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November 11, 2025 35 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Is The Jesse Kelly Show. Final hour of The Jesse
Kelly Show. On a magnificent Tuesday, a Veteran's Day once again.
Happy Veterans Day to all who served. It's a good
day to make a phone call. I know we don't
like to make phone calls now that we're in the
texting era, but if you have a veteran in your life,

(00:23):
make a phone call. Consider making a phone call to
that veteran. Now. I wanted to talk a bit about
this because I've had a lot of these, Jesse, I
don't understand what's going on. When the shutdown started, President
Trump threatened to unleash unleash russ Vatte at the Office
of Management and Budget OMB to eliminate democratic programs and

(00:44):
institutions permanently. Where is all this? Where was all this?
Donald Trump is a different kind of a character for sure. Obviously,
as you're well aware, sometimes Donald Trump floats out trial
balloons for policies to see how it lands, to see

(01:06):
how it lands with the people, see how it lands
with his base, like for instance, this thing, this, this
is a trial balloon.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
Dividend to our middle income people and lower income people
of about two thousand dollars, and we're going to use
the remaining tariffs to.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
Lower our debt.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
We're going to be lowering our debt, which is a
national security thing.

Speaker 1 (01:27):
Two thousand dollars. We'll give you a two thousand dollars dividends.
That's a trial balloon. He's going to see where that lands.
He does that. Sometimes he's not floating a trial balloon.
Sometimes he's selling something something that he kind of feels
forced or possibly is forced into. We don't want six

(01:50):
hundred thousand Chinese spies educated at our universities in this country.
That's freaking insane. We also, we don't like the university
cym that has destroyed this country in many many ways
by its communist ways. We don't like the university system.
We don't want six hundred thousand Chinese spies in. As

(02:11):
I pointed out in the first hour, US accepting six
hundred thousand students from China is part of the trade
truce we are currently in with China. It was part
of the deal Trump and Jesian Ping cut. Trump knows
that he knows you don't want six hundred thousand Chinese

(02:33):
students in. So this is in a trial balloon. This
is Trump trying to sell it.

Speaker 2 (02:39):
You don't want to cut half of the people, half
of the students from all over the world that are
coming into our country, destroy our entire university and college system.
I don't want to do that. Don't forget Mega was
my idea. Mago was nobody else's idea. I know what
Mega wants better than anybody else, and Mago wants to
see our country thrive.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
He's selling it. Remember remember the Jeffrey Epstein stuff that
so many people are still angry about. It was almost
out of the blue. It was just something he decided on,
almost out of the blue. He started yelling about anyone
talking about it. Why are we still talking about? Shut up?
This isn't this isn't important? Are we still talking about that?

(03:22):
He just looked at all of us and he shut
up what he was selling.

Speaker 2 (03:28):
It.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
Wanted everyone to move on. Let's move on now. Sometimes
their trial balloons. Sometimes he's selling something, and sometimes he
remember he's a deal maker, that's what he does. Sometimes
it's an idle threat. You know what. An idle threat

(03:49):
is a threat that you're not actually serious about, a
threat you don't really have any intention of following through
on Donald Trump did not want the government shut up down.
He obviously he's president, he wants to do things. He
is hamstrung if the government is shut down, so he
didn't want it shut down. And he understands that Democrats. Really,

(04:12):
the power of Democrats in this country is the fact
that they've filled up government at every single level with Democrats.
They have filled up the government with committed communists who
will carry out their will no matter what, and who
will kneecap Republicans no matter what. Democrats understand that's a
hugely powerful thing they have in their back pocket. Donald

(04:34):
Trump wanted to shut down to stop. Donald Trump used
that threat to try to get them to stop. Now
that wasn't effective. He never fallow due on it. The
shutdown would have ended a long time ago. If we
were actually watching federal employees be fired by the thousand,

(04:55):
if Democrats were watching communists getting marched out of the
federal government, they would have freaked out earlier. But it
didn't happen. What did we get four thousand? I think
four thousand got laid off. I believe it was the number.
What happened to it? It didn't happen, but remember this.
Remember you can have your frustration with the Trump administration,

(05:17):
with the White House, and then it's totally fine. Again.
You're not a servant, you're not a subject. You can
criticize anybody you want in politics, anybody. You're a free
American citizen. That's fine. I just want to remind you again,
if I'm going to try to make you feel better,
that Trump is the beginning, not the end. He is

(05:39):
never It's not even realistic to ask that of him
to solve all these problems that are decades in the making.
What do we want from him, really, what he's done.
We want him to get the ball rolling, get the
ball rolling. And contrary to what he tells here, I'll

(06:00):
play it for you again at the end, what he says,
you don't.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
Want to cut half of the people, half of the
students from all over the world that are coming into
our country, destroy our entire university and college system. I
don't want to do that.

Speaker 1 (06:14):
I don't forget.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Maga was my idea. Mago was nobody else's idea. I
know what Mega wants better than anybody else, and Mago
wants to see our country thrive.

Speaker 1 (06:25):
He may be right about it being his idea, and
he certainly is the leader of the Republican parties, the
leader of the right, and has been so for years.
He's the largest, most influential, most powerful voice on the right.
But America first, that movement. It will go on for
a very long time after Donald Trump is gone, a

(06:45):
very long time. He is not the movement. He is
the leader of the movement, no question, he is not
the movement. So there are things that you're not going
to get and I'm not going to get during this
four year span. Oh look, all we could do is
hope and pray that we get another guy in for
four years or eight years. That's all we can hopes.

(07:07):
But let's just focus on this four years. There are
going to be a lot of things you don't get.
You will get, some things you will not get, some things,
some things you really really want. That's how it always goes, though.
That's how it always goes. It's always been this way,
no matter what promises they make or no better. Sometimes

(07:28):
it's not possible. Sometimes they were flat out lyon. Sometimes
it's a hard complicated thing to walk into Washington, d c.
And actually reform the place because it is designed so
it can't be reformed. Evil, selfish, horrible people have spent decades,

(07:50):
in decades, in decades in Washington, d C. Trying to
ensure that you, the voter, are not allowed to change
things there. They've worked very, very hard at that to
separate you from their power. They don't want you to
have any say, so they don't want you to be
able to actually cut things out of the federal budget.

(08:12):
They don't want you to be able to deport people,
to denaturalize some of these dirty foreigners who hate our
country and openly talk about how much they hate the
freaking place. There's no reason we shouldn't be denaturalized in
deporting those people. They don't want you to have that power.
They don't want you to have the power or anyone
to have the power of firing federal employees because they

(08:34):
understand having a massive federal government full of communists is
wonderful for them. They don't want you to be able
to have a say, because if you, the patriotic citizen,
actually have a say, then things would change. That doesn't
mean we can't make changes. It doesn't mean we can't

(08:55):
improve things. We can. It means it's going to happen
a lot slower than you or I would ever want
it to happen. It is. It's just that's the way Washington,
DC works. Remember that we're two hundred and fifty years
two forty nine, We're two hundred and fifty years into America.

(09:16):
That's a really nice lifespan for a country. I'm not
saying we're done or anything like that, but after two
hundred and fifty years, inevitably there is going to be
a degree of rot inside the government. Whatever kind of
government system there is, there's going to be a certain

(09:37):
amount of rot there. Because of the evil, sinful nature
of man. Men are going to get into power, they're
going to abuse that power, find a way to insulate
their power from the will of the voters. And this
didn't happen last night, and it's not going to be
solved overnight anyway. Back to Trump, sometimes it's a trial balloon,

(10:00):
Sometimes he's selling something, and sometimes it's an idle threat
that he didn't mean. He didn't mean firing all these
federal employees. He was just trying to threaten Democrats and
get them to not shut the government down. He never
meant it. We didn't get it. That sucks. I wanted it,
but that's the way it goes. It's do some emails,

(10:20):
shall we? Nextday is the Jesse Kelly Show on a
Wonderful Tuesday. You can email us Jesse at Jesse kellyshow
dot com. Before I get to these emails, I just
want to say this. I hope Bob doesn't ever leave
me for the mailman or something that would be less

(10:40):
than ideal. But if she does, I know exactly what
I'm looking for. Headline. Twenty one year old Florida woman
has been arrested after authorities says she was caught driving
at one hundred and seven miles per hour. When questioned,
she told officers she was trying to get to Little

(11:02):
Caesar's before it closes. That's the kind of dedication to
delicious pizza. What, Chris, why do you dog? You like
Little Caesars. Everyone knows it's delicious. People think it's low class.
I don't have any problem with being low class. I
admit I'm low class. Little Caesars is delicious. Hey, crayons,

(11:26):
that's not nice. Congress can't even vote on a full CR,
which is ridiculous, Gridlock, Why not scrap the idea of
a CR and start making our own full budget. I
just want to make sure I emphasize this again and
again and again. They don't want a budget. Democrats don't

(11:47):
want to budget, and Republicans don't want to budget. The
reason they don't want to budget is that would involve
actually opening up the books and showing the American people
you want to fund and what you want to defund.
They don't want to risk that. The easiest thing for

(12:07):
these people on both sides is to just keep voting
for a CR, a continuing resolution, which is horrible. It's
I hate that this is just accepted now. There should
not be a CR. That there is ever a CR
is a scandal. I want to keep stressing this. It

(12:27):
is a scandal to have a CR. A CR is
meant for dire emergencies, only we're in the middle of
a hot war. We don't have time. That is what
it's made for. Instead, we've just chosen to continue this
because they're all a bunch of gutless, loser cowards who

(12:47):
don't want to cut anything. They don't want to budget anything.
They don't want to show the American people what they
like or what they dislike, so they all just say
CR crs aren't. I am not convinced this will ever
end until we get the coming debt collapse that we
all know is coming. I think it will take something

(13:08):
that severe, maybe a great depression type thing. I think
it will take something that severe to get these parties,
but either of them to stop doing this. It drives
me insane. Oh, by the way, did you hear this
speaking of the debt collapse? You hear this? This is
from a Ray Dalio.

Speaker 3 (13:26):
And those are the characteristics that produce a deterioration in
the monetary order. And that's you know, that's why what
you're seeing, you're seeing a dynamic of why countries, for example,
are letting the reserves or their assets in bonds and
so on go down, and they're acquiring and have been

(13:49):
acquiring gold for example. So gold is a currency. You know,
we think of currencies as well.

Speaker 1 (13:56):
Have I been telling you, By the way, have you
called gold code yet? Dude? Should I play it for
you again? You know what? Let me play it for
you again. What are countries doing right now? Because they
see the debt out there, they see the interest rates,
they see this global economy. What are nations doing right now?

Speaker 3 (14:13):
And those are the characteristics that produce a deterioration in
the monetary order. And that's you know, that's why what
you're seeing, you're seeing a dynamic of why countries, for example,
are are letting the reserves or their assets in bonds
and so on go down, and they're acquiring and have

(14:36):
been acquiring gold for.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
Eight five five eight one seven gold. Get it in
your retirement now, if you can get some physical gold
or silver, I don't care what color it is in
your possession now, you might right now qualify for thousands
of dollars in bonus silver five eight one seven gold

(15:03):
or go to Jesse likes goold dot com. Jesse, I
was watching a video clip of you berating Chris for
not watching the movie Heat. You too went back and forth,
but we could only hear your side of the combo.
Then it dawned on me that Chris has no mic
to interact with you in the audience, unlike some other
talk shows. Is this a bug or feature of your show?

(15:27):
Why not give Chris a mike? Well, for one, and
he says his name is John. Chris does have a mic.
I can hear from Chris. I have made the executive
decision I don't want you to have to suffer and
hear his voice. It's very nasally and really high pitched

(15:51):
and whiny. It kind of sounds like, let me think,
like Lindsey Graham. It's got a real Lindsay Chris. I'm
just trying to be honest with the audience. It's got
a real Lindsey Graham lispy kind of thing. Too high
and nasally feminine, lisp be everything bad you could put

(16:12):
in a voice that's Chris's voice, And so I'm actually
doing you a favor by silencing Kim. Look, let's accept
I'm jumping on a grenade every day for you. I
have to listen to him. You don't have to suffer
like this. It shouldn't. It shouldn't fall on you. El sombrero.

(16:35):
Why don't we always hear about Japanese samurai warriors and ninjas?
Did the other Asia oriental cultures have similar or did
the Japanese just have better PR? No, the Japanese were awesome,
are awesome, but it's not that they add better PR.
It was a more Look, there are some cultures, as
you're aware, that are simply military cultures. They are in America,

(17:00):
for instance, are Indians are different Indian tribes. We had
some Indian tribes like the Lakota, the Sioux, like the Comanche,
that they were warlike peoples and that's what they believed in,
and that's what they wanted to do. And so they
were gonna go out and they were going to conquer
other Indian tribes and take their land and all that

(17:21):
other stuff. All that gobly goook they taught you in school,
but they never owned the land. Is just a bunch
of the biggest bunch of idiocy in the world. They
were always fighting over land. They were always fighting over
that stuff. But then there were tribes like the Pueblo
for instance, that's a southwestern tribe. They were farmers. Really,
that's what they wanted to do. It's not that they
didn't have any warriors. You had to have some to

(17:43):
protect yourself. Now, if you were a tribe in military
is what you do, you're gonna be better at it.
What do you good at? Things? You do, things you
practiced for a long time. Anyway, Carol Roth, speaking of
all this economy stuff, housing market stuff, Carol Roth is
going to join us in a moment talk to us
about that. Hang on it is the Jesse Kelly Show. Chris,

(18:08):
you better make sure there aren't any potty words in that.
We have kids listening anyway. Joining me now my friend
two times New York Times bestseller, former recovering investment banker,
Carol Roth. You know her already, You're well acquainted with
her on this show. First, Carol, have you ever wanted
to be part of a secret club of any kind?

(18:29):
Because I'm going to start one.

Speaker 4 (18:31):
Yeah, I saw that. I actually don't want to be
part of your club. I don't want to be part
of any club. I wouldn't be part of any club
that would have me. I don't like people. I like
to be by myself. So the idea that I would
have to go socialize you learn a secret handshake and
all that totally an appealing to me.

Speaker 1 (18:46):
Well that's fine, Carole, because we're not allowing in any
women anyway, so you're not even invited. Yeah, I figure. Yeah,
all right, Now, let's move on to the to the
task at hand. People can't afford to live right now.
In the last five years, with the money printing and spending,
inflation is priced middle class people down into poverty, poverty

(19:07):
people into nothing. It's a problem. Can it be fixed
in four years?

Speaker 4 (19:14):
So what you are describing is the lower part of
what I call the K shaped economy. So if you
think about the letter K, you have some people who
are experiencing an economy as asset holders where they have
seen at least on a nominal meaning non inflation adjusted basis,
they've seen their four or one ks go up, they've

(19:35):
seen their houses go up. They feel okay. Then you
have the rest of the middle and working class, as
you mentioned, who are on the lower slope of that trajectory,
and the increased cost of living across the board, whether
it is their rents or mortgage, whether it's property taxes,
healthcare costs, anything that you can think of. Insurance is

(19:56):
just gone through the roof, and they're really struggling to
stay afloat.

Speaker 2 (20:02):
And this has.

Speaker 4 (20:03):
Been a huge issue. It's what put President Trump in
the White House, the frustration with the economy and the
lack of affordability that spiraled out of control during Biden's term,
and I do think that it played a role in
the elections that we're just had across the country with

(20:23):
you know, mayors and governors because it hasn't been fixed
and to your question, you can be addressed in four years. Certainly.
I don't think that it can be entirely fixed, but
looking at different things that could be undertaken, whether it
is fixing the student loan problem that's transferring wealth from

(20:46):
younger people to college administrators, fixing the housing situation. I
do think there are things that we could be doing,
certainly fixing healthcare. We've been waiting for some folks to
get on that forever. I do think that there are
things that can be put on the right trajectory where
people feel some relief and feel like at least they're

(21:06):
being thought about and cared for and moved in the
right direction.

Speaker 1 (21:11):
Let's focus on the healthcare portion of this, because I've
been hot on this for a while, been talking about
it tonight. Obamacare was of course designed to end up
as government run healthcare. Everyone knows that there were some
people were honest about it at the time. And now
health insurance is just shockingly expensive. It's amazing normal people
cannot afford it. What can we do to help people

(21:32):
afford healthcare?

Speaker 4 (21:34):
Yeah, I mean, I know that this is a huge
surprise everyone, but I think we just figured out that
the affordable Care Act is not in fact affordable, you know,
big chakra there, you know. I think this is probably
the hardest problem we face because the entire system needs
to be redesigned. And part of the issue is that
we have all of these entities that are in different areas.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
Right.

Speaker 4 (21:58):
You've got the people who were for big corporations who
have a certain special access to healthcare. You have you know,
a group of people who are now on these exchanges.
You have the government workers who are in their own
health plan. And in order for the healthcare you know,
insurance industry to work and to get that pool sorted

(22:21):
out in the right way, everybody really needs to be
moving into one market based system. I'm not certainly not
advocating for a government run one basystem, but in a
market basystem where we remove barriers, we remove the state barriers,
we remove you know, all the things that are creating
the extra cost within the system and allow for real competition,

(22:45):
because just like everything else, the administrators and the middlemen
are the ones who are getting wealthy at everyone's expense,
quite literally. And the only thing that solves that is
if we can bring it back to an area where
we have that full competition, and that is a major
major endeavor, which is why I think the Republicans have

(23:08):
been too scared to try to touch that.

Speaker 1 (23:11):
Can they touch that in a way that doesn't look
like they're ripping something away from someone because we both
know the low tgop he doesn't have the guts to
ever cut anything off.

Speaker 4 (23:22):
Yeah, of course they can, but do they have the
political will to do so, or do they even have
the smartest to do so, you know, that's a that's
a separate question, and so none of this is impossible
in you know, kind of a vacuum. But when you
bring politics into the question and you talk about political will,

(23:45):
you do they have the will to dig deep because
the reality is that it would benefit you know, pretty
much all of the people, except for maybe the people
in Congress who are getting some sort of a sweetheart
deal themselves. But you have people who are working on messaging.
Just like they tried to tell us that the Affordable

(24:06):
Care Act was affordable, they're going to do the opposite
thing because they are trying to get government run healthcare
and moving at the extreme opposite end of that to
something that is free market oriented, of course, is going
to have a lot of propaganda around it. So they
need to have the strength to be willing to do

(24:27):
the right thing despite what anybody might say, and so far,
very few people in Congress have proven that they have that.

Speaker 1 (24:35):
Well, Carol, the average age I saw this this morning
of a home buyer is now sixty one years old.
That is amazing. I think I'm the last person in
America paying under three percent for my mortgage. People can't
afford homes right now. Is that something the administration can
address beyond just deporting fifty million people, which I scream

(24:58):
about all the time.

Speaker 4 (25:00):
Well, you stole my first talking point, Jesse. So yes,
we agree getting the illegals out of the country is
going to free up certain housing. And I think that,
you know, that makes a lot of sense. We are
under built right now by several million units. There's arguments
on whether that's two million or four million or whatever

(25:20):
it is, but we know that there isn't enough housing.
And one of the issues is that there isn't enough
right sized housing. If we go back to the nineteen fifties,
the medium the median house was about a thousand square feet,
maybe a little bit under, and now it's about twenty
two hundred to twenty four hundred square feet. So the

(25:42):
idea to get people into more flavorable housing would be
to incentivize builders to build you know, smaller footprint housing
that's still reasonable. We're not talking about a tiny house
from Amazon, but just you know, reasonable sized house, especially
since families on average are today than they were back
in the nineteen fifties. No surprise there.

Speaker 3 (26:04):
You know.

Speaker 4 (26:04):
The challenge for a builder today is that everything's more expensive.
You've got lots of regulations, you've got lots of zoning laws,
and there aren't really the incentives if you've got a
piece of land to build a couple of smaller houses
instead of one big mc mansion. And so if there
were appropriate incentives for them to do that, that's something

(26:25):
else that could help. I do think that having the
government think about increasing the assumability of mortgages could also
help free up some of the stock that has been
locked in place, because there are people who got these
mortgages that are three and four percent and they can't

(26:45):
sell their house because they don't want to pay you know,
six or seven percent for a new house. That has
also increased highly in value, you know, in terms of
both the price as well as the financing. So right
now now less than a quarter of mortgages are assumable.
If they went to the banks, who we have bailed

(27:06):
out many, many times, and said, you know you're going
to do this. You're going to allow for some mobility.
And by the way, you know you do get a
benefit out of this too, because if nobody is moving
in terms of houses, you're getting no origination fees.

Speaker 1 (27:20):
So we'll give you.

Speaker 4 (27:21):
A write a first refusal for that particular buyer so
that you can finance the rest of their mortgage. And
then there's a blended rate that certainly better than the
six or seven percent today. That's something that could free
up some housing as well as well as addressing some
of these student debt issues, because if you are somebody

(27:43):
who is young and you're saddled with tens of thousands
or maybe even six figures of student debts, no matter
what the house costs, you don't have the balance sheet
to be able to buy it. So I think there
are many things the administration can do. Obviously they cannot
fix the local zoning ordinances, but President Trump has a

(28:04):
big platform. He could certainly shine a light on it,
and he could certainly motivate people to make noise to
try to move those ordinances, those rules, those regulations and
all the things that are tying up the lack of
availability of new homes. So I do think this is solvable.
We just need to get the right answers. And I

(28:25):
can tell you what the right answer is. Not a
fifty year mortgage.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
No, it is certainly not. Carol. You are welcome on
the radio show. You're just not welcome in my secret club.
Thank you so much. I appreciate it. Chris, we can't
have women in the club. Well, I mean you're not
allowed to join either, So to be fair, you're not
allow Why I'm the founder. I just get to make

(28:52):
these decisions like a dictator. Really is the Jesse Kelly Show.
Final segment of the Jesse Kelly The Show on a
wonderful Tuesday, a Veterans Day again, Happy Veterans Day to
all who served out there. I wanted to remind you
you can email the show your love, your hate, your
death threats, whatever you would like to Jesse at Jesse

(29:13):
kellyshow dot com. Since Jewish producer Chris was asking me,
I figured I might as well tell you what did
I do for the Marine Corps birthday. Remember today's Veterans Day.
Yesterday was the VIP event if you will, what Chris? Anyway?
What did I do? Got home? Took my mother left
today so and I we took her out to dinner,

(29:35):
got back. I was tired. She decides to go to bed.
And now everybody knows what I did. Everybody probably already knows.
What do you think I did? I sat up and
I watched documentaries about the Marine Corps and various fights
the Marine Corps has been in. I sat up and
watched it until I couldn't keep my eyes open anymore,

(29:56):
and then I went to sleep. Why do you rub
your head, Chris? What I'm I'm not an old man.
Documentaries are amazing and it was just wonderful. I watched
one on Pelolu. You would be very proud of me, Chris.
The one I found on Pelllu. I had to get
a subscription for it for the channel, but it was

(30:20):
one of those free trial for seven days subscriptions. Got
the subscription, watched it before I fired anything else up,
canceled my subscription already watched it for free, didn't pay
a dime. I knew it would make you so incredibly proud.
After that, I spent my time on YouTube looking for

(30:40):
various Marine Corps things. What Chris, All that stuff is free,
except everything is advertisers supported now, which is obviously annoying,
and you know I need some relief from that, like
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(31:01):
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(31:21):
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Relief Factor is the help. Go to relief Factor dot
com and try it three weeks off It's nineteen ninety five.
Just try it doesn't work. After three weeks you don't
feel any better, don't call them back. One eight hundred

(31:42):
the number four relief or relief Factor dot com. Jesse,
what do you think about the possibility of the US
intervening in Nigeria to stop the Christian manslaughter. Well, one,
it's not going to happen. It's not going to happen
because the Trump well, for probably a variety of reasons,

(32:03):
Trump is fairly non interventionist when it comes to foreign policy,
is not an isolationist, but he also doesn't believe in
going everywhere. That's one. Two. The administration is starting to
feel some heat, some heat from the people. They're starting
to feel heat on the economy, on the affordability of things.

(32:24):
So if there was a small chance we would go
into Nigeria before, those chances probably dropped to zero after
we lost a bunch of elections on Tuesday night, and
after all the polls show people were unhappy with the economy.
It's not to say I don't have a heart for
our Christian brothers and sisters who are being slaughtered in Nigeria.

(32:45):
I very much do. If I had my way, I
would find a large mercenary group that would, with the
backing of the United States of America, go over there
and simply provide security to protect those people. That's what
I would want. But right now, the American people don't
have any time whatsoever for foreign adventuring, even if it's

(33:09):
something that's near to your heart, you're near to my heart.
I mean, I can't watch these videos anymore of Christians
getting slaughtered over there, and it's just freaking terrible. They
don't want to hear about it. The American people, when
they can't afford things, do not want to hear about
Ukraine and why it's important. They don't want to hear
about Israel and why it's important. They don't want to
hear about Nigeria and Christians and why it's important. They
don't want to hear about Venezuela. They don't even really

(33:30):
want to hear about Mexico. They don't want to hear
about it. What they care about now? And look, if
this is not me saying it, every single opinion poll,
public opinion poll shows this. The American people are worried
about the economy. The American people do not feel the
jobs market is good, they don't feel prices are good.
And when that is the case, you don't care about
other places. You can get away with things as a

(33:53):
politician on foreign soil when times are good back home,
and you can't get away with those things when times
get tough back home. It just doesn't work that way.
And now here's a headline, why, oh, you know, you
know the thing headlines we didn't get to BBC top

(34:14):
executives quit in disgrace over fake Trump video scandal. Hilarious
to me. One of the oldest news organizations on the
planet just lied like they always They just lied, completely
edited a video to make Donald Trump look like he
said something he didn't say. And these people don't think
anything of it. Communists lie about everything all the time,

(34:36):
and they keep getting sued, and they keep getting burned,
and they keep lying. Hong clearyat Bridge partially collapses in
southwest China months after opening Rero Iguano's Falling from Trees.
It's a Florida. Do we have to do this thing
every year? Florida where it freezes and everyone talks about

(34:58):
the iguanas following from tree? We got it. At this
point in time, everyone understands it. A Utah judge on
Monday rejected a Republican approved congressional map in favor of
an alternative that will create a Democrat leaning district. Red
states are a disaster internally a disaster. There has to

(35:20):
be a renewed effort by all of us, including my state,
by the way, Texas, a renewed effort to make red
states redder. Red states are not read enough because we
are lazy and complacent. We don't get involved in local
politics or state politics. And Utah is a disgrace for
this pitiful and what is one of our great states

(35:41):
and could be one of our red estates. Pitiful the
GOP in that state. And I know, because I've got
a pitiful one in mind. We will do this again tomorrow.
That's all
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