Minneapolis the victor today. To be honest,
it wasn't even close Somalia. I should note tomorrow, I
don't think it's going to be close. South Sudan is
(25:45):
taking on France, Okay, I guess we'll see, all right.
So before we get back into the sad place where
you are about realizing you're surrounded by a bunch of monsters,
well again, talk about why we got there and how
to deal with that sadness. It's actually healthy where you're
at right now. It's healthy. I know it hurts, but
(26:06):
it's healthy. It's a lot of things like that. I
wanted to update you on something, Megan Kelly. You know
Megan Kelly. Megan Kelly is doing a speaking tour very
similar A lot of people do these speaking tours where
she's going from city to city and she has a
guest or two or three, I don't know how many,
(26:26):
and they go up on stage with her and they'll
just how political discussion. It'll be a big event. A
bunch of great people will come together. On October twenty third,
she's doing one in the Houston area. From what I understand,
unless something's changed, Don Junior, Donald Trump Junior is here
featured guest, which I like Don. I like him a lot.
(26:47):
We get along. I'm going to be there too, as
a speaker, and I know that word has already gotten
out about that and people are worried. I get a
lot of emails of I'm worried. I'm worried because I
keep your head down, be safe, or I've gotten a
bunch of don't do it, don't do it. We can't
afford to, can't afford to lose you to I want
(27:08):
you to come if, if you can, if it's feasible.
I know not everyone's around Houston. Most people are not.
Or if you are, you know, maybe maybe it's expensive,
Maybe you want to come in from out of town.
It's too expensive. I get all those things. But no,
we do not hide at home. We do not shy
(27:29):
away just because there are people who want to kill us.
Now is the time to go to more events than
you ever had before. And I know that we are
in an elevated threat environment. I know bomb planted under
Fox News vehicle, the suspects are nabbed in Salt Lake City.
(27:52):
A Fox News vehicle was there covering the murder. Charlie kirk'ssassination.
A couple of dudes try to blow it up. We
are in an elevated threat environment and there will be
more casualties. I want you to know that I know
that there will be more. Demons are not tired, and
(28:14):
they're not giving up. There will be more. We have
to stand up louder and larger than we ever have before.
Our greatest weapon right now is courage. If you are
considering political events, go take your children. I know that
(28:35):
can be intimidating. Go If it's not this March or
October twenty third thing for Megan Kelly, go to something else.
Does that have to be with me? For me? Go
be bold, show them we are unafraid, all right, And
I do hope we are gonna be able to pull
off this Utah thing I'm in wanting to do. I
(28:56):
don't know if it's going to work logistically trying, but
we'll see. Anyway, we're gonna go back to talking about
the people surrounding us next. This is the Jesse Kelly Show.
It is the Jesse Kelly's Show, and we're gonna get
to your emails here and a few I just wanted to,
in fact, you know what, We're gonna break after your
(29:16):
emails and make fun of Kamala Harrison a couple things
before we get back to this. I just wanted to
address how sad people are realizing that a lot of
their Democrat friends are solace evil monsters. Everybody gets to
that point in their own time. And I know I
(29:37):
get so many emails of I don't want to live
like this. We shouldn't have to live like this. I
don't want to be okay with this. Well, sorry, but
you don't get to live in the world you want
to live in, and neither do I. That's not how
it works. I don't wish it for you or me.
I don't want to be here with this kind of
(29:59):
poison and his hate. I don't want to be here
where people like this go on the news and spread
this film.
Speaker 3 (30:07):
The reason he was labeled a white supremacist is because
he believed in the superiority of white people, which.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
Is why he said, that's Jamie Hill. I don't want
to live like that either. But we have to set
aside this childish notion about the world we want to
live in and accept the world we do live in.
And I'm here to tell you, I know it doesn't
feel like it right now. If you're busy waking up,
(30:36):
it does get easier. It gets easier when you just
accept that there's evil around us. And remember, these people
have been broken through years in years and years of conditioning,
years of conditioning. Now they had a natural proclivity for
(31:00):
it anyway, probably a lack of belief in God, meaning
there's no sanctity to human life. So they were, you know,
they were essentially had addictive personalities and got introduced to alcohol.
They were already susceptible to it. But then you consume
this for ten twenty thirty years, it takes away your
(31:23):
respect for human life.
Speaker 3 (31:24):
And it is somebody who understands history. When I see Ice,
I see slave patrols. Now I never lived.
Speaker 1 (31:32):
When I see Ice, I see slave patrols. That's Jasmine Crockett.
How in the world could anybody become that? Well, I'm
glad you asked allow me to introduce you to her past, that.
Speaker 4 (31:44):
You thought about the fact that this week in Utah,
a white Christian got killed by a white Christians and
then the next day HBCUs were under threat. How did
we get in it?
Speaker 1 (32:05):
Poison? Lies and poison, And if you consume that poison
for long enough, you'll find yourself one day watching someone
be murdered and cheering for it and feeling like the
good guy as you watch it. I know that's not
(32:26):
what you want. But now that you realize where we are,
then you can operate appropriately moving forward. Think of it
like a house fire. If the kitchen, if the stove
catches on fire, that is one level of danger. Gotta
grab the baking soda, the fire extinguisher. Don't grab water,
(32:49):
Grab the baking soda, the fire extinguisher, and put the
thing out. We'll get by. Maybe we burn up the cupboards,
maybe some smoke damage, possibly the fire department. We'll get
by with a little drywall. We'll call it good. If
the entire downstairs is raging inferno and we're upstairs, we're
(33:09):
going to die if we don't get out the windows
and out of the house, because the house probably cannot
be saved and is going to burn to ash. The
most dangerous thing in the world is not that there's
a fire downstairs. The most dangerous thing in the world
is thinking it's just a tiny fire on the stove
and operating in that way you yesterday, last week, two
(33:34):
weeks ago, if you didn't realize we were dealing with
prevalent evil, you were in danger because you didn't understand
how bad the fire had gotten. I know it's ugly,
but feel good about the fact you are much more
aware now than you were last week. There can be Look,
(33:58):
it's not exactly out there now. Courtesy of social media,
they all put their thoughts out publicly, as loudly as possible.
Now we see, we see that we have an enemy
who is committed, committed to his evil things, not sorry
for them in the least at all. Someone people who
(34:20):
think you deserve it, and I deserved.
Speaker 5 (34:22):
A lot of things. They got a lot of people
riled up, right, And that's part of his uh, that
was part of his style about race, about gender, about
affirmative action.
Speaker 1 (34:34):
Hey, he said some stuff. They got people rouled up,
kind of out of comment. They think the exact same
thing about you, the exact same thing. That sucks, But
it gives you, in me an opportunity to operate in
the elevated threat environment we are in. Now, we're going
to change this subject, at least I'm going to try to.
(34:56):
I'm going to do some emails, and then we're going
to make fun of Dome because there's just a hilarious
thing that no one's paying attention to right now. There's
a hilarious thing going on between Dome and the Biden camp.
And I am enjoying it immensely, immensely. I will just
say it's just a little preview for it. There are
(35:16):
a million reasons you don't hire a communist, you don't
make a DEI hire. There are a bunch of very
good reasons you don't do it. But maybe the best
reason is they're never going to be grateful for it.
I hope you don't think you're going to bring in
that filthy communist and you're going to get some level
(35:37):
of grace or gratitude. That's not how they operate at all,
at all. One guy wrote in and he said, what
did he say? Twenty sixteen, his buddy lost his job,
got kicked out of his house, and he let the
guy come stay with him in his house. Later on
that year, his buddy refused to talk to him because
(36:00):
he wouldn't get vaccinated or something along. Because it wasn't vaccinated,
it was something else. In sixteen voted for Obama or
didn't vote for Obama. He it was something. I forget
what it was, but purged him out of his life.
You're not dealing with people who have the ability to
have gratitude. That's what part of what makes them communists.
One of the best ways to inoculate your children, as
(36:22):
I've told you many times before, is simply teach them gratitude.
Be grateful. I asked my kids as often as possible.
In fact, I need to do that again tonight. What
are you grateful for? An attitude of gratitude is one
of the greatest vaccinations against communism. They don't have it Dome.
It gives us a great example. Next after emails, hang
(36:43):
on