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September 13, 2024 • 36 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Another hour of the
Jesse Kelly Show. We're gonna talk FBI, d OJ stuff.
This hour, we're gonna discuss are they about don are
they finished with the revolution? Someone's still angry about the vaccine,
and someone wants to know how to get the show
on a computer. All that and more coming up this

(00:23):
hour on the world famous Jesse Kelly Show. Now, remember
you could email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
I have some good news. I want to talk about
something good. We've already talked about nuclear war and World
War three and stuff like that, but I got this email.
Maybe think a little bit, Jesse. You were talking about
the worse the better. Pause on that. That's a Lenin quote.

(00:45):
Remember that is Vladimir Lenin's quote, the worse the better.
Guys like Mao and others have pretty much quoted that verbatim,
meaning communists understand now what they have always understood. The
worse they can make it in a country, economically, you

(01:07):
name it, the better it is for them. Happy content
people will never choose a despicable, demonic religion like communism.
Only the miserable and desperate people do that. So what
do you do if you're a communist, you do whatever

(01:29):
you can to create more miserable and desperate people. That's
the idea. Remember, it's hard for good people to accept
the destruction is intentional. You still see people on the right,
maybe it jew throwing their hands up. I don't understand
this ruins it? Why would they do this? It ruined it.

(01:52):
Why would they open the border? Why did they ruin Disney?
Why did they do I don't understand why. All they
did was ruin it. It ruining it is the point
they were trying to ruin it. Anyway. The guy said,
the worse, the better for the communists to gain more power.
But at what point is it enough chaos and destruction.

(02:12):
I can see them wanting to gain power, but power
over what. At some point a r it's a wasteland.
And he goes on to ask a couple others. But
I want to discuss this, and this is a point
that has been made by others who've studied the history
of communism and how they work. They're always doing the
let me destroy everything you know so I can create

(02:36):
a bright, wonderful future thing. They're always saying things like that,
when it comes to someone like Kamala Harris. What she say.
We've made fun of her for it a million times.
What is it? What is it to see what can
be unburdened by what has been? That's flowery hippie COMMI
language for everything you've got now is a burden and

(02:57):
it's terrible. Just let me said it all on fire
and then you can see what can be. Pole Pot
declared year zero when he took over. There is nothing
before this. This is years zero. So at what point
is it enough? Because they never seem to move past

(03:18):
the destruction point and into the creation point. It's all
just destroy, destroyed, destroy, and here lies the rub. Have
you ever let's pause on this for a second. I'll
come back in to explain what I'm talking about. Have
you ever known somebody who was into essential oils? Actually,

(03:43):
this is a great example essential oils. If you know
any white women, you know somebody who's into essential oils.
Maybe you yourself are into essential oils. And I am
actually not criticizing essential oils. They smell lovely whenever I've
seen them. You've ever known someone who was super super
into them? Though? Have you ever noticed that the person

(04:04):
who's really really into essential oils. They claim to have
one that fixes virtually everything. Oh, what's that? You got
a mosquito bite? He let me mix some lavender lemon
poop and I'll put it on that. That'll fix it.
Oh hey, I got brain cancer. That's okay because I've
got the special roseberry oil imported from the Himalayas in Notice,

(04:29):
how no matter what you say, no matter what the
issue is, if they're into essential oils, well, essential oils
are a fix for everything. It's how they've built. It's
a fix they've built in their mind. We all do
this with various things, but this, it's just an example. Now,
let's go back to the communists. Why do they never

(04:49):
move past the destruction phase? Why is it always chaos?
Destroy chaos, destroy, chaosh destroyed until it is a wasteland,
But still they destroy It's still they create more chaos.
Why is it? Remember he believes destruction is how you
grow a society. We have to destroy it. So whenever

(05:14):
he sees a problem of any kind, he never thinks
about the building because his essential oil is destroying it.
That's what he wants to do. He wants to wreck it.
It's all he knows. That's why every time it's been tried,
it's been a disaster. Now, he says, when does the

(05:36):
revolution phase end? This is the good part of this.
I want you. I want you to know something. Yes,
we have a ton of problems. We talk about him
all the time, we do. We got all kinds of
problems and some rough things. In fact, we're going to
talk to OJFBI stuff in a moment, and that might
get scary. But I want you to understand this. The
American Communist, in fact the global communists, for a variety

(06:01):
of reasons, they are still so far away from being
able to achieve their end goals. Here in America. We
have so many guns, we have so much ammunition, and
the American Communists can never come close to doing all

(06:23):
the evil things he wants to do. While we have
the most guns on the planet, they simply cannot. We
have too much killing power, we have too much ability
to defend ourselves. And it drives these people up the
wall that they have not been able to disarm you,
because that's what they want. I mean, that's why people

(06:45):
like Dome when she's asked about gun confiscation, that's why
she answers questions like this. She knows this is built
into every Democrat. They know it's built into the back
of their mind. I can't ever do everything I want
while they have these guns.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
I listen. I don't think we lack for great ideas,
as I've said many times, Really've been having great ideas
for decades.

Speaker 3 (07:07):
The problem is that Congress does not have the courage
to act.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
And that is why from the beginning I have said
my agenda include attempting to get thonomists to act.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
But if they don't be in the first one hundred
days of my administration, I'm going to take an executive
action because what we need is action.

Speaker 1 (07:24):
How do these people think, what do they want to do?

Speaker 2 (07:27):
Well?

Speaker 1 (07:28):
This was a guest on MSNBC talking about Elon Musk.
Elon Musk, remember his mortal sin was he bought Twitter
and he stopped censoring voices on the right. That's for him,
that that's the mortal sin. He bought Twitter, he stopped
censoring things they don't like. And this is what they

(07:48):
think should be done.

Speaker 2 (07:49):
With a critical element in thinking about Elon Musk is
like any American. He has a right to his own opinion,
and he has a right to express his opinion. However,
that right is not limited, and he is under some
special limitations that wouldn't apply to normal people because his companies,
specifically Starlink and space X, are government contractors, and as

(08:12):
such he has obligations to the government that would for
any normal person and should for him require him to
moderate his speech in the interest of national security. So
what you have is somebody who runs really strategic defense
and aerospace projects for the federal government, who's actively undermining
the government which is paying him, and somewhere in there

(08:36):
is a legal case that needs to be prosecuted.

Speaker 1 (08:41):
They want to throw him in prison, that's how they think.
But we have guns and more than that, And this
goes beyond America. People they are losing faith in their
government and their evil leaders. They are waking up. You're
seeing things in the UK that you don't really care about.

(09:03):
I don't really care about, so it's not here, but
we should care. More. People are beginning to take to
the streets and mass in protest against this. This story
out of Springfield, Ohio. Yes, it's one story, and it's
not even the worst story. There are way worse stories
about all the new people we've brought into this country,
but it's bringing an issue into the forefront. It's making

(09:26):
people angry. People are not only waking up, Americans are
waking up. They are armed, and they are getting involved
in local politics. We are taking back so many school boards.
I counted on the way to work today and in
my neighborhood that previously you couldn't get anyone to vote.

(09:47):
I counted six school board signs on the way out
of the neighborhood. Not just the Trump sign. Everyone's got
one of those around here, school board signs. Is it
happening fast enough? Is it enough to save the fifty
state experiment of the country. I doubt it. I don't know,
But it is enough to save huge portions of this country.

(10:09):
In our way of life. I have real hope in
our future for a variety of reasons, and just so. Yes,
these people are powerful, and they are evil, and they
are going to hurt a lot of people before they're done.
I do not think these people will win in the end.
I don't. I do not, all right, All right? That

(10:30):
also means we have to fight our battles every possible way.
It's not just presidency, not just the school board we
fight with our money now too. They use enough of
our money for all the crap we can fight with it.
Where do you spend your money? Where do you abstain?
You shouldn't be sending money to AT and T ever

(10:53):
to Verizon. You shouldn't be sending money to T Mobile,
not when pure talk is there. Pure Talk is the
company they hire American. Do you want to hear the story?
Listen to this? Listen to this, Hey Jesse, In fact
is an ask doctor Jesse question to it. Been a
pure talk customer for a few months now. I'm converting
a few friends. I recently added a family member account.

(11:15):
I was having trouble with the setup. I thought it
was pure Talk's error. I was getting frustrated. I admittedly
I don't have much patience, especially for stuff like that.
I called them up. They were patient, kind, still wasn't
getting this set up done. I got a little sassy,
and then the pure top rep pure talk rep asked
a very simple question, and I felt about two inches tall.

(11:35):
I was wrong. I apologized and said I'm sorry. The
rep laughed and said, it's fine. Two things. Pure Talk
is awesome. Played the fart sound for my two girls
of course I will. Gosh, I'm o. Have you ever
been overly committed to being right gotten sassy only to
be proven wrong and feel idiotic? Said? I love the

(11:57):
show despised to comedies telling you, man ten minutes the
phone speaking to someone who's nice. How's that sound? Dial
pound two five zero and say Jesse Kelly pound two
five zero, Say Jesse Kelly? Have I ever been wrong
and been sassy about it? Hang on? It is the
Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday. Of course, it's an

(12:19):
ass doctor Jesse Friday. And you can email all your
questions and now to Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com.
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Before we get back
to the politics, we're gonna talk a little FBI, d
OJ stuff, the stazy other things. I do want to
answer the question the guy asked, Have I ever gotten

(12:41):
a little sassy because I thought I was right? Did
I turned out to be wrong? Oh gosh, I've done
this so many freaking times in my life. I'll give
you one. You want to hear one of the dumbest
things I've ever done. I'm not even gonna say the dumbest,
because I've done so many stupid things. I'm just such
a moron. You want to hear one of the holl
the things I've done. We Uh, we were living in Tucson, Arizona.

(13:06):
We were pretty newly married and not at all flushed
with cash. I want to stress that point, but I
had saved. I was working construction, so I was making
okay money. And we got married. And as soon as
we got married, we moved in together, bought a house,
moved in together, and our house we got a security system.
I'm just security obsessed. I always have been. I really

(13:27):
take take a lot of stock in that. So we
bought a security system for the home. Okay, standard security system, cameras, pads,
everything like that. I'm home one day, the wife is gone.
Dude knocks on the door, rings, doorbell. I opened up
the door and he's standing there and he essentially says, hey,

(13:51):
it's time to upgrade your security system. I, in my
incredible naivete I just look back. Honestly, I want to
go back and punch myself in the face. I don't
realize that he's with a different security company than the
one we currently had. An upgrade to security. Wow, sounds good.

(14:15):
Come on, in. He comes on in. He's laying out
all the upgrades they have for security. We can put
a camera in here and do this and not only that.
And I'm sure this was all done intentional. The colors
of everything he was wearing matched the colors of our
current security company that we had. And I'm sitting there
and I start ordering stuff. Yeah, I want this and

(14:37):
I want that. Yes, it's definitely time to upgrade. I
want this, And so he starts making phone calls. I
get a phone call from the wife because our current
security company had called her because this dude was canceling
our current security company to install a new system with

(14:58):
a new company. And OB calls me and she tells me, Hey,
are you canceling our security system? And I said, what, No,
I'm upgrading our security system. What's your problem. It's an upgrade.
And she's doing the best she can because she knows
if she pushes it the wrong way, I'll just fight harder.

(15:19):
She said, baby, I don't think you are. I think
you're switching security companies. Well now, because I'm a dude. Now,
I feel like my intelligence is being challenged and I'm
digging in my heels even more. You don't know what
you're talking about. Woman, Pipe down, I'm getting us even
better security. Baby, I'm telling you you're changing security companies.

(15:41):
And I dug in and we had a nice little
spat on the phone, and boop ended up. We hung
up the phone mad at each other, and I signed
the new thing with my brand new, upgraded security system.
And right about then it on me that I had

(16:02):
just changed security companies, and not only did I have
a brand new security company, we were paying more money
with the new security company. And because I had broken
the contract of my last one when it was two
years left on the contract, I had to pay the

(16:25):
last two years for security I didn't even use from
the original company. And you've never heard someone dig in
on the phone and get as snotty and sassy as
I did with the wife. You want to talk about
a brutal apology I had to deliver when she walked
in the door. We now had a more expensive security

(16:47):
bill at a time, and we didn't have a lot
of money, and we just had to stroke a check.
I think we had to dip into our savings to
stroke a check and pay for two years of security
with the company whose contract we just broke. Oh you
want to talk dumb, Believe me, I've done dumb. I
mastered dumb, Jesse. In April twenty one, I had trust

(17:10):
in our government. I got the vaccine made by Pfizer
two days after my second shot. I was crippled and
have been crippled ever since. They ignore me. I am sorry. Brother.
The number of people who've been injured by that poison,
it's a lot. It's very very sad. I have very

(17:35):
little faith outside of lawsuits wherever you can pursue those
I don't. I have very little faith the people who've
been VACS injured will ever get justice because both parties
are so heavily invested in the vax I. The vax
is great. I did the VACS. I love the vax
But you were a victim of the largest propaganda campaign
in history. That's the bottom line. And I wish it

(17:59):
wasn't that way, but it was all right. Let's talk
about the FBI, DJ the Stazi government getting weaponized. Hang on,
good is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday? And
ass doctor Jesse Friday And we are turning through everything,
and yes, I did see speaking of being hopeful, you

(18:22):
know how I was talking about being hopeful. It does
feel like, yes, there are bad things happening worldwide, but
there are good things too. Do you see the Netherlands today.
They opted out, or they're trying to opt out of
the EU's migration policy. They're part of the EU, And
because the EU is a suicidal death pack designed to

(18:45):
destroy the nations of Europe, they've opened up the borders
of all these European countries. And that's why the churches
are on fire every other day, and there's a new
mosque on the street corner every other day. Rapes, murders,
everything violence up. Well, Netherlands has had another and they said, hey,
we're declaring a state of emergency another country. I forget

(19:05):
it might have been Denmark, might have been gosh, where
was it one of those countries I just saw yesterday.
I don't want to misspeak. Here is now paying people
to return back to their homeland. Here's twenty thirty grand
leave again. This is not everything we want. You shouldn't
have to pay people, But nations are waking up to

(19:27):
what unending mass immigration can and will do to their countries.
It seems like good things are happening anyway. Hey, Jesse.
I used to wonder what it would be like to
be in the Germany, or to be in Germany in
the thirties and forties and live in fear of the
Gestapo kicking in your door in the middle of the
night to arrest you for some fabricated crime. While I'm

(19:47):
starting to understand what it might be like, the DOJCIAFBI
Secret Service scare me. They have unfettered power to throw
me in prison, never to be heard of again, or
even murder me in my home for simply having opinions
they don't like. Is this the future we have to
look forward to? Well, I don't know if it's the

(20:08):
guaranteed future we have. Let's use the bad Let's go
over the bad news first. I've tried to drive this
point home over and over and over again because it's
so important for everyone to understand. Your own government turning
against you, turning evil and turning against you is the

(20:31):
most dangerous thing that can ever happen to you. It's
more dangerous than an invading army. It's more dangerous than
a trend a arragua taking over your apartment complex. As
far as what it means for you, it's the most
dangerous thing that can happen to you, and think of it.
Think of it this way. So I'm the father in

(20:53):
my home. I'm the husband, I'm the father, I'm the
head of my home. Is it really really bad for
my family if a gang of thugs show up to
my house tonight at midnight to murder us all and
rob us. Yes, that's very dangerous. Gosh, we could die.
It's bad. But at least there's me there, head of

(21:14):
the household. Lots of guns, know how to use them.
I am there as part of my duty is to
defend my home, head of the household. I am there.
Is it really really dangerous if tonight a fire breaks
out in my home, some kind of electrical fire and
it spreads. Yes, it's very dangerous. It could kill us,

(21:35):
my goodness, But I am there. Wake up, get out,
get out. Let's call it that. I'm there to handle
the problem. Stay calm, get people out. I am there.
It's a dangerous situation, maybe even a deadly situation, but
I am there. But for my kids, what's more dangerous
than a gang trying to break in and murder them

(21:57):
or a fire trying to burn them to death? What's way,
way more dangerous than that. What if I, as the
head of the household, What if I want to kill them?
What if I want to set fire to the home. Well,
now they're in a place where they'll be very, very
lucky to escape it. It's almost impossible to escape it.

(22:20):
There's nothing more dangerous than your own government doing what
our government is doing, turning all of its guns, all
of its authority inward, in aiming them all at you
in me. This goes way you mentioned Germany, Nazi Germany.

(22:42):
But the examples of this are without end throughout history,
secret state police agencies, governments turning evil. Once the government
turns corrupt, the secret state police agency will always turn
into a protect the government agency that aims its guns inward.

(23:06):
And if that happens. The reason I've been imploring you
if you can, to get to a red area is
not because I want you to leave the paradise of California.
I love California, and seven I know it is. It's
because if, and let's be honest, when our federal government

(23:26):
reaches its final form, you will need some kind of dad,
some kind of state power to stand against them. This
is the Attorney General of the United States of America.

Speaker 3 (23:40):
US federal prosecutors and agents may never make a decision
regarding an investigation or prosecution for the purpose of affecting
any election, or the purpose of giving an advantage or
disadvantage to any candidate or political power. In short, we

(24:03):
must treat like cases alike. There is not one rule
for friends and another for foes, one rule for the
powerful and another for the powerless, one rule for the
rich and another for the poor, one rule for demo.

Speaker 1 (24:20):
Of course, that's a lie. And you know it's a lie.
And that's how every single government agency that has been weaponized.
That's how they all talk. They love to get up
in public and brag about how uncompromised they are, how
by the book they are. It's the rule of law.
It's happening right now, not in the future. Right now.

(24:43):
Americans are being thrown in prison for phony crimes right now,
killed right now by the government. It's happening right now.
That's all the bad news. And yes, it is something
that keeps me up at night. It's so much more
dangerous than if al Qaeda wanted me dead. This is
way more dangerous if my own government does, if the Chinese.

(25:06):
Even if the Chinese a powerful nation state. If the
Chinese wanted me dead, and the Chinese hate me, their
state media hates my guts. If they wanted me dead,
that's a big deal. That's a problem. In fact, given there,
given where they are, they could probably make that happen.
It's still not close, not close to being as dangerous
as if my own government has turned against me. And

(25:29):
that's where we are now. Again, that's all the bad news.
Here is the good news. Our guns matter a lot.
They can never do all the evil they want to
do as long as we have this kind of gun ownership.
You brought it, You brought up the Germany in the
nineteen thirties and forties. You could make this about anything,
the NKVD and the Soviet Union, you can make about anything.

(25:50):
But how did that normally go? It normally went this way.
A knock on the door at two three am. You
open up the door and there are a bunch of
government thugs there to throw handcuffs on, throw you in
the back of a van and take you to Siberia
where they'll pull your fingernails out and shoot you in
the face. That can never happen. End mass here in

(26:13):
the United States of America, as long as the American
citizens are as armed as we are. I'm not saying
don't be scared. I'm not saying don't be wary. But
we have a state system where our states have incredible authority,
and if we actually get a GOP with some guts
in these states, we can begin to really really put
up a bulwark between us and the federal government. And

(26:36):
that's happening slowly but surely. So. Yes, be wary, no question,
be wary. But we are not near there. Those populations
Soviet Union, Germany, China, Cambodia, they were all of them
disarmed first. As soon as that happens, it's over. It's

(26:57):
absolutely over. As soon as that happens, these people will
do anything to you, all right. I want to There
was something that was asked of us graduates about salary
over benefits and things like that, and they answer the
question a certain way. I want to talk about this
and then we'll get back to all kinds of ask
doctor Jesse questions here on a Friday. It is The

(27:19):
Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday, reminding you, as we
always do you, freedom is not free in reminding you
you can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
So I wanted to touch on this before we get back
to the ask doctor Jesse questions. This is from unusual Wales.
Seventy seven percent. Actually from Fortune magazine, seventy seven percent

(27:42):
of US graduates said that they value salary the most
when considering a career over benefits, progression, and working location,
per Fortune Magazine. Okay, so US graduates, college graduates they
value salary money over things like location and over things

(28:03):
like benefits. And it's time for a little daddy moment,
Little Daddy Jesse, all right, what Chris do You don't
have to shake your head anyway. I understand chasing a buck.
I have done it my entire working career. I know
what it is to chase a buck. I know what

(28:24):
it is chasing the most money, chasing down the best
salary you can. But take it from Daddy Jesse. You
who are just now going into the workforce, are about
to go into the workforce. Take it from a man
who's made every single mistake you can make. And I
know this is going to sound like an old lame

(28:46):
thing your grandma puts on Facebook believe me when I
tell you it's true. The value of your time is undervalued.
You under value your time. Let me explain, Let me explain.
So one of my neighbors. Actually I won't even use

(29:09):
personal story yet, but I'll talk one of my neighbors.
He's a lawyer. Great dude, he's a lawyer, and he's
one of you talk to him for five seconds. And
you know, this guy's got an IQ IQ of eight thousand.
And because he went to I forget which law school
he went to, graduated top of his class, moved right
from that into one of the law firms, you know

(29:32):
those destination law firms, one thousand dollars an hour lawyer
law firms. And he was making a fortune, an absolute fortune.
He was having to drive an hour. The law office
where they are is an hour from his home where
he lives now he was working. He was living in
the neighborhood, working at this law office an hour each way.

(29:57):
And this is how it goes. When when you show
up at a law office fresh out of law school,
especially the big shot ones, they're going to work you
like a dog. Like seventy eighty hours a week is
not unheard of. Eighty hours a week. I'm all for
hard work, keep in mind, but hour to drive into work,

(30:20):
eighty hours a week, hour to drive home every single night.
This guy's get a wife. At the time, he had
one baby. Now they have two. But I had a
wife and a baby at the time, and he said, Jesse,
I never saw my wife. We never had a glass
of wine together, discussed our day. By the time I

(30:40):
got home, she's collapsing into bed. I had enough time
to pop in on my kid, who was already asleep
when I got home, hopefully hold her for five minutes
in the morning before I have to give her back
to my wife, who I haven't seen, and go right
back into work. He said, I was driving a late
model BMW. Yeah, when we got a vacation once every

(31:02):
two years, we were in Paris. Baby, But I never
saw my wife. I never saw my daughter. And he
gave it up. He gave it up to work for
a small law office with six total people in the
law office. He's making now one third of what he
was making, not even half one third is what he's

(31:24):
making a third. His salary was reduced sixty six percent.
He works ten minutes from the house at lunchtime he
comes home to hang out with his wife and see
his daughter. He said, Jesse, I am so angry at myself,
not for making the switch. I'm angry at myself for

(31:48):
every minute I spent chasing a buck at the big
shot law office, in giving up all that time I
could have had with my wife and my daughter, which
is making up for all of it now. He's wonderful. God,
that's true story. I'm not telling you don't go make money,

(32:08):
but when you get older, you will understand that time
is so valuable. I've had two hour commutes each way
in my life. I've told you about living in DC
where it was an hour hour and a half each way.
By the time I get home. If I'm lucky, I
don't have anything left, no energy left. Grind you down

(32:31):
to the nubs, working closer to home at a place
where you're happy, and yes, making a good living is
worth more than an extra whatever you think it's worth,
cross my heart and hope to die. If you are
in a job where you are happy, where your the
bills are being paid, and you enjoy your job, I

(32:53):
want to make sure you understand you are a minority.
Doesn't even really put it really doesn't. It really doesn't
put it really doesn't put it as it doesn't put
as much emphasis on it as I want. You are rare.
You are a rare, rare person. If you enjoy your job,
if you enjoy your job and the commute is not bad,

(33:16):
just soak it up, all right? Hey Jesse, how could
I listen or read what was said on your great
show on my computer? The evening doesn't work for me?
Thanks and keep up the great work. Okay, Sometimes I
forget There are people who listen that know less about
technology than I do, which is amazing. Like my dad
this the other day. My dad he told me he's

(33:39):
never googled anything and doesn't know how. Said he doesn't
know how. No, Chris, he's never done it. He doesn't
know how, and i' mean internet search engine at all.
He's never done it. He's never looked anything up in
his life. And I said, Dad, what if there's something
you don't know? And he said, well, what will that be?
I love him anyways, Yeah, he's definitely my father. So

(34:01):
listen if you want to listen to the show and
you can't listen live when it's on six to nine
Eastern every single Monday through Friday. Go to Iheart's website. iHeart.
Just look in the little search thing and look up
the Jesse Kelly show iHeart or Spotify or iTunes. All

(34:22):
of these things are available on your computer and you
can find the show right there. Oh that's right, Chris,
jesse Kelly dot com. I thought it was jesse kellyshow
dot com. Chris, you want to look at all they
both work, Okay, jesse Kelly dot com or jesse kellyshow
dot com will also help you. All right, all right, Now,

(34:44):
let's get back to the politics, shall we, Because there
is a little tidbit that came out about remember those
debate moderators. Well, this is a doozy today. Man, that's
quite an admission. Before we get to that one, let's
get to the IFCJ. You know, there are people who
suffer still every day in a war zone. We've been

(35:06):
discussing what it would be like to live in that.
People in Israeli already live in that. They live in
a war zone every day, surrounded by enemies, attacked all
the time. That's the truth. It sucks. It's freaking awful.
So what can we do? We can help one we
can pray for them. The IFCJ International Fellowship of Christians

(35:27):
and Jews they want you to help. They want you
to help and pray and stand in solidarity with the
people who are being attacked by terrorists all the freaking time. Bombs, missiles, rockets,
misery all the time, stabbings. It's awful. Help Go to
support IFCJ dot org to find out specific ways you

(35:52):
can help support IFCJ dot org. All right, all right,
What is this about the debate moderators, Why they jump
in when they did. We'll talk about that next
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