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July 18, 2024 • 36 mins
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(00:00):
This is a podcast from wor isthe Jesse Kelly Show another hour of the
Jesse Kelly Show. In as promised, here she sits the great Megan Kelly,
of course, of the Megan KellyShow. Serious XAM YouTube podcast.
You don't really have to introduce MeganKelly, but here we are, all
right, Megan. So you've beenhere in Milwaukee for a couple of days,

(00:22):
and this is not my first oneof these. I know it's not
your first one of these. Doesit feel different or is it just me?
It feels different. It's so strangeto be around a bunch of Republicans
who are happy. Yes, yes, it feels I thought after the assassination
attempt, I thought we would gethere, and I thought it would be

(00:44):
darker feeling and angrier. I guessI should say I figured people would be
all kinds of spicy. But ithas been honestly the most pleasant convention I
can remember. You know what,Jesse, It's one of those things we
know, of course, anything couldhappen, and the Republicans should not count
their chickens, and you know theyoften screw things up. However, right
now everything's going their way. I'venever been to a convention like this where

(01:06):
it's all going their way. They'reahead in the polls, there's a wave
of momentum behind them, the swingstates look good. The media has turned
on the Democratic nominee. That doesn'thappen, No, and not to mention,
the law bearer is falling apart,like by the day, including last
Monday, just as we came offhere. It's just all these things happened.

(01:27):
And then on top of it,Trump survived an assassination attempt heroically,
to the point where he even hadto be praised by some c and nners.
Not the MSNBC years, but likeit's just, you know, the
world is upside down and Republicans areused to being embattled and the scourge of
the media and behind in the polls, and even if they're not, the

(01:49):
media says they are. And it'sjust everything's flipped. Okay, let's actually
focus on that, because we're goingto come back to bide and whether or
not he politically survives this. Ina moment that I was actually talking with
a senator last night and he said, Jesse, my biggest concern right now,
maybe he was just being paranoid,he said, is over confidence.
He said, every consultant I talkedto other senators, House members, they're

(02:12):
talking fifty five fifty six seats inthe Senate owning the House. Fine,
right, yeah, that's exactly right. So I don't want to be mister
sink. I don't want to beDebbie Downer. But if we were to
blow this or it wasn't as bigas we want it to be, how
would that happen? Have a Idon't want to count my chickens, but
I don't understand how we could blowit from here, But I'm sure we

(02:36):
could. How would we do that? I mean, the biggest thing I
worry about is that Democrat turnout machine. Yeah, and you know, I
don't know. I think this iswhy Republicans have problems with mail in balloting.
They don't trust the system and theydon't trust the Democrats not to do
something with the ballots. And Iunderstand that hesitation. That's That's the biggest
way I have is just you know, Trump keeps saying we got to win

(02:58):
by a big margin and in orderfor them not to steal it. That's
not how I would put it,but I do think he needs to win
by a big margin either way.It has to go buy a big margin
otherwise the other side won't accept it. And there's no way the Democrats are
winning by a big margin in thisparticular race. So I don't know.
I guess I feel like overconfidence isa problem. It's tomorrow's problem. Right
now, we need to enjoy thisamazing week which never comes along, and

(03:20):
then tomorrow we need to get seriousabout where we stand, because what if
Joe Biden doesn't drop out? Whatif we have another four years of somebody
who can't put two sentences together buthas the nuclear codes. And if he
does sub out, there's gonna bea new wave of overconfidence. Because there
was a poll that just dropped todayshowing Trump's ahead of kam Law by a

(03:42):
bigger margin. Then he's ahead ofBiden, and she's a less inherently likable
person. So the Republicans are goingto be like, she's toast. But
these Dems are very good about justvoting Democrat no matter what. They want
the abortion, you know, theywant their government checks, they want their

(04:02):
taxes. They vote with a purpose. Yeah, so you're right not to
count anything. Okay, So let'stalk about the Biden news. I have
our time We've talked about this,you and I before. I have an
ongoing bet with Buck sexit about thiswhole thing. Does he drop? Does
he not drop? Bucks says hestays, I say he goes. Okay,
set that aside. I can't seehow he stays. Now that Pelosi's

(04:26):
public, now that Schumer's public,now that Schiff is public. These are
some Democrat heavy hitters who are notjust voicing displeasure, they're doing it publicly.
So if Joe Biden stays, howdoes that look when the other big
shots have said he's got to go, Well, they're not going to allow
it. That's what we're seeing.You're gonna win your bet because this is

(04:49):
sort of all part of the extortioncampaign where they went to him nicely and
they said, you know, it'sthe nice puppy you have. Yeah.
Right, we're at the phase oflike, I'm gonna spend some time with
you puppy without you round. Sorry, no one wants to hurt a puppy
anyway. They're doing all the leaking, right, there's a reason Adam Schiff

(05:11):
just came out in California with hisOpEd saying he's got to go. He
never would have done that if Pelosihadn't blessed it, she's his master.
And so they're starting to, youknow, twist the knife like it's only
going to get more painful for youfrom here, Joe, and by that
we mean Jill. He can leavenow with his dignity, or he'll leave
later without any of it, withouthis dignity. And even today there was

(05:31):
a piece of Axios talking about howthey're threatening him and you'll lose your library.
Oh boo. Ever now, butthis is what they're gonna do.
They're gonna try to ruin him ifhe doesn't leave willingly. And at some
point, Jill, who does careabout power and legacy and I guess money
post presidency, I think we'll beforced to go to him and say they're

(05:53):
ruining us. We've got to go. Have you ever considered wearing sunglasses inside?
As you know, we were talkingabout this before that in the winter.
Yeah, as of about twenty fourhours ago, I've decided I'm a
sunglasses inside guy. It's just it'sbecome who I am. Have you ever
considered coming around to this, Imean, not like as a policy,
but on a case by case basis, I would do it. No,

(06:14):
I occasionally, I do want toavoid the Anna Winter relationship. He's not
a good person. But I havedry eye and so the bright lights often
bother me, and I think,you know, maybe I'll get on board.
Well, they bother you, theydon't bother me anymore, Megan,
because I have my sung glasses.Why what brought you over? What tell
me about your evolution? So one, these are a prescription So I can't
see. I can't make out people'sfaces anymore here, So that's that's a

(06:38):
problem. Because I'm forty two goingon ninety two, my eyes are apparently
going to crap on me, andthat was a big part of it.
I look really good, especially becausemy hair has fallen out to the point
where I have to buzz it.So I've got to make I've got to
compensate for things right now, Megan, you don't have this problem. Okay,
These are problems that I have thatyou don't have. I had to
wear the hat because for the listenersI'm listening, I'm wearing it looks like

(06:59):
a Maga hab at. It readsmake Women female Again, because it is
like a wind tunnel out there onmy set, and it was starting to
look like, yeah, I'd justgotten out of bed after like a hot
and sexy night, and that's notreally appropriate for daytime news. No,
it's not okay speaking of women's finishup with this. Obviously, single women
have been a huge problem for Republicansfor the longest time, and that problem

(07:24):
is getting worse. Married men voteRepublican, married women vote Republican. This
is just how I go. Singlemen vote Republican, but single women,
by a margin something like seventy tothirty vote Democrat. That is something that
GOP has very ham fistedly tried tochange. Is that something that can change.
There's very clearly just a natural inclinationof single women to go left.

(07:46):
I can't explain it, but maybeyou can. I don't know that they're
going to change that. I thinkwomen are very worried about abortion, and
the Republicans are not their party onthat, even by saying it's a stage
issue, which is better than wewant to ban it in all fifty states.
But I think they're naturally worried moreabout having their right to get an
abortion, that's how they would phraseit. And I also think that in

(08:09):
some ways it's not their fault becauseI have a daughter. I see what
schools do to the young girls,like they really try to play on their
empathy to start indoctrinating them on theirleft wing causes. If you're a good
person, if you're a kind andempathetic person, this is how you will
feel about this issue. Right.Trans women are women's sweetheart. That's what

(08:30):
the nice people would say and accept. It starts very young, and so
I think it takes a while forthe brainwashing to wear off on them,
because eventually they do get married andthey have babies, and they see ultra
sounds and they start to look atit differently. I think it's a long
evolution. But I think if Iwere running in Republican politics, I would
not say put all your effort intoyoung single women. Yeah, that's probably

(08:52):
a lost cause she's Megan Kelly.You know where to watch Megan Kelly.
Listen to Megan Kelly's Serious XM ofCourse, which is amazing YouTube podcast.
Megan, I appreciate you very much, even if you're not wearing sunglasses.
I appreciate you. Look forward toMegan Kelly. Everyone all right, So
we still have obviously a ton toget to. It's our last night to

(09:15):
hear at the convention. But fornow, before we get to any of
that, I want to talk toyou about signing a pledge. Now that's
sounds weird, doesn't it sign apledge? What does that mean? Well,
when I talk about IFCJ, theInternational Fellowship of Christians and Jews,
I want you to understand that thepeople who are living under rocket attack,
terrorist attack, murder, rape,and just all that horror that they're going

(09:37):
through still every day. It's notin the news every day, but they're
going through it every day. Theythink if you talk to people over there,
they think America doesn't give a crapbecause because of our media, because
how horrible our media is. Sothe reason you sign the pledge is they're
going to turn it in one bigpledge, all these signatures. They're going

(09:58):
to go over there and present itto net Yahoo will present it to them
and let them know, Hey,a lot of people care, a lot
of people care, A lot ofpeople are praying for you, a lot
are you not praying for him?Go to support IFCJ dot org and sign
the pledge. That's all they're askingfor that I'm asking for money and they're
not. That's all they're asking foris just signing a pledge support IFCJ dot

(10:22):
org. If you would, allright, we'll be back. You're listening
to the org. It is theJesse Kelly Show on a Thursday. Do
not forget. You can email theshow. We'll be right back on Monday.
And I gotta be here tomorrow.I'm traveling from this invention. But
now I'll be back on Monday.You can email the show Jesse at Jesse
Kellyshow dot com. If you missany part of the show, you can

(10:46):
download the whole thing on iHeart,Spotify, iTunes. Now let's get back
to the ask doctor Jesse questions.And I should update you. The Biden
campaign has come out. Since thisnews is breaking news that he's planning on
step down, some Biden people willcome out and said, that's not true
at all. He's not stepping down. Look, we're not gonna know that
again. Like we've talked about manytimes, you're not in until you decide

(11:09):
you're in. Then you're not outuntil you decide you're out. It's just
let's wait and see. But Itend to believe the story anyway. Let's
do some mass doctor Jesse questions.Dear Jesse, machine gun, Kelly,
Why is early voting bab? Allright? I'm gonna explain this because this
would be a good way so foryou to explain to norm and norma because
they can get confusing. Why wouldyou care? Why is early voting bad?

(11:33):
All right? Here it is.There's a thing called chain of custody.
You've probably if you watch legal shows, cop shows, you've probably heard
this phrase chain of custody. Soevidence. You know, I rate a
drug dealer's house and I pick upthe cocaine. Okay, so it goes
from me, from my possession,I have to turn it into an evidence

(11:56):
locker. It has to be signedinto the evidence locker. So that's clad
chain of custody. So there's atime a date where you signed it in
and it leaves, and that hasto be signed out at a time and
date. Who signed it out?This proper chain of custody? Why is
that so important? Because they understandimportant things moving to and fro tend to

(12:18):
disappear, things tend to happen.I'll make it. I'll make it even
simpler than that. I've used thisexample before. Let's say we live in
a little hundred person village, Okay, and in this village, we all
get to vote. We get tovote. We're voting on the new chief,
who's chief in our village. Andso there are two scenarios. In
the first scenario, there's a votinghut. There's one specific hut. You

(12:43):
show up on election day, youwalk in there, you show your ID,
proving yourself to be a citizen ofthat village, and you vote and
drop your thing in. You putyour little piece of paper in there.
Okay, that's one way. Onthat day, at the end of the
day they add up all the votes. Winner is the chief. That's one
way. Second way is this,Oh, sure, there's a voting hut.

(13:05):
And on election day you can waitand you can go vote in the
voting hut, and a lot ofpeople do. But also they've mailed these
ballots out to a bunch of differentpeople, and if you want, you
can you can fill out your ballotand then it doesn't go to the voting
hut. The ballot. Someone willcome by and he's in charge of the
mail of the village and he's gonnagrab your ballot from you, and then

(13:26):
he's gonna take that ballot into aseparate hut where they store the mail for
a while, and then it getssorted in there, and then eventually it'll
be moved from that hut into anotherhut, and they're gonna get things organized,
and then eventually from that hut it'llmake its way down to the voting
hut. Now, which of thetwo ways is more safe and secure?
Which of the two ways is moreI don't know, appetizing for a cheater,

(13:54):
or look beyond beyond absolute malfeasance.Which of the two ways is right
for just an hour accident? Itdoesn't have to be a bit fraud.
What if the mail guy who showsup at your house and grabs your ballot
and he's walking to the other hutton, the big gust of wind comes by
and there goes your ballot. Itfloats off and the ballots off, and
it floats into the river, andnow your vote doesn't count. There is

(14:16):
a reason, nation after nation afternation has banned mail in voting, early
voting, any form of electronic voting. Then they've gone paper ballots, same
day voted voting counting of the sameday. That is why early voting is
bad. Now, if it's availableto you, do it. Look vote,

(14:39):
I don't care how you vote,vote, but in general, you
don't want that in a society.All right, Jesse, do you think
the Republican National Convention seems a littledated? I can't tell if they're running
a Miss America pageant or the oscars. I think newer Republican voters would rather
see something with the excitement of acage match, or for that matter,

(15:01):
a Trump rally. The old guardprefers pomp and ceremony. Well, they'll
vote Republican anyway, Thanks for allyou do. His name is Michael,
Okay, does it feel dated?Look, there are some things that are
a tradition and they continue on asa tradition, whether or not they make

(15:22):
total sense. Now, I needto explain that these conventions, they've been
going on for as long as anyonecan remember, very similar to you know
what. Here's a good example,weddings, the American wedding tradition. What
happened? What happens normally. Irealize there people do it differently, but
normally, what happens you you findyourself a dime or you find yourself a

(15:46):
dude, and you decide you're gonnaget married and live happily ever after,
and you're gonna go smoochy smooch andlife is good, and that's good.
I hope you do that. Wonderfulgood for you. And you decide you're
gonna get married, and then youdo what. You send out invitations to
everybody all across the country, friends, family, wherever you go, and
everyone has to then take a fewdays off of work and buy a plane

(16:10):
ticket, a hotel. By thetime you're done, if you're flying a
family of four to somebody's wedding,that's a three four thousand dollars affair.
Most likely by the time you're doneeating, fly staying. That's crazy,
but that is the American tradition.And traditions are very very very powerful things.

(16:32):
And well, I'm not a traditionfan. Traditions have their place.
It's always been done this way.Members of the Republican Party delegates people from
all across the country. They cometogether for a gigantic event. And I
will tell you, look, I'mhere, you're not here, but I'm
here. I will tell you there'svalue in coming together. There is value

(17:00):
you in coming together. What haveI told you before that you, especially
if you're an introvert, you needto avoid the temptation. I'm pointing fingers
at me. I'm an introvert.I need to avoid the temptation when I'm
not working, of just going home, keeping to myself, watching my documentary,
read a good book. It's verytempting and it's very easy today in

(17:23):
this era of the cell phone,the smartphone, social media. And I've
told you you need to get outthere and force yourself into groups of like
minded people. There's value in community. There's value. Look, there's value
in a PEP rally. There isSo does it feel dated? Would I
like a cage match? I understandDana White speaking, then I yes,

(17:44):
of course, feel stated. Butat the same time it feels traditional,
and I don't necessarily think it's abad thing. All right, all right,
but look, there are bad thingslike living with pain every day.
That's a bad thing. That's notsomething you should do. And here's what
we do. We either tough itout when we have this daily pain,

(18:10):
back, pain, neck, pay, whatever it is. We either tough
it out, or we start takingthings that are harmful to us just because
we don't want to live with that. I don't want to live my foot
e it's all the time. Butmy back, I can't my leg.
Instead, why don't you seek outsomething natural, drug free. That's what
relief Factor is. It's natural,it's drug free. Wouldn't it be nice

(18:33):
to wake up tomorrow morning pain free? Relief Factor? You take it for
three weeks and you see what happens. Call them all. I'm asking three
weeks. If it doesn't work,stop, you'll be ordering more. I
guarantee it. Call one eight hundredthe number four relief or you can go
to relief Factor dot com. Don'tlive with pain every single day? All

(18:56):
right? All right, let's talkabout Biden, the courts, an inside
job, and the assassination attempting more. Next, Jesse Kelly Show on a
Thursday. Did you hear the wW two vet who spoke last night at
the convention. I'm not big.I'm not big on speeches. Don't I'll

(19:18):
be honest with you, just doingme talking here. I haven't seen a
single speech in person, and I'mnot going to either. I'll watch it
on TV. I'm gonna go getsome chicken wings. I'm gonna go.
I can't hear. I can't hearthe speech. Everyone's talking and everything.
So but I did watch this onelast night, and man a lot,
this was pretty awesome. People saypeople is in America is an idea,

(19:45):
but I believe America is much morethan that. America. America's our home,
you know. And I was fightingin Europe and I came back home.
I kiss to ground, thank Godthat I'm back home in our my

(20:06):
country and where I come from.When somebody comes for me for my home,
you're digging your boats in the groundand never look back. That's the
attitude that saved the free world andPresident Trump back in the commander in chief.

(20:27):
I would go back to the MarieEnlist today and I was storm whatever
beach you want, My country wantsyou, needs to meet you, fighting
fun. Tell me you're not readyto stand up and cheer right now.

(20:48):
It was freaking awesome. And JD. Vance was awesome last night. JD.
Vance was also very, very aimedin one direction last night. Let's
talk a little that's not the samethe pom Poms for a minute and talk
a little political strategy. I don'tknow if you watched the speech, but
it was heavily, heavily heavily whatit was about. JD. He was

(21:10):
introducing, introducing himself to a lotof people who don't know him. Look,
remember you're a nerd, I'm anerd or political nerds. We know
who these people are. Norman Normadon't. So he was introducing himself,
introduced his mom, who's overcome addiction, and things like that. That's wonderful.
But he also was talking. Noticehow many times he mentioned Pennsylvania,
rust belt manufacturing, Michigan. Ithink he said those words about nine thousand

(21:36):
times last night. That is theplan for jd Vance. I bet you
he might as well buy a secondhome in Pennsylvania, a third home in
Michigan, and maybe even a fourthhome in Wisconsin, because until July he's
going to reside permanently in those states. Jd Vance is the weapon they're going

(21:56):
to aim at rust belt voters,rustbelts, swing voters who feel disenfranchised,
they feel like their country has screwedthem over repeatedly. And he was speaking
to the working man last night,And as you know, that is what
I love. That's who I love, and I love how much the communists
hated it. This was on MSNBC. She started talking about what America is.

(22:18):
He said, America is not justan idea. It is a group
of people with a shared history anda common future. The thing about America
is that it's not a group ofpeople with shared history. In fact,
I think a lot of people wouldargue it's quite the opposite. It's a
lot of people with different histories,different heritages. His in laws don't share
the history exactly. And that Noticethey'll just pause for a moment. Notice
how much they despise the very ideathat we have a culture here, we

(22:45):
have a history, we have aculture. Lose this stupid melting pot talking
point. That's a bunch of crap. We have a history in a culture.
Our culture in this country believes infreedom. Our culture believes in family
goodness. We believe the government shouldbe small and out of our lives.

(23:11):
That is American culture. It's notsome meaningless thing that just kind of floats
with every way any way the windblows. That's what the communist wants you
to believe. Is it unique toanyone's skin color, No it's not.
Is it unique to anyone's heritage asfar as what country they come from or
race, No it's not. It'snot even really unique to anyone's religion.

(23:33):
Although America was founded by Christians.That's not debatable, and it is a
Christian history, of course it is. But it is a country that has
a culture. It is unique,it is wonderful, and the Communist has
done wonders watering down that concept inthe minds of Americans. Anyway, I'll
let this hag continue piece of it. He goes on. He went along

(23:56):
sort of a paragraph at least aboutthis plot in eastern Kentucky where his seven
or six generations of his family areburied, and his hope is that his
wife and he are eventually laid torest there and their kids follow them.
And I sort of understand the ideaof sharing the burial plot, but it
also is it reveals someone who believesthat the history that the family should inherit,

(24:21):
and indeed, the history that shouldbe determinative in the story of the
Vance family is the history of theEastern Kentucky Vances, and not the Vances
from San Diego, which is wherehis wife is from and where her Indian
parents are from. But in America, doesn't always have to be the white
male lineage trumps that defines the family. You can't possibly treat these people with

(24:42):
enough disdain they disdain you. Theyhate you. They hate every single part
of your country, your culture,your history, and your values. And
know you don't have an obligation tolive peacefully with them. These people should
be run out of the circles ofpower everywhere they are found, because they

(25:06):
are a poisonous cancer on this country. Remember that, Jesse, in your
opinion, how many people would havehad to be in on this if it
was an inside job, local copstoo, so on and so forth.
Okay, so I guess we're doinghypotheticals. What if this was an inside
job? You know, no one'sruled out anything, at least I haven't
ruled on I think who knows.Who knows? We may never know.
Well, look, it would onlyreally take one or two. It wouldn't

(25:33):
take that many. You take somebodywho's in charge of this, in charge
of that, you assign someone herewhen he probably should be here, but
you're in charge. It wouldn't takethat many. As far as the situation
on the ground. Now, ifwe're gonna do this inside job thing,
he was a train operative and whoknows, I mean maybe he was,
who knows. Let's put it onIran because that's the one that makes us

(25:56):
feel better than that being our owngovernment. So it would if he wrong
wanted to do it well. Onthe day of, you would only need
a few like I said, one, two, three, You could make
it happen if you had them inthe right places. But it would take
a lot more than that leading upto it. Planning, pepper, preparation,
equipment, These things take time.Takes a lot of time, Jesse,

(26:17):
how come you get to make upyour own commercials? Are you?
How come you are allowed to dothat? You know? I have this
question a lot from a lot ofpeople who are in radio, people who
do what I do, people wholisten. They ask me, how do
you get away with this? Howdo you get away with saying this?
How do you get away with doingyour commercials this way? How do you

(26:38):
get away with well? Whoever saidyou couldn't. Here's what happens whenever you
whatever you do a job, whateveryour job is, whether you're in construction
or a lawyer or whatever you do, you feel like you're supposed to do
it the way everyone else does it. But you don't have to. That's
that's an unspoken things. You don'thave to Why would I do it that

(27:03):
way? And look, as youknow, this is an advertiser supported show.
I don't charge to listen, Idon't charge to download the podcast,
and Lord Willing, I can't promisethis, but Lord will think it will
never happen. I wanted to alwaysbe free. But it's not a charity.
It's a business. So it's advertiserssupported. And so if you're going
to read ads on the show.It's not like people tune in for the

(27:23):
ads. But if you're gonna readads on the show, you, in
the very least could make an effortone to treat your advertising partners the way
they should be treated. That's one, and two, make an effort to
at least make it a little bitentertaining. That's how I've always felt.
I don't understand why you feel likeyou have to do some monotone or rate
it off the think. I thinkthat's freaking brutal. And to be honest,

(27:45):
it's unfair to advertising partners. Itis. Whether you buy something or
choose to patronize one of these advertisingpartners of the show, that's fine,
it's your business. I don't wantyou to ever do anything that doesn't fit
for you or you don't like ordoesn't work for you. I would never
say that, but they are thereason the show goes. You know,
it doesn't happen without them. WhenI talk to you about Done for your

(28:08):
real Estate, it's actually a reallygreat example. Done for your real Estate's
a great example. What do theydo? Done for you real estate helps
normal people invest in real estate.They'll find the homes for you. They'll
get you the financing, the closing, the rental costs, the rental process.
They do all this stuff for you. It done for you. Real
estate has such a place in people'shearts. They've been spoken about at people's

(28:33):
funerals because a father I believe itwas ten homes he eventually got from Done
for Your real Estate passed that downto his kids. That's what they do
now. If that doesn't interest you, fine, my goodness, don't call
them. But if you do,these are my friends and they're wonderful people
and they might just make your lifebetter. This is for normal people to
begin investing in real estate, whichis a really smart thing given what we

(28:57):
see from the dollar and the marketsand everything else. Go to Done for
You Jesse dot com. If thatinterests you, all right, Done for
You Jesse dot Com and tell himI said, Hi, I love those
guys. Brionna Morello, host ofThe Brionna Morello Show, joins us next,
Jesse, it is the Jesse KellyShow on a Thursday. And joining

(29:21):
me now a very special guest,longtime friend of mine who has her own
show now, as I always assumedshe would, Brionna Morello, host of
The Brionna Morello Show. It's onRumble, It's on Twitter. Highly recommended.
Okay, First, why in theworld would you go? Because I
get these emails a lot from peopleif hey, Jesse, I want to
I'm gonna start trying radio or orwant to start trying TV. I want

(29:42):
I want to start doing this?Why why would you do it? Why?
Yeah? It sounds crazy, doesn'tit. But I'm a little crazy,
and I also really enjoy not beingcensored. So so many of my
stories would get rejected when I pitchthem during editorial calls when I worked in
the corporate world, and I wasso upset and so heartbroken over it.

(30:03):
And so now nothing gets rejected becauseit's just me. And that's the best
part in all of this, Right, I'm able to now report on things
honestly and fairly, and cover thingsthat they don't want to talk about,
like J six, like the DOJ, lying to the American people, lying
to the juries that are all surroundingJ six, the judges. And it's
great, you know, and Ialways joke about this, but I'm always

(30:25):
pissing off the right people. That'sthe goal of every day, and so
that's what we do it on myshow. That's a very good goal to
have. Okay, let's talk aboutthe DOJ. Because of all the things
they've taken over, that might bethe most frightening. Once you take over
the legal system, once they canturn you, me, the poor January
six ers into enemies of the state, criminals that they have the power to
do whatever they want to a storeyou in a cage, kill you.

(30:45):
They can do whatever they want toyou. And this is one of those
things that feels daunting because Trump wasin there for four years, had two
ags and they both sucked. Neitherof them drained that swamp. Can that
be done or is it they andwe can't move it? I think it
can be done. So when PresidentTrump wins back to the White House,

(31:06):
I am confident that he has greatpeople around him, people like Jeff Clark,
who was over at the DOJ.He was one of the rising stars
that really came up towards all ofthe election fraud questions, and now he's
being prosecuted because they are hoping toturn Jeff Clark against the president. But
Jeff Clark, like I've spoken tohim before, says that, you know,
President Trump didn't do anything wrong andthere's no crimes that were being committed,
but they've indebted him in Fulton County. People like that, people like

(31:30):
Mike Davis. I'm pretty sure thatthey're going to be key players in all
of this and purging out the wrong, the people who should not be there
in the first place. So I'moptimistic from that sense. Now, what's
so worrisome, though, is we'vewatched everyone keeps saying, oh, just
let the system play it out.Let the system. We're watching the DOJ
become weaponized, and everyone just thoughtit was okay just to continue to sit
back and watch. We have Republicanattorney generals who have sat back and watched

(31:55):
as other attorney generals have gone afterPresident Trump just because they don't like him
pipulating laws, doing all of theselegal gymnastics to make sure they will criminally
prosecute him, and they never steppedin on any of this. Now we're
watching the Missouri ag kind of stepup and kind of challenge a lot of
this. But it shouldn't have takenthis much time. We should have jumped
in on this sooner. And that'sthe part that's so concerned. If they've

(32:15):
allowed it to play it out forso long when they shouldn't have waited this
long. Well, they allowed itto happen to the January sixth political prisoners,
and look, these people matter too. It frustrated me to no end.
And I know you've been speaking aboutthis to your credit for a long
time as well, that these people, their lives, their livelihoods, their
freedom matters too. And you couldn'tget enough people to care until it was

(32:37):
Trump under the gun. These fringingpoor people from January sixth, they have
been assaulted and abused by their governmentin horrible ways and really forgotten by most
of the GOP. Yes, Jesse, that's the most outrageous part in all
of this. Now, I knowthe name Stuart Rhodes has a very negative
image in the media, but heis somebody who ran the oath Keepers and

(32:58):
has never been a ues of aviolent crime, the youalth keepers, because
I want to go dig into them. I've never seen anything regarding like a
video of them coming in a violentact or anything of that nature. So
I was a little I was alittle down the middle when I first started
talking to these individuals. I goton the phone with Stuart Roads, who
was in the DC goolog and hesaid, and remind you, he's actually
ivyly educated. He was a defensivecriminal defense attorney as well. He said,

(33:21):
what they're doing to me is theblueprint for what they want to do
to President Trump. And I thoughtat first sounded like a little dramatic,
and then it actually happens, andthey did lay out the groundwork against Stuart
Rhodes, and then they got eighteenyears in prison because of it. Egregious
disgusting. I've been covering his trial. They've committed perjury. The DOJ,
they help withheld evidence from his criminaldefense attorneys. They've also just recently we've

(33:45):
come about going through an email thatboth the DOJ and his attorneys did receive.
But the judge in that case,Judge Meta, an Obama appointed judge,
actually said that this was not goingto be seen in front of the
jury. The email, specifically fromthe DOJ saying it there was no evidence
linking Stuart Road to before JA sixtelling the oath keepers to go into the

(34:06):
capitol. They went through his signalmessages, his emails, everything, and
they had no evidence of this,and Jesse that email was withheld from the
jury. And then the most egregiouspart in all of this, too,
is that when the FBI agents wereput on the stand during the trial,
they openly admitted, yes, wedidn't have any evidence showing that Stuart Roads
ever planned any of this out inadvance. So what do they do while
they got an oath keeper who wasunder the same amount of pressure to go

(34:29):
on the stand and to say that, well, we didn't say it.
It was just kind of assumed thatwe're going into the capitol. And because
of that, he is now sittingin prison for eighteen years until someone intervenes
in this. Eighteen years. Yeah, eighteen, I mean it's essentially the
eight you're your adult life, it'sgone, it just disappears anyway. Again,
we're speaking with Brianna Morello, hostof The Brionna Morello Show. All

(34:51):
right, So it broke an hourand a half ago, two hours ago,
this story from Mark Halperan saying JoeBiden's out, he's writing his fare
well speech. He's gone. Sincethen, the White House has come out
and said, no, this isridiculous, it's a bad story. It's
not true at all, except thestory was multiple sources. Who knows,
where do you fall in all this? Yeah, I mean, I think

(35:13):
it's obvious he's not gonna be ableto make it to November. I think
that they have created this pressure campaign, and then they've done it so successfully.
At this point, we're watching allthese big name Democrats throw their names
out there and say he's got totake his name off the ballot in November.
So I think that he's going tobend to the pressure eventually. But
then again, who's going to replacehim? I mean, I know they're
going to lose at this point.There's no way that they could put somebody
else in there. Maybe Michelle Obamaat this point, but again, I

(35:37):
think everyone else, at any ofthe candidate would not be inspirational for folks
to go out and vote be for. I think the messaging is clear if
we kind of just stake, youknow, a little down the middle on
these issues. And I know peopledon't like hearing this, it's the rhino
comments. But ultimately, we've gotto win over these moderate voters, and
I think the best way to dothat is just keeping at pace of what
we're doing now. You know,President Trump is going to speak tonight,

(35:58):
and I think that his speech isgoing to be very it's going to try
to unify the country at this point. I think that's the best way to
go about it right now. Iknow it sounds crazy. I probably would
have told you that a couple ofmonths ago, but I think this is
actually the way to go. That'swhere I'm at, very moderate and very
down the middle is, you know, That's that's how I fall on.
Yeah, that's what I've always heldpeople for. Now. Jesse Kelly,
Brianna Morello, thank you so much. I appreciate you. I'm very proud

(36:20):
of you and your success. Iknew you would make it. I appreciate
you. Thank you, Jesse,I appreciate you. All Right, So
we still have an hour left,and as you heard earlier, there's a
lot of talk that it's going tobe dome, that it might end up
being domed. Joe Biden might endoor, sorry, might not. He might
even drop out. We we don'tknow. But what if it is at
some point next hour, I thinklike twenty minutes from now, we have

(36:43):
a guy who wrote a book onDome. It's worth sticking around for it.
And other than that, it's justus. It's just you and me.
It's just asked doctor Jesse time andwe're going to have a good time.
All right. This has been apodcast from Woor
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