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November 12, 2025 32 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Jesse Kelly Show. Another hour of The Jesse Kelly Show
on a fantastic, magnificent Wednesday, even though it was a
rough first hour, and so we are, Look, I just
got done beating up on the White House a little bit.
It's time to beat up on the regular gop a
little bit. Then we'll do some emails and other things

(00:22):
on The Jesse Kelly Show. So there's something that's kind
of been sticking in my craw and in fact, I'm
gonna piggyback off of what we just got done talking
about how we crave a people's champion. We always have,
don't we. We want somebody to rise into a position

(00:43):
of power and instead of only caring about themselves and
other powerful people that care about us, you and me,
a real servant's heart for the people. That's what people want, right,
That is what people crave. And it's so rare you

(01:06):
get to these positions of power and what do you
end up caring about other powerful people. I brought that
up because there's something that is bothering me a lot.
Ardic frost. Do you know what ardic frost is? In
case you've been in the mountains or something somewhere a
bit out of pocket, Ardac Frost. Was that Jack Smith

(01:30):
FBI investigation where they were gathering up cell phone information
from everyone, from influencers even though that's such a stupid word,
from conservative organizations to United States senators tracking phone numbers,
who they talked to, who they text where were they?
A real invasion of privacy stuff? That was Ardic Frost.

(01:53):
Now pause for a moment. I want to rewind back
to January sixth. Really, post January sixth, a lot of
people are not aware of just how horrific the federal
government was with people their rights and their privacy After

(02:15):
January sixth. We're talking a dragnet where they would find
out anyone who was in the vicinity and track their
purchases in things like that. That's how bad the federal
government got with people's private information. From January sixth, they
just decided this was the end of all things. They

(02:37):
could violate everybody's civil rights. So if they wanted to
hunt you down, steal your cell phone, they did it.
They did it to over a thousand people. Now not
United States senators, but normal people you me. Did everything

(02:58):
they could to rip up in ruin lives. Right, I'm
going to play you something little clip from Fox News.
You know how we just had that bill, the CR,
the CR that's making its way through the government. Well,
I hope you didn't think there was nothing added to it.
The GOP, the Senate coming fresh off information that their

(03:22):
privacy had been valid through a little something in there.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
The way this provision is written, it's tucked away on
page two hundred and seventeen through two hundred and twenty
nine of the funding bill. Senators could bring lawsuits and
sue the federal government using taxpayer money if federal law
enforcement seizes or subpoenas their data without notifying them. The
damages could mean each senator could get half a million
dollars for each violation. Democrats in the House not amused

(03:46):
by this. In fact, the leader of the party hacking Jefferies,
hoping some Republicans cross the aisle to join Democrats and
take this provision out before it's passed.

Speaker 1 (03:56):
Okay, is there in there for me? Are you? I
know you're not a senator, I'm not a senator. But
the normal Americans who had their lives destroyed by all
these evil government agencies, do they get to sue or

(04:21):
is it just senators. I'm super, super happy the GOP
Senate did a special carve out for the GOP Senate.
But where's your carve out? I don't know how many
January six ers are currently listening to this show or
family members of them. Do you think you have a

(04:44):
carve out? Do you get to use taxpayer money to
sue the government when they grab your information? In fact,
did any one of these senators even propose such a
thing when it was being done to you. These people
are supposed to serve us, not themselves, not they're rich friends.

(05:10):
They're supposed to serve the people first. Your senator, whoever
it is, should have you as a priority over themselves.
That's how it should work. That's how a good, just
society should work. Instead, the GOP Senate passed I don't

(05:32):
even know I should actually add it up, but I
don't think I want to know the number. How many
crs got passed after they did this same thing to
January six ers without a single GOP senator putting a
carve out in there for them? How many crs did
they vote for, time and time again without this carve out?

(05:59):
More than you can count?

Speaker 3 (06:00):
Well?

Speaker 1 (06:00):
Was it every six months, it seems like one of
these things come up, but when they finally find out
it happened to them instead of happened to you. Well,
now we need eleven pages. I'm gonna sue with someone
else's money.

Speaker 2 (06:14):
The way this provision is written, it's tucked away on
page two hundred and seventeen through two hundred and twenty
nine of the funding bill. Senators could bring lawsuits and
sue the federal government using taxpayer money if federal law
enforcement seizes or subpoenas their data without notifying them. The
damages could mean each senator could get half a million
dollars for each violation. Democrats in the House not amused

(06:36):
by this, In fact, the leader of the party.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
Good job, guys. I am happy, super thrilled to hear
that you're going to look out for you, that you
if your rights are violated, you're going to write it
into law that somebody has to burn for that. So
good job. But anything for me, No, I've read it,

(07:02):
by the way, in case you're wondering, I read the
carve out. Not a word about you, not a word
about me. There wasn't a care in the world when innocent,
oftentimes poor Americans had FBI swat teams throwing them in
the back of vans, had all their information hoovered up,

(07:23):
had their civil rights violated, time and time again, nary
a word from the GOP. But the second a GOP
senator gets his text messages hoovered up by the FBI,
Now we got to start throwing some carbouts in here.
This is against the law. I'm upset. I'm in a

(07:43):
bad mood today that all this stuff has me in
a bad freaking mood. It's a good thing we don't
take calls anymore, Chris, it'd be a bad day, Bronco.
When I sign into my email, I get the Yahoo
news feed. It's nearly always a story slanted to hurt
the administration. Used to make me mad, although I could
see through it now all right, So, actually I wanted

(08:06):
to talk about this briefly because there was something something
I don't want us to lose sight of, because we
are so in the bubble, and in fact, this story
happens to my wife today, we lose sight. I'm going
to talk about Democrats in the media. It's time to
go pound on them for a little while now that
I'm sour, But we lose sight of how susceptible normies

(08:32):
are in this country to propaganda, to democrat propaganda in
the media on Yahoo News and Google and Wikipedia and
CNN and MSNBC and all these ones. We rail against them.
You love to beat them up. I love to beat
them up. We call them soulis, evil comedies, which I'm
sure they which of course they are. But let's not

(08:55):
forget that there are so many normies out there. They
don't have your ability and your willingness to seek out
the truth about information. They read it and Yahoo News,
they turn on CNN and they see it, and they
believe it. They believe it, and then they march forward

(09:17):
and act as if the outright lie they just heard
was true. You know what happened to ob today. She
was in a woman's group. I don't want to go
into the details protecting names and sources here, but she
was in a woman's group. That means a lot to her.
And a lady in the group, black Lady, said Charlie

(09:41):
Kirk said a lot of horrible things about people like me.
Charlie Kirk never said a racist thing in his life.
There's a bunch of fake video out there that's been
cut up and manipulated to make it look like he did.
But that wasn't who Charlie Kirk was. But now this
woman's group was ruined for my wife. She came home,

(10:04):
she was so bummed. I can't go back now. I
can't go back now. It is Jesse Kelly's show on
a Wednesday. You can email the show Jesse at Jesse
kellyshow dot com. So back to what we were discussing.
Wife ran into it today at one of her women's groups.
Just some brain dead moron lady. She was a black

(10:26):
lady talking about Charlie Kirk, had a lot of horrible
things to say about her, which of course is a lie.
The Internet and the communists spliced up a bunch of
video to make him look like a racist who didn't
like black people, and that's not what he said at all.
But is this lady a communist? No, she's just a moron.
She's just a normy, Just a normy. She believes what

(10:50):
she sees on the news. She believes when she logs
into Google it's the news. When she turns on ABC,
it's the news. When she logs into Twitter on Facebook.
That surely no one would lie. No, I saw them
say it. This is why communists think, talk and act

(11:11):
like this when it comes to the media. Communists need
control of information because it's all based on lies. They
lie about everything all the time. So if you're lying
about everything at all times, you need one hundred percent
control of the sources of information. In order to keep

(11:34):
women like that brain dead moron in the world of
make believe, you can never allow her to see the truth.
This is why they talk like this. Listen to this.
We obviously released something.

Speaker 4 (11:47):
We need our electorate behind us, all parts of our electorate.
We need the media, and we rarely have the media.
So how this story gets told is going to be
a really important piece. Right now, They're going to have
to go up against all of Trump's media appara write,
social media owned by his pronies, the legacy media that
always has a little bit of a skew bias towards

(12:07):
both SIZESM. Both SIZESM always benefits Republicans.

Speaker 1 (12:12):
Why would both sides ism benefit Republicans? And I know
you're laughing and rolling your eyes, but the media is
all on their side. No, no, she knows, she knows.
It's ninety five percent on their side. But if I'm
lying to you about everything all the time, I can't

(12:34):
afford you to have five percent of the truth. If
I have you trapped in my house, let's say you're
my kid, then I've never let you leave the house,
and I've told you you're not allowed to leave the
house because the lawn is molten lava. And you step
out of the house, you will die well. I have

(12:57):
to cover up the windows, and I can't cover them
up ninety five percent because if you catch a peek
through there and you see that it's not molten lava,
then everything else I've told you comes apart. If I'm
telling you the truth about the lawn and what's outside,

(13:19):
I don't have to stress you finding other bits of
information hearing from other sources. When I tell the truth,
I don't have to stress. But if I'm lying to
you about everything at all times, ninety five percent control
of information is simply not enough. I have to have

(13:39):
one hundred. So when Democrats complain about the media media bias,
don't think that they're being dishonest. They mean it. They
cannot afford ninety ninety five percent control of information. It
has to be one hundred. This is why Elon Musk

(14:00):
has probably more personal security than Donald Trump himself. Why
because communists are trying to kill him. Why Elon Musk
bought one of the largest, most powerful social media companies
on the planet and stopped censoring out the truth. For

(14:23):
the communist revolution to succeed, people have to stay as
brain dead, uninformed and stupid as that woman in my
wife's group today. They have to believe things that aren't true,
otherwise they break free. The communist lies about everything at

(14:44):
all times. Jesse, oh, oh, this is about my secret club.
I mentioned yesterday that I'm going to start a secret club.
I mentioned that we're gonna have a cool lodge and
comfortable chair. We're going to have secret rings that have
a phone number in them you can call if you

(15:05):
ever get in trouble. And I also mentioned that there
are going to be rules. Certain people are barred from entry,
men under five ten, there will be no women. So
and of course now everybody wants in my secret club,
like this lady, Jesse. I was all in until you
said no women. I think you should change that. You

(15:28):
will need someone to do the laundry and cook the meals,
and you could use membership dues to pay for an
additional chapter of your book, which we are still holding
on to our breath over uh. In a week from now,
I'll hopefully be putting the final touches on that. Don't
think I haven't been working on it. I have. Yeah,
it's almost done. It got a little longer than a chapter.

(15:52):
It kind of kept going and going and going. I'm
giving it to you. It'll be free again. I'm probably
gonna email it. What, Chris, what? It's not another book, Chris,
it's a chapter. It's not another book. Don't sit there
and accuse. No, no, it does not count as a book.
Maybe a booklet, but that's not a book let. Us

(16:13):
not a book. A booklet. No, no, a book let,
us not a book. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a Fantastic Wednesday. Remember you can email the show
Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com and you know, ask
doctor Jesse. Friday's coming. Don't forget to email your questions,

(16:33):
your comments Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com.

Speaker 2 (16:37):
The name of a Jesh mershful gun.

Speaker 1 (16:39):
That's clear somehow, Jesse. I was listening to mister Kelly
say he once ran for political office on the night
of the big election he lost. He had to go
to his supporters at the hotel. Did mister Kelly really
do this or is it a joke because he makes
fun of political figures and he really took a chance
and did this before? I asked, because I once considered

(16:59):
running for office, what advice would Jesse Kelly really give me?

Speaker 2 (17:04):
No?

Speaker 1 (17:05):
I really did it. Look I'm stupid. I make huge,
impulsive decisions that are life changing. I remember I quit
my job after I lost my two congressional races. I
moved back to Washington, d C. To work in politics

(17:25):
for a year. I hated it, and I quit my
job without a job, and put my family in a
mini van and we just drove across the country looking
for work. I do really, really stupid things, and it
often ends in catastrophic failure. This job that I've now

(17:46):
been doing for seven years is probably the one that
I've ever done that it actually worked out. So, after
all these horrible strikeouts and disasters, decided to take a
chance on a media career. And here I get to tell.
Do you Coast to Coast every single night from six
to nine pm Eastern Time, or if you download the
podcast on Iheartspotify, and iTunes. So this is like the

(18:08):
only one that ever worked. Yes, I got mad. It
was mad about Obama because he's a thirty freaking liar.
I mean this, Obama, we will keep.

Speaker 5 (18:17):
This promise.

Speaker 1 (18:19):
To the American people.

Speaker 5 (18:21):
If you like your doctor, you will be able to
keep your doctor period. If you like your healthcare plan,
you'll be able to keep your health care plan period.
If you like your doctor or healthcare plan, you can
keep it. Nothing in this plan will require you or
your employer to change the coverage of the doctor you have.
The only change you'll see are falling costs as our

(18:42):
reforms take hold. If you like your healthcare system and
your doctor, the only thing reform will mean to you
is your healthcare will cost less. I will not sign
a plan that adds one dime to our deficits.

Speaker 1 (18:57):
Yeah, you get the idea. Thanks to Tom Elliott, by
the way, for putting that together. Anyway, I got really
mad when that guy got elected president. Knew what a dirty,
comedy scumbagg he was. I decided to run for Congress
out of the blue, just because I was mad, and
I make gigantic, stupid decisions, and I almost won I
lost by like four thousand votes. They had to recount

(19:17):
the thing for a week. What advice would I give you, Well,
you're gonna die one day on your deathbed, assuming you
are lucky enough. Very few of us are. But assuming
you are blessed enough to be surrounded by loved ones
on your deathbed, and you're gonna have time to reflect

(19:39):
on the life you lived. Are you going to wish
that you had thrown yourself into the fight, or are
you going to say, in that moment, thank goodness, I
didn't take a chance. If you have considered running for office,
any level of office, do it. Try it. Take it

(20:00):
from someone who lost twice. Losing isn't the end of
the world. In fact, one of the best things that
ever happened to me. I'm so glad that I'm not
in Congress. But try it. Throw yourself into the ring
and go try it. Look at all these dirt balls
we have in office on the GOP side, by the way,

(20:20):
the Democrats, we know how evil they are. Look at
how many dirtballs are in office. That's in large part
because good people don't run. They don't want to run.
They feel like they're not smart enough. They're not qualified.
I don't have perfect hair, and I don't know how
to speak in front of people. These are all things. Well,

(20:40):
maybe not the perfect hair, I'm never going to have that,
but learning to speak in front of people in two people,
these are all skills you will acquire over time. Even
if you don't become some person who loves speeches and
loves the stage. You will learn to comfortably, comfortably get
through a five to ten minute speech. You'll learn to

(21:01):
shake hands, look someone in the eye. You're gonna have
to raise money, You're gonna have to put in the work.
These are skills that come to you. All these people
that are in office haven't been doing this forever. If
you're considering it, go do it. Jesse, what's your favorite
modern aircraft? I have to tell you something, and I

(21:23):
know everyone's gonna make fun of me for being an
old soul. I know Jewish producer Chrissy Is. I can
already tell he's gearing up to make fun of me,
even though he can't even beat Cory and Chez. I
actually don't care for modern aircraft. I very much appreciate
modern air travel. Don't get me wrong. It's great that

(21:44):
you can be almost anywhere two three hours, at least
anywhere in America, which is the only country that matters.
I like that. I like that we have big jet
planes and passenger planes and cool fighter planes and stealth bombers,
and I like it. I do like it. I like
prop planes, older prop planes. And you know how I

(22:05):
know because there's always an air show somewhere down in
the Houston area where I live. There are planes flying
overhead all day long. Helicopters flying overhead all day long.
I'm talking about passenger planes, even fighter jets, all day long.
I don't give them a second look. The second it's
some Mustang from World War Two flying overhead, I look

(22:28):
up and like a little kid, I can't stop looking
until it's gone. I'm looking up at it and I
just think that's freaking cool. And I don't understand why
I'm that way. But my favorite plane of all time
is the BE seventeen flying Fortress. That is one of
the first planes that we used in World War Two

(22:48):
to bomb Europe, bomb in Germany. It was eventually replaced
by the super Fortress, which was bigger and stronger and
faster and superior in every way. But the B seventeen
flying Fortress when I was a kid, very very briefly.
In fact, maybe I should get into this again. I
started to get into model airplanes. You ever do model airplanes,

(23:09):
or at least know about them? Where it comes in
eight thousand pieces and you have to have this little
thing of glue and you're slowly gluing the whole thing together.
And I wasn't even good at it because I'm not artistic.
So I had too much glue here and this wing
was half fallen off there. But I got one of these.
I think it was for my birthday one year. Nothing
big or extravagant. We didn't do that, but a little

(23:30):
B seventeen flying Fortress. I think I put this thing
together in a day. I just sat over there obsessing
over it. And once I had it together, I would
just go play with it by myself, not with friends
with I would just go play with it all the time.
What Chris Chris said, wasn't it not climate controlled? Oh yeah,

(23:53):
there's no climate control. I mean these guys would get
frostbite up there. It was frigid. I mean up with
your flying it was frigid. No, I mean climate controlled.
The freaking sides of it are open for the side
gunners to put the machine guns out the side of it. No,
there's no climate control. The lack of technology in those

(24:14):
older planes terrifies me, and in fact, I think about
it because I'm not a nervous flyer. It's not a
big deal. But when I look up today and I
see those World War two planes or World War One
planes that are air show planes and they're out there practicing,
I look up at them and I think to myself, Oh,
be safe, because there's just the technology wasn't there. It

(24:39):
wasn't advanced enough yet. And yet they're up there twenty
thousand feet. They're up there and flying bomber runs, and
they're basically made yeah, Chris, of tinfoil. There's nothing to them.
It's not like they're bulletproof. So these German fighters and
flack or coming at them, and guys are dying. There's
a reason half these guys die. Half of them the

(25:01):
are bomber crews. Half of them died. More guys died
in the Eighth Air Force. The Eighth Air Force was
the one bombing Europe. More guys died from the Eighth
Air Force in World War II, than marines died in
the Pacific. That's a bonker stat it's true. Don't see
the Jesse Kelly show. So yeah, here's a nice little

(25:23):
pairing with all this H one B talk. How do
companies use these things? Is? Is it just? Hey man,
We've looked far and wide for an American to fill
this position. There just isn't anybody. We have no choice
but to go over to China and grab someone from there.
Is that how it works? Let's hear from Palmer Lucky,
he's the guy who founded Oculus. It's this virtual reality thing.

(25:48):
How does this work? Of course, there's so much H
one B of use. You would not believe what I
saw when I was in Silicon Valley. It's it is insane.
It's obviously a program to try and replace US workers
with basically slave labor that can't ever escape. It's like
H one B abuse is crazy. That's why this kind
of thing is not going to fly. Each one be
visa thing will not be a big priority for your administration,

(26:10):
because if you want to raise wages for American workers,
you can't flood the country with tens of thousands or hundreds.

Speaker 6 (26:16):
Agree, and we also do have to bring in talent
when we've got.

Speaker 3 (26:20):
Your talent and you know you don't know you don't
we don't have talent in people now.

Speaker 6 (26:24):
You don't have you don't have certain talents, and you
have to people have to learn. You can't take people
off an unemployed like an unemployment line is say I'm
going to put you into a factory, Who're going to
make missiles.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
That's that's one of the worst interviews he's ever done.
I I think they know it by now, it's been
twenty four hours. I'm sure they know it. I don't
know what the plan will be. I guess maybe in
the back of my mind, I'm hopeful tomorrow. Maybe maybe
by the time I sit down here tomorrow and you

(26:57):
and I get to chat, maybe tomorrow there will be
some sort of a walk back. Maybe there will be
some sort of an effort to put out these fires.
But it's been I think it's been since COVID since
I've had emails with this level of anger. People are furious.

(27:18):
Donald Trump was elected for two reasons. He was elected
because the economy was garbage, inflation had priced people out
of things. And he was elected because of the anger
about immigration that is all across this country coast to coast.
People are tired of it. So they don't want to

(27:39):
hear this stuff. They simply don't look. You want to
hear you want to hear this, This is this is
a doozy. In nineteen fifty, you know, the percentage of
thirty year olds who were married and owned a home
over fifty percent. You know what that number is now
less than fifty team percent. When the American people are

(28:05):
finding what their parents had and grandparents had to be unobtainable.
They don't want to hear how important it is for
Microsoft to have another thirty five thousand people from India
come in. They don't want to hear it. They certainly
don't want to hear that they're not skilled enough to
do the job. They can't even be trained. Oh no, no,

(28:28):
don't worry. It's just it's just gonna be temporary. We'll
just bring a bunch of them, or to fly a
bunch of them in to train you. You stupid ruine.

Speaker 3 (28:36):
Again, we can't snap our fingers and say you're going
to learn how to build ships overnight. We want to
bring semiconductor industry back to the US. They're gonna be
big facilities in Arizona. So I think the president's vision
here is to bring in overseas workers where these jobs went,
who have skills, who have the skills, three five, seven

(28:58):
years to train the USA workers. Then they can go
home the US workers fully takeover.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
Yeah, and that doesn't land. Well, this kind of stuff doesn't.

Speaker 6 (29:08):
That's the greatest economy we've ever had. Their talking points. Oh,
of course, high course. Sorry, by the way, the only
thing is beef. Beef coffee is a little high because
the ranchers are doing great coffee coffee. We're going to
lower some tariffs. We're going to have some coffee come in.
We're going to take all this stuff very quickly, very easily.
It's surgical. It's beautiful to watch. Their line is price

(29:30):
is affordability. That's the new word, affordability. It's much less
expensive under Trump. And you'll and I haven't been here long.
Nine months is not a long time. But look at
what I've done to energy. Look at the price of
gasoline going from four to fifty to two fifty or
two seventy, it's going to be two dollars gasoline. People
want affordable, Well, they answer me, is my thing, and
we have the greatest economy in history.

Speaker 3 (29:52):
Are Republicans not selling it?

Speaker 6 (29:54):
The Republicans don't talk about it.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
Yeah, so they need to do a better job on
Capitol Hill the trade give.

Speaker 6 (30:00):
Talk and the Republicans and I say it all the time,
Republicans have to talk about the fact that prices are down.

Speaker 1 (30:09):
Let me let me explain something that's a strategic mistake.
There's no question the Biden administration carpetbomb this economy for
four years. That's not debatable, the spending, the insanity that
they destroyed it. The Trump administration has only had ten months,

(30:29):
eleven months, He's right about that. Taking ownership of what
Joe Biden burnt down is a strategic mistake. I'm not
saying Trump can't get it turned around. He has a
lot of very sharp ideas when it comes to the economy.
He does it probably will take time, there's always a lag.

(30:51):
I'm not saying he can't get it turned around, but
stepping up right now and saying it's never been better,
greatest economy. What that's doing is that's assuming ownership of
something that you don't even fully own yet. We're still
we're still working out all the crap Joe Biden did.
I think it's a strategic mistake out of the White House,

(31:16):
because you're out there every day telling people the economy's great.
I fixed it all. People don't feel like the economy
is fixed. People don't feel like prices are down. They
have not seen inflation go down. That has not happened
at all. The rate of increase has slowed down, but
inflation hasn't gone back to where it was five years ago.

(31:38):
You step up and say, I did it my economy. Well,
if I don't like the economy, and if I'm a Normyan,
I don't understand how economics working and how there's a lag.
If I don't like that, that's a problem. Jesse. I
always dismissed Costco cheese pizzas kids food. Lately come to

(32:00):
appreciate the obscene amount of cheese on the pizza. What
say you, cheese pizza in all forms it is kids food.
Get some freaking meat on your pizza. Dudes, don't eat
cheese pizza. Get some sausage on there, Get some pepperoni
on there, maybe some bacon on there. Chris, we can

(32:22):
use all beef, pepperoni or whatever, doesn't matter. Let's get
some meat of some kind on the pizza,
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