Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
Okay, so I know you woke up to the same
thing I woke up to on Sunday. You woke up,
maybe you were getting ready for church, maybe you weren't,
but you saw there had been a Mormon church in
Michigan that had been attacked and still sorting out, sifting
through the details on the why. But the why is
(00:31):
actually not what I want to talk about tonight, not
at least right now. In the opening, we'll get to
some why here in a moment. I want to just
go back to something I discussed with you before. Remember
when I said this back in July. This is now
going to increase from here organized planned street violence and
the animals who commit this kind of violence are going
(00:52):
to move on from hard targets like board attack, and
they're going to come to your church, They're going to
come to your child's school. They're going to find soft
targets where they can hurt the people they want to hurt.
They're not going to accept failure forever. This is not
to get you to hide or even be afraid or
(01:13):
stay in your home. This is to let you know
to keep your eyes open, carry if you can, and
be ready to protect yourself because organized street communism in
this country is going to increase from here.
Speaker 2 (01:31):
Cut.
Speaker 1 (01:32):
So before we get to the actual communism portion of this,
let's just focus on the nitty gritty. What matters to you,
what matters to me, the safety of our loved ones,
safety of ourselves. You know what I've done in the
past week. I've done both these things. In the past week.
I sat down at my children's school and had a
(01:55):
discussion with the leadership there about the security at the school.
Not there the school hands security, all the little buzz
lock doors, armed police. But I looked around and I
thought to myself, if I was a suicidal demon who
wanted to hurt these kids, could I And the answer
(02:18):
to that question is yes. Remember it's something we've learned
after years and years and years of dealing with Islamic jihad.
Speaker 2 (02:25):
It's extremely extremely.
Speaker 1 (02:28):
Difficult to stop someone who is willing to die or
wants to die, extremely extremely difficult. And you have to
put yourself in that mindset when you look at your
child's school. If someone is willing to die in order
to kill these kids, can they get to these kids?
And most schools, for most schools, the answer to that
(02:53):
question is yes. Now I said, I did a couple
things this past week. I did yesterday. It was actually
during church, during the worship service. It's kind of felt compelled.
Got up, walked out and just.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
Started doing what we would know as.
Speaker 1 (03:12):
A threat assessment. Walked out the front doors, looked around,
took a look at the security, took a look at
the rent a cop they have in the church. We'll
get to that in a moment. Took a look at
the back door the nursery. If I was a suicidal
demon and I wanted to come kill a bunch of
(03:32):
Christians on a Sunday in my church, could I do it?
And the answer was easily easily? Why back doors sitting
there unlocked, could have walked right in.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
Oh, but there's a cop there in uniform.
Speaker 1 (03:49):
There sure was. There was a cop there in uniform.
You know what he was doing. I'm not even kidding.
I actually sat there, stood there and watched him for
a few minutes, just to see. In fact, I walked
back and forth. I'm six foot eight. Is he going
to look up? Is he going to notice me? Is
he going to register my face? He was sitting at
(04:11):
a table on his phone like a teenage girl. The
whole time. If I was a demon, shoot I could
have killed him and then went and killed everybody else easily, easily.
Have you done this in your school, your church? It's
fine If you haven't, now's the time to do it.
And once you do it, demand better. I told my
(04:36):
school children in school, look, we need more. This is
not good enough. This is a target. Now we live
sadly in a country where schools are a target for demons.
We have to try to protect it as if it's
a target. Same thing in your house of worship, whatever
that house may be. By the way, this applies to
(04:56):
synagogues that if you have a house of worship, are
probably okay, But that's another story. If you have a
house of worship, are they doing enough? Put yourself in
the mind of a suicidal demon. Is your church a
hard target? Or is your church ripe for the picking?
And don't say what you may be saying right now.
(05:20):
Even though I sympathize, I don't want to live in
that world, I get it.
Speaker 2 (05:27):
I don't want to live in that world.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
I thought I was done having a look around for
things like that. That is the world in which we've
been given. You cannot wish it away, and neither can
I start taking steps to ensure your soft targets, the
soft targets in your life are protected because there are
evil people everywhere. Now, let's talk about the communist aspect
(05:52):
of this. We have talked endlessly, It's been an endless
discussion about elite communists and street communists on this show.
Elite communists generally are not true believers. Sometimes they are.
They're just out for money and power. These are media people, politicians,
and they understand very well that they have foot soldiers,
(06:13):
shock troops street communists.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
Now the animals.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
The street communists generally are true believers, almost always violent,
mentally ill, sometimes drugged out, and they have been radicalized
over and over and over again by the rhetoric from
the elite communists. Elite communists give orders, not necessarily direct orders,
Hey you go kill him like, more like soft orders,
(06:38):
more subtle orders if you will, Hey, Fascists are evil.
Nazis are evil. That guy he's a Nazi. Anyway, do
with that what you will. And so, in the wake
of the murder of Charlie Kirk, maybe you thought, maybe
you thought that Democrats people in the media would stop
(06:59):
the rhetoric they would change the rhetoric. But not only
have they not stopped, they have increased. This is courtesy
of Western Lensman. Why have they increased it?
Speaker 3 (07:10):
Let me ask you tonight, do you think Donald Trump
is a fascist?
Speaker 4 (07:13):
Yes? I do.
Speaker 5 (07:14):
This is what taking the kind of fascism looks like.
Speaker 6 (07:20):
Try to prevent the spread of the lawlessness in the
fascist chaos that's been unleashed against us.
Speaker 7 (07:25):
So when we say Donald Trump is a fascist, fascism,
a huge component of fascism is uniting racism, bigotry, a
form of racist nationalism.
Speaker 8 (07:39):
This is we are now living in a fascist dictatorship, Kenchry.
We are worried about potential rise of fascism in this country.
Speaker 1 (07:46):
We're worried about our democracy falling to an authoritarian and
potentially fascist form of government.
Speaker 9 (07:52):
Not only to roll over to Donald Trump's will, but
to roll over our democracy and allow him to take
over this country as a fascist dictator.
Speaker 10 (08:03):
When fascism isn't just coming, it's already here.
Speaker 6 (08:06):
The former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mark
Milly said, no one has ever been more dangerous to
this country than Donald Trump, and he is a fascist
to his core.
Speaker 1 (08:21):
Why because they want people hurd You can keep telling
a Democrat that your rhetoric is getting people hurt, but
they know that's why they do it. You are a
good person, so you can't understand why they wouldn't stop.
Why won't you change? Their political enemies are being hurt.
(08:46):
They don't want it to stop. They're not going to stop.
Did you know a Health and Human Services official was
followed at the United Nations At the United Nations, followed
into the bathroom and assaulted by a street animal. You
know what, the street animal calling them nazi fascist. This
is the result and they're not backing away. Gavin Newsom
(09:08):
is currently the likely Democrat nominee for president in the
year twenty twenty eight. Gavin Newsom's social media account quote,
this is after the assassination. Steven Miller is a fascist.
They want you hurt. It's hard to accept and this
the result of this is the animal communist base has
(09:30):
come to accept, in fact, has come to desire their
political opponents harmed.
Speaker 2 (09:37):
You see this video.
Speaker 7 (09:40):
I don't want to be a fluent person, but in
this case I feel like that we just.
Speaker 2 (09:47):
Me too.
Speaker 3 (09:49):
I have to say the word but assassinate him What was.
Speaker 11 (09:53):
Your reaction this July when the assassin almost got Trump
in Butler, Pennsylvania, happy that he missed, or happy that.
Speaker 5 (10:01):
It happened happened, and too bad that it was.
Speaker 11 (10:05):
What was your action in July when an assassin came
an inch away from ending Trump.
Speaker 3 (10:13):
Disappointment that if they didn't follow through.
Speaker 2 (10:15):
They they missed.
Speaker 4 (10:18):
Yeah, I thought, oh my god, it could have been wonderful.
Speaker 11 (10:24):
If he'd have been shot.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
I can sum it up in one word.
Speaker 11 (10:29):
And drat that it happened, or drat that it missed,
it missed.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
I won't lie.
Speaker 7 (10:38):
I do not support silence anyway.
Speaker 2 (10:44):
I think I'm gonna let you finished.
Speaker 3 (10:46):
I'm so shy and reserved. My fault was if he'd
had a good scope instead of the red.
Speaker 10 (10:55):
Dot, we would not be going through this.
Speaker 3 (10:57):
I can see it.
Speaker 4 (10:58):
I feel to be here.
Speaker 10 (11:01):
If I was an active And.
Speaker 1 (11:06):
That's why they do it, the endless rhetoric. And remember
this is not recent. Ten years of Trump's a Nazi,
You're a Nazi. Trump's Nazi, You're a Nazi. Trump's Nazi,
You're a Nazi.
Speaker 2 (11:19):
Ten years.
Speaker 1 (11:21):
What it has done is my buddy Arn McIntyre called
it a moral blank check, And he's so right about that.
It was a great line. It is given these people,
It's given the street animals a moral blank check to
do whatever they want, because, as we've discussed so many
times before, what can't you do to a Nazi? If
(11:44):
I had Hitler back alive, sitting in a room, just
you and Hitler and he's handcuffed, and you knew legally
you couldn't get in trouble, and I had knives and
hammers and guns and scissors sit in front of you,
what would you do? What would your moral code allow.
Speaker 2 (12:06):
You to do? To Hitler?
Speaker 1 (12:10):
This is exactly how they think about you, your church,
your child's school, your political leaders in the media, and
the elected officials. This is the situation we have now.
It's an extraordinarily dangerous situation. No olive oil that's fresh
is great, and olive oil that's not sucks. Your olive
(12:31):
oil is bland and flavorless because you bought it from
the grocery store. My olive oil has always been bland
and flavorless because we always got it from the grocery store.
Speaker 2 (12:41):
I'm not going to get some specialty olive oil.
Speaker 5 (12:43):
It's all the same, right.
Speaker 1 (12:45):
Months years old. That's the kind of olive oil you
have At farm Fresh two four six dot com. They'll
send you a bottle fresh from the farm. You try
one bottle, that's the only you'll go. It's so full
of flavor. You don't realize what you've been eating. They'll
(13:05):
send you a thirty nine dollars bottle for free. You
pay him a buck to help cover the shipping. Farm
Fresh two four six dot com.
Speaker 2 (13:15):
Go discover some flavor. We'll be back, all right.
Speaker 1 (13:31):
So what everybody's talking about today is the speech Pete
hag Seth gave to all the military top brass and
everyone knew something was going to happen. He put out
the word that generals and abrils, all these big shots,
all the military leadership. Yeah, you guys all have to
come to Washington, DC, all of you physically. Now that's
(13:53):
a huge deal, a gigantic deal. It's not like you
or me getting online and booking a Southwest Airlines ticket
to fly an hour. These people are all around the
planet and they all come with gigantic entourages, staffers, drivers,
all kinds of things. And it was not optional. All
of you, come on, We're going to have a little chat.
(14:16):
Now before we get to the actual chat, I need
to explain some stuff you already know, some stuff you
may not realize about why the military has rotted as
much as it has rotted, but what happens. So we're
going to talk about communists and power.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
First.
Speaker 1 (14:34):
When you drive through your town, We're just going to
make this about your town. When you drive through your
town and you see a school, what do you think
should be done at that school? Educate children? When you
keep driving down the road and you see the public library,
what should be done at that public library? Well, they're
all about books. There should be giving out books, loaning
(14:55):
out books to people. You drive to the hospital, what
should be done there? Caring for sick people? On and
on and on and on and on it goes you
believe every single institution should do the purpose of the institution.
Almost sounds like a simple point, right, But it's really
important to understand that that's not how the communists sees anything,
(15:17):
anything at all. The communist drives down the road and
the communist looks over at the school, and the communist thinks,
how can I use that for my revolution? I need
to get in there. There are kids in there, but
if I could teach them about the revolution. The communist
keeps driving down the road and he sees the public
library and he says, hmm, there are a lot of
kids who go there, adults too. They're picking up books,
(15:39):
they're learning things. You know what, We need to get
a big trainee display in there. Make sure we really
drive that point home. The communist drives further up the
road and he sees the hospital. Everything he sees, everything
he sees is an opportunity for power and to use
that power for the revolution, which brings us to the
(16:01):
United States military. It supplies across the government. But we're
just going to make it about the military. When you
think about the military, and anyway, maybe you serve, maybe
you didn't, maybe you have a relative, but even if
you didn't, none of that matters at all.
Speaker 2 (16:13):
When you think about the United States military, what.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
Do you think, what should they be doing or training,
training so they can fight for America, defend America, training
so they can defeat our enemies. That's a basic point.
That's the point of the military. But you really, really,
you have to understand this. That's not how the communists
sees the military at all. Defending America, fighting for America.
(16:40):
These thoughts never even enter his mind. The communist doesn't
think in those terms at all. He's fighting a completely
different war, a completely different revolution. For him. The military
presents an incredible opportunity, an opportunity for what. Well, we
live in a country, by the grace of God, where
the military does that rule. We're not run by a
(17:02):
general an admiral the military. Our military serves underneath our
civilian government. You me, we get to pick the government,
and then the government tells the military you go here,
you do this, you don't do that. That's a good system,
that's the kind of system we want. But it also
is a system that presents an opportunity for the communist.
(17:25):
If he can conquer the government, then that huge military,
all those people, all those guns, all those bombs, all
those tanks, all that money, well that can all be
used for the revolution, all of it, every single part
of it. And so many people on the right in
(17:45):
recent years, as we've watched the military get gayer and lamer,
and gayer and labor and we had to stuff women
here in dei this and trainees here, and normal people
like you like me have been mortified and it's a
common way of thinking for normal people to say, why
are they doing this. They're destroying the military. No, they're
(18:08):
destroying what you think the military should do. They're destroying
what I think the military should do. That's not what
they think the military should do at all. They have
a gigantic toy to play with. They can use it
for the revolution, and so they have done everything they
can do to that end, which is why this Trump
term is so critically important. Because our military in recent
(18:30):
years has reached critical mass for communism. At our military academies,
you can take courses on diversity. We have so much gay,
rainbow drag, queen ugliness there open anti white racism. It
has turned into Berkeley a disaster, and it needs a
(18:53):
lot of work. By the grace of God, our Defense
Secretary Pete Hegseth has spoken endlessly about this long before
before he was Defense Secretary, who wrote a book about this.
Speaker 2 (19:03):
People who have fought.
Speaker 1 (19:04):
For this country, who know it is a big, big problem.
So Pete hag Seth called all those generals, all those admirals,
many of whom are responsible for the condition of our military,
and they had a little chat today.
Speaker 3 (19:20):
From this moment forward.
Speaker 8 (19:21):
The only mission of the newly restored Department of War
is this war fighting, preparing for war, and preparing to win,
unrelenting and uncompromising in that pursuit. Not because we want war,
No one here wants war. But it's because we love peace.
(19:44):
We love peace for our fellow citizens. They deserve peace,
and they rightfully expect us to deliver it. Our number
one job, of course, is to be strong so that
we can prevent war in.
Speaker 3 (19:58):
The first place.
Speaker 8 (20:00):
The President talks about it all the time. It's called
peace through strength, And as history teaches us, the only
people who actually deserve peace are those who are willing
to wage war to defend it. That's why pacifism is
so naive and dangerous.
Speaker 1 (20:21):
Wow, when's the last time you heard a defense secretary
talk like that? Certainly not Lloyd Austin with his mask
and his face shield on. When's the last time you
remember a defense secretary talk like this?
Speaker 8 (20:35):
Should our enemies choose foolishly to challenge us, they will
be crushed by the violence, precision.
Speaker 3 (20:45):
And ferocity of the War Department.
Speaker 8 (20:48):
In other words, to our enemies, fa fo. If necessary,
our troops can translate that for you, President Trump, has said,
and he's right. We have the strongest, most powerful, most lethal,
and most prepared military on the planet. That is true,
full stop. Nobody can touch us. It's not even close.
Speaker 1 (21:15):
No, Before I play this next one, I want you
to understand something I did four years in the Marines
of nothing special, average grunt marine did my time in Iraq.
But because of that time in the Marines, and now
because of what I do, I know a lot and
a lot of veterans, a lot of veterans, and I'm
(21:36):
talking the war fighting type, the trigger pollers, the guys
who do not sit on base, the guys who have
seen men die, their friends die, the guys who have
killed people, the guys who are in these positions we
need them to be and I know lots of them.
I count them as friends. We talk all the time.
And you can't imagine the things they've said to me
in recent years, the disgust they have with watching their pride,
(22:02):
their military, watching it be completely destroyed by the Marxists.
They're mortified. So many have already gotten out. Not only
have they gotten out, they have told me over and
over and over again, Jesse, my son will not serve,
my daughter will not serve. They will not be serving
underneath this disgusting leadership we have now in this country.
(22:24):
Those guys, and some of whom are still in and
they write me anonymously. Those guys have been dying, dying
for leadership that talks, thinks, and acts like them. They've
been dying for this for too long.
Speaker 8 (22:39):
We've promoted too many uniform leaders for the wrong reasons,
based on their race, based on gender quotas, based on
historic so called firsts.
Speaker 3 (22:50):
We became the Woke Department. But not anymore.
Speaker 8 (22:56):
No more identity months, dei offices, dudes in dresses, no
more climate change worship, no more division distraction or gender delusions,
no more debris. As I've said before and we'll say again,
we are done with that new war department. Golden rule
(23:18):
is this, Do onto your unit as you would have
done onto your own child's unit. Would you want him
serving with fat or unfit or undertrained troops, or alongside
people who can't meet basic standards, or in a unit
where standards were lowered so certain types of troops could
make it in in a unit where leaders were promoted
(23:41):
for reasons other than merit performance and war fighting.
Speaker 3 (23:46):
The answer is not just no, it's hell no.
Speaker 8 (23:49):
Frankly, it's tiring to look out at combat formations or
really any formation and see fat troops. Likewise, it's completely
unacceptable to see fat unerals and admirals in the halls
of the Pentagon and leading commands around the country in
the world.
Speaker 3 (24:04):
It's a bad look. It is bad, and it's not
who we are.
Speaker 8 (24:08):
So whether you're an airborne ranger or a chairborne ranger,
a brand new private or a four star general, you
need to meet the height and weight standards and pass
for PT test.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
Yes, standards, huh, they talked more about standards today.
Speaker 3 (24:27):
At my direction, each service will ensure that.
Speaker 8 (24:30):
Every requirement for every combat mos, for every designated combat
arms position returns to the highest male standard.
Speaker 3 (24:39):
Only because this job is life or death. Standards must
be met and not just met. At every level. We
should seek to exceed.
Speaker 8 (24:48):
The standard, to push the envelope, to compete its common
sense and core to who we are and what we do.
Speaker 3 (24:55):
It should be in our DNA.
Speaker 8 (24:58):
Today at my direction, we are also at a combat
field test for combat arms units that must be executable
in any environment, at any.
Speaker 3 (25:06):
Time and with combat equipment. These tests that look familiar.
Speaker 8 (25:11):
They'll resemble the Army Expert Physical Fitness Assessment or the
Marine Corps Combat Fitness Test. I'm also directing that warfighters
in combat jobs execute their service Fitness test at a
gender neutral, age normed male standard scored above seventy percent.
Simply put, if you do not meet the male level
(25:32):
physical standards for combat positions, cannot pass a PT test,
or don't want to shave and look professional, it's time
for a new position or a new profession.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
The male standard. That's offensive. Yeah, not in wards not
men are bigger, stronger, and faster than women. We have
forced women into ridiculous combat positions in this military, and
it is and already has going to get people killed.
(26:07):
It gets people killed. When you have people who are
not physically able to keep up with others. It costs
people's lives. So you can feel good about feminism. Look
at all the women we have no more the highest
male standard. And what's crazy is how many people in
this country think that's crazy. Every military in the history
(26:31):
of the world would have acknowledged that's basic stuff. Here
in this country, it's been treated all day as controversial.
We're supposed to be more understanding no, no, no, no, no no.
But of course you know why we talked about it
in the open. They have different ideas about what the
military should be. He talked about the people who got
promoted and the changes of the promotion ladder.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
We are liberating commanders and NCOs. We are liberating you.
Speaker 8 (26:58):
We are overhauling and inspector general process, the ig that
has been weaponized, putting complainers, id loogus and poor.
Speaker 3 (27:06):
Performers in the driver's seat.
Speaker 8 (27:09):
We're doing the same with the equal Opportunity and military
equal opportunity policies. The EO and MOO at our department.
No more frivolous complaints, no more anonymous complaints, no more
repeat complaintants, no more smearing reputations, no more endless waiting,
no more legal limbo, no more sidetracking careers, no more
(27:31):
walking on eggshells. Promote top performing officers and NCOs faster,
and get rid of poor performers more quickly. Evaluations, education
and field exercises will become real evaluations, not box checks,
for every one of us, at every level.
Speaker 1 (27:52):
That is exactly what we've been needing. It was an
outstanding day, even if you're not in even if you
can't see it. It's an outstanding there. Now the work
begins because there's a lot of rot in there that
has to be cleaned out. Clearly they're getting ready to
do so. That may have made you uncomfortable, but I
don't care.
Speaker 2 (28:13):
I'm right.
Speaker 1 (28:14):
I love chips, and you know that I'm a chip freak.
When I was a kid, I used to beg my
parents to let me have chips, and if they would
just give me a bag, which they would never do,
I would lay wasted like an entire bag of Doritos
or something like that. So I have a real chip problem.
I have to be regulated with my chips. But I'm
forty four now and I've come to realize these chips
(28:37):
are freaking terrible for you.
Speaker 2 (28:39):
They just are.
Speaker 1 (28:40):
There's all sorts of garbage in them, seed, oils, you
name it, but not massive chips. Finally, a delicious chip
that is guilt free. I know there have been healthy
chips before. They're all disgusting. They taste like cardboard. You
want one that's just beef, tallow salt, corn, Delicio Massa chips,
(29:01):
corn chips, potato chips, all kinds of different flavors.
Speaker 2 (29:05):
You will love them. When you can finally chip.
Speaker 1 (29:07):
Out guilt free massachips dot com slash Jesse TV.
Speaker 8 (29:24):
Well, today is another liberation day, the liberation of America's
warriors in name, indeed and inauthorities. You kill people and
break things for a living. You are not politically correct
and don't necessarily belong.
Speaker 3 (29:41):
Always in polite society. We are not an army of one.
Speaker 8 (29:47):
We are a joint force of millions of selfless Americans.
Speaker 3 (29:51):
We are warriors.
Speaker 8 (29:53):
We are purpose built not for fair weather, blue skies
or calm seas.
Speaker 2 (29:59):
Were build to.
Speaker 8 (30:00):
Load up in the back of helicopters five tons or
zodiacs in the dead of night, in fair weather or
foul to go to dangerous places to find those who
would do our nation harm and deliver justice on behalf
of the American people in close and brutal combat if necessary.
Speaker 3 (30:23):
You are different.
Speaker 1 (30:27):
Gosh, it's been so long since anyone talked like that.
Joining me now, the United States Marine and National correspondent
with the Blaze, Julio Rosas. Julio Man, I've out came
out of my chair watching that thing today.
Speaker 10 (30:42):
Yeah, I almost kind of want to go back if
I didn't have this this illustrious career of going into
other crazy situations. But I mean, yeah, that speech. I
know some people were saying, oh, it's a waste what
this could be done over vio conference call, has to
be done over a meeting, But Jesse, you know how
important formations are in per formations are in in the military.
And it's yeah, it was all this, you know, this
(31:05):
spectacle was there was a reason behind that, right, is
to say, we're gonna bring you wherever you're from your
command is could be the other side of the world.
We're gonna bring you back to d C, to the
area so that you can hear directly from second guy,
you know, the guy in charge of the Department of War,
you know close ally of President Trump, that things are
different now, like we we we're serious and we mean it.
(31:26):
And and you know, all the nonsense, all the bs
that has been happening for for a long time, you know, Prey,
you know even you know back in the early two
thousands that that's over. And and so I think, you know,
it was a much needed wake up call to the
people above the high brass right and and this this
further exemplifies why, you know, a Secretary of Hexseth was
(31:50):
chosen by President Trump to lead the department because he
he he understands as once an enlisted man himself, and
you know, he was an officer, uh, not not that
high of an officer, but an officer nonetheless, and so
that that's a much needed perspective, especially as a former
enlisted man myself.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
ULLI, Oh, how could the brass let it get to
the point where they needed a speech like that from
the Secretary of War? So many people who were never
in and don't really realize that that they don't understand
And see that general and he's got all these ribbons,
all these all these ribbons and metals, and he's got
the real shiny collar, and surely that means he's a
warrior for America and a patriot, right, how could he
(32:31):
let this happen?
Speaker 10 (32:33):
Well, actually, it's not that all dissimilar from the talking heads,
except for your Jesse of course, in the media and
and ground reporters. Let you know, because when you're on
the ground, you see things for yourself, whether it's in
a combat situation or in a reporting situation, you have
a much different perspective than someone who is in the
studio or back at you know, the you know, the
this this office, whether it's in DC at the Pentagon
(32:55):
or some of you know high command that's in Europe
or you know Tampa for you know, for example. So
it's inevitable, it's inevitable that you're going to lose some perspective.
And that's why you got to have That's why they
have seenior enlisted advisors.
Speaker 4 (33:07):
Right.
Speaker 10 (33:08):
So but even then that that that's still a high
ranking position. And so I think the reason why is
just because they let it get to that point is
just because it's just the politics. And and yeah, people
don't really understand unless you've been in the military and
you've seen it that once you get to you know,
the two three four stars, things get very very political,
(33:29):
very very quickly, because you know, if you don't support
certain things, if you don't get along with the blob,
the swamp of DC and and the and the industry
that supports it, you're not gonna get anywhere. And you're
not going to get that third or fourth star. You know,
you're not going to get that high command that you
might have been wanting since you were a cadet at
West Point or something. So it's just the unfortunate uh,
(33:53):
you know, hubris that that we've had because yeah, our
track record from these pats, you know, from the war
on Terror is unfortunately, it's atrocious. Not necessarily know, it's
not because of the ground guys. You know, they obviously
did their part, Jesse, you did your part. But it's
the high ranking people that that make those tough decisions,
and they get when they get clouded or they get
distracted with all this nonsense of like, oh we got
(34:15):
to have dei hires in our human resources department as
opposed to like, what's that going to actually like win
battles and win wars? People are going to suffer. And
I think, for example, you know, how we ended the
war in Afghanistan was the culmination of all that I
mean that was that that was decades of mismanagement and
and just total uh misdirection and mistrust towards the American people.
(34:40):
But they couldn't hide that, you know, they couldn't hide
how you know, us leaving that that country in such
a such a dishonorable way.
Speaker 1 (34:50):
Speaking of DEI hires, here was Dick Levine.
Speaker 5 (34:54):
Hello, I'm Admiral Rachel Levine. Climate change is having a
disproportionate effect on the physical and mental health of black communities.
Black Americans are more likely than white Americans to live
in areas and housing that increase their susceptibility to climate
related health issues, and sixty five percent of Black Americans
report feeling anxious about climate changes impact. Through our Office
(35:18):
of Climate Change and Health Equity and the Office of
Environmental Justice, we're working with providers and community leaders to
identify innovative approaches that empower communities to address to health
consequences linked to climate.
Speaker 1 (35:31):
Chain Jullio, how much of that is still left in
the military beginunings. It seems to me like Pete Hegseth
has a lot of cleaning up to do.
Speaker 10 (35:44):
I would say, there's still a big chunk, and we
saw that unfortunately in the aftermath of Charlie Kirk being killed.
There were a lot of uniformed personnel on their social
media pages that are often were times supported by their
command uh saying the most horrific thing about Charlie and
(36:04):
lying about him and what he said for But because
I mean, I remember during the early days of you know,
the Trump administration and the first term, I had to
sign an understanding. I have signed an agreement with through
the d D on social media use and that whatever
I posted, it had to be professional, it had to
reflect good on the service and the department. And these
(36:28):
people who have the preferred political leanings and activism that
the blob, you know, the DC blob has, they've been
super political, they've been super uh just unhinged prior to
Charlie being killed. But people didn't really understand it until
you know, there were people where other people were looking for,
you know, who was saying what about Charlie. So there
(36:51):
is this capture that is deeply embedded within the Department
of War. This is just the first step to try
to get that culture to change and get back to
the basics, which is concerning because it's like, well, why
haven't you guys been focused on this to begin with,
Like you're you're dealing with life and death situations with
the security of not just the country but in many
cases of the world, and really we've only been getting
(37:14):
along just through the inertia that that we've had for
you know, since you know, since the post World War
two period of Vietnam and all that. You know, this
isn't desert storm anymore. I mean that this is this
is just brave new world stuff that requires serious people,
and I think that the Trump administration is doing a
(37:34):
good job to get it just again, just back to
the basics.
Speaker 2 (37:39):
Final one from me.
Speaker 1 (37:40):
Trump spoke about fighting the cartels today and all these
guys is what he said.
Speaker 4 (37:45):
Together with the leaders here today, we're also restoring and
needed focus on defeating threats in the Western hemisphere. Throughout
this region. Cartel terrs have been allowed to wage a
relentless campaign of death and destruct you know, in our country, well,
because we had weak leadership on time, and we did
(38:05):
a great job with it first term. But this is
something else. What we're doing now, we're taking it to
the next level, probably next level of times three.
Speaker 2 (38:16):
Well the oh what does that mean.
Speaker 10 (38:21):
Again? It means that things are different now, that we
are going to be taken seriously and that and that's
why they're drone striking smuggling smuggling boats from Venezuela, because
we've been at we were absolutely taking advantage of during
the past four years. The fact that the drug cartels
were able to make more money dealing with human smuggling
(38:43):
and human trafficking than drugs during that period is insane,
and they did that because they know that they were
able to make more money because I was guaranteed there
was no significant loss of quote unquote product. And so
now that we have again serious leadership to safeguard the homeland,
this is what it means. And you know, again Jessic,
(39:06):
we've talked about this before where I'm not exactly sure
if it means we're going to do full invasion of
South America. But something has to change. And that's why
Trump was elected because the status quo, especially within you know,
the Department of you know, the former Department of Defense,
it was a total it was a total joke. It
was a total joke. Everyone saw it, everyone knew it.
(39:26):
But because again is of this going along to get
a long attitude within the halls of the Pentagon, no
one wanted to do anything because there was their career.
And so again I think this speech was which much needed.
It was very refreshing. I was very motivated with it,
and I'm not and I've been out for over four
years now, so it's it's I if I were if
(39:46):
I were in, I'd be very happy. I'll just put
it down. I'd be very happy if I was still in.
Speaker 2 (39:53):
No doubt who deal. Thank you, boss, appreciate it. You
know why.
Speaker 1 (39:57):
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result of this is a fifty percent drop in our
(40:17):
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Start today. It's time to light in the mood. And
(41:08):
there is obviously something about sick kids that always tugs
at every human being's heartstrings. And you don't ever want
to see a child sick, and Trump signed an executive
order yesterday to accelerate pediatric cancer research, which I mean
kids with cancers. That's worse than that. And he brought
(41:28):
a bunch of these wonderful children into the White House.
And it's very rare that somebody steals the show from
President Trump, but it happened yesterday. Would anybody like to
say something?
Speaker 4 (41:41):
Would anybody?
Speaker 2 (41:41):
Would you like to say something?
Speaker 10 (41:43):
Yes?
Speaker 12 (41:44):
And I learned age in a nine years old and
I was I had a blood of cancer called leukemia
when I.
Speaker 10 (41:50):
Was only teen years old.
Speaker 12 (41:52):
I had to get treated at seven different hospitals across
this country. And I had to have to go on
transplants from one from my dad and one from my mom.
And I had to spend many days in the nights
in the hospital getting punkies and yakie medicine. And me
and my parents are very worried. And I didn't go
(42:14):
through those seven digree houses to find the best treatment
that can make me better. And thank you is referred
as a president for making everything happen today. So kids
like me and Laura, we can still be living today.
Speaker 9 (42:29):
In speaking.
Speaker 2 (42:32):
And you feeling good? Now?
Speaker 4 (42:33):
Know you all better you're pretty.
Speaker 10 (42:36):
Close, right, Yeah, yeah, I hear you're gonna do good.
Speaker 3 (42:39):
Good afternoon.
Speaker 13 (42:40):
My name is Carolyn Hendrix. When I was four years old,
I was diagnosed with you in sarcoma, a pediatric bone cancer.
Eleven years later, I'm now sixteen years old, and I'm
doing great.
Speaker 10 (42:51):
What you're doing today, mister President.
Speaker 13 (42:53):
Means that kids like me will get better options and
so much more hope for the future, mister President, Because
of actions like this, kids like me have the chance
to go up to chase our dreams and to live
full lives. And that's the greatest gift anyone could ever get.
Speaker 10 (43:08):
That was so fat.
Speaker 1 (43:10):
When did you learn how to speak like that?
Speaker 13 (43:13):
I've done lots of speeches for childhood cancer over the
last few years, and I'm also in a theater.
Speaker 10 (43:19):
Program, so that's.
Speaker 1 (43:21):
Yeah, sure, go ahead. I've been I've I've had a
brain too since alas four months now, I'm all brain
on all all medicines.
Speaker 10 (43:29):
I'm a cancer survivor.
Speaker 5 (43:31):
I've had a brain too since all four months, and
I'm doing great.
Speaker 10 (43:34):
I'm fifteen now, I'm gone.
Speaker 4 (43:35):
You're gonna be a football player, offensive lineman.
Speaker 2 (43:45):
That's wonder. I'll see them all,