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Hey, everybody!
Welcome to the Dennis Prager Show.
I'm coming to you from Chicago.
I'm doing a speech this weekend.
The weather is gorgeous.
Ah, nice and cool.
Interesting development yesterday.
I told you I would monitor how many people at Los Angeles International Airport were wearing masks when you didn't have to.
It will be the only airport in the country, to the best of my knowledge, that, as of tonight, There will be a requirement again.
There is a crazy woman named Barbara Ferrer who is a fool with power.
Those are the most dangerous people in the world, fools with power.
And she has dictated, and I don't understand why even LAX has to listen to it, she has zero authority.
The authority given to health authorities is...
It is unprecedented.
They get to tell you how you live your life.
They don't get to tell you what the situation is, but how you live your life.
I thought that's what we elect politicians for.
Aren't they the people who are supposed to pass laws?
Health authorities don't have to pass laws.
They just say, screw your life around.
Put masks on two-year-olds who are crying.
Morons.
Morons run these health agencies.
I've never said this.
Many of you know that my views have gone 180 degrees in the opposite direction.
I consider almost everyone in public health an idiot, a fool, an idiot savant, people who know something about science but know nothing about society or about people.
They have a tunnel vision that is so narrow that they have no idea the damage they have done two years of no school thanks to stupid people and health authorities and politicians listening.
I mean, I'm furious.
I'm just furious.
And that people go along with it.
Damage people in the name of health.
That is the motto of America's health authorities.
Damage people.
Fauci from Fauci on down.
Damaged people in the name of health.
That is it.
I've got to learn that in Latin.
My friend Mike's listening.
Send it to me in Latin, Mike.
Damaged people for the sake of health.
That is the...
No, no.
Not no.
Nominee.
In the name of.
That's it.
Not for the sake of.
In the name of.
It seemed to me yesterday, on my plane, That I would say nearly half of the people on the plane in my section, which is first class, were wearing masks.
I was shocked.
And fittingly, there were two flight attendants in first class, one male, one female.
The male wore the mask the whole time.
The female didn't wear it at all.
Looking around and taking pictures at the airport, I could find zero pattern.
I always looked for patterns.
Was it young?
Was it old?
Was it white?
Was it non-white?
Was it male?
Was it female?
There was no pattern I could detect, except, which was not surprising, Asians were more likely to wear masks than any other single group.
But that is a cultural thing, which if you go to Asia, you find that people were wearing masks before COVID. Amazing, amazing.
It's truly, putting Asian culture aside, it is truly a pacifier.
It's an adult pacifier.
I was stunned that the flight attendant, this was on United, I was stunned that the male flight attendant, perfectly pleasant man, but weren't worth the whole flight.
Well, it's silly for me to say what did he think.
I know exactly what he thought.
He thought he's protecting himself.
Maybe he even thought, oh, I'm protecting...
The people on the plane.
Anyway, there's at least outdoors, that's pretty rare.
At least, it's getting rare.
My friends, this is disinformation.
I got a question, yeah, from...
From Alan back in LA. What percentage in the airport were wearing masks?
That was a little tough to tell.
I would say, again to my surprise, I wouldn't say it was 50-50.
I would say between 30 and 40% were wearing masks.
I so wonder, what do they think about...
The other half or more than half that are not wearing masks.
I don't know.
Do they think we're risking our lives, risking others' lives?
The whole thing is a bit scary, my friends.
The ease with which people are convinced of what is not true.
The ease with which people say men give birth.
You tell them enough men give birth, then they say men give birth.
Latest, you know, this is a really fascinating and awful story.
I'm speaking in La Cañada, California on Mother's Day on raising moral leaders.
Pretty non-political topic, would you say, about raising children to be moral leaders?
And it's the first Jewish institution, I think, in La Cañada history.
It's a small town.
It's where the Jet Propulsion Lab is, NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab.
It's a little west of Pasadena.
It's a few miles from Pasadena.
So a Chabad house is opening there.
This is a religious place that opens all over the world.
They invigorate the life around them, particularly for Jews, but for everyone.
They have beautiful programs for people of every background in rehab and addictions.
And so to help them out, I'm speaking.
I'm not taking a penny.
I'm speaking for them on Mother's Day.
And the rabbi told me that the moment he put the notice up on the biggest Facebook page in La Cañada, California, it was taken down.
They would not speak to him.
They just told him, these two women, that I have hateful rhetoric.
And what was the other?
I don't know, something else, but in that category.
Hateful rhetoric.
And so they will not allow an announcement, the first Jewish institution in La Cañada history, that they're having me speak.
They can't publicize it.
People keep sending me that they have tried to put it up on that Facebook page.
The La Cañada Parents Facebook page, 4,000 members.
They are taken off within 15 minutes of posting that I will be coming to speak.
15 minutes.
I'll bet these women are considered by many who know them, I don't know them at all, as nice people.
I'll bet these women are considered by many who know them.
The amount of damage nice people have done in societies is as much as not nice people have done in societies.
You can have a nice personality and be despicable.
But, of course, they believe what they're writing.
I'm sure they never heard me once, and I'm sure they never heard me, I'm sure they never read me.
And so I would ask you to, if you are in Southern California, please come to the lecture, or at least get tickets wherever you are.
And you can go to Where's Dennis on my website, dennisprager.com, about Dennis, Where's Dennis?
That's it, about Dennis, Where's Dennis?
Or go to crescentavalleychabad.com, C-H-A-B-A-D. I want to fill the place up like I did.
with the Santa Monica Symphony Orchestra.
Back in a moment.
The Dennis Prager Show.
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Hey everybody, Dennis Prager here in Chicago for a lecture.
.
Well, my friends, we are living because of Joe Biden and his party.
He's a bad man.
I never said that about a president, ever.
We have a bad human being as the President of the United States of America.
Now you'll say, well, wasn't Trump bad?
There's no comparison, first of all.
Donald Trump, with all his flaws, did not use the government to make his family wealthy.
That level of corruption is what is...
characteristic of third-world countries.
Joe Biden is profoundly corrupt.
He's a liar.
In other words, everybody has told lies.
But he does it regularly and has throughout his life.
Or his public life.
I can't speak to his private life.
And he's ruining this country.
It is not possible to overstate the unprecedented threat that we are witnessing now with the creation of the Disinformation Governance Board.
The moment Elon Musk bought Twitter, within two days, the fear that the left has of any dissent Being widely disseminated is palpable.
Please understand, you cannot have both freedom of speech and the left.
One will die.
You cannot have both at the same time.
If the left is in power in any country, in any university, in any high school, in any kindergarten, where the left is in power, free speech dies.
When free speech thrives, the left is not in power.
So the left understands in the deepest parts of their soul that if people are allowed to speak their minds, if dissent is allowed, the left will not succeed.
The first thing that Lenin did in 1917 was shut down all newspapers and created his own newspapers.
That is what the Democrats would like to do as well.
They would like to shut down talk radio.
They would like to shut down Fox News.
They'd like to shut down every site possible.
As the La Kenyatta Facebook page is trying to shut down my ability to speak in that city for a rabbi's organization, Chabad.
It is all the same thing.
We will never...
Allow different opinions.
Because when they do, the shallowness, the moral and intellectual shallowness of their positions is made evident.
That is why.
That is why they don't dialogue, they don't debate.
Do you know that this, the first official rabbi in the history of this city, Young, wonderful rabbi, Mendy Grossbaum.
Rabbi Grossbaum was in contact with the La Cunyata parents' Facebook page.
People who run it, they would not speak to him.
They would not give the rabbi the courtesy of a phone call.
No time.
It's in my column this week.
I wrote about it.
They have no time for them.
Everybody who has tried to put up the fact that I'm speaking on Mother's Day, they have been taken down.
And what is done in this little city in California is done everywhere.
They shut down dissent.
It amazes me that they could do this and half the American people Or half the people who vote, at least, put it that way, are okay with this.
This is what's upsetting.
People vote Democrat.
They vote to shut down dissent.
Because they didn't like, in some cases, they couldn't stand Donald Trump's character.
Whoa, what a great reason.
Oh, my God.
I tell you, I am reinforced in something I used to tell kids when I would I am reinforced in something I used to tell kids when I came to California in my 20s to direct an institute, an educational institute.
So I'd speak to them.
They were all 19 to 25 years old, a little younger than me.
I would tell them, you know, you think you become an adult.
When you reach a certain age, 21, 30, 40, whatever you think it might be.
But you're wrong.
You become an adult when you decide to become an adult.
When you're a kid, you think that the adults who are in charge know what they're doing.
If you don't think that, life is very, very insecure.
So there is a built-in yearning by young people to believe that the adults know what they're doing.
Otherwise, there's a sense of chaos which is very discomforting to anybody, and especially a young person.
But the adults don't know what they're doing.
How do the teachers' unions and teachers get away with shutting down schools for two years?
How is it that parents still have respect for these teachers?
I don't get it.
I must admit, there are unanswerable questions to me.
You deliberately hurt my child because you are a hypochondriac or a leftist or both, and I'm supposed to respect you?
Back in a moment.
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It's the happy, happy, happy, happy happy, happy early.
Ladies and gentlemen, it's the happiness hour on the Dennis Prager Show.
Every Friday since 1999. Amazing.
Think about that.
The same century as World War I, we started the happiness hour.
Okay, y'all.
The happy make the world better, the unhappy make it worse.
We have never missed a happiness hour any time I broadcast on a Friday.
Which is about 48 out of 52 times a year.
All right, y'all.
My topic today has political overtones.
They normally don't, but there are also non-political overtones.
And I'm not saying it for the sake of politics, but for the sake of happiness.
Although, I will say that the more I think about it...
Happiness is a political, very political issue because there are no happy leftists.
There are happy liberals.
There are happy conservatives.
So the more happy people we have in the country, the better the moral fabric, social fabric, the preservation of its best values will be.
So today's topic is...
And it's engendered by actually two things.
It's something I have talked to you about on a number of occasions.
There is an article today in College Fix, and it is about a Harvard student coming out as a conservative.
She came out of the closet just recently.
Here it is.
Kareem Hajar said after she respectfully raised her conservative views at the university, most people thanked her for it.
She was basically shut down as every...
One who isn't on the left is at campus or anywhere else.
And she's a happier person for having come out of the closet.
You know the young woman also at Harvard that I do a podcast with, Julie Hartman.
It's the Dennis and Julie podcast.
So all you need to do is type in Dennis and Julie podcast and that'll come up.
We record one every week.
It's particularly...
It's appealing to people of all ages, but particularly the young people.
She's 22. And her story about becoming happier, coming out of the closet outside of the left.
Well, by sheer coincidence, such as life, and this is one of the...
You want to know one of the many reasons I am happy?
Is the number of terrific people I get to meet.
I... It sounds...
I don't know what does it sound like to people.
Does it sound like a cliche?
I don't think so.
Because most people don't have that opportunity.
I thank God every day for the opportunity to meet wonderful people and literally of every age.
So, write with me.
I'm in Chicago right now.
I'm here to give a speech.
And in the studio with me is a young woman.
She's 25. And her name is Morgan Goldman.
She's a law student.
She came to the attention of PragerU through PragerForce, the young people's organization that we have.
And talking to her, I just met her.
I never met her before.
But if Alan Estrin thinks well of you, that is damn impressive.
The living martyr is not easily impressed, but he said, Dennis, I think you should meet her when you go to Chicago.
And he was right.
By the way, are you a Sox fan?
Is that correct?
Somewhat.
My boyfriend's a Sox fan, so you're him.
That's good enough.
No, if your boyfriend is a Sox fan, that's a good sign.
I told her I prefer the Sox to the Cubs.
Because I think of the Sox as the little guy and the Cubs as the elite.
So I hope you Cubs fans here at Chicago don't resent me for it.
Look, I find it impossible to root for the Lakers because of LeBron James.
So just for the record, it's not a Chicago-based problem for me.
Anyway...
We were speaking and I thought, my God, if the happiness topic is coming out of the closet and I'm sitting with somebody who did that at such a young age, why don't I have her tell a little about the effect it had?
The happiness topic today is the more you hide yourself, the less happy you will be.
This is not just true politically.
It is true in every way.
Look, before I get to Morgan, I want to re-emphasize what I have been saying for all of the years of the Happiness Hour.
A friend is someone you can tell everything to.
The more you hide from people in your life, the less happy you will be.
For one thing, it means when you hide parts of yourself, It means that you don't trust the people in your life and how they will react.
Obviously.
It's a terrible way to walk through life.
If they really knew me, they wouldn't like me.
Forget politics.
It has nothing to do with politics.
It's a guarantor of non-happiness.
To hide who you are from others.
So anyway, today in America, tens of millions of people hide who they are in the political, social, moral realms because of fear of how friends or others will react to them.
By the way, it's a completely understandable fear.
This is not paranoia.
The question, though, is what is more likely to make you unhappy?
Your fear or the consequences of overcoming your fear?
That's the way to put it.
Which is more likely to make you unhappy?
And there's no question.
In most cases, I can't say every case.
Your fear will make you more unhappy than the consequences of overcoming your fear.
So, Morgan, you didn't expect to go on national radio today when you woke up, I suspect.
I did not, but...
Wait, we need your microphone.
Hold on.
Is Morgan on the mic?
Yeah.
Okay, now you are.
Yes, so you didn't expect that, obviously.
I did not expect it.
But I'm ready for it.
That is clear that you are.
So you were raised, as you said to me earlier, in a secular Jewish home with Democrat.
I mean, secular Jew Democrat is almost redundant.
I'm a Jew.
I'm well aware of that.
And what happened?
Well, I obviously went through high school and college being a Democrat, a leftist, I guess you could say.
I think I was generally a pretty unhappy person.
I was insecure.
I was anxious.
And then into my first year of law school, during the George Floyd stuff that was going on in the defund the police era, I kind of started seeing the truth because I had had prior experiences in my education where I got to be around police officers.
So from there, I started trusting my intuition.
Rather than listening to what people were telling me, I knew what I believed to be true and I went with it and I started doing research and the rest is history.
And I think I'm a much happier person now because I think when you're living in truth, you're just bound to be happier.
Were you afraid of revealing your change?
So I actually thought that because I was a former leftist, I had some credibility and I would be able to wake up everyone around me.
I thought that was going to happen.
So I really wasn't.
I kind of went into it thinking that I'd be able to convince people to change their mind.
And as you know, it's not so easy.
So I really wasn't scared.
But then when I saw the reactions, I got a little bit more tentative.
Give me an example.
I've lost friends.
I've been called racist.
Just a lot of distance and judgment has gone on with people in my life.
My grandma, who's my best friend in the world, is a very, very strong Democrat.
Our relationship, it's okay now, but for a bit it was tarnished.
So it's been difficult, but I don't regret speaking out.
By the way, how old is your grandmother?
My grandma is...
81. And I call her Gigi.
I will tell you something about that in a moment.
1-8 Prager 776. Saying who you are makes you happier.
When you're smiling, keep on smiling.
You know, by the way, whenever I hear these songs that we play on the Happiness Hour, this is Dennis Prager, this is the Happiness Hour, Second Hour Fridays.
Do they...
Do they even have songs like this?
Sean, what year was that from?
Was that from the 40s?
Yeah, check.
I suspect it was from the 40s.
The number of songs about being happy from, I would say, before the 1960s, then the devolution of our society.
Really began.
I wouldn't even say slippery slope.
I would say slippery downfall.
The speed has been eerie, if you will.
But I reflect on the music that we play for you and how few songs about being happy are written.
Why would people be happy?
You can't...
What year?
As late as 57?
Oh, that's the Louis Primo recording, yeah, but I think the lyrics precede that.
Anyway, it doesn't matter.
Anyway, welcome back.
I'm in Chicago, and this young woman came to the awareness of PragerU.
She became active in the Chicago branch of Prager Forest.
It branches all over the world.
Okay, it was written in 1928. Much sooner than I thought.
The Roaring Twenties.
Our twenties are also roaring in the wrong direction.
In unhappiness direction.
The subject of today's happiness hour is expressing who you are and you'll be happier.
It's not just political, though today that's the most obvious.
So, I'm with this 25-year-old impressive young woman who, so to speak, did come out of the liberal left closet.
And you, look, we just met an hour ago, so I'm learning as much as the audience is.
You radiate a happy disposition right now, but you say that was not always the case.
Right.
I think I used to be very unconfident in who I was.
So ever since I came out, I think I've definitely changed in that way.
Part of my theory, and I always tell people who are on my show, you don't have to agree with me.
It's very important.
But I always tell people that one of the rewards, there are prices paid for coming out.
There are.
But there are rewards, and I think the rewards are bigger.
The rewards are, for every person you lose, you will gain one or two kindred spirits in your life.
Have you been a magnet to kindred spirits?
Or has that been still a tough project?
It still has been a tough project, and I think a lot of that has to do with me.
I don't know if I've left my social scene in a way where I... I've exposed myself to people that think differently than me.
It's tough living where I live.
So I think I need to go out of my comfort zone more, join more organizations, and meet more like-minded people.
But, I mean, being here, you're a kindred spirit.
I mean, this is an amazing opportunity.
So putting myself out in that way allowed me to have this experience.
That's right.
That's exactly right.
My God, folks, you won't believe this.
This woman majored in social work.
Is that correct?
Yes.
My friends, left of social work is Bolshevik.
Now, by the way, this really fascinated me.
Part of your work for your degree in social work was to spend time with police.
Is that correct?
Yes.
So as part of, in pursuance of your bachelor in social work, you do an internship during your second semester.
And there's a variety of options, but I applied to work at the police department.
And at this point, I was still a leftist.
And so I spent every day there and I got to go on multiple ride-alongs a week and kind of form relationships with police officers.
I would think that they would not want people who are on the left, if they want them to stay on the left, don't let them know policemen.
I would agree with that.
This was also in 2019, where I feel like the tides shifted a bit.
Maybe now, in 2022, they don't have the same internship, but back then...
It's a big gamble for the left.
In fact, the biggest gamble for the left is spending time with any conservatives.
Right.
Just spend time with...
You know, with people like me, or Alan, or any of us at PragerU, or Ben Shapiro, or, I mean, I could, you know, the whole list, or...
Because then you don't have the caricatured version of conservatives in your minds.
That's right, yes, exactly.
It's shattering.
It has to be.
So you were with police, and...
By the way, I was going to add Dave Rubin just as an example.
The list, forgive me all my wonderful conservative public figures whose names I don't, because it's endless.
They're basically a very fine group of people.
They're basically happier as well, in keeping with this.
But police, that's the biggest risk.
I did a ride along with the LAPD, the Los Angeles Police Department.
Now, I was pro-police because I believe the police are the fine line between barbarity and civilization.
That's why they're a policeman.
If there was no barbarity, we would not need any police.
It's obvious.
And I saw the way they took interest in kids in the inner city.
Young black kids who came over and hugged them that the press never covers.
They're the fathers that these kids don't have.
You're nodding.
Is that because you had that too?
Yeah, I saw how much the police cared for members of their community, knew people by name.
I just saw a lot of love.
And I think that anyone who, before they judge police, they should go on a ride-along because their mind might change.
That is a great idea.
Before you judge the police, go on a ride-along.
Well, you are a delight, Morgan Goldman.
Look at where your life has taken you.
Thank you for having me.
You're welcome, but if you knew what a joy it is for me, you would know it was really...
As much in my self-interest as in yours.
Folks, call in.
The subject is stepping out and declaring who you are.
If you've done that, what has happened in your life?
Did it turn happier?
Less happy?
Very incredibly important subject.
1-8 Prager 776. The Dennis Prager Show.
All right, back to Dallas.
And Ray, right?
Yes, sir.
Okay, so you raised an issue.
What was it again?
I wanted to comment on it.
Yeah, the issue overall is, on your topic of anything goes, right, is when do you decide you're done?
So I've caught myself recently saying, I'm done.
Whether it's in an airport or a restaurant or within a relationship of saying, you know what, I'm done.
So I would appreciate hearing your thoughts on when are you done?
Well, they're all different circumstances.
Absolutely.
Yeah, in a debate, it's a great question.
But I'll give you...
If there is one generalizable answer, is when I internally conclude there's no hope.
So I will debate somebody.
First of all, I never debate privately.
If someone comes over to me and says something absurd, I'll say, okay, have a great day.
I don't feel it's worth the...
I'm not kidding.
Because, look...
Partially true.
One reason is I get to speak to so many people, millions of people, so feeling that I'm somewhat expending the same energy debating one as debating a million, I'd rather debate a million, or at least speak to a million.
But even in any circumstance, you mentioned relationships, that's when there is no hope.
There are people...
I have had people who differ with me on for two segments, which in radio is enormous.
A whole segment.
Because I thought...
Not that I would...
There was hope that I could persuade them.
But there was hope that there could be an honorable intellect.
That's right.
There could be a dialogue.
But there are people...
That I let go very quickly, because I realize they're there to give a monologue.
I hear them, but they don't hear me.
Absolutely.
Interesting.
So, by the way, the other point that you had made was that your father, from World War II, had a Nazi belt as a souvenir, and alongside the swastika, it had God is with us.
Gott mit uns.
Yes, sir.
He was a European World War II fan.
Concentric circles, swastika, oak leaves, and praise God is with us.
Right.
So, I'm going to comment on that.
And, yeah, I'll tell you it was a pleasure to speak to you.
So, this is one of the most important things I ever talk about.
Belief in God means nothing.
Nothing.
Absolutely nothing.
If you believe in Zeus or you believe in God or you believe in climatology, it is all the same.
I want to know what God you believe in.
To say you believe in God is literally meaningless.
And this is what trips up a lot of people because atheists, understandably, will say, Oh, you think God is necessary for morality?
Well, the Nazis had on their belts, Gott mit uns.
God is with us.
So, what do you say to that?
Well, I'll tell you what I say to it.
I'd like to have asked the Nazi.
So, let me ask you, since you're using the word God, I mean, do you mean a table?
They would say, of course not.
I mean God.
Okay, so I'll ask you another question.
Did this God...
Give the Jews the Ten Commandments.
Okay?
And he would say no.
So what God do you believe in?
What they believed in was a supreme being who may have made the world and who's on their side, who's obviously an a-hole.
That God is an a-hole.
A God who's on the Nazi side.
Is divine scum.
So, what does it mean that a Nazi soldier believed in God?
in the God who said, "Thou shall not murder, "thou shall not steal." That's the point.
What God do you believe in?
I've written about this.
And it's really, really important.
I'm glad he raised the subject.
Okay.
What God do you believe in?
You see, I'm a Jew, and I have such a kindred spirit feeling with so many Christians, because we believe, yes, they believe in Jesus Christ, and I don't believe in Jesus Christ as the Messiah or the Son of God.
But that doesn't affect me.
We believe in the same Father.
So we will have so much in common.
They believe that God gave the Ten Commandments to Moses, and so do I. I mean, there are people, everyone has people, Catholics and Protestants, you know, Catholics believe that the Pope is the vicar of Christ on earth, and Protestants don't.
So therefore, do they not believe in the same God?
They do believe in the same God.
To use a musical analogy, the Jews and Christians, Protestants and Catholics, Mormons, are variations on a theme.
Variations are on the theme of the Creator God, the God of the Ten Commandments, the God, in fact, I guess, of the Old Testament.
That people have additional beliefs does not negate the centrality of that.
But the Nazi who believed that God was with him did not believe in the God who gave Moses the Ten Commandments.
To say the least, back in a moment.
Public education has gone off the rails.
Parents and teachers have had enough.
Watch the groundbreaking new documentary, Whose Children Are They?
Today on SalemNow.com.
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