Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Let's bring up Christ to Golf. It is Chris to
God Risk Gall.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
I'm joined now by Christigall, most of.
Speaker 3 (00:05):
The Christ of Goall Show, so let's brand talk radio
host Chris Togall. Also his podcast is a musk listen
every day Christa Gall Show podcast.
Speaker 4 (00:12):
And host of the Christgall Show.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
Let's Bring in Christa Gall.
Speaker 5 (00:15):
Pay You welcome Chris Speak Gall to.
Speaker 6 (00:18):
Chris to Gall podcast is presented by US Medical Plan
dot com. Save big money monthly and get better health
covers at US Medicalplan dot com.
Speaker 5 (00:29):
Hey, they're merry Christmas, and I guess I will say
a happy New Year. Welcome into the Christagall Show podcast.
I want to say thank you for another tremendous year
of support. Your downloads and your regularly scheduled attention to
this show means more than I can say. Our entire
family that puts the show together every day, they work
so hard to give you content, hopefully quality content you enjoy.
(00:50):
We didn't want to leave you without quality content during
the holidays. While we're taking some time away, we've put
together from some various shows, some special long form interviews.
There will be some repeat content of some shows and
segments that we really enjoyed. Maybe they're new to you
if you missed them before. But over the next few days,
while we're away taking some time with family, I hope
you're able to as well. But we never want to
(01:10):
leave you without something to enjoy and listen to. And
today's show and future shows hopefully will be.
Speaker 1 (01:17):
No exception.
Speaker 5 (01:18):
We're going to be back with brand new programming on
January fifth. But one thing that I want you to know,
if you're an Obamacare person, and you are now, it
appears officially under the gun because Congress is not going
to be able to figure out how to keep your
rates from jumping. I don't want you going without health
insurance in the new year. I don't want you thinking
(01:38):
you have to just sit around being victimized by a
jump and Obamacare rates. John Ruhlman, who is my friend
and sponsor, is as much a help right now in
this era of Obamacare debate as anybody I know. It's
an honor to call him friend and yes, sponsor, but
most of all he can help. Genuinely, he is a help.
He and his company US medical plan dot Com right now.
(02:01):
You can reach out to them today and find out
he works with one hundred different health insurance companies find
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if you're doing the best that you can do, but
odds are they're going to find you a better rate.
I've told you my parents have saved four hundred dollars
a piece on their supplemental Medicare insurance. I told you
(02:23):
I have a dear friend who saved six hundred dollars
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a Cobra plan and that was going to cost her
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(02:43):
whole family. I have a friend John saved one thousand
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you're not going to know unless you give them a
second eight seven seven four one zero forty three twenty
one eight seven seven four one zero forty three twenty
one or US medicalplan dot Com. Hey, good morning, Welcome
into the Tuesday edition of This Stagall Show and Merry
(03:05):
Christmas to you. Thrilled to have you here. Our telephone
number is eight five five Stagall. If you want to
get in here today, you can always reach out Christigall
dot com for everything you need. We're on X We're
on Facebook. You know, I was just told by people
that count this stuff. I don't. I don't have time,
but I'm told by people inside the company that look
(03:26):
at this stuff. Our Facebook in particular. I'm not entirely
sure what it is or why, but I thank you
for it. Facebook has been blowing up lately. You guys
have been chatty over there on Facebook. I'm grateful. However
you come, if you're on Instagram, if you're on Facebook,
if you're on X, even TikTok. I've kind of limped
in and tried that scene, even though I feel weird
(03:48):
about handing over all of my intel to China. Yes,
I'm even trying that. So if you want to get
in touch with me on social media, I hope that
you will, and I really appreciate the conversation. If you
ever have the time, head over to Christigall dot common.
It's all there, as well as my three times a
week newsletter The Harump Society, where yesterday I continued to
talk about something that I brought up I think on
(04:09):
this show last week. I forget sometimes whether I brought
it up exclusively to Hrumfers, or whether I brought it
up here or both. Revelation addiction. And it is something
that is if you're on social media, and again I
stipulate if you're not, or you don't spend a ton
of time on social media, even Harrumfers, who I surveyed
(04:29):
and I asked, are you following all of this personality
driven back and forth between podcasters and digital streamers whose
names you know, some people love it when you name
names because they like the food fight. They're addicted to
the food fight. They want the food fight. Revelation addiction.
There is a cottage industry growing by leaps and bounds.
(04:55):
It just is creating their own little podcast Netflix series.
Tune in to the next episode and find out whether
she is accusing her or him of this or that.
Find out tomorrow if he is sitting with him for
this interview, and then they can join force. And you
(05:17):
know what it is, it's WWE. I mean fasted, I
said last week. This world that's being created out there
in the podcast space, and it's smart. I'm actually not
maligning it. It's very very smart. They're creating fan fiction drama.
This is exactly what the WWE storyline is. It's just
now in podcast and digital streaming form. Oh absolutely, yes,
(05:42):
you can see it see it from downtown too, especially
in the headlines. But some people take it very seriously. Yes,
they live it, and they're getting emotional about it, and
it leads to people like Tim Poole's home being shot
at ed And this is where it's starting to get
very very troubling and why I've talked about this being
an addiction that becomes a problem like most addictions do.
(06:04):
Tim Poole is a big, big fish in the digital
download space, in the streaming space, in the podcast space.
He's been on this show a couple of times. I
think I don't know him. He's come out swinging at
people like Candice Owens. And as such, last weekend or
(06:25):
late last week, in the dark of night, somebody comes
along and takes physical gunshots to his house. Give me
number thirty two.
Speaker 1 (06:37):
So where does that leave us?
Speaker 4 (06:40):
We have two weeks left in the year before we
go on our Christmas hiatus. You know, I'm not a
big fan of any kind of hiatus. I would prefer
just to work. But it is taxing. It is grueling,
of course, and there's a lot of infrastructure here that
requires me to work all day every day, Monday to Friday,
(07:02):
with some extra work on the weekends, usually meetings. And
I'm probably gonna have a stroke.
Speaker 5 (07:12):
My uh, my.
Speaker 4 (07:14):
House is actually pretty good. My blood pressure is great,
my heart right resting heart rate is actually around you know,
forty five. I exercise quite a bit. Haven't been able
to skate in the past month or two the holidays,
and uh, you know, but we have to have these conversations.
And I have been with the people, our contractors, people
we work with.
Speaker 5 (07:35):
Yeah, and so he went on to talk about why
he may just hang it up, I mean, because his
family's being shot at. Told you yesterday, there's a new
survey out there that says words, young people think words
are violence. And as such, if you think that, what
must you do? We're gonna have to take matters into
your own hands, right, stop the violence with violence. Tim
(07:59):
Poole speaks for a living that's all just like me,
but there are people that are now becoming so slavishly
loyal to this Netflix drama, this fakery, this wrestling match
that's playing out, this fictitious world that people like Candice
Owens are building. So I want to just put the
truth up front. There is a very new spiritual and
(08:20):
psychological sickness gripping particularly American young men, and I've named
it revelation addiction, and it's pulling them toward very destructive moments,
fueled by the very same poisonous route, and that's envy.
And if you were reading my Harrump Society letter last week,
(08:42):
you know my Thanksgiving column I wrote about my nineteen
year old son, a thoughtful, skeptical, genuinely critical thinker, who
looked up at me during breakfast to make conversation and said,
very seriously, so Dad, what do you think about the Jews?
(09:05):
And not in hostility, not in confusion. But it's because
every young man with a phone is being hit from
all sides by conspiracy grifters and antisemitic tropes and bitterness
and influencers whatever that word means, who profit by keeping
them angry all the time, so angry that apparently they'll
pick up a gun and shoot it at a guy's
(09:26):
house if he speaks out against it. I'm mindful of
that revelation addiction. I've been watching this for years. It's
the compulsive hunt for the next secret truth, the next
expose a, the next villain supposedly responsible for your problems.
(09:47):
It isn't stupidity, folks, It's spiritually weaponized anger. It keeps
young men scrolling for vindication, not wisdom. It rewards intensity
over accuracy, it rewards outrage over understanding. And if it's
(10:07):
left untreated, revelation addiction becomes the gateway drug to the
two movements now competing for the souls of particularly young
men in this country, socialism on the left, the Zoramandami types,
and then the grievance grifters who claim to be on
the right, though I don't really know that they are
(10:27):
necessarily and you know their names. I'm not going to
do it, but they become a booming cottage industry of
rage peddlers without solutions. And by the way, there's some
new evidence to suggest at least one of them is
in fact being artificially propped up and shopped by foreign
entities entirely online. But these two forces pretend to hate
each other, you know, but they're preaching the same sermon.
(10:49):
Some of these people that are supposedly on the right
and the Zoramandami types, they're really not at odds. They
sell the same thing. You've been wronged, someone stole what
should have been yours, and you should be pissed about it,
and we should all pick take up arms, maybe literally.
And that's called envy. The Bible calls it covetousness. Psychology
calls it resentment, politics calls it a movement. Whatever you
(11:13):
want to label it. It is destructive. It does nothing
but destroy. The left weaponizes envy by moralizing mediocrity. Success,
of course, is exploitation. Achievement is oppression, Inequality is injustice.
They don't just pit the poor against the rich. They
(11:35):
drag everyone toward the same resentful middle, the grievance grifters.
They weaponize envy inward against our own allies, against Jewish people,
against conservatives, against anyone who's had success, or anyone that's
had a modicum of respect. It's divisive. It doesn't build up,
(11:58):
it doesn't offer solutions. I've told you that whereas free
markets do the opposite. They take the natural desire to
improve your life and redeem it, work, build, create. None
of that is going on with the grievance grifters. Socialism,
(12:19):
of course, collapses because it feeds envy. The grifters corrode
the right for the very same reason. Free enterprise survives
because it redirects human longing toward ownership and responsibility and growth.
And that's why this is the third, fourth, fifth time
(12:41):
I'm addressing this because for the first time, socialism and
fringe influencers supposedly on our side are feeding off the
same spiritual poison in an attempt to fracture these young
men who have recently voted Trump. By the way revelation addiction,
(13:03):
it primes this group for socialism because both offer the
same counterfeit comfort. You're a victim, someone else's to blame,
and your salvation comes from exposing or punishing the villain.
One offers the thrill of hidden knowledge. The other, of course,
offers the thrill of state revenge getting even Neither requires
(13:26):
any responsibility, neither produces anything, and of course both hollow
out a generation starving for purpose. I have more on
this in a minute. Hang on, just to close the
loop on my thoughts here. Tim Poole, a podcaster who's
(13:47):
pretty well liked and well known and built a hell
of a following. His home was shot at over the weekend.
And the only thing that Tim Poole's done differently is
dare speak out about Candice Owens. And it struck me
again how dangerous it is that there are people listening
(14:08):
to that woman that are now driven to pick up
a gun and shoot at Tim Poole's house because he
says he thinks she's full of excrement. So this is
no longer about the left anymore. This is about some
who claim to be on what I thought was the right.
I don't know what you call Candae anymore. I don't
know if you can call her a conservative. I think
she feeds revelation addiction. It primes young men, and she's
(14:35):
not alone, by the way, it is an industry now.
It primes young men for socialism, just the same as
leftists who outright own it and say that's what they
believe in command and control economies, because both offer that
very same lie. You're a victim and someone else's to blame.
And the only thing we can do about it is
(14:56):
punish the villain who made you the victim. Again. It
doesn't build anyone up, It doesn't create anything. It just
offers the thrill or the hit of being in on
the inside and here's the real truth, and here's what
they're not telling you. It also offers the thrill of
getting revenge on people, but it doesn't require any kind
(15:16):
of responsibility whatsoever and produces absolutely nothing. And I understand
it's appeal particularly to young men, because you've got a
generation starving for purpose. They've been hollowed out in many ways.
And I get it. Look at what these young men
in particular are caring around with them inflation, student debt,
(15:37):
no path to homeownership. They've been humiliated culturally, they were
lied to and their childhoods robbed during COVID institutions to
numerous account have failed them and betrayed them. And they're
yearning for a desperate, desperate sense of meaning and purpose,
(16:00):
which many of them are getting to church and amen
for that. But this anger, if it doesn't have an outlet,
this revelation addiction, as I call it, it supplies an
outlet the next conspiracy, or the next villain, or the
next target, like Tim Poole and the grifters line up
to feed the algorithm. So I return to the theme
(16:21):
of envy, not as an economic point but as a
spiritual diagnosis. Here, socialism weaponizes envy, and the grifters monetize envy.
Free markets redirect envy into creating something, building something, making something.
The Stigall Plan, if I may rather brilliant look it up.
(16:45):
I've written about it not because it's policy, though it is,
but because it's the opposite spirit of socialism and the
grifter economy. It says to young Americans, you don't need
to burn anything down, you don't need to resent successful people.
You don't need conspiracies to feel alive. You can build,
(17:08):
you can own, you can prosper. It turns envy into
partnership and resentment into opportunity and ownership. It offers something addiction, revelation.
Addiction never will a real future or a minute excellence
(17:31):
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Speaker 3 (17:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (17:44):
One of the things that I told them from early
on when they started with me was the value of
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of our doctors. The other thing is we now have
(18:05):
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discussion about opening again on some Saturdays for services.
Speaker 5 (18:13):
Yeah, but not you. You're fishing. You're not kidding anybody.
It's not you going to be working on Saturday.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
Come on, I'm in my thirty third year and it
should be the young gun.
Speaker 5 (18:20):
That's right.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
You've earned it. You've earned it.
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I feel like I have thank you.
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(18:44):
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you know, I told you the reason he's doing it,
because I told you I lost forty pounds in under
four months earlier this year. Eddie said, I want to
try it. I said, it's almost the holidays. He said,
(19:05):
I don't care. I want to try it. And he's
lost eight pounds in two weeks time. He works with
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(19:28):
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Come on, get healthy, lose weight even during the holidays
with PhD weight loss. It's the perfect dot king stuffer.
Stuff it right and you're stocking if it fits. It's
Colonel Kurt Schlickter and his brand new book. He's back
with Panama Red. It's the latest installment of his Kelly
Turnbull series and he's with me. Merry Christmas, Colonel Hoy,
(21:15):
congratulations on yet another huge success. It drops today.
Speaker 3 (21:20):
Well thank you. It's selling like Yeo. At Hunter Biden's
birthday party.
Speaker 5 (21:27):
I really I have to say.
Speaker 3 (21:29):
Yeah you could. I could have gone with Bolivian marcher powder.
I went Yeo's that's me. See, you can speak everybody
else goes here, but I go all the way over there.
Speaker 5 (21:43):
You speak the lingo of the of the those Venezuelan
drug boat guys. Good job, yeah, which I do want
to get into that in a minute. But first of all,
nine of these. Now, you write books like most other
guys do laundry like you really you can crank out
a good book quick.
Speaker 1 (22:02):
Then don't do laundry. Are you a char woman?
Speaker 3 (22:08):
A scullery made laundry?
Speaker 5 (22:14):
Well, I just I guess I was hoping, So maybe
all right, shower or shade brush.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
Teeth to go with it.
Speaker 5 (22:20):
My point is, you do it fast. You write a
book fast. You write the damn books fast. You've written
nine of the damn books cor that's my point.
Speaker 1 (22:28):
I go faster in a Bullwark wedding night? Why should
people go right in?
Speaker 3 (22:36):
But I actually, at the end, you're actually satisfied with
my climax.
Speaker 1 (22:44):
So here's the thing.
Speaker 5 (22:45):
If people have, if books we have, we have the
worst delay. This is like you're on the moon and
I'm on Neptune and we're trying to communicate like it's
nineteen sixty. I'm not entirely sure why you can't hear me.
I can't hear you, this will be a long conversation.
Speaker 1 (22:59):
You're going uranus.
Speaker 5 (23:01):
Yeah, So tell the people why they should order your
ninth installment, Colonel.
Speaker 3 (23:09):
Because it's about as much fun as our discussion here.
I mean, for the listener. What Andrew Breitbart was the
guy who dragged me into this thing, right. I thought
I was out, but he kept pulling me back in,
and he said, we've got to make.
Speaker 1 (23:26):
Our own culture. So let's make our own culture, right.
I decided, you know, I was.
Speaker 3 (23:30):
Reading books by short never Trump writers, and I was like,
these spine novels are boring. It's the same thing all
the time, and I find them tiresome and I would
throw them across my house.
Speaker 1 (23:43):
And then I said, well, why don't.
Speaker 3 (23:44):
I write one that I'd like to read? And I
ended up writing People's Republic, which is right behind me.
That's the first of the nine, introducing Kelly Turnbull. And
he likes to shoot people, and he likes to encounter
situations that are either intriguing, interesting, or hilarious, and so
there's a lot of laughs. There's occasional cameos from my pals.
(24:06):
I think you've shown up in a couple. Yes, I
don't think you show up in Panama read, but Larry
O'Connor does in a very uh, very interesting way. Dennis Miller.
Remember the time we had our little chat with Dennis Miller.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
I do that was? Yeah, he called you hefty. He's
like a on that interview.
Speaker 5 (24:31):
By the way, I you know, I've lost a substantial
around of wait since we had that conversation. I'd like
to have a look at it now. Thank you, thank you.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
You look like a here now, you look like you
have a day on a billboard.
Speaker 5 (24:42):
Dennis Miller is one of my favorite big money if
a truck's me, Dennis Miller is one of my favorite
people ever. And we I don't even know it was
during COVID. I'm not sure, but it's it's so it's
Larry O'Connor and it's Colonel Kurt Schlichter and me, and
we're all on a zoom and Dennis Miller joins us.
I'm not entirely sure how that came to pass, but
the four of us are on a zoom, and he's
(25:03):
he loves Kurt. He's seen Kurt's work, he's read Kurt's work.
He's he's all enthralled with Kurt. He's clearly there for Kurt,
maybe Larry, and then me, who's probably the biggest fan
of his since I've been a child. I've just nothing
excites me more than to talk to him. And he
finally acknowledges me by saying, Wow, aren't you fat? That
(25:25):
was the sum total of that conversation. I'm not entirely
sure why, but I was there and along for the ride.
It was fantastic.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
I don't think it.
Speaker 3 (25:32):
Was quite that harsh, but it was. He does He
does appear in this book as the host of the
Dennis Miller Mysteries.
Speaker 1 (25:43):
Oh that's good.
Speaker 5 (25:43):
What is he doing? This about Dennis Miller? But I
was literally thinking, what is he doing? Have you spoken
with him lately?
Speaker 1 (25:49):
Where is he? Like everyone in always send me? I'm
going to send an email. I've got to tell him
about his little hit.
Speaker 3 (25:55):
At one point, he's the Dennis Miller hit Mysteries and
Kelly turnmle the heroes watch and Danis Miller says to
his chief played by Bernie Casey, the third of course, Hey,
you've given me a case where my roster of subjects
is shorter than the track list on Greatest Hits of Starland.
Speaker 5 (26:15):
Vocal Banda's Dana Carvey doing Dennis Miller is one of
my favorite impressions ever.
Speaker 1 (26:23):
Colonel Kritch Schlichter is with us.
Speaker 5 (26:25):
He has written a brand new book called Panama Red.
It is out today. It just dropped. It's the ninth
installment and is Kelly Turnbull series. All right, colonel the
double tap on the drug boat?
Speaker 1 (26:37):
You stand where I'm for it. I'm gonna, you know,
call me crazy.
Speaker 3 (26:43):
I'm going to take sides against the people bringing poison
into our country.
Speaker 1 (26:47):
And I was having a thought, Yeah, you knew.
Speaker 3 (26:49):
I was a lawyer for thirty years and I was
a colonel for what twenty seven?
Speaker 1 (26:55):
So I don't know.
Speaker 3 (26:55):
I have a glancing familiarity with his stuff. And I
I came up with a thought exercise for all the
people going, you're not allowed to blow up people bringing
poison into your country?
Speaker 1 (27:06):
And I thought, well, that's an interesting thought.
Speaker 3 (27:09):
Where would you stand on blowing up a boat full
of mustard gas it's also known as HD. I was
a chemical warfare office. Or I'll give you a spoiler.
Mustard gas very bad. Okay, you don't want anything to
do with it? All right, it's no thank you, It's
like you or me on a conservative cruise. You don't
(27:30):
want that, So could you blow that boat up? And
I'm hoping our Democrat friends would say, why, no, you
need to convene a court of law to analyze the
modalities of the Geneva Conventions and the loved On conflict,
which I am now an expert on, having been an
(27:50):
expert on COVID during our epidemiology during COVID and terraffs
during economics during the teriff thing.
Speaker 1 (27:58):
I am now an expert on the law of war.
Speaker 3 (28:00):
And would I would declare no, you can't please take
that position. Please, But you know, the difference between mustard
gas and the poisons that the drug tails are bringing
in is that mustard gas is killed exactly zero Americans
in the last year, and fentanyl and cocaine, yes, cocaine
(28:21):
has killed people killed nearly one hundred thousand. So if
we're doing you know, if you want to analyze it,
if you want to rationally discuss the situation, bombs away.
If you're a sissy fenboy, you'd rather Americans die then
drug dealers die.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
Well, I'm sure you're voted for Kamala Harris.
Speaker 5 (28:45):
So just so I'm clear because I don't. I'm with
you one hundred percent. I don't feel even a little
bit sorry for drug runners at C. But Monny, just
just as a literal military matter, those in charge have
already said Pete Heggsith one hundred percent didn't tell us
any such thing. So whatever that means, then it's on
(29:09):
what immediate leadership, whether it's a problem or whether it's not.
They're saying Hexith didn't give any such order. So what's
that mean?
Speaker 3 (29:15):
Well, the commander is responsible for anything he does or doesn't.
It doesn't matter if he has a jag there or not.
He is responsible. He didn't do the commander did not
do anything wrong. The commander wrought again a medal, a
high five. And if he singled to a brand of
stewardess's to hang in a HOWK club them?
Speaker 1 (29:34):
Well, now that's my next question. Here's my next question.
Speaker 5 (29:37):
So he's the commander and he decides to take those
two guys bobbing around that we didn't hit, take them
out as well in your view or literally in terms
of military code of conduct, there's nothing wrong with that
as you read it or understand it.
Speaker 3 (29:52):
Oh, I could care less. I hear people citing the
Geneva Conventions. Geneva Conventions are there are conventions, it's not
Geneva Convention. So my question is, well, which one are
you talking about?
Speaker 1 (30:04):
Which one you think?
Speaker 3 (30:05):
And then I asked, well, why do you think it's applicable?
What's the nation state that these guys belong to as
uniformed combatants as opposed to illegal combatants who get almost
no rights that the reports to bind us. At which
point they're they kind of look around or I shift,
and then they call me a transpote.
Speaker 1 (30:29):
You are allowed to kill the enemy.
Speaker 3 (30:32):
Now, typically if you're bobbing in the water on flotsam
and jets, and typically we don't.
Speaker 1 (30:37):
There are plenty of good reasons to do it.
Speaker 3 (30:40):
But here the problem that they have are the facts,
and the facts are that, well, you know, they blow
up the boat, boat didn't sink boat still there, they
got back on the boat. Okay, it's a there's no
one shot rule. You're allowed to destroy the boat and
you're allowed to kill the enemy who's on it. And
(31:01):
because the guys have been wounded doesn't matter, you fink.
Look when I was at Fort Benning, right at the infantry,
I was trained. When you assault an ambush city, you
know you have a kill zone. You launched the ambush
and a kill zone. A bunch of people go down,
and then you run through and you shoot everybody in
the kill zone. Why do you do that? Because you
don't want them to pop up and shoot you from
(31:22):
behind if they're only wounded.
Speaker 1 (31:24):
War is a mean thing. It involves hurting people. This
is why we shouldn't do it lightly.
Speaker 3 (31:30):
You should have a good reason for going to war,
like yesterday when the anniversary of the Japanese attacking Pearl
Harbor or scumbag cartel guy shipping in poison that kills
nearly one hundred thousand Americans a year. You should have
a good reason to do it. Because it's ugly. I don't.
I'm no desire to hurt anybody. I'm no desire to
kill anybody. I managed to never kill anybody when I
(31:52):
was the army, and I'm pretty happy about that worked
out well for me. But at the end of the day,
you're either going to defend your country or you're going
to do he is sissy femboy watching the pool boy
scam on your wife before you go back to scribbling
for the Dispatch.
Speaker 5 (32:08):
The latest book Panama read Perfect for that Christmas gift,
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Merry Christmas to you, my friend. You'll always be the
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(32:31):
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Chris at my pillow dot com. A little earlier in
the show, I was talking about, and I've been writing
(34:20):
about at the HERUMF Society, revelation addiction and that young
men are desperately looking for a future out there, and
there is a sector of I'll just say what we
do for a living, what we do here, this show
that we put on. There are people out there putting
on shows like this who have no responsibility to anybody.
(34:45):
They don't have. They're not transparent necessarily about who funds
their efforts. But what they peddle is a lot of
divisiveness and a lot of rage, and quite frankly, it's
led to some people's homes now being shot at because
they dare speak out about it. As I have. I'm
mindful as I listened to a guy like Tim Poole
talk about his home being shot at because he dared
(35:07):
say something negative about gad Zowen's. It's like her minions
are now picking up guns and shooting them at houses.
Is that where we want to be as supposed conservatives?
Assuming that's what she still calls herself. I don't know.
Young men in this country face a real future, in
particular young people, but young men in particular. Hopefully many
of them are turning to faith, leaning into the turning point,
(35:29):
Charlie Kirkway. But it's very very clear that there are
two versions of a future emerging, two distinctly different visions.
Envy and grievance and division or creation and responsibility and hope. Envy,
(35:50):
grievance and division or creation, responsibility and hope. Those are
the two visions that have emerged in this current era.
I think President Trump is selling the latter out there
on the camp paint trail. I know what my choice is.
I choose building, and I choose unity, and I choose
prosperity rooted in faith, not in suspicion. Envy destroys nations,
(36:14):
It destroys cultures. Opportunity builds them up and So all
I would say is it's time we help young men
put down the phones and streaming these podcasts of these
grifters trying to divide and tear down or socialists who
(36:36):
are trying to poison them with their ideology or both.
Let's build. Let's build something President Trump. Guys like Scott Bessen,
they're hitting the campaign trail, starting the day in Pennsylvania
to sell a future of optimism and hope and building
an investment solutions, not just rage and anger for the
(36:56):
sake of being angry. So that's a wrap for another
christgallsh podcast. Thanks for committing to it, listening to it
all the way through. You're a fighter. I like that
about you. Hope you'll leave it a five star review
and a written review. Apple Podcasts, Spotify. We'll see you
next time here on The CHRISTA. Gall Show Podcast. The
christ Gall Show Podcast