Dennis Prager dismantles the myth that high male libido equals perversion, arguing frequent desire is a biological expression of love rather than obsession. He shares listener stories where wives initially feared their husbands were perverts only to realize their drive signified devotion, while advising couples with mismatched needs to seek counseling and compromise on frequency. Ultimately, Prager urges listeners to accept inherent sexual differences between sexes to eliminate gratuitous marital suffering, emphasizing that understanding these distinct biological realities is essential for a healthy marriage. [Automatically generated summary]
Transcriber: CohereLabs/cohere-transcribe-03-2026, WAV2VEC2_ASR_BASE_960H, sat-12l-sm, script v26.04.01, and large-v3-turbo
|
Time
Text
Who Makes You Feel Like a Freak00:01:20
On today's episode of Timeless Wisdom, why are we made to feel like freaks if we need sex?
I mean, hey.
Who's making you feel.
Wait, wait, wait, wait.
I have no clue.
That's how we feel love.
No, no, no.
There are three separate issues, but let me tell you who, God forbid, is making you feel like a freak?
Me?
My husband.
Oh, okay.
That's coming up on Timeless Wisdom with Dennis Prager.
We live in a time where the moment you question the narrative, you're told to stop.
Thinking and start complying.
That's why what Angel is doing matters.
With eye opening documentaries like Thank You, Dr. Fauci, and RFK Legacy, Angel is willing to explore the issues others avoid.
In a culture shaped by gatekeepers, Angel offers something rare a platform for truth seeking storytelling that isn't constrained by fear or conformity.
Go to angel.comslash Prager, join the Angel Guild, and watch these films today.
Welcome to Timeless Wisdom with Dennis Prager.
Hear thousands of hours of Dennis's lectures, courses, and classic radio programs.
And to purchase Dennis Prager's Rational Bibles, go to DennisPrager.com.
I'm old fashioned.
I like two sexes.
Yeah, and another thing.
All of a sudden, I don't like being married to what is known as a new woman.
I want a wife, not a competitor.
Competitor!
Competitor!
Addressing Suffering in Modern Couples00:15:56
Talk about a bit this crying in the morning thing, this depression.
You know, let's get that fixed.
That's what men think, isn't it?
What?
Unless you've got the answer, unless you can say, oh, I know this bloke in the Sixth Road who could fix that, and.
There's no point bothering.
How do you rate women so well?
I think of a man, and I take away reason and accountability.
I love him.
I love him.
And I don't care what you think.
I love him for the man he wants to be, and I love him for the man that he almost is.
What do people have rows about him?
Money, sex, sex, money.
He wants, she doesn't want.
She wants, he doesn't want?
Women have always been a big problem to me, Dr. Fosband.
Are you listening, Doctor?
Yes, yes, yes.
Go on, go on.
Hi, everybody.
Welcome to the Male Female Hour on The Dennis Prager Show.
Every week at this hour, I talk about men and women.
I call it the Male Female Hour.
I've explained that, and I won't now because I'm getting into a subject that is very delicate, as it often is on this topic.
What gives me the courage, and it takes some courage, to do this.
Is your reaction, frankly?
Your reactions have been so powerful.
I will read to you a letter from a woman, married 14 years.
And it is.
The reason for my hesitation is because I have to announce this is not.
This hour will not be for little kids.
I think it is your call on early teenage, mid teenage, and older, I think.
I think it could be useful.
I mean, kids are not living in submarines these days.
But I just need to tell you that if they're under teenage, I don't think that this is for them.
But it is for you if you have a little kid.
So either send the kid out of the room.
If you're driving, just drop the kid off somewhere.
Come back on the freeway later.
Send the kid to some mall shop.
Because I really want you to hear this.
All righty, listen to this letter here, and I won't even give her first name nor her husband's name, let alone even the city.
All right, but here is a letter that I received very recently.
Dear Mr. Prager, I have been married for 14 years to my husband, R.
Okay, and we have two young boys.
My husband is listening to your show on a regular basis, and he is quoting you quite often.
By the way, well, it doesn't matter.
I have a feeling that it's a European woman here, but I'm not certain about it.
Anyway, it doesn't matter really.
He has made many attempts for me to listen to your shows, but without success.
He recently became more creative and started downloading your podcasts, then putting them in my car CD player.
That, by the way, is worthy of its own topic.
The efforts that this man made to have his wife hear this show.
And it could go in both directions, by the way.
Often it's the wife wanting the husband to.
I am as convinced as one can be that I have a 50 50 male female audience.
But this man did not give up to his credit for, and you will see, to his benefit.
So, first thing, when I start my car, bam, the happy hour song came on, and here goes Dennis Prager singing along.
I thought of my husband and told myself, okay, honey, you put a smile on my face.
That's cute.
But I shut it off.
I am a bit stubborn, but so is my husband.
He then recorded for me the male hour.
Isn't that funny that she calls it the veil hour?
It's called the veil female hour, but that's the part she heard.
And this time I actually listened to you, Mr. Prager.
And when I heard these women calling and telling how their husbands were pursuing them and never could get enough of them, I was shocked.
And immediately realized that my husband was not a pervert obsessed with having relations with me.
I understood my husband and realized how much he, she capitalizes he, loves me and only me.
And I immediately felt bad.
Felt bad for neglecting my husband, felt bad for thinking that he was only lusting after me.
And I started telling myself.
How selfish I have been all these years, how devoted he is to me every day that goes by.
Every day he has been telling me he loves me, and how pretty I am, and how hot I am, and I always thought that he was saying that because he wanted something from me.
How much time have I wasted in my marriage?
But now I look at him, and I truly feel special.
I truly know he loves me, and only me, and I love him more, and only him.
I get it, Mr. Prager.
I get it.
And I thank you for opening my eyes to a truly wonderful, loving husband.
For this letter alone, I am beyond happy that I made the male female hour.
But when you multiply this by thousands, two things happen.
One, I realize how important it is to talk about these things, as difficult as it might be, and it is difficult.
The other thing that I realize is how many millions, millions are suffering needlessly in their marriages.
There are two types, I always say this, folks, there are two types of suffering.
There is that which exists, there is the built in suffering that is inevitable to life, and there is gratuitous suffering.
Suffering we create for no good reason.
There are millions of couples who have suffering.
And there are millions of couples who have gratuitous suffering.
There are so many aspects to this letter that I want to concentrate on and talk to you about on this edition of the Male Female Hour.
One is the notion my husband's a pervert.
My husband is oversexed, hypersexed, pervert, whatever it is that you might think.
The odds are, my friends, the odds are.
That your husband is in fact not a pervert.
Okay?
Just know that.
The odds are what he is is a male.
And if he's a male and he's not like you, that doesn't make him a pervert.
It makes him a male.
That's a.
Now, there are guys who are.
I don't know if the word pervert even.
I'm sure there are.
But although it's not the world's easiest term to define, one person's pervert is another person's adventurous lover.
So that's a very, very difficult term and not a very useful one, in my opinion.
Not a very useful one to use.
And calling your husband that may not, shall we say, lead to a warmer marriage.
Now, that's not to say that there are men who ask for things or something else that may be over the top.
I'm sure that's true.
But the average guy may seem like a pervert.
Uh, to the average woman when he is in fact not.
He's just not you.
It's, it's almost like the average kid, the average boy probably seems like a, like a, an incipient, uh, you know, mall shooter when all he's doing is walking around with a gun and the mother is horrified.
A toy gun, not a real gun.
The average mother is horrified.
Oh my God, my boy's walking around with his toy gun and he makes everything into a gun.
Is he gonna kill people?
No, he's not.
He's a boy.
Boys like to shoot guns.
One of the most important things is for each sex to know that they are not the other sex, but it's particularly important.
I think men are far more aware that women are not they and do not have to be them than women are vice versa.
We are not hairy females, and we shouldn't be made into it.
And we men should not allow you to make us into it.
That's another issue.
So, number one, the number one point of this letter.
And why it was so touching to me because now she realizes how much her husband loves her.
He wanted relations more than she did.
What a shock.
What a shock.
I mean, God, is this the only marriage that this happens to?
I mean, obviously it happens so often.
And she's just thinking, ah, this guy's the lust machine, and then so on.
Then she went, wait a minute, he wants me.
He wants me.
That's beautiful.
That's beautiful.
It's not sick, it's not perverted.
Now, does that mean that there can't be limits or should be limits?
Or we don't take both sexes into account?
1 8 Prager 776.
I'll tell you more reasons why this is such an important letter, and I'll take your calls.
This episode of Timeless Wisdom will continue right after this.
We live in a time where the moment you question the narrative, you're told to stop thinking and start complying.
That's why what Angel is doing matters.
With eye opening documentaries like Thank You, Dr. Fauci, and RFK Legacy, Angel is willing to explore the issues others avoid.
In a culture shaped by gatekeepers, Angel offers something rare.
A platform for truth seeking storytelling that isn't constrained by fear or conformity.
Go to angel.comslash Prager, join the Angel Guild, and watch these films today.
Now, back to more of Dennis Prager's Timeless Wisdom.
Hi, everybody.
You're listening to the Dennis Prager Show, the male female hour.
I didn't give you the number 18 Prager 776.
I fully acknowledge that the intent of this hour is to help the sexes understand each other and ideally help your marriages.
I can't do that, and nobody can do that if we don't address real issues between men and women.
Sex is one of them.
This is not an hour for your kids under teenage years.
I announced that at the outset, and I'm reminding you in case you didn't hear it then.
Or, well, actually, I can't remind you if you didn't hear it then.
I see I'm very precise, so much so I drive myself nuts sometimes.
I am telling you for the first time if you didn't hear it then.
I'm reminding you if you did hear it then and didn't act on it.
Oh, man.
I have a number of letters with the exact same point.
I read to you one.
I'll read to you just an excerpt from this one.
Let's see here.
And appreciate the difference between.
What a difference.
You have relieved my mind thinking my husband was a pervert all those early years of my marriage.
I love him more.
Thanks.
And this is another wife.
Do you think your husband's a pervert?
Now, here's the problem with doing this on the radio.
I can't.
You can't spell out specific desires that he might have because it is still public radio.
I don't mean, you know, public as an NPR, but it is still public radio and it is still family radio, nevertheless.
But I do want you to address this issue in your mind or address it with me.
A man is a man and not a woman, and this letter was so powerful to me, the one that I had originally read to you, and how bad she now feels thinking this way about him.
Let's take some calls here, and we begin with Los Angeles and Linda.
Linda, Dennis Prager, thank you for calling.
Good morning, Dennis.
Hi.
I just want to say that I hope a lot of women don't make the same mistake I did.
I was married for 30 years, and then I lost my husband to cancer.
And the last few years, I didn't give in to him.
I know now, after listening to you and Dr. Laura, because she says the same thing.
That's right.
That they love us.
Mm hmm.
And they're so simple.
And I'm so sad.
Go on.
Through your tears, I'm keeping you on.
Because your message is so important.
He was a wonderful man.
And he wasn't a pervert at all, he was gentle and kind.
And I was selfish.
So please, ladies, let them love you and love them back.
God bless you.
You see, I do want you to know this.
In some way, what you can't do now for him, you are doing for others, and that is so important.
You're turning a mistake, and it was a mistake.
You didn't have ill intent.
But, but, but you're turning into a mistake into a blessing for others.
I think it was one of the very first male female hours when I covered the subject that for the vast majority of men, no matter how much you are kind and loving and what a wonderful wife and mom and whatever else you are, if you don't give him sex, he doesn't know you love him.
You can call it simplistic, you can call it.
Animalistic, you can call it male, you can call it anything you want.
It's either true or not true.
You can add your editorial comments all you like in your mind or with your girlfriends.
The question is not to editorialize on what I just said, it's to confront whether or not it is true.
That is the single biggest way he knows you love him.
You have ways in which he can show he loves you.
The Single Biggest Way He Knows Love00:09:29
And that's not one of them by and large, as it happens.
It may be on the list, but it's not top.
It's not on the top of the list for the vast majority of women.
For some women, it is.
I can only talk in broad generalities.
I can't talk about every human being under the sun.
And these letters, and the call you just heard, and I am sure the marriages that are lost because of this.
Is this just what I called the gratuitous pain of life?
And let's go to National Park, New Jersey, and John.
The phone number here is 18 Prager 776.
Hello, John.
Dennis Prager.
Hi, Dennis.
Thanks for taking my call.
Thank you.
I was listening to the letter that the woman wrote to you, and it really sounded good.
When I was a boy, when I was coming of age, my dad was not around.
So my mom gave me the father and son talk.
And I think it was an advantage for me because I got it from a woman's point of view.
I remember her saying that there were times when her and my dad would have sex and afterwards he would roll over and go to sleep.
And ever since then, that's always stayed in my mind that one of my goals when I'm with a woman is to please her.
A lot of women have commented on that.
One in particular said that she liked the way that I kept kissing and touching her even after I was done.
And I said to her, Well, some men like to roll over and go to sleep.
And she said, Yeah, like my ex husband.
Well, by the way, that's a very, very valid point.
Very, very valid.
Men, this is not exactly asking you to swim the English Channel to continue to embrace and speak lovingly and.
For God's sake, stay awake.
I don't think that that is too great a demand on you guys.
Once your wife has been that giving, even though she's not in the mood, and what did they assess recently?
That a woman is in the mood, what, eight hours a month or something?
Just absolutely spontaneously aching for relations?
I mean, depending on age, obviously, some, you know, a great deal of time, obviously.
But we're talking in the broad spectrum of men and women.
So, yes, that would be a great example of how you reciprocate for what is meaningful to her.
The key in life and in marriage is you do for the other what the other considers important when possible, obviously.
And mood can't be the issue.
I know no woman who says, I'm not in the mood to get up, the baby is crying.
What if your husband is crying?
This is the Dennis Prager Show.
This episode of Timeless Wisdom will continue right after this.
We live in a time where the moment you question the narrative, you're told to stop thinking and start complying.
That's why what Angel is doing matters.
With eye opening documentaries like Thank You, Dr. Fauci, and RFK Legacy, Angel is willing to explore the issues others avoid.
In a culture shaped by gatekeepers, Angel offers something rare a platform for truth seeking storytelling that isn't constrained by Fear or conformity.
Go to angel.comslash Prager, join the Angel Guild, and watch these films today.
Now, back to more of Dennis Prager's Timeless Wisdom.
Hi, everybody.
This is the male female hour on the Dennis Prager Show.
I read to you, and I'll reread a bit of it here.
A letter, and I have two letters using the exact same word women who thought their husbands were perverts because of the frequency that they would want or whatever.
And the odds are, folks, that you're not married to a pervert.
Okay, the odds are.
And you're married to a male.
I've been married to my husband 14 years, two young sons, and she explained how he has been working to get her to listen to the show.
He would even put it on so that when she turned on a podcast, to turn on her car CD player, up I would come.
Anyway, she finally started listening and she said, Let's see.
I actually listened to you, and when I heard these women calling and telling you how their husbands were pursuing them and could never get enough of them, I was shocked and immediately realized that my husband was not a pervert obsessed with having sex with me.
I understood my husband and realized how much he loves me and only me.
I immediately felt bad, felt bad for neglecting my husband, felt bad for thinking he was only lusting after me.
And by the way, I hope that your husbands do, my dear female listeners.
And I started telling myself how selfish I have been all these years, how devoted he is to me every day that goes by, and that he's not a pervert and so on.
Likewise, another letter that I read to you.
You have relieved my mind thinking my husband was a pervert all those early years of marriage.
I love him more.
Then you heard this woman who just called now.
In tears, her husband died a few years ago, and she neglected him in that arena for some years and was just in tears of guilt.
You know, he died of cancer.
There's nothing that can be done.
My heart goes out to her, goes out to him for that time.
Let's go to some more of your calls.
By the way, I think all of you know this, but for those of you who might be brand new to the show, I'm not taking sides.
My only side is that you have a better marriage.
That's all.
That's the side I care about.
But that may involve understanding him better.
And that's why I'm mentioning these things when I do.
All righty, Jennifer in Manhattan Beach, California.
Jennifer, Dennis Prager, thanks for calling.
Hi, thanks for taking my call.
I'm calling because you are right that for men, sex is a way of saying, I love you.
And without it.
No, ironically, it isn't.
Okay.
No, no, no.
Sex is a way of them being told by you you love them.
That's what I meant.
I'm sorry.
Okay, no, but it's an important distinction.
Yes, right.
Okay.
So, you know, we can say it to him all we want.
It won't work.
The only problem is several years ago, I started realizing that, okay, if I don't feel like it, so what?
And I love him.
Right, okay.
He's a happier camper.
It's great in that respect, but outside of sex now, he's almost forgotten I'm a woman.
It's like I'm a woman, I'm like a pal that goes to bed.
And, all right, explain that even further.
Well, for example, I mean, Women like to know that we're being thought about, that they're taking the trouble to do something that would please us.
I mean, I don't even remember the last time that he grabbed me and gave me a hug or, I don't know, took me out to dinner of his own volition.
Have you told him this?
Yeah, and he says that he doesn't need to.
He doesn't need to?
Well, wait.
See, here's the deal, and I would like him to be told this, and I'd be happy to tell him this.
If you feel you don't need to do what she wants, Then she'll feel she doesn't need to do what you want.
Yeah, and that's about where I've arrived.
Well, I'll, I'll tell him.
No, I think you should play this for him.
Okay.
What kind of nonsense is that?
I don't know.
I, I, I, it doesn't, it doesn't make any sense.
He doesn't need to?
Well, then you, well, you don't, you, you don't need to have sex that often.
I mean, if, if one wants to play the game of I don't need to, you, I, I mean, he may not need to do every, I don't know, your, your, your demands from what you listed to me, and I'd love to hear his side, obviously.
Always in any of these cases, but what you listed do not sound like particularly difficult demands that you're making on him.
No.
Hug you periodically?
Does he call you from work?
No.
Guys, call your wives from work every day.
Even if you're playing poker at the same time, just say hello.
Back in a moment.
This episode of Timeless Wisdom will continue right after this.
We live in a time where the moment you question the narrative, you're told to stop thinking and start complying.
That's why what Angel is doing matters.
With eye-opening documentaries like Thank You, Dr. Fauci, and RFK Legacy, Angel is willing to explore the issues others avoid.
Why Men Need Daily Connection00:11:22
In a culture shaped by gatekeepers, Angel offers something rare, a platform for truth-seeking storytelling that isn't constrained by fear or conformity.
Go to angel.comslash prager, join the Angel Guild, and watch these films today.
Now, back to more of Dennis Prager's Timeless Wisdom.
Yes, indeed.
Dennis Prager here.
Hi, everybody.
I'm Jennifer, my last caller.
I would love to talk to your husband.
I would really like that.
I would have, of course, if he never hears my show, I don't know what clout I would have, but nevertheless.
I would like to have.
1 8 Prager 776.
1 8 P R A G E R 776.
Very important that people hear from you on this, as difficult as it might be.
And I still appreciate the first woman caller who, in tears, spoke about how she had neglected her husband in this arena.
She's 60 now, so during their 50s, and he died of cancer.
But she did a service.
Her tears, I want to thank you again.
It's a hard call, but it's important.
Your letters and your calls give the points that I make credibility.
And if you don't agree with me, that's fine too.
I think they all.
Those two give the points of credibility because they'll respond.
877 243 7776 is the number.
877 243 7776.
I read to you two letters where women use the same word.
I used to think my husband was a pervert, and I realized he's just a guy, he's the male, and I love him now all the more, and we have a better marriage, and so on.
This notion of your husband being a pervert.
And, you know, I'll even add it to another area, which is extremely controversial because of its emotionality, and I understand that, but I want to help you.
It's the only reason.
There are many reasons to oppose the pornification of this society.
It's been a disaster.
There's no question.
It's been particularly terrible for kids.
But if your husband has looked at pictures, it does not make him a pervert.
That doesn't mean that it's a good thing.
That's a separate issue.
And for religious people in particular, there are a whole host of issues.
But he's not a pervert.
And it just makes things worse if you walk around calling him that.
He may have real issues.
That's a separate issue.
But the letters weren't even written about that.
The letters were written about the frequency that he wanted.
Oh, he must be a pervert.
Or he just lusts after me.
You should thank God if he lusts after you.
Now, the last caller claims that's all he does, and he doesn't show affection in ways that are meaningful to her as a woman.
That's an issue.
That is an issue.
All right, let's go to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Kathy.
Hello, Kathy.
Dennis Prager.
Hi, Dennis.
How are you?
I'm well.
Thank you.
I've been a long time listener.
This is my first time calling, and I'm calling because I am so worked up about.
The subject matter today, and I just want to let you know that you are doing women a grave, um, you're not doing us any favors by stressing how much men need sex and acting like it's not really as important to us as it is to them.
There are so many women who need sex just as much, if not more, than men, and why are we made to feel like freaks if If we need sex, I mean, hey.
Who's making you feel.
Wait, wait, wait, wait.
I do.
That's how we feel love.
No, no, no.
There are three separate issues, but let me take.
Who, God forbid, is making you feel like a freak?
Me?
My husband.
Oh, okay.
All right.
He doesn't need it.
He doesn't care.
I could go for seven months without it.
It doesn't matter.
Fine.
I think that.
It's terrible.
That's just an excuse.
No, it's terrible.
It's a terrible problem.
My heart breaks for you.
What?
As I said about at least twice today, and always say, I'm generalizing because, in general, the problem works in that direction.
That what you have exists, I know for a fact, and my heart breaks for you.
In general, it's the problem is the other way around.
Yes, I'm sure, because every, I'm sure on every level, including all that I have read, including all the people who have written to me, including all the couples who have written, but see, it doesn't matter.
See, for Kathy's marriage, it's irrelevant that it's a minority of couples' issue.
It's still, it's still a huge issue.
It's like saying, Kathy, if I say seatbelts save lives, and we know for a fact, we do know for a fact, that there were people who were killed because they wore a seatbelt.
Because the car went on fire, they couldn't get the clicker on, and they burned to death.
So for that person, the fact that seatbelts tend to save lives was utterly irrelevant.
For that person, the seatbelt killed them.
The fact that for most couples where there is a sexual issue, it's that he wants more than she does, is a fact, but that doesn't help The many couples wherein they have your issue.
And I get my 100% sympathy as much as a man does.
But it doesn't negate the fact that most of the time the problem is in the other direction.
You need counseling.
He needs to acknowledge it.
But it's unfortunate, though.
It's harder to solve your problem because when the woman is not in the mood, she could still just be there, as it were.
But a man has to react.
And so it's harder.
And when he feels pressure, it's even harder.
So it's a terrible quicksand in a relationship when it is the man who has the lesser drive for the woman.
But it is something you go to a good therapist, you go to a sex therapist, you find out.
But I mean, he can't give you this line.
I mean, may I ask the frequency?
I can tell you the last time we were together was May 10th.
I'm 45 years old.
My husband's only two years older than me, so I don't think we're getting to that age.
No, no, no.
Anyway, there is no age cut off, so to speak.
And I agree with you about you're young, relatively young.
Well, I would love to speak to him.
Does he ever listen to me?
He's listening right now.
Oh, then why doesn't he call in?
I'll take him as my next call.
We'll be back in a moment.
Hi, everybody.
Dennis Prager here.
And in the time remaining, let me get a few words in with Kathy's husband.
Hi, Paul Dennis Prager here.
Hi, how are you doing?
Hi, okay.
I don't want to put you on the spot, and I'm not here at all to, in any way, be your accuser or anything like that.
I just, I know you heard the call I had with your wife.
Yes.
And would you like to just make any comments?
I just, Don't need it as much as she does.
I run a business and I know I have a lot on my mind, and it's really a pressure for her, and she needs to have it.
But I feel that with everything, with responsibilities I have, and that we've been married over 25 years, it's not that I don't love her, it's just that I take things, I guess, before her, and I probably really shouldn't, but I do.
What things do you take before her?
Like the business and working, trying to make sure I can support her.
My daughter's in college in California.
Just different things like that just seem to be more, I guess, important than it is to her.
Ideally, for you, what would be, generally speaking, the frequency that you would make love?
Now?
Yeah, once in two months, once twice a year, every month.
Probably once or twice a month, maybe.
Okay, and what was the frequency five years ago?
Probably a lot more, and it just gradually dropped to what it is now.
Okay, knowing how important it is to her.
Which is somewhat of a credit to you because, you know, when a guy is found desirable by a woman, we feel great.
Is there anything you think you could do knowing that it's important?
Let's say we're up to, let's say, once every 10 days.
Is that handleable?
Yes.
Yes.
Why don't you try for that now?
All right.
Okay.
And by the way, if there are things that she could do that you feel a little frustrated, Funny about saying, you know, maybe wear something very sexy, you know, in the bedroom or something, you should let her know.
25 years is a long time, but, you know, guys have fantasies.
Why don't you tell her some of your fantasies?
All right.
Okay?
Yes.
Okay.
Thank you so much for sharing that.
I know it's not easy.
I tell you folks, I divide pain between the necessary and the gratuitous.
And we should try to minimize the unnecessary pain.
So, Kathy, let me hear from you in an email in a couple of months.
And upping that frequency to that might really be a help.
Good luck.
Thanks for calling.
It's a male female hour on The Dennis Prager Show.
Tomorrow on Timeless Wisdom with Dennis Prager.
Can a sophisticated, modern, contemporary, intellectual, rational, moral person believe in hell?
Join us tomorrow to hear more on Timeless Wisdom with Dennis Prager.
This has been Timeless Wisdom with Dennis Prager.
Visit DennisPrager.com for thousands of hours of Dennis' lectures, courses, and classic radio programs, and to purchase Dennis Prager's Rational Bibles.
Can Rational People Believe in Hell00:00:29
We live in a time where the moment you question the narrative, you're told to stop thinking and start complying.
That's why what Angel is doing matters.
With eye opening documentaries like Thank You, Dr. Fauci, and RFK Legacy.
Angel is willing to explore the issues others avoid.
In a culture shaped by gatekeepers, Angel offers something rare, a platform for truth seeking storytelling that isn't constrained by fear or conformity.
Go to angel.comslash Prager, join the Angel Guild, and watch these films today.