The A&G Replay Thursday Hour One

Published Jul 4, 2024, 2:25 PM
  • D- Day How Terrible is Totalitarianism
  • D Day Biden Speech Causalities
  • D Day Ike's Message to Troops / Bob Trout Report
  • D Day Steven Ambross on D-Day, 20's Cynicism & Paratroopers

Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio, the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe.

Getty Armstrong and Jetty and Pee Armstrong and Getty Strong.

From the studio c see a dimly lit room people in the bowels of the Armstrong and Getty Communications Compound. And today we are under the tutelage of our general.

Manager, America's veterans, which have preserved the freedom the founding generation gave us.

Hey, we're not actually here today.

Remember you can always find us in podcast form Armstrong and Geddy on demand.

Today's show, we're going to have a lot of highlights from our D Day show, which was very very well received and was oneful to do.

Please enjoy and thanks so much for listening.

Soldiers, sailors, and airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Force.

You are about to embark.

Upon the great crusade toward which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world out upon you, The hopes and prayers of liberty loving people everywhere march with you.

June sixth, nineteen forty four, General Dwight D. Eisenhower, issuing the order of the.

Day, we will accept nothing less than full victory, good luck, and let us all be seeks the blessing of Almighty God upon this great and noble undertaking.

Everybody was scared because of the long life we figured we're going to have could be ended with one bullet or one bow of one mind paper say, how did you get all that boat and go in on the beach here?

Your job had to be done, somebody had to do.

We dated. I've never seen as many dead men on the beaches of that I've ever seen.

You couldn't stop and help anybody because they kept calling, get off the beach, get off the beach, and get said to go fire those guards. Man, oh man, oh man.

If you've ever seen saving Private Ryan, that just the amount of confusion and chaos there at the beginning, along with the I could just die at any second here.

And I'm watching men die around me, you know, right and left.

I can easily understand how people didn't want to talk about this. Don't want to talk about this if you.

Were there, geez, well, and those bits of audio are quite recent, and those fellas can barely get through the description of what happened eighty years later, which I think says everything you need to know, right, and yet they persevered and won the decisive battle of twentieth century, which set totalitarianism on its heels and change the history of the world. As we discussed with Mike Lyons Last Hour, if you didn't hear Last Hour, didn't get it to grab it by a podcast Armstrong and Getty on demand. But that was the beginning of a very long and bloody campaign. But it was the opening that the Allies needed so desperately to start that campaign to retake Europe.

For some reason, I was just thinking of the famous patent quote of you know, the goal is not to die for your country, to make the other, poor son of a bitch die for his country. And I was thinking about the variety of people that have had the level of bravery we're just discussing for really awful causes like jihadism or whatever. But a lot of times it's not bravery, as you're seeing with Russian Ukraine. Those Russian soldiers are running into certain death in some instances because they're going to get shot if they go the other direction. Our right, our people, the Allies, the harbor many different countries that were involved in D Day, and it is a lot. They were doing it willingly because they wanted to protect their country, their way of life, their family back home. They weren't doing it because they're going to be shot if they turned around right there, right right.

There is so much to say about D Day.

We've got some great audio for you, some comments from veterans who've reached out to us with their thoughts.

Looking forward to getting to that.

It's very very basic history of the day, and Jack, you've taken in enormous amounts of information on D Day. You ought to be teaching a class on it or something. But if you don't understand what it was. It was the largest invasion for US ever assembled on the planet, and they had one day to take the beach and establish a landing spot or Ike was going to call the whole thing off and withdraw all the troops that he could. It was a one day we're either going to win or we have failed battle to secure those beaches, and thank god, it succeeded at enormous enormous cost and no plan B.

Correct.

Yeah, Now, there's so much that can be said about the heroism and the sacrifice and the horror of the day and just the courage and just patriotism.

Not just Americans either.

I always want to point out the Brits and the Canadians were there in the tens of thousands and showed incredible courage and patriotism and the rest of it as well. That's why alliances are so important. But having said that, just some of the numbers. On D Day, there were one point five million US soldiers in England. There were two hundred and eighty seven thousand personnel on board Allied ships on D Day two hundred and eighty seven thousand. The number of Allied soldiers and hairtroopers engaged in Normandy on that day was one hundred and fifty six thousand plus. That's a stunning number, practically an unimaginable force. One hundred and thirty two thousand Allied soldiers landed on those beaches. On June sixth, twenty five thousand Allied sailors were engaged in Operation Neptune, piloting those Higgins boats that you may be familiar with from either history books or Saving Private Ryan or what have you.

I mean, have you ever tried to get forty people onto a couple of buses for a ski trip? And like you know, organize stopping at the restaurant. I mean, it's it's just stunning to think about these numbers and what they were doing. And they all had to have food and water and guns and ammunition in the vehicles. It's just amazing.

There were fifty nine thousand US soldiers who landed on the beach on June sixth, fifty nine thousand. There were seventy three thousand British soldiers who landed on June sixth. There were forty thousand German soldiers in the landing area attempting to defend it. Boy, the numbers just go on on, They're so interesting. There are twenty one thousand plus Canadian soldiers who disembarked at Juno Beach, while the Brits were disembarking at Gold Beach and Sword Beach.

The US of course at Omaha Beach.

Famously, why, as a percentage of population, twenty one thousand Canadians had to be a big chunk. God, what was the population of Canada in the forties.

Yeah, yeah, And actually, you know, just as an aside.

Canada and Britain.

Have been partially taken over seized politically, culturally by certain forces that absolutely despise the values of the Alliance on D Day, whether it's the Socialist Marxists or Islamists or whatever, and that troubles me a lot, partly because the blood and sacrifice and unity that we've had with those countries, especially through the decades and centuries, has been incredibly important, and so I feel like they're my brothers in a way. Anyway, back to the numbers, because they're just astonishing. There were two hundred thousand beach obstacles installed by the Germans along the Atlantic Wall. There are also two hundred thousand Allied vehicles that landed in Normandy on June sixth. Back to Jack's getting forty people on and off buses to have a meal, two hundred thousand vehicles, not to mention the tens of thousands of fighting men. The logistics of it in an arrow without computers or email or cell phones or what have you, it's all inspiring in like every conceivable way.

Yeah, there's no.

Text in your boss. Yeah, there's supposed to be six votes here and there're eight and we don't know what to do. I mean, they're just people had to figure it out on the fly. People ended up in places they weren't supposed to be and just had to make it work.

Oh my god, adapt and overcome exactly. And I look at this again, as I said to Mike Lions, not to shame our generation or the current generation or kids these days or anything like that. I think that's the wrong way to look at it. Look at the other side of the coin. Look at it as an example of Wait a minute, that sort of thing can be accomplished. Maybe I'm a little defeatist in my life. Maybe I give up a little too quickly.

Happened?

Whatever happened to that sort of patriotism?

Why were people so willing to sacrifice for the cause of defeating totalitarianism?

How terrible is totalitarianism? I think it's a.

Great opportunity for people to learn and be better Americans, especially the.

Cultural difference then to now, and and it should be studied more. Here's an example. Our friend Tim Sanderfer turned me on to the Here's something you weren't expecting today, here's you know, talk about what's on your Bengo card. Tim Sanderfer turned me on to He said it was the best book he read last year. So I've been listening to the audiobook Sammy Davis Junior, Yes, I can. It's the autobiography of if you're younger, you don't even know who that is, one of the rat packers, Sammy Davis Junior, who is with Sinatra and indeed Martin and those in Vegas and you know, the heydays, the fifties and sixties and that sort of stuff.

Anyway, Sammy Davis.

Junior grew up crazy dirt, poor black, horrifying racism and listening just the other day to the chapter where he is.

It's like eighteen years old at the time, on Pearl Harbor Day.

So they get the word listening to the radio that the Japanese have attacked the United States of America, and Sammy Davis Junior and his uncles gotten their cars and ran down to the enlisted I'm in office that afternoon to join the military to fight for the United States. And I thought, culturally, wow, how different is that.

I don't even know where to start.

That's such a great thing to bring up in a great question that people would have, Wait a minute, why did they do that given all the racism and the rest of it. You know, My very very brief answer is that the idea that the United States is the most racist country on Earth is so surpassingly idiotic and ignorant I can barely spend the breath to refute it. It's like somebody claiming cows can fly. I'm like, but it's a widespread attitude, so I guess it's worth the time. Number One, racism exists in virtually every culture on earth. It's terrible and it's awful, and we're working to erase it, but there it is. And I think, and I haven't read the book, but what I have heard from a lot of the civil rights leaders and common people of that era was that and Martin Luther King, you know, brought this home so eloquently. Y'all have stated certain principles in the Founding Documents, especially about all men being created equal. All we're asking is you live up to your own stated principles, which is one of the most powerful moral arguments ever made in the history of mankind. And it was irresistible morally and logically. And I think there was probably an optimism that, hey, we live in a place that says we're trying to do this. Now we've failed so far, but at least we say we're trying. I mean, that's all I can come up with. I hate to bring my infamous cynicism into today too much. On June sixth, but you know, we get attacked by another country. Do we have a whole bunch of people as they hear the news, where's the closest enlistment office I'm going.

To go join?

Or are they marching on our campuses to make sure we don't punish the other side too much because we're evil.

I don't think that's cynicism. I think that's an incredibly important question. Just watching the evening news. Yeah, well I have so much to say on that, and we need to take a break. But yeah, that's like the project at the rest of my life, trying to fight against the extent to which the United States, especially in the West, has been undermined by those who would see us crumble. Those attitudes to see reflected in the kids on the college campuses. That's not an accident that didn't happen organically. That's people who despise the West and our principles trying to bring us down.

Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty The Armstrong and Getty Show. Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty, The Armstrong and Getty Show, Monday, jute.

Fish deevil pit right was devastating the world.

Uhh, the Fiddley Stirred right was that Hitler's side project. I didn't even get that word out of there, so I didn't know what do I need to hear that again?

Yes, they are could nearly calm Monday shoot Fish nineteen devil right was devastating the world.

Well, keep in mind that that man, Joe Biden, President of the United States, was a sitting US Senator on the thirtieth anniversary of D Day, and this is the eightieth anniversary of D Day.

That's that's amazing.

Oh he was alive on D Day. Right, he was a senator though, that's how long. That's amazing, you know.

Granted there is a little echo going on there. But I'm not familiar with the Fiddley Stirred Rich. And I've studied this my entire life. I think I can tell you about the brown Shirts and the shoot staffa and anything you want to know.

But I don't know the Fiddley. I don't think the words came out the way he meant.

Oh, okay, boy, his next term, it's going to be really hard to understand him, said somebody with no grasp of reality.

How can people be running around with a straight face talking about him serving another term?

Well, I was gonna say they're insane, or they're covering up the fact that they're just keeping their secret plan secret until it's time to switch horses.

Did you want to play more Joe Biden or can I get into my analysis of his speech?

There's little point in playing more Joe bib Okay, So.

This is this and again I gotta work really hard not to be too cynical on an important day where we should just be in awe of what happened. But the president giving a speech that is designed at least somewhat to rally the world to understand the importance of fighting evil.

And everything like that.

Okay, well, then let the Ukrainian shoot into Russia.

Give him the stuff they want.

What the hell are you talking about?

Yeah?

He talks like Churchill and behaves like Chamberlain.

Quit telling Israel no they can't, while you get the speeches about standing up to evil?

Yeah, well I agree completely. Does that lost on him?

Uh? Yes?

In short, the D Day operation of June sixth nineteen forty four brought together the land, air and sea forces of the Allied armies and what became known as the largest amphibious invasion in military history. The invasion force included seven thousand ships in landing craft manned by over one hundred and ninety five thousand naval personnel from eight Allied countries. Almost one hundred and thirty three thousand men from the UK, the US and our allies landed on D Day. Casualties from these countries during the landing, just during the landing on that day numbered over ten thousand, and by June thirtieth, over eight hundred and fifty thousand men, one hundred and fifty thousand vehicles, and too many tons of supplies to account had landed on the Normandy shores. Less than a year later, German General Alfred Yodel signed an unconditional surrender at Riems, France.

Jack Armstrong and Joe Gerty The Armstrong and Getty Show, The Armstrong and Getty Show.

Yeah, if you're just tuning in, we are talking a great deal about D Day, looking at the history, the sacrifice, the courage, the logistics, what it says about that era, how it reflects on the modern era, just every aspect of it.

I hope you enjoy it as much as we do.

Got a couple of pieces of audio here for you that I think are amazing and moving in their own way. The first being General Eisenhower's addressed to the troops, which they got just before the invasion began, or as it was beginning. And then the second bit of audio is contemporaneous radio news on June sixth, when all they had were rumors and recently translated reports from German media that the invasion had begun. Really interesting. So to begin, Here's General Eisenhower.

Soldiers, sailors, and airmen of the Allied Expeditionary Force. You are about to embark upon the great crusade toward which we have striven these many months. The eyes of the world are upon you. The hopes and prayers of liberty loving people everywhere march with you in company with our brave allies and brothers in arms on other fronts. You will bring about the destruction of the German war machine, the elimination of Nazi tyranny over the oppessed peoples of Europe, and security for ourselves in a free world.

Your task will not be an easy one.

Your enemy is well trained, well equipped, and battle hardened.

He will fight savagely. But this is the year nineteen forty four.

Much has happened since the Nazi triumphs of nineteen forty forty one. The United Nations have inflicted upon the Germans great defeats in open battle.

Man demand.

Our air offensive has seriously reduced their strength in the air and their capacity to wage war on the ground.

Our home fronts have given us an.

Overwhelming superiority in weapons and munitions of war, and placed at our disposal great reserves of trained fighting men.

The tide has turned.

The freemen of the world are marching together to victory. I have full confidence in your courage, devotion.

To duty, and skill in battle.

We will accept nothing less than full victory.

Good luck, and let us all.

Beseeks the blessing of Almighty God upon this great and noble undertaking.

Couple of thoughts.

First, the sentiments Generalizenhower, the Supreme Allied Commander, was expressing there about freedom loving people and the need to fight and sacrifice all to preserve that that's not quaint or stupid or outdated. We're bombarded with people and institutions in the current day who try to tell you those principles are and they try to tell you this is an evil country. They undermine the heroes of the American founding, try to turn them from heroes into villains just because they were human beings or lived when they lived Or is this that don't go along with that crowd.

That crowd is wrong. Number one.

They're corrosive and they're cynical, and if the world listens to them, we'll have to have another D Day right in every way you possibly can to preserve liberty and the Western American world order.

Yeah, that fits in with what I was criticizing about the president's speech today as he commemorated the They they're on the beach there in France, And I heard George Willill the Washington Post talking about this the other day that if we don't stop Russia from winning, they are going to attack a country where we do end up with American soldiers fighting. So, like you were saying, you try to avoid allowing things getting out so out of hand that you have to have a D Day. You have to sacrifice like this to defeat under countries. And that's what bothers me about Joe Biden giving the this is so important to stand up to evil.

Well, okay, we.

Got something going on right now, and you're really really hesitant to stand up to it.

I want to quote the Wall Street Journal editorial board briefly, they have a peace out today on the eightieth anniversary of D Day. The US has hardly been immune from complacent illusions about a peaceable international community. The Obama and Biden administrations recklessly expanded social and welfare spending while shrinking the military. Mister Biden has proposed four years in a row of declining defense budgets after inflation. The emergent isolationist wing of the GOP is blocked a necessary debate over defense by putting all of its deterrent hopes. In the braggadocio of Donald Trump, the best way to honor the memory of D Day is to recall the eternal lesson that to preserve the piece, you must.

Prepare for war.

And their greater point is exactly as Jack was saying. If you allow evil to get as far as some people are willing to allow it to get, we will have to have another D Day.

And the point is to avoid that by the way that the speech there from Dwight Eisenhower. It's unfortunate.

I guess that he grew up in Abilene, Kansas, in the middle of nowhere, where I happened to be from. Joe and I got together in Salina, Kansas doing radio and his birthplace is right outside of Selina and Abilene, and that's so that's where the Dwight D. Eisenhower Library and Museum is. And if you're into World War II stuff, it's fantastic, absolutely fantastic. If you ever happened to be traveling through on I seventy stop there.

Yeah, great tip.

So what you're about to hear is, if you're a super radio freak, you might know the name Bob Trout, legendary CBS newsman in the nineteen forties. This is June sixth, nineteen forty four, at two five in the morning East Coast time, when reports were just filtering in.

BBS world Views, Bob Trout speaking, and again we bring you the available report, all of them from German sources, on what the Berlin radio called the invasion. There is still no Allied confirmation from any sort correspondence to rushed to the war Department in Washington. Soon after the first German broadcast was heard, were told that our War Department had no information on the German report. There's been no announcement of any sort from Allied headquarters in London. The first news of the German announcement reached this country at twelve thirty seven am Eastern wartimes. The Associated Press recorded this broadcast and immediately pointed out that it could be won, which Allied leaders have warned us to expect from the Germans. Shortly after one am Eastern wartime, the Berlin Radio opened its news program with a so called invasion announcement. Columbia's shortwave listening station here in New York heard the Berlin Radio say, and I quote here is a special bulletin. Early this morning, the long awaited British and American invasion began when paratroops landed.

In the area of the Somme Estuary.

The harbor of Lawv is being fiercely bombarded. At the present moment, naval forces of the German Navy are off the coast fighting with enemy landing vessels. We've just brought you a special bulletin end of the quotation, that is the invasion announcement as heard from the Berlin radio by Columbia shortwave listening station. Now here's what Transocean, one of the German news agency.

Says, and I quote.

Early Tuesday morning, landing craft and light warships were observed in the area between the mouth of the sumb and the eastern coast of Normandy. At the same time, paratroops were dropped some numerous aircraft on the northern tip of the Norman Day Peninsula.

It is believed that.

These paratroops have been given the task of capturing airfields in order to facilitate the landing of further troops. The Harbor of Law is at the moment being bombarded and continues the broadcast. German naval forces have engaged enemy landing craft off the coast. The translation broadcast, still unconfirmed, concludes this way the long expected Anglo American invasion appears to have begun.

So if you're interested, we'll post a link at armstrong a getty dot com under hot links.

There's a couple of hours of that stuff.

And thanks very much to various listeners who've sent that in and other things in as well. I just find that so interesting. Kudos to the German media, they nailed it.

Yeah.

I was watching some interviews with the author Stephen Amber last night preparing for this, and he's written so much good stuff about D Day, But he was quoting some German soldier who survived D Day, you know, from the other side of a perspective as he was, because they were concerned about an Allied invasion, but most of them thought, nah, they can't or they won't. Anyway, He's looking with his binoculars and sees it coming, and basically it was just a holy s. Just like you know, because you've run through the numbers of boats and people and planes and everything that was involved.

It's just so overwhelming.

Can you imagine being an eighteen year old German and maybe not even particularly enthusiastic about defending the Nazi regime and you're looking out there and you see that coming.

Holy Yeah.

I saw one one quote from a German soldier who was defending the coastline that as day broke and the clouds cleared somewhat, it looked like a city was floating toward them on the water.

Yeah, it was just overwhelming.

If you've never checked out any of the videos, it is absolutely stunning. From a logistical standpoint, the number of boats and men and everything that was going on at the same time just came across an interesting rundown of what it was like to be a paratrooper at this time. Quite harrowing the people, as you heard in that announcement that landed first, like right after midnight on June sixth. That and some of your texts on the way stay hear. Quick question for you, what if you happen to miss this unbelievable radio program.

The answer is easy, friends, just download our podcast, Armstrong and Getty on demand. It's the podcast version of the broadcast show, available anytime, any day, every single podcast platform known demand.

Download it now, Armstrong and Getty on Demand. Armstrong, the Armstrong and Getty Show.

Home can home to finish our education and.

We want to work.

That's say veteran of D Day saying, we got home, we finished our education, and we went to work, which leads me into this Stephen Ambrose quote from one of his books about D Day now as being fairly cynical earlier about today's generation.

Maybe this is my answer, and I quote it.

Is the young men born into the false prosperity of the nineteen twenties and brought up in the bitter realities of the Depression of the thirties. That this is about Stephen Ambrose's book about D Day. The literature they read as youngsters was anti war and cynical, portraying patriots as suckers, slackers. None of them wanted to be part of another war. They wanted to be throwing baseball's, not anger gaades, shooting twenty twos at rabbits, not in ones at other young men. But when the test came, when freedom had to be fought for or abandoned, they fought and they saved the world. That's interesting, brought up on literature of people who believe in patriotism, are you know.

Suckers?

Thanks the aftermath of World War One? Well, the World War One, and then it's the reaction to it. It was a very.

Different war than World War Two. I get the cynicism.

So here's a thread I came across about the paratroopers, which we've mentioned several times today on this eightieth anniversary of D Day. Here's a quick thread on the Americans who parachuted behind enemy lines on D Day, which is among the most insane things anyone's ever done in military combat. And this was all taken from John Keegan's Six Armies in Normandy. I've read a lot of John Gigan books. I've not read that one, ill probably will. First of all, it's important to remember that there basically were no parachutists prior to World War II. It was a brand new thing, and the Allies only belatedly figured out the technique with a lot of men dying along the way. The which his final briefing on the day before by Colonel Howard Skeetz, Johnson of the five hundred and first Airborne, which he concluded by whipping out his jump knife, brandishing it above his head and screaming, I swear to that you. I swear to you that before tomorrow night, this knife will be buried in the back of the blackest German in Normandy.

I assume that means the evilst German in Normandy.

Yeah.

Yeah, clearly, that's a way to fire up your troops. Thirteen thousand parachutists dropped on D Day. Air drops required flying at a height of about six hundred feet at a very low speed, which made you a sitting duck. Back to the Steven Ambrose d Day Book. That's one of the things he features in the first chapter, which I think everybody ought to have to read.

The first chapter at least.

This young patriot, great athlete, well loved in his high school girlfriend back home waiting for him. I think his wife actually waiting for him to come back home. Anyway, lays out a biography. This guy, leader of his parachute group, flying to one of these planes, low and slow, getting ready to jump out. Bullet comes up from underneath and kills him, or he even jumps out of the plane. That's what happens to a lot of people. Why did he have so many knives, Because after you jumped out of the low flying, slow moving plane with little practice and a bunch of stuff, there was a real chance you'd get tangled the net and die or be injured. The size and nature of these extraordinary burdens, which nearly double the man's weight with the stuff that he had to carry and required for assumption something like the assistance of a knight in armor, which you would receive from esquires, tells us a great deal about the nature of the airborne operations. Within a few years, parachuting would be considered too dangerous and outmoded to be widely used at all, But at this moment it was the best thing we had. This guy says, Oh, did I mention that half of them were zonked out on sleeping pills before they jumped out of their plane with little training and double their body weight and stuff in the Nazi occupied Europe because they're having to get to sleep to prepare for the battle. They were on Benendru, but they ended up kind of going in the middle of the night. You didn't know when it was going to happen because the weather conditions had to be right, et cetera.

When the order came to jump, you jumped.

The whole plane emptied within ten seconds under heavy anti aircraft fire. Holy Cole, you're flying around slow getting shot at a quicker time to jump out the door, you go the American parachuters. The parachutes were designed such that as they jumped out of the plane, they were exposed to a five G force shock that itself could injure you before you even hit the ground. Landing was not a precision science at that time.

Either.

Some fell in German land mines, some fell into bogs or swamps, and had to cut themselves loose or drown. So imagine this, It's d Day. You're an eighteen year old from the Midwest. You've never jumped into combat before, and no one really knows how to do it. You're strapped with one hundred pounds of gear, sleep deprived, high in benadryl. Your plane is taking heavy anti aircraft fire. In that context, you get yanked out of the plane, almost crash land in a field somewhere in France, cut yourself looped from a death trap, and then look around to see how many Nazis are around you. And the craziest part is.

They did, to quote Andrew Roberts from the National Review, they knew that when they reached the ground there would be merciless opposition. Some of those whose parachutes got caught in trees were burned alive by flamethrower. They fought in fields and hedgerows lit only by the moon and by tracer fire.

What men they were.

And then he goes on, how can we not, reading of their actions that extraordinary day, hold our manhood cheap? When we contemplate what they attempted and achieved, it makes us wonder how we would have fared had it been our generation that had to liberate Europe from Nazism.

Ah, including a great portion of the quote from Saint Crispin's Day, the Shakespeare speech that fired up people for that great battle. Those who are not with us will hold their manhoods cheap and wish that they were with us on this day, right, And that's where the band of Brothers quote comes from.

Final note from my old friend Mike, the attorney in Chicago. Early in his career, he had the privilege of having a dinner with one of the Sea your partners, who was a D Day paratrooper. He writes, we were all struck by the way he told the stories, very matter of factly about what happened that day, particularly that they drifted off course, ended up way behind enemy lines, had no idea.

Where they were.

Even so the theme was we did what we had to do, and it was so amazing how he told the story the way one would talk about how they mowed the lawn the night before. He did one of the greatest things ever in the history of mankind, and he talked about it so plainly.

We got a lot more on this. You can text us anytime.

I got to read some of your texts, because there's been some really good ones At Tough four one KFTC.

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