Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Final hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a wonderful Tuesday. Try to wrap up this history story
here on the Railway of Death, and then we'll get
back to some politics. Gonna gonna point out a talking
point You're going to be hearing a lot of over
(00:33):
the next year three years from the Communists, these ridiculous
police chiefs and big cities. All that emails so much
more Joe Biden trying to take credit for peace. So
much more coming up in the final hour of the
Jesse Kelly Show. But I need to try to finish
this story on the Railway of Death. Sorry to walk
(00:54):
you through. You go down in the ship, your friends
get machine gun in front of you in the water.
You end up on a hell ship, what they're known as.
Then you end up at a prisoner of war camp.
But you're only in this prisoner of war camp temporarily
because now they have to send you into the parts
of the jungle where the railway is going to be built.
(01:18):
A normal way you build a railroad is you start
at both ends and you start to work your way
towards the middle. And meet in the middle. But I
already said this was a five year project. The Japanese
Empire is starting to lose the war. They don't have
five years. They need it built now, so they would
(01:41):
take large groups of soldiers. Again, almost all these guys
are already sick, starving, and they would march them into
the jungle where there is nothing, and there you have
to try to make a camp close to the railway
station you're working at. I call it a station. There's
(02:02):
nothing there. You have to begin clearing out the jungle,
leveling the ground. And this is a place where the
monsoon season lasts five months, and when you show up,
there are no facilities, not even a roof. The guys
(02:22):
would talk about being rained on all day, in all night,
with no cover at all. None. Think about that, and
quickly your clothes, if you had any that they hadn't confiscated,
they will quickly rot off of your body. I know,
(02:45):
if you've ever seen pictures of the Allied troops who
were going through this, you've probably seen them in loin
cloths of some time, basically makeshift underwear. It's what they were.
And that did happen quite a bit. But you know,
the the ugly truth of it. A lot of times
they were just naked. You never had clothes because all
the clothes rotted off of your body. You were treated brutally, brutally,
(03:14):
and the brutality got worse. Why, remember I told you
about the Japanese culture and the hierarchy and the racism
and everything else. Japan had also conquered Korea by this time.
Remember I told you the Japanese at this time thought
they were superior to all other Asians as well. They were.
(03:37):
The Japanese occupation of Korea could be a show in
and of itself. What was done there, It's terrible, but
they treated the Koreans horribly. They also conscripted the Koreans
into the Japanese military. Now remember this, You're not getting
the best troops as campguards anyway. You need your best
(03:58):
troops out there fighting, so you're already getting the lowest
quality Japanese soldier there is. Now you're bringing in Koreans
and all these Allied prisoners talk about the Koreans. The
Japanese would routinely beat and savage the Koreans who worked
(04:18):
for them and treated them like dogs, and in turn,
the worst treatment on Allied troops. Was often done by
Koreans who were fighting working on behalf of the Japanese empire.
If you weren't working fast enough, you would be hit.
All the Allied prisoners were hit all the time. They
(04:40):
were always being beaten, always being hit. If God forbid,
somebody tried to escape, the punishments would range from just
run of the mill torture like holding a heavy rock
over your head to chopping off your hands. They would
forcibly fill up your stomach with water and then jump
(05:03):
on you, which would rupture your insides. A terrible way
to die. You would die that way, a very very
common way. They would brutalize you for any kind of infraction,
and it could be a small infraction. If a Japanese
officer walked by and you didn't bow properly, you could
be punished and would be punished. They would put you
(05:23):
in a bamboo cage where you couldn't stand, but you
also couldn't really sit and stretch out your legs, and
they would leave you in there for days on end.
You're naked or just the loincloth. You are working like
a dog day in and day out, and they were
(05:43):
even brutal to animals. There were elephants that were initially
helping build this railway through the jungle. Elephants are very
family oriented, very intelligent creatures. The Japanese were so brutal
to the elephants, the elephants ran away. They lost them all.
So now you just have the Allied troops. You're also starving,
(06:07):
and as time went on, the Japanese are starving too.
There are no roads, there's no railway yet it doesn't exist.
And even if there was, the Japanese empires running out
of stuff, you had to rely on the river, the
flooding rivers, to try to float supplies to and fro.
(06:27):
The Japanese troops don't have enough food. What's it like
for our troops. They get a bowl of essentially disgusting
rice pudding in the morning and maybe another soup of
sun kind later on. No protein to speak of. So
you have to catch snakes, including poisonous king cobras. You
(06:49):
have to catch and kill monkeys. If you see a
disgusting grub underneath a rock that is a choice piece
of protein, you don't turn your nose up and squish
it under your foot. You grab it and eat it
because you're starving to death. If you look at any
of the prisoners who worked on this railroad, they all
(07:10):
look like Holocaust victims. That's how they look. It's the worst,
it's the saddest thing. And there's another part of it,
the disease. This is an area that has every disease,
every horrible disease you can think of. Barry, Barry. That's
where your legs swell up. It's terrible, malaria, dysentery, the
(07:32):
water situation's a nightmare. And I've explained dysentery before. You're
losing all of it. And that brings me to the
medical care. You don't have medicines for the most part.
You would have guys who weren't even doctors. They're just
a low end medical guy in your unit. And he
(07:53):
became the surgeon with amputations, amputations with no anesty. One guy.
This wasn't one guy, but one story I read. The
guy had ulcers, jungle rot ulcers all over his legs.
Those would get infected and you would die if they
didn't amputate your leg. You had to take the tear
(08:15):
care of the infection. But the doctor didn't have any
medicine for him. He had to send him to the
latrine to gather the maggots from the base of the
latrine and put them on his wounds so they would
eat away the infection the rotted flesh to save his leg.
(08:37):
I'm being as nice as I can describing the disaster
that this was. They even got to a place known
to history as hell Fire Pass. You finally got out
of the jungle, and instead you ran into a gigantic
block of rock where you had to chip and chop
(08:58):
away at it. Remember, you're starving, dying of disease, and
you didn't get to take the day off if you
were sick. The Japanese would storm into the medical tent
and make people go out anyway. And they also thought
it was funny sometimes to set off the explosives in
hell Fire Pass when the Allied troops were nearby, so
(09:18):
they could enjoy the carnage as all this went on.
I'm going to wrap this up with this. This took
fourteen months to build the Railway of Death. They did
finish it, It was promptly bombed repeatedly by the Allies
and hardly used at all. Sixteen thousand Allied POWs died
(09:43):
twenty a day. You would go out with your buddies
and you knew you were going to bury one or
two of them every single day. You had to bury
them where they fell and then get right back to work.
Ninety thousand civilians died even mentioned them all those countries
Japan had conquered. They treated them like slave labor too,
(10:06):
and they weren't as physically fit. They didn't have the
medical knowledge of the troops, and they died at a
much higher rate than even the troops did. And the
worst part, not the worst part, one of the worst
parts of this whole story was most people not only
don't know what happened the troops when they got home
(10:28):
from these camps because it was late when they got home,
they didn't get released till after the war. Were almost
universally ignored by their home countries, no parades. Oftentimes the
government would deny benefits, and these guys were ravaged. Their
physical health was bad for the rest of their lives.
Their mental health is destroyed for the rest of their lives.
(10:49):
That if you are an American, this happened to your people.
If you were a brit if you're an Aussi, if
you're Dutch. This happened. One of the worst stories in
history happen, and most people don't know about it, The
Railway of Death, the Burma Cyan Railway. There is your history.
Let's go back and talk about some politics. Joe Biden's
(11:10):
taking credit for things before we do that. Speaking of
your history, I already mentioned that today is the one
year anniversary of my father passing away a year ago.
It was the last time I talked to my old man.
I I won't do it. I wouldn't do it before
(11:30):
the show because I didn't want to be all messed
up for the show. After the show, I'm going to
go home and I'm going to get by myself, and
I'm going to get on my phone and I'm going
to watch videos and look at pictures of my own
man and say goodbye again. Because Legacy Box digitized all
that stuff for me. Legacy Box digitized all those pictures.
(11:55):
I have pictures on my phone of my father snuggling
with me when I would a baby, because Legacy Box
digitized it for me, digitized home videos. Legacy Box preserves
those memories forever. They'll do it for you too. Let
them hand digitize your memories. So you always have them.
(12:16):
Go to legacybox dot com slash Jesse get your stuff
preserved forever legacybox dot com slash Jesse. We'll be back.
It's the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly
Show on a fantastic Tuesday. Ever. If you missed any
(12:40):
part of the show, including the beginning of all that history,
you can download it iHeart, Spotify iTunes. You can email
us Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Joe Biden releases
statement to let everyone know he got the ball rolling
on the Gaza Peace steal Please, well, are the biggest
(13:01):
bunch of dirt balls in the world there is? You know,
I would never want to be a democrat, But in
a way, wouldn't the complete lack of shame be kind
of fun if you just have no shame whatsoever, no
shame at all, it would be enjoyable in a way.
(13:22):
What Chris, I don't really have shame. That's a good point.
And it's a good time. It's I have a joy
I have. I have a lot of fun with it.
It can get heavy, it's heavy as ten boxes that
you might be moving, But I have a good time.
Jesse yesterday, it sounded like you think striving for peace
is a big waste of time. What are you talking about?
(13:48):
Is that? What I said? Is that? What I said?
What I said was it was wonderful. People being reunited
with their families is wonderful. Even fifteen minutes of peace
is wonderful. Donald Trump deserves all the credit in the world.
But don't kid yourself and think that it's lasting. Oh
(14:10):
you know what. Here's some headlines from today. Gaza ceasefire outlook,
darkens as, Israel DeLay's aid and Hamas Titans grip. Here's
another one. Israel accuses Hamas a violating ceasefire and will
reduce aid to Gaza. Oh you want another. Hamas carries
out public executions just hours after signing a peace treaty
(14:31):
with Israel. I am going to burst your bubble on
something in politics. Do you know why you care about politics,
same reason I care about politics. You love your country,
and you understand the people who hold power at any
level in your country. It's important the things they push for,
it is important. It matters. You love politics because it matters.
(14:54):
This is why I could never do sports radio, even
though I enjoy sports. It's so unimportant. It's not important.
And I couldn't sit and scream and act like it
matters all day long. What you care about matters. It's
important because it matters, because it is important. You and I.
We get emotional about it. We do, and there's a
(15:18):
danger in that, and sometimes, unless we're careful, we will
get too high or we will get too low. It's
human nature, and you have to avoid that. You have
to work to avoid that, because it doesn't serve you
well to ever get too high or too low. On politics,
(15:42):
On the election, it's the most recent wonderful thing that happened.
Donald Trump stomps Dome, wins the election, crushes her, and
we're looking at the election results. He wins the popular vote.
For Pete's sake, we don't ever do that anymore. Donald
Trump takes it back. We look at the election, it
(16:03):
is tempting to stand up and be like, oh my gosh,
the Communists are finally defeated once and for all. They've
been rejected forever. We will now hold power for one
hundred straight years. They'll never come back. We have one.
They are gone forever. Yeah, that's a mistake. You're only
setting yourself up for disappointment. It was a huge, important win.
(16:28):
Don't get too high, and they're exactly the opposite. Don't
get too low. In the four years Joe Biden was president,
felt like the world was coming to an end, felt
like it was going to happen any day, any day
in the country will just implode. We won't make it
another year. Don't get too low. When big things happen,
(16:50):
like a peace agreement, it's good and we should celebrate.
And Donald Trump and Marco Rubio and really all of
them deserve so much credit for get getting it done
and getting all those people reunited with their families. That
is wonderful. Don't sit and lie to yourself that the
(17:11):
Gaza is going to be beachfront property where you're going
to be taking a vacation soon. Come on. This area
will always be at war always. You cannot have something
that is central to the three biggest religions on the
planet and think they're all just going to share it.
(17:34):
It doesn't work that way. There are always going to
be problems here until the day you die. If you're
five years old or one hundred and five years old,
there are always going to be problems. This is a wonderful,
wonderful temporary pause. And that's all it is, a wonderful
(17:56):
temporary pause before all fire up again. Somehow, some way
is some idiot is going to do something violent and stupid,
and it's all going to kick off again. Enjoy the day,
don't get too high, don't get too low. All right,
All right, let's talk about something we've talked about before. Briefly,
(18:20):
you're gonna hear a lot of Democrats do what we're
about to play next, Truth Attitude, Jesse Kelly. It is
the Jesse Kelly Show on a Wonderful Tuesday. Let's get
right back to it here. So piggybacking off is something
I had talked to you about before. You know what,
(18:42):
do we always say? Communists lie about everything at all times.
Every single word they use is design designed to deceive.
You can't sell hey, I want to destroy everything you
care about. That doesn't work, so you have to come
up with different words. And I told you before or
that when they use words like deconstruct, decolonize, those are
(19:06):
just euphemisms for destroy. Whenever you hear them talk about
decolonizing something or deconstructing something, they're trying to destroy it.
There is a third word I should have brought up.
You're going to listen to this idiot actor Mark Ruffalo,
He's going to use it.
Speaker 2 (19:24):
What do we do to make life better for everybody?
Speaker 1 (19:26):
We certainly have enough. I mean, we just created the
most number of billionaires in the history of the world.
You know, we had enough.
Speaker 3 (19:33):
We could do this, but it's going to take some
reimagining of what America is.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
Reimagine. Whenever you hear a communist use the word reimagine,
that also means destroy. They know, destroys not a great
seller in politics. It's hard to win the people over
with destroy. That's what reimagine means. That's what deconstruct means.
(20:04):
That's what decolonized means. Whatever they're trying to reimagine, they
are trying to destroy. All Communists lie about everything at
all times. They are extremely purposeful with their language. It
is carefully selected. Speaking of which, remember this little bit
(20:25):
I played for you about Abigail Spanberger, and she's asked
about men and women's bathrooms, men and women's sports, this
unbelievable non answer she gives. But part of the non
answer she gives is she keeps referencing parents and local
control and parents. And look here she.
Speaker 2 (20:45):
Was focusing on a K through twelve school system. Should
transgender girls who are biological males be allowed to use girls'
bathrooms and play on girls sports teams? You have sixty seconds.
Speaker 4 (20:58):
On issues related to what's happening in our schools in
each individual community. I think it's important that we have
parents and teachers and administrators making decisions about their individual schools,
not politicians.
Speaker 2 (21:14):
Once again, the question was, should transgender girls who are
biological males be allowed to use girls' bathrooms and play
on girl sports teams? In K through twelve? You have
fifteen seconds to clarify.
Speaker 4 (21:28):
In cases across Virginia. I think it's incumbent upon parents
and educators and administrators in each local community to make decisions.
Speaker 1 (21:41):
Did that sound familiar that answer? If you have a
mind like a steel trap, maybe it did sound familiar.
I think this was what was this a couple months ago?
Chris two? Three months ago, the rear Admiral Pete Podhajej,
who also wants to be president, He was asked a
(22:03):
very similar question, and wow, this answer he gives sounds
familiar to when President Trump says something like no, boys
and girls sports, which is a phrase that they use.
It sounds like you're not signing on to that.
Speaker 3 (22:15):
I think that chess is different from weightlifting, and weightlifting
is different from volleyball, and middle school is different from
the Olympics. So that's exactly why I think that we
shouldn't be grand standing on this as politicians. We should
be empowering communities and organizations and schools to make the
right decisions.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
Hey, it's up to the school. It's up to each school,
it's up to the parents. Mark my words, write it down,
take a picture. This is going to be the answer
Democrats give across the country for the next three years
(22:56):
until twenty twenty eight. When they are confronted by this question.
They will be repeatedly confronted by this question because it's
an eighty twenty issue they are on the wrong side of,
and no matter where they are asked this question, unless
it is the bluest area in the world and they
don't need any Republican votes, whenever they are asked this question,
(23:19):
they will give some version of kicking the can down
the road and saying, hey, not my problem, it's up
to the school itself. It's up to the community. It's
up to the parents. I think it's up to the community.
It's the only answer you can give when you're on
the wrong side of an eighty twenty issue. Hey man,
(23:41):
not even my authority, ask someone else. Of course, they're
communists and they're lying, and they one hundred percent believe
dudes should be in the locker room waving his penis
around in front of your doctor. But that's a hard
selling politics too, So they lie about everything at all times,
lying about everything at all times. Speaking of which, here's
(24:04):
that filthy commedy Jaya Pow talking about the government shut.
Speaker 5 (24:08):
Downfew control the House, the Senate, and the White House.
It is your responsibility to find the votes to pass
a bill that keeps government open.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
Now, you can scream and yell that there aren't enough
Republican votes in the Senate. We don't have sixty Republican
votes in the Senate, so Democrats have to vote for
a continuing resolution or the government stays shut down. Jaya
Poal knows that as well, but she also knows the
(24:39):
truth is dangerous for the world of make believes she
creates for her communist followers, so she has to give
answers like this. Communists lie about everything all the time.
Speaker 5 (24:52):
If you control the House, the Senate, and the White House,
it is your responsibility to find the votes to pass
a b that keeps government open.
Speaker 1 (25:03):
Tiny hands. Just when I think your takes can't get
any worse, after the botched results of your worst Country
in the World contest, you dare come on the radio
and tell me to put green onions in blue cheese
to dip my wonderful chips in. I'm telling you I
already got enough pushback from Chris and Corey yesterday. I'm
(25:23):
telling you a potato chip, not a corn chip, mind you,
corn chip's a different animal. Those really need a cheese
of some kind. You need a caso dip of some kind,
a potato chip. Don't sleep on a good blue cheese.
It can be straight up blue cheese dressing or a
blue cheese dip. What Chris, Chris said, What if I
(25:46):
don't like mold? All cheese is mold, Chris, Stop lying
to yourself now. It's not a lot. It's all mold.
It's all just milk that went bad at different stages.
Stop majoring on the minor, Chris, attempt to embrace it.
You know I've already got you talked into mayo on
your cheese steak. By now you've already come around and
(26:07):
realized the greatness of adding a little tang to the
old cheese steak. What it's not simplicity to the order.
Why don't you just admit that you like it? Chris?
What is it? You know what? I think this is
a you people problem, because you know what, I had
to go through this with my old campaign manager who
was Jewish too, and if this was not about cheese steaks,
(26:28):
it was about breakfast sandwiches, and we were talking about,
you know, bacon, egg and cheese breakfast sandwiches, bacon, egg
and cheese bagels, or I was just talking about straight
up egg sandwiches because he couldn't have the bacon. You
don't understand. And I would always put mayo or miracle
whip on him. He was mortified, Why would you do that?
Why would you do that? Over and over and over again?
Stop putting that on there? And I would explain it
(26:50):
has a little tang, little tang, little zip miracle whip,
just like the commercial says, little tang, little zip miracle whip. Finally,
one day he tries it should have seen the shame
when he realized that I had been right all these years.
Why are you people being like this? Chris, wake wake
(27:14):
up and smell the mayo. Chris, wake up and smell
the mayo. It's time and Corey, don't shake your head.
You order patty melts without onions. There's no point in
getting a patty melt if there aren't onions on it.
I've never even heard of that before. And oh then
you get a side of onion rings. A patty meult
with no onions and a side of onion rings. Nobody
does that. You don't even get a say in this
(27:35):
whole thing. This is why you need zip Recruiter so
you don't get stuck like I am stuck. You don't
need people in your office who deny Mayo, who take
the onions off of a patty melt and make your
business worse. You don't need to live like that. You
can replace that dirt ball you work with. Zip Recruiter
(27:56):
will help you, and they make it fast. High is
a nightmare. Don't go through the nightmare. Just go out
to ZipRecruiter, ZipRecruiter dot com, slash jesse let you try
it for free. They will plant the most qualified candidates
in front of you immediately. Eighty percent find somebody good
(28:19):
the first day. You don't have to stress. I need
somebody soon. That's what ZipRecruiter is here for. You don't
have time to wait months. You need somebody now. ZipRecruiter
dot com slash Jesse. We'll be back. Jesse Kelly returns next.
(28:39):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Final segment of The
Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful Tuesday, but we shall
return tomorrow. You can email us Jesse at Jesse kellyshow
dot com. You remember that idiot Cincinnati police chief when
that old white couple got the crap beat out of
them by these savages in Cincinnati, and she went on
(28:59):
the news and lecture to all of us for sharing it.
Speaker 6 (29:02):
Social media and journalism and the role it plays in
this incident.
Speaker 1 (29:07):
And yes, guys, that's you. That is you social media.
The post that we've.
Speaker 6 (29:15):
Seen does not depict the entire incident. That is one
version of what occurred.
Speaker 1 (29:25):
Definitely sounds like she's the type he's going to clean
up crime right. Definitely sounds like she's going to find
the bad guys and lock them up of course the
people who did the assaulting were multi time felons. I mean,
then look, you know the whole story. Well she's back
in the news. See a couple people got shot. And
let me tell you what this woman sounds like. She's
all about law and order.
Speaker 6 (29:46):
So my message to everybody, learn how to behave in
our city, but especially learn how to behave in our
downtown and our Fountain Square. And our officers will approach
you if you start to behave disorderly Unfountain Square, because
these things can sometimes start as a minor altercation and
(30:07):
then evolve into something bigger. So do not come down town,
especially on Fountain Square if you don't know.
Speaker 4 (30:15):
How to behave.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
Learn how to behave, guys. This is the state of
big city police departments, so drowning in cultural Marxist filth,
they find the biggest dufest woman they can find and
make her the police chief. And now when people get
gunned down in the streets of Cincinnati, the best you
(30:38):
can get is everyone behave or I'm keeping you after class.
So freaking pathetic, almost pathetic. Is Chris still pitching for
Mayo or against Mayo? During the commercial break? Do you
know what he said to me. He said to me,
Mayo isn't for the flavor, it's for the texture. Is
(31:01):
there something you'd like to share with all of us?
Chris Rady here, I don't eat mayo? Is it the No? No,
I'm just curious. Is it the creamy texture you're looking for?
That's weird. That's that's weird. I didn't. I didn't take
you for a Lindsey Graham fan. I'm just look, I'm
just saying, all the years I have enjoyed mayo, never
(31:25):
once did I bite into a delicious sandwich with Mayo
on it and think, mm, that's the texture in my
mouth I was looking for. Never even occurred to me
one time. But it's weird that's what occurred to you. Huh.
Excuse some emails, Hey, Bronco Oracle with the Dems freaking
out about Trump twenty twenty eight, what are your thoughts
(31:45):
on JD Vance in a Rubio ticket. Rubio is a
star in Florida and a reformed Neo KHN. His name
is TJ.
Speaker 3 (31:55):
So.
Speaker 1 (31:58):
I have this thing about politics and politicians. In fact,
I have a rule. Yeah, I call it the Chris
Christie rule. If you've listened for a long time, you
will know what I'm talking about. Here's the Chris Christie rule.
There was a time. I know, if you haven't followed
politics for a while, you'll think I'm lying. But there
was a time where Chris Christie was the newly elected
(32:21):
Republican governor of New Jersey, and he was this tough
talking guy, and he was the hottest thing in Republican politics.
People across the country were in love with him, and
he was being heavily, heavily drafted to run for president.
(32:42):
Chris Christie was a bright, shining star at one point
in time. Maybe you're rolling your eyes or scoffing at that.
Oh good, I'm glad you are, because that brings me
to the Chris Christie effect. One bad photo op, one
or two bad decisions, and you can go from being
(33:05):
the bell of the ball to being a punchline. Chris
Christy now is a punchline. He's a joke. He's widely
mocked in Republican circles. When I say to people that
he was the hottest thing in Republican politics, they laugh
(33:27):
and think I'm joking if they don't remember, but he was.
The truth is I am extremely impressed with jd Vance
that I'm not as surprised about because I liked jd anyway.
I am really impressed with Marco Rubio as well, that
I I am surprised about because I always thought he
(33:48):
was kind of milk toast and lame and doesn't seem
that way anymore. I am so impressed with both of them.
And you ask me right now on October October fourteenth,
twenty twenty if I like the thought of a potential
jd Rance Marco Rubio ticket. The answer is I do,
(34:08):
But twenty twenty eight is a long ways away. No,
I don't foresee either one of those guys with some
kind of gigantic screw up. But I'm not a prophet.
I don't know what could happen. I don't I don't
know as of right now. I could see it, I
(34:30):
would certainly vote for it. I just try to not
get too far ahead of my skis whenever there's an
we're so hungry for decent Republican politicians because we've had
so many crappy ones for so long that we can
tend to be a bit of a cheap date. We
just meaning, hey, just buy me a flower. You know,
(34:50):
buy me a flower and I'll fall in love. Just
give me one good thing, talk tough to the media
one time, and you'll be my new king that has
bitten us many times before. Fall in like don't fall
in love with politicians. You should fall in love with
relief Factor, though, because you don't have to live with pain.
(35:11):
Living with pain it hurts you at home, It hurts
you at work, It hurts your entire life when you
always have to think about, oh, is it going to
hurt to grab this, to pick this up? Is it
going to hurt to bend over? Is it going to
hurt to lay down? Is it going to hurt to
get up? That's no way to live. I don't want
you to live like that anymore. Whether you're sitting at
(35:33):
a desk all day working construction, hiking, golfing, playing pickleball,
do it pain free and do it drug free. That's
what Relief Factor is, a path to being pain free
without drugs, one hundred percent drug free. Every day you
take it, it builds in your system. The longer you
(35:55):
take it, the better it works. They're so confident in it,
they just sell you three weeks three weeks of it
for nineteen ninety five. Call order three weeks of it.
You'll call on order more. Almost everyone does one eight hundred,
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All right, all.
Speaker 6 (36:15):
Right, and now he's a headline.
Speaker 1 (36:17):
Go you know, you know the thing headlines. We didn't
get to ice NAB's alleged illegal alien truck driver with
quote no name given license. Somebody actually gave him a license.
This is New York, by the way, with no name given.
(36:39):
These steps Blue States have taken to hand your entire
country over to illegals is enough to make your head
pop off. I fought for this country and it means nothing.
Haunting last words, a veteran who killed himself after being
refused to house by the council who said he wasn't
a priority. He's an Afghanistan veteran. This took place in
(37:01):
the UK as they hand their whole country over to
Sharia Llah, just spitting in the face of their troops.
What a disgrace that country has become. Air traffic control
shortages during the government shutdown, what to know? What to
know is you should probably drive. I'll come see you
again tomorrow. That's all