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November 20, 2025 • 39 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
On a Wonderful Thursday. We're gonna talk about air travel,
people abusing welfare, surprise surprise, human trafficking, all kinds of things,
emails and more coming up in this hour of the
Jesse Kelly Show. I want to touch on something Sean
Duffy said. I have a flight coming up myself next week,

(00:22):
and I am what you would probably describe as a
home body. That's how my mom describes me, a homebody.
I don't like to go anywhere. It's not that I
don't like to travel for a vacation or something like that.
I like a good adventure, as you know, but I
don't I'm not one of these guys. I don't want
to go to every conservative conference and give speeches here

(00:45):
and do that. I like my house, I like my bed,
I like my family. I just want to do my
show and go home. That's all I want to do.
But because I'm a huge, important celebrity, I have to
travel a lot. Why does travel suck? Why? What makes

(01:08):
it hard? What makes air travel suck? What's the same
thing that makes traffic suck, same thing that makes school suck,
works uck the bottom barrel people in our society. It's
not the most travel It's not most of the travelers,
it's five percent ten percent. Most people are just like you.
Show up on time so they don't have to run

(01:28):
in front of everybody at security. They don't play music
on their speaker phone on the phone, they don't take
their stinky shoes off and smell out the place. They don't.
They're just just like you. They just want to keep
their head down, their mouths shut, get a little bite
to eat at the airport if you can afford it anymore,
and just get where they're going politely. They even let

(01:51):
people go down the aisle on the airplane most people,
but it's always the five to ten percent. So I'll
play you what Sean Duffy said.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
People dress up like they're going to bed when they fly.
You know, I see people getting on airplanes and they're
having a hard time taking their luggage and getting in
in the oversize or above ben help people out, be nice,
be courteous, and so we want to push people as
we come into a really bad busy travel season, help
people out, be in a good mood, dress up, bring

(02:23):
civility back to travel, and I think everyone's experience is
going to be that much better.

Speaker 1 (02:29):
Let me get this disclaimer out of the way. I
like Sean Duffy. I have met Sean Duffy. He is
a really, really solid human being in his reputation is
that just a solid person, family man? And I like
this messaging. Be nice when you travel, be civil to people.
It drives me up the wall when I see men

(02:50):
sitting down while women are struggling to get their bag
in the overhead that I blow a gasket every time.
If I ever catch my sons doing that, they know
I'm gonna lose my mind on them. Get up and
you help women out. So I like the messaging. It's
the first part of it that I'm not sure I
can get totally on board.

Speaker 2 (03:10):
People dress up like they're going to bed when they fly.

Speaker 1 (03:14):
Listen, I can't wear the things I used to wear
in airports because I get recognized now, and Obs always
saying people are gonna recognize you. You can't dress like a
bum anymore. And she's right, She's one hundred percent correct.
So I'm not dressed up the way I used to.
But air travel is miserable enough. What's wrong with wearing

(03:39):
some sweats? What's wrong with Chris disagrees and Corey agrees.
What's wrong with wearing what's wrong with wearing sweats? What Chris?
What Chris said? What's wrong with blue jeans? There's nothing
wrong with blue jeans? All Right, I'm gonna say something,
and I know I'm gonna catch all kinds of hate
for this, but I'm just going to come out right

(04:00):
now and say it. Ever since I started wearing my
everywhere pants from Cozy Earth, blue jeans are not comfortable.
They're not as comfortable. What do you want minute saying?
I know everything can't be everywhere pants from Cozy Earth.
I get that, But when you finally get something that's stretchy,

(04:25):
it looks good, it's it's better. So if I have
my everywhere pants and I have blue jeans, why would
I choose blue jeans. I'm not pounding nails, I'm not
laying asphalt. I'm not I'm flying. I'm flying from here
to New York City. Why would I need blue jeans?

(04:47):
Not when I have everywhere pants some Cozy Earth. Remember,
by the way, it's Black Friday Special time at Cozy Earth.
It's a lot more than just everywhere pants. Cozyearth dot
Com promo co Jesse don't forget about that anyway. Where
pants are fine, sweatpants. The ladies like to wear their
little yoga tight things. No one knows the difference between

(05:07):
tights and leggings, and obs tried to tell me whatever
they like to wear that, and whatever, shouldn't we just
be comfortable. It's miserable enough. It's miserable because of the
bottom five to ten percent of society. They don't know
how to act. They can't conduct themselves in public. I say,
let people where would they want? I also say, we

(05:29):
have a serious, serious, human trafficking problem in this country.
Headline Hispanic couple in liberal Michigan town. It's Plymouth, Michigan,
by the way, charged with trafficking two hundred and forty
seven illegal aliens and a forced labor scheme. Times don't

(05:51):
really change, do they They just don't. We imagine ourselves
to be so much more civilized than the ancients were.
We're surely so much better, a much moral people than
we used to be a thousand years ago. We're superior beings, right, na,

(06:12):
we're the same. We look back at the history of slavery,
which is the entire history of the world. Everywhere there
have been slaves. Every people have been enslaved, every people
have held slaves. It's a shocking, horrible part of human history.
And then we think about modern day and we say

(06:32):
to ourselves, Wow, I'm so glad, we're all done with that.
No more slaves here, We are good to go. But
that's not true. Right here in the United States of America.
Who knows the exact numbers, but we probably have more
slaves now than we ever did realize. That, Isn't that

(06:53):
sad and freaking horrible. We look back on the days
of American slavery and the trans afage, Transatlantic African slave trade,
and all the horrors of all that, and how awful
it all was, and we look back and we say, wow,
that's terrible. We did that. Hey, thank goodness, we're done
with all that. Thank goodness. We're a better people now.
We'd never do it. Well, there are slaves all over

(07:18):
this country. Remember that video. I don't know if you
saw it. It's nothing bad, you could go watch it. It's fine.
But they busted a farm in California. There's a bunch
of women and children out there in the fields, all illegals, slaves.
The human condition is one of a desire to enslave people.

(07:43):
And it's one of those things that I will never
understand in my life. I will never understand looking at
another human being and thinking it's okay to own them,
to have them as a as a possession. I'll never
understand it. But I do understand. Humans love it. Human

(08:05):
beings love slaves. They prefer insane to me. You know
who else is insane? Nancy Pelosi?

Speaker 3 (08:11):
Why did I retire?

Speaker 4 (08:12):
Yeah, well, I've been eager to sort of go into
another phase of life for a while. I thought Hillary
Clinton was going to win in two thousand and sixty.

Speaker 1 (08:24):
That's not why she retired. Why did Nancy? Why can't
anybody be honest? When everyone runs for president, they act
like they don't want to run for president. They were
just felt an obligation to serve the country. Oh shut up,
you're a wildly ambitious person and you want to be
the most powerful person on the planet. That's why you
ran for president. Everybody, and when they retire they're never
honest about that either. Ever. Why did Nancy Pelosi retire?

(08:49):
Because she got old and weak, as we all will
one day. For lucky she got old and weak at
the same time, the base of the Democrat Party became
more rabid, more violent, and more Communist, and the younger, stronger, sharper.
Nancy Pelosi used to be able to keep the cats

(09:12):
inside the fence. She used to be strong enough and
sharp enough to threaten and reward Democrats when she needed
legislation passed, when she needed something started or stopped. Younger, stronger,
Nancy Pelosi used to be able to do so. Remember
it was Nancy Pelosi who brought AOC to heel. AOC

(09:35):
went into Congress, some dirty communist that she is, after
having auditioned for the part. Remember that gets into Congress
and promptly start she can't stop running her mouth everywhere,
running her mouth about that's running her mouth about that.
I mean, what are you gonna do? She's a communist.
Nancy Pelosi yanks her into the office, straightens her out
real good. AOC dialed it way way down after that.

(10:00):
Nancy Pelosi used to be able to take your dreams
and smash him in front of you if she wanted.
She used to be powerful enough to keep these street
animals in check. Now she isn't. Now she isn't, And
now she's looking at these nutballs in the direction the
party's going, and she says to herself, the juice just

(10:22):
isn't worth the squeeze, It's not worth the headache. I
don't blame her if imagine being that age, imagine living
to I don't know how old she is, a thousand,
eight hundred years old. I don't know how old she is,
But imagine living to that age, and all of a sudden,
you have a bunch of communist animals dropped into your lap,
and someone says, hey, control these people. I'd retired too.

(10:43):
You know what she's gonna do. She's gonna drink. He's
gonna what Chris, A lot of retirees drink a lot.
I'm not supporting it, but we all know she loves
the sauce. You can hear in her voice. Grandma Vodka
is going to retired to San Francisco, and I'm sure
she lives in a beautiful mansion out there. She's going

(11:05):
to watch on the television as the Democrat Party tears
the country apart. That's what she's gonna do. Let's do
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(12:12):
That's clear some emails out of here, Jesse. The subversive
Democrats who openly delivered their insurrection message fear no reprisals
since Republicans have done nothing to address this type of behavior.
It's not wrong. He's not wrong. Remember this. The Communists

(12:33):
are religious. They are religious Zealots, and religious Zelots only
understand fear and pain. Sultsanitsen used to talk about this.
He said, the big fist is what he said you
had to use on them, And he flat out said
the harder you slug them, the safer you will be.

(12:54):
They are never going to control their own demonic impulses.
They're not capable of doing so. They are fighting a
destructive revolution. Nothing will stop them, so you can't try
to be reasonable with them. It's not possible. When you
find democrats, subversives, communists subversives inside of any institution, you

(13:16):
have to get them out. You have to get them out,
root and branch, because they don't just exist there. They're
not capable of doing that. They're there to worm their
way through it and subvert it and use it for
the revolution, which will ultimately destroy it. You have to
get them out. But because we have been so kind

(13:38):
about it for so long, they were able to worm
their way through every single institution. Now it's a nightmare.
You know, there are still stories lots of them about
the military not doing what Pete hagg sayth wants done.
He is the secretary of war. He is over all

(14:00):
of them. And I get stories all the time sent
to me from people who were in about the horrible
stuff still going on, and by the way, they're finding
out about it and chasing it down. But it's like
playing whack a mole. These people have spent years worming
their way through these places. The FBI, by the way,

(14:22):
I had somebody who told me the Washington field office specifically.
They have field offices all over the place, but the Washington,
DC Field office is not salvageable in any way, not
even close to being salvageable. It is full of communists
and they're just flat out not doing what they're told.

(14:43):
They understand they have to be quieter now under new
FBI leadership, but they haven't changed any thoughts any ways,
and they're cleaning out some like this freaking guy who
went to sixty minutes. I think this was sixty minutes.
Where was this guy? Uh? This dude here listen.

Speaker 5 (15:02):
I wasn't surprised. I was definitely disappointed. I knew, not
truly firsthand, but I knew I was on a list.
There was fear after the administration took in came in
that they were going to start looking at all of
our personnel files where some of us did self identify
our sexual orientation, some people did identify as trans. So

(15:26):
there was fear early on that Doge was going to
collect this and they were going to curate a list
and get rid of the undesirables.

Speaker 6 (15:34):
You say it pretty casually, but it's pretty powerful to
hear that phrase. You say you were likely on a list.
That's quite something.

Speaker 5 (15:44):
It's concerning.

Speaker 1 (15:46):
It's concerning. And I know you're attempted to scream at
the radio you made lists. You've made list every chance
you got, and purged every single I know, I don't,
but remember this. The communist genuinely feels like everything should
work on his behalf. Everything, there should be no opposition.

(16:10):
So the FBI if they and they basically did this
over a number of years, if they created lists of
right wingers or potential right wingers, people who needed to
be run out, well, that communist would simply say, well, yeah, yeah,
of course, the FBI should work only for the revolution,

(16:31):
never against the revolution. They can make lists of you,
you're never allowed to make lists of them. But what
do you think that guy, Well, I'm gonna play it again.
What do you think this guy was doing at the FBI.
Do you think this guy woke up every morning, grabbed
his FBI badge, powdered his nose, and walked into the

(16:53):
building to solve crime. Think he was there to take
down the mob? Tells? But what do you think this
guy was doing with the power of the FBI at
his fingertips? I was a surprise.

Speaker 5 (17:07):
I was definitely disappointed. I knew, not truly firsthand, but
I knew I was on a list. There was fear
after the administration took in came in that they were
going to start looking at all of our personnel files
where some of us did self identify our sexual orientation,
some people did identify as trans So there was fear

(17:31):
early on that Doge was going to collect this and
they were going to curate a list and get rid
of the undesirables.

Speaker 6 (17:38):
You say it pretty casually, but it's pretty powerful to
hear that phrase. You say you were likely on a list.

Speaker 1 (17:46):
That's quite something. An FBI agent with the Pride flag
on his desk, which brings me to this email because
we're about to talk about him, Master of the Irish Goodbye.
Don't you think there have been male honey pops. Otherwise,
how would hostile foreign countries compromise people like Lindsey Graham?

(18:10):
Very good point. Who knows what kind of files they
have on Lindsey Graham. But I brought him up because
I'm just gonna lose my freaking mind. Remember that little thing,
the little thing they put in the bill they just
passed when they opened the government back up, that little
thing being United States senators making for themselves a carve out.

(18:38):
Now what kind of carve out? Well, the FBI violated
their civil rights, collected their text messages, their phone calls,
their locations. Obviously that's a really, really terrible thing. And
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(19:44):
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ends twelve seven, twenty five. So the Senate, they put
a little carve out in that bill so United States
senators can sue the FBI. Not so you can sue
your rights. You're right me. Nothing, not a single United
States Senator to my knowledge ever even attempted to give

(20:06):
you a carve out so you could sue when your
rights were violated. But the second it comes out that
their rights were violated, they made sure they put that
in a bill. And you know what's actually kind of
funny about this. They didn't even do it for the House.
They didn't even do it for any member of the
House of Representatives. It was only them, and the House
just passed it. Unanimously passed it. Lindsey Graham was on

(20:31):
the Senate floor. Here's what he said, one thousand dollars.

Speaker 7 (20:36):
I'm going to sue.

Speaker 8 (20:36):
I want to let you know, I'm going to sue
Biden's DOJ and Jack Smith. I almost sue Verizon is going
to be a hell of a lot more than five
hundred thousand dollars.

Speaker 1 (20:44):
This is twice this has happened to me.

Speaker 8 (20:47):
I was hauled into court and Atlanta for no good reason,
spent a million dollars, and the crime is being friends
of Trump, being supporters of Trump.

Speaker 1 (21:01):
Matthew Purna was a supporter of Trump. Matthew Purna had
the DOJ come after him, tried to overcharge him. Well,
did overcharge him the way they always do after January sixth.
Overcharged this young man to the point he reached what

(21:22):
he thought was the end of his end of his rope,
and he killed himself. I don't know to this day
if Lindsey Graham has ever spoken his name, not even
talking about a carval, not even talking about some sort
of monetary thing for his family, not even talking about that.

(21:45):
I don't know if Lindsey Graham has ever spoken his
name Lindsey Graham. Though, the second his rights get violated,
He's gonna sue everybody. I'm gonna sue DOJ, sue the FBI,
to sue Rize, and I'm gonna sue this. I'm gonna
sue that. Could you guys in the Senate pretend to

(22:08):
care even if you don't care? I understand, you're just
a bunch of swamp monsters. I got it, I got it.
All you care about is money and power. I get it.
I'm not naive. This is why I treat all you
politicians like rental cars. I get it. I understand. Could
you pretend to give a crap about us? You're right, Chris,

(22:29):
not even lip service, not even to my knowledge, nobody
even mentioned a carve out for you. This kind of crap.
This is the kind of stuff that jades people so
badly they walk away from politics. At a time where
we need more Americans involved, We need more Americans running

(22:51):
for office, helping people running for office working. But this,
this is the kind of crap that people they just
throw their hands up and say, you know what, I'm
gonna go watch football one thousand dollars.

Speaker 8 (23:01):
I'm going to sue I want to let you know
I'm going to sue Biden's DOJ and Jack Smith almost
sue Verizon is going to be a hell of a
lot more than five hundred thousand dollars. This is twice
this has happened to me. I was hauled into court
in Atlanta for no good reason, spent a million dollars,
and the crime is being friends of Trump, being supporters

(23:23):
of Trump.

Speaker 1 (23:25):
Lindsey Graham, Lindsey Graham, he had he had some legal
fees a million dollars. Wow, how many January six ers
still have legal fees? How many Americans suffered under the
Biden DOJ. Remember when the Biden DOJ responded in what

(23:49):
it's one of the most evil things ever done in
this country. Roeversus Wade got overturned, and they were so
angry about it that the DOJ dug up in old
law that wasn't even being used to Face Act and
used that old law to justify sending the FBI after

(24:10):
pro lifers. Sending the FBI after pro lifers and by
the way, not giving them a misdemeanor ticket or something,
sending them to prison, federal prison. That's what the DOJ
did did Lindsey Graham, ever one time mentioned a carve

(24:31):
out for them their legal fees. There. These weren't powerful,
rich senators. Most of these people were lower class, barely
middle class who pastors don't make a lot of money.
Pro lifers who read the Bible, sing worship songs had
their lives completely destroyed. I wonder what their legal fees are.

(24:55):
Lindsey Graham never even pretended to care. This stuff draws
me frigging nuts. All right, let's move on. I want
to trash Democrats. Here was Jason Crowe remember that video
they put out military military c I a, hey, maybe
you guys should subvert the president. Remember that he got

(25:16):
it pretty good on Fox.

Speaker 9 (25:18):
What are you talking about specifically?

Speaker 3 (25:20):
Yeah, yeah, I appreciate your asking him.

Speaker 6 (25:21):
Well.

Speaker 10 (25:22):
Number one, the protest with Lafayette Square in the first
Trump administration where he said, can't you just shoot them?
Can't you just shoot them in the legs or something?
That's a direct quote, and of course uther than Chairman.

Speaker 3 (25:32):
Of the Jointcraft. That was not a military order. That
was a comment.

Speaker 10 (25:36):
Well, that's coming from the President of the United States
to your commit to your generals.

Speaker 3 (25:40):
Don't you think that's a request I'm asking specifically what
you're talking about.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (25:47):
Number two, he's also threatened to send the military into
Chicago and other cities to quote go to war with
those cities.

Speaker 1 (25:54):
Right.

Speaker 3 (25:54):
That is a very very disturbing thing.

Speaker 10 (25:56):
Number three, he's also alluded to sending troops to polling stations,
which is actually a violation of US law. US criminal
law prohibits troops from going to polling stations, and he's
alluded to that.

Speaker 3 (26:08):
So those are just one of many examples.

Speaker 9 (26:10):
You're talking about Trump allusions. You're not talking about actual policy.
You're not talking about things that are members of our
service members who we revere and respect, are actually being
asked to do so. When you see this video on
exactly all over the place, when you see this video
on social media, I think a lot of people scratch

(26:30):
their heads and they say, what exactly are they talking about?
Are they talking about not allowing gunboats to make it
to the United States carrying drugs?

Speaker 3 (26:39):
Is I mean? Is that what you're talking about? Martha,
here's a novel idea.

Speaker 10 (26:43):
How about we actually prevent things from happening before they
become a problem.

Speaker 9 (26:47):
I think that's what they're trying to do.

Speaker 3 (26:48):
That you're what you're saying.

Speaker 10 (26:49):
What you're saying is we have to wait until there's
a problem to respond to that problem.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
Yeah, he goes on and on and on. He can't
answer the question because the answer to the question is
what he can't voice. We talked about this last night.
They put out that video because they want communists inside
the CIA in the military to subvert the Trump administration.

(27:15):
They want people to ignore orders. They essentially want them
to revolt. They can't use those words, so they had
to once again carry those people right up to the
line of illegality stop there so they themselves don't get
in trouble. But every communist inside the CIA knew what

(27:39):
they were talking about. Every communist who's still inside the
military knew what they were talking about. They all did.
It's the Jayapal thing. Every communist who heard this knew
exactly what she was saying.

Speaker 11 (27:52):
We might call this getting strike ready. I think of
it as getting us strike ready or street ready. And
part of that is understanding our own strength, and as
we developed that strength, being able to assess our risk tolerance,
because we know that risk tolerance increases as the severity
of the situation increases, and as our own understanding of

(28:14):
what's happening increases. So overall, the more we understand what's effective,
what the risks are, and who's ready to participate, the
more impact we can have.

Speaker 1 (28:25):
That's enough of all that. I can't take it. Let's
move on, shall we. Let's do listen to how wonderful
this is, Jesse, because of your words in God's timing.
Two years ago I joined the water and sewer board
of my small town. This year I ran for counsel
and won the primary for one of the three seats.
There are people out there who are pretending to be

(28:46):
conservatives who are really malcontents and can very much hurt
a town if allowed. I am just a dude who
got involved. Thank you for cajoling us, Chris is out.
How you say that word cajoling? I do? I nailed it.
Stop the coming, thank you? No, thank you? He did
request Howard Dean's scream. And anyone who gets off the

(29:07):
couch and gets involved definitely has earned it. Now, let's
get rid of that loser employee who makes your life harder,
shall we. Let's get rid of that person. You I'm
sure are worried about replacing them, though you can't have
an empty desk. How do you find somebody good and fast? Well,

(29:30):
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(29:52):
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Speaker 7 (31:08):
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Speaker 1 (31:19):
I know it's not the weekend quite yet, but we're
almost there, Chris, We're almost there. Remember you need to
email your ask doctor Jesse questions in right now to
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. So there's a story
you're not going to care about it. I really don't
care about it, but it maybe think of something before
I get to emails. Chinese astronauts left stranded aboard a

(31:41):
space station. So don't you feel like we get these
headlines a lot and nothing ever happens. It turns out
they're always fine. Now I'm not by the way, I'm
not wanting something bad to happen to any astronaut, but
they always turn out fine. What, Chris, That's exactly my point,

(32:06):
Chris said. Chris said, isn't a delayed flight something that
leaves you stranded? I feel like they overseell how hard
it is to go get somebody out of a space station.

Speaker 12 (32:18):
Now.

Speaker 1 (32:18):
I know it's expensive, I know it's complicated. I know
a lot of people have had to do a lot
of work and research, and I understand the lives that
were lost as we figured out space travel. I got
all that. I understand that. But when's the last time
you gave a crap about astronauts stranded? You never have,
and you know why you didn't, because they always come

(32:40):
back alive. At some point in time, someone has to die. Now,
I'm not rooting for it, Chris. It's not what I'm saying.
I'm not rooting for it. If every time they get
stranded they survive, that's not inspiring. You know what was
inspiring Apollo thirteen. I watched the movie because we all

(33:03):
thought they were gonna die, and it looked like people
were gonna die, and they had to jimmy rig this
and Jimmy rig that and move this wire over there,
and oh my gosh, the freezing to death. It was intense.
I feel like they just have to float around a
little longer out there. Am I wrong? It's that there's
no risk, there's no spice to it. There is a

(33:26):
risk going to Chicago. Remember that story. We we played
your little audio of it yesterday. It's spring terrible story.
Some guy who's committed more crimes than you can count
set some woman on fire. And of course it's just
awful set some woman on fire. All those judges should

(33:47):
be sent to prison, everyone who ever turned him loose.
But setting that aside, they had a little mini press
conference today and this guy said something that we have
to address here.

Speaker 3 (33:57):
He was, Yeah, perhaps people were afraid to get involved.

Speaker 12 (34:01):
But what we could say is even as she was
on the ground trying to get put herself out and
is rolling on the ground desperately trying to put out
the fire, no one came to her aid until she.

Speaker 3 (34:13):
Was able to get off the get off the.

Speaker 12 (34:15):
Train and to the platform, and when she finally stumbled down,
two Samaritans came and put out all the blaze that
was all consuming.

Speaker 1 (34:26):
Okay, I want to be the type of person who
would immediately jump on that woman and try to put
the fire out. And I want you to be that
type of person too. That's kind of I don't know
that I'm that guy either. I'm not telling you I am.
I hope, so you don't know until someone's on fire
right in front of you. I want to be that
type of guy. But we also have to understand what

(34:51):
has brought us here. These big cities are communist city
states with complete communist rule from top to bottom. In
these cities, they let violent criminals out on purpose. They
want them raping and murdering and setting people on fire.

(35:13):
And they have proven time and time again that if
you try to stop the animals they let out of prison,
they will come after you. Remember in New York City,
Daniel Penny, United States Marine. He stopped that nutball before
he hurt someone on the subway and the drugged out

(35:34):
lunatic died. This is a United States Marine. This is
an American hero who stopped the bad guy in New
York City tried to send him to state prison for it.
Barely got out of that one with his life and
livelihood barely. What lesson do you think that teaches other

(35:55):
potential good Samaritans. You don't want to get involved. Minneapolis
after George Floyd sat George Floyd died of a fentanyl overdose,
sent multiple cops to prison. One of them, you can
go look at pictures of him, the Asian cop, Asian
looking cop. I forget his name. His name escapes me.

(36:16):
Sorry about that.

Speaker 13 (36:18):
He was just standing off to the side doing traffic
control during the entire interaction. That was it, standing to
the side, making sure no one got driven over or.

Speaker 1 (36:31):
Anything like that.

Speaker 13 (36:33):
They sent the cop to prison for five years.

Speaker 1 (36:36):
He just got out. He just got out, five years
without his family, five years gone. That was a cop
who did traffic control. You cannot routinely assault the good
guys with the justice system and then look around wondering

(36:58):
why is nobody helping every time some monster does another
monster thing. The good people in these communist city states,
and maybe you're listening right now from one of them,
the good people in these communist city states are starting
to completely understand. They have no friends, you have no
state protection. The cops are not going to do it,

(37:21):
the judges are not going to do it, the mayor
is not going to do it. If you try to
stop one of the animals, they will, they'll they'll hammer
you for it. So people move on, They don't want
to get involved. They keep their heads down, their mouths shut,
and they walk away, or they just sit and watch
while some young woman is burning alive on the train.

(37:44):
I hate it. I'm disgusted by it. But this is
the consequence of Democrat rule. If you're in one of
these cities and you vote for Democrats, you did this.
You are the reason they're a rapists and murderers everywhere.
You're the reason people don't help anymore. If if you
vote for Democrats, you are responsible for every one of
these incidents. And I know you want to wash your

(38:06):
hands of that. It was one incident, it was this,
It was just this. No, you're a Democrat, you're a destroyer.
You're the reason it's all bad. Now, how do we
ensure we're the type of people who would jump on
that woman try to put out a fire. I know
a little testosterone would help. I know that you know

(38:28):
chok get your tea levels through the roof? Did you
know that? Why do you think there's a low T
clinic on every street corner in your town? Now they're everywhere.
But why it was never that. I never saw one
my whole life. Now they're everywhere because America is waking
up and realizing that our testosterone levels are in free fall.
We've lost fifty percent of our tea levels in fifty years.

(38:51):
That is catastrophic. A male vitality stack from Chalk turn
it around twenty percent incre in ninety days. And right
now it's Black Friday special time during the month of November.
When you get a subscription, they send you a free

(39:11):
bag of chocolate powder that's ninety nine bucks normally free.
Choq Chalk dot com slash Jesse Chalk dot com slash Jesse.
All right, in the final hour, we're gonna talk about
this gigantic fraud scheme apparently done by Somali's in Minnesota.

(39:33):
We are gonna talk about the purge, if you will,
of violent communists. We're gonna talk about Trump not being
invited to Dick Cheney's funeral. Next
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