Episode Transcript
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0:03
General, A lot of people ask how much time you put in researching for
0:07
the show? Well, you know, it's kind of weird. I'm always
0:10
reading, so that's nothing. I just read, read, reread questions how
0:13
much can I retain? And then from there how much can I retain?
0:18
And then kind of tie in on a weekly basis to something what's happening in
0:22
America to make the show interesting to our listeners. And so what about the
0:27
general? Yeah, do you guys get together like the day before you you
0:30
know, what do you do? Well? Most of the time, general,
0:32
you tell them how's it work? Well? When we first started this
0:34
show, I had this idea that we would beat for coffee beforehand for about
0:38
like forty five minutes and just discuss the show. And with scheduling and all,
0:42
it doesn't really work out that way, but we just sort of bounce
0:45
things off of each other and there it is. Yeah, it is what
0:48
it is. We show up and normally I'm tightening up my notes the topics
0:53
that I want to cover in the seconds leading up to the mic going live.
0:57
So it's it's time to put an annual Christmas show in the can.
1:00
We've been at this for seven years and I don't. We've we kind of
1:04
danced around the holidays, but we've had a stocked Fourth of July one we
1:08
had one. Yeah, but we want to put together a Christmas show.
1:12
And I had to check with the Mothership just to make sure. I'm like,
1:15
look, you know, we're coming in hot on Christianity today. What
1:19
makes sure you guys are cool with it? Yeah? Good go. You
1:21
know, I can't even believe I got to ask for permission to talk about
1:25
Christmas Christianity an America in twenty twenty three, twenty twenty four. But better
1:30
to beg forgiveness. We can be a bit of a doom sayer, but
1:36
at the same time, let's have a show that reminds all of us how
1:42
unique and wonderful our nation is and it must be protected, defended, its
1:49
borders, our political system, the constitution, the culture. And that's what
1:56
today's about. We are are damning therpedoes and we are launching our offensive weapons.
2:06
We're fighting back. And here's the inspiration for this general. I know you don't read the New York Slimes, but I get the New York Slimes,
2:13
and and I normally read some through most of the Sunday Paper it got
2:19
to go behind enemy lines and see what stuff's being fed to the minds of
2:23
the people. To read the New York Slimes. And I saw a full
2:27
page advertorial in the main section of the Sunday New York Times, and it
2:34
was a it was a advertisement, paid for advertisement, but as an editorial,
2:39
and it was on behalf of the world Jewish community, blaming, accusing
2:47
the American institutions that have been under attack for not defending them. They have
2:54
decided that the woke movement has gone too far. Welcome home, right.
3:00
So you know, if if if Christians wanted to put out a full page
3:07
advertorial in the New York Times calling out the the attack on on Americanism,
3:13
American nationalism or Christianity, I can only imagine did they find some other New
3:20
York Times. So anyway, so this is kind of our rebuttal. And
3:25
you know, general, you and I and I think most of our listeners,
3:28
we grew up in a bipolar world, meaning two pools of power USSR
3:31
USA. And when I when I was finishing up my university degree in political
3:36
science and revolutions and you were doing international what was your degree? National security?
3:42
Security? Things for black and white there was nuclear weaponized Judeo Christian capitalism
3:46
versus nuclear weaponized evil communism. However, over the past couple decades, a
3:52
mind virus, a new mind virus, a newism, a new ideology oppressed.
3:57
The oppressor has exploded to the that contradicts everything we've been taught since we
4:01
were children. We're no longer in a binary US versus them, United States
4:05
versus Soviet Union as our existential threat. Now the American family, church,
4:11
public school system, neighbors that were the guardians of Americanism are under attack,
4:16
and our forefathers anticipated this. We talked a little bit about this on our
4:24
education show recently. In the eighteen hundreds, we had a spirit that took
4:29
us from this middling frontier nation that was busy building one room schoolhouses because we
4:32
knew how important compulsory public education was to build young men and young women who
4:41
could read, specifically the Bible, could get their their math, their classics,
4:47
their English, their grammar, their handwriting. Not necessarily compulsory public education.
4:51
They just needed a public education. People actually had to pay for that
4:56
stuff. Back in the day the one room school house. We moved into
4:59
a compul education after Horace Mann visited Berlin and brought back what he saw in
5:04
Prussia, which became eventually became the German Empire. But we had our kids
5:10
recite the pledge in front of the flag, hand on chest. So the
5:14
eighteen hundreds was our founders knew, look, the spirit of revolution is running
5:20
across Europe right now. That thing jumps here to the United States. We
5:24
have some problems. We need to tamp this down. And so they started
5:27
with the kids, and that was your schoolhouses, recite the pledge in front
5:31
of the flag, hand on chest. And we raised several generations, multiple
5:35
generations, maybe a century's worth of patriotic men and women and patriotic children.
5:44
Think of TR's navy, of the splendid white ships that he built up,
5:48
our navy enter the nineteen hundreds. We have the European mind viruses that didn't
5:56
that we're trying to take hold America. But didn't the isms Leninism, stop
6:00
Nazism, fascism, And we had to send. Now, we had to
6:03
send our boys that grew up in the frontier, their great grandfathers and their
6:09
grandfathers grew up in the frontier. We had to take our patriotic gis get
6:14
him across the pond, get them into Europe and Africa to physically fight a
6:18
kinetic war against these mind viruses from Europe. After World War Two, the
6:24
boomers and their kids, which we are, we inherited this worldview of good
6:28
versus evil. We were good, ruthless dictators Lennon Stalin, Hitler, Mao,
6:33
Polpot, then Gaddafi, Pussying, the tyrants behind the Rwan and genocide,
6:38
all evil by any Western standard have been replaced by a new rubric.
6:43
Our kids are now being not told or taught about American patriotism. Now this
6:49
new rubric is the powerless are good, the powerful are evil. This new
6:56
world view is crept up on us and it's replaced a lot of things.
7:00
Now. Before the show, General, you and I were talking about how this door opens. This door opened, and it clearly opened. In the
7:10
sixties, God was taken out of the schools by the Supreme Court of the
7:14
United States. And what year in general that was nineteen sixty two of beliety
7:18
two doctor King's nineteen sixty three color blindness blindness speech I have a dream has
7:27
been replaced by race obception, race obsession. The sixties' form of debate over
7:32
political ideas have been replaced recently with political identity, civic debate being replaced with
7:41
public shaming. And this is a French revolution all over again. This is
7:46
exactly what our founding fathers were petrified and the eighteen hundreds would jump to the
7:49
Atlanta across the Atlantic and what did we do? What did our founding fathers
7:55
do? And the men and women, the children of the founding fathers in
7:59
the eighteen hundreds of specifically the first half the eighteen hundreds, and we're going to tie this into Christmas. After the break, we got to work building
8:05
a national identity, a culture, a way of life that would immunize the
8:09
minds of our youth, our children, to not fall prey and victim to
8:15
these mind viruses. And the American people in the eighteen hundreds early eighteen hundreds
8:20
chose faith, family, education, hard work, charity. And we decided
8:31
that that set, that toolbox, that set of how to run, those
8:35
rules, how to run society, would free people economically and spiritually if they
8:41
so choose chose. But we didn't raise a generation of youngsters who looked at
8:46
themselves as victims. We told them, you are a unique human being with
8:52
natural gifts and natural talents that will benefit society. In fact, it's a
8:56
sin to bury your talents. Its personal struggle, it's adventure, it's hard
9:03
work, it's religion's community, it's family is being bulldozed and culture, marriage,
9:11
devotion to God or yahweh, love, divine consciousness, whatever you want,
9:13
something bigger than you. These bricks that build communities, that fortify nations
9:18
against the evils of pride, greed, wrath, the other sloths in there
9:26
somewhere has been replaced. And it was the American mind. It was the
9:30
American mind and guts and spirit that literally took four thousand years of tyranny and
9:37
said enough. And it was a couple generations later that same American mind,
9:41
the same American people, that destroyed another evil institution of slavery. It was
9:48
those cultural bonds that allowed us to get to where we are today. Well,
9:52
unfortunately we're losing bonds of youth. What's the remedy, Snoopy? After
9:58
the books, I welcome back. This is turned Brad Kaffel. If you
10:13
or a loved one find yourself on the receiving end of a government warrant,
10:18
a detective knocking on your door, maybe the police pull your kid out of
10:22
class. I want to talk to him or her about something. Accuse you
10:26
of stealing somebody's Christmas presents. I'm not representing. If you're a porch pirate,
10:31
we're not representing. Accused. Do you look a dog a porch pirate?
10:35
Here on your own, show me the video, show me the ring
10:37
anyway, the General and I will meet you wherever you are. We are
10:41
in. We've practiced in seventy three counties of Ohio's eighty eight counties and for
10:48
thirty years, and we can meet you where you are. No case too small, nothing really too big. We'll come in. We'll lean in.
10:54
We put a team together and help you in your loved one out the Coffel
10:58
Law Firm. We have a new brain. Actually, General come out in
11:01
twenty twenty four. We're re on our thirtieth anniversary, rebranding, revitalizing.
11:05
I've never done anything like this before. And we've come up with crisis counsel.
11:09
So if crisis hits you and your family, call us. If it's
11:13
something we can do, we'll take care of it in house. If it's
11:16
something we don't do, we know who all the good patriots here are in
11:20
the state, the good lawyers who can help you out. And if it's
11:24
a really small minor charge, we can send our new dwarf attorney out,
11:28
little person. Yes, general, Americans have sent her husbands and sons and
11:33
daughters to the American cause of freedom, to break the tyranny, the institution
11:39
of tyranny and the institution of slavery. Those are thousands of years old.
11:43
Those were institutions that were thousands of years old. Try tens of thousands.
11:46
Yes, But the political collapse of a nation comes, actually, actually before
11:54
the political collapse of a nation comes, these symptoms of cultural bonds being destroyed.
11:58
That being friends turning against friends, family turning against family, isolation,
12:03
depression, suicide, suicide is skyrocketing in the United States the last decade.
12:09
And it started, in our opinion, I think I can speak for you,
12:13
the cultural revolution of the sixties. We are all for progress, and
12:16
with Michigan cheating and football, yeah, we're all for progress, but it's
12:20
got to be incremental. And within two generations of the sixties, suicide skyrocketing.
12:26
Whatever has been fed to the minds of Americans is poisoning us. And
12:28
that and what we're being told, what we're being told is that America is
12:35
inherently evil. Christians are extremists. Jews welcome to Welcome to our team.
12:41
Jews, your oppressors. And that America was designed by white Protestant men,
12:46
just for white Protestant men. That everything that flows from revolutionary war breeds white
12:50
hetero Christian oppression and intolerance. Right, quick history check, Lefties. We
12:56
were colonized by the British, we were oppressed. We put King George on
13:03
notice, we fought back, we won, We established our own terms of
13:07
government, and then the American people, the bosses. We decided what type
13:11
of culture made sense with this new type of freedom. And you know what
13:16
made sense. Christianity made a ton of sense. Got to believe in something,
13:20
you got to have something. But we also assimilated the best of other
13:24
national traditions that were under attack in their homeland. So when the Irish came
13:28
here, when the Italians came here, the Greeks came here, the Poles
13:31
came here, the Russians came here, they fled something, but we welcomed
13:39
them in and they became part of the American experience. And I'm going to
13:43
prove it to everybody in just a few minutes. So whatever in the seventeenth
13:46
and eighteenth century those immigrants fled, whatever they fled, we defeated in the
13:52
Revolutionary War. That'd be your tyranny. Whatever the immigrants fled, and the
13:56
eighteen hundreds and nineteen hundreds come to the United States, We're going to go
14:01
kick their ass. In World War One or World War two. The mind
14:05
of American was informed by Christian principles, what was right, what was fair.
14:09
America was built on Christianity. That is a fact. Christianity is a
14:13
peace loving religion. That is a fact. There is no suicide vest wearing
14:20
Christian fundamentalist. There is no hostage taking, beheading in the Christian faith.
14:26
Oh, in Hollywood, you know the movies and all they have those.
14:31
And I'm not the most radical Christian versus the most radical of the Muslim brotherhood
14:37
are not equivalents. And so, knowing that this new nation needed to assimilate
14:43
and build cultural bonds, we expanded on what we knew to be true.
14:46
We had to expand on something, and we expanded on Christianity, and we
14:52
celebrated it. How do we celebrate it? Celebrate it? The American Christmas?
14:56
I submit to you that the American tradition of the American Christmas is the
15:03
best example kind of our holy grail of what makes America awesome. Also makes
15:09
winter tolerable, for sure, but part of the reason, part of the reason we did that. I mean, there's a whole we do a whole
15:15
show on on why we celebrate Jesus' birth and how we come up with that
15:22
date versus Easter, which is the holiest of all. Right, yet,
15:28
yet the Second Amendment supporting Christians that made this country awesome are now the biggest
15:37
threat to our country. That whack job James Carville. Someone's let him out
15:43
of his out of his coffin, pump some life back into him. James
15:50
Carvill is on making his rounds last weekend on the news shows where's his wife
15:54
the most? The biggest threat to America are are Christians? Christian fundamentalist.
16:02
I couldn't believe it when I've heard this. I just like someone send me
16:06
the clip, like that's ai. He's not really saying this. Oh,
16:08
he's not the only one. So let me say this loud, and let
16:12
me say this in no uncertain terms. When the Marxist globalist empire revolution comes
16:19
for you, your job, your child's mind, your family. You will
16:25
be looking for help if you currently don't agree with what I'm saying, and
16:29
you consider yourself to be center moderate, left of center, the revolution protected,
16:33
the revolution will come for you. The guillotine will be pulled up in
16:37
front of your front yard. It's coming. I ask Robes, let me
16:41
tell you who you're going to be looking for. You're going to be looking
16:44
for those Second Amendments, supporting Christians who understand that God is good and guns
16:48
protect us from the worst forms of humanity. All right, listen to the
16:51
who's won't get fooled again. So when the evil forces prey on our culture,
16:57
the American culture, the American marriage, the American family, the American
17:02
borders. God, uh, they've brought nothing but pain and suffering. The
17:07
remedy a good old fashioned Charlie Brown Christmas that is, that's, this is
17:11
how we built the American dream, the American spirit. So remember generals,
17:18
as you may know. You know, the original Protestants, the Quakers didn't
17:22
celebrate Christmas. The Massachaset's big colony. It was you don't do that,
17:26
you know, that was a Puritans in Massachusetts. It was the Quakers were
17:30
in Pennsylvania, Virginia, but they shunned it because they they're like, you
17:34
guys are using you're using the Birth of Christ as an opportunity to go drink,
17:41
yeah, to sell, to sell toys and things. So take let
17:45
me give you some examples. Charles Dickens, Washington, Irving, Frank Capra,
17:51
Charles Schultz, Irving, Berlin. Thank you. I know it's missing
17:56
a biggie. So let me let me explain to you. Let me explain
17:59
how I how I interprets what has made America awesome? Charles Dickens Christmas Carol,
18:06
Charles Dickens arguably the greatest writer of the Victorian era. The Victorian era,
18:14
and the way Charles Dickens wrote these, I guess you'd call them like
18:18
a serial publication. He did them in a yeah, he published them in
18:22
newspapers and sections, and they kind of had cliffhangers and they got you coming
18:25
back. And you know, he had also Game of Thrones, Oliver Twist,
18:30
A Tale of Two Cities, great expectations, Who Loved, Who Loved?
18:36
Charles Dickens writings A young Queen Victoria, Queen Victoria of England. Now
18:41
this is this is pretty cool stuff. So Queen Victoria presides over the biggest
18:49
revolutions any nation has ever seen. One person. Queen Victoria from eighteen thirty
18:55
seven to nineteen oh one presides over an industrial revolution, political revolutions, scientific
19:02
revolutions, military expansion, the expansion of the British Empire kept the people together.
19:07
And meanwhile, in Young America it goes from Andrew Jackson to Teddy Roosevelt.
19:12
We're kind of busy. We're like a duck underwater with our feet underwater,
19:18
going busy, trying to make something a national bond like what they had
19:22
in the Victorian era. Enter Washington, Irving, and twas the Night before
19:29
Christmas. He wrote that in the eighteen nineteen, eighteen twenty, and this
19:33
caught the imagination of Young America. And as the cities grew, businesses flourished,
19:40
and commerce took off, Americans started to celebrate privately Christmas in a more
19:45
public way. It brought us together in our cities, in our towns,
19:49
in our village centers. They were decorated. And after the break, Jonah
19:55
and I want to kind of walk you through, had some nostalgic trip on
20:00
some awesome classic Christmas movies, songs, we kind of bring everyone together,
20:07
and this is what we need more of. We need more Snoopy, welcome
20:15
back if you're just joining us. The General and I have taken a little
20:18
bit of a walk through history yet again, but this time with a bent
20:21
towards Christmas. And what made what protected America from all the isms, the
20:26
ideologies, the movements, the cultural the dramatic cultural changes that were happening in
20:36
other parts of the world that America largely. We inoculate and immunized our youth
20:41
and the moms and dads, and we found protection inside our schoolhouses. We
20:47
found protection inside our churches, We found protection inside our family homes, and
20:52
we ventured outside. We saw and we felt. When you see Macy's and
20:57
Woolworth back, you know, like you think of America on thirty fourth Street,
21:02
you think of this nostalgia. And it was this type of bond that
21:06
brought the immigrants together and Americans. Our culture really was written and promoted by
21:17
literary geniuses like Washington Irving. Washington Irving is huge legend. Asleep and Hollow,
21:22
Sleepy Hollow, a rip van Winkle and then twas the Night before Christmas
21:29
went all through the house. That was eighteen nineteen. He comes up with
21:33
these things again. Prior to this Christmas and the Protestants and the dig down
21:42
deeper into the Quakers and the Puritans, you didn't celebrate Christmas. It was
21:48
too much merriment. It was a reason to go out and get drunk,
21:51
and they didn't like that. But as Americans got more comfortable being together and
21:57
assimilating, we found that the Christmas holiday really was the time of the year
22:03
where that each year we'd kind of come around and we'd get a little more
22:07
Americanized. To get a little more Americanized. You became less Polish, and
22:12
he became more American. It became less Italian and became a little more American.
22:15
It became less Russian, he became a little more American. So as
22:21
these cities grew and business flourished, the cities and villages, they decked themselves
22:26
out. Next thing you know, you get your department stores doing awesome things
22:32
with their lights and decorations and their live santas. And then we get into
22:38
our world wars, world War War, world War two, and we saw
22:41
how evil man can really be. So we come back from World War Two
22:48
and we doubled down on great things that are going to protect us again.
22:53
Bing Crosby Fred Astaire saying in a movie. The movie is called holiday In.
23:00
Do you ever see holiday In? I don't think you have, Ben
23:03
Crosby, Fred Astaire and holiday In sing a song called White Christmas. It
23:10
is the most popular record ever made. White Christmas, written by a Jewish
23:18
Russian immigrant named Irving Berlin. Now this is not a perfect example of how
23:23
Christmas brings together this new nation, this growing nation. Irving Berlin, that
23:33
has been said, helped write the story of this country. Irving Berlin captured
23:37
the best of who we are, this young America and our dreams that shaped
23:44
our lives. This dude was born in Imperial Russia, Jewish winds up in
23:48
the US at the age of five. He wrote in a new way,
23:55
an American vernacular, uncomplicated, simple, erect, little bumpkiny. But it
24:02
was the The idea was to reach the heart of the average American, who
24:07
was the soul of the country. So Irving Berlin very important person, influential,
24:12
and he what he put into the American culture informed America that the next
24:22
generation and the generation after that as to what it means to be an American.
24:26
It was a dream, an aspiration. Frank Capra, It's a wonderful
24:30
life, rags to riches, the American dream personified. Frank Capra from Italy
24:37
comes to the United States. It's a wonderful life. Christian Christmas, it's
24:48
one of the most was it number one two to three movie of all time
24:52
and popularity. So we have White Christmas, the number one song of all
24:57
time. It's a wonderful life, one of the most revered movies, popular
25:03
movies of all time, written by immigrants. Then we get into Charles Schultz
25:11
Charlie Brown Christmas. Remember prayers taken out of school in sixty two, Doctor
25:18
King's color blindness speech of sixty three. Of course we know he was ruthlessly
25:23
assassinated nineteen sixty five. Charlie Brown's Christmas ears for the first time. Now
25:32
the Coffles watch Charlie Brown's Christmas every year. Have we seen it yet?
25:36
Well, I've seen it many times when, especially when I was a guy. All that you've seen this year, not this year, not yet.
25:41
So you have Vince Giraldi, one of the best jazz one of the best
25:47
jazz soundtracks in my opinion out there. Coca Cola was the sponsor. And
25:52
what made Charlie Brown so unique was there was no laugh track. Charles Schultz
25:59
were rejected that he wanted authenticity. He didn't want the audience at home to
26:03
be instructed to laugh. I say, you know, your joke's no good.
26:10
They had a totally different way of communicating to American Americans. Love it
26:15
because it's real. There's no laugh track, And what is it. It's
26:19
a depressed teenage boy, Charlie Brown with his dog Snoopy, who is a
26:26
total free spirit, the only Peanuts character who is animated and sings and dances
26:30
and loves life. Sally is the little sister. She's the up and coming
26:36
American consumer who only sees Christmas as a time to get toys. And you
26:41
go get a tree. But remember Charlie Brown's when he goes look for trees,
26:45
they're all illuminum. They're fake. Charles Schultz knew what was going on
26:48
in American sixty five. The most important scene on Charlie Brown's Christmas is when
26:56
Linus, the insecure Linus with his blanket, goes out on stage and drops
27:03
the blanket and recites what did he sing? On Hark the Herald, Yeah,
27:11
Harks the Herald, Angel sings, he drops his blanket and he sings
27:15
this in front of the crowd, and then he grabs his blanket and walks
27:19
off stage. So many important symbolism in that. Charles Schultz knew religion was
27:27
on the decline in sixty five. He grew up with a strong Christian faith
27:30
in the Heartland, and they asked him, is this too much religion?
27:36
Charles Schultz said, if we don't promote this, who will do? You
27:40
know how many people watch the very first Charlie Brown's Christmas in nineteen sixty five,
27:44
General No, I do not fifteen million, five hundred thousand. It
27:49
was number two show behind Bonanza. It crushed it. It crushed it.
27:56
You know what else it crushed. It crushed the butting aluminum Christmas tree movement
28:00
as well. So it's followed up with Frosty the Snowman, Gene Autry singing,
28:07
Rudolph Red No's Reindeer, Jimmy Duranty, Perry Como, Johnny Mathis,
28:12
and Rudolph is a legend. Up there with Charles Dickens a Christmas Carol which
28:15
was one hundred years earlier, so there's something there that Americans crave and love.
28:23
Speaking of which general your Christmas favres, what are your favorite Christmas movie?
28:30
The recent or special? Yeah, well, you know, it's it's
28:36
so interesting to consider what is a Christmas movie? I mean Diehard, Yeah,
28:41
I mean that was set during Christmas and there's a few themes to it.
28:45
But you know, then there's Love actually was very recent. That was
28:48
a very good Christmas film. Yeah, I mean probably It's a wonderful life.
28:53
Yeah, nineteen forty six, It's wonderful life. Absolutely. I'm a
28:57
huge fan of Elf and I'm a huge fan of Polar Express World's best coffee.
29:03
Congratulations. Anyway, after the break, I want to take what I
29:11
want to I want to challenge anyone to take what we're saying here about Christianity,
29:15
the founding of this country, how we raised, how I weird our
29:19
youth, how we did it, and did we not make America the greatest
29:25
nation the world has ever seen? And yet this ideology that the far left
29:30
globalist Marxists are promising. I'm going to ask you after the break, let's
29:33
take a look at how's their worldview working out for them? Have yourself merry
29:40
Little Christmas. Our final segment, Thanks for listening. Share the show this
29:45
please our listenership continues to grow, our downloads. We are so grateful.
29:52
We are so thankful. But we I think what we're kind of doing general
29:56
is we're saying things that people are saying to their spouses, they're best friends,
30:03
kind of looking around their shoulder, making sure they can say it right
30:06
now, and we're on Ohio's blowtorch blasting it loud and clear. We need
30:12
to stop acting like a china shop to the bull here and start saying no,
30:18
we don't need to look around. You don't need to look around first
30:22
cautiously before you say Merry Christmas. Yeah, understand. If you want to
30:26
talk appress or oppressed hamas pro Palestinian idiots that don't understand history, you think
30:36
you understand history. If you want to just say America is evil, inherently
30:41
evil, go back. Send the show to those people. Have them listened
30:45
to the first few segments of today's show. Let's take a look at your
30:49
ideology over the last few decades. Let's take a look. Let's see what
30:52
you're promising and see how it's working out for the world. By the way,
30:57
suicides in America skyrocketing, Depression, especially amongst our children, is skyrocketing.
31:07
The middle class is shrinking. We have a nation of Americans that are
31:15
saying the most Unamerican things I can imagine. And these are people who are
31:21
begiven like James Carvill's be given seats on shows on the on the weekly Sunday
31:25
show tour, calling the Christians are the greatest threat to America. Look this
31:32
up. He said it, and he's not the only one. It's out there. And this ideology that they're promising is ruining that started with ruining universities.
31:41
Then it's ruining the media. It's ruined our medical schools, it's ruining
31:45
our law schools, it's ruining every major corporation. And now it's ruining our
31:48
high schools, and it's getting down into ruining our elementary schools. The takeover
31:52
is so comprehensive that it's now almost hard to notice it because it's everywhere.
31:57
It's ubiquitous. But now it's baring its teeth. One of the most persecuted
32:02
and oppressed groups of people in the history of the world, the Jewish community.
32:08
The Jewish community is now finding out that this new worldview that measures fairness
32:20
by equality of outcome rather than opportunity. That if you are oppressed, then
32:29
your oppressor must be annihilated. How About pick yourself up by the bootstraps.
32:36
How About take a page out of the American book of how to do it?
32:40
How about realize that it's not the fundamentalist Christians that are trying to push
32:45
you into the sea. It's unbelievable, all right, this wokeness, anti
32:52
racism, progressivism, whatever term you want to use, what's clear is that
32:57
it has gained power. And it uses the noble words diversity, equity,
33:04
and inclusion DEI. It uses three words that they can do die. These
33:13
noble causes are all causes to which Americans have long been devoted individually and collectively.
33:20
Christmas is the American Christmas has probably been the most recognized inclusive, equitable,
33:30
diverse celebration because we the American Christmas. We took in a lot of
33:36
immigrants in their traditions to make an American tradition. And we've got a lot
33:40
of pretty lights. Go look at the zoo. So this this ideological movement,
33:47
this DEI, what's happened on our college its campuses. That's nurturing our
33:52
future leaders. They're miserable college kids, the depression. I mean, they're
33:59
not happy people. They're not happy. They're not happy. But now students
34:06
and professors who are immersed not in facts and knowledge and history, but in
34:10
in in dehumanizing us, are now celebrating or justifying terrorism. We have to
34:16
this has to be reversed. They are demonizing hard work, merit, family,
34:22
and the dignity of the individual. They're demonizing a fundamental belief of Christianity
34:30
and now Judaism. And it is time to end quote d I for good.
34:37
No more standing by as people are encouraged to self segregate. No more
34:42
forced declarations that you're going to prioritize identity over excellence. And now we're not
34:47
talking about like passing a law against these things. We're just talking about the
34:52
way you operate. Shout it down. Yeah you should. You should make
34:55
your disapproval not rice. No more going along with the little lies for the
35:00
sake of being polite. Several generations of Americans have had enough, and we
35:06
know that this quote DEI is undermining America and that for which it stands,
35:14
which is opportunity, safetym safety, and freedom. In the American history shows
35:22
that we will break the institutions of tyranny, we will break the institution of
35:29
slavery. We will if you follow this recipe, you don't have to look
35:34
at yourself as a victim. You don't have to consider yourself to be oppressed.
35:40
It's okay to pull yourself up from their bootstraps. You have God given
35:45
talents. And the people that want you to see yourself that way are doing
35:49
this because that gives them power for sure, because like I'm helpless, they
35:54
say, oh, yes, you're helpless. I'll help you. And I'll
35:58
help you because I will then demand money from the government, which will go
36:01
through me as a conduit down to the little U when our remaining minutes.
36:07
Just some quick Christmas American Christmas history. So we in the eighteen hundreds we
36:13
realized as we nation built, not just the laws, not just the territories,
36:19
but our culture, not just religion, but our culture. It's a
36:21
fusion of all those, right, And we took our private religious celebration from
36:27
our hearth inside our home, and we took it outside and it became you
36:32
know, we borrowed the Christmas tree from Germany and the lights from over here,
36:37
and then the feast and festivities and the mirth and all that from other
36:42
parts of the world that came to America, borrowed the snow from Minnesota,
36:47
borrowed the snow from Minnesota, and our leaders understood that we were building a
36:53
nation, and it was a nation based on it was built on goodness.
36:59
So the first Christmas tree goes up in the White House eighteen fifty six,
37:04
Joe Biden's tree fell over. We didn't declare Christmas is a federal holiday until
37:10
eighteen seventy, in fact, December twenty fifth, up until eighteen eighteen seventy.
37:15
On December twenty fifth, Congress was in session. Nineteen twenty three,
37:21
Silent cal Coolidge lit the first national Christmas tree on the ellipse, and then
37:25
you go out west. The invention of motion pictures Hollywood brings to life the
37:31
American spirit. Courtesy of Ben Crosby, Fred Astaire. The most popular song
37:37
ever, We Said White Christmas, written by a Jewish man named Irving Berlin
37:43
who was born in the Empire of Russia, and Irving Berlin kind of felt
37:47
called to rebuke the European way of writing and music and composing, and he
37:53
came up with the American vernacular, uncomplicated, simple, direct, real Why
38:01
to reach the heart of an average American? Why is that your soldier?
38:07
That's whose shoulders are countries build on. That's the real soul of the country.
38:10
Irving Berlin is American music. Irving Berlin wrote the most famous song of
38:17
all time and is a Christians That is a Christmas song, you know.
38:22
The one of the things Jewish. The one other thing that makes Christmas special
38:25
to is that it's the one place and you can talk about consumerism all you
38:29
want, but it's the one place where you're actually buying things for other people.
38:34
You don't buy gifts yourself, and you have to think about what these
38:37
other people think about some other people besides yourself, and you know they're the
38:40
the the idea of going door to door Christmas Caroline. That was a leveling
38:45
of the different social classes in Victorians, England and also jumped over here to
38:52
the United States. Going Caroling leveled the classes. Right. You might have
38:59
a few drinks to go to so and so's house, but that's what we
39:02
did the right fighting, guys, Fighting is the least we owe this country
39:07
to find. Fighting. You know, I'm not saying pick up a gun
39:10
and do it that way, but fight back in a very lawful, legal,
39:16
dignified way. It is your duty. Merry Christmas, although it's been
39:22
said many times, many ways, Merry Christmas to
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