Jerry Seinfeld's commencement address made click-bait headlines for foolish reasons, but his commencement address itself was excellent. He made one point in particular, about what kinds of things are worthy pursuits, that was Biblical and Good and a wonderful reminder.
Hey, welcome to Politics by Faith, brought to you by the Patriot Gold Group. Thanks for being here. It's graduation season, got a lot of commencement addresses going on. I want to play a clip here from Jerry Seinfeld. This made news, clickbait news, that all these students walked out of Jerry Seinfeld's commencement address.
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What did he say that was so controversial that people walked out now we know with nothing they walked out before you start talking and they were pro-hamas those the palestinian pro-hamas people they walked out with the palestinian flags or whatever and uh... crowd booted
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but that i have i've made it all very dramatic and and it wasn't but uh... it did maybe aware that jerry salford at the commencement address a duke university where his kids uh... go to school or went to school or whatever. Here is a part that I think is worth hearing.
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I want to play the whole thing here. It's three minutes. I want to play it all because, yeah, it also fits into one of my theorems, and that is perhaps the opposite is true. When you're presented with a statement of a fact, as we're told, before you go down that road and considering whether
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or not it is true, stop for one second and say, okay, well, hold on. Perhaps the opposite is true. And we do that all the time on the show. And this is a good, Jerry does this here as well.
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Privilege is a word that has taken quite a beating lately. Privilege today seems to be the worst thing you can have. I would like to take a moment to defend it. Again, a lot of you are thinking, I can't believe they invited this guy. Too late. I say, use your privilege. I grew up a Jewish boy from New York. That is a privilege if you want to be a comedian.
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Thanks. If I messed up a funny story around my relatives, they would go, that's not how that joke. The prostitute has to be behind the drapes when the wife comes in. You went to Duke. That is an unbelievable privilege. I now have an honorary doctorate, a humane letters degree from Duke University. And if I can figure out a way to use that, I will. I haven't figured anything out yet. I think it's pretty much as useful in real life as this outfit I'm wearing. But so what? I'll take it. My point is we're
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embarrassed about things we should be proud of and proud of things we should be embarrassed about. When I was writing my TV series... Thanks. What a crowd. So on my staff in the 90s we had a lot of Harvard guys. They were fantastic, but I could never understand why these guys were so embarrassed about being from Harvard. They would never talk about it.
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They would never mention it. I'm not talking about Harvard now. I'm talking about the way it used to be. You're never going to believe this. Harvard used to be a great place to go to school. Duke. You didn't fake your fabulous education, you earned it, be proud of it.
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Don't just drop it on people right before you serve in pickleball. Okay, Duke 24 coming at you. But if it comes up, if someone asks, don't say it looking down, stubbing your toe in the dirt. When someone asks where'd you go to school, you say I went to Duke. Watch them take that uncomfortable hard swallow. AI on the other hand is the most embarrassing thing we've ever invented in mankind's time on earth. Oh so you can't do the work, is that what you're telling me? You
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can't figure it out? This seems to be the justification of AI. I couldn't do it. This is something to be embarrassed about. The ad campaign for ChatGPT should be the opposite of Nike. You just can't do it. Making fake brains is risky. Frankenstein proved that. He was so dumb he thought a monster needed a sport jacket. It's not a wine tasting, we're terrorizing villagers. No one's going to tell you, I'm sorry Mr. Stein, it's jackets only this evening. What I like is we're smart enough to invent AI, dumb enough to need it,
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and still so stupid we can't figure out if we did the right thing. Making work easier, this is the problem. So obsessed with getting to the answer, completing the project, producing a result, which are all valid things, but not where the richness of the human experience lies. The only two things you ever need to pay attention to in life are work and love. Things that are self-justified in the experience, and who cares about the result. Stop rushing to what you perceive as some valuable end point,
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learn to enjoy the expenditure of energy that may or may not be on the correct path.
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It's great. Focus on the things that are self-justified, work and love. I'm okay with him saying work. He's a workaholic. He's like a healthy workaholic.
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He speaks a lot, Jerry speaks a lot about how he constantly needs to be working. And that's okay, right? Work is a part of God's creation. It existed pre-fall, when Adam and Eve worked in the garden. Work is good.
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Work can bring glory to God, no matter what you do. Work and love, self-justified experiences. The greatest dedication, of course, though, of your life is to God. Psalm 119.57, you are my portion, O Lord. I'm thinking of the story of Esau and Jacob. This is one part of the story. So this is after the betrayal. Jacob went off to a different land. And then the Lord said to Jacob, go back to the land of your fathers and to your relatives,
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and I will be with you. So the two men had a chance to reconcile, they hoped. But they weren't sure, so they sort of prepared as if they were going to battle. Genesis 33 now Jacob lifted his eyes and looked and there Esau was coming and with him were 400 men so he divided the children among Leah Rachel and the two maidservants and he put the maidservant and their children in front, Leah and the children behind and Rachel and Joseph last he split everyone up then he crossed over before them and
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bowed himself to the ground seven times until he came near to his brother so before this he sent over a bunch of gifts and now he's bowing to the ground in front of Esau. He's like, I mean no harm. Here's all my stuff and I want no power over you. Now keep in mind none of this would have been necessary if there was no betrayal in the first place but alas here we are. But Esau ran to meet him and embraced him and fell on his
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neck and kissed him and they wept and he lifted his eyes and saw the women and children and said, who are these with you? And he said, the children whom God has graciously given your servants. So they just have this nice reuniting moment, very good. But here's the reason I'm bringing it up. Then Esau said, what do you mean by all this company which I met?
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Like, why did you send me all this stuff? And Jacob said, these are to find favor in the sight of my Lord. And Esau said, I have enough, my brother. Keep what you have for yourself. Keep in mind this is the person whose birthright was stolen from him. Betrayal.
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And Esau now says, I have enough, my brother. Now Jacob insists and Esau ultimately takes it, but that line, I have enough. 1 Timothy 6, 6 says, Godliness with contentment is great gain. I have enough. The outcome, if Esau's outcome was more, then he'd be like, Great!
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Give me all this! Right? But no, I have enough.
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The outcome isn't in question here. It's a process. The outcome can't matter. Because wicked people are successful, successful, and righteous people may not be successful monetarily. See, that's the thing.
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That's the only metric we use to gauge success. That's how we, in our society today, that's how we gauge success. That's how we judge success. How much money do you have? And that that can't be right. That obviously can't be right.
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And you can be a righteous person and do good work who sells a great product, but for a million variables, completely outside of your control, the product doesn't sell well. And this other guy over here, this wicked person over here,
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who sells an inferior product, his does. And you're like, oh, well maybe they just had, that guy hired the better marketing team who happened to know the right person in order to get on a certain platform. Who knows?
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But the outcome can't be it. And that's why we need to focus more on the things that are not outcome-based. The things that are good, period. The things that are good in and of themselves. The things that are self-justifying at every moment. And really, it's love.
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That's why when the man asked Jesus what commandment's the greatest. Jesus said you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart with all your soul with all your mind that's the first the greatest and first commandment and the second is like it you shall love your neighbor as yourself that's the self-justifying thing and that's all you need that is success and that's all we should be living our life for and to go back to Psalm 119 where What's the main focus of our love is you are my portion, oh Lord.
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The other point of this podcast is to still be abreast of the news, but not feel anxiety. I just feel like this is a worthy couple minutes here to decrease some of the anxiety that you may be feeling of the rat race. I got it, I need more, I need this, I need that.
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Yes, you got to put food on the table, you got to provide. That's why work is also good. But if your whole life is dedicated around this outcome, then that's just not gonna work. Let's take some advice from the Bible and from Jerry Seinfeld to focus on the things
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that are not outcome-based. That's just every single day, loving God, loving your family, loving your neighbor. Mike Slater, dot locals dot com, commercial transcript Mike Slater, dot locals dot com, commercial transcript or commercial free, at transcriptmikeslater.locals.com.