Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a wonderful Thursday. We're about to discuss, in fact, it's
gonna it's gonna really piggyback off of what we were
just talking about. De e I what what was it
always about? What was it about just giving more jobs
(00:34):
to women, more jobs to black people or eight people
or whatnot? Yes, but no, we'll talk about that. More fraud.
We're isolating China. That's a good thing. Dome or beachfront property,
legal immigration continues to be a problem. All that and
so much more coming up tonight on the world Famous
(00:56):
Jesse Kelly Show. Now, Stacy Abrams, remember it. Stacy Abrams,
things just really haven't worked out for her. She keeps
trying to run for office of some kind, she keeps losing.
She did end up, remember her organization got three billion
dollars from the Biden or Biden administration after he lost
(01:18):
when he was a lame doc. They just tried to
shovel three billion dollars through organization. So, I mean, she's
just a crook like the rest of the communists. But
Stacy Abrams was complaining about the death of Dei, the
alleged death of DEI in this country. Here she said that,
And if you agree.
Speaker 2 (01:34):
With me, I think DEI is under such aggressive attack
because it is the central pillar of a pluralistic democracy.
And if you're an authoritarian bent on white supremacy in
Christian nationalism, there's nothing more terrifying than the body of
law that includes all of DEI.
Speaker 1 (01:53):
Okay, Kaitanji Brown Jackson, we already mocked her yesterday, routinely
kind of makes any it of herself because she doesn't
know anything. She's just a moron who was put on
the Supreme Court because she's a black woman. And again,
don't send me your email. How offended you are. Biden
said that himself. You'd send your email to Joe Biden.
He's the one who said that's why he's putting her
up there. D I though, what was it really about?
(02:18):
I know you know it was communism, I know you
know it was wrong, and I know you already know
that it was an attack on white men. But what
was it really about. Remember one of the main reasons
communist systems don't last long. They've been put into place
many times in the last hundred years, but the Soviet
(02:41):
Union was the longest lasting one and it lasted sixty years,
roughly about sixty years, sixty seventy years. And it depends
on what you how you classify how it began. You know,
this Russian Revolution was nineteen seventeen nine to ninety is
(03:01):
when it died. That's not very long. And that's the
longest one. In Cambodia, it lasted like four years. It
just doesn't last very long. There are a variety of
reasons for this, but one of the main driving factors
in this is this, people who are unqualified are given
(03:28):
critically important jobs in society simply because they are loyal
party members. They're not qualified to be there. Of course,
they're not experts. They don't know what they're doing. This
guy shouldn't be a general, This guy shouldn't be a doctor.
This guy shouldn't be a pilot. This lady shouldn't be
(03:49):
on the Supreme Court. This guy shouldn't do this, and
that girl shouldn't do that. But shouldn't doesn't matter at all.
They're loyal to the system. They're loyal to the party.
So all the choice jobs, all the important jobs, all
the choice, gigs are given out to people, and soon
(04:12):
everything starts to collapse because you have unqualified communist morons
rising to the highest, most important positions in society, and
society cannot sustain itself that way. You know, what's underrated,
has always been underrated, and always will be underrated. One
(04:34):
of my favorite things in the world. Discrimination. There's nothing better.
And if you say you don't like it, you're a
dirty liar. Do you want the best teacher or a
diverse group of teachers to teach Aiden, Jaden and Braiden?
(04:55):
If God forbid you were diagnosed with a brain tumor
tomorrow you needed emergency surgery, who do you want cutting
your head open? A diverse group or the best in
the world? Oh you want you want the best in
the world. Huh? Why are you discriminating? Why are you
(05:18):
discriminating against the others? Discrimination is outstanding. Discrimination makes a society,
makes everything in society better. We talked about it during
our five part series on Rhodesia. I touched on it,
I should say briefly. I brought it up several times.
(05:39):
But why did this country start? And in five minutes
it was the wealthiest, most prosperous country in the entire
continent of Africa, with a standard of living so high
that Africans began to flood into it for job opportunities
(05:59):
to live that life. Why is that the case, because
from the very beginning, Cecil Roads, Cecil Roads, however you
describe it, Cecil Rhodes who started the whole thing. He
did not take anybody. He grabbed the cream of the
British crop. He only wanted great people from great families,
(06:22):
the smartest, the bravest, the best. I want the best miners,
the best doctors, the best lawyers, the best troops. I
want well established families. And they created the foundation for
an incredible society that was like it was like a
mecca for the world because he discriminated. But when when
(06:48):
you build a society, when you give critically important positions
to unqualified people simply because they're loyal party members, society
collapses because you can't build a society on those people. Yes,
the end result of DEI was white men were run
(07:10):
out of everything, from the military, to journalism, to corporate
America to everywhere. That, of course, was the end result
of DEI. And yes, if you want to call it racist.
That's totally fine, because of course it was racist. It
was open naked discrimination against white men. I'm not arguing
against that, but that's not what it was really about.
What DEI was really about, it was the justification to
(07:35):
hand critically important positions over to loyal Communist party members.
I saw so many people complain that Kaitanji Brown Jackson
is dumb and she's incompetent, and she's dumb, and she's incompetent,
and she's dumb and she's incompetent. And of course that's true,
but that didn't matter to the Communists' loyal she's a
(08:02):
loyal Communist. Think about this, Hey, Chris, I want you
to grab something for me. If you can, remember when
she was asked, if you can't, that's fine. The computers
are a little wonky. Remember at her confirmation hearing, when
she was asked to define a man and a woman?
Can you define a man or a woman? And Chris
may not be able to get computers going crazy, but
(08:23):
you already remember. Even if he can't, you already remember
that she was asked that. I remember she played dumb.
I'm not a biologist, I think, is what she said.
Now think about this. Kaitanji Brown Jackson is a senior citizen.
Let me you know what, let me do this while
I'm live on the air. How old is Kaitanji Brown Jackson.
(08:46):
I'll shoot I looked up Katel Marte. No, she's not
going to play second base. How old is Kaitanji Brown Jackson.
She's fifty five years old. Okay, not quite a senior citizen.
She had her confirmation hearing what two years ago? How
many of Katanji Brown's fifty five years on this planet
(09:08):
do you think she would have told you to your face,
very clear definitions of man versus woman, her entire life, right,
entire life. Yet when it came time to be a
loyal operatic, I don't know. I'm not a biologist, DEEI
(09:28):
was always just the justification to hand critically important positions
over to people who don't deserve them because they're loyal.
That's what it was always about. Now, let's discuss less
lethal before we get back to emails, more communists, legal
immigration and other things. You know, that's what Burna is, right,
(09:55):
That's what Burna is. When I tell you Berna is
about the size of your smartphone fits in your purse,
your pocket. They also have holsters for them. Maybe you think, well,
I don't want to get in trouble. Berna is legal.
Do you know security? Private security firms across America carry them?
(10:16):
Did you know swat teams across America carry them? Why
would a swat team carry them? Because it will stop
a bad guy quickly, a bad guy who won't die,
Throw your handcuffs on him, send him to trial, but
he'll wish he was dead. You can carry that in
your pocket. Your daughter you sent to college, can carry
(10:36):
that in her purse. So when that's savage from El
Salvador stops her at a raper in the parking lot,
she can survive, unmolested and survive another day. Yes, but
even in New York, even in New York, save the
person you love the most, be y Rna Berna dot
(10:58):
com slam Jesse all right, Bernard dot com slash Jesse
all right. We'll do a couple emails discuss legal immigration
and the VOI I mean, courtesy of what's her name?
Jaya Pau and so much more. Next, Fighting for your
Freedom every Day, The Jesse Kelly Show. It is the
(11:24):
Jesse Kelly Show on a Fantastic Thursday member. If you
miss a single second of the show, it could be
the end of the world. You need to listen to
it on iHeart, Spotify, iTunes, download the podcast. There is
an announcement coming for the show, maybebe next week or
(11:45):
the week after one. You will very much enjoy. Don't worry.
I'm not getting fired, not quite yet. Let's do some emails. Hey, Jesse,
are the protesters and those who pay them filing the
appropriate tax documents? Isn't this how alcohol the poem was
taken down? Okay, so it's a good question. Her name's
Mary said, I can say her name. Are they finding
the appropriate tax documents? Because as we discussed, these are
(12:08):
all organized and professional, and they're done by groups. There
are communist groups in this country. They train these people,
they organize these people, they fund them. There are bail lines,
you know that. They give these people phone numbers so
when they get arrested they could call, bail will be
posted that. That's how this works. This is all organized,
professional And she mentioned correctly that al Capone didn't go
(12:32):
to prison for all the murders and things like that,
he went to prison for his taxes. Okay, that's very fair.
That's kind of a basic point that a lot of
people know. But here's what you might not know. Yes,
al Capone ended up going down for his taxes, but
that was very, very difficult to pull off two very difficult.
(12:58):
It wasn't as if they tried to take him down
for murder and try to take him down for a
loan sharking, and try to take him down for this
or bootlegging, and then they said, well screw it, just
sent into prison for his taxes and he went the
next day. That's very difficult to prove too. He's not
the only mobster that went to jail for that. Why
(13:19):
did it take so long? They had to have witnesses
come forward, They had to have his books exposed, they
had to have those translated. Why remember what money actually
buys you. It's not the Beatles when they say it
can't buy you love, and it's not that money. Maybe
(13:40):
you have some, maybe you don't, Maybe you want some,
maybe you don't, that's fine, whatever, But what money actually
buys you is access access to what, access to better food,
better cars, first class tickets, private air travel, whatever, that
(14:01):
exclusive club, better medical care, And money buys you better lawyers,
access to better lawyers and better accountants. I just had
a buddy. I won't go into his business, you know what,
that would probably be too easy to expose him. I
(14:24):
just had a friend. He was being sued by a
major corporation. He had started his own company. This huge
corporation sued him. Said he was I don't remember exactly
what the terms were, stealing intellectual property or something like that,
being sued by this major corporation. And lawsuits, especially these
(14:46):
kinds of lawsuits, they're not fast things. It's not a
week or a month. They drag on and on and
on and on and on. My buddy, in the beginning,
because he's a small businessman, hired not the bargain basement attorney,
but an affordable attorney, a guy who lives in my
(15:09):
buddy's town. And don't quote beyond this, because I might
be messing this up, but I think his attorney, his
first one he hired, was two hundred dollars an hour.
Now that's a lot of money, isn't it. Two hundred
dollars an hour. But that's who he hired, all right.
I talked to him recently because he ended up settling up.
He ended up getting out of it pretty much scott
(15:29):
free and whatnot. But this went on more than a year,
and we were talking about it the other night. We
were hanging out, and he said a bunch of things.
He had some pretty choice words to say about a
bunch of things and a bunch of different entities and people.
But he reinforced something to me that I'd been told
by my father over and over and over again. There
(15:50):
is not a quote difference between a two hundred dollars
an hour attorney and an eight hundred dollars an hour attorney.
There is a grand canyon between a two hundred dollars
an hour attorney and an eight hundred dollars an hour attorney.
(16:11):
The golf is wide. That guy, and I know, I
don't mean to make you mad, you guys who are
listening in the joint right now, that guy who got
the public defender because he couldn't afford a real attorney. Man,
can you imagine what kind worked for free? You get
a public defender at this point in time, start prepping
(16:34):
for prison because that's where you're going. But wealthy guys
oftentimes don't ever see the inside of a prison, and
the difference is the lawyer. It's not just that communists
are evil and demonic, in violent and all those things
we talk about all the time. There is a huge
(16:57):
amount of money behind the gloses global communist movement. You
call it the globalist movement. That's what they are. They're
globalist communists. But it's it's billions. Billions and billions and
billions of dollars are at stake with all this. So
when you have billions of dollars at stake, people are
(17:18):
willing to spend a fortune on the best lawyers and
the best accountants. You asked about tracking down the funding
sources and their taxes and all that stuff's reasonable, And
the Trump administration, to their credit, they are they're trying
to tackle that stuff. So much of what you're seeing
(17:40):
is legal. I didn't say it was right. It's not right.
It's wrong, it's terrible. Shouldn't be legal, shouldn't be this way.
But you think you think these people just marched out
and started doing these things without checking with a two
thousand dollars an hour lawyer on what is and what
(18:02):
isn't allowed. Do you think they set up this organization
or that organization without making sure every tea was crossed
and every die, every eye was dotted. A lot of money,
a lot of thought, a lot of legal talent went
into setting these things up. It's a very tough nut
to corract. Doesn't mean we can't, but it's difficult. All right,
(18:24):
we'll talk about isolating China legal immigration more. Next. Feeling
a little stocky, follow like and subscribe on social at
Jesse Kelly DC. It is the Jesse Kelly Show, reminding
you tomorrow's Ask Doctor Jesse Friday, and the questions are
(18:44):
already coming in hot and heavy, and you need to
get yours in line. Ask me anything. All three hours
are yours Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Illegal immigration
obviously big problem, but so's legal immigration. And communists will
(19:04):
just come out and prove my point for me time
and time again. You know who primal La Jayapal is.
In case you're not familiar, you're at least familiar with this.
We've played it several times on the show. Why are
all these communist street animals out there doing things that
can get them killed because elite communists like jayap Al
(19:28):
tell them to do so?
Speaker 3 (19:29):
We might call this getting strike ready. I think of
it as getting us strike ready or street ready, and
part of that is understanding our own strength and as
we develop that strength, being able to assess our risk tolerance,
because we know that risk tolerance increases as the severity
of the situation increases and as our own understanding of
(19:51):
what's happening increases. So overall, the more we understand what's effective,
what the risks are, and who's ready to participate, the
more impact week and half.
Speaker 1 (20:01):
Okay, that's Jayapowe. Now she got up and she posted
this video. I did not grab this some summerre she
posted this video. This was her speaking in the House
of Representatives. Keep in mind this is the woman. She
is a communist, She encourages communist street activism. She works
(20:21):
day and night to destroy the United States of America.
We played that audio of her yesterday. She says it
all the time that immigrants, Somalians and Africans built the country.
She is as bad and evil a human being as
is in politics in this country. So why is she here.
Speaker 4 (20:40):
She took me seventeen years to get my citizenship. I
went through a lot, and I'm you know, I can
advocate for myself. As you all will attest and yet
it was still extremely difficult and there was a lot
of processing, and I still remember that.
Speaker 1 (20:54):
Day seventeen years. Now, let's think about that for a moment.
We are currently. Our current situation is this communist is
inside the House of Representatives. She holds a significant amount
(21:19):
of power in the United States of America day and night.
She uses that power to subvert the country, burn down
the country, and destroy everything she loves. Okay, so how
did she get to the US House of Representatives? Oh?
How to become a citizen? First? All right, well, could
(21:42):
we have done anything to prevent her from rising to
that position of power? Let me play it again, basically
acting as the wrong sound bite. My bad.
Speaker 4 (21:51):
It took me seventeen years to get my citizenship. I
went through a lot, and I'm you know, I can
advocate for myself as you want.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
Seventeen years. We had seveneen years to recognize a subversive
communist and say you know what, no, no citizenship for you,
(22:22):
go back home. We had seveneen years of opportunity to
stop this in its infancy, seventeen years, but we didn't.
After seventeen years of opportunity to say no, we said yes.
(22:47):
And now she will spend the rest of her natural
life trying to destroy the country you love and I love.
Remember Remember this guy, Shri Tandahar or whatever his name is.
We've talked about him so many times before. Do you
remember this guy.
Speaker 5 (23:04):
We will go to penk Or Pelis. Now there is
Nu Maharayak.
Speaker 1 (23:10):
And again I'm sorry, sorry brought wrong sound bite, wrong
sound bite. This is Shri than the high.
Speaker 6 (23:16):
ICE is beyond reform. ICE is totally out of control.
And this week I intend to introduce a bill to
abolish ICE.
Speaker 1 (23:30):
Let's just process that for a moment. He was born
in India. He was eventually given citizenship. Now he stands
in the open air behind a microphone and calls for
the elimination of the deportation force that exists to get
(23:53):
rid of illegals who were in this country. How much
of a bonker's upside down migration system do we have
that that guy is ever allowed to become a citizen
to begin with. But not only do we give him citizenship,
we allow him into the United States House of Representatives.
And now he stands up in front of the American
(24:14):
people and says this.
Speaker 5 (24:16):
We go to penk Or Palace. Now there is new Maharaya.
And again the palace has the power of the dark light.
It is dead. Please kill my people?
Speaker 1 (24:31):
How can we allow that in this country? Crazy? Great?
What Chris? What I didn't say it? Jesse? Everyone knows
the right is armed, but where has all the fraud
money been going? It's possible the left has been secretly
stockpiling arms for the revolution. Stop for a second, all right, one,
(24:55):
There's a couple things so this. Some may make you
feel better, some may not. We on the right, we
love our guns, we love our ammunition. We're more inclined
to go to the range, be part of a Second
Amendment group trained at that kind of stuff, hunt fish,
that kind of stuff that's going to be generally more
right wing than it is left ring left wing, and
(25:16):
that has led us to believe that, hey, what are
they gonna do? We're the ones with the guns. And
to some extent that is true. I will just say
a couple of different things. There are multiple different videos
out there now, multiple different resources you can go read
that show communists are buying weapons and training with them,
(25:40):
buying weapons and training with them. That's one. Two. Who
do you have to fear more? The big buff right
wing guy with too many tattoos, probably cusses a lot
and drinks too much beer, likes going shooting with the
fellas on the weekends, or that effeminate little little I
(26:05):
was about to say a bad word, Chris. I stopped myself.
Just want to point out the improvements I've made. I
stopped my No, I wasn't going to say that, all right,
That's exactly what I was going to say, Chris. All Right,
anyway rhymes with hag, and I was going to say
that I shouldn't. I held back, all right, I headed in.
I held back that little hag with painted fingernails and
(26:29):
the nose ring any weighs about one hundred and ten pounds,
soak and wet. I don't have to fear that guy. Well,
if it's just you two throwing hands in the parking lot,
maybe not. That guy will kill your whole freaking family.
That's the guy you have to worry about the most.
Have you? What's the last time you went through and
looked at the school shooters we've been having. Is it
(26:53):
the big buff college football star guy who's about to
play Division one? Is it the kid who's ace and
the chess team no, no, no, no no. It's the tiny, weak,
ugly freak who hates his life and hates you because
you're better looking and successful and you have a mom
(27:13):
and dad. And let's not dismiss the fact that they
are armed as well, and they're more willing to create murder,
to commit murder than we are. And communists recruit those
people on purpose, as we've talked about so many times before.
They'll find people, not necessarily who believe in communism or
any of that. They'll just find violent people, mentally ill people,
(27:37):
because they make the best recruits for a communist movement
that's based on violence. Yeah, they've got guns, and they're
not secret. There's no secret of stockpile. All right, we'll
talk about China, good things we're doing there and more.
Speaker 5 (27:49):
Next you will go to penk Or Palace. Now there
is new Maharayak and again the palace has the power
of the light.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
A sitting member of Congress. That's where we're at now,
and shake your head, Chris, remember tomorrow as ask doctor
Jesse Friday. Also remember, if you missed any part of
the show, you can quit Focus. You can download it
on iHeart, Spotify, iTunes, China fumes at Trump's Iran tariff's
(28:23):
after losing access to Venezuelan oil. Trump has to juggle
a lot. The Trump administration, i should say, has to
juggle a lot. It's obviously more than just him. No
one person can do that job. And can we pause
for a second. This just popped into my head. Can
you believe we survived four years of Joe Biden? Think
(28:47):
about all the things we talked about this before. Think
about all the things that Donald Trump juggles. It's been
a year. There's Venezuela and Iran, and there's protests, and
there's taxes, And today's about this healthcare.
Speaker 7 (29:01):
I'm thrilled to announce my plan to lower health care
prices for all Americans and truly make health care affordable again.
We're doing things that nobody's ever been able to do.
We're calling it the Great Healthcare Plan. Instead of putting
the needs of big corporations and special interest first, our
plan finally puts you first and puts more money in
(29:24):
your pocket. The government is going to pay the money
directly to you. It goes to you, and then you
take the money and buy your.
Speaker 1 (29:32):
Own Okay, we got that, But Greenland Euro up there, Russia, Ukraine.
Think about all the things the United States president has
to juggle, and for four years we had a cadaver
who couldn't tie his own shoes, ride a bike, speak
in complete sentences anyway. Anyway, he's also he has to
(29:57):
take on China without taking on s We've talked about
it before, the China, China and US were linked. We
don't want to be linked. I don't want to be
LinkedIn you don't want to be linked. But bad politicians,
Republican and Democrat, for decades, has they've married us to China.
(30:20):
We need them to make things, they need us to
buy things. China, while also trying to stomp us globally
needs us buying their stuff. And it's easy for us
to say, for you and I to say, well, just
stop doing that, But then you don't even you can't
even imagine how many things we won't have. Remember, ninety
(30:41):
percent of our pharmaceuticals are made in China. It's it's
a terrible, ugly situation. We are the married couple. We
beat each other up every night, and we hope each
other are dead, but we can't afford to divorce. That's
where we're at right now. So we're bouncing around and
doing different things. But what we did in Venezuela cutting
(31:03):
China off from the oil and now tear ifsn Iran,
we are strangling China and putting a stress on China's
economy that I don't think we fully appreciate. China's economy, Remember,
is more fragile than we know. Every time I talk
to one of these China experts who knows what's going
(31:25):
on inside the country. Remember, you can only you can
only have if you're a dictator, a president of king,
it doesn't matter. You can only have a certain percentage
of your country. Be out of work in Hungary and
then you're going to go down. Period. That's what's really
happening inside Iran. What's happening is is it just about
the hijabs? No, that's part of it. It's about we're hungry,
(31:50):
we don't have power. But that's what it's about. So
we're doing good things when it comes to China, and
I wanted to point that out. And speaking of China,
speak of pharmaceuticals, Remember that our goal should be to
stay off of pharmaceuticals and get off of pharmaceuticals. If
(32:11):
we're on them should always be our goal. It's part
of the reason I tell you about relief factors so much,
because there's nothing that'll make you reach for a pill
bottle faster than pain. Nobody wants to live their life
with pain every single day, but we grab things. Maybe
you bought in the pharmacy gas station, maybe a doctor
(32:32):
gave you a prescription for it. But it's temporary, isn't it.
And you know why it's temporary because it just masks
it for a little while, just a little bit of relief.
Not true lasting relief. Relief factor is lasting relief because
it goes to the root of the pain. Inflammation. Inflammation
(32:54):
is why you are in pain. Inflammation is why your
back hurts all the time. It's why your knee hurts
all the time. Try a supplement. Try it for three weeks,
see what it does for you every day three weeks
one hundred percent drug free. One eight hundred The number
four relief or relief factor. Dot com headline Russia China
(33:14):
unlikely to back Iran against US military threats. So you
know what force projection is. You've heard that term before.
I'm sure you have force projection. A lot has been
made about Russia's military capabilities. Sometimes you make fun of them,
(33:35):
and honestly, they're mockworthy lots of the time, but sometimes
they do impressive stuff, and they have impressive things. They're
space capabilities, they're impressive. They're the largest nuclear power on
the world. That's something you always have to consider. You
can never fully wipe out a country that can end
the entire planet with their nuclear weapons. That's something to
(33:56):
think about. China. China is probably the big one because
there's so frigging many of them, and their military is huge,
and they've been putting all these subs in the water
compared to our subs, and they're building up their navy,
and it sure looks like China's gonna conquer the globe.
And I'm not saying it won't get ugly in the future.
(34:18):
You can certainly see it getting ugly in the future.
But the United States of America does force projection in
ways that other countries simply cannot. And that's, Oh God,
forgive me for saying this. It's because of the US Navy,
(34:42):
the US Navy and its astounding capability, and I have
to give some credit the Air Force as well, our technology,
our stell technology, our ability to refuel in the air
or the things like that. What that does is it
allows us to carry out long or short military campaigns
(35:06):
virtually everywhere on the planet. We don't appreciate that enough
because that's the only country we know. If you're an American,
I know we have people all over the world. But
let's say we have a bunch of listeners in Australia.
Maybe you're listening in Australia right now. Good, ayn't shake
your head, Chris, that was really good. You have to
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speak to people in their native language. Anyway, maybe you're
in Australia. Now. I love Australian people. I absolutely love them.
Not the dirty commis in the city, the rural Australian people,
freaking fantastic people. Never met one I didn't like. And
the Australians have an underrated military history. Australians fight like
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freaking lions, absolute beasts. Australia can't project force across the globe,
not even a possibility. This is a very capable military
with some tough as nails soldiers. Australia can't. Australia can't
do anything to Venezuela. Nothing. Australia can't do anything to Iran. Nothing.
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We can do something to anybody anywhere. Kind of cool, right,
and that leads me to Greenland. Let's have a little
Greenland talk next