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November 20, 2024 • 37 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from woor.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Another hour of the
Jesse Kelly Show on a Wednesday night, a hoop day,
and we are going to well, I'm gonna offend everybody
about Nancy Mace right now, so that'll be fun, that'll
be a really good time, and then probably do some emails.
We're gonna talk about these anti personnel minds Russia, Ukraine stuff,

(00:25):
talk about why it's so important for us to whip
these politicians instead of worship these politicians. All that and
so much more coming up this hour on the world
famous Jesse Kelly's Show. Now, Congressman Nancy Mace. She has
been all over the news for about the last forty
eight hours. She's been all over the news because she's

(00:46):
been the one loudly screaming about this new trainny that
got elected to Congress and she wants this dude in
a separate bathroom. She's completely correct about that. She is
one hundred percent right about that. She is running to
every news show. She's been all over social media. Keep
the guy out, keep the guy out.

Speaker 3 (01:05):
Keeping not being a feminist makes me an extremist. I'm
totally here for it.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
Is this teffort in response to Congressman mc drive coming
to Congress.

Speaker 3 (01:14):
Yes, and absolutely and.

Speaker 2 (01:16):
Then some I'm not notice how she calls herself a feminist. There, Oh,
we'll get to that in just a moment. I'm going
to caution you with something.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
There is.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
There's something that we are all susceptible to because it's
a human nature thing.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
Uh, I'll put it to you this.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
Way, I'll put to you here's here's a little analogy.
Here's a little analogy.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
What if.

Speaker 2 (01:40):
What if you work with somebody and this human being
there's only one bathroom. This human being, he's a pretty
good employee, he's your fellow worker, pretty good employee, but
he always makes a mess of the bathroom and it's

(02:00):
just gross. It's just he doesn't flush the toilet. You've seen,
he doesn't wash his hands. He's just one of these barbarians.
It's just freaking gross. And you're like, man, you're grossed
out by that. And so it's just a turnoff. And
even though the guy's polite and gets the work done
on times, just there's this gross, gross.

Speaker 1 (02:18):
Gross thing.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
Guy's pretty good employee, but there's that, And then you
find out they're thinking about replacing him with Corey. We'll
call the guy's named Corey, and Corey is as an
employee just as mediocre as it gets, just really mediocre.

Speaker 1 (02:40):
However, Corey leaves.

Speaker 2 (02:43):
A spotless bathroom, washes his hands every time, never makes
a mess of anything. You can get so beaten down
by the dirty bathroom that average employee. Corey looks really
really good as long as he gives you what you
haven't had, and that's a clean bathroom. Makes sense, makes sense.

(03:08):
That's stupid little analogy I just did. Forever there's been
a thing on the right, and it's mainly been immigration,
and this thing on the right is this. You can
take somebody, go down the list of different issues, taxes, spending, abortion, border,
foreign policy, of all the issues, everything that comes up,

(03:29):
and you can take somebody on the right and they can,
as a governor, a congressman, a senator, whatever, they can
be horrible on nine of the ten issues, but if
they took a strong sounding stance on illegal immigration, they
would immediately be lifted up to being this vanguard lion.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Yes, finally, someone with some guts.

Speaker 2 (03:54):
I watch this happen repeatedly over the course of my
political life. Why is that the case, Because traditionally Republicans
have been so pathetic and weak and in some ways
complicit with illegal immigration that the second any Republican, even
if the rest of his voting record sucks, the second
any Republican comes out and says, deport them all, Well,

(04:17):
the rest of his record doesn't matter to us anymore.
We're so desperate for a clean bathroom. He immediately becomes
the bell of the ball.

Speaker 1 (04:24):
Woo, I love you, Wooo.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
Yes, look at this guy be my president. And that
same thing is slowly but surely happening with the tranny
stuff because the GOP is so weak and pathetic, so effeminate,

(04:48):
so unwilling to speak obvious truths about things. You have
guys like Representative Tom Cole and Oklahoma. Well, I don't
want to get into the bathroom thing you have. Mike
Johnson yesterday before he finds came around.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
Here is freshman elect Sarah McBride, O man or a woman.

Speaker 5 (05:06):
Look, I'm not gonna get into this. We welcome all
new members.

Speaker 2 (05:10):
Well I'm really not really comfortable. I mean, everybody's welcome.
We get so sick of that crap that somebody finally
steps up and speaks like this, and we think that being.

Speaker 3 (05:26):
A feminist makes me an extremist. I'm totally here for it.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
Is this Teffert in response to Congressman mcgride coming to Congress.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
Yes, and absolutely, and then some I'm.

Speaker 2 (05:36):
That's clear eyed, that's direct, that's gutsy, and we hear
that and we think, oh my gosh, can we Is
it too late to make her vice president?

Speaker 1 (05:46):
I love Nancy Bass.

Speaker 2 (05:48):
We have got to be very very careful with our
newest battered wife syndrome thing, that's the tranny stuff, because
these people will use us. I watched it happen with
immigration forever. They know they can screw up this and
screw up that, and mess up this issue and betray

(06:10):
us on this and then make one bold statement or
propose one bold bill and will forgive them immediately for
everything one. Be careful about that too. I just want
to address this quickly, as long as I'm offending everyone
at the very beginning of that.

Speaker 3 (06:25):
Being a feminist makes me an extremist.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
I'm totally Nancy Mace loves to talk about being a feminist.
She said that many times. In fact, they goes yesterday,
I'm pretty sure Nancy Mace went on social media and
bragged that she shot.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
I think she said shattered the glass ceiling.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
I'm almost positive she mentioned the glass ceiling and then
mentioned how she shattered the glass ceiling. And I was
the first woman to graduate from the Citadel. The Citadel
is a revered formerly all may Military College. Is really
what it is, revered. Nancy Mayce, the.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
Feminist, feminist, makes me a.

Speaker 2 (07:10):
Shattered that class ceiling and she's the first woman graduate
from the Citadel. You know, the revolution doesn't stop when
you get what you want. Nancy, here's a hard truth
for everybody, people in Congress and really everywhere. Women should never, ever, ever,

(07:34):
ever ever have dudes in the bathroom with them. Women
shouldn't have to share a locker room with men. They
should not have to share a bathroom with men. It's disgusting,
it's evil, it's wrong, and it should never happen. And
you know what else, women shouldn't graduate from the Citadel
because it's an all male institution, a revered all male institution.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
And if you're gonna.

Speaker 2 (07:57):
Be miss thaying I'm feminist and you're gonna shatter that
glass ceiling, who I broke up this all boys club.

Speaker 1 (08:05):
Then I I don't have a lot.

Speaker 2 (08:08):
Of sympathy when the tranny wants to pee and the
toilet next to you. Oh did you shatter one glass ceiling?

Speaker 1 (08:16):
And then oh, look at that. You looked up and there's.

Speaker 2 (08:20):
Another one right there, and the trannies went motoring right
through that one. And now it turns out the revolution
didn't stop when you got what you wanted. It turns
out the revolution itself, the altering of our social order,
the breaking of norms, the shattering of walls. It turned

(08:40):
out the revolution has momentum, and it doesn't stop as
soon as you get what you want. As soon as
you get what you want, there's another glass ceiling and
another glass ceiling, and if you're not too careful, Nancy,
soon the glass comes raining down on you. You feminists,

(09:02):
you better learn, You better learn. You are the author
of so much of this insanity. You wanted to shatter
this glass ceiling and break up this boy's club. And
I can do anything a man can do. And I'm
the first woman to graduate from the Citadel.

Speaker 1 (09:21):
Whoa, I'm a woman, Nicka be raw. What's this a train?

Speaker 2 (09:26):
He's trying to use my restroom? What does he think
he's doing trying to break this class said, you paved
the road, Nancy, don't blame the he sheet for driving
down the road you paved. It doesn't work that way,
you revolutionaries. And this goes to every one of you
dirty comedies who hate listens because you all have your

(09:46):
dirty comedy cause for whatever it is, I know, in
your sick, twisted little brain, you convince yourself that once
you get that, then that'll be enough and everything will
stop and it'll work out. It will put the brakes on.
But that's the thing, you see, it doesn't stop. And
if you choose to give it gas thinking you can

(10:08):
master that power and use it for your needs. Might
have a training in your bathroom one day, but hey,
congrats on that graduation from the citadel. Anyway, do some
emails and voicemails before we do those. Let's talk about
pure talk. Let's talk about the holiday season, Christmas season

(10:28):
and putting.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
Your money where your morals are.

Speaker 2 (10:31):
Right now, the corporate world is just as involved as
they've ever been in all this garbage. You don't have
to pay them for it. You don't have to pay
them to dump on your culture, to dump on your society.
In fact, you have options. When it comes to your
cell phone, you have endless options. Ah, I want to
get my I want to get my wife or my

(10:53):
kid a new phone for Christmas. I want to get
my husband something nice. How about a brand new iPhone
from Pure Talk brand new Andrew. You realize I pay
half of what I used to pay at T Mobile,
half with the patriotic cell phone company that doesn't take
my money and use it against my values. Switch go
find out what they can do for you. Dial pound

(11:15):
two five zero and say Jesse Kelly Pound two five zero,
Say Jesse Kelly. Switch to Pure Talk.

Speaker 1 (11:24):
We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
Feeling a little stuff. Is the Jesse Kelly Show on
a Wednesday. Remember you can email the show Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com. Love hey, death threats, ask doctor
Jesse questions for Friday. You can almost also leave us
a voicemail eight seven seven three seven seven four three
seven three years one.

Speaker 4 (11:46):
Yes, Kelly, this is Danny from Georgia. I would just
like to call and say thank you from the bottom
of my heart for sitting up there and telling the unbridled,
uncomfortable truth. Period. That's all there is to it. Keep
up the good work. Man. The more people you piss off,
the better job you're doing. Thank you so much for
not being bridled by political correctness and by fear. The

(12:10):
truth is the only thing that will get us out
of this mess. Keep up the good work. Thank you.

Speaker 1 (12:15):
Well, Look, I'll tell you what.

Speaker 2 (12:18):
I'll pair that voicemail with this. I'll pay it with Jesse.
Have you noticed the change since the election. It's not
just athletes and stars, but common people I see and
talk to. Many people were afraid to voice their opinions
because of the left attacking them. Like you said, if
a few conservatives come out, others will feel emboldened.

Speaker 1 (12:37):
Keep up the great work.

Speaker 2 (12:38):
Well, listen, I appreciate the voicemail thanking me and stuff
like that, but it really is us. It really genuinely
is us, because yes, I feel it too. I feel
it in my personal life with the people I know.
I see it all over sports, movies, stars. It's very

(12:59):
clear that the lefts hold on our culture is cracking.
I don't want to say it's broken. I don't want
to say we've won. I don't want to say any
of those other crazy things, because that's not true. And
we have a lot, a long way to go, But
they did have this society, in this clinch where you
couldn't question the vaccine in polite society and stay in

(13:20):
polite society. You couldn't question the George Floyd narrative, the
Hunter Biden laptop stuff, whatever it maybe you could not
question it. And normal people would not question it because
they didn't want to be yelled at. They didn't want
to be harassed. Even if they disagreed, they stayed quiet.

Speaker 1 (13:37):
But you got.

Speaker 2 (13:39):
Boulder, You got bolder. All of us did. Yeah, and
thank you for the thanks, but you deserve it too.
I remember during COVID how much I was screaming about this.
I probably said this one hundred times on the radio,
that courage and cowardice are both contained. It doesn't feel

(14:02):
that way when you when you're in when you're in
a bad situation. Let's say you're on the Titanic and
the ship's going down and everyone's running around screaming I'm
rock and die, Oh my god, someone saying Leonardo DiCaprio.

Speaker 1 (14:19):
And everyone's freaking out on the boat.

Speaker 2 (14:22):
If you're in that situation, it doesn't feel like you
standing up, standing strong, remaining calm, taking a position of leadership.

Speaker 1 (14:34):
It doesn't feel like you.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
The lone person can make a big difference. There's a
thousand people freaking out. I can't do anything, but it
can make all the difference. You look at one person
who steps up and says, no, calm down. You form
a line here, you get to this life boat, You
go over there, you go over here, and you'll soon see.

(14:59):
Now the next guy sees that, Yes, that's how we
do it, and then the next guy sees it, and
soon instead of a thousand people running around with their
chicken like chickens with their heads cut off, there's five
hundred normal people keeping calm and making sure everything's being
done right. Courage is contagious, and the same thing with cowardice.
It's what I was beating my head against the desk

(15:20):
for over and over and over again. During the Floyd
stuff and the COVID stuff. Everyone was too scared to
sayvius truths everybody.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
And it drove me nuts.

Speaker 2 (15:34):
And you saw, honestly, the Republican weakness, the just It
drove me insane because so many people knew this was
wrong and didn't say anything. I saw somebody I forget
her name. She was a journalist. She had said something
a couple of days ago to this effect. She said,
I'm genuinely surprised at how many people thought all the

(15:58):
tranny surgery stuff was evil and wrong and just never
said anything about it. I'm not surprised at all. People
get afraid. They get afraid about understandable things. I don't
want to lose my job. I don't want my kid
to be picked on in school. I don't want to

(16:20):
I don't want some crazy comy to hurt me. You know,
understandable fears, and people have fears about things that they
go beyond tangible things too. Hey, don't uh. I don't
want my neighbors to think I'm a bigot. I don't
want my coworkers to think that that I'm a bad person.
I don't want my sister to hate me. And so
people will refrain from telling even brutally painfully obvious truths

(16:47):
because they're afraid. And the problem with that is cowardice
is contagious too. If you're too afraid you know what's right,
you know what's true, that you won't say it, then
the buddy next to you won't say it either, And
the guy next to him, and the lady next to him,
and the kid next to him, and that cowardice is contagious.

(17:11):
It may be more contagious than courage.

Speaker 1 (17:13):
Did you know that? You know what?

Speaker 2 (17:15):
An ancient warfare, when it was all swords and spears
and shields and things like that, the thing that commanders
feared the most was the first unit that routed, the
first unit that said I'm gone. I can't because they
knew if even one unit does, it can spread like
wildfire and.

Speaker 1 (17:35):
They'll all route.

Speaker 2 (17:37):
But if someone's standing strong in the vanguard, courage is
contagious too. So it's way more than just me. I
appreciate that, but it's way more than just me. We
are all getting bolder, and yes I feel it, and
yes it's a good thing.

Speaker 1 (17:52):
And this is.

Speaker 2 (17:53):
Why when we see a lack of courage, we you
and me, we have to whip these people.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
We do.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
We have to pull up the whip, and we don't
like doing that. So I'm gonna explain exactly about him.
This is gonna apply to Mike Johnson. I'm gonna explain
exactly what I mean in just a moment. Before I
do that, let me talk to you about real estate.
Go check the books of the big finance companies the states.
Go look what they're putting their money in. Now, they're

(18:22):
putting their money in hard assets. Even with the election
of Trump. The debt is there, the inflation is there.
We are seeing sign sign after sign that we might
be heading into a severe recession right now. Hard assets
done for you.

Speaker 1 (18:39):
Real estate.

Speaker 2 (18:40):
They will get you set up, they will walk you
through everything. They'll find you the property, they handle the closing,
they handle the rental process. You normal person will begin
acquiring rental properties consistent tax free income. You can retire
undone for you real estate. Many have go find out

(19:01):
what they can do at done for you Jesse dot com.
That's done for you, Jesse dot com. Let's talk about
whipping politicians a Jesse Kelly Show on.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
A Wednesday night.

Speaker 2 (19:14):
All Right, we're gonna talk about whipping our politicians here
in just a moment. And why we have to thank
you Chris for bringing us back with the whip it song.

Speaker 1 (19:23):
I am proud of you, very very proud of you.

Speaker 2 (19:26):
Anyway, before we get to whipping our politicians, I want
to give a shout out to the great Woai of
San Antonio. The world famous Jesse Kelly Show is now
live on WOAI San Antonio, and that is, of course
a legendary station and very honored to be there, live, thrilled, honored,

(19:48):
Thank you, appreciate you very much. San Antonio still has
breakfast tacos that will always live in my heart, always always.
I did a Chris, I lived there for a while.
Remember I told you I lived in San Antonio for
a while. I was doing construction. What, Chris, what.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
Am I limiting it to breakfast tacos? No?

Speaker 2 (20:09):
No, San Antonio's more than just breakfast tacos. I've had
some good pizza there, I've had other things. But I
want to Can we stay focused, Chris, please? So I
was doing construction. In fact, you could argue, in a way,
this may have been the start of my radio career.
You want to hear San Antonio story. Here about this,
listen to this WOAI. So I was doing construction down

(20:33):
in San Antonio. When we were doing construction, you have
to go where the work is, so you're all over
the country. And that was back when I fell in
love with Texas and I had a wife, two young kids.
So it was a hard time, right, We didn't have
any money. We're living out of hotels. But we were
in San Antonio for a while, and when I was
at work, if the wife would have to be taking

(20:56):
the kids down to the river walk and different things
like that. But I down this little Mexican restaurant. I
don't even know if it's still there. There were two
of them at the time. For all I know, there's
probably ten of them by now.

Speaker 1 (21:06):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (21:07):
I haven't been back to this place as well. It's
called Nietzsche's. Nietzsche's and I c has Chris. It's Mexican.
You wouldn't understand it's Mexican anyway. I'll bring it down
for you later. But Nietzsche's they have breakfast tacos. Now,
I know if you're from Texas, you know breakfast tacos
are the norm for everyone in other places. Understand that.

(21:30):
I know you know what a breakfast taco is. I'm
not going to insult your intelligence, but you need to
understand how big they are. In Texas. Everywhere has them,
and I mean everywhere, every gas station. They're not hard
to come by, but they're not all equal. And there
are two things. There are two things that decide the
greatness of a breakfast taco, and they're not the two

(21:51):
things you think, because eggs are eggs as long as
they're not powdered, they're scrambled eggs. I personally get mine
with chariso. That's Mexican for charizo. Chris, get mine with
torrizo and gaso that's Mexican for cheese. Chris, I get
mine with charizo and cheese and eggs. So those are
pretty standard. Chariso's gonna taste fairly. It's it's pretty much

(22:13):
the same. The beauty of the breakfast taco is in
the tortilla, in the green salsa Salsa verde, if you will,
if we have to go native salsaverde, nietzschez had. I
don't even know if this place still exists. They does, Chris,
Oh wow, we're about to blow up their sales. They
had the greatest tortas I've ever had in a breakfast taco.

(22:38):
Kind of a little thicker. I don't mind it thick.
You know, I was in the Marines. It was a
little bit thicker and a little bit dull weier. So
the breakfast taco tortillas can get crusty, a little thicker
almost like a gordida, if you will, almost like a gordida.
That's the kind of tortilla's man, and they're green salsa.

(23:00):
It was so full of flavor and it was so hot. Now,
I like heat.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
Jewish producer Chris likes heat a lot. He's just like me.

Speaker 2 (23:08):
But I'm telling you right now, Chris, you didn't think
I'm lying to you. These things would make you sweat.
That's how hot the green salsa is. Nobody it's me.
I'm telling you right now, it would make me sweat.
It's so delicious that you can't help but dump it
on the You have to dump the whole thing in there,
but you really shouldn't because your insides are angry with

(23:28):
you for the rest of the day.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
It's just torching hot and so freaking good.

Speaker 2 (23:34):
Anyway, I don't know exactly why I got off talking
about this before, but.

Speaker 1 (23:38):
Anyway, wai, I'll be over to.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
Eat some breakfast tacos shortly. Love you, appreciate you very much.
Now let's talk about whipping our politicians, because maybe you
have a woosy politician who won't eat hot green salsa,
or more specifically, you very likely are not led by
leaders let me explain. We don't want, we don't like

(24:00):
to think of our politicians as leaders because they're supposed
to be servants of the people and things like that,
But they are leaders. It's a leadership position. When you
send a representative to Congress. Yes, he's a servant of
the people.

Speaker 1 (24:12):
I got that.

Speaker 2 (24:13):
But he is there. He is a face, he has
a voice, he has a platform. You expect, I expect.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
These people to lead us.

Speaker 2 (24:25):
But there's a problem with that. You see, we can
only take what the political world gives us. In the
political world often doesn't give us men, real men leaders,
And there are a lot of reasons for this. Maybe

(24:46):
it's a more narcissistic type that gets into politics. I
have argued for the longest time politics. You know how
Rush used to say, he was very accurate with this,
that politics is Hollywood for ugly people. He may amend
that a little, not that I'm adjusting anything that the
Great Rush said. But for dudes, I'm only making this
about dudes. I don't want to speak for women, but

(25:07):
for dudes. You know, dude, what does a dude want?
What does a man want? Very male wants in needs.
A man wants what he wants to achieve success, He
wants to be admired, He wants women to like him.
These are male things, and there's nothing wrong with this.
These are very male things. Well, if you grow up

(25:30):
as a complete dork, and maybe you are a complete dork.
I had my dork phase. Maybe you grow up as
a dork. Well, the women aren't flowing themselves at the dorks,
you know, and you don't have any success. Maybe maybe
politics is away. You can get that. And a lot
of these guys are just dorks. They're lifelong dorks. It's
not like we send a bunch of leaders, real men

(25:50):
to Congress. The people we get there are losers and dorks,
and they're weaklings. And we're asking a weekling we sent
to Congress, we're asking him to be a leader. But
most people, the vast majority of people in politics, are followers,
not leaders. They will lick their finger, they will stick
it in the air. They will see which way the

(26:11):
wind is blowing, and that's what they will do. A great, bright,
shining example of this is Mike Johnson, the new Speaker
of the House, Mike Johnson, where he would ad a
fairly conservative, very right wing voting record until he got
to be Speaker of the House, and then what happened?
People keep asking what happened, what happened? What pressure happened.
Mike Johnson's weak. I believe he's probably a very good man,

(26:32):
but he's weak. He's a feminine. You can't handle the pressure,
and so he's caved on every significant thing. And yesterday
in the morning I played it a couple of times.
He was asked about that new tranny in Congress, in
the bathroom thing, and this is how he sounded his
freshman elect, Sarah mcfrid.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
Ohan or a woman.

Speaker 5 (26:51):
Look, I'm not going to get into this. We welcome
all new members with open arms, who are duly elected
representatives of the people. I believe it's a command that
we treat all persons with dignity and respect, and we will,
and I'm not going to engage in silly debates about this.

Speaker 2 (27:11):
That was yesterday morning. Mike Johnson, after dropping those comments
on camera yesterday morning, got completely destroyed by you, by me.
I called him low TGP. It was it was way
beyond me. You did it too, if you were on
social media, you did it.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
It was loud.

Speaker 2 (27:32):
The opposition to that kind of mealy mouthed pathetic weakness.
We essentially all raised up in unison and shouted at
Mike Johnson. Mike Johnson. I think it was three and
a half hours later after that, Whipping stepped up and
said this.

Speaker 5 (27:48):
Hello, everybody, I just want to make a statement for
all of you here and be very clear. I was
asked a question this morning at the leadership gaggle, and
I rejected the premise because the answer is so obvious
for anybody who doesn't know my well established record on
this issue.

Speaker 1 (28:04):
Let me be unequivocally clear.

Speaker 5 (28:06):
A man is a man, and a woman is a woman,
and a man cannot become a woman.

Speaker 1 (28:13):
That said, I also believe what happened.

Speaker 2 (28:18):
Did Michael did Mike Johnson just inhale or was he
snort and chuck behind the scenes. No, you whipped him
because he's a follower. You had to be his strength.
I wish it wasn't this way. I wish we didn't
have to whip him into doing what's right. But that's

(28:39):
why we whip him, and that's why you don't fall
in love with them. And that's why I don't care
when you yell at me when I'm mad at your
favorite one, because I get mad at your favorite one
all the time. It doesn't matter who that is. I
don't care who we're talking about. That's why I whip him,
because that's the only way to get these freaking people
to do what you want is whip them. You worship them,
they'll never do what you want. You gotta whip them,

(29:00):
all right, talk about the IFCJ before we do some emails,
maybe some voicemails, maybe some other fun stuff. Let's talk
about protecting people. Some people live in war zones and
some do not. We have been grateful, We've been lucky
in this country. Unless you live in the South Side
of Chicago, you don't live in a war zone. The

(29:22):
people of Israel do every single freaking day, every day.
And I just couldn't imagine what it would be like
to be picking up my sons from school and find
out rockets are raining down and we have to scramble
to the bomb shelter.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
But I know, in that moment, I.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
Would be really grateful that IFCJ built the bomb shelter.
That's the kind of thing they do. They provide a bridge,
they provide help, food, flat jackets, bomb shelters, firefighting equipment
from people who desperately need it, help them. If you
can go to support IFCJ Support IFCJ dot org, we'll

(30:05):
be back. Jesse Kelly returns, Yes, it is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
Do not forget.

Speaker 2 (30:14):
You can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com,
or you can leave us a voicemail eight seven seven
three seven seven four three seven three Chris, I'm still
curious you never did answer. Why would you ask a
question like that? I don't know what prompted? Are you
watching more organized crime stuff? For those who don't know,

(30:35):
Jewish producer Chris oftentimes doesn't do his job. He watches
videos and he and Corey's sitting there and screw off
when we're trying to do the show. And he asked
me right as we're coming back from the break, if
I knew anything about cutting cocaine. Why would I know
anything about cutting cocaine, Chris? And why would you assume
that I would know something about cutting cocaine?

Speaker 1 (30:55):
Do I look like a cocaine guy?

Speaker 2 (30:58):
But we don't have to talk about anything I've done
in the past, Chris. We're talking about the present. Okay,
you see these two pinky nails. Do you see any
long ones there? All right? Did I drive up in
a nineteen sixty five Cadillac? Do I have a mink
coat on? I don't know anything about cocaine, Chris. I
can tell you about ice makers if you'd like to

(31:18):
talk about that. I know quite a bit about ice makers.
I had mine fired up and running this morning. I've
had to fight off revolt after revolt after revolt in
the Kelly household because the ice maker does make quite
a bit of noise at night, and it doesn't it's
not by my room, it's by everyone else's room, so

(31:39):
getting pretty upset. People were turning that off in the
middle of the night. Anyway, Let's go to some emails,
shall we. Jesse, I love your show. I listened on
the seven to ten wor V iHeartRadio. Shout out a
wor By the way, I too, am an infantry veteran,
though not Marines, but Army. I love your open support
of our fellow vets. Appreciate your show because you don't
talk like an academic to you your audience. You speak

(32:02):
to us over the radio like we're in the same room.
Person to person. His name is Rick. Well, Rick, how
could I talk over anybody? I'm un educated. The reason
I don't talk over you is because I can't. I'm
a normal person. We have a bunch of new listeners.
You understand that I'm a normal person.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
Right.

Speaker 2 (32:21):
I completely lucked into this job. We've been doing this
for six years. Lucked into this job. I've had a
normal life. I was born in Ohio to a construction family.
That's what not only what my dad did, that's what
his dad did. Construction people, just Rustbelt, Ohio construction people.
And then we moved to Montana and kept doing construction,

(32:41):
and I grew up in a very normal house. We
were so poor when we first moved to Montana. Did
I ever tell you we lived in a ski cabin
because we couldn't afford a house. We had to rent
a ski cabin on the side of the mountain. Not
even kidding, not doing the back of my day thing.
If the weather was bad, and let's be honest, it's
on a ski cabin. It's on a ski cabin's on

(33:02):
a ski hill. So the weather's generally bad. You couldn't
drive up to the house. You had to park down
below the house, and I want to call it a
hundred feet up, but I'm looking at it from a
kid's perspective. It could have been five hundred feet, it
could have been fifty feet. But we were well well
below the house. If you brought groceries or something home,

(33:24):
we had to have sleds parked by where we parked
the cars, and you had to load all your groceries
into a sled like you go sledding, and we had
to walk the groceries up the hill, towing the sleds
behind us with the groceries. So, like I said, I've
had your life, you know what I mean. I washed
golf clubs, I worked construction, I joined the Marines. I've
done all this. I'm not trying to talk to you

(33:46):
or not over your head. I don't know any other
way to talk. This is how I talked. I didn't
graduate from college. I got a zero point zero my
first semester. Not to brag, but yeah, that's not stupid.
Jesse Prince of Darkness. He says winning the election was
like D Day, a huge victory, but just the beginning.
We are now in the Hedgerow country, trying to push

(34:08):
through appointments that's exactly right. The election day was a
critical win, a must. We had to have it, and
we got it, and that's awesome and we should feel
happy about it.

Speaker 1 (34:18):
We should not. We should not think.

Speaker 2 (34:21):
That we can somehow back off now, or that they
will back off now. Look, I'll make this about actually
the Russia Ukraine thing really quickly. I've talked to you
before about defense in depth, that if you think about it,
like World War One, how you'd have a trench line,
and they realized one trench line doesn't do any good
because what if they break through? What if they break

(34:42):
into your trench line, then you're finished. What you need
is more trench lines behind it so you can retreat.
You have a place to retreat to and regroup. You
leave the first trench line, you regroup, but the second one,
maybe that same attack force breaks against your second trench line,
and you end up winning. Defense in depth. That's the
idea behind it. It's very simplistic I present presentation of it,

(35:05):
but that's the idea behind it. What the system is
doing right now is defense in depth. They didn't want
to lose the first trench, They didn't want to lose
the first line. The evil globalist communists who run the
United States of America in most of the western countries.
They want a Democrat rule forever because Democrats are filthy,

(35:25):
evil communists now trying to burn down everything the way
the globalists want. They didn't want to lose that election,
but they did. But they did not route, They did
not retreat. They are not running for the hills. We
didn't win. They left the first trench and they are

(35:45):
in the second trench, reforming, regrouping, rethinking, coming up with
a new plan to stop whatever Donald Trump is doing,
stop the appointment, stop all this.

Speaker 1 (35:59):
I think about this.

Speaker 2 (36:00):
We are in that period of time, that little sliver
of time in between where we had the presidential election
and before Donald Trump actually gets sworn in. This is
a critically important period of time and all we can
do is sit and watch. And it's critically important because
I want you to think about this time as if
we just took the first trench and we're watching the

(36:22):
enemy reform and regroup in the second trench, and we're
not allowed to go get him yet. All we can
do now is sit and watch. Is they slam through
judicial appointments as they try to preemptively smear all the
appointees as they try to. They are making plans to
resist in every way humanly possible, so our next fight

(36:44):
will not be easier. Yes, we want an important victory.
That was a good trench. The next fight will be
the next trench. And speaking of defense in depth, let's
discuss the Russia Ukraine thing, which apparently continues to get worse.

Speaker 1 (36:56):
This has been a podcast from wor
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