Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a wonderful Wednesday. We'll touch on a little bit more
of the response to the Pete hag Seth talked to
the military from yesterday, which was wonderful. Pete Buddhajet did
(00:31):
something while he was Secretary of Transportation which was terrible.
They're going to try to adjust your thermostat for you.
All that and so much more coming up this hour
on the world famous Jesse Kelly's Show. So we just
had to talk at the end of last hour in
case you missed it, about how they deconstruct, they decolonize,
(00:53):
which means they destroy. That's what it means. Remember that
communism is about destruction. It is a religion of destruction.
At its core. The thinking is everything is evil and
everything must be destroyed. When I say everything, it's every institution,
whether it be the family, the church, the government, that
(01:17):
the NFL, the Boy Scouts, everything in existence is evil.
It's all a system of oppression and everything has to
be destroyed. They will destroy themselves, they will destroy every
single thing they touched. It really is a cancer and
(01:37):
it is a religion if sometimes it can be hard
to understand why they defend what they defend, even when
it's indefensible.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
Why would you fight so hard for it?
Speaker 3 (01:51):
What?
Speaker 1 (01:51):
Why would you? Well, I'll use this example. Have you
ever known somebody who is a workout freak, just someone
who works out all the time, a workout freak. Maybe
you are one of these people. You're in the gym,
you run, you do yoga, you do CrossFit. You are
(02:12):
a workout freak. This person, and maybe it's you. This person,
their life, so much of their life is worked around,
revolves around the idea of being healthy. It affects everything
for a true workout freak. It affects how often they sleep,
(02:34):
It affects how they eat, It affects how they allot
their time, It affects it is a lifestyle for them.
If you were to tell that person, or that person
were to discover that somehow exercise is not good for you,
it's bad for you. It's not just that exercise is
(02:57):
bad for you, what would be a hard revelation for them? Well,
their whole life revolves around that. A huge portion of
their life revolves around that. You didn't take a part
one particular part of their existence. You took a part
their entire belief system. That's how communists operate, and that's
(03:21):
how communists think. Now, Pete Hegseth, I realized the Communists
think it's extremely controversial. But he really gave up, got
up yesterday. We played it last night and gave the
most basic speech in the world when you think about
what the essence of it was. Hey, we should promote
(03:43):
people based on merit. Hey, if you're in the military,
you shouldn't be fat. If you are a leader in
the military, you definitely shouldn't be fat. That's pretty much
all he said. The whole thing came down to that
our goal, our job is to protect America, to kill people,
(04:07):
to break things. We should promote only the best and brightest,
no matter what their skin color is, and you shouldn't
be fat while you're doing it.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
At no other.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
Time in the history of our military would that be
viewed as remotely controversial. So why are they taking it
so hard on the levee.
Speaker 4 (04:27):
The words that Donald Trump used today enemy from within.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
That's hitler esque, that is right out of Nazi Germany.
That is not constitutional speech.
Speaker 4 (04:38):
That is not the speech that we stand for in
this country where we.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
Believe in the rule of law.
Speaker 1 (04:45):
He's talking about Trump's speech after the Hegcess thing. As
far as the heg Set thing itself, the idea of
merit meritocracy, I call that.
Speaker 5 (04:54):
The meritocracy myth. And it feels as though that that
met the meritocracy, this idea that the women and the
people of color, anybody in the LGBTQ folks, they are
all there because of some helper, some preference.
Speaker 2 (05:07):
That idea is a lie.
Speaker 5 (05:10):
But it feels as like it's a lie that they
feel like takes that especially has to tell because then
they can twist the narrative, They can twist the truth.
He can hide excellence. It gives cover for his own
mediocrity because he is unqualified to be there.
Speaker 6 (05:23):
They also had that line. He had that line about
diversity is in our strength own it is our strength,
which made me wonder whether or not there is room
for diverse opinions, diverse racist religions in his sense of unity.
Speaker 1 (05:37):
I suspect not. Remember that these people are not interested
in America. They are not interested in having a strong
military to protect America because they don't care about America.
Itself at all. What they are interested in is promoting
their friends and punishing their enemy. What they are interested
(06:01):
in is decolonizing, deconstructing everything, including the United States military.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
They have declared war.
Speaker 1 (06:11):
On everything you love, on everything that is good, and
the idea of promoting people based on merit. What it
would do is it's not that it would eliminate to
black people or women. What it would do is it
would eliminate the scumbags who these people consider to be friends.
That's who it would eliminate. And that's what it did eliminate.
(06:34):
For the longest time. The United States military has been
integrated for decades. For decades, they could pretend as if
it wasn't, as if it was some sort of racist thing.
For decades, black people, for instance, have risen to the
highest ranks in every single military branch. This is not
something new. This is how it's always been. So what
(06:56):
are they actually worried about.
Speaker 2 (06:58):
It's not that.
Speaker 1 (06:59):
They're worried about black people not getting promoted. They're worried
about communists not getting promoted. That's what they're worried about.
Because they are deconstructing, they are decolonizing, they are destroying
that's how they think. Let's move on, Let's do some emails.
(07:20):
I promised you.
Speaker 2 (07:21):
Some Jesse.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
Battleships. Oh this is off of that interview last night.
Last night, in the third hour, we had Merchant Marine
Captain John Conrad on to talk about firefighting on ships
and to talk about how we need to rebuild our navy.
And he is a huge battleship guy, not as in
thinking they're really cool. Every guy with any testosterone thinks
(07:43):
battlefields are cool. He thinks they should come back. We've
gone completely away from them. He thinks they should come back.
This guy says battleships and tanks are obsolete. Heck, a
well placed nuke will turn a carrier group into reef.
Why are the Chinese hardening their space lab. I'm just saying,
(08:05):
all right, so we can talk about battleships, whether or
not they're obsolete, tanks, whether or not they're obsolete. These
are worthy debates to have. But in defense of what
he was saying, and in defense of the battleship. Remember,
the reason tanks in large part are obsolete now is
(08:28):
because we figured out how to eliminate it, and it's
no longer cost effective to make one, and it's not
cost effective to put men inside of one when it
can be eliminated with a relatively cheap drone. Drone warfare
is ugly.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
War warfare is uckly.
Speaker 1 (08:48):
I realize that, and it sounds futuristic to those of
us who love to study wars of the past, or
maybe even fought in wars of the past. We really
don't like it. I will tell you. I hate it.
I hate the thought that some dork from ten miles
away can fly a drone in and kill our best
and brightest, our toughest people. No matter how many push
(09:10):
ups you can do, no matter how many miles you
can hump one hundred pounds, no matter how hard you've worked,
some dork with essentially a video game remote can fly
in and blow you up. I hate it, but I
don't get what I love, and neither do you. In life, oftentimes,
drone warfare is here, and it's not just that it's
(09:32):
an individual drone here or individual drone there. The way
of the future until there are appropriate countermeasures are drone swarms. Now,
when you think of a drone, or when I think
of a drone, oftentimes you think of something. Maybe your
kid has or maybe you have this one four propeller
(09:54):
thing you buzz around in. What about a thousand nin
of them working together at two hundred miles an hour.
These are things that already exist and they'll advance from there. Now,
let's talk about ships. How do you stop that? What
(10:16):
is the plan to stop that? The idea behind a
battleship is the armor's too thick for the drone to
take it out.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
That was the idea.
Speaker 1 (10:26):
Now the idea behind pure talk is you don't have
to spend a fortune on your cell service, and you
don't have to pay a company that hates your guts
for that cell service. That is another old way of thinking,
as old as thinking. Tanks are still going to be
the wave of the future. You do not need AT
and T anymore because pure talk is here. You don't
(10:48):
need Verizon, you don't need T Mobile because pure talk
is here. Pure Talk is my wireless company. Pure Talk
does things. Remember the last thing they did around Independence Day?
While Verizon, AT and T and T Mobile were sending
your money to every vile communist cause, pere Talk was
sending out American flags to veterans. Whoever you nominated was wonderful.
(11:11):
I loved your emails. I'm glad that it blessed. You
switch to peer talk. You've got ten minutes you can.
It's easy. You keep your phone, and you keep your number,
and you switch to the company that actually loves the country.
All you have to do is pick up that cell
phone dial pound two five zero and say Jesse Kelly
(11:34):
Pound two five zero, Say Jesse Kelly, We'll be back.
Speaker 4 (11:42):
Jesse Kelly returns next.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Fantastic Wednesday.
I remember you can email us love hate, death threats.
Ask doctor Jesse questions for Friday. Jesse at Jesse Kelly's show,
to speaking of deconstructing, decolonizing, destroying, Secretary of Transportation Sean
(12:09):
Duffy spoke a little bit about why the Rear Admiral
Pete budhajedge or what the guy did as Transportation secretary.
He never had any intention, of course, of doing his job.
He was given that job as a gift for dropping
out of the presidential race and because they thought it
would maybe help his political aspirations, but being actually in
(12:31):
charge of transportation was never something he intended to do.
Like all communists and field traders, he was there to
decolonize things, to deconstruct things like.
Speaker 4 (12:43):
This driving policy, that there was racism behind roades. He
saw racism around every single corner to the point where
an aviation. He was so concerned about this, he wanted
to change. He did change the name of cockpit to
flight deck because cockpit is too offensive and too masculine.
I guess, or we have was we have no town
(13:05):
is noticed to air men. He's like, Oh, that's offensive.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
I've got to be honest with you. I am I'm
hard to surprise. Maybe it's it's not because I'm intelligent,
probably because I'm cynical, so I'm hard to surprise. In fact,
I had to listen to this the first time I
heard it. I had to listen to it two or
three times because I'm I'm in disbelieve.
Speaker 4 (13:28):
Driving policy, that there was racism behind roads. He saw
racism around every single corner to the point where an aviation.
He was so concerned about this he wanted to change.
He did change the name of cockpit to flight deck
because cockpit is too offensive and too.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
I would have bet my life that Pete budaj Edge
was a big fan of cockpit. I would have been
my life. What Chris, why are you making that face?
I assumed that he was a cockpit man. I honestly,
I wouldn't be surprised if he hangs out at places
(14:10):
called the cockpit. It really genuinely shocks me to hear
Pete Boodhajet is anti cockpit.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
Nothing makes sense anymore. Just do some emails, hey, King Bronco.
Speaker 1 (14:26):
I need your help solve a little argument between my
wife and I. I won't divulge which one of us
has which opinion as to keep bias out of your judgment.
Here's the problem. Our son graduated high school last June
and immediately started an apprenticeship with a plumbing company. I
love that he's a great kid, has always been a
(14:47):
hard worker as a nineteen year old adult working full time.
One of us believes it's completely fair and reasonable to
get him to contribute two hundred dollars a month for rent, food,
in other things. The other one wants us to treat
him like a toddler. Is it right to charge a
(15:08):
bit to an adult child with a full time job
if he's living at home? Of course, there would be
not charges when he does his class. Parts of the apprenticeship.
We absolutely do not need the two hundred dollars, so
is it bad to collect it just to show that
we expect adults to contribute? What would you do with
your boys? I can't wait to see which side you
(15:31):
fall on.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
Love the show? His name is Ryan, Well Ryan.
Speaker 1 (15:36):
Obviously, with the language you used in your email, it's
pretty easy to see which side you fall on. You
want to charge the boy two hundred dollars your wife
does not. Here is my thinking on this. I used
to I used to feel very very strongly. In fact,
(15:59):
if you've listened for a lot long time, I probably
have said this on the air before. I used to
feel very strongly about kicking my sons out of the
house when they graduate high school.
Speaker 2 (16:10):
I believed in it all the way.
Speaker 1 (16:12):
It's pretty much what was done to me and my sister.
Not that I needed any any pushing. I wanted to
go anyway. But you go fly, you go live in
the real world. Since that time, as I've seen the
evils of the world, and as I've seen what our
economy is doing smashing people, I've been less inclined to that.
(16:32):
Now I'm totally fine if my sons stick around, which
they're not going to They've already expressed that.
Speaker 2 (16:40):
But I would be.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
Totally fine if they stuck around until they got their
feet under them, got married, and went and got a
place of their own, an apartment or a house. Probably
gonna be an apartment, not gonna be able to afford
a house, get an apartment of some kind. Whether I
would charge them rent or not wouldn't tiely depend on
(17:02):
where they are in life.
Speaker 2 (17:04):
I will not.
Speaker 1 (17:05):
Have a free loading lazy dirt ball in my home.
If they move out and they're free loading lazy dirt
balls without jobs, they will never have a dime from
me at all. They simply will not. It's not something
I believe in. But if they're grinding like it sounds
like your son is grinding, they've proven that they're hard workers,
(17:29):
that they're into it, I would probably. I would probably
skip the rent for them. It's not that i'm by
the way, it's not like I'm dead against it, and
I'm not saying you're wrong wanting to charge them. That's
two hundred bucks a month they could be putting in
their pocket, maybe towards a down payment for a house,
(17:51):
maybe towards a rainy day fund. It sounds like your
sonnet nineteen doesn't need a lesson on harbor work. It
sounds like he knows hard work. If he needed the lesson,
charge him the money. Doesn't sound like he needs a lesson.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
What Chris.
Speaker 1 (18:11):
Chris said, Charge him the money and put it in
an account for where he moves out.
Speaker 2 (18:14):
I don't hate that.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
I wouldn't hate that either, but I probably wouldn't charge
him there. Let's how pillows soft I've gotten over the years. Apparently,
apparently I need to up my tea levels. Also, as
you look at your son, do remember that he's going
to have a family one day with kids and their
kids and their kids after them, and their kids after
(18:37):
them are going to want to know more about Grandpa
and great grandpa. You know how little I know about
my great grandparents. I know their names. I've seen a
picture of one or two of them. I met one
(18:57):
one and only one, my great Grandma Gray, when I
was very very little, but I don't remember her. I
wish I had those pictures on my computer on my phone.
I do not, because legacy box didn't exist back then.
Legacy Box exists now to digitize your memories for future generations.
(19:19):
And for you don't put this off, do it legacybox
dot com slash Jesse legacybox dot com slash Jesse.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
We'll be back.
Speaker 1 (19:33):
He doesn't care if you believe him, but he's right.
Speaker 2 (19:37):
Jesse Kelly.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic Wednesday Memory.
If you miss any part of the show, you can
download the whole thing on iHeart, Spotify, iTunes. So there's
a proposed bill in Ohio that would let power companies
adjust thermostat at homes and small businesses. Now, obviously that's
(20:04):
insanely invasive, but I wanted to have just a talk
with you really quickly. There is something that is happening
that we've discussed before on this show. It's not just nationwide,
it is worldwide. Two things are happening at once and
combined they're both disastrous, absolutely disastrous. And the two things
(20:27):
are this. Our need for energy for power is massive,
exponentially increasing, really really fast. This has to do with
these data centers that are being built. We need more
energy now that we ever have, and what we need
(20:48):
now pales in comparison to what we're going to need
five ten years from now. We need more energy ever,
combine that with the fact that the communists globally have
declared war on all proven forms of energy, doesn't matter
what it is, coal, natural gas, nuclear, they have declared
(21:09):
war on it because they've declared war on humanity itself.
Combine those two things, what it means is.
Speaker 2 (21:19):
Your power bill is.
Speaker 1 (21:20):
Going to keep going up, up, up, up up. As
they put more solar panels up and more wind farms up,
your power bill is going to keep increasing. It is
almost inevitable at this point in time. Now, maybe you
think this is one bill in Ohio probably won't pass,
doesn't apply to you, and I am here to tell
(21:41):
you this. This is a warning. You can take it
to heart or you can ignore me. It's completely up
to you. But this is a warning. The government controlling
the amount of power you use is going to become
the norm in the future. If you choose to have
(22:04):
your thermostat hooked up to the internet. If you make
that decision, you have officially opened the door for them
to do it to you. This particular bill in Ohio
is not even what I'm talking about. It probably won't
even pass Republican Ohio government, but it is coming. The
(22:25):
government will react because what happens is one we know
government buildings are never going to sacrifice any power for themselves.
And two, remember that all these politicians shouldn't say, oh,
most politicians, every Democrat and most Republicans, they're all completely
(22:45):
bought and paid for by their largest donors. And guess
who the largest donors are. Let me go ahead and
spoil it for you. It's not you, and it's not
Jesse Kelly. Their largest donors come from these gigantic quur corporations,
the ones building the data centers. Yes, you can give
ten bucks or even two thousand bucks to your member
(23:08):
of Congress or to your senator, and don't get me wrong,
they'll send you a nice card.
Speaker 2 (23:13):
You might even get.
Speaker 1 (23:14):
A meet and greet and an adda boy, appreciate your support.
I super care about you. You understand how it works.
You know what you don't have. You don't have five
hundred thousand dollars for their super pack, but you know
who does Google. That would be like you giving your
congressman two pennies. These huge corporations are going to buy
(23:37):
your state legislature, as if they haven't already, They're going
to buy the federal government. They're going to buy the presidency.
And the result of this in the future is going
to be the government is going to steal divert I
should say, divert all the usable power in your area,
in your state towards the people who write them the
(23:59):
largest checks. And you are going to be told to
put a solar panel on your roof. And if they
can't do that, they are going to reach their big, ugly,
not noncallous I should say, tyrannical hands into your home
and they're going to turn your thermostat to eighty in
the summertime, so you have to walk around as if
(24:20):
you live in Somalia, half naked with fans running at
all times, solar powered fans. I may point out, this
is coming. The energy crisis is so bad and it
is going to get so much worse, and your red
state is not safe from it because your red state
(24:44):
is run by a bunch of uniqu Republicans. If I
may point out my state, in the state of Texas,
Bob and I every single month are mortified by what
our power bill is now every single month, and we
use don't me wrong, we have our AC down, but
we're not walking around with the thermostats at seventy degrees
(25:06):
in the summertime or something like that. That's not something
we do. We're not that way. We don't have all
the lights on in the house. I'm officially the angry
old man who yells at the kids for leaving lights
on and leaving the door open. We use power, but
we're not ridiculous about it. Our power bill continues to
get more and more insane because the eunuchs who run
(25:29):
the Texas government, including Governor Greg Abbott, they throw up
solar panels, they throw up wind farms, and they tell
you all the time to use less power. This is
happening in Red Texas. So I know what's happening in
South Carolina. I know it's happening in Alabama. I know
what's happening in Wyoming. Don't think that your red state
(25:50):
is free of this. The energy crisis is coming in
our governments at every level, federal, state, and local. They
are going to steal the power that should go to you,
and they are going to send it to their largest
campaign donors. This is a warning to you a to
get involved in your primaries and make this a priority
(26:12):
for your Republican legislature. And b you better get your
thermostat unhooked from the internet. You had better find a
way whatever you have to do to do that do it.
May not be a problem today, may not be a
problem tomorrow. But let me tell you who your politician
(26:32):
is going to pick. If it comes down to choosing
between you and Microsoft. Let me go ahead and give
the way the game. It's going to be Microsoft. It
won't be you, remember it, all right, That's all, just
little heads up. Study links COVID injections to increased cancer risk,
(26:54):
including breast and prostate cancer. This is a South Korean study.
It's not a small study. The study was done on
over eight million people, so it's a large study. I'm
not going to say whether it's true or not. I
will say this many many, many, many many people I know.
(27:19):
I'm talking about doctors. Many of them swore up and
down that these COVID injections would cause cancer. They swore
up and down after these COVID injections that they saw
an alarming increase in cancer, including in young people. And
(27:41):
the sad thing is, you can't get it out of
you now, but surely we can do something to hold
the people accountable who forced this into so many arms,
maybe yours. Maybe your son was forced to your daughter
was forced to to play sports, You were forced to
in order to keep your job. Maybe you're in the
(28:04):
military and it was give up your career or take it,
so you took it, and you have nothing but sympathy
from me. I get it. Bill's got to get paid
hard to give up a career for something. But the
people who did this to us, the people who promoted it,
all of them. If this is something that's causing cancer arise,
(28:25):
and what's worse than cancer, I mean nothing. It's affected everybody.
My family is everybody. It's not my family, it's your
family too.
Speaker 2 (28:33):
I know it.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
If they did this to us, someone better pay. That's
all I'm saying, someone better pay. We're going to do
some emails before we do any emails. Hiring people is
a nightmare, now, I know it. Hiring people as a nightmare.
And you would think that the online world would make
(28:57):
it easier, right, surely makes it easier. It actually makes
it more difficult. Yeah, you get to sift through resumes online,
but you go sign up for these places and they'll
tell you congratulations. Twenty five hundred people qualify for the
job you just posted. Well, no, they don't real they don't.
You need somebody to narrow it down for you. Put
the most qualified people at the front of the line.
(29:20):
Because your time is valuable and you don't have time
to sift through twenty five hundred resumes. You have a
business to run. Zip Recruiter sifts for you. They narrow
it down for you. Zip Recruiter will help you four
out of five employers find somebody quality the first day.
(29:40):
Go to ZipRecruiter dot com slash jesse. Try it for
free at ZipRecruiter dot com slash jesse.
Speaker 2 (29:50):
We'll be back. You're listening to the Ourcle you love
this life. It's a scream baby, the Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 1 (29:58):
It is the Jess I see Kelly's Show on a
Fantastic Wednesday. If it sounds like I'm talking quietly, it's
because I am. I'm losing my voice a little bit.
Then I'm not exactly sure how she's gonna hold up.
But uh look, Warriors Soldier On, Chris, don't roll your eyes.
(30:20):
Warriors Soldier on, I'm just gonna keep going, and I'm
just gonna keep going.
Speaker 2 (30:24):
Well, just play a lot.
Speaker 1 (30:25):
Of fun the name of a just merciful gun Jesse,
you stated there's no person of merit from Somalia. Oh,
this was about our crappiest country in the World competition
last night. What about the woman who was married to
her brother Ihan Omar, Minnesota congresswoman. I said merit, merit.
I didn't say this disgusting human being, my goodness.
Speaker 3 (30:48):
And so the idea that this is a white nation
that needs to be preserved is a fascinatingly disgusting view
because this country is one for the many.
Speaker 1 (31:05):
I will say that because so many savages listen to
this show that we got a bunch of emails of
people pointing out some Somali model apparently, and of course
Jewish producer Chris looked her up and said, absolutely she
should be on the list. I've never heard of any
Somali models. I'm not up on the modeling world. We
(31:27):
are not going to make the Somali model a person
of note. Okay, you absolute animals, doctor Jesse. I've been
reading your book and I'm the Golden Corral manager.
Speaker 2 (31:39):
Gosh, I would love to be the manager.
Speaker 1 (31:41):
At Golden Crow trying to help stop communism, I laughed,
for about an hour, because I've encountered that feminist in
your book many times before. Love your book. Have you
ever eaten at Golden Corral? If so, menu doctor, what
is your favorite item?
Speaker 2 (31:56):
There? Says?
Speaker 1 (31:58):
His name is Michael. Have I ever eaten at Golden Corral?
I love Golden Corral. We used to back when I
was running for Congress in Tucson. We used to regularly
meet for our meetings. There'd be GOP meetings, my campaign
staff meetings.
Speaker 2 (32:17):
What are you shaking your head? Ach?
Speaker 1 (32:18):
What are you laughing at? We would regularly meet at
Golden Coraw Do you think that's funny?
Speaker 2 (32:23):
Chris?
Speaker 1 (32:23):
Is there something wrong with Golden Corral? There's nothing wrong
with Golden Corral?
Speaker 2 (32:28):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (32:29):
And I don't want to speak for every Golden Corral,
but ours was pretty high end. They had fried shrimp
that was dynamite dynamite, and every time I brought that up,
some snoody person would be like, Ah, you can't eat
that shrimp. It's delicious. I never got sick off of
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it at all. And they had a caso a cheese
sauce waterfall at our Golden Corral. So Chris has seen it,
see Chris, knows exactly what I'm talking about. I don't
know if this is at everyone, because I haven't been
to one in a while. We don't have one in
my area now, so it's been years. But at our
Golden Corral, we had a cheese sauce waterfall.
Speaker 2 (33:15):
Let me say that again.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
We had a cheese sauce waterfall where you could get
as much cheese sauce as you wanted and you could
put it on everything. And of course I did put
it on absolutely everything. Bob wasn't always that happy with
some of my selections. But cheese sauce waterfall. Wrap your
(33:38):
mind around that. Jesse as a thirty five year service
retired cop, SWAT officer and firearms trainer, I continually assess
any place I go.
Speaker 2 (33:51):
Everyone should.
Speaker 1 (33:53):
I sit in a restaurant strategically watching the door, and
I'm always thinking what if I go to the grocery store,
and I'm constantly looking for problems. I always have a plan,
an active and retreat plan. I'm not paranoid. I'm just
wired this way after so many years in law enforcement.
Get out of your phone and think about your surroundings.
(34:16):
Try it. It's easy. I carry concealed recently at church.
It doesn't feel right, but I'm aware of the potential dangers.
I'm lucky to live in Texas. Yes, Look, I've told
my sons endlessly whenever we go anyway. We took them
to New York City last year because we wanted them
to see the nine to eleven Museum and see the
(34:37):
Statue of Liberty. So we take them places, even places
that can be dangerous. We take them places. And so
I have told them over and over and over again,
not just that you are outright banned from being on
your phone when you rock around. That is not allowed
in my house. Put it in your pocket. If you
have to text somebody, do something on social media, go
(34:58):
sit down. You'll put your back to the wall, and
then go back and get on the move. It's not
only that I tell them their best weapon is their eyes,
your eyes. You can say, concealed carry is not legal
where I live, and look, that's the case for a
lot of people with these ridiculous gun laws. I understand
(35:18):
that your best weapon is not the nine to milimeter
on your hip. Your best weapon is your eyes. I
have avoided more bad trouble in my life by simply
looking around open up your eyes. And that's so much
harder now because we have access to an endless world
(35:42):
of knowledge and entertainment in our pockets.
Speaker 2 (35:46):
I get how hard it is. Again.
Speaker 1 (35:48):
I'm on my phone too. I have social media too.
I like funny videos too. I like sending text messages too.
I am not on the little house on the prairie,
out a cabin in the woods cutting my own firewood.
I live in the modern day world too. I understand it.
I have it too. When you are in public, put
(36:10):
your phone in your purse, put it in your pocket,
and open up your eyes. Open up your eyes. You
will be surprised and how often you can spot trouble
or potential trouble. Contrary to what you see in the movies,
(36:31):
most of the bad guys are not calm, cool, collected
and looking like everybody else. That is something that exists
in the movies where the bad guy is super slick
and handsome and he's in a suit and he knows
how to.
Speaker 2 (36:46):
Blend into the crowd.
Speaker 1 (36:48):
Bad guys oftentimes practically wear a billboard above their head
that says I'm a bad guy. I could at any
moment to something bad, And if you just open your
freaking eyes and look around. You can see him across
the street. You can see him and walk out, avoid trouble.
(37:12):
Your eyes will save your life. Open them up, all right,
all right, we're going to talk about the lying ecosystem
because artificial intelligence has become something that communists are using
to their advantage. I'll explain what I mean next time.