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Jesse Kelly Show

Recalling First Day of Covid Lockdown Four Years Ago...Listeners tell ridiculous covid stories

Duration:
39m
Broadcast on:
14 Mar 2024
Audio Format:
mp3

With the Lucky Land Sluts, you can get lucky just about anywhere. This is your captain speaking. We've got clear runway and the weather's fine, but we're just going to circle up here a while and get lucky. No, no, nothing like that. It's just these cash prizes out of quick, so I suggest you sit back, keep your tray table upright and start getting lucky. Play for free at Luckyland Sluts.com. Are you feeling lucky? No purchase necessary. Void we're prohibited by law. 18 plus terms and conditions apply. See website for details. This is a podcast from WOR. It is the Jesse Kelly Show, another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on a Wednesday. It is a hump day, and I hope you are having a magnificent week. We are celebrating tonight celebrating a horrible anniversary because it was today. Four years ago today, 15 days to slow the spread was announced. And then America lost its collective minds. We're going to do a lot of that this hour. I'm going to get to your stories about it here in a few about insane things. I'm going to let you have your say here in a minute. I was thinking about it during the break just now when we were talking about COVID and four years ago today. And I remember, don't you remember how quickly everyone lost their mind? That's one of the things that really hit me hard. It was maybe it's because I have pay attention to life, but you know, I was doing the radio show then. You pay attention to the news. You listen and watch things. And one day we woke up and we were, there were some headlines, not a bunch, but there were some headlines that there was this virus in China. And then, and what we now know was very obviously a propaganda campaign. There were videos we started to see of people just falling over dead in the street in China, which that's not how people die from COVID so we know that was a lie. Then we had videos of the Chinese and their full hazmat suits, welding people into their homes and then people started to get apprehensive. And then it got here and I just still can't believe. I'm sorry. All we can do is laugh now. Honestly, I'm not even mad anymore. I'm really not. I can't believe that social distancing became a thing that all these supposedly really smart people, doctors and such were pushing out there. No, no, no, no, just stand six feet away from everybody. It's so dumb. It sounds like a child came up with it. I remember we've since we've since had them admit they've come out and admitted on camera. Oh, we just kind of made it up, but that it always sounded made up, didn't it? When I first said it, I remember thinking to myself, I'm in the grocery store and I'm looking, don't you remember the stupid footprints in the grocery store? Or you stand here, but don't stand any closer to this guy. And then they had the little piece of plastic by the cashier and you remember thinking to yourself, this is a microscopic virus is very clearly airborne. We're standing six feet away from everybody. Remember how that was the justification to close schools? That's not like that was a small thing. Shutting down schools and restaurants and the social distancing was the whole aspect of whatever. I don't need to get off on it. I'm going to let you have your say for it. Remember though, there are rules just because we haven't done this in a few weeks. Doesn't mean the rules have gone away here on the Jesse Kelly show. Unless you want me to just get right back to $22 burritos and the army changing the motto at West Point and another Republican failure in a primary unless you want me to get back to that. Get right to the point. Right to the point. No small talk. No asking me how I am. Just have your say. All right, and make it fast. Being being in agreement with me is not nearly as important as making it fast. All right. All right. That said, Jason Idaho. Go. Hey, so back in COVID, I got. Well, that I was there. Dang it. His phone sucks. He was good. Jason, no big deal. You can call back on a pure talk phone. Just call back on a peer talk phone. That's one to he was going to talk about how he wasn't an essential worker or how they they labeled him not essential. One of the funniest things about this, Chris and me still laugh about this to this day. Don't you remember the concept is essential workers versus not essential workers? And don't you remember how quickly Americans accepted that concept as if that was a thing that we should ever allow the government to determine? No, no, no, no. We've determined that these workers are essential. You though, you're not. I'm sorry? Excuse me. My job. My livelihood is not essential. And speaking of me personally, that's another thing Chris and me were joking about the entire time. Listen. I do a radio show. Me, Chris, Michael, we show up every day here and we do TV and radio. That's what we do. This is not an important job. And if you're going to list the important jobs in a society that makes society go, I'm pretty sure we're close to the bottom. Wherever politicians are, we're right above them. We're very, very close to the bottom. And yet almost immediately they handed us passes. Chris, weren't they like FEMA passes or something like that? They were FEMA. That's right. They were FEMA passes. They handed to me and Chris, Michael wasn't with us then. Chris still has his. They handed us FEMA passes, declaring us to be essential workers so we could drive to and from the studio and play fart sounds every single day. Oh, my gosh. You can't make this up, man. The whole country just lost its collective minds. Michelle, Florida, go. So obviously I think the worst thing about all of it is when someone unfortunately was dying from its probably old age, obesity, any type of illness, the last person they see besides their family is someone standing over them. Gloved up, mask, hazmat suit, the whole nine, like dying and isolation. I think that's disgusting. Obviously, that's not how anyone wants to go out. But I think another thing is, and obviously I was a part of it as being pregnant for the first time during 2020, or in general, not being allowed to bring your significant other with you to any appointment, seeing your child for the first time, hearing their heartbeat for the first time. Well, you know, limiting one person to join you during labor. I think we as time goes on, we forget. We can forget about it a little bit and whatever. But I think I don't think we should. I think we should be angry about those things specifically because that's just pure evil to me, like not being able to get moments back like that is evil. I am in a thousand percent agreement with what Michelle just said. I don't know if you know very much about the Amish. Most people know vague things about the Amish and the Amish are well thought of in this country, which I'm happy about. That's part of my heritage, right on my grandpa's side. My grandpa Hank God rest his soul. His family was Amish. We chose to leave, but we would go visit the Amish and we were kids, so I'm aware of the Amish and have a lot of respect for how they live their lives, but their story versus the story of America during COVID really, really hit home. That's one of the things that you remember I was probably probably remember screaming about back then was the human touch the human the spiritual connection in the Amish community. There were no lockdowns. There was there was none of that insanity, but they got COVID too. Right again. It was an airborne virus that everyone was going to get. And the first batch of it was a nasty little lung thing right it was nasty. But the Amish, instead of doing what the rest of this insane country did, like Michelle was just talking about, nope, you can't visit, you can't visit, the Amish did the exact opposite. No, no, no, no, no. It will be your family, your loved ones surrounding you, their hand in yours, praying for you, talking with you, bringing you food as you lay there. And the death rates in the Amish community were non existent. And look, the death rates for the country as a whole were very small anyway, but in the Amish community, they just beat it. They just got through it. And that was another thing that floored me about America's medical community. Maybe it's always been this way. I don't know. We have a bunch of doctors and nurses who will email me and let me know. But it seemed like it was only about flesh and blood and medicine that there was no other part that loneliness wasn't part of the human condition that loneliness wasn't part of human health. Right? It was treated as if it was some stupid side project instead of being an essential part of who we were. It kills me. Absolutely kills me. You know what? Chris dug up. We little report on that, in case you want to know a little bit more, I'll play it for you when we get back and then we'll get to more of these. It's just crazy to look back four years ago today is when it all began. And when so much changed in the country and stuff that's never changed back, right? America was changed in, I hope not permanent, but in lasting ways back then. It's crazy to think about. Speaking of the human body, human body, as you know, it needs things, right? Vitamins, minerals, probiotics, it needs things. Well, we know that about ourselves. We don't act on that when it comes to our pets lots of the time. We go for a simple solution like dog food. We think if we just buy some dog food or maybe this special blend of dog food or this better dog food that that'll be better for our dog, but all dog food is dead food. There's nothing alive in it. It's all dead. It's just empty calories. They have to kill everything in the factory. So what lasts? You need to pour rough greens on your dog's food. All natural nutritional supplement with everything your dog needs to live longer and healthier and happier. Call them eight, three, three, three, three, my dog for a free jumpstart trial bag or go to roughgreens.com slash Jesse will be back. It is the Jesse Kelly show on a Wednesday reminding you if you missed any part of the show, you can download the whole thing on I or Google Spotify iTunes. All right, before I go back to your ridiculous stories about the craziest, most insane things you saw during COVID because today's our four years. Our four year anniversary of one 15 days. So the spread start. I was talking about the omission, how they handled it and how our medical community in this country acted like a personal component, a spiritual component, a loneliness component. Like that didn't matter for the human body. Everyone just became a body. So stuff them here and know you can't see your wife and know you can't see your husband and know you can't see that and people just died lonely. And, well, there's a little story is a couple minutes long. I was talking about the Amish on the Amish, the Amish and how they had essentially defeated COVID by May of 2020 was gone. It's gone toward through their community was gone. How that happened. Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, thousands of families lead lives largely separate from modern America, the Amish or Christian group that emphasizes the virtuous over the superficial and during the COVID-19 outbreak. They became subjects in a massive social and medical experiment. So it's safe to say there was a whole different approach here in this community when coronavirus broke out in many other places. Absolutely. There's three things the Amish don't like and that's government. They won't get involved in government. They don't like the public education system. They won't send their children to education and they also don't like the health system. Well, those three things are all part of what COVID is. After a short shutdown last year, the Amish chose a unique path that led to COVID-19 tearing through at warp speed. LAP says they weren't denying coronavirus. They were facing it head on. It's the worst thing to quit working than dying, but the shutdown and say that we can't get a church. We can't get together with family. We can't see our old people in the hospital. We got to quit working. You're working. It's going completely against everything that we believe. Steve Nold is a scholar on Amish and Mennonite culture and Mennonite himself. He's studying Amish news publications to analyze community-wide trends. So are you saying as of about May of 2020 things kind of went back to normal in the Amish community? Yeah, it's kind of by the middle of May, it's sort of like back to a typical behavior again. That also meant avoiding hospitals. I know of some cases in which Amish people like rip you. So the Amish face that head on, they avoid the government, the schools, and the health care system. And they did just fine. In fact, they did far better than us. Us, I mean, they don't have TVs in Amish land, but if they did, they would have watched us watch things like this. Vaccination not only prevents you from acquiring severe illness, but we now know with certainty that it largely prevents transmission. My gut feeling is that this vaccine is prevent infection and therefore will prevent transmission. The vaccine not only prevents people from. Yeah. So how ridiculous was it for you? Barry, California, how ridiculous was it? What was the insane thing you remember from COVID? Well, I play adult league ice hockey. They call it beer league. And they made us wear masks while playing ice hockey, which is, you know, anybody has ever played before. You need to be able to breathe. I mean, it helps. And not only that, they made us change into our gear in the parking lot. So you had like a whole parking lot full of hockey players changing into their gear because they wouldn't let us use the locker rooms. I'm just glad they still let us play, but how ridiculous. Oh my gosh. Had to wear a beer playing hockey. I remember they had it was an NBA game on. I forget where I was. There was an NBA game on on one of those TV was a public place. And they had the NBA players, the professional athletes that don't even watch the NBA, but there's some of the best athletes in the world. No risk of COVID. None. There's nobody who was like an NBA player who died from COVID. Nobody. You might have died from the Vax. You didn't die from COVID. None. Nobody did. Yo, you had all these guys at no risk sitting on the bench wearing masks. And then they would get up off the bench and take the masks off and then go play basketball against each other, rubbing on each other and slamming into each other and whatnot. Gosh, this freakin' country during COVID, man. I'm telling ya, John Colorado, go. Hey, uh, lots of things. The list is really long. Uh, you go to the park, they had the basketball med zip diet. They had the tennis courts, uh, padlock shot. You go to the grocery store and that one-way aisles. They could be still shouldn't be bad. I forgot about the one-way aisles. Hold on a second, though. Hold on a second. I don't want to talk about the basketball courts and the tennis courts again for a minute. I'm sorry. Look, it's a four-year anniversary. I'm walking down memory lane. No, no, no. I'm going to remember all the things these demons did to us. Remember this, fresh air and sunshine have been used many, many times throughout history to help cure diseases and pandemics. It's one of, if you ever do, if you ever don't need any reading about the Spanish flu and how many people died and what the Spanish flu was, it's a fascinating little read and I'm an amateur at the Spanish flu. A little bit about a little bit is what I know. But one of the most fascinating things was them figuring out, "Hold on a minute. If we take these patients and we pull them out of the hospital tents and let them sit in the fresh air and sunshine, they seem to get better a lot faster than everybody we pile inside." And this was a hundred years ago. The medical community now is supposedly more advanced and yet here. In this super advanced country we have with all these fancy schools and books and everyone's got a smartphone with endless information on it. In this country, they closed the outdoor tennis courts so you couldn't exercise outside. Gosh, I tell you, Joyce, Mississippi, go. Hey, how are you? But listen, the only thing I thought of on vision impaired, they stayed ahead in the plane. I mean, the bleachers, cardboard pictures of the plane, while the game was going home. And I feel like everybody was laughing at them. Oh, geez. Listen to what you got to say. Cardboard players in Japan, players that couldn't even move up and down the court, by the way, Joyce, those weren't cardboard, by the way, those were women. No, I'm kidding. Stop. It's wild. It's wild. What happened in this country? All right. I'm going to get back to that in a minute. I want to talk about speaking of Mississippi. Joyce was from Mississippi and we took it on a chin in a primary there. And we're just going to talk about it and I'm not going to rant and rave. I honestly am. This stuff makes me feel good to talk about all the crazy stuff they did to us. So I'm going to get right back to it. I'm just going to rant on Mississippi and then our primary work and how we have a lot of work to do for a moment. Then I'll come back. I swear I will come back in the meantime. Do something for yourself. Get a hold of done for you real estate. Even even if you're just vaguely interested in beginning to acquire real estate. Don't do this thing that normal people always do. I can't afford anything right now. Look, maybe you can't, but what done for you real estate does is they work with normal people to begin the process of getting some real estate in your hands. And you're only going to start out with one house. You're not a millionaire. It might turn into two, three, four, five, ten, one day. Soon you're retiring, leaving a legacy to your children. Done for you real estate. These people are my friends. Done for you, Jesse.com is where you go find out about them. There won't be some high pressure sales, but none of that crap. Just go to done for you, Jesse.com. If you've ever been even vaguely curious, find out what they can do. They handle it all for you. They handle it for you. Done for you, Jesse.com. We'll be back. They're coming, yes, the chassis Kali show. Oh, yeah. I'll get to the Ken Buck resigning thing. I have a little inside info from the military for you here in a few. You're going to absolutely love their contribution to women's history month. And so much more. Let's get to this. I just want to get to this one real quick before we talk about Mississippi and the GOP primary and whatnot. Lloyd, New York. Go. Yes. You had a real estate bank or a broker. The last week in February on your show. It was very vitriol. He was completely open about the New York state legal system being gone. What they did with Trump. And I just want the name of this guy. So you can Google him and send him a letter. Well, Lloyd, here's the great news. You can download a podcast to the show on iHeart, Google Spotify and iTunes and on iTunes. You can leave a five star rating and a review talking about how handsome I am. And you could also go download the podcast of whatever show you're talking about. So that I know what you're talking about. See, it works for everybody. See, I don't remember at all. Chris, do you remember? I don't remember. Anyway, go look at that one, Lloyd. Now. All right. In Mississippi, they were having a primary. One of the piece of trash senators out there is Senator Wicker, Roger Wicker of Mississippi. You had another one of these red state senators who's completely loser. It was a complete loser who sells us out every, every chance he gets. And they had a primary and the good guys lost. He had two primary challengers. Wicker did. Wicker, of course, is the standard establishment. Well, this is what the AP had. There's no military news. That's what they had to say about Wicker. He's a ranking member of the Armed Services Committee has been pushed to expand is to expand shipbuilding for the US military. He's been endorsed by Donald Trump. He's an attorney. He served in the Mississippi State Senate. Okay. That's what they said about him. Here's what they said about Gannon Burton. He was the Marine running against him. Burton, he believes the 2020 election was rigged. He criticized Wicker for voting to certify the results. Burton said he wanted to close the US border, but he believes the globalists wanted open. They even put that in quotes, quote, the globalists wanted open. That's what military news put in quotes. Burton also said he believes COVID-19 vaccines are poison. And the US primary voter in the Republican party in Mississippi went out and pretty overwhelmingly voted for the other guy. There was another primary challenger. You Banks was his name pastor actually at a Presbyterian church state rep. He believes the people, the January sixers have been denied due process. And they even put this part in quote, they're rotting away in jail that they actually put that in quote as if that's not something that's happening. Anyway, the GOP primary voter in Mississippi didn't want him either. They went out and voted for Roger Wicker. We love, love, love, love, love. To point fingers at the urban Democrat and tell them you voted for this. This is your fault. You voted for this. This is your fault. We love to do that. It makes us feel good. Rub it in their faces. Ha ha ha. Stupid Democrat. The GOP primary voter is as responsible for the state of this nation as anyone else in the country or the lack of primary voter or the uninformed primary voter time and time and time again. We run to the voting booth and we vote for the same dork who's been in there screwing everything up and time and time and time again. It burns us. Don't know what to say. Uncle, Uncle in Denver, go. So the dumbest thing our governor did was about two days before we were supposed to go into action and he said liquor stores and pot shops are deemed non-essential. Well, that lasted all of like 12 hours before he realized that was an entire train wreck because there was a run on the liquor stores and the pot shops and nobody was standing six feet apart even outside on that kind of stuff, crazy, absolutely crazy. On a personal side, the dumbest thing I saw was a lady by herself in a convertible with a top down. I kid you not wearing a mask. Ha ha ha. Of course. I will never forget that. Of course. Never forget that. On a personal side of things. Let me ask you. Let me ask you something. Chris, Michael, no judgment here. Let me ask you something. I'll get back to the calls in a moment. At what point did you start passing judgment on people who had masks on when they when you knew they were in a situation where it wasn't required? Look for a while we had to to walk in the hospital, right? You want to go see my arm or something like that you add to you're on an airplane. You add to. But at what point did you start looking at people and say, really, man, one of the sheep. I want to say it was a month. I think I gave people a month of grace because I mean, how many times did we see someone outside walking their dog by themselves? Like he said, in a freaking convertible by himself. Gosh, Steven Allen town, Pennsylvania, go boss. Steven, you there? I probably pressed the wrong button, Steven. That's my bad. George, Virginia. Go. Oh, wait. I'm George for China. Go. Yes, the biggest things that happened to me was I've separated from my church family, my friends, and they closed the library down. I took the first vaccination three weeks later, got the dog sick and my energy since that time has gone south. I'm about to turn 81 years old and my work season is about to start. I don't, I don't know if I'm going to do it this year, you know, what you do for work, George. That's painters. How about that. You enjoy it? Well, you know, I hate to say that, but once I get the first brush full up or the first roller going, I'm good to go. I appreciate you, brother. Very much. Keep on keeping on Tom Colorado, go. Yeah, we attended my wife and I, my granddaughter's middle school choir practice or choir concert, I'm sorry. And they required all the kids singing to wear masks and they told them if, if you get faint, just sit down. Oh gosh, I had a guy walk by and wouldn't sit by us because he said, Oh, these people are wearing masks. And he, I thought, well, should I start a confrontation? He walked by and I just went, ah, ha, ha, ha. All right, eight, seven, seven, three, seven, seven, four, three, seven, three. Remember when they made the kids, I'm not making this up. You can look this up. If you think Jesse's just being a liar or a wingnut for radio, go look it up yourself. Remember when they wear the, or they wore the kids, when they made the kids who were in band wear masks and they cut holes in the mask so you could, you know, stick the instrument through, ha, ha, ha, follow the science, trust the science, everybody. Don't worry. The CDC has your back for sure. Remember when, remember when we thought we had a cure for a deadly disease or a virus and, or we thought we might have a treatment or a cure for it and the American media and America's medical institutions all came out against it to make sure more people could die. Did I ever met and do anything? No. Okay. But not for this purpose. Right. It does not help with COVID and it could be dangerous. It simply does not work as a treatment for COVID. Let me just say very clearly that hypermectin is not a recommended treatment for COVID-19. It is not a recommended drug to prevent COVID-19. All right. Got this from a listener today. What are my sources, if you will, from the, well, no, I'm just going to say he's in the military. That's all in the military. This was sent out earlier this year's theme. This is for women's history month. This is an official document, US department of defense seal right on top of it. This year's theme is women who made great achievements and they go on, I'm skipping a bunch of things, but this is a direct quote from the article, not edited by me at all. We celebrate the resilience and triumphs of women reflecting on the incredible progress the department has made toward gender equality while acknowledging the challenges that still lie ahead for women to achieve their full potential. Women nationally represent nearly 50% of the workforce, whereas women in the DoD comprise 17.3% of active duty military force and 33% of DoD civilian employees. These statistics suggest that the journey towards equal opportunity for women in defense occupations is ongoing. In case you're wondering just how focused the national security apparatus is on protecting this country. Anyway, let's talk about you and me. Let's talk about being pain free before we get to this story out of West Point and I'll get back to these calls, but I want to get to this West Point story first and the $22 burrito first and get to these calls. Let's talk about pain, pain. It is one of those things that just happens as you get older and you don't have to be 80, right? You don't have to be like I was in 80, I'm 42. Every now and then my shoulder starts bugging me. My knee starts bugging me muscle pain, joint pain, but you don't have to live with it and you don't have to grab drugs to deal with it. And I'm talking about basic stuff that we don't. We don't think it's a big deal. Like I be pro from there is a drug free all natural way to fight inflammation. That's called relief factor. It helps your body support its fight against inflammation naturally instead of using drugs without trashing your body, your liver, your kidneys get relief factor. It is so effective. They sell three week quick start kits of it. Oh here, just try it for three weeks, 1995, three weeks. You will call an order more. Everyone does over 70% of people call it order more 1 800 the number four relief 1 800 the number four relief or go to relief factor.com. We'll be back. The Jesse. It is the Jesse Kelly show. I love that. I love that band. That's the name of the band is called the band. I had a long conversation with my youngest son, Luke about this the other day, we were sitting in the car and I was playing up on Cripple Creek for him. And he's like, that's a great song. And we kind of did that. Yeah, we did the who's on first routine, Chris, he was all who sings this and I said the band. And we did it a couple times. He said, yeah, who and I said the band and it doesn't, it doesn't matter. It doesn't. Anyway, before we get back to your ridiculous COVID stories and I'll get to those in a moment. It can be hard. Sometimes we're discussing, you know, bills and spending and the debt. Sometimes it can be hard to make the connection between what these people do in Washington, D.C. and how it actually affects us. How it affects us? What does it mean for me? What do we care? What do you care if they pass another trillion dollar bill? What does it matter? Well, here's one way in San Francisco, a restaurant. They used to sell $11 burritos. Now they sell $22 burritos. Now this is just a burrito, right? For me, it has more importance than it has for you because as my wife says, I have an unhealthy obsession with food, just a burrito, but still even I can acknowledge it's just a burrito. But every single time Washington, D.C. passes a bill with money we don't have, which we don't have any money. Every time they print more money that's unbacked, you, your life will have fewer and fewer burritos because of it. Now, stay with me. Stay with me here. How old are you? Well, let's make it about me. I'm 42. I'm a Kelly. The Kelly men don't generally last a very long time. My old man's 70. Look, let's say 75 maybe and that's being really generous with me. Let's say you're going to have me for 70 years and then I'm going to check out of here. So I'm at 42, that means I have about 28 years left to eat burritos. How many burritos could I reasonably? What I, if everything stayed the same, would I reasonably consume over the next 28 years? Well, let's just do the bath here with me. I'm probably eating at my current pace. I'm probably, I actually had a burrito for breakfast, crossed my heart, hope to die. I had a egg, cheese and burrito, egg, cheese and chorizo burrito for breakfast. So 52 weeks a year, let's say I'm going to eat one burrito a week. So that's 52 burritos a year times 28. I could reasonably expect if everything stayed the same to eat 1,456 more burritos in my lifetime. They said stay with me. This will be about something bigger, say with me. So every time, like this morning, when I sat down to eat a burrito, my sons were there. We made a little run at a local Mexican shop, good prices, good food. And I'm sitting there and I'm Kamala and down my burrito and Gavin with my boys and they're being meat heads and that was 15 minutes, maybe 15 minutes of enjoyment and satisfaction that burrito, that burrito brought to my day. And I will probably eat about 1,400 more of them in my lifetime. But because of the government, because of what the government has done today and every other day in DC, it won't be 1,400 burritos. What if it's a thousand 600 800 only it's about so much more than a burrito, isn't it? It's about the way we do everything in our lives, how often why be able to visit family, how often why be able to do this, why be able to do that as we watch everything rot down around us, we must always remember it's Washington DC who took our burritos and that's completely unacceptable. All right, get back to this Steven Pennsylvania, call back, go. Jesse, thank you for doing what you do every day. I'm going to try not to make this to I'm going to try not to burst into tears. I know what you have to say, man. I'm just let I'll let you go. Go ahead. Go ahead. I spent the last about 30 hours of my father's life watching him go prayer like a fish out of water dying from COVID and I'm not going to name anybody, but whoever they are, whoever's responsible for this. I hope they all spend eternity burning in hell. How you doing, brother? You all right? Yeah, that's why I just let him have his say. We get a lot of these emails, a lot of these phone calls. People hurting really, really hurt out Wisconsin. Make it pretty quick out. Go. Hey, Jesse, tough one to follow. They're small community with six lakes with Wisconsin makes kids children wear life jackets. So the one of the area clubs had kiosks outdoor kiosks where you go up and you open them up, take out a life jacket. When you're done using it, you bring it back. Those were temporary clothes due to COVID presumably they're there to save kids lives, but I guess they turn the way the kids life jackets for COVID. Oh my gosh, this leaf, ah, she's all right. We still have another hour. I want to do another army thing here and then we'll get back to these eight, seven, seven, three, seven, seven, four, three, seven, three West Point. They had something as part of their mission statement, a motto that used to be duty, honor, country. That used to be the motto of West Point, but it's being replaced now as being replaced by something that sounds pretty benign, not a big deal, right? They're taking away duty, honor, country and they're replacing it with army values. Hmm, army values. Is this a big deal? Does this matter? I'll give you a clue it does and we'll talk about it next. I keep hearing that a lot of people are still on the fence about owning gold and silver. Have we already forgotten about the bank closures, inflation, global instability, world war three that sadly may be coming? Look, precious metals, you need them for various reasons. You want tangible currency on hand, a portfolio diversification strategy. It's a hedge against inflation. You need value, stored value that stands the test of time. I know you're paying attention to global events. Wars bubbling up everywhere. Countries are buying and hoarding mass amounts of gold. Why aren't you? It's time to pull the trigger with Oxford, gold group and buy gold and silver. Nobody can predict the future, but we can't put our heads in the sand either. The Oxford gold group are the pros. 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