Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Said Jesse Kelly Joe final hour of The Jesse Kelly
Show on a Friday and asked doctor Jesse Friday, and
we still have to tackle history, milking snails, Tom Tillis
eating two bone wings. The guy called them all that
and so much more on The Jesse Kelly Show. I
(00:22):
want to begin with something political really quickly though a
couple political things. First, I want to congratulate you once
again on something that was big. It was big, even
if you don't realize it was big, but it was enormous.
The election of Donald Trump that stopped for stops. You know,
(00:42):
I'm not doing dumb down stuff. Just hang with me
for a second. It wasn't just big because of securing
the border and all those other things. Remember when Democrats, well,
they just decided to go full communist. Joe Biden was
not able to control them because he wasn't strong enough,
(01:03):
and they just started law fair like we have never
seen in the United States of America before ever. They
sent prosecutors to kick in the doors of pro lifers
January six ers, anybody who was anywhere in Trump's orbit
they could get on a crime, they would arrest them.
(01:24):
They'd arrest them publicly. They would invite CNN. Remember when
they arrested Roger Stone with a swat team and they
invited someone invited CNN to videotape to hope. They just
turned into these savage, wild animals like they've always wanted
to be in New York. Remember what happened to Trump
in New York, the arrests Georgia, the arrests Florida, the
(01:46):
Marlago raid. They just turned into Stalin into Lenin, completely evil,
using the Department of Justice against their political opponents, and
that that can and probably did, to be honest, create
a site, created a cycle that can end the country. However,
(02:09):
something really, really really important happened when the country kept
rejecting those things. Remember the primary, for example, People forget
Donald Trump was always up in the Republican primary and
was probably always going to win that Republican primary. But DeSantis,
Florida Governor Rond De Santis HEAVYD is just the best,
(02:30):
and he was a darling on the right, and he
was such a darling that he had closed the polls
were closing, and he had closed to within ten points
of Donald Trump in that primary. And then something happened.
You know what happened the first arrest of Donald Trump.
Boom Trump got arrested, he was instantly up thirty points,
(02:52):
and it was never close after that, never even a
sniff for anyone else. But that's not just the GOP
primary voter. Every time the scumbag leftists arrested or imprisoned
Donald Trump, his poll numbers went up, and you could
tell they kept being baffled by it, and they kept
going with this line felon, Well, he's a felon, gonna
(03:14):
trust a felon. And yet up up, up, every time
they arrested him, we got a mud shot up in
the polls. We arrested him in New York, up in
the polls, ah, we found a judgment against him, up
in the polls. What happened was incredible because what the
communists may have learned. It's not that I think they'll
(03:34):
stop their evil ways, but what they may have learned
is it's an election loser to use the justice system
against your political opponents.
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Listen to this, and CNN, I'm going to agree with
you that Democrats cannot only be the party of resistance.
We cannot like we resisted so hard between twenty seventeen
and twenty twenty four, we impeach the guy, like if
we've prosecuted him, convicted him on thirty four felonycounts, and
guess what, he still got elected. So I don't know
how much harder we can resist?
Speaker 1 (04:06):
Right now?
Speaker 3 (04:06):
Are you admitting that the case against Trump in New
York was part of the organized Democratic Party resistance?
Speaker 2 (04:11):
It was a Democratic prosecutor and at the time, okay,
at the time I thought it was unwise. I went
on Fox News and said, at the time.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
Listen to what she just said. At the end, you
hear what she said. Remember, you're never going to appeal
to these people's morality. In New York, New York's Attorney
General Latitia James, she publicly ran on arresting Donald Trump.
That's so evil anyway. Then she got arrested, and unlike Republicans,
(04:41):
she actually fulfilled her campaign promise and went after him.
And this lady looking back on all that evil, she
didn't say it was wrong. She didn't say it was evil.
She simply said it was unwise, unwise. It's not that
it's evil, it's not that it's wrong. It just didn't
(05:05):
work out for the poll numbers. Therefore, it was unwise.
It's not that I think the communists won't use the
justice system again against their political opponents, because they will.
They can't help themselves. When communists get power, well, it
doesn't matter what it is. They could have the power
of a stapler, they would find a way to use
it for the revolution. When they get positions like attorney general,
(05:28):
DA the senator, whatever it is, they use it for
the revolution. So it's not as if I feel like
they're never going to do this again. But by rejecting
that at the polls, the American people going out and
overwhelmingly voting for Donald Trump, he even won the popular vote,
(05:49):
there is a chance, a chance at least I believe
that gave us a chance that the next time these
people are in a position to do something like that,
maybe it gives them a moment of pause, not because
of their morality, not because they realized it's wrong. As
you heard, they didn't wake up one day and say
(06:10):
this is wrong. That's not it at all. Maybe next
time they're considering arresting their political opponents for honestly, pretty
nakedly political reasons, no one could even outline the crimes.
Maybe next time they sit and stop and say, wait
a minute. Last time we did this, we got crushed
(06:31):
in the election. Maybe strategically it's a bad move to
arrest this guy. By electing Donald Trump and rejecting Democrat
law fair, there is a chance we saved the entire country.
And I'm not even talking about Trump's policies. I'm not
(06:51):
talking about the border or trade or anything like that.
There is a chance the American people save the United
States of America by rejecting Communist law. Fair. That makes
me feel good. I hope it makes you feel good.
You feel proud, Dear Oracle, I think you're off a bit.
The subject to this one is chess versus checkers. When
(07:12):
you heard Tom Tillis squash the vote to advance Ed Martin,
you wanted him called out. That's what is called an
extinction burst instant anger. He said, you can take credit
for this in future use. Trump is an elephant. He
never forgets. He might forgive, but never forgets. These rhinos
will face his wrath sooner rather than later. Your thoughts, No,
(07:36):
I don't believe that. No, I don't believe that. You know,
I'm more than happy to compliment Trump when he does good.
I've done it several times during this show. Donald Trump
is awful at endorsements and choosing Republicans. No, I don't
believe that at all. No, that's what you want him
to be. You want him to lay in wait and
take out the next Rhino. No, he lays in weight
(07:57):
and he endorses the next rhino and tries to take
out the Conservative. That's not what he does. He's terrible
at it. Dear, smallhand jerk service, it's not very nice. Okay,
we're not naming it Jesse's jerk Service. I already said, what, Chris, what, Well,
we're not calling it that. I misspoke. I understand it
(08:17):
has Brandon now, but that's just because everybody's being mean.
I will step in and be a be a jerk
on your behalf. Initially, because I was just doing it
off the top of my head on the air, I said,
we can call it Jesse's jerk Service. But then I
realized that probably doesn't sound like like what I was
(08:39):
going for, and so we're not going to call it
Jesse's jerk Service. Virtually every other name I've come up with, though,
sounds somehow worse than Jesse's jerk Service. You know, the
do you know the bad there's a there's a bad
word that starts with a P that I'm not gonna
say because kids listening. Okay, there's a bad word that
(09:02):
references something that starts with a P. I was about
to say, we could call it Jesse's that service, but
then that sounds even I know, Chris, that sounds even worse.
What what you said, Jesse's jerk service has sticking power.
You know what, Chris, if you're going to take everyone
(09:23):
else's side, we just need to not talk anymore. Okay,
this is this is this is not fun. I can
see you're having fun. I'm not having any fun at all.
Kaitanji Brown Jackson's having fun being a savage in the
supreme sort.
Speaker 4 (09:35):
I would think we'd want the system to move as
quickly as possible to reach the merits of the issue
and maybe have this court decide whether or not the
government is entitled to do this under the law. Wouldn't
having universal injunctions actually facilitate that. It seems to me
that when the government is completely enjoined from.
Speaker 1 (09:58):
I just want to point out that when Democrat get elected,
they find the most partisan judge humanly possible and put
them on the Supreme Court so that person will be
a warrior for their cause until the day they retire.
When Republicans do it, we get losers like Amy Cony Barrett.
We have got to do a lot better. I don't
listen to Katanji Brown Jackson to get angry at them.
(10:20):
I get angry at us for how pathetic our people are. Anyway,
back to the emails, maybe some history. Next it is
the Jesse Kelly Show on a Wonderful Friday. Cannot get
the smile off my face. Did you hear Savannah Hernandez
she interviewed this street communists. Of course, the lady has
blue hair. Remember what we were talking about earlier about
(10:42):
why these people talk so casually and so often about
murdering you, murdering Trump, murdering Republicans. I wish you would die.
I hope someone shoots him. I hope he has a
heart attack. This is how democrats normally, not even activists.
This is how democrats speak about the other side when
they're in circles. You know what's crazy. I guarantee you
(11:04):
I will show up on Monday and we will have
emails flooding in of people who tell me about the
democrats in their life, live, work, or wherever who say
things like this all the time. I hope they die.
But be easier if you would just die, well, I
hope someone would shoot him. That why we'll remembered. Everybody
(11:25):
who aids the revolution. Who aids the revolution, no matter what,
no matter what their conduct is, no matter what their
history is, that is an ally a friend. He deserves
every accommodation you can give him, and vice versa. Everybody
who opposes the revolution is somebody who has to be
(11:49):
removed by any means necessary. Maybe you kill them, maybe
you arrest them, maybe, whatever the case may be. If
you're an enemy of the revolution and you are subject
to the worst possible things. Now, who's the sweetest, nicest
person you can possibly think of, the nicest lady you've
(12:09):
ever known in your life. But Mother Teresa. Let's say,
mother Teresa. Mother Teresa comes up, But Mother Teresa, this
you know, saintly none she comes out and says, hey,
I voted for Donald Trump. Immediately, in the minds of
an American Democrat, she becomes a mortal enemy that has
(12:31):
to be stomped, hurt, killed, removed in some way because
she's an enemy of the revolution. Now on the other
side of it, what if there was a I mean,
what's the worst thing in the world. Oh, let's just
use the audio for an example. Is a child rapist
not the worst most evil thing on the planet? It is, right,
(12:52):
So surely, I mean, surely American democrats would want a
child rapist held to account. Well, I mean, I guess
it all depends. Is he a the revolution or no?
Speaker 2 (13:03):
No, you don't care.
Speaker 5 (13:04):
If they're the worst criminal in the world and they
have great and murdered children, they're okay, and they're still
human beings and they should be here. I believe that
they are human beings and that they deserve dignity just
as everybody else. Do you think child rate this deserve dignity.
Speaker 1 (13:17):
Absolutely, I do. It's not about anything but the revolution
to that freak, that's how these people think. Chessie, what's
the proper way to eat? Two bone wings? Hey, but
they're not called two bone wings? Okay? Two bone wings
was Kamala Harris's nickname in college. They're called flats. What, Chris,
(13:39):
It's fine, flats. I have something very very embarrassing to say,
and I know that I'm going to hate myself for
telling you this, but I'm going to tell you this anyway.
I prefer flats. That's not the embarrassing thing. A lot
of people prefer flats. My kids prefer drumsticks. I prefer flats.
It works out right. Here's how I do the flats.
(14:03):
And I know it's not the most efficient. It is, however,
what I have found to be most effective. I take
one side, bite it, tear the meat off. I flip
the wing, dunk it in the blue cheese again, other
side bite it, take the meat off. Now I've got
(14:26):
two naked bones and I still have the meat in
the center. Look. I have limited athletic ability, I admit that,
but there are some things about me as a Kelly
that I simply inherited. One thing is I have big feet,
I have wide shoulders. I have an extremely powerful tongue.
(14:52):
All right, what, Chris, I have a powerful tongue. It
just always has had great strength. I don't know why, No, Chris,
that's enough. I don't know why my tongue has such
great strength inside of it. It's just god given, I guess.
So when I get the flat and I've chewed the
(15:13):
meat off one side and chewed the meat off the
other side. I hold it up to my mouth and
I tongue punched the meat out the other end. Chris,
I don't need you making these faces when I'm trying
to explain how I eat the wings. Okay, it's hard
enough explaining this. I tongue punched the meat out the
other side, and I even do the deep thing. I
(15:37):
moved my tongue back and forth couple times to make
sure the meat is clean. Then the meat's sticking out
the other side. Quick flip, bite, snip clean wing done. What, Chris?
They separate, I know they separate, Chris, and weak tongued
(15:57):
people like you need to set break them. I don't
have to go to the trouble of tearing the bones
apart like some sort of an animal, because I'm blessed
with an extremely powerful tongue. You don't have one of those, obviously,
so you have to tear the wings apart. I will
(16:19):
continue to go with my method because God's gifts allow
me to eat wings in this way. I'm not telling
you to try this because your tongue is probably not
It's probably not where mine is, and I'm sorry about that,
but uh, you can call me the tongue master. No,
(16:43):
don't call me that, but you understand what I mean.
It's powerful and it helps me eat flats with an
efficiency that most men can only dream of. Now, let's
talk about Congress and history Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday,
a full Friday. And then, look, I've played Kaitanji Brown
(17:03):
Jackson earlier. And maybe you're wondering why I didn't go
on and on about the Supreme Court decision today. Why
I'm not losing my mind about the Supreme Court decision today.
I should probably explain myself why I've just basically cast
the issue aside. I think I spent a minute on
it on the show. Allow me to explain myself my
feelings on it. I have already vented before. I don't
(17:27):
feel the need to vent them again. It is the
Supreme Court. Is the court itself that is losing legitimacy,
not Donald Trump. Every time they do something like this,
What it does in the minds of the people is
it delegitimizes the court. When set when there's a seven
to two vote saying you can't deport gang members, you've
(17:48):
delegitimized yourself. What I believe has to happen is Donald
Trump has to ignore the Supreme Court, deport every single
illegal in the country. Ignore the Supreme Court. If anybody
tries to stop you, whether it is a general, a judge,
a senator, whoever, arrest them to and throw them in prison.
(18:09):
You cannot survive as a country if the communists are
going to bring in twenty million people every time they
get power and you are stopped from deporting them. So
you can stop your emails. I don't need your email
about well, this about the constitution or this what if
we do. None of your arguments, None of them will
(18:30):
mean anything to me at all. And that's why I'm
not spending any time on this. It is quite simple.
If we are not allowed to deport as fast as
a communists import, we will no longer have a country.
And that's why the communists are doing it. Everything else
doesn't matter. Trump will ignore the Supreme Court or we
don't have a country. So there, that's why I'm moving
off of it. Jesse. With the left's hatred of statues
(18:51):
and monuments, their description of them as monuments to death
and destruction, what does that statue of a large black
woman say, Well, look, hold on, let's be clear. Communists
don't hate monuments and statues. That's not at all what
they hate. In fact, they build them all the time.
(19:12):
There are brand new ones all over the place. They
don't hate monuments and statues. They hate your history. Your history,
as we've explained, as we talked about before on the show,
your history is actually really, really, really important because it
forms who you are and how you think about yourself.
(19:34):
What is it about your home specifically, what is it
about your home that makes it special to you? What
is it? I'll tell you know, I'm not exactly a
touchy feely, flowery type person, emotional type person. I've moved
a lot in my life, a lot, ten houses in
ten years at one point in time. I've just I've
(19:54):
moved everywhere, moved a lot. Every single time we moved
out out of a house or an apartment or a
cabin or wherever we happen to be living. Every single time,
I wouldn't cry, but I would take one that's look
at it on the way out, and I would get emotional.
Why cis carpet blaster and paint? And why because of
(20:19):
the memories from the house, the memory it's it's the
what happened in the house. Hey, that's that's where we
open Christmas gifts. That's where my son took his first steps.
That's where I tell I used to hang out with
my dad there that it's the memories that are in
the house. That's what matters. Your country operates in much
the same way. You put up things like statues and
(20:43):
monuments and things like that. You put them up to honor,
respect and remember your history and as a reminder to
people about who they are, where they come from, what
they stand for. It's really important to your value system.
Your past is important to your value system. That is
(21:05):
why communists try to tear down monuments and statues. They
rename parks, they rename streets, they rename military basis. That
is why they go after all historical things, and they'll
come up with any excuse they can to do this.
Never believe the branding. It's never about the Confederacy or racism,
(21:26):
never about any of that stuff. It's about deleting all
your past. Because once they do that, once they have
unchained you from anything, family, country, values, then they can
make whatever they want of you. They can paint whatever
future they want of you. That's why they do it.
(21:46):
Destroy everything that came before you. Yeah, Chris, actually grab it,
destroy everything that came before you, so they can then
make whatever they want out. If you're out of your future,
you would never sign on to some horrible, horrible, dystopian
communist hell whole future if you actually remembered and appreciated
(22:10):
the founding of your country, that you were free, that
people fought a war to make sure you're free. Why
do you think? Why do you think Kamala Harris loved
this line so much? We have dreams.
Speaker 6 (22:21):
We can see what is possible, unburdened by what.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
Has been, unburdened by one has been. Remember how much
we used to make fun of her for that? Why
do we make fun of her because she used that
line all the time, speech after speech after speech. I
bet we have a montage in there of it unburdened.
Oh you have one? Oh, go ahead, good.
Speaker 6 (22:41):
I can imagine what can be and be unburdened by
what has been. You know, what can be unburdened by
what has been? What can be unburdened by what has been?
What can be unburdened by what has been? What can
be unburdened been We.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
Don't have enough time left in the show. Jewish producer
Chris told me that goes on for four minutes. I
could have played that. Well, that's a lot of love
for that line. Why why did she wrap both of
her hands around that line and just squeeze. Why? Well,
that's everything to the communist. Your past, your parents and
(23:27):
those values they taught you, that's a burden. Be unburdened
by the Constitution, America being free, that's a burden. Unburden
yourself of that past. Just look at me. Trust me.
I will design for you a beautiful future. I will
(23:50):
create a future. But we can't do that until you
unburden yourself from that past. Aren't those Aren't those values
of your parents such a burden? You don't need that,
Just trust me. That's how communists operate. Jesse. I heard
you talking about history nearly, if not every evening, and
(24:13):
you certainly sound like you know your history and historical events.
And I have to ask, when your attempt to congress
unfortunately didn't work out, why didn't you become a history teacher.
You certainly know your stuff. I wonder if you ever
thought about it or considered it, well, I need to
go to college for that. And here's the thing about college.
(24:38):
In college, they make you take algebra. Did you know that?
And that's really hard, and so that was definitely a
big hold up. It was the algebra thing. Two. Now,
actually there's no two. I didn't want to go to college.
I'm actually really dumb. I don't do well in school.
(25:00):
I function based on what I retain in a class.
But I never really did homework per se. And I
don't like to study because I find it boring. I
find most of the teachers to be boring. And so
that combined with the fact that I'm just I'm really extreme.
(25:20):
When I'm interested in something, I will wade into it
and learn everything about it. That's the good news. The
bad news is when I'm not interested in something, I
don't retain any of it, none of it. And not
only that, I'm not interested in trying. It's not like
I just well, I just have to make myself do it. No,
I don't want to make myself do it. You know,
when I finally decided to drop out of community college
(25:43):
after I got out of the Marine Corps, I remember
the moment, the moment I did I was working construction
and I was going to Pima Community College at night,
and it was for a test that was coming up.
We had to learn what magma, you know, like lava,
or we had to learn what magma was made of.
And not that there's anything wrong with knowing what magma
(26:04):
is made of or learning anything about that, but I remember,
I remember it. I remember what was on the page
in the book, and I remember looking at this thinking
why am I here learning about magma Cities The Jesse
Kelly Show Final segment of The Jesse Kelly Show on
a Wonderful, a fantastic Friday. I'll get to a couple
(26:25):
more questions in a moment. I wanted to play one
more sound bite. It's an older one, but remember Daniel Penny,
New York City, that United States marine. Crazy dude gets
on the subway, starts freaking out. Daniel Penny puts him
in the chokehold. Drugged out dude ends up dying. Well,
they tried to throw Daniel Penny in a cage for
the rest of his life for that Now, remember what
(26:49):
we were talking about earlier about how if you were
viewed as an ally of the revolution, no matter who
you are you could be a child rapist. No matter
who you are, you are viewed as a friend who
needs to be taken care of at every turn. Doesn't
matter who you are, how evil you are, what you've done.
If you're helping the revolution, you are to be helped,
(27:10):
and vice versa. If you are viewed as an enemy
of the revolution, you could be the most gentle saint,
wonderful superhero. It doesn't matter at all. If the revolution
considers you to be an enemy, you must be destroyed
at any cost. You want a great example, This prosecutor's
(27:32):
name is Daphna Uran, and she's talking about her efforts
to throw Daniel Penny in a cage. Now, before I
play this, remember, violent crime from open jail policies is
not an unfortunate byproduct of just liberals being nice. It
(27:52):
is the goal of opening the jails. Communists have always
wanted violent crime to inc priests during the revolutionary phase.
This s happened in the Soviet Union. Identical the justice
system would aid the violent criminals in getting out and
staying out while throwing law abiding people in prison. That's
because violence, chaos, and all these things helps the revolution
(28:15):
move forward. What is happening with these Soros prosecutor types
is intentional. When a rapist gets out of jail and
rape someone else, and you say something like how could
they not see this coming, You're incredibly naive. They saw
it coming. They let the rapist out so he would
rape somebody else. I know, evil, but these people are demons.
Now back to Daniel Penny, prosecutor. Listen to the efforts
(28:39):
made to ensure that the guy who stopped the violent
criminal was punished.
Speaker 3 (28:44):
Something that I did with a recent case of mind,
and this was never has never been done in my office.
I had a murder case where the defendant did not
intentionally kill the victim. He went into an ATM on
the Upper West Side and tried to rob an individual. Unfortunately,
(29:09):
it was an older individual, he was eighty six, and
in the course of the robbery he fell to the ground.
As a result, he died. This is under the law,
a felony murder, which is akin to intentional murder. However,
when I first got the case, I learned I took
(29:32):
the time to learn about the defendant and it was
a strong case, so it wasn't about who done it,
and knew immediately who did it. I could prove it,
I could take it to trial that day and win it.
But it wasn't about that. It was that the more
I learned about the defendant and his life and the circumstances,
the kinds of things that Jarrelle was talking about, that
(29:54):
one should take into account the trauma of that individual.
I really he felt incredibly sorry for him, that he
had gotten to that point in his life where he
felt like there was no other choice.
Speaker 1 (30:06):
But she lowered the charges on a violent man who
she could prove a murder on immediately because as she
dug into him, she figured out this was someone on
her side, Daniel Penny. She worked, and she talks about
this openly. Worked and worked and worked to bend over backwards.
(30:31):
Lower the charges, manipulate the charges, don't charge him with this,
add this charge there in order to get him into
a steel cage the rest of his life, no matter
what why. One is an ally and for an ally
to a communist, an aid to the revolution, some violent nutball.
(30:52):
He needs to remain free. She needs to be his friend,
somebody who stops violent criminals. That's a threat to the revolution.
He has to be destroyed. That's how these people think
that's how they think.
Speaker 2 (31:05):
You don't care.
Speaker 5 (31:06):
If they're the worst criminal in the world and they
have great and murdered children, they're okay, and they're still
human beings and they should be here. I believe that
they are human beings and that they deserve dignity just
as everybody else. Do you think child rate this deserve dignity.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
Absolutely? I do. Yeah, that's what we're up against. Have
you have you gotten some gold in your retirement yet?
By the way, before we do emails that I can
get to, have you, have you taken the time to
get a hold of gold Co. Look, you understand that
(31:39):
it is I consider it in insurance. It's not insurance,
but I consider it insurance on the money I've saved.
I saved my money. I try to make sure I
am saving for retirement one day. I'm sure you probably
do the same. Imagine doing that and then the market
just blows up and everything's gone. And people have experienced
thisultiple times. Gold Co. I look at gold Co like
(32:04):
insurance to make sure that's not gonna happen, because they'll
get some precious metals as a portion of your retirement.
What that does is it raises the floor. You can
never lose at all with precious metals because they always
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eight five five eight one seven gold or go to
(32:25):
Jesse likes goold dot com. All right, all right, and
now here's a headline. But you know, you know the
thing emails. We didn't get to you, dear professional cherch servicer,
when you were talking about churros the other day. I
wanted to let you know Jack in the Box has
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the best churros, and in your small hands they may
even look regular size. Okay, that one that's not very
nice too. I have something devastating to say. I am
a Jack in the Box freak. I love Jack in
the Box, love it one of my favorite fast food restaurants.
But the one in my area is probably the worst
(33:08):
one in the country. And I am aware that Jack
in the Box can be rough. They haven't changed the
oil at this Jack in the Box since Nixon was
in office. The food is uneditably bad. And this is
from a Jack in the Box freak. I haven't had
Jack and I can only have it when I travel.
It's devastating, Dear Jesse. I believe these rhinos are compromised
(33:29):
by Democrats slash Communists for whoever, so on and so forth.
As far as music, the military time was either Leonard
scannered or ACDC. I'm not really sure what the question was,
but I got you. I agree with most of that. Hey, Jesse,
I've been called I've been called a jury duty. The
letter said to bring some reading material. I plan on
bringing my autograph copy of the Anti Communist Manifesto. Look,
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if you bring the Anti Communist Manifesto in there, they're
not going to allow you on the jury. I'm just
giving you a heads up. This is something that many
people have discovered. If the prosecutor in particular finds out
that you are reading the Anti Communist Manifesto, they are
going to dismiss you from jury duty. Now maybe that's
(34:13):
your goal, but remember I'm mister jury duty. It is
jury foreman, Jesse. After all, I'm mister jury duty, and
I want you on that jury. We need you on
that jury, and I need you to go have a
good weekend. Okay, go enjoy your weekend. Our troubles will
be here on Monday. That's all