Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is the Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show, Final hour the Jesse
Kelly Show on a Monday. But don't worry, we'll be back.
We'll be here all week, I guess, except for Friday.
But yes, it's time to finally just do an hour
of just us, shall we? And let's just have a
little talk about some more of these things going on,
because I'm getting a lot of questions from people of Jesse.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
Was this an inside job? Jesse?
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Did the government do this? Jesse did? Okay, so let's
talk about that. You ever heard of Jerome Johnson? My
name ring any bells to you, Jerome Johnson. Just you're
gonna have to stay with me for a few okay.
So Joe Colombo was an Italian mafia don. He was
(00:59):
a boss, a godfather type, and he ended up rising
to that position because there was an assassination plot amongst
one of the other godfathers.
Speaker 3 (01:11):
It was the Bananos.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
The Bananos wanted Joe Colombo to join with them and
assassinate two of the other heads of the five families
in New York City with me, all right, So they
got together and said, hey, let's.
Speaker 3 (01:25):
Kill these guys.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
Joe Colombo was not a godfather at the time, but
instead of joining with Banano to take these guys out,
he instead goes to the Mafia Commission to have a
corporate board, just like Merrill Inch or somebody. He goes
to the Commission and he tells them, Hey, these guys
they're gonna they're gonna try to kill you. As a result,
(01:48):
as a reward, I should say, Joe Colombo gets promoted
to being the big cheese. And it was formerly the
Profaci family, now it's Columbo family. To this day, there's
a Colombo family, one of the five families that operates
one of the criminal Italian mafia families that operates out
of New York City, still a Columbo family. But that's
(02:10):
just a little bit of the background on it. Joe
Colombo had something else he did. Joe Colombo operated in
ways that the mafia bosses previously had not, meaning he
believed in going public. The shadowy criminal organizations, the smart ones,
(02:31):
the ones that last a really, really long time. They
last a really long time because they stay in the shadows.
That means you don't show up at the super Bowl
in a luxury box with the Colombo family title, over
the top, driving a rules Royce. It brings heat, it
brings attention, It lets people know you're there. Who is
(02:53):
this guy? How'd he get this money? The smart ones
you never hear from them. They stay quiet. They don't
want things to be public. But Colombo decided to take
a different tactic. He decided to start what essentially amounted
to an Italian civil rights league because he said the FBI,
(03:14):
it's kind of brilliant when you think about it. He
said the FBI was unfairly targeting Italian Americans, claiming they're
all in the mafia.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
I know, how hilarious is this?
Speaker 2 (03:23):
So the man actually started a league as a mob boss,
and the purpose of the league was to say we're
not all mobsters anyway. So he does a lot of
things in the neighborhood, big rallies. All the Italians had
show up and it's Canoli's and the olive oil and
whatever else happened there. And then this went on for
a while. But the other family members, the other mafia families,
(03:49):
did not like it, and then Colombo had a division
within his own family. They didn't like it. So let's
fast forward to the Jerome Johnson part. Jerome Johnson was
a young black guy from New Jersey.
Speaker 3 (04:03):
He did like guns. He was a big gun fan.
Speaker 2 (04:05):
He also was, according to what we know historically, a
fan of Hitler.
Speaker 3 (04:10):
He collected Hitler pictures. Came a little bit.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
Of a red flag, a little bit of a red.
Speaker 3 (04:15):
Flag, but he collected Hitler pictures.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
And Jerome Johnson showed up one day at one of
these Colombo rallies and shot him three times in the head.
But that's not the most interesting part of that story.
The most interesting part of that story comes afterwards. You see,
we found out afterwards, this young mentally ill black man
(04:38):
from New Jersey, he got that close to Joe Colombo.
He got access to being there because he got himself
an official press pass, even though he wasn't a member
of the press. But wait, there's more. After assassinating this
powerful mob boss, he was killed almost immediately before anyone
(05:04):
could ask him any questions. He was killed, killed by whom,
you may ask, Well, nobody knows, Jesse. This was a
big rally. There were thousands of people there. They reported
there might have been fifty thousand people there. What do
you mean nobody knows fifty thousand person rally, and they
murdered the guy, and nobody knows. Well, no, they were
(05:28):
never able to solve that crime. You see, a young
mentally ill guy shows up with an official press pass.
No one knows how he got his hands on that
got him right next to Colombo killed him. He was
then killed immediately, either by the cops or by Colombo's bodyguards,
or by somebody. And isn't that neat and clean from
(05:53):
a certain perspective?
Speaker 3 (05:55):
What perspective?
Speaker 2 (05:56):
Well, if you were a very powerful person, another mob family,
maybe one of the people from within Colombo's family, maybe
even DFBI. If you were a powerful entity of any
kind and you thought Joe Colombo was a problem, you
not only just got Joe Colombo removed, but any and
(06:20):
every single link that may tie that back to you
was also removed. With the killing of Jerome Johnson on
the spot. And to put a nice little bow on
this little historical story that I'm telling, just for no reason, ever,
in Jerome Johnson's stuff, they found shooting certifications and ra stuff,
(06:44):
shooting certifications, almost as if Jerome Johnson had to prove
to somebody before this event that he knew how to
handle a weapon. I am not sitting here tonight telling
you that I believe this is a deep state conspiracy
(07:08):
to kill Donald Trump. But I'm also not not saying
that at all. I don't have any idea what to believe.
Could this be some lone nutjob who got radicalized somewhere.
Of course, where did he get radicalized? I don't really know.
He wasn't on social media, and he was also an
(07:29):
extra in a black Rock commercial. Longtime listeners, let me
ask you, who are the three big evil entities, the
finance giants who are as responsible as anyone else for
the filth you see in the corporate world today? What
are their names? Blackrock, Vanguard, State Street.
Speaker 3 (07:49):
And here we go. Here we have this ad from Blackrock.
Speaker 4 (07:54):
My name is Brian Delala. I teach AP and Honors
economics in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Financial well being to me is
knowing that I could be free to do the things
that I love to do. I hope when I retire
someday saying that guy made this place a special place
to come.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
And an extra in that black Rock ad, which they
have since pulled as up this morning, was the man
who just missed assassinating Trump by two inches and did
let's do remember, did assassinate somebody in the crowd, A
father there with his family shielding them, and gave up his.
Speaker 3 (08:33):
Life for them.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
And these people have the gall to do things like this.
This is Margaret Brennan sitting down with Steve Scalise afterwards.
Speaker 5 (08:45):
I wonder what your message is. Have you specifically instructed
members in the coming hours to reign in some of
the rhetoric that I will point out some are using
online that is somewhat incendiary in term of really blaming
this somehow on the administration. Have you asked them to
(09:07):
refrain from that?
Speaker 2 (09:10):
Notice how the American media immediately their concern is the
left Democrats, our Democrats going to win the election. That's
their immediate concern. Of course, all right, we're not done.
I have a bunch more emails I want to get
to on this. Before I get to that, I want
to talk to you about something pretty devastating that happened
this morning. I had to say goodbye to Fred.
Speaker 3 (09:33):
Fred.
Speaker 2 (09:35):
He doesn't do well when I leave, and he's not
doing well now. All he has is rough Greens to
get him by. But thankfully, at least I won't show
back up to a house full of you know, throw
up on the floor because Fred doesn't have digestive problems anymore.
You see, the dog food we give our dogs has
(09:55):
no nutrition in it. It's all garbage. It's just empty
calories because they kill everything at the factory. Roughgreens all
natural nutritional supplement with vitamins, probiotics, antioxidants, omega oils. My
dog doesn't get sick after he eats anymore. His coat
is shinier, his breath is better, his energy level is better.
(10:18):
You will see differences in your dog, and your dog
will live longer. Go try it. They give up free
jumpstart trial bangs. Roughgreens dot Com slash Jesse is where
you get them. Roughgreens dot Com slash Jesse or you
can call eight three three three three my dog.
Speaker 3 (10:38):
We'll be back. Get the cure for rhinos week days
with the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 2 (10:47):
Also want to extend a congratulations to one Senator jd
Vance from Ohio. Yes, I saw the news obviously, it
hit before the show even aired. We've just been talking
about other things. Trump's VP. I'll just echo what I've
been saying all along. I love it, and I hate it.
I love it because JD is one of the few
good senators we have. So I'm glad Trump has someone
(11:11):
sharp like that, young sharp on the goal. At the
same time, man, we were really going to miss him
in the Senate, and that probably means that loser Mike DeWine,
the governor of Ohio, is going to pick the next
Senator and gosh, that really friggin sucks. Now let's go
back to something we were talking about. What happened? What
do I think it was? Was this alone nutjob? Was
(11:34):
it an op of some kind?
Speaker 3 (11:36):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (11:37):
I think, I said, I don't think we'll ever know.
I think anything's possible. Nothing would surprise me. But I
also know you can create an environment that virtually guarantees
certain outcomes. You ever heard have you ever seen bootcamp
(11:59):
videos of the people in boot camp. They'll have helmets
on and they'll have sticks with pads at the end
of them, but the pads aren't really all that thick,
and they're fighting with the sticks.
Speaker 3 (12:11):
We've seen this. I'm just trying to explain in a
way you would understand.
Speaker 2 (12:14):
You've seen this, right, It's a very common thing you
do in boot camp we did in the Marines all
the time. In fact, will set aside the sticks. We
used to do something in the Marines all the time
all the time called bull.
Speaker 3 (12:26):
In the ring. You know, bull in the ring is.
Here's what it is.
Speaker 2 (12:31):
I and you're allowed to challenge anybody, and anyone can
challenge you, even somewhat of a higher rank. If you
want to challenge your platoon commander and you're young, you
can do this.
Speaker 3 (12:42):
What I will do.
Speaker 2 (12:44):
I will go sit down on the ground with my
legs out ahead of me. Key, my opponent will sit
down behind me and we will be back to back,
so our butts will be on the ground, legs out,
back to back. And then when they say go you turn,
you're not You're not allowed to punch your elbow. That's
what they say. You're not allowed to punch your elbow.
(13:05):
There are some rules, but you go until somebody submits,
until somebody taps out. You just fight for you grapple
for lack of a better way to put it.
Speaker 3 (13:16):
And this happens all the time.
Speaker 2 (13:20):
It'll just someone will just suggest it and immediately it's on. Immediately, Hey,
should we do pull in the ring? Hey, it's pulling
the ring time and all of a sudden everyone circled up.
Doesn't matter. I'm tired, I'm there, I'm hungry, it doesn't matter.
Speaker 3 (13:33):
It's fight time. Baby.
Speaker 2 (13:35):
Why doesn't that seem a little extreme? I mean, I
know you want marines to be tough, and it does
not seem a little a little much. Can't they just
sit down for lunch? Well, what things like that do
is they foster an environment of aggression, testosterone, violence, things
(13:57):
you would want out of a platoon of infant marines.
If you're that way already, you'll get even better. If
you're not that way, you will eventually become that way
because you have no choice.
Speaker 3 (14:11):
And you would see it.
Speaker 2 (14:12):
We really saw it towards the end, well towards the
end of my four years. I only did four years,
but you would see it from the guys who just
came in. And there were kids, there were puppies when
they came in, eighteen nineteen years old. Maybe some of
them a little soft. By the time they're done, you
can see, I mean, you can see it on their face.
It's just they hardened because they were put in an
(14:34):
environment with violence, an aggression, and that stuff was rewarded
and encouraged and cheered, And because the environment was that way,
you became that way. These people have been using the
language they've been using for as long as they've been
using it because they want things like this to happen.
(14:56):
They're not said, not a single one of these people
is sad, glorified, frightened, anything else. These people all wanted
it to happen. That's why they speak the way they speak.
That's why everything's Hitler, everything's Nazi, everything's threat to democracy.
That's exactly why they do it. And when you combine
(15:18):
that with the things they've been doing within the groups
like the Secret Service. Even though I'm isolating this to
the Secret Service just because I have audio, this could
be about the FBI, it could be about the military,
it could be about anything. Listen, I want you to
listen to this. This is Secret Service director. Her name's
Kimberly Cheatle. Listen, listen closely to this.
Speaker 6 (15:37):
To expand hiring, they're aiming to have thirty percent women
recruits by twenty thirty and even allowed YouTube influencer Michelle
Care to trade with agents.
Speaker 7 (15:48):
But I'm very conscious as I sit in this chair
now of making sure that we need to attract diverse
candidates and ensure that we are developing and giving opportunities
to everybody in our workforce, and particularly women.
Speaker 6 (16:03):
That workforce will be pivotal for the twenty twenty four
campaign season, which for the first time includes a former
president who already has lifetime protection agents were there when
Donald Trump was arraigned in New York.
Speaker 3 (16:16):
They're diversifying the Secret Service.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
Why people ask that question, why, Well, because it destroys.
That's why these people LOVEDI. That's why they brag about diversity.
That's why they do things. You can say, you can
scream until you're blue in the face, and a woman
like this, well, how does that make anyone more secure?
(16:40):
To pass over a qualified male for a less qualified female.
You've got Donald Trump's six to two or whatever. He
is out there being covered up by women who are
five to five. Why do you need it? Why do
you need it? Why do you need it? It destroys,
It destroys. Well, that's why they do it. They create
an environment. They create an environment where where you're not
(17:00):
where you're the enemy.
Speaker 3 (17:01):
They create an.
Speaker 2 (17:02):
Environment where the systems that should be in place to
protect you, to protect people like Trump are weaker. They
do everything necessary to create the environment, and then terrible
things happen. We've talked about it before, but it's so true.
Speaker 3 (17:18):
One of the best examples is Chuck Schumer.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
Getting up giving a speech threatening Brett Kavanaugh by name
with reaping the whirlwind, and then surprise, surprise, and assassin.
It's on a plane from California with a knife and
a gun and everything else he needs and flies.
Speaker 3 (17:35):
Back to ensure Kavanaugh reaps the whirlwind. Did Chuck Schumer
do that, of course not.
Speaker 2 (17:40):
He simply laid the groundwork and someone walked across it.
All right, I think we're going to talk to a
former Navy seal here in just a moment before we
do that. That'll be interesting. Before we do that, he
probably doesn't need chock, but you never know. Listen, fellas.
Testosterone levels are one of those things that you can't
(18:02):
always control. When you're drinking estrogen, sometimes you can't control it.
It's gonna go down even if you're a tough guy,
a former tough guy. Go get your levels checked, and ladies,
you two not your t levels necessarily, but how's your energy.
That's how you can really tell. Really, men women. That's
(18:22):
how you can tell two three in the afternoon. You
shouldn't need a nap. Oh well, I'm sixty. Ah, that's
still not time when you should need a n app.
Get on a male vitality stack or a female vitality
stack from Chalk. If you have questions, you can call them,
you can text them.
Speaker 3 (18:42):
They'll talk to you about it.
Speaker 2 (18:44):
C hoq dot com promo code Jesse. All right, chalk
dot com promo code Jesse. Or if you want to
do the call text thing five zero chalk three thousand
five zero c choq three. All right, We're going to
talk to this Davy seal. And then I have a
doozy of a flashback from CNN. You're gonna want to
(19:06):
hear this one. Yeah, they thought we forgot about this.
Speaker 3 (19:10):
We did not hang on truth attitude.
Speaker 2 (19:15):
Jesse Kelly.
Speaker 3 (19:18):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on.
Speaker 2 (19:21):
A Monday, and I'm pleased about this one. Just came
strolling on by and I thought it might be a
good day to talk to a Navy seal, former Navy
Seal senior chief, current Congressman from the third District in
the Great State of Wisconsin.
Speaker 3 (19:36):
My friend, Congressman Derek van Orden.
Speaker 2 (19:38):
Okay, first, this is my first time I've spent a
significant amount of time in Wisconsine. I know cheese curds.
I'm not naive, I wasn't born yesterday. I know cheese curds.
Beyond cheese curds. What should I be doing here? I'm
here for four days. I don't want to talk to
Republicans the whole time.
Speaker 8 (19:55):
By all means you should polka yes, because I can
just see you in a pair of leader hos and
just carrying it up.
Speaker 1 (20:04):
Dude, it would be fantastic.
Speaker 2 (20:06):
You know, I am a very graceful person. It's it's
like watching Fred Astare when I walk around. A lot
of people have said that that's not exactly what my
wife has said, per se.
Speaker 3 (20:15):
Okay, let's focus on the task at hand for now.
Speaker 2 (20:18):
Sure, everyone's talking about the event we all witnessed on
TV in the division, and there's a lot of talk today,
a lot of talk about hey, let's unite, Hey, let's unite,
let's calm down. And my complaint with that has been
that's a bumper sticker. That doesn't mean anything at all.
I would love unity. I thought that sounds wonderful but
(20:38):
unity is found on the other side of victory. You
don't get unity just because something bad happened and it's
scared everybody that doesn't bring about unity. That's not how
that works at all. We have to defeat these people
or there will not be unity.
Speaker 1 (20:52):
Unity is going to start with honesty.
Speaker 8 (20:54):
And a few weeks ago, the American people saw Joe
Biden where he's at for the first time because the
mainstream legacy media has been protecting him. They saw an
elderly man in cognitive decline that's incapable of leading. He
couldn't even put together a couple sentences. And so now
they know who Joe Biden really is and they should
(21:15):
look back and understand that we've been saying this for years.
Speaker 1 (21:19):
Okay, so that's called the truth.
Speaker 8 (21:21):
And then on Saturday, they saw President Trump literally take
a round to the head, drop to the ground, as
anyone does when you're getting shot at stand up immediately,
and his first response was to hold his fist up
in the air with blood running on his face and
call us to fight for our freedom. So people got
(21:42):
to see Trump for who he is for the first time.
So now they know what we're dealing with. And that
they now have the first honest assessment because the media
has been covering for President Biden for years and they've
been lying about President Trump for years. And I think
a lot of people are going through this phase of
cognitive dissonance right now because they realize that they've been duped,
(22:05):
and so unity will come because people now understand what's
really taking place around them.
Speaker 1 (22:11):
I mean, it was like it was like.
Speaker 8 (22:14):
A B fifty two bomber of red pills being dropped
down over the entire country, right and people like, oh
my gosh, if they've been lying about Biden, maybe they've
been lying about Trump. So I think we can unite.
People want, people seek leadership. We are closer to worldworthy
than we've been in our lifetime. The economy is as
bad as it's been since I was a kid in
(22:36):
the seventies. People are having difficulty filling up, guests taking
grocery card in the same day.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
In the United States of.
Speaker 8 (22:40):
America, ten million illegal anilis across the border and they're
literally kidnapping, raping, and murdering our children.
Speaker 1 (22:46):
And people are sick of this.
Speaker 8 (22:47):
They're afraid to walk in the streets because of rampant
crime because no one's being held accountable, so people are
going to gravitate towards leadership. How many never trumpers are
in the Republican Party right now? Zero never trumpers are
Independence right now A significant amount of less amount of them.
Same thing for Libertarians, and there's also soft Democrats that
(23:08):
are finally going ago. I've had enough of this, so
I respectfully disagree. I think that we will be unifying.
I think the message that President Trump is going to
give tonight is going.
Speaker 1 (23:16):
To do just that.
Speaker 3 (23:18):
When was the first time you got shot up?
Speaker 1 (23:22):
Shot in on purpose or on accident?
Speaker 2 (23:24):
On purpose purpose, We're not talking about a bad day
at the rains on purpose.
Speaker 8 (23:29):
The first my first combat you can't see this air
quotations combat deployment was in nineteen ninety six to Bosnia
immediately following this signing of the DAT and the courts.
They shot at our house a lot, through grenades at
our cars. But the first time I was in what
I would call, you know, like actual combat combat was
in two thousand and three in Afghanistan. That was my
first tour over there, and then I went to Iraq
(23:50):
and then back to Afghanistan and then back to Iraq
and Afghanistan bounce back and forth for quite a period
of time, and that I was in the Horn of
Africa doing I've lived and worked on five of the
seven continents, and I spent a lot of time in
that environment.
Speaker 2 (24:04):
That is a lot of time in combat. I was
extremely impressed by Trump's response to beings shot at, because,
as far as I know, that's the first time for him.
He's not a freaking Navy seal who's fought on every
continent on the planet.
Speaker 3 (24:19):
He's a politician in a business. Dude, can you explain that.
Speaker 8 (24:24):
I had the chance to write the special Reconnaissance and
Land Warfare curriculum for all the seal teams and you
can't train to that like you cannot train to that response,
meaning that is something innate in that guy. His immediate
response was, I mean, you take cover as you do,
(24:45):
You're supposed to identify where the streeter comes from, then
your return fire. Well, he doesn't have a gun. He
immediately dropped the ground right as you do. And then,
knowing that he didn't have a firearm, his immediate response
was to rally his troops, and the troops are the
American people. When he he stood up and said, fight,
fight for your freedom. You can't train. Do you think
(25:06):
they went through like a bunch of rehearsals. Okay, mister president,
if you get shot in the head, what you're gonna
do is jump up in the area and make a
fist and like yell fight.
Speaker 1 (25:16):
You can't train to that dude.
Speaker 8 (25:17):
That's who that guy is, and that's why the left
has been so terrified to him, and that's why they've
been lying about him forever, because he has innate leadership qualities.
Speaker 2 (25:26):
Can you explain the failures we saw that day? I
know you still have questions. I still have questions. I
don't know what we were looking at, but I know
something didn't work. If a twenty year old, relatively untrained
dirtball can achieve a rooftop one hundred and forty eight
yards from the Republican nominee for president, something went wrong.
(25:46):
Of Course, the head of the Secret Service, Kim che
had already announced today she's not resigning.
Speaker 3 (25:50):
Of course she wouldn't. What's accountability anymore?
Speaker 2 (25:53):
How can that? How can that happen? Because I'll tell
you what, I have an email inbox full of people
saying he was one loan nut job caning box full
of people saying no way, no way that can go.
Speaker 8 (26:04):
What do you say, Well, this mission set became declassified
in two thousand and nine. The top six Iraqi officials
during the election cycle were protected by Navy seal platoons
and I was one of them. I was responsible for
that was the shift lead for Ebodehimil Jeffrey, the deputy
Vice president, who was the first democratically elected prime minister
of Iraq in their country's history. And we went through
(26:27):
an entire election cycle in a combat zone with tens
of thousands of people that wanted to kill him and
had the actual weapons of war to do so, and
he never got shot. So when your sole duty is
to prevent the president of the United States from being
shot and the president gets shot, by definition its mission failure,
(26:49):
and that needs to rise to the highest level of
that organization. It's wholly unacceptable to have a armed person
who is not part of a law enforcement.
Speaker 1 (26:56):
Detail within it.
Speaker 8 (26:58):
My I mean within six hundred to seven one hundred
two one thousand meters away from the sitting president.
Speaker 1 (27:02):
Or a presidential candidate.
Speaker 8 (27:04):
What we're going to do is this Jesse is I've
implored the Speaker of the House to not do this
like we're members of Congress, meaning, don't have the four
committees of jurisdiction squabble about whatever and try to figure
this out. Ain't gonna work. This has to be an
independent commission. And if we find out that there's been malfeasance,
(27:26):
if we find out that there's been a lot of
procedures that are lacking the second one, one hundred percent,
we know that first one. We know if there's malfeasance,
then we need to fire people, and they need to
not have retirements, and they need to never be welcome
back into the United States government because Donald Trump was
almost assassinated on Saturday, and that's a direct fault of
(27:49):
the Secret Service, one way or the other.
Speaker 3 (27:51):
Tong it's been I appreciate you. I'm gonna go poke
my feet off after this. DS.
Speaker 1 (27:57):
I'll poke up.
Speaker 2 (27:59):
I can polk them. How hard can it be when
you have no shame?
Speaker 1 (28:02):
I can pull them. It's oompapa, dude, one two three,
one tooth three. It's that easy, man.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
I'll do the best I can. I appreciate your brother
as always much. All right, we have one more segment left.
We'll get to a couple of different things. I want
to play this older cut from CNN for you. That's
a bit of a doozy. Before I do that, Let's
save someone's life tonight. That's that's real. That's what preborn is.
(28:28):
It's saving lives. It's saving lives. And look, it's just
like we've been talking about death the same way. With death,
it doesn't seem real till what happens. It doesn't seem
real what we talk about when it comes to preborn.
When you give twenty eight dollars to preborn, that twenty
eight dollars buys an ultrasound for who, not just anyone.
(28:51):
They're not handing them out free on the corner. It
buys a free ultrasound for a young woman who was
already decided to abort her baby. That baby is about
to die. She lays down, she hears that ultra she
hears the heartbeat from the ultrasound, and she chooses life
almost every time. It may be it probably is the
(29:12):
greatest tool in the pro life movement. Not yelling and
screaming and banning and laws and all that stuff's fine.
Convincing a young mother it's a baby is how we
save lives and that's what your twenty eight dollars does.
Go to Preborn dot com slash Jesse and give what
you can.
Speaker 3 (29:31):
It's all tax deductible. Give as much as you want.
Speaker 2 (29:34):
Preborn dot com slash Jesse sponsored by Preborn. He doesn't
care if you believe him, but he's right Jesse Kelly.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Final segment of The
Jesse Kelly Show. Don't forget to fire us an email.
You're welcome to love Hey, death threats, ask doctor Jesse
(29:57):
questions for Thursday. All are welcome to Jesse at Jesse
kellyshow dot com. Now the media is very sad, very
very sad today. They just want to tone things down.
They want unity, they want peace. I want to give
credit to the guy who snatched this one up, my
friend Aran McIntyre.
Speaker 3 (30:16):
Back in twenty sixteen.
Speaker 2 (30:18):
You may remember Trump was on stage and somebody rushed
the stage. They enemy rushed the stage and CNN was
so mortified by that they did this.
Speaker 9 (30:32):
Man arrested after rushing the stage at a Donald Trump
rally in Ohio yesterday, speaking out for the first time.
This video camp fing the moment to twenty two year
old Tommy Demassimo tried to confront the Republican front runner.
Speaker 10 (30:44):
What did he say, Marty, Well, you know, Poppy, there
have been obviously a great many protests that have taken
place with Donald Trump rallies, but this is the first
person we've known of to actually sort of charge the stage.
Twenty two year old Tommy do Masimo as a college scenery,
goes to school here in Ohio. He's bright, he seems intelligent,
but he's obviously very politically active. And what he wanted
(31:05):
to do, he said, was to deny Trump the stage.
But I asked him, what were you really trying to do?
Listen to the response.
Speaker 2 (31:12):
I was thinking that Donald Trump is a bully and
he has nothing more than that.
Speaker 3 (31:20):
He is somebody who is I'm gonna stop it there.
It doesn't matter what he says from there.
Speaker 2 (31:25):
The American media, the Democrat Party, the bureaucracy, FBI, CIA, NSA,
the education system.
Speaker 3 (31:35):
They have been working for year after year after year
after year.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
To create an environment where violent, mentally ill people will
do something about it and they don't get changes of
heart after something bad happens either.
Speaker 3 (31:54):
There's about a.
Speaker 2 (31:55):
Twenty four to forty eight hour period where they act
like they're kind of sorry half well, I guess it
was kind of both of us, and then they go
right back to doing what they were doing before. You
do remember that the dude who shot up the congressional
baseball game, the dude who shot Steve Scalise, almost killed
Steve Scalisi, wanted to kill Ran Paul. He wanted to
kill all those people. He wasn't just well, I mean,
(32:17):
we don't know what he believed. He was a Bernie
Sanders supporter who believed that Republicans were evil, and he
showed up because Bernie Sanders and the Democrats in the
media told him Republicans were evil, and he showed up
intending to murder a bunch of people that day. And
after that, there wasn't even thirty seconds of self reflection
(32:40):
from the left. It was right back to Nazi, Nazi
Andy Christ, threat to democracy, threat to democracy, over and
over and over again. Don't fall for any of these things.
And they're already making the pivot. If you haven't noticed,
they're already pivoting, because everything to the communist is just
an opportunity. Sometimes, like in the immediate wake of that assassination, attempt.
(33:04):
Sometimes they might have to turtle up for a day,
but then they will quickly turn around and figure out
a way they can use this to seize power to
go after you, to go after the people they hate.
Allow me to point to exhibit A.
Speaker 11 (33:21):
I hope that at some point in this country we
do have a conversation about what is happening, because we
can't just react when it is our side.
Speaker 1 (33:30):
What was this again?
Speaker 11 (33:31):
It was, you know, a twenty year old lone wolf,
white whack job with easy access toy gun, and we.
Speaker 2 (33:41):
Have immediately the guns and the white people, of course
it is they're not seeking unity with you. They are not.
They want victory over you. In times like this, when
they look extra bad, they're on their heels. They'd never
been less popular. They look like a bunch of violand demons.
(34:03):
Of course they'll talk about unity and peace. And Biden's
even out there now, so oh, I want we definitely
should tone things down. That same Joe Biden that got
up and gave a speech, remember that blacked out speech
with the red streaks behind it, And he gave a
speech calling you and me threats to democracy and a
threat to the foundation of democracy.
Speaker 3 (34:25):
That same guy feels the same way today.
Speaker 2 (34:28):
All he knows is the way he's been talking talking
hurt his poll numbers, and so that's why he's changed.
Speaker 3 (34:35):
And they're of course going to try to get it.
They're going to try to use this to get you
to tone things down, to back off.
Speaker 2 (34:43):
Hey, we just tried to murder your guy, So why
don't you tone down your rhetoric.
Speaker 5 (34:48):
I wonder what your message is. Have you specifically instructed
members in the coming hours to rein in some of
the rhetoric that I will point out some are using
on online that is somewhat incendiary in terms of really
blaming blaming this somehow on the administration. Have you asked
(35:10):
them to refrain from that. I've already been very vocal
with it.
Speaker 2 (35:15):
That was Margaret Brennan of CBS interviewing a Republican telling
him to tone things down.
Speaker 3 (35:24):
Don't you dare fall for it.
Speaker 2 (35:26):
This is communists doing what they've always done, using your
values against you.
Speaker 3 (35:33):
I know you want peace. I want peace.
Speaker 2 (35:37):
I know you want to come together and live in
a normal country again. I mean, forget about forget about
the nineteen fifties. I'll take the year two thousand at
this point in time, would you not take the year
two thousand. I know that's what you want, it's what
I want, but it's not what they want. And as
the old saying goes in war, the enemy gets to say,
(36:00):
these people have had to say for a long time,
and this is what they believe. Benny Thompson, I brought
it up earlier, introduced a bill that would strip Trump
of secret Service protection. They want this, They've encouraged it
every time they get behind a microphone. They encourage it
(36:21):
every single time they do. And I'll tell you something else.
What has been more than alarming but not very surprising,
especially if you listen to this show, is the number
of government employees in the wake of that whole thing
who were cheering it, FBI employees, school teachers expressing regret
(36:44):
that they missed. That's where we are. All right, let
me tell you something else. I still need to go
sign that pledge. You've signed the IFCJ pledge by now, right,
make sure you do that. It's only I don't think
it's very much longer. Once you get that done, once
you go say hey, we are praying for you. You
(37:07):
are not alone with the rockets and the rape and
the murder and everything else you people have been through.
Speaker 3 (37:12):
You are not alone. We Christians, we stand with you.
We're here for you.
Speaker 2 (37:16):
Once you sign it once, once it gets done, they're
gonna take it over. It's gonna be really cool. They're
gonna do a big presentation in net and Yahoo and
it's really really really cool, and it's something it's something
they need for inspiration right now, because you want to
talk about feeling alone and on an island they do.
Go to support IFCJ dot org. Support IFCJ dot org
(37:41):
and sign the pledge tonight. All right, all right, now,
remember you can send me an email Jesse at jesse
kellyshow dot com. I'm not sure how we're gonna handle
the interview stuff this week. Some of the stuff just
comes to us. I don't want to make it a
bunch of freaking interviews because I think it ruins things.
At the same time, we'll see it's gonna be an
(38:01):
adventurous week. All right, that's all