Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a Thursday. Here's what we have on tap for this hour.
We're gonna talk about this new poll that's out showing
Americans warming to mass deportation. We'll deal with that. We'll
(00:31):
deal with the debt, the economic dues. That's bad. We're
trying to get to a bunch of emails. Oh, that's
so much more coming up on the world famous Jesse
Kelly Show. Don't forget don't forget it all. You can
email the show and you should. You're ask doctor Jesse
questions for tomorrow. Email those into Jesse at Jesse kellyshow
(00:52):
dot com. Now let's talk maybe a hard talk to hear,
but let's talk power versus majority once again. There's a
poll out today. Axios ran with the story. It was
actually a Harris poll though if I remember right, it's
a poll, and what's the poll say, Well, here's the
(01:13):
title of the story. It says, exclusive poll American America
warms to mass deportations. Oh okay, all right, that sounds good.
Certainly right. We have to have mass deportations. We can't
save the country without them. You can't just import fifteen
(01:34):
million people in four years and save a country. You can't.
We have to have them. So that's good, right, And
we even have Union guys are coming out citing this
is the reason they're voting Republican. You hear this guy
in the past. We are basically Democrats, all of us.
Speaker 2 (01:49):
And after what's happened the last four years in this country,
they democrats are basically pushing everybody to the other side.
We're a very patriotic group, and we love our country
and we want the best for America. We are tired
of immigration, We're tired of our tax got dollars going
to immigration.
Speaker 1 (02:06):
We're tied of the crime.
Speaker 2 (02:08):
We need to put a handle on things in this
country and bring it back to how it should be.
Speaker 1 (02:12):
Okay. And so I've seen a lot of people celebrating
today over this pool. And here's the numbers of the pool.
Fifty one percent of the general public supports mass deportation.
Fifty one percent. Let me repeat that number, fifty one percent.
Broken down by ethnicity, fifty six percent of whites, forty
(02:32):
five percent of Latito's Latinos, forty percent of blacks, sixty
eight percent of Republicans, forty six percent of Independence forty
two percent of Democrats, Boomers sixty percent, Gen X fifty three,
Millennials forty eight, and Gen Z thirty five. Okay, so
a majority fifty one percent of Americans support mass deportation. Okay, Well,
(02:58):
let's just deal in reality here. Majority and power are
different things. We talk about it all the time on
the show. Majority and power are different things. In fact,
let's pause on that because this is getting a lot
of play today. Maybe you've seen this. This is a
(03:18):
construction worker. He caught a quick interview on TV. He's
in Manhattan. It's a construction worker asked about Trump Biden.
It's like seeing so many Republicans in Manhattan, so many
Trump supporters in Manhattan's that surprise you, No, not at all.
It's turning down. Trump's turning again. What's your message to
Joe Biden? You? Wow, No, it's turning. It's Trump's turn
(03:41):
what's your message to Biden? Beep you? Okay, construction worker
in Manhattan. Where do you think he lives? Does he
live in Manhattan?
Speaker 3 (03:54):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (03:54):
I have no doubt most of the construction crew that
they're all on the Trump train. That doesn't mean Manhattan's
on the Trump train, and the people who hold the
levers of power in Manhattan, they're not going to join
the Trump train when it comes to illegal immigration. This
(04:14):
goes back to the Cloward Piven strategy. You can go
look that up if you'd like. A couple of street communists, well,
never mind a couple of elite communists professors and they really,
really really hated America like many college professors do, like
frankly most of them do, but they really struggled with something.
In fact, this is the same thing the Soviet Union
(04:34):
struggled with for ages. How can you bring America down?
Because the pause for a moment and just admire America.
America is so insanely wealthy. People don't appreciate how crazy
the money situation is in this country. Our poor people
(04:57):
have smartphones in air conditioning and refrie duration in this country.
And I know you're thinking, wow, thanks, that's a lot man.
For other countries around the world, poor people don't have anything.
They're living in a ditch somewhere, there's an open sewer
running down the street in their town. In America, you
got running water, toilets that flush crazy wealth in this country.
(05:22):
And the Soviet Union, those dirty commies, they wanted to
bring America down. We wanted to bring them down to
prove that freedom is better. They wanted to bring us
down to prove that communism was better. But man, it
was a nightmare for them. How do you bring down
a twenty trillion dollar economy? How do you bring down
(05:42):
a country whose free market system has brought so many
out of poverty. It's wealthy, they can just make so
much stuff, They the natural resources. How do you How
would you ever take down America? It's hard, Gosh, it's
the borderline impossible. Well, you have to find a way
(06:06):
to do it from within. And there are two things
that can bring down any nation of any size, and
have done so many times throughout history. Debt and unchecked immigration.
Debt and unchecked immigration. You can't sit in lob missiles
(06:28):
at America if you're the Soviet Union and bring it down.
But what you can do is inject a contaminant, a
virus inside of America, let it grow, and then watch
it burn. The Cloward pivot strategy was by communists, and
it was designed to overwhelm America's systems overwhelm America's financial systems,
(06:53):
medical systems, education systems. And one of the main ways
you do that, on top of all the entitlement pros
is illegals. You allow them to pour into the country.
And so they have spent decades, decades doing that, dumping
as many illegals into the country as possible. But wait,
(07:16):
it actually gets worse, It gets deeper than that. How
could they get away with it? Okay, so some dirty
professors wanted to burn the country down. Why would we
let them? Why didn't someone stop them? Well, America's Democrat
Party was quickly consumed with immigrant fervor. Why not because
(07:39):
they gave a crap about you know, some people from
Mexico picking the crops. They cared about power, and they
understood these new arrivals can be a source of power.
So if the Republican Party's stance is nobody comes here,
but our stance is yeah, come here, Yeah, bring all
your friends. Yeah, I don't even care if you loved them, Well,
(08:00):
you're going to get more and more support. So this
goes way back to the sixties, the Immigration Act, everything
pouring in illegals and pouring an illegals. But then so
many other entities outside of basic communists. So many other
entities have realized how profitable this can become. Remember I
(08:23):
told you the story before, it's a while ago, about
me running for Congress in Arizona. So I get out
of the Marine c I haven't told you in a while.
I'm not going to go into the whole story. I
get out of the Marines. I go back to work
in construction. I start listening to more politics on the
radio because I'm working out of town. I'm reading more
political books than I ever had. I get mad about Obama.
I decide I'm going to run for office. I'm going
(08:45):
to run for Congress. I've never run for anything. I've
never been politically involved. I'm gonna run for Congress. I've
had enough. I'm gonna get out there. I'm doing it.
Uscrew these people. You know it's me I am. I
know you're gonna find this very very shocking. I am
hard right, hard right, and I didn't come around to
being a border hawk yesterday. I always have been one.
That's how you preserve a country, strict immigration enforcement, strict borders.
(09:09):
You preserve your country that way. So that was my
policy stance. Well, the Republican donor class in my area
in Arizona. They were interested in me, kind of feeling
me out. I was the leader for a while before
they threw in their establishment guy who I ended up
(09:29):
beating in the primary. But before he got on board,
they were looking around and wondering, Okay, who is this
upstart guy? He's running for Congress? What do we think
about him? Is he on our side? Is he not
on our side? And so I find out they want
to they want to sit down. They want to meet
a couple of these guys. I want to sit down
and feel me out. What's this guy all about? And
I'm thinking to myself, Okay, well, they were probably going
(09:50):
to ask about taxes and they'll probably love my answer
on that, and the last one of my thoughts on
government getting involved in business, and they'll love my answer
on that. But they didn't want to talk about those
things when we sat down. They were very, very concerned
with how strict I wanted this whole immigration enforcement thing.
(10:11):
In fact, talking to them didn't take long to figure
out my whole deport them all and don't allow any
endthing might be a deal breaker for them. We're going
to discuss all the different entities invested in keeping the
border open in a moment, and then we'll come back
to this poll and explain everything. Before we do that,
(10:32):
Let's do this though. Let's explain this. You know, corporations
get involved in the charitable world. That's part of corporations. Now,
they'll pick some nonprofit, some charity, and they'll take the
money you give them and they'll throw it at it.
You see this everywhere. Would you like to add a
dollar for whatever you see it everywhere? Well, the money
(10:53):
you've been sending to AT and T, Verizon and T Mobile.
I would actually invite you, don't take my word for it,
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Then go look at Puretalk. You know what pure talk does.
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(11:18):
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(11:40):
five zero and say Jesse Kelly Pound two five zero,
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he said, on mean, Jesse Kelly, you're listening to the
Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on
(12:01):
a Thursday, reminding you you can download the whole thing
on iHeart, Google, Spotify, iTunes. Back to what we were
talking about, Okay, So let's set aside the vile communists.
They want the country full of illegals. That's been part
of burning it down, America's business interests, the GOP donor class.
(12:22):
They also want the border open. Those gopers in leadership everywhere. Senators,
the McConnell types, the cornn types, the Mike Johnson types,
they don't want the border closed. They don't want the
border closed. The media types they want to make sure
(12:44):
it stays open without end. Okay, So what does that mean. Well,
here's what it means. Okay, fifty one percent of Americans
support mass deportation for now. If Trump gets elected and tries,
and he probably will try. If Trump gets elected and tries,
(13:06):
the media is going to be against it. Democrats are
going to be against it. The university system is going
to be against it. Hollywood's going to be against it.
GOP leadership is going to be against it. Judges across
America are going to be against it. Over and over
and over again. You will see photo op after photo
(13:28):
op of crying loope and crying this guy and we
can't deport these people in what the public pressure campaign
would quickly overwhelm the Trump White House and they would
cave even if they didn't. Maybe you're sitting there saying, no,
he will learned his lesson this time. He won't next time. Okay,
let me give you that. Let's say he doesn't cave.
Let's say he tells all those groups to go pound
(13:50):
sand we're deporting anyway. They're going to impeach him for it,
you know that, right? They can't really look at what
the GOP leadership has been doing with Democrats for the
last three and a half years. The Democrats have gotten
(14:13):
every single thing they've wanted for three and a half years.
If Donald Trump attempts to round up ten million illegals,
he will be impeached, and I would venture to guests
the Senate will actually remove him from office. He would
be impeached in the House and remove from office. So
(14:36):
what I'm trying to say is this poll, Wow, fifty
one percent of Americans are for it. Well, one, that
fifty one percent would drop down to thirty as soon
as all the sad videos started coming out. But two,
the people who have power, not the majority. The people
who have power are invested in keeping the border open.
(15:01):
That's why we need a red state coalition. That's why
we need a red state coalition to take back immigration
enforcement from the federal government. All right, all right, let's
do a couple of emails here, Dear mister Kelly, no
nicknames or jokes this time. I'm too upset. I just
checked the primary results for Pennsylvania, and the Republicans in
(15:23):
the first congressional district voted to send Brian Fitzpatrick, a
Republican who votes sixty percent of the time with Democrats,
over Mark Halk, who was an actual target of Biden's
doj to the general election. As a refresher. Mark Hawk
was the man whose son was assaulted outside a planned
parenthood and then an FBI swat team gave him a
(15:44):
five am wake up call. Primary voters sit it out
once again, and we reaped the consequences. I bite my
thumb at you, Pennsylvania. Look this answers, well the next
question here you here, Jesse, I'm listening to the podcast
where you're reading from the Welfare Farmer, and how pathetic
(16:05):
the GOP is. I think the vast majority of large
right landing voters don't feel represented, so on and so forth.
It's expected the left hates us, but realizing the right
hates us two hurts a bit. I'm going to vote.
But when I tell people around me making sure you're
registered and going to vote, they tell me if politicians
are going to do whatever they want anyways, what difference
(16:25):
does it make? So on and so forth. Well, we
ignore the primaries, we ignore the most important elections. I'm
going to confide something in you. This is just me
being honest, and you're welcome to be mad at me
and yell at me. At this point in time, I
(16:49):
am so disheartened by the GOP, all of them, every
single one of them. I am not one hundred percent
sure I'm going to vote in this general election. I
might be a primary voter only from now on until
I get a GOP that represents me. Now, don't get
(17:12):
me wrong, I know O cave in the end, and
I know I'll show up in the general, and I
know I'll vote, but I have feelings many times now,
where what am I voting for? Oh? Just some abortions,
an open border, more spending for Ukraine, more vaccines. But
give me a reason to go vote. We don't show
(17:33):
up in the most important elections. The most important elections
are not the general election. It's not coming this November.
That's not the most important election. The most important election
is the primary. You forgot about. The most important elections
are primaries. And once again, look at this Pennsylvania One's
(17:54):
just another example. I don't need to pick on Pennsylvania.
It's across the country this way. Primary election after primary
election after primary election. The GOP primary voter either doesn't
show up or shows up and votes for the same
scumbag who screwed him over every time. Until that changes,
nothing can change. The most important election in your life
(18:19):
is the local one. In the primary one, sit out
the dagon general for all I care. If we don't
change the right, we can't save ourselves from the left.
All right, that's enough of that. We'll deal with debt
and economic matters and things like that, because there's some
bad news out there. Hang on, Jesse Kelly, Vaccian. It
(18:42):
is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday. We are
almost at the end of the week. So let's tackle
the really the true big story of the day, beyond
the protests and everything else. The true big story of
the day is really really bad economic dues. It's really
really bad and that's let's first, let's do a little
(19:06):
a little basic economy thing, A little basic how it
works in a country, your economy, it adds a certain
size to it. In America's ours is roughly twenty trillion dollars.
That's a gargantuan amount. That's a huge economy. But that's
our economy. Okay, twenty trillion dollars. The government will take
(19:29):
in so much per year. That's from taxes, that's the
money they blood suck from you, and then they will
spend a certain amount per year. If they spend more
than they take in in a given year, that's called
a deficit. They ran a deficit for that year. Now,
since our government has been running ridiculous deficits for ages,
(19:53):
we now are in a place where our debt is
astronomical thirty four trillion dollars, twenty trillion dollar economy, thirty
four trillion in debt. And we have another thing where
we have well, we have many things working against us,
and we're going to go over all that stuff right now.
One the entitlement spending portion of it. What this is
(20:19):
Medicare and Medicaid, social Security. Do not send me another
email saying they're not entitlements. Those are really stupid emails.
I understand why you send them. I understand you're not
some blood sucking freeloader because you're on Medicare, you paid
into that, you paid into social Security. I understand that.
I'm not calling you a freeloading loser. But there they
(20:41):
are considered entitlements when it is the government, whether or
not they've taken it, whether they've taken it for you
or not. If the government is handing out these things,
those are entitlements. What our country has done, because we're insane,
is we've taken those items off of the table in
the budget process, meaning we can't touch them. They're automatic
(21:04):
every year many many countries around the planet, in fact,
even European countries that we make fun of for being socialists.
Did you know that they will adjust their entitlement expenditures
each year because they require a balanced budget. This is
something socialist countries do, but not here. Here we have
(21:26):
firmly etched these programs in stone so they can never
be touched. Okay, so that's bad. Now when you consider
the deficits, that's bad. We're borrowing money, that's bad. We're
pillaging small business, that's bad. It's really bad. We're printing money.
It's bad. And where does that leave us? Now? Well,
(21:48):
I've played a little bit of it before I'm going
to play Well, I'd probably stop it a couple of
times to explain a couple things. But this was from
CNBC today. I believe this was Rick Santelli.
Speaker 3 (21:59):
GDP first look, first quarter of disappointment, one point six percent.
We're looking for a number almost a full percentage point
higher one point.
Speaker 1 (22:10):
Stop for a second. What is that GDP growth thing
he's talking about? Okay, so let's and I know a
lot of this may be basic, but a lot of
this stuff doesn't get taught in schools and people don't know.
So we're gonna explain it. Twenty trillion dollar economy. It's
not supposed to ideally remain a twenty trillion dollar economy
(22:32):
because inflation happens because expenditures go up. You bank on
your economy growing every year, and you need it to
grow when you have such a bad debt situation like
we do. Like, for instance, let's say, let's make it easy.
(22:52):
Let's say I made one hundred thousand dollars a year.
I make one hundred thousand dollars a year. I am
well compared to the US. Let's do this. I'm one
hundred and sixty thousand dollars in debt. I make one
hundred thousand a year. I'm one hundred and sixty thousand
in debt, but I haven't stopped spending. I'm one hundred
(23:13):
and sixty thousand in debt. Man, I've got a new
Lamborghini coming next week, diamond ear rings, new guns, amo,
I just bought some jet skis. I've developed a cocaine problem.
I'm spending like like you can't believe. So now it's
not that the one sixty is staying one sixty. The
(23:33):
one sixty is gonna be one seventy soon. It's gonna
be one eighty soon, it's gonna be two fifty before
you know it. Therefore, I need to up my income.
I need that one hundred thousand to keep pace with
my ridiculous spending. If my debt next year is gonna
be one eighty, then my income needs to go up
(23:56):
at least as much as that. My income needs to
be one ten. We need need the economy to grow.
We cannot have it stay flat and frankly, when we
get in this bat of a debt situation, we cannot
have it grow just a little. We need big time growth.
(24:18):
I'll let them continue.
Speaker 3 (24:19):
Six the weakest growth on a quarterly basis, going back
to the second quarter of twenty two when it was
negative minus six tenths of a percent.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
If we look at.
Speaker 3 (24:28):
The price index, it's higher three point one percent.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
I'm gonna pause on this for a moment because I
need to explain something. They do the CPI, that's what
he's talking about, the price index, the consumer price index, inflation.
You have to always understand something about these numbers you
get out, because what happens is people get confused. They
get the latest CPI numbers, the latest inflation numbers, and
(24:54):
they'll see, well, he just referenced three point one, so
let's make it three point one. Well, then what what
happens as you sit down and you send me an
email and say, Jesse, I just paid six dollars of
ninety nine cents three months ago for the chicken nuggets
my kids love, and now they're twelve dollars in ninety
nine cents. How's it only three point one? Remember, not
(25:15):
only has the federal government abused you, your money, your country,
and your economy without end for decades, they have known
for decades that you would be upset about that if
you ever actually found out. So what they've done is
they've built a slow, steady system of lies, and they've
(25:37):
put that system of lies in place. So when you
get reporting numbers, you know inflation's not five percent, six percent,
eight percent. You know it's way more than that. We
just finally got the grocery numbers. They're up forty percent,
but they tell us inflation is at what eight Well,
the reason is they lie. They've baked lies into all
(25:57):
of these numbers.
Speaker 3 (25:58):
And even with the lies, we're expecting three percent in
the rear view mirror one point six percent moving in
the wrong direction. This comes to the third quarter of
last year, when it.
Speaker 1 (26:08):
Was up three point three If.
Speaker 3 (26:10):
We look at the price index Core on a quarter
over quarter basis, it leaped to three point seven. We're
expecting three point four in the rearview mirror is two percent.
Three point seven is the hottest. Well, it's the hottest
since the first quarter of last year. It exactly equals
the second.
Speaker 1 (26:28):
Quarter of last year.
Speaker 3 (26:29):
And finally, hostsale inventories actually drop minus four tenths of
a percent, minus four tens percent. That's the biggest negative
month over month drop since June of last year. Yields,
of course, paying very very close attention to those GDP numbers,
how do you spell stagflation weaker growth, higher price action.
(26:50):
We're now above the resistance, which would be on a
closing yield basis at four sixty seven.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
All right, let's talk about this stagflation thing, because we
have to wrap our minds around what stagflation is, and
we very likely have to prepare ourselves for some rocky
economic times and we'd look, we are going to get
through this. I want to make sure I'm clear about this.
We are going to get through this. We're going to
become more family focused, more community focused. We're going to
(27:21):
support each other. I got so many emails from you.
You just blessed me to know in about that farmer
last night who was signing up for EBT A bunch
you reached out. No, I don't need you to reach
out some more, and I've asked to hook up with
him so you can maybe help, and we've facilitated that.
So look, we're gonna have to be together. But we're
going to talk about stagflation what exactly that means for you, me,
(27:43):
for all of us. Before we get to that, maybe
a lot of this stuff is it gets to be
too much, no matter how simple someone breaks it down,
it's too much CPI, this and whatnot. Well, yes, these
things are complicated, but maybe just your T levels are low.
Let me explain. Testosterone is so misunderstood. It is so misunderstood.
(28:05):
You see, people think testosterone is just about making babies.
Well that's part of it, for sure. For sure. After all,
we have an article right here fertility rates slumped by
two percent and twenty twenty three. That's a big deal.
We need tea levels back up to make more babies.
But testosterone is as much about your mind as anything.
Getting foggy, gentlemen, your mind, I mean getting foggy out there,
(28:30):
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choq dot com, Chalk dot com pro code Jesse, we'll
talk about stagflation next. You're listening to the Oracle. You
love this one. It's a scream baby the Jesse Kelly Show.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday. Don't
(29:16):
forget to get your ask doctor Jesse questions in right
now to Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. We'll come
back to that important question you just asked about Mexican
beer in just a second. Chris, I'm going to talk
about stagflation first, because it looks like that's where we're headed.
And look, we're just gonna it's gonna wrap our arms around.
This is what it is. What is stagflation. It's when
(29:39):
the economy isn't growing. It's basically slower than expected economic growth,
but also inflation on top of that. You know, ideally
you wouldn't have either. In a perfect world, you want
the economy growing and inflation not growing. So there are
more business opportunities out there for you, more to make money,
(30:01):
and your money is going as far or even further
than it did last year. Okay, that's perfect. What's a
bad part? What's the next level down? The next level
down is you only have one of those two things. Okay,
so the economy's growing nice, but inflation's growing too, so
your money's not going as far. But you do have
(30:23):
more business opportunities, so that's you know, you're at least
making ends meet. Yeah, I can't the meal, my favorite meal,
red lobster. It costs more than it used to and
I was having a hard time making ends meet. But
I did pick up ten new clients west last week,
so we're we're getting by all right. So that's the
next step down. But the bottom of the barrel step
(30:46):
is the worst nightmare step is the economy stops growing,
so the opportunities start to disappear, while at the same time,
your dollar, the value of it goes down, so you
don't have ten extra clients this week, and you can
no longer afford your best, your favorite meal at Red Lobster.
(31:08):
That is stagflation, bad economic growth, and bad inflation. And
that's where we are now. We know today twenty five
percent of adults, this is from AARP fifty in order,
I think they will never retire government debt. You know,
(31:30):
we have to pay interest on it, right, it's called
servicing the debt. We have to service the debt. Twelve
percent of government spending is now servicing the debt. We
will pay roughly one point six trillion dollars this year
on just interest, the interest on the debt. And that's
(31:54):
if they don't raise interest rates. So it's not only
where we are is rough. Where we're going is rough.
Because if you want to stop these things, if you
want to really rain these things in, you can't do
it without pain. That's not possible. But if you really
(32:14):
want to reel these things in, what you have to
do is stop spending. You have to stop printing money,
and you have to stop spending money. You have to say,
there's no other way. You can't make debt disappear. You
can't threaten it away, wish it away, promise it away.
(32:36):
It is there. These are dollars and cents things. They're
not subject to your whims or my whims. It's not
a Democrat, libertarian, Republican nationalist thing. It's not a Muslim,
jew Christian thing. It is facts of life. Without reductions
in spending, without stopping the quantity of stop printing money.
(32:59):
Unless we stopped that, we can't take care of this problem.
And no one is even a little bit interested in
stopping it.
Speaker 4 (33:09):
I mean, God, sixty billion dollars enough money for Ukraine
to push back Russia decisively, Well, we hope. So it's
actually only zero point two percent of our gross domestic product,
So put in in that context, it's not a whole
lot of money for us.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
This is how they think. Look and you think that's bad.
That's better than the Biden approach. I mean, does this
sound like a man who's getting ready to make some
hard choices with the economy we're.
Speaker 5 (33:45):
Invested in America. Agendas attracted more than eight hundred and
twenty five billion dollars eight and twenty five billion dollars
in private sector investment, not a penny of which existed
before I got elected a night in a manufacturing book,
a clean energy boom was semiconductor boom nationwide. And it's
clear we have the strongest economy in the world. That's
(34:06):
a fact.
Speaker 1 (34:08):
Fifteen million new.
Speaker 5 (34:09):
Jobs created in three and a half years. Unemployment hasn't
been as low for this long, for fifty years, wages arising.
Instead of importing foreign products, we're exporting and exporting American jobs.
We're exporting American products and creating American jobs here in
America where they belong.
Speaker 1 (34:31):
Do these sound like people concern that you're never going
to retire? Do these sound like people who are, as
we speak, having an all hands on deck meeting trying
to figure out everything they need to cut to save
you in your ways.
Speaker 6 (34:48):
And that's why we think the underlying growth remained steady, solid, strong,
just like you heard from Esther Georgia sectually.
Speaker 1 (34:54):
So you're okay with this GDP report.
Speaker 6 (34:57):
Yeah, I think this GDP report, especially once you get
under the hood you take out some of those more
volatile components, consumer spending and investment look great. In fact,
year over year GDP is up three percent. That's a
great number. And look, since the president got here, the
average GDP growth rate has been about three percent. His
(35:17):
GDP over his term has been the highest we've seen
under a presidential term for twenty five years in a row.
At in the very strong job market for that, and
I think you understand the underlying economy is solid as ever.
Speaker 1 (35:33):
Look, we're in trouble. I'm not gonna lie. We are
in trouble, and we're just gonna have to support each
other through it all. All right, all right, we have
an hour left. We're going to talk about women selling out,
women in women's sports. We're gonna get to emails. We're
gonna get to so many things before we get to
those things. In an economy like this, it is nice
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