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August 21, 2025 • 34 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Apparently we're gonna play our ones opening music for our
two tonight. I don't know why. It's Jewish producer Chris
did it. And now I'm in a better mood again.
Maybe we should just keep that rolling, Chris. It's our
two of the world famous Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday.
We'll talk about visas, we'll talk about well flooding Boston

(00:25):
with a new aggressive attitude on the right, all that emails,
so much more coming up. Oh and I'd be remiss
if I did not mention the news from earlier in
the day that evil which Letitia James ag of New
York got that ridiculous judgment against Trump four hundred and
sixty four million dollars, which was just the most egregious

(00:46):
lawfair in the world. Today that got struck down again,
another reason to celebrate. It's a great day. It is
a great day. Now. We played for you earlier Boston's
mayor Michelle Wou that dirty communist, that the Boston people
of Boston made a terrible mistake and elected her, and

(01:08):
how she's going to stand up to ice the response.
I just I love the attitude change on the right.
The response has been amazing. Headline Ice to flood Boston
after leftist mayor rejects Bondie's sanctuary policy, demands we have

(01:29):
such a better attitude now, such a better attitude on
how we deal with these communists. Now we have finally
let go of this ridiculous fiction that we can point
out their hypocrisy, or we can point out their bias,
or we can point out their evil deeds and somehow

(01:51):
change their ways. These people are religious zealots, and you
must deal with them aggressively. You must be ag great
with communists, because they only understand fear and pain. You
are never ever, ever, ever, ever, in a million years
going to point out the communists hypocrisy or bias, or

(02:13):
point to the evil things he's done and win him
over or shame him because he's not capable of that.
It's not humanly possible. I'll ask you again. I've asked
it a million times. To this day, I've never heard one.
We got a thousand emails a day to the show.
I've never had one response. Name for me the Democrat

(02:37):
in your life, not the politicians and media people. Name
the Democrat you know who watched Donald Trump get arrested
and charged with crimes, and several jurisdictions cooked up crimes.
Name the Democrat in your life who said that was wrong?
Who says today that was wrong. We shouldn't used our

(03:00):
power to arrest and imprison our political opponent. Nobody knows
a single Democrat in the country. So if that's what
you're dealing with, if you're dealing with somebody who can't
bring themselves to at least say that, well, I guess
maybe we shouldn't send the FBI to rifle through his
wife's underwear drawer. If there's not a single Democrat to

(03:23):
say that, then fine, it's not ideal. How do we
deal with it with aggression? When La started to say
you can't come here, don't come here, we'll do protests,
what did we do? We announced we were going to
dig into the funding of these protests and send in
the marines. Fine, you have your protesters, we have infantry marines.

(03:47):
Let's see who wins that. One. Boston's mayor gets up
and says, no, not in my backyard. Oh yeah, in
your backyard. We're now going to park it there. Did
you see minor thing? It's not a big story. But
Pete hag Seth and JD. Vance they went down to
the to Union station in Washington, d C. To go

(04:10):
look at how much cleaner it is now that Trump
sent in the National Guard and they cleaned up all
the crime in DC. Well when they were there, you
know what actually paused on that for a moment. Do
you remember the Brett Kavanaugh hearings. Do you remember that worthless,
effeminate loser, Jeff Flake. He used to be a senator
from Arizona. Do you remember why Brett Cavanaugh almost didn't

(04:33):
get through. We had all the votes and then Jeff
Flake wavered. Why did Jeff Flake waiver because some communist
street animal obviously paid some communist street animal woman pinned
him in an elevator and started screaming in his face.

(04:54):
You can go look at pictures and video of it
to this day, and he's sitting there looking like he
wants to crawl into the floor and die, sheepish, afraid,
looking down and that it's like throwing blood in the
water for sharks because some animal screamed in his face.

(05:17):
He was going to vote no on Brett Kavanaugh until
he got threatened from within the GOP conference he got
threatened and he switched his vote back to yes. Now,
contrast that with jd Vance and Pete hag Seth walking
through Union Station. Of course, there's another paid probably street

(05:38):
animal there starts screaming at jd Vance, screaming at Pete
hagg Seth, making a big scene, and they both laughed
at her. There's great video of it. There's a great
picture of it of the just hey, look they're both
pointing at her, laughing. We have completely changed our mentality

(06:01):
on how to deal with these savages. You must deal
with them with aggression. With aggression. Yeah. By the way,
if you want to follow the show, I have my
own personal account on x but there's also a Jesse
Kelly's show account where Chris and Corey run it and
they put these amazing videos of me and other things.

(06:24):
What Chris, they put amazing videos on there. They're all
of me. Anyway, we'll put the picture or video up
on there if you want to go see it. It's
wild to watch it. It's great to watch the mentality shift.
You cannot deal gently with animals, with rabbit animals, you
have to deal with them with aggression, and we are

(06:45):
changing that slowly. Don't get me wrong. Slowly, it's not
happening all at once. But I'll tell you what. I'll
played something for you. This is going to be unrelated
to anything we just talked about. This guy's name is
Lewis Goodall's talking about inheritance taxes. One of the most
egregious things in the world. That you pay taxes on

(07:06):
everything in your life, and then when you die, the
government steps in and sticks its greedy fingers in and
grabs a bunch of your wealth before you can hand
it to your children and their children. It's so wrong
on so many levels. Listen to this.

Speaker 3 (07:23):
I would not be against a far higher rate of
inheritance tax than we have at the moment, which is
forty percent above a certain threshold. I wouldn't be opposed
to putting that to fifty percent, sixty percent, seventy percent.
Why because I think the quid pro quo should be twofold.
One that helps fund public services, which actually helps level
the playing field in achieving a true meritocracy. Two it

(07:45):
will help us reduce taxes on income. Because at the
end of the day, I want to incentivize work, I
want to incentivize productivity, I want to incentivize people to
get up off their backsides and do more. You don't
have a right to inherit. You should have a right
to be able to work while you're alive and keep
more of your own money. That to me is more important,

(08:08):
way more important than your rights. Just inherit some money
from mommy and daddy that you did nothing to earn.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
That's a thief. That's what all these communists are in
the end. Dirty, filthy thieves, that's what they are. Ugly
destroyers who feel entitled to what you have, who feel
entitled to destroy everything good and wonderful. That's a filthy thief,

(08:36):
who feels entitled to what your parents earned. You have
to deal with these people with aggression, Jessie, thank you
for discussing the Northern Pow Camps. Oh, by the way,
we did in case you missed it, we did a
history of Andersonville. It's that Confederate famous Confederate prison from
the Civil War. Yesterday there was an hour, a little

(08:59):
bit more than an hour. iHeart Spotify iTunes if you
want to download the podcast anyway. Thank you for discussing
the Northern Pow Camps. Between my husband and I we
have two grandfathers who died in different Illinois camps, and
two great great grandfathers who died in battle. All fought
for the Confederacy on my side. One died in the

(09:20):
Battle with the Wilderness. None of these men owned slaves.
They all fought for their constitutional freedoms. The South being destroyed,
all these families moved to Texas afterwards. They left legacies
of Christian duty in their new communities. I appreciate your
honesty in the portrayal of history. I will always attempt

(09:40):
to deliver history just as it was, not in these
ridiculous biased ways. And that's almost all you can find now,
are these dirty communists who have to present every single
history story as America sucks, or white people suck, or
of course the child So the Confederates were all Nazis?

(10:02):
Are all these ridiculous things. Just talk about history. Put
your biases aside, and look, I have my own biases, then,
I'm sure. Look you're not a moron. I'm sure you
can hear them when they come through. I try to
be honest about them, and I can't take them completely
out of me. I do the best I can do
when I talk history with you, to deliver it straight.

(10:24):
I will not always succeed at that. I am glad
you enjoyed it very much. Now, how many people have
visas are currently in the US? And I'm not talking
about the credit card?

Speaker 4 (10:36):
What is that number?

Speaker 2 (10:38):
We'll discuss that number in a moment. It is the
Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic, fantastic Thursday, reminding you
that tomorrow's ask Doctor Jesse Friday, and you need to
get your questions emailed in right now to Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com, so it's not off. I get

(11:01):
a headline that makes my eyes pop out of my head.
This one did. This is from the ap Trump administration
reviewing all fifty five million people with US visas for
potential deportable violations. How many there are fifty five million

(11:30):
people with visas? Exactly? How much? How much have we
handed this country over to people who don't live here? Look,
Jewish producer Chris crunched the numbers. That's sixteen percent of
the population. Sixteen percent of the population. Why is housing

(11:54):
so unaffordable? Well, did you think those fifty five million
people we're sleeping in cardboard boxes? No, they have apartments,
they have homes, they have condos. Why why is traffic
so bad? Sixteen percent? Sixteen percent of the population. And

(12:17):
I'm not saying you can't ever give visa to somebody.
I know there are work visas and student visas and
I got all that. That's fine. Fifty five million. Just
how out of control has the United States State Department
have been? How out of control is the United States
State Department? I'm going to give you one. This is

(12:38):
something you might not know that I actually found out
today and now I'm bringing it to you. You know,
as a journalist, it's journalists. Jesse. There's just no one better.

Speaker 1 (12:51):
We love Jesse. He's the best.

Speaker 2 (12:52):
Jesse. Please kiss my baby? Yes e Jesse, Jesse, Jesse, Jesse.
You know Xi Jinping, the communist dictator of China. You
know where his daughter goes to college? Harvard. We I'm serious, Chris,
Chris is about to lose his mind. We took the

(13:14):
daughter of the dictator who attacks us in every possible way,
and we allow her. She may have already graduated. I
don't know. We allow or allowed her to attend the
most prestigious university on the planet. These people who the
people who have been running the United States of America

(13:34):
have bent over backwards, and you know, in Lindsey Graham's case, forwards,
to hand our country away to foreigners as fast as
humanly possible. Doesn't that fill you up with rage? As
fast as human as fast as they could, they handed

(13:55):
your country away to people who don't live here, who
aren't invested in it, aren't loyal to it. Man, you
know what I need to do? Emails. It's gonna make
me too mad. I'm gonna end up shouting. By the way,
we have a Congressman Chip Roy joining us five minutes
from now. Five minutes and now ten minutes are now
something I don't know. I don't do time. That's Chris's job.
Bronco Jesse. I'm a few months away from USPS retirement

(14:20):
after forty years of service. How about that, man? That's cool.
I make world class baked goods. My friends and colleagues
there have enjoyed them and have offered to pay more.
Should I risk a clandestine under the table baked goods
operation or simply call it a career? Dude? Don't retire,

(14:42):
I mean, don't get wrong. Retire from the USPS forty years.
You've done your job. I'm sure you've got hopefully, I
mean it's government. I'm sure you've got a nice thing
going on, nice retirement of some kind. Go rock your
bake goods, I will tell you will. I will warn
you though this is not me talking you out of it.

(15:02):
I like a good baked good as much as an
x man. The baked goods market, at least in my area,
is a little saturated because women saturated, these housewives. And
but by the way, I applaud them. If you're a
woman who does this, I think it's an awesome gig.

(15:23):
Women who end up the kids go off to school,
they have more time in their hands. Maybe they're just
trying to make it a little extra scratch, make ends meet.
Women will start baking things and selling them. You see
it all over the place.

Speaker 4 (15:37):
And you know how I know this.

Speaker 2 (15:38):
Because OB always feels the need to buy some. Well,
we have to because Tina's making these special cakes.

Speaker 5 (15:45):
Why do we have to buy all the baked goods.
She doesn't even eat the baked goods. And then I
get yelled at for how bad I eat. Anyway, I
don't mean to go off on a tangent. There are
a lot of women making these baked goods out there
because they're all over Facebok, book and everything else.

Speaker 2 (16:01):
So that's not me talking you out of it.

Speaker 1 (16:03):
It's warning you that the market, depending on how many
women there are in your area, the market may be
a little bit saturated when it comes to those particular
bait goods. All right, now, let's.

Speaker 2 (16:14):
Talk speaking of Jijinping, let's talk about China because we
have a bribery problem in this country. China knows we
have a bribery problem in this country, and it has
infected a lot of things. So here's what we're gonna do.
We're gonna go talk to Chip Roy, and then when
we're done with Chip Roy, we're gonna talk about China

(16:35):
bribing us, and then we get back through some more
emails and other stuff. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a fantastic Thursday. The week is almost over, and
it does my heart well to welcome in my friend congressman, well,
I guess currently congressman from the state of Texas, Chip Roy. Hey, Chip,

(16:57):
are you gonna keep being a congressman?

Speaker 4 (17:00):
Well, Jesse, great to be on the show. Yeah, I'll
be in Congress for at least sixteen more months tormenting
every soul I can in Washington, DC, trying to I
think one headline today said I was a quote nuisance
to a leadership in Washington, which is I wear the
badge of honor. It's actually my job. But yeah, look,
that'll be the end of my fourth term. Can you
believe it? Jesse has already been in the eight years

(17:22):
and it's time. It's time to come home to Texas.
So yeah, happy to come home to Texas and take
on the next chapter here.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
Okay, well, I mean we might as well just walk
right through that door. What is this next chapter?

Speaker 4 (17:36):
Well, I'll be running for Attorney General of Texas. We
put out that announcement today. It's been a great response
from people all over the state. Were frankly overwhelmed by
all the outpouring of support. Obviously a lot of sport
for my colleagues, people here at home, crass Fred's people
in Texas, and a look, Jesse, it's pretty simple. In fact,
I saw you tweeted out something a little bit earlier

(17:58):
where somebody was talking about how you don't get generational
wealth if you have kids before you're thirty, and you
tweeted that you know, the opposite is true, and in fact,
the kids are the wealth. And you know, when I
think about our legacy, you know I get hit by
train tomorrow. Whatever, it's what we leave behind, it's our kids.
I want to run FORRAG to be able to fight,
to defend the Texas that I know and that I love,

(18:20):
the Texas that my grandparents lived in, the Texas that
our forefathers thought for. You know, we're under assault in
so many different ways. I want Texas to remain free.
I want it to be the greatest state and the
greatest country in the history of the world. And you
need an Attorney General with the ability and the desire
to fight, but also to know how to win and
to be unafraid to win. And that's that's why I'm

(18:41):
coming back and running for AG.

Speaker 2 (18:43):
Be honest, at least in part, you made this decision
because the food in Washington, d c. Sucks. It doesn't
even make any sense that a time with that much
money has that crappy of a restaurant situation. You're just
tired of eating there and chip.

Speaker 4 (18:56):
Well you got I mean, look, every time I come
home and I go to matsill ran So or good
Mahdi's or I go get some barbecue, one of the
great barbecue places in Austin. You know, I'm reminded as
to why being here as far superior to being in Washington, DC.
There's no question.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
Okay, update us before you leave that place and become
our next Attorney general. Update us on Washington, d C.
On what's coming, the good, the bad, and the ugly.
You're always very forthcoming with us about that.

Speaker 4 (19:24):
Well, look, we obviously got through the Big Beautiful Bill,
which I think was overwhelmingly a win. Now, obviously I
had some things with it that weren't exactly where I
wanted it to be. But that's what I meant when
I say you got to be unafraid to win. You
got to be able to take things as you move
the ball forward, you know, gain three yards in a
cloud of dust. And we did that with the Big
Beautiful Bill. The president's now, you know, taking on a

(19:45):
lot of the great important issues of the day. His
executive ranch is acting, his omb director, Russfote, my dear friend,
is doing great work. Scott Besson is doing great work.
I think the economy can now trend in the right direction.
So now we just got to do our job and
hold spending flat and sept And I think our Democrat
college are going to come in and try to rattle
about shutdown. They want to try to pin that on
the president. But the President's ready to do what we

(20:07):
said we would do, which is whole spending flat, fun
government the right way by reducing its size and scope.
And so that's going to be the big fight of September.
There's other things we're gonna have to deal with. You know,
I'm trying to get a stock trading ban for members
of Congress. I've been leading on that issue for five years.
I think we've got a bipartisan group willing to do
that and I want to lean into that fight. And

(20:28):
then there's other things we need to finish up. We
need to improve on some election integrity stuff like the
Save Act that there was my bill that we passed,
and you know, things like that. But I think we're
going to have I'm hopeful that we will be able
to deliver on a good bill that we'll keep spending
flat and reduce it. But Democrats are going to fight.

Speaker 3 (20:45):
Us, no doubt.

Speaker 2 (20:46):
Can we talk about this again. When speaking with Chip Roy,
Congressman Chip Roy announcing his candidacy for Texas the Attorney
General today, can we talk about this insider trading because
this is one of those things it's bonkers that it's
still go at all. Democrats do it, Republicans do it.
It's obvious the whole public can see that people are
very clearly inside our trading, which is illegal, and yet

(21:10):
this is something that hasn't gone through yet. It blows
my mind that's such an easy win has eluded us.

Speaker 4 (21:16):
Well, you're exactly right. I mean this is again, I
introduced this bill back in I think twenty twenty, and
I've had the most number of co sponsors of any
bill out there. But we've had resistance because you get
a bunch of Republicans and go, well, I'm remember Congress,
I have a right to you know, trade, I've been
in besting you know, my whole life. I've built up
this stuff or whatever. I'm going. Look, man, if your job,

(21:37):
if you want to focus on day trading, then leave Congress.
I mean it's not a you don't have a right
to be in Congress. You're asking for that, you know, honor,
to be able to go serve and represent the people.
So my view on. It is pretty simple. We ought
to just you know, if you come into Congress, you
got your stuff, you know, keep it there, but you
can't trade. You got to you know, make it like

(22:00):
the sovoids. You can put it in broad broadly held
mutual funds, that kind of thing. But we shouldn't be
trading while we're voting on this crap. It's crazy, Like,
how can you have an honest opinion about whether you're
going to break up a big tech company, or say
a big hospital conglomoration or insurance company, or Obamacare policies
or anything else when you're trading the very stocks, or
like if you're trading defense stocks and you're voting on

(22:21):
all of the defense contracts, the conflict of interest is
so high. So we should be in broadly held mutual
funds so we can just be honestly up there doing
our job and if you don't like it, then leave.
Like people were going, shit, you know, we need you
up there. Even five I said, guys, this will be
my fourth term eight years. We don't like kings, like
we don't want people who are there permanently. I've done

(22:43):
my job up there. I'm going to come back if
they'll hire me for the job of ag I'm happy
to fight for the Texans here, but we just don't
need people up there sitting up there in perpetuity day
trading and enriching themselves.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
What's been the best part of the job. I know
that you have not enjoyed your time there. Who would
but to have been some good things about it?

Speaker 4 (23:02):
Yeah, no question. I mean, look like working with a
lot of my good friends and the Freedom Caucus to
stand up make some real changes, and we've made some
fundamental changes. Things that you don't even really pay attention to.
Bills that used to just fly off the floor we
blocked and we now have a process for doing them
the right way. Obviously, through the speakers fight, we got
more conservatives on committees. We now have more rational conversations

(23:22):
about spending. We have made a real difference in Washington.
But if you ask me what my favorite part of
it all is, it's representing constituents. It's one of the
reasons I would love to be ag to serve all
thirty three million Texans rather than just the three quarters
of a million people that I represent in Texas twenty one.
But going through the floods Jessee and going through what
happened in Kerville, watching the response to the people that
I represent, the people of faith, you know, the strong

(23:46):
men and women that have served in our first responders,
and our men and women in blue, the law enforcement
community that showed up, even some of my colleagues. I mean,
you know, you had both Morgan and Marcus Latrell were
up there with others, their buddies out there with their
die having equipment and trying to help people deal with
the floods. And it was an outpouring of support that
I got. To be honest, it was the final decision

(24:07):
for me about running for age the ability to serve
in an executive branch function to go help the people
that I represent, to go fight for them. Look, it
gives me a lot of prize. There's a lot of
so many good people out there. You know. Government is
just government is a barrier to the otherwise great people
that are the American people. And if we can just
get government back into its limited role serving people to

(24:28):
do its basic job, then this country will always prosper.
So that's that's my goal.

Speaker 2 (24:33):
Speaking with Congressmanship Royd Ship, before I let you go,
what's our blind spot right now? On the right. I
know we're feeling pretty high right now. It feels like
the Communists are on their heels a bit, and that's
a good thing that they are. But we're always missing something.
What are we missing right now?

Speaker 4 (24:51):
Look? I think to the extent that we have a
blind spot, it's going to be if we don't do
the common sense things, some of which we've already talked about,
like one should ban the congressional stock trading, right, that's
common sense, Like don't let the Democrats outflank you. We
shouldn't get too arrogant about the whole redistricting process. As
the way for us to save the House, we should

(25:11):
just keep leading the House needs that. We need to
be out there passing good legislation. We need to deliver,
and importantly, we've got to deliver on the spending front.
If we will hold spending and check this fall, then
we will send strong signals to the market, and then
we'll be able to get economic growth going in the
right direction. But our blind spot is basically arrogance, right
Our blind spot is believing that Democrats are so crazy

(25:33):
they can never get elected. We have to go earn
those votes, and we have to earn the right for
them to support us. And you do that by doing
what you said you would do, and that's holding spending
and check. Continue to secure the border. Do not even
dance with anything we're remotely resembling amnesty. Continue to do
the job we said we would do. If we go
down the road of established Republicans, amnesty, big spending, right,

(25:56):
those traps, we lose if we'll go out and fight
for the people. To Senator, we.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
Went amen, rooting for you. Thank you, brother, I appreciate
you very much. All right, is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a fantastic Thursday. Do not forget that tomorrow's a ask.
I just the pen banged off the microphone, sting. Could
you hear that? Chris? You could hear it? Does that
mean the audience could hear it too? I can't do anything, Chris,

(26:23):
it's a live show. I can't put the pen back.
My hands are so big. It was the pen that what? Anyway?
Don't forget Tomorrow's ask doctor Jesse Friday, and you need
to get your questions emailed in now the Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com. Also, Chris, I forgot to tell
you Corey, I completely space telling you guys, I should

(26:44):
have told you off air, but now I'm just gonna
tell you in front of every of everybody. I have
exciting news. I'm a robe guy. Now did you know that?

Speaker 4 (26:56):
Don't roll your right?

Speaker 2 (26:57):
Why are you making that face? Chris? I have a
completely different outlook on life now that I have a robe.

Speaker 4 (27:08):
What happened?

Speaker 2 (27:08):
But you know how I told you ab It's like
the worst thing in the world that could ever happen
to you is letting your wife discover Cozy Earth. Already
told you about that. One benefit was she does this
to butter me up, to weaken my defenses. You know
that's women. Don't think we don't know what you're doing.
That's why God made women so hot. It weakens our defenses.

(27:29):
She bats those pretty eyes at me, and then she'll
give me a little something. She discovered Cozy Earth. She
got me a bathrobe, only I don't use it. I
don't take baths right, So instead of it being a bathrobe,
it's just what I wear around the house. Now when
I get home, all clothes get dropped off immediately. No,

(27:53):
not I wear underwear. Chris, Why do you have to
make it weird? I wear underwear, but my robe goes on.
If you need me, if I have to take the
trash out, I'll be in my robe. If I'm sitting
there watching TV, I'll be in my robe. This morning,
Ob went to go volunteer at the church or do
something to give back. I only care about me, so

(28:14):
I stayed at home. Kids were in school, Bob was gone.
I cracked open a book in my robe. I'm a
robe guy now, and now she's making all these threats.
She's threatening that she's going to burn it or something
if I go to the gas station in it. I'm
totally going to the gas station in it. There's nothing

(28:35):
that's going to stop me from doing that. All of
her threats have fallen on deaf ears. I'm now a
robe guy, and I don't understand. While you're shaking her head, Chris,
do you have a rope? Do you wear it? You
don't wear your robe? Well, you can't call yourself a
robe guy if you have one and don't wear a

(28:57):
Corey Are you a robe guy? Cory's not a robe guy.
I just see life differently than you two do. Right,
We robe people were I don't want to say higher.
I bet definitely above you, definitely above you. I don't
want what Chris, I don't want to I'm not putting
anybody down. But once you're a robe guy, you understand

(29:20):
non robe guys they don't know what's up. They don't
know what's up. You're missing out on life. You're missing
out on life. By the way, a US Navy sailor
got convicted of spying for China. Just to let you know,
that's like a really, really, really big deal. When you're
you're in the United States military and you start spying

(29:44):
on behalf of another country. Uh, he is facing the
possibility of life in prison. Now, Remember I told you
a long time ago I talked to a Chinese insider,
not Eric Swallwell, a different one. I talk to you
about what China, what they think about us as far

(30:05):
as bribery goes. They think we're cheap, that it's cheap
to buy Americans, it's cheap to buy our politicians, our
universities are military personnel. Would you like to know how
much money China paid this gentleman for a life sentence

(30:27):
twelve thousand dollars. Twelve thousand dollars he sold out America
and very young man will probably never see freedom again,
possibly never see freedom again. I mean, don't get me wrong.

(30:50):
You can buy a lot of robes for twelve thousand dollars.
What Chris, You can buy a lot of robes for that,
but twelve thousand dollars given the price today, I don't
think twelve thousand dollars buys you a Kia. You can't
even get a car for twelve thousand dollars at this
point in time today. What Chris?

Speaker 4 (31:07):
What?

Speaker 2 (31:10):
No, he didn't sell out America for a Kia. He
sold out America for a third of akia twelve thousand dollars.
Combine that with this story. Eric Adams, Chinese staffer says,
quote a culture thing made her stuff cash and a
bag of chips for a reporter. It's just how they

(31:33):
operate here. It's just what they do. Americans are cheap,
and I hate that about us. And I don't mean
like Chris type of cheap.

Speaker 1 (31:41):
I mean word, we just sell out for nothing, for
absolutely nothing.

Speaker 2 (31:45):
It's crazy to me. Let's go save a baby's life
before we do some emails. I am very pleased to
tell you that you have saved thousands of lives already
through preborn. The word on what preborn does has gone out.
People now give in the name of other people. You know,

(32:06):
I'm want to give in the name of my mother
who died, or a child we lost, or the people
are now giving from their inheritance. Yep, twenty eight dollars
buys an ultrasound. Maybe you've only got eight dollars, give
it to preborn. They're giving an ultrasound to a woman
who was about to abort her baby. If she gets

(32:27):
that ultrasound, she'll choose life. Almost every time she chooses life,
because once you hear the heartbeat, as a mom, you
can't kill your baby. You can lie to yourself and
say it's not a baby, but a heartbeat at your baby.
Go to preborn dot com slash jesse and save a

(32:48):
life tonight preborn dot com slash jesse. All right, all right, Bronco,
what is your recipe on Kraftmac. I've discovered half and
half is the key to Kraft Mac and cheese, no
margarine garbage. All right, so I'm a bit of a

(33:09):
Kraft Mac expert if I may, and here's the solution.
I don't do half in half. Although I actually support
your I support your suggestion, I would. We usually don't
keep it in the house because I don't drink anything
with my coffee. I drink my coffee black, like John
Wayne intended anyway. With Kraft Mac one, don't be afraid

(33:33):
to add wieners. Remember mac and whenies. You get some
protein in there. But it's not required. Maybe you're not
a wiener person. It's fine, don't be afraid to add weenies.
But regular Kraft Mac requires this. I think it calls
for four tablespoons of butter. It's half a stick of butter.
Drop the whole stick in there, or at least close

(33:54):
to it, the three quarters of a stick. At least
you don't have to double the butter. But the butter
is the star of the show. A tiny, tiny, tiny
bit of milk. I don't even I don't measure anything.
The butter goes in the pan. Then I put the
pasta from the strainer on the butter. I load it
with black pepper. Your Kraft Mac has to be full

(34:16):
of black pepper. Pour the cheese in. Then I just
start mixing it. It's going it's a sound, what Chris,
It's a sound it makes. And then just a dab
of milk. That's all you need for creamy, delicious macinweeny goodness,
trust me on that we still have another hour. Hang on,
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