Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Jesse Kelly Show. Let's have some fun on a Friday,
a magnificent Friday, and ask doctor Jesse Friday. We have
all kinds of amazing questions on everything under the sun,
from the FBI, history, Democrats, Doge, the big beautiful bill
(00:26):
in Congress, all that, so much more coming up tonight
on the World Famous Jesse Kelly Show. I actually want
to began on the Doge stuff from today because it
actually is applicable to one of the questions, and it's
applicable to what's happening right now in Congress. It's this
is the important thing that other people aren't talking about.
(00:49):
I know, the flashy headline about this and that, but
this is what's important. The guy says, Doge, what.
Speaker 2 (00:57):
In the world?
Speaker 3 (00:58):
Man?
Speaker 1 (00:58):
Although we didn't say what in the world, They said,
why does it seem like Doge is fizzling out? Okay,
it's an interesting question because it comes on the heels
of a big Doge press release today talking about all
the things they just discovered. Now I'm going to go
through some of these things and then we're going to
(01:19):
have a talk about Doge. What is its real value,
what it's not, what it is anyway? Here they were.
Speaker 4 (01:28):
There was a four billion dollar COVID fund in the
Department of Education, and there was no receipts required, so
people be just drawed down on it.
Speaker 2 (01:36):
And when people looked into it, this wasn't dust. This
was before us.
Speaker 4 (01:40):
They found that money was being used to rent out
Caesar's Palace for parties, rent out stadiums, et cetera. And
so the one change that DOGE made with part of
education is we had the simple requirement that if you
draw down money, you must first upload a receipt.
Speaker 2 (01:54):
That was the only change that was made.
Speaker 4 (01:56):
You must upload your receipt, and upon doing so, nobody
drew down a money anymore.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
Now, let me explain something before we go on, because
I know you're probably getting ready to punch the radio
or the dog or someone else. Please don't punch anybody.
Definitely don't punch your dog. Let me explain and what
I'm about to talk about, you know, but it's still
going to make your blood pressure go up. Hey, it's Friday.
(02:22):
Let that go. We're just gonna talk, Okay. I ran
for Congress one time. As you know, I've talked about
it many times before, and when I was running for
Congress the first time. This was during the recession, right
about that two thousand and eight recession time. You remember,
anyone old enough remembers, it's a very tough time. And
(02:44):
for me as an adult because I was out of
the Marine Corps this time, and I was in my twenties,
and you finally start to notice more things than you
do as a kid. You know, you notice different things
as a kid than you do as an adult. That
was the first time in my life I remember looking
around and kind of being hit at all the businesses
(03:04):
that were closing. I hadn't really lived as an adult
in that America yet. Now that you have, if you're
old enough, But for me at that time, that was
really the first time I looked around and I saw
you could see it with your own eyes, real economic suffering.
Strip malls that used to have six businesses in it,
(03:26):
little strip mall, you know, the little sandwich shop and
the dry cleaner. After six months it had two left
and everything else is boarded up. And this is what
it was like. I was in Arizona. This was in
southern Arizona at the time, but this was across the country.
You remember what it was like. It really hit me.
You could see you could see everything shrinking. You could
see everything kind of just crumbling. It was a real
(03:48):
economic downter. Now, running for Congress, as I've explained to
you before, you have to raise money. I don't like
to ask you for money. So I don't have a
lot of people running for off on the show. It's
very rare. As you know, it's rare that I have
anyone anyway, but people running for office is extremely rare.
That's part of the reason is because they're gonna ask
(04:09):
for money. And I'm gonna ask for money. If I
have someone on that I care enough about, I'm gonna
ask you to give them money. And that sucks. But
you know what money really matters in politics. You have
to raise it. You have to raise some of it.
You don't have to outraise your opponent, but you got
to raise money for commercials and all kinds of stuff.
You have to have it. Part of running for Congress
was flying back to Washington, d C. To ask different
(04:32):
congressmen for money from their political packs. This was my Now,
this is stuff that you're gonna know, but this I
lived it, and this was my experience with it. I
flew back to Washington, d C. The very first time
I had never been in my life. We didn't get
to go. I didn't get to go on the Washington
(04:53):
d C. Field trip. So many school classes take and whatnot.
I think we didn't have the money or something like
that at the time. But either way, I was in
twenties that I'd never been to DC. Maybe you've never been.
This was my first experience with it. And we landed
in Washington, DC and it was like the recession that
I had been living, that i'd been witnessing. It was
(05:15):
like I landed on a completely different planet. There was
no recession in DC. In fact, it everything was new.
Everything was new, and there were new things being built.
What wasn't new was about to be new. It was
shiny and it was glass, and it was new paved roads,
and it was new this, and it was everything was
(05:36):
brand new. And I was with one of my guys
my campaign manager at the time is my buddy Adam,
and I because he had a lot of experience in DC.
He had lived there, did like an internship and stuff
like that there, and I was so floored by it
that we had a conversation by it. I said, Dude,
everything is new, And he said, Jesse, where do you
(06:00):
think all your tax money goes, Buddy, the federal government.
All government's work this way. We'll stick with the federal
government for our purposes. Now, the federal government is full
of people, criminals. They're not all criminals, of course, but
it is absolutely full of criminals. And they take that
(06:22):
federal job and stay in that federal job and work
their way up through the federal employment system for two reasons. One,
the job security that comes with it. Everybody knows, you
can't fire these frigging people. They're like dag gone ticks.
You got to burn them out. You can't get them out.
They're all unionized. You got to relocate to eliminate. It's
(06:44):
a nightmare trying to fire them. So one, it's the
job security slash benefits. They all get the best benefits
in the world. But two, most of these people are
not talented. They don't have any unique gifts, they don't
have have an outstanding work ethic, they don't have the
things that you have. They don't have the things that
(07:05):
are required to make it big in the private sector
outside of the government. Well, what are they gonna do?
Settle for just nothing? No, they want the finer things
in life. To say, well, you want the finer things
in life. They want red lobster. They don't want to
settle for long John silvers. They want to upgrade. They
want the best of the best. Well, I mean, we
(07:27):
do work for the federal government and there's so much
money here the American treasury. It's just a sea of money.
What if what if we found a way to get
our hands on that money. What if we did that?
(07:47):
You know those stories about mayor this mayor that. Mayor
Karen Bass just did this member. They had that huge
fire in Los Angeles, and the controversy was that Mayor
Karen Bass was on a taxpayer funded trip to freaking
Africa at the time. Wow, we're just studying how things
are working in Ghana. She got elected Los Angeles has
(08:11):
a big, fat treasury. You didn't think she was there
to do some good with that money or with that position, right,
She's there to enrich herself, to live like a king
on your money. That's how it works in the federal government.
Only it's so much more than the mayor's office. Department
after department after department after department, full of these career
(08:36):
criminal comedy. Bureaucrats who can't make it in the private
sector aren't motivated to even try, and why would they,
because they've made a twenty thirty year career luxuriating with
your money. These people at the Department of Education, just
(08:57):
think for a moment. I'll play it for you again.
Just think for a moment. You want to get really angry.
Think about all the scrimping and saving you've had to do,
trying to make ends meet second job, worried about all
the debt and everything else piling up on you. And
then think about the people at the Department of Education
hopping on a flight you paid for. Living it up
(09:18):
at Caesar's Palace Vegas. Baby.
Speaker 4 (09:21):
There was a four billion dollars covide fund in the
Department of Education and there was no receipts required, so
people be just drawed down on it.
Speaker 2 (09:29):
And when people looked into it, this wasn't us, this
was before us.
Speaker 4 (09:33):
They found that money was being used to rent out
Caesar's palace for parties, rent out stadiums, et cetera.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
Rent out Caesar's palace for parties, rent out stadiums. You
know that thing. Big Wall Street firms, big law firms
do Hey, let's let's rent out Yankee Stadium. Baby well
own the whole thing. Let's get Hoodie and the Blowfish
to play. Money's flowing woo. Yeah, those federal employees, they
(10:04):
do that with your money, with your money. Now, we're
gonna have a long talk about Doge in Congress and
these people in just the moment. Hang on. It is
the Jesse Kelly Show on a Fantastic Friday, and asked
doctor Jesse Friday guy asked a question about Doge, and
(10:27):
it was a timely question because there's so much that's
been exposed today. Don't worry. Don't worry. We're gonna get
to kind of the Congress negative portion of this in
a little bit. But we're discussing these people that worm
their way into governments, all governments. This happens at the
state level, happens at the city level. And what they
do is they live at a higher standard of living
(10:49):
than their salary should allow, and they live that way
on your money. They get into these positions of power,
sometimes elected, sometimes not, and they rent out Caesar's Palace
and Yankee Stadium.
Speaker 4 (11:04):
A four billion dollar COVID fund in the Department of Education,
and there was no receipts required, so people we just
drawed down on it. And when people looked into it,
this wasn't just this before us, they found that money
was being used to rent out of Caesar's Palace for parties,
rent out stadiums, et cetera.
Speaker 2 (11:21):
And so the one change that do.
Speaker 1 (11:23):
How does that work? How do how does something like
that come in to be? Because we're going to go
over a couple other things here. Well, it's quite simple actually,
because a lot of this is going to come back
to Congress. This is going to hurt, but it's quite simple.
Eventually somebody Education Department, somebody, they will lobby Congress for
(11:44):
something and they'll find a congressman. Hey, let's aoc Hey,
this is Bob over here at the Education Department.
Speaker 2 (11:54):
Man.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
We're really we're really trying to get some things done
over here, some really important things, some stuff that may
affect your district. Actually, would you mind, I know there's
a big I know there's a big budget coming up here.
Would you mind putting this little rider in that budget?
Just just one piece of paper? All this is it's
a fund for us at the Education Apartment. So we
(12:15):
have the funds we need and all that you would
you mind don't forget about that big teacher's union donation.
Would you would you mind putting that in the bill.
AOC looks it, says sure, sure, I'll put that in
the bill. And of course this is twenty thirty years ago.
Either some corrupt person or some idiot put it in
a bill somewhere, and from there, if a slush fund
was created, a slush fund of your money, a slush
(12:38):
fund government employees have been luxuriating off of for years
and years and years while you struggle to pay the bills.
Let's do some more, shall we thank.
Speaker 3 (12:46):
The Inter American Foundation if is one of the eighties
we visited, where you know, they get fifty million dollars
a year congressional money to give grants. These are things
like you know, Apoka farming and them.
Speaker 5 (13:01):
That's a real example, that's the real description. Improving the
marketability of peas in Wattamala.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (13:08):
Yeah, so you might expect, you know, in the private
sector and nonprofit to give.
Speaker 1 (13:12):
You this is this this part is important. I know
you're already angry fifty billion dollars for I'll pack of
farming and studying of peace it's about to get more aggravating.
But remember the story I just told you about how
in Tucson, Arizona, there was this recession. All across America,
wherever you were at the time, there was this recession,
and I flew to d C. Yet everything seemed brand new.
Speaker 3 (13:35):
Ninety percent of their money to grantees. In the case
of IAF that was fifty eight percent. So the other
half those towards management, oh, travel, What would.
Speaker 2 (13:46):
You find exactly to mean too? An example is is
that even if you're agreed.
Speaker 3 (13:52):
With with supporting our pack up farmas in Peru, well,
actually most of the money never made it out of DC.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
It's going into the pockets people in the neighborhood.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
When I lived when I lived in DC for a year,
and when I was running for Congress, I swear on
my life every single person I met was in some
way in government. Money's orbit finding a way. Either they're
(14:25):
actually working for the government, or they work for a
company that works for the government, or for a company
that works for another company that works for the government,
or for a company who works for a company. Get
you get the idea, either government or government adjacent this money.
It's all fraud. It's not waste. I hate when they
use that. It's not waste. This is theft from the
(14:47):
American taxpayer. It's all fraud. Why fifty million dollars for
our pacas down? Where is it? Peru? Alpaca is in Peru,
and of course about twenty five cents actually gets sent
down to Peru, and that of course ends up in
some brothers somebody's brother's cousins slush fund down there too.
What happens to the rest of it, It gets allocated
(15:08):
to this government department, this government department. Well, first we
have to study it first. We wouldn't just want to
give money to any alpaca. Hey, my second cousin's brother,
he's he's got a new firm and that's what he does.
He studies alpaca farming. Hey, can we give him thirty
million dollars for that study? Yep, sounds good. You get
how it works. Everything, everything in the largest criminal organization
(15:30):
on the planet, that would be the United States government,
everything is designed in some way to pull money from
your wallet. I keep using the example of organized crime,
and I use it because it is absolutely perfect when
it comes to the United States federal government and how
they steal from you in a million different ways. There
(15:52):
are people like these criminals, gangsters, mafia guys. Everything in
their life, everything they look at, every thing they see,
it all becomes a potential hustle. Can I get in
on that? Can I figure out a way to skim
off that? Can I figure out? Hey, this guy has
a lot of mink coats? Could I figure out how
to skim some of those mink coats? This guy has
(16:13):
a movie theater. I bet I could go to his
movie theater and charge him a dollar a receipt every
Friday night to protect it. Hey, this guy sells cigarettes.
I bet I could get some of the Everything becomes
a hustle, Everything becomes away. Hey, how do I get
one over on these guys and get some of that money?
That's how the criminal organization known as the United States
(16:35):
Government operates in you or the Mark and so am
I get my blood pressure up on Friday? Oh, it's
about to get worse. There's more. We'll get to that
more in a moment. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a fantastic Friday. I do not forget we are
live here on a Friday night. You can email us
Jesse at jesse kellyshow dot com. Back to this dose stuff,
(16:58):
because this is gonna get to Congress and the bills
and what's going through here. Here's some more of it.
Speaker 6 (17:04):
Is the Small Business Administration giving loans to dead people,
people over the age of one hundred and twenty. The
answer was yes, and it was around three hundred thirty
million dollars.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
In total, three hundred and thirty million dollars in loans
to dead people. I want to once again completely stressed
to you that that is not waste. Okay. I hate
when Republicans talk like this. I hate when anyone on
the right talks like this. Be more purposeful with your language.
(17:36):
Stop saying waste, fraud and abuse. This is theft. You
can call it fraud, you can call it abuse. Don't
say waste. Waste makes it sound like, oh, you know
what waste is. I'll tell you what waste is. The
other day I found nine dollars in my shorts. I
put on some shorts. It was a weekend. Nine dollars
was crumpled up in it. I had forgotten that I
(17:56):
had nine dollars in my shorts. Bob had washed those shorts.
God knows how many times I stuck my hand in
there and found nine dollars. Now that's being wasteful, that's
not appreciating the value of a dollar. I just let
nine dollars go to waste. That's waste. Three hundred and
thirty million dollars in small business loans to dead people
is theft. It's not waste, that's theft. Do you know
(18:18):
what it takes to get a loan? Have you ever
gotten a loan? I'm sure you have. Maybe it was
a home loan, maybe it was a small business loan.
Was that a quick process that you could just kind
of fall into? Oh? Whoopsie, I applied for a small
business loan today. Oh dang, I guess my finger slipped
off the button and I clipped the wrong one and
I applied for a small business loan. Was it quick?
(18:39):
Did you find the process quick? You have to submit
yourself for a colonoscopy to get a loan anymore. Yet,
three hundred and thirty million dollars of your money was
sent out the door to small businesses that didn't exist.
Somebody applied for those loans and received the money and
(19:01):
spent it. Your money while you struggle, While you try
to make ends me. I hope you're mad. I'm mad.
I want the American people to start caring. And we're
going to talk in a minute about what we need
to start caring about. We'll continue on. We'll let them
finish a couple more of these, by far, the.
Speaker 5 (19:20):
Least peaceful agency that we've worked with. Yeah, ironically, of course.
Speaker 7 (19:24):
Additionally, we found that they were spending money on things
like private jets.
Speaker 1 (19:27):
He's talking about the Institute for Peace. Just a heads up,
what a name, right, the Institute for Peace. They just
found a large, large quantity of weapons at a building
the Institution Institute for Peace owned in Washington, DC. Look,
if you could go look at pictures of the room.
(19:49):
I saw pictures of the room. It's basically every guy's dream.
There are allegations. I'm just going to leave it at
that right now, there are allegations that was a Central
and Intelligence Agency room. So you know exactly what the
deal is here, you understand how this works. Right in
case you don't understand how this works, here's how this works.
(20:11):
Secret spy agencies like the Central Intelligence Agency, they can't
afford to have all the secret things they're doing as
line items in the United States budget, so they find
ways to lie and bury their things in the budgets
of other departments. In fact, other departments, entire departments are
(20:31):
essentially Central Intelligence agency departments. But you don't want to say, hey,
this money's for black market weapons purchases in Zimbabwe. So
instead you have to create the Institute for Peace, give
them a big, fat budget bank on the fact none
of the losers in Congress will ever look into it,
and you've got a gigantic cash of weapons sitting there
(20:53):
for the CIA to screw up yet another government coup somewhere.
That's how it works anyway, what they find.
Speaker 5 (20:59):
There, but far the least peaceful agency that we've worked with. Yeah, ironically,
of course.
Speaker 7 (21:04):
Additionally, we found that they were spending money on things
like private jets, and they even had a one hundred
and thirty thousand dollars contract with a former member of
the Taliban.
Speaker 2 (21:12):
Yeah, this is real.
Speaker 5 (21:13):
We don't encounter that in most agencies.
Speaker 4 (21:16):
What was the money going to the Taliban for?
Speaker 5 (21:20):
So it was a contractor.
Speaker 7 (21:21):
They received one hundred and thirty thousand dollars for generic services,
And to Elon's point, there was not actually a clear
description of what the contractor services were for.
Speaker 1 (21:28):
There wasn't a clear description because they were paying somebody
the Central Intelligence Agency that was bag money. No, we'll
never know what it was for. I don't want to
sit and pretend what it was for. Who knows. Maybe
he was an informant, Maybe they were paying him to
kill somebody. Maybe that money was supposed to be passed
on to someone else doing black bag CIA stuff. I
get it. I don't actually need to know every single
(21:49):
thing the spy world's doing, but that's what they're doing.
And that's also why the Institute for Peace was the
most hostile agency. As he said, this is an agency
run by spies, run on secrecy. Elon Musk and his
team of super nerds show up to comb through the books.
Central Intelligence Agency is probably not going to respond that
nice to it. That's what's happening right now. And finally
(22:12):
for the the for the grand finale, and we'll get
off this doge stuff. Listen to this.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
A lot of great work in the Treasury this week.
Speaker 4 (22:22):
One of the crazy things that with regards to the
Treasury is that when a payment is made and the
computers at the Treasury actually pay about five trillion dollars
per year, like crazy amounts. There was formerly not a
budget code on there, so if a payment was made,
you didn't know actually what it was for.
Speaker 2 (22:40):
It could have been for.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
Anything five trillion dollars and they didn't even have to
mark what it was for. You know that. You know
that I worked for Premier, right, this show was syndicated
by Premier, the largest most wonderful syndicator in the world.
But Premiere is underneath iHeart. You get that. So when
(23:05):
I have to go somewhere for work, when I have
to fly somewhere, hotel, food, whatever it is, I have
a credit card, I have an iHeart credit card. And
when I get back, Chris has to submit all this
stuff and he has to have receipts for everything, and
(23:27):
everything has to have a category too, right Chris, everything
has to happen. What category was this? Okay, you bought
red lobster in Florida. I need to know who were you?
This is for a two thousand dollars business trip to Florida.
Submitting an expense report into iHeart requires receipts. What was
it for? Everything has to everything has to be marked.
(23:50):
And don't think just because I'm me that I get
away with it if it's not marked. Chris is shaking
his head. Yeah, he gets it, because Chris has to
do it. Nope, send it right back to him. No,
you have to declare what this was. What's this for?
That's for a two thousand dollars business trip to Florida?
The United States federal government, that criminal organization hands out
(24:15):
five trillion dollars a year of your money without so
much as a code for why it's going where it's going.
This is not waste. These are crimes. Crimes have been
committed against you years in years in years of our
(24:37):
negligence and GOP complicity in weakness has brought us to
the point we are now governed by a criminal organization.
And that brings me back to your question, was it
feels like Doege has fizzled out. Well, it's not that
they've fizzled out. As you can tell. They're digging into
(25:00):
things like the Treasury, like the Pentagon, things like that.
But there's a lot of misinformation, if I have to
use the word they love, there's a lot of misinformation
out there about DOGE itself, what it actually can do,
what it can't do, what its value is and what
(25:21):
its value isn't and another ask doctor Jesse, question is
going to lead us to that which we will get
to in a moment. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a Fantastic Friday, churning through the ask doctor Jesse
questions all the news of the day, making fun of
check humor in a little while. But first we just
did all the Doge stuff in the government waste and
(25:43):
everything else. This guy asked the question because it's going
to come back to the Doge stuff. Just stay with me, Jesse.
The big beautiful bill. I've heard Congress has sent the
bill to the Senate. The Senate back to Congress with
less cuts than I heard. The bill would be passed
by the NIMA. Now I just heard John Thune said
it before the July Jesse. If we don't pass the
bill asap, will lose the House. Jesse, what's going on? Okay,
(26:05):
So all the Doze stuff that made you angry, this
will come back to Congress. Doze cannot cut things in
any significance. That's what you want, and that's what I
want to be honest with you. I want you, I
want Elon and the super Nerds to not just identify
(26:28):
all this theft. I want them to stop it, eliminate it. No, no, no, stop, Okay,
no more thirty million dollars for gay turtles. I want
the same thing you want. But DOGE doesn't actually have
the power to do that. Now. I'm not saying Doge
is useless at all, because exposing problems is an incredibly
(26:52):
important step in solving problems. That these things exist, that
Doge exists. Hey, look at where this money's going. Is good.
I'm not dogging on it at all. But don't think
that's how it works in the government. How you can
just expose it and then well, okay, press a couple
of buttons and not the money's coming back now the
(27:13):
waste's done. But Nope, that's not how it works. The
truth is that all this money that they're identifying, all
this fraud, all this theft in the United States government
that DOZE is identifying, all of it has been authorized
by the United States Congress, by Republicans and Democrats inside
(27:38):
the United States Congress. So let's discuss how that happens,
because it's going to bring us to where we are now.
I touched on it a little bit earlier you know
how that happens. You know how we end up with
this separate department that doesn't even sound like it should
be a thing. And you want to know how this
separate department that shouldn't even be a thing gets three
hundred million dollars a year of your money to hand
(27:59):
out today people, which is obviously theft. How does the
hen of these things, these things come to be, Well,
they don't just magically fall out of the sky. Congress
authorizes them in big, beautiful bills. That's how they do it. No, no, no, no no.
We can't do single issue bills. We can't do this
(28:20):
one issue, we can't do that one issue. We can't
have a bill that just deals with the border, or
one that deals with taxes. Hey, let's do a big bill.
Let's just do a big one, and he'll put it
all in there. The reason they expand the size of
the bills is so they can throw more theft and
fraud into the bill, Because inside every trillion dollar bill
(28:42):
is billions and billions and billions of dollars of theft,
authorizing Congress to steal your money and hand it to
their friends and family members. That's how this stuff happens.
Doge is discovering the things Congress has authorized, and Congress
authorized all those things underneath a big beautiful bill. What's
(29:08):
happening right now in the House and Senate. I don't
have any good news for you. It's all bad, every
single bit of it. It's bad in the Senate, it's
bad in the House. This gigantic bill is a colossal mistake.
It's a disaster. It will fund, it will continue to
fund every evil, criminal thing inside of the government. Now
(29:29):
I understand completely why the Trump administration wants the bill.
Trump wants what every president wants. He wants to do things,
and doing things ain't free. He wants to do things,
and things cost money. And I want to make sure
I am giving him all the credit in the world.
The things he wants to do are awesome. He wants,
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you know, I want money to secure the border. I
want money for new navy ships. I want money for
He wants to do good things. And so because he
wants to do good things, Trump is repeatedly asking for
a quote, big beautiful bill. The problem is the second
you make it a big beautiful bill with all the
things you want in it, they're going to throw the
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three four things you want in it at about three
hundred things nobody wants in there, and that's how we
continue to get screwed. You're thrilled that the Doge is
exposing all this fraud inside of the government, and I'm
thrilled that Doge is about to expose all the fraud
inside of the government. But the here's the painful truth.
The bill that's about to go through Congress authorizes all
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of it. Again. Do you know that there is no
such thing as a big bill that is beautiful? And
if you really really want inflation to go down, if
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you really want to get the debt under control, if
we want to continue the financial system we have always known,
it involves changing out Congress, not the president. Once every
four years. Every president, no matter how good they are,
they're going to do the same thing Trump's doing. They
all do it. Reagan did it, Clinton did it, Obama
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did it, Trump did it, every single one of them.
Does it give me a big bill with all the
stuff I want in it?
Speaker 7 (31:23):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (31:23):
Sure, mister president. We'll get you some stuff you want
with some stuff we want too. Happens every single time.
If you want this game to stop, you and I
will start getting a lot more focused on who we
elect and don't elect to the United States House of
Representatives and the United States Senate. There's no such thing
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as a big bill that is beautiful. It does not exist.
It cannot exist a criminal organization like the United States Congress,
it's not possible for them to create a trillion dollar
bill that is good. It's not possible. They can't do it.
You might as well go give the American mafia fifty
million dollars to build a school. Where do you think
they're going to do with that? Oh, you might end
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up with some sort of a school. Maybe you can
get a one room shack or something they built for
fifty grand. But that's what it's like. You give Congress
a trillion dollars for anything, they're going to do exactly
what the mafia would do with it. Anyway, I do
hope you've went ahead and called gold Co because I'm
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telling you what's coming. There's going to be another big bill,
and we're not going to get inflation under control, and
there's going to be uncertainty