[00:00:32] 5.15 AM, The fireside is blazing bright, The twinkling lights across the mantle dazzle my eyes, The tree ablaze in C-33 bulbs.
[00:00:53] I love it when these days start like this. I really, I just, I stumbled bleary-eyed into the Obama's fantasy of what they really would have liked to have happened to America during their reign in this nation.
[00:01:16] Also known as the movie Leave the World Behind. Leave the World Behind, Obama's true vision for America stolen from him by the Tea Party or whatever. Look, if you're a prepper, you should watch it. It's a lot. It's two hours and a half. This is what I'd recommend.
[00:01:44] I'd recommend you fast forward through the first hour. At least the first half hour. The white actors were pretty, well, no, that's not true. Let me get into it.
[00:01:59] Julia Roberts looked old and was, it was, she was either absolutely on point in her miserable, uptight character or that's her. I don't know. I don't know. The kids were fun. The kids were fun. I'll leave it at that. The kids were fun. They were, they were real. They were fun.
[00:02:28] Ethan Hawke played, uh, like, uh, the, the caricature beta male. Do you know what I mean? He was the caricature beta male that, I don't understand the caricature of the beta male in Hollywood. It's, it's the, it's one of the great betrayals in all honesty.
[00:02:55] You watch the guy and you see he's the butt end of every, he leaves the house and can't even find his way home. He's such an idiot. He's so useless. You know what I mean? And the only reason these dudes exist in the world is because of the Hollywood left wing mentality. You know, the sort of, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey there.
[00:03:22] Pump the brakes on that masculinity. Let the lady lead a little, will ya? Yeah. The, uh, the black actors were great. Really, they were great. I, I thought they did an exceptional job. It was the woke apocalypse. That's what kept going on in my head. It was the woke apocalypse. Um, I don't want to give all of it away, so I gotta be careful. The dad was the best. The black dad was awesome.
[00:03:51] That dude, I've seen him in other movies too. He's always awesome. But he was great, again. Um, he, he held the whole film, in my opinion. That guy, that guy's the only thing that kept me watching until things started happening. Uh, there's a prepper in the movie. And the tone deafness on this, he doesn't even implicitly say that he's right-leaning prepper.
[00:04:18] You know, he wouldn't have to be a right-leaning guy to be this guy. But they make him look like another idiot. White guy, of course. They make him look like a complete, like, like he was smart enough to prepare. And, and so thoroughly prepared that he provides something to the family that is, not, not everybody would have it. So he was so on it, on it, and so well prepared.
[00:04:45] Um, but, he was a total numbskull. And, you know, he was like a broken, a broken record of conspiracy. Like, it's gotta be Russia. Maybe it's, you know what, it's Korea. Could be China. Could, it was brutal. They made him look so simplistic and so simplified. It was like, uh, another caricature. You know what I mean?
[00:05:13] It was, it was sort of the prepper, ball cap, come to the door with a 12-gauge shotgun caricature of a prepper. I'm keeping mine. I'm gonna keep mine safe. I don't care what I gotta do. You know what I mean? Really sort of low-grade character development. Um, like I said, I couldn't help watching it. I couldn't help but hear woke apocalypse movie.
[00:05:40] And I couldn't help but wonder if this was some sort of Obama fantasy that he would have liked to have hatched in the United States. Um, during his reign. But couldn't quite get away with it. It's been a while since he's been in office. You have to understand, I have a lot of disdain for this man.
[00:06:02] He, uh, the further we get from his reign, the harder it is to remember the hell that he unleashed all over the world. Uh, and most people, like, get on him about drone strikes, which I always think is funny. Obama was the deadliest drone striker of them all. And I'm like, what? He obliterated the military. He obliterated the medical system. Personally, he obliterated my family doctor.
[00:06:29] I mean, he, he, he, I don't know the upper limit to what a guy like Barack Obama could have achieved in this nation. Barack Obama could have been, honestly, if he could have got off the resentment, Barack Obama being half black and half white, and being the amazing orator that he was,
[00:06:52] I think he could have been, like, almost, I don't want to say, like, demigod-esque damn near. Honestly. I think if he were, if he weren't brought up by left-wing terrorists, a radical Muslim father, I think, well, he wasn't brought up by his father, was he? I think he would have, uh, and then, you know, radicalized in, in university.
[00:07:21] I think he could have done anything. I think, there's no, I don't think there was a limit to what Obama could have pulled off. Seriously. And I don't mean negatively. I mean, I think he could have done anything. I think he could have ended, like, racial antagonization in the nation on all sides.
[00:07:43] He could have, I mean, he could have reinvented the United States in a way that we'd never even seen it before. In a good way. Change. In an amazing way like nothing we'd ever, he could have done it. He could have, he could have had the ear of both races. He could have done it. But anyway, back to the movie.
[00:08:06] Uh, the movie caught fire because of a, and it's really probably the reason I'm doing the review. Well, maybe, maybe not. It caught fire because of a, a, a simple line. A simple racist line in the middle of the movie. In fact, I knew there was racist things in the movie. And when Julia Roberts answered the door and said, This is your house? I thought that's what the racist thing was. Because that was pretty rough. So she answers the door.
[00:08:36] There's a black family, black father, black daughter. Really nice car. I don't know what kind of car it was. And, and they said, this is our house. And he said, this is your house? And, uh, you know, condescending. Condescending. A little racist. And I thought that was it. I was like, oh, okay, sure. Yeah, everybody probably lost their mind about that. Because I can't gauge it anymore. You know what I mean? Well, I can't anymore. I just don't know what people get crazy about. But there's a scene where they're, like, things are starting to get bad.
[00:09:06] And the husband, I'm sorry. The daughter and the father are laying in bed together because they're, the daughter's scared. Things are getting wild out there. You know what I mean? And she's nervous or she says, Daddy, can you come lay in bed? And he's like, sure. And, uh, while they're laying in bed, she starts coaching dad on. And she's like, you know, as things get worse and worse, we gotta be careful.
[00:09:34] Uh, what is, what is the exact line? We, we can't just, it's something like we can't just dole out trust to anyone. And definitely not white people. I'm not kidding. That's the exact, it might not be the exact line, but that's the line. I mean, the line is pretty much, we can't just give our trust out in a chaos, chaotic situation like this. And we definitely can't give our trust out to white people. And, and it's, she says white people.
[00:10:04] And it took me back for a minute. I was like, whoa. And then it's sort of like called into question all these other things that have happened in my life. Where I've, I've seen this weird thing that is learned. It's learned, right? That's a learned thing. Oh, she, she even says mom would agree with me.
[00:10:26] Um, I'll take you back eight years to a wonderful gal who was generous in giving and, and, uh, really, really just an all around great person who would dedicate her time to service and religion and feeding the hungry.
[00:10:46] And, uh, not a right wing person, not, not anybody who would be talking conspiratorially about anything, you know, really kind of career focused and that kind of stuff, but not really somebody who would even go down the rabbit hole, listen to talk radio, any of that kind of stuff was kind of out of her bounds. Right. And, uh, she told me years ago, it was probably about eight years ago.
[00:11:16] She was doing, uh, charity work, inner city charity work. You know what I mean? And she was talking to a little girl. They would, what they would do is they would go buy shoes for the inner city kids that were primarily black and Hispanic, you know? And she would go buy shoes for them. They had like a fund. They would raise money in the fund. And then they would, they would go get the shoes.
[00:11:41] And, and she said, you know, I was sitting there and we got on this topic cause we were talking about a coworker there, a black coworker who was kind of in the same, like saying crazy stuff like that about white people. And, um, and she, she brought this story up and said, yeah, it was, it's unbelievable. She was sitting next to me. Putting her shoes on. I'm putting her shoes on the new shoes.
[00:12:09] And she just, you know, she could tell she was happy. She was beaming. You know what I mean? Like she got these shoes, the shoes that she wanted that she couldn't afford or whatever, or maybe that her parents didn't want to get. I don't know the whole backstory, but she was beaming over these shoes. And Kate, uh, uh, the person I'm talking about helped her pick them out and you know, all that kind of stuff. The girl says something that's absolutely unbelievable.
[00:12:38] And she says, you know, miss such and such, I really like you. And my mom says, I'm not supposed to like white people. Like I said, I worked with the girl for a long time. I never got a vibe that like she had a bone to pick. We worked together to feed families of all races. Didn't matter.
[00:13:05] Um, and this story came out of a conversation and it really floored me, man. Blew me away. I've told it on the air before because it'll stick with me forever. Because I didn't know that was a thing. You know what I mean? What I'm nervous about is, is, are we damning entire races in households across America?
[00:13:33] Are we damning entire, because you know, I, I don't know if you've seen the, the new film that I hope gets obliterated before it hits theaters. But then again, it could hit theaters and be a total flop and that would be just as fun. It's called the American Society of Magical Negroes. I'm not making this up. There's the name of the movie. Some people got together. They thought this would be a good idea.
[00:13:58] And it's sort of a fantasy style movie where, um, where in this sort of universe or whatever, all the black people are magic and they use their magic all together to make sure that white people are not uncomfortable. I'm not making this up. This is a hundred percent real. Look it up. It's a big film. There's big stars in it.
[00:14:24] And David Alan Greer, who I used to enjoy so much and in living color and grew up laughing at. Now I'm laughing at for different reasons. Um, there's a scene with him and the young star standing there and, and he says to him, he says, what's the greatest predator on the planet? And, and the guy says, I don't know, standing in front of a shark picture and the kid says, I don't know. He says, it's, it's, it's an upset white person. It's an uncomfortable white person or something like that.
[00:14:52] This is, you know, this is a big movie. This is a big thing, right? What I want to know, and I don't know if anybody out there can answer it or not is, is, were you ever taught as a kid to, to like, what did your parents ever? My parents were rough. Okay. They were rough. And we'll just leave it at that. But they never once told me, never trust black people.
[00:15:22] They never once told me, uh, black people are dangerous. Do you know what I mean? All of them. Like the whole, let's damn the whole, don't trust them. Don't, you know what I mean? And, and I, I grew up in a neighborhood that in the sixties, the cops would come through and kick all the black people out of the neighborhood. So that's how my mom grew up. You know what I mean?
[00:15:50] So with this happening more and more like this thing, this, it's like bubbling to the surface, this weirdness about race. That seems to be something that's either learned in the house growing up or taught in the house growing up or something like that. I wanted to get your guys take on, on, did you grow up with this stuff? Did anybody grow up with this stuff? Did anybody grow up with people or friends?
[00:16:20] Like maybe you were a white kid and had a black friend and he told you some stuff and you were like, what? Or maybe vice versa. Right? Because I never heard of this. I mean, don't get me wrong. I had friends who had parents who were like, okay, like you won't marry a black girl. That's for sure. Right?
[00:16:41] But I never, like those people even coming out of that situation, they never talked about the complete and total damning of an entire race. So much so that it influenced them. Right? I don't know. That was more intriguing than the rest of the film. That one line there and thinking about how that line came to be that was written. I don't know if it was written into the original book.
[00:17:10] Whatever the situation may be. I thought about that for the rest of the movie. Because I was thinking to myself of the bigger picture. You know what I mean? Like what's really going on here? Is this just something that's just a trend right now? It's just showing up in Hollywood. It's just, you know. What are people, of all the things you could teach a young kid, what are people teaching their kids about the opposite race? Not the opposite race. Even that doesn't even make sense.
[00:17:39] What are they teaching kids about other races? I don't know, PBN family. Tonight we'll gather together in love and peace in the name of God in Christmas with people from a variety of races and religions at my house. And I'll be thinking about it. I'll be thinking about that.
[00:18:07] I'll be looking over the joyous time that we're having and wondering what on earth the motivation would be to teach someone something so crazy as that race. We cannot trust those people. Do you understand? In bad times we cannot trust that entire race of people. Oh, it's just a movie. Yeah. Okay. It's just a movie.
[00:18:33] Produced by a once president of the United States, right? All right, PBN family. So leave the world behind. Fast forward through the first 30 minutes. Understand that the white guys in the movie look like idiots. And, you know, get ready for a great performance from the dad. The dad who owns the home. I mean, it's just, he's the guy who's going to hold you into this movie. You know what I mean?
[00:19:03] But it's worth watching. It gets the mind rolling a little bit. It gets the juices flowing a little. It's probably worth a look. All right. I'll talk to you guys soon. I do appreciate you. Merry Christmas. Hey, if you need a last minute gift, PBN family.com. Promo code Santa. Give somebody the gift of preparedness for $50. Okay? Talk to you soon.
[00:19:27] What if I told you you could own land for $200 down and highly affordable monthly payments? Yourcheapland.com is your answer to bug out land, hunting, recreation, and whatever else your prepper mind can dream up. Yourcheapland.com has properties in Texas, New Mexico, Colorado, Oklahoma, Arizona, Utah. Go to yourcheapland.com. Check out the properties.
[00:19:53] Use the promo code PBN and get $100 off your purchase.
