Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Let's have some fun on a Friday. Oh
my goodness, we did it. We made it to the
end of the week. Put a smile on your beautiful
(00:34):
face or ugly face. I mean I can't see you
right now, and just sit back and enjoy three hours
of greatness. Tonight, we're gonna talk about these judges throwing
roadblocks in front of Trump. By the way, these are
all your questions, all three hours as always belong to
you on The Jesse Kelly Show on Friday. So you
have questions about these judges. Someone saw political ads for
(00:57):
Bill Cassidy in Louisiana making a point that I've been
making over and over again. Someone wants to know how
a strict father like mine raised a quote finicky eater
Elon Musk blowing up at people in public. Someone wants
to know if you can change that stool school security
or stool security, I guess for your kid. How do
(01:20):
we do this when you have a school that needs secured?
How'd I end up in Houston? Tim Kaine's and Evil Demon.
All that and so much more coming up tonight on
the world Famous Jesse Kelly Show. And before we go
any further, and before I forget, I've been teasing all
week long that Monday, the competition begins. Competition makes us
(01:44):
all better. And on Monday we tackle the real issues
that matter. We tackle the question that's been on the
front of your mind. What is the crappiest country in
the world. It's the twenty twenty five Crappiest country in
the world. Competition. The full bracket, if you would like
(02:12):
to see it, is complete. It is up on the
show's Twitter account or x account, whatever you call it
at Jesse Kelly Show. And I have neglected to mention
this just in case you think we're just being mean here,
We're not being mean. At the end of this amazing tournament,
(02:37):
the tournament of tournaments, we the Jesse Kelly Show family
are going to be putting together a special gift for
the winner. How about that. Don't think it's all negative.
We're going to be doing something good for other people.
Stand by for that. Let's dig into your questions, Jesse.
(03:00):
It won't belong. The subject is relentless judges. It won't
be long before they sue Donald Trump for getting out
of the wrong side of the bed and the name
of a just merciful God, please stop this. In the
name of a just merciful gun. Can we put these
pathetic political lawsuits to rest? Okay, I wanted to address
(03:23):
this because I know you're probably wearing down on the judges,
the judges stopping this, and the judges stopping at and
the judges ruling against Trump this, and that's understandable. But
it's not as bad as you think, and it's getting better.
So let me explain this in the most basic terms.
And I'm not dumbing this down for you. I'm dumbing
(03:45):
this down because I'm dumb. So I had to reach
out to all kinds of legal experts and I've talked
to so many of them to make sure I'm presenting
this accurately. So here's what it is. Okay. There are
there are different ways for a lower court judge to
stop the president, for a lower court to stop the president.
(04:10):
All right, there are different ways. I'll just leave it
that way. There are different ways the Supreme Court, in
light of what they were doing immediately after Trump got elected.
You remember, I mean, the judges are making these absurd rulings. Hey,
bring back this illegal and things like that. They kept
making these over the top absurd rulings. So the Supreme
(04:32):
Court stepped up and stepped in kind of meaning, let's
say there were a hundred of these bad rulings from
lower court judges. What the Supreme Court essentially did was
stop fifty of them. It's two different types. They stopped
some of them. They did not stop all. We have
(04:55):
fewer of these than we had before because the Supreme
Court already stepped in and ruled somewhat that you can't
keep doing this. Now here's what happens. And we get confused.
I do I do too. I'm not pointing fingers. We
get confused because of headlines and social media posts. You
wake up in the morning, you roll over, you grab
(05:18):
your phone. I know you do, don't lie, and you
look start looking at the news of the day. What
are the headlines that's was there some controversy, what's going
on in the world. And you'll see something on Facebook,
You'll see something on a news site, you go to
something on Twitter, you'll see something to the effect of
lower court rules against Trump. Trump not allowed to deport
this person. Trump not allowed to do And we don't
(05:41):
get past the headlines. And even if we do, the
article itself is confusing. What lower court? Is this an
actual ruling? Is this an actual So here's what I'm
going to tell you about the courts and the judges.
The Fifth Circuit ruled this, don't I don't freak out
over any headline in a good way or a bad way.
(06:08):
Headlines are Look, it's like an advertiser trying to get
you in the door. Come on down to jesse Ford
on this Sunday, you get some free matches. It's trying
just they're just trying to get you in the door.
All right, that's what headlines are getting you in the door.
(06:30):
The legal matters are complicated. There will be a ruling
by some judge, but it's a ruling that's only temporary.
It's twenty four hours. It has to go to a
different court, and then it gets to that court and
the court makes an initial observation, but that's not an
official ruling. And then but every time they're doing these things,
(06:50):
there's a headline trump stopped. But then that's not an
official thing either because it has to go to another court.
Then it'll get to the Supreme Court, and then the
Supreme Court will say no, well, we can't rule on
this in this way. This has to go back down
to the lower courts before we can rule on this,
and they'll kick it to a lower court who might
kick it to a lower court, but then it moves
up to another court and moves up to another court.
(07:12):
This was all I chose to answer this question because
it is something I have learned over the last four
or five years that has saved my energy. It has
saved my outrage meter a great deal because we only
have so much in the tank, right, don't ever freak
out too much one way or the other on court rulings.
(07:36):
Judge rulings. Judge, it stops, this court stops that. It's
It's never as drastically good or drastically bad as the
headline makes it out to be. It's just not. It
makes for a great headline, it makes for a great
thing to click on, but it's never all that. I mean, look,
(07:57):
and even ones that are awesome and huge and like
the overturning of roversus way, the Dobbs decision. Of course,
you know I'm a big fan because I hate abortion.
Everyone knows that, and that's great. Don't get I'm not
complaining about it. But you've heard me say a million
times it didn't even slow down abortions, not numbers wise
(08:22):
in red states, they're cleaning it out and playing parenthoods
are closing. And it was good. It was good. It
was good. It was good. It was good. But we
it's tempting. And I'll tell you what I did it
the day Rovers' way got overtuned, I sat back and thought, uh,
that's millions of lives saved. Abortion will now slowly but
surely start to die in the country and it'll be gone.
(08:46):
Oh thank goodness, that whole abortion thing is over. That's
not true at all. As you've heard me say, there's
as many now as there have ever been. I'm not
going to go off on abortion right now, but I
just it's an example when the court's rule. Don't freak
out too much or too little. Now. There are very,
(09:09):
very very important rulings that will happen. For instance, maybe
the most important ruling we're waiting on and we don't know.
I'm not telling you I know when it's going to come.
No one knows when it's going to come or even
if it's going to come, is the birthright citizenship ruling.
The fact that the United States of America allows women
(09:32):
to come into this country illegally just to have a
baby and automatically grant that baby's citizenship is bonkers. It's
completely insane. But Democrats have, of course, with the help
of Republicans like James Langford, Democrats have used that to
change the United States of America demographically so it's not
(09:53):
so far to the right, so they'll be more accepting
of communism. Thus, that's the only reason Democrats can get
elected at any level in the country. Now, that's a
ruling that is gigantic. Honestly, that that might be the
biggest Supreme Court ruling you'll ever have in your life,
no matter how long you live, no matter how old
you are. If we could actually get a good ruling
(10:16):
on that, that would change everything everything anyway, I don't
want to go off on a tangent on that. Let's
talk about these fake GOP guys. I'm Super Marga. Next,
get to care for rhinos weekdays with the Jesse Kelly Show.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Wonderful Friday,
(10:38):
and ask doctor Jesse Friday, I can't get the smile
off my face and I'm just trying not to think
about the fact that we have to leave the house
at six thirty am on a Saturday for another kid's
sports tournament tomorrow. You know, they tell me I'll miss
it when it's gone, but I don't think that's true.
I'm kidding, I'm kidding. I do enjoy it. Bronco. I'm ashamed.
(10:59):
I watch the Eagles game last night, but I see,
but I see a political ad for Bill Cassidy. As
you predicted, the whole ad was about the great things
he and Trump have done. Put another feather in your cap,
says his name is ken. Politicians lie. It's not news.
(11:21):
It's not news, and it's not new. Chris. Is that
an old mind? Did I steal that from somebody? Because
if not, I'm totally using that again. You never you
never heard it before. It's mine. Now, you know what
I just came up with that I probably didn't, but
now I'm claiming it. It's not news and it's not new.
Politicians lie. Now there is a benefit that we have
(11:46):
that historically other peoples have not had. Now it's a
two way street. It could be great and it can
be terrible. But information access to information. It sounds like
access to information is always good, right, wouldn't it be
(12:07):
better to always know more, always be able to access
more information. But if that's the case, what explains the
fact that people are dumber now about virtually everything, economics, history, everything.
They're dumber than they've ever been. When your phone can
provide you with the answer to virtually any question you
(12:28):
have about anything in life. You have the biggest, greatest
library in the history of the world in the palm
of your hand, and we're dumber than we've ever been.
Access to information should be great. Sometimes it's not. I
don't want to get off on a sidetrack. We have
the ability now, if we care enough to do so,
(12:53):
to find out what politicians are really about, what they
really do, what they really say. You you, I've told
you this before, and I know it sounds patronizing or
like I'm sucking up, but anyone who listens to the
show knows I'm a jerk who wouldn't do that anyway.
You don't understand how much more informed you are about
(13:14):
the players about the game than normal people because you care.
And that's what gets me to my point about Bill
Cassidy and John Cornan and Mike Rounds and all these
GOP turds who screw us over all the time. The
truth about these people, about Instagram, and the truth about
these people is available right at your fingertips, right honestly,
(13:39):
that's not even that's not even let's not even being
over the top about it. It's in your fingertips. In
your fingertips, you have the ability, if you care enough
to do so, to access all the information about what
Bill Cassidy's really about. You could go look at its
political donations. Did you know that it's not just Jewish
(14:01):
producer Chris who has special access to that. That's public information.
Anybody can go on the FEC website and go look
at all the political donations of your congressman, your senator.
Do you know how much they receive from this? Do
you know everybody has access to this information? The problem
(14:22):
is laziness and stupidity. Laziness and stupidity. And this actually
comes back to what we were talking about in the
opening of the show. We with access to endless information,
we are still headline consumers and I have to fight
against this myself. I'm not above it. Believe me. We
(14:44):
are headline consumers, we read a flashy headline and we
think we got actual information from it, or even worse,
we trust the wrong person in this business us and
now we just took a lie hook line and sinker.
(15:04):
There was actually a little hubbub about this yesterday on
social media. I won't bore you with the details, but
long story short, these huge people with large platforms, all
within the span of a couple hours put out the
exact same pro India message. Not that there's anything wrong
(15:25):
with being pro India, but it was there were I mean,
a little sentence here, a little sentence there, but it
was obvious they all had been given talking points, they
had all been paid, and they all put out the
exact same message. And we're probably talking. I didn't add
it up ten twenty million followers between these people. Now
do the math on that twenty million people were just
(15:47):
browbeaten with the exact same message that's paid for propaganda.
But you read the message. You read it on Facebook,
you read it on Twitter, you read it or wherever
you consume your news, and well, I thought this guy
and a lot of people follow this guy. If he's
saying it, it must be true. And then lies get
spread and everybody who believes it is dumb. And everybody
(16:10):
who spreads it everyone they spread it to his dumb
meaning your dumber, having consumed the lie that was paid
for propaganda. Guys like pill Cassidy stay in the United
States Senate because people believe the thirty second TV commercial
that he produced and paid five million dollars for showing
(16:30):
him to be mister magga. I'm maga this, I'm maga dad,
My love Trump, and Trump loves me and me and
Trump and Trump and me, and the GOP primary voter
sits at home watching it on the news. I like Bill,
he likes Trump like I do. And seventy percent go
(16:50):
vote for the same third who screws you over every
single time. We have got to break the cycle of
being headline readers and dig deeper, dig deeper. I'm preaching
at the choir. You're already listening, but we have to
encourage our GOP voting friends to dig deeper, to wade
(17:11):
past the headlines. You want to dig deep acquire wisdom.
Hillsdale gives it to you for free, not five million dollars.
This weekend, when you are scrolling headlines, maybe on your
way to a brutal kids sports tournament. Hillsdale College can
(17:31):
make you wiser. Look I told you I'm leaving at
six thirty am tomorrow morning. I already told my sons
get ready to learn about the history of the Roman Republic.
Hillsdale College offers more than forty free online courses, and
we have an hour and fifteen minute drive both ways
tomorrow morning. As soon as I get in my car,
(17:53):
Bluetooth hooks up to my phone. We will be learning
from Hillsdale both ways. When tomorrow is over, my boys
and me will be wiser than when the day began.
For free Hillsdale dot edu slash Jesse go sign up
free Hillsdale dot edu slash Jesse. We'll be back the
(18:15):
Jesse Kelly Show. It's still real to me. Damn it
with ternstacks. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday,
A fantastic ass Doctor Jesse Friday. Remember you can still
email us. We are live here on a Friday night
or a Saturday morning, depending on how you're listening. Jesse
(18:37):
at Jesse Kellyshow dot com is the email address. Let's
get you know what. Let's do some personal ones. Hey, Jesse,
I'm a little behind. Listening to the podcast, you mentioned
how Elon publicly fought with Donald Trump, and you warn
listeners to cut people out of their lives who air
private arguments. My question is, what if I've been that person.
(18:59):
I did that once to someone and have since regretted it.
I'm not asking because I want to get back in
their life or anything. I've let it go, but I
also don't want to be that kind of person. Does
one mistake mean you're always a crazy person who can't
be trusted or will always resort to publicly airing out
private business. I'm genuinely trying to better myself. I want
(19:20):
to know your thoughts whether it's possible to truly change
and grow from a mistake like that. His name is Samuel. Samuel.
People screw up, everybody screws up. I don't sit around
(19:44):
dwelling on all the things that I've screwed up in
my life. And you know why I don't, because it
would be the most depressing thing in the world. I
am forty four years old, and I have done more
horrible and I don't want to say I was about
to say mistakes. I've made more mistakes, but honestly, I
(20:05):
meant to do a lot of them. I don't think
it's right to call him a mistake. I knew that
was bad, I knew that was wrong, and I did
it anyway. And you know that's everybody. Every single person
has a lifetime of that crap that you can if
you if you let it, it can weigh you down forever.
(20:26):
Of course you can change, of course you can change. Look,
you felt bad about it, you screwed up. Never do
it again, Never ever, ever do it again. And that's it.
Move on with your life. Don't sit and beat yourself
to death over something you did one time. Of course
you could do. You've probably that you were even asking
(20:46):
the question means you already changed. Jesse, how in the
world did your dad raise such a finicky eater? His
name's Chuck. So this is something that people debate this
all the time, nature versus nurture, and it'll always be
a debate. Human beings forming good human beings, trying to
(21:07):
raise good children, raise good human beings. What's the formula
and is there a formula? There's some mixture. I think
everybody would admit. You can't take a child when they're born,
and you know, throw them out in the wilderness and
have them raise up and know anything about manners or
things like that. So that doesn't work either. But any
(21:31):
parent with multiple children will tell you that they are different.
I actually I'm more. My eyes are more open to
me after raising my children. You see, I have two boys,
James and Luke. James is my oldest. He's the one
(21:53):
who can't sit still. He's the one who likes running.
Gets up at five thirty am and runs every morning.
It's just it's wild. He has to move. It's awesome.
I'm not that way, but it's awesome. He is the
greatest eater I've ever seen in my life, besides Aubrey.
(22:14):
It is astounding. He will sit down and he'll tear
through chicken steak. He'll eat all his broccoli and ask
for seconds. He will not Don't get me wrong, he
likes his young food too. On occasion, he will refuse
it when I offer it, especially now it's cross country season.
Hey should we uh? Should it happened to me last weekend? Hey?
(22:35):
You guys want to grab for pizza? I was doing something. Boys,
you want to go grab a pizza? Now? I gotta
race tomorrow. I want to stay. That's James. There's no
time in my life, in forty four years on this planet,
I would ever say no to pizza under any circumstances whatsoever.
James is now, I'm trying to stay healthy. Okay, you
can say that's how we raised him. Okay, sure I
(22:58):
would agree somewhat. But then there's the other hid the
other kid, Luke just like me. Broccoli. Nah, I'm gonna
slip that to the dog under the table. That's disgusting.
When he was a child, we used to, you know,
trying to make him eat his veggies, trying to make
(23:19):
him eat whatever. That was. That's the rule. You eat
what's made. When ob makes dinner, you sit down, you
eat what's made. And he would refuse, and we used
to make him sit there until he ate it. He
would sit there until bedtime. We finally stopped doing it.
It was it would be two three hours he's sitting
(23:40):
at the table and he's just gonna sit there. I
brought that up to my parents and they laughed hysterically
because my parents used to do the exact same thing
to me, with the exact same results. You sit there
and you finish your meal. It's not like they were
soft on it. You sit there and finish your meal,
(24:00):
don't get up till it's done. All right, I'll sit
here all night. I will sit here all night at
the table before I eat those freaking disgusting vegetables. I
know that we can guide children on how they eat,
and I know that we all can improve somewhat how
(24:20):
we eat. Believe it or not, I have improved immensely
how I eat. I don't eat near as much fast
food as I used to, and I get way more
nutrients courtesy of chalk and things like that than I
used to. But I'm never going to be off. I'm
never going to order asparagus as a side. No, bring
me some French fries. Please? Do you have mac and
(24:40):
cheese that I'm never I can't do it. I'm not
going to do it. My parents tried, and it's not
like we had it's not like we had any money
to well, if he doesn't want to eat, if he
doesn't want to eat the chicken and lime of beans,
let's just order in. Then there was no ordering in
that that's what you got. That was the food. I'll starve.
I'd rather talk. Luke has puked on his dinner table
(25:03):
before when we forced him to eat vegetables. That's how
gross they are to him. And people who like vegetables
don't understand those of us. That's exactly how I react
to I did too, lima beans down, lima beans coming
back up. People who don't like people who aren't like
that can't understand it. All right, let's talk about something
more serious here after that little sidetrack, school safety. Every parent,
(25:30):
in the wake of these horrible school shootings, every single parent,
myself included, we all think what if that happened at
my kid's school. What if that happened to my kid.
We all go through the mental exercise of, oh, dear God,
what if I got that phone call one day? What
(25:52):
if that happened? With every single parent, it's just natural
thinks about it. And when one happens, you know, shooting
at a half the school, a bunch of kids worshiping
Jesus and now there's some animal killing him. But it
was so palpably awful that in the wake of it,
(26:12):
we start asking, am I ready? Is my church ready
for something like that? Is my synagogue Chris ready for
something like that? I don't know how you guys are
doing over there is my kids school and by the way, preschool, kindergarten,
(26:33):
private school, public school, Christian school is your child's school?
Ready for a demon to show up with a gun
and try to bring people with him as he chooses
to exit this world. And the answer to that question
(26:54):
is oftentimes no. And we got a very very very
heartfelt email from mother here and I'm gonna I'm gonna
address it, and maybe we can have a serious talk
about security and school and what you do and bravery
and things like that. Before we do that, let's do this.
(27:16):
Speaking of bravery, I know you nerd out on the
MACV Sog stories whenever I get sidetracked on those. Just
the bravest dudes in the world, behind enemy lines, Vietnam,
fighting a secret war, dying and droves. The CEO of
Puretalk did it twice, two tours. It's amazing he's alive.
(27:45):
Two tours in mac V Sog is usually one more
than you survive. He did it, came back and now
he runs Pure Talk. Why in the world would you
have AT and T or T mobile when you can
patronize a company like that, a company that never gives
to these dirty cultural comedy causes. Ever, when they give,
(28:09):
they give the vets care about the country, cares so
deeply about the country they cost themselves money by hiring Americans.
Isn't that freaking wonderful? Isn't that the kind of company
you want to patronize? Dial pound two five zero and
say Jesse Kelly. Pound two five zero, Say Jesse Kelly,
(28:32):
it's time to switch. We'll be back the Jesse Kelly Show.
Why are you bringing this up? It is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a fantastic Friday. I'm so I'm so
happy that Jewish producer Chris put not one but two
bits of that James Carvel sound on the soundboard. Gosh,
(28:56):
it's so really stop this in the name of a
just God. All right, let's get to the email focus.
We've gotta talk about security and bravery. Jesse, I'm a
mom in a suburb of Minneapolis. I have a child
who goes to a Christian school. The events of last
week hit me pretty hard. After being angry at the
(29:16):
medium politicians, there are two things that have been on
my mind. One, how can we instill bravery in our children?
I learned about one young man who covered his friend
and took a bullet in the back to keep him safe.
A young lady also shielded her friend to keep her safe.
There was another young man who got everyone around him
(29:36):
under the pew and said prayers for safety, and then
told himself he needed to get them to safety and
jumped into action to help kids get out of church.
These acts of extreme bravery from these kids brought me
to tears and made me wonder what things I could
do to help instill that in my own child. Let's
(29:58):
just address this first, because this is something you've heard
me talk about before on the show. Oftentimes it comes
after Medal of Honor Monday, when we sit here together
and we learn about some hero who does something absurdly brave,
and we say, how do we, how do we How
do I make my sons like that? I want that
(30:20):
from my sons. I want them to be like that.
We talked about it. Those two Navy seals who gave
their lives. They were boarding a ship. One of them
apparently the water was very very bad, very stormy. It was,
I mean, the ocean was a death trap. And one
goes into the water and the other one, without hesitation,
(30:41):
dives into hell to save his buddy. They both died.
But what bravery, Oh my buddy's in there. I'm going in,
how do you do that? More specifically, how do you
raise that? And I don't have the answer to that question.
I want the answer to that question. But my boys
(31:04):
are fourteen and sixteen, and by the grace of God,
they'd never been in that kind of situation. I will
say that you want them to have that probably goes
a long way. I've pointed out before. You know how
much time I spend on Medal of Honor stuff. And
we read that stuff and we dig into it, and
(31:24):
oftentimes I read into the background of it, and I'm
always reading books and things. It is crazy how often
these Medal of Honor distinguished service cross these guys who
earn these medals for valor, ridiculous valor to do brave things.
Crazy how often Dad was that guy? My dad was
(31:49):
in World War Two, My dad's been a cop for
thirty years. My dad did my dad did that, My
dad did this, and the moms too, of course, But
these guys grow up and they learn from mom and
dad that bravery is a good thing. And look, I'll
tell you this, I've told I've taught my sons. I've
asked them before. Hey, God forbid, there's a shooter comes
(32:12):
into your school, what are you going to do. You're
gonna look out for yourself. You're going to look out
for others if you have to sacrifice yourself to save somebody,
will you? And you can see their little minds churning, right,
And I try's best I can to get it through
to them. You are supposed to look out for others
as a man. I don't care that you're fourteen or sixteen.
(32:33):
In that situation, you're the man. Are you going to
look out for others? I don't know that that's effective.
You can see their minds working. Talk to them about it.
Maybe just talk to them about it now. Finally, for
the other part, Jesse, how can I push the school
my child attends to be more vigilant about security. I've
been providing feedback on my concerns, but they seem to
(32:56):
think with locked doors and intruder drills, everyone can be Okay.
What can we do as parents and the community to
push for increased safety for our children? If your school
has nothing but locked doors, if your school does not
have some form of armed guard and by the way
this goes for your church, your synagogue, or wherever there
(33:19):
are demons in our midst and let's have an honest
conversation about the tranny stuff. I'm not trying to be
mean here. We have socially conditioned, mentally ill people in
this country to embrace darkness in a way you can't imagine.
We took somebody who was struggling. Maybe it's a child,
(33:40):
a teenager, maybe it's an adult. We took someone who's
struggling with mental health issues of some kind, and instead
of getting them help, we started pouring sick psychiatric drugs
into them, possibly even to the point of them chopping
body parts of themselves after themselves. We took a human
who was struggling and turn that human into a freaking monster.
(34:03):
And those people are not gone. The latest school shooter
blowing his head off after he's done doing something terrible,
don't for a second breathe a sigh of relief and say, Wow,
glad they're gone. This has been years. Doctors have been
doing this. Schools have been doing this to children. Psychiatrists
have been doing this, parents have been doing this. These
(34:25):
people are out there. If your school or your sit
at God or your church, or if you do not
have an armed security guard with a gun a gun
if they don't have one. You need to make it happen.
Make it happen today. Now, how do you go about
(34:45):
doing that? You this is a lady, but you have
voiced your concerns. Your schools said. They seem to think
it's okay. This is where we have to learn from
communists because they do this so so well. They understand
(35:05):
the power of numbers and noise. Numbers in noise, it
has power. Okay, they ignored you. How many friends do
you have? How many mothers who have children in that
school and fathers? How many mothers and fathers are interested
(35:26):
in additional security? Probably a lot. Have you texted them?
Have you talked to them? You need to organize clearly.
Clearly you aren't enough. But that's fine. Get a group
the next time you show up at school, not you,
ten of you, twenty of you. How many times do
you think the principal or administrator of that school has
(35:47):
had ten angry parents in his office? Let me spoil it. Never,
it's never happened. He's a human being, she's a human being.
That happens. They start taking things. Seriously, you know we
didn't need appointment. We need an appointment. We have something
we need to discuss, not just you, a group of you. No,
you fix this. That's my kid, You fix it. And
(36:09):
the same thing with your church. Don't let your naive pastor.
I'm sure we're fined. Jesus is it? No no, no,
no no no Jesus in firearms. You need them both.
Where are they get it done? And Chris, definitely you people.
Everyone's always trying to kill you people. Get it done.
And get your legacy box done too, At least get
(36:31):
the box in your house. Those pictures and videos they
need to be digitized. Everything has to be digitized. And
I know when you think about digitizing Grandpa's picture in
the wall, it sounds like a pain because you have
to pull down the picture, you have to take it
out of the frame, and then you have to send
it away and who wants to do that? And let
(36:51):
me tell you, it is a freaking pain. It's a pain.
And then when you get it back, you have to
put it back. That sucks, doesn't it? You know it
sucks word losing it forever. What would suck even worse
is your grandkids never getting to see grandpa. Picture got lost,
someone else got it. They don't even know what he
looks like. I got one picture of my grandpa Jack digitally,
(37:17):
one picture, so I don't remember him. Give it to
your children and their children. Let Legacy Box digitize your
home videos, your hard pictures, you're VHS tapes, your Super
eight films. Order the box legacybox dot com. Slash Jesse,
Legacy Box dot com slash Jesse. We'll be back