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July 18, 2024 38 mins

Why is early voting a bad thing? Chain of custody. Is the RNC dated? Getting swing voters on the side of Trump with JD Vance. The people in the mainstream media hate you and your values, you don’t have an obligation to live. Who would replace Biden?

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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. And
as promised, here she sits the Great Megan Kelly, of course,
off the Megan Kelly Show. Serious Sex Sam YouTube podcast.
You don't really have to introduce Megan Kelly, but here
we are, all right, Megan soue. You've been here in

(00:33):
Milwaukee for a couple of days, and this is not
my first one of these. I know it's not your
first one of these. Does it feel different or is
it just me? It feels different.

Speaker 2 (00:42):
It's so strange to be around a bunch of Republicans
who are happy.

Speaker 1 (00:46):
Yes, yes, it feels I thought after the assassination attempt,
I thought we would get here, and I thought it
would be darker feeling and angrier. I guess I should
say I figured people would be all kinds of spicy.
But it has been honestly the most pleasant convention I
can remember.

Speaker 3 (01:05):
You know, Jesse, It's one of those things we know.

Speaker 2 (01:07):
Of course, anything could happen, and the Republicans should not
count their chickens, and you know they often screw things up. However,
right now everything's going their way I've never been to
a convention like this where it's all going their way.
They're ahead in the polls, there's a wave of momentum
behind them, The swing.

Speaker 3 (01:23):
States look good.

Speaker 2 (01:25):
The media has turned on the Democratic nominee.

Speaker 3 (01:29):
That doesn't happen.

Speaker 2 (01:30):
No, and not to mention, the law fairer is falling apart,
like by the day, including last Monday, just as we
came off here. It's just all these things happened. And
then on top of it, Trump survived an assassination attempt heroically,
to the point where he even had to be praised
by some c and nners, not the MSNBC yars, but like,

(01:52):
it's just, you know, the world is upside down and
Republicans are used to being embattled and the scourge of
the media and behind the polls, and even if they're not,
the media says they are, and it's just everything's flipped.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
Okay, let's let's actually focus on that, because we're going
to come back to bide and whether or not he
politically survives this in a moment. But I was actually
talking with a senator last night and he said, Jesse,
my biggest concern right now. Maybe he was just being paranoid,
he said, is over confidence. He said, every consultant I
talked to other senators, House members, they're talking fifty five

(02:25):
fifty six seats in the Senate owning the House. Fine, right, yeah,
that's exactly right. So I don't want to be mister Sink.
I don't want to be Debbie Downer. But if we
were to blow this or it wasn't as big as
we want it to be, how would that happen? Have
a I don't want to count my chickens, but I
don't understand how we could blow it from here, but

(02:47):
I'm sure we could. How would we do that?

Speaker 2 (02:49):
I mean, the biggest thing I worry about is that
Democrat turnout machine.

Speaker 3 (02:53):
Yeah, and you know, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (02:55):
I think this is why Republicans have problems with mail
in balloting. They don't trust the system and they don't
trust the Democrats not to do something with the ballots.
And I understand that hesitation. That's the biggest way I
have is just you know, Trump keeps saying we got
to win by a big margin and in order for them not.

Speaker 3 (03:12):
To steal it.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
That's not how I would put it, but I do
think he needs to win by a big margin either way.
It has to go buy a big margin otherwise the
other side won't accept it. And there's no way the
Democrats are winning by a big margin in this particular race.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
So I don't know.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
I guess I feel like overconfidence is a problem. It's
tomorrow's problem.

Speaker 3 (03:29):
Right now, we need to.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
Enjoy this amazing week which never comes along, and then
tomorrow we need to get serious about where we stand.
Because what if Joe Biden doesn't drop out? What if
we have another four years of somebody who can't put
two sentences together but has the nuclear codes. And if
he does sub out, there's gonna be a new wave
of overconfidence. Because there was a poll that just dropped

(03:50):
today showing Trump's ahead of kam Law by a bigger margin.
Then he's ahead of Biden, and she's a less inherently
likable person.

Speaker 3 (04:02):
So the Republicans are going to be like, she's toast.

Speaker 2 (04:05):
But these Dems are very good about just voting Democrat
no matter what. They want the abortion, you know, they
want their government checks, they want their taxes.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
They vote with a purpose.

Speaker 3 (04:17):
Yeah, so you're right not to count anything.

Speaker 1 (04:20):
Okay, So let's talk about the Biden news. I have
hard time. We've talked about this, you and I before.
I have an ongoing bet with Buck sexit about this
whole thing. Does he drop? Does he not drop? Bucks?
Says he stays, I say he goes. Okay, set that aside.
I can't see how he stays. Now that Pelosi's public,
now that Schumer's public, now that Schiff is public. These

(04:43):
are some Democrat heavy hitters who are not just voicing displeasure,
they're doing it publicly. So if Joe Biden stays, how
does that look when the other big shots have said
he's got.

Speaker 3 (04:55):
To go, Well, they're not going to allow it. That's
what we're seeing.

Speaker 2 (04:59):
You're going to win your bet because this is sort
of all part of the extortion campaign where they went
to him nicely and they said, you know, it's a nice.

Speaker 3 (05:08):
Puppy you have there. Yeah. Right, And now we're.

Speaker 2 (05:12):
At the phase of like, I'm gonna spend some time
with you puppy without you around.

Speaker 3 (05:16):
Sorry, no one wants to hurt a puppy anyway.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
They're doing all the leaking right, there's a reason Adam
Schiff just came out in California with his OpEd saying
he's got to go. He never would have done that
if Pelosi hadn't blessed it. She's his master. And so
they're starting to, you know, twist the knife like it's
only going to get more painful for you from here, Joe,
and by that we mean Jill. He can leave now

(05:40):
with his dignity, or he'll leave later without any of it,
without his dignity. And even today there was a piece
of Axios talking about how they're threatening him and you'll
lose your library. Oh boo everano, But this is what
they're going to do. They're gonna try to ruin him
if he doesn't leave willingly. And at some point, Jill,
who does care about power and legacy and I guess

(06:01):
money post presidency, I think we'll be forced to go
to him and say they're ruining us.

Speaker 3 (06:05):
We've got to go.

Speaker 1 (06:07):
Have you ever considered wearing sunglasses inside? As you know,
we were talking about this before that in a winter. Yeah,
as of about twenty four hours ago, I've decided I'm
a sunglasses inside guy. It's just it's become who I am.
Have you ever considered coming around to this, I mean, not.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
Like as a policy, but on a case by case basis,
I would do it. No, I occasionally I do want
to avoid the Anna Winter relationship.

Speaker 3 (06:31):
He's not a good person.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
But I have dry eye and so the bright lights
often bother me, and I think, you know, maybe I'll
get on board.

Speaker 1 (06:38):
Well, they bother you, they don't bother me anymore, Megan,
Because I have my sunglasses.

Speaker 3 (06:42):
Why what brought you over? What tell me about your evolution?

Speaker 1 (06:44):
So one, these are a prescription so I can't see.
I can't make out people's faces anymore here, So that's
that's a problem. Because I'm forty two going on ninety two,
my eyes are apparently going to crap on me, and
that was a big part of it. I look really good,
especially because my hair has fallen out to the where
I have to buzz it. So I've got to make
I've got to compensate for things right now, Megan, you
don't have this problem. Okay, these are problems that I

(07:06):
have that you don't have.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
I had to wear the hat because for the listeners
I'm wearing it looks like a Maga hab but it
really reads make women female again, because it is like
a wind tunnel out there on my set, and it
was starting to look like, yeah, I'd just gotten out
of bed after like a hot and sexy night, and
that's not really appropriate for daytime news.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
No, no, it's not okay. Speaking of women's finish up
with this. Obviously, single women have been a huge problem
for Republicans for the longest time, and that problem is
getting worse. Married men vote Republican, married women vote Republican.
This is just how I go. Single men vote Republican,
but single women, by a margin something like seventy to
thirty vote Democrat. That is something that GOP has very

(07:50):
ham fistedly tried to change. Is that something that can change.
There's very clearly just the natural inclination of single women
to go left. Explain it, but maybe you can.

Speaker 2 (08:02):
I don't know that they're going to change that. I
think single women are very worried about abortion, and the
Republicans are not their party on that, even by saying
it's a stage issue, which is better than we want
to ban it in all fifty states. But I think
they're naturally worried more about having their right to get
an abortion, that's how they would phrase it. And I
also think that in some ways it's not their fault.

(08:23):
Because I have a daughter, I see what schools do
to the young girls, Like they really try to play
on their empathy to like start indoctrinating them on their
left wing causes. If you're a good person, if you're
a kind and empathetic person, this is how.

Speaker 1 (08:38):
You will feel about this issue. Right.

Speaker 2 (08:40):
Trans women are women's sweetheart, That's what the nice people
would say and accept. It starts very young, and so
I think it takes a while for the brainwashing to
wear off on them, because eventually they do get married
and they have babies, and they see ultrasounds and they
start to look at it differently. I think it's a
long evolution. But I think if I running Republican politics,

(09:01):
I would not say, put all your effort into.

Speaker 3 (09:03):
Young single women.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
Yeah, that's probably a lost cause she's Megan Kelly. You
know where to watch Megan Kelly. Listen to Megan Kelly's
Serious XM of Course, which is amazing YouTube podcast. Megan,
I appreciate you very much, even if you're not wearised sunglasses.
I appreciate you.

Speaker 3 (09:18):
Look forward to it.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
Thank you. You look great, Megan Kelly. Everyone all right,
So we still have obviously a ton to get to
it's our last night to hear at the convention. But
for now, before we get to any of that, I
want to talk to you about signing a pledge. Now
that's sounds weird, doesn't it sign a pledge? What does
that mean? Well, when I talk about IFCJ, the International

(09:40):
Fellowship of Christians and Jews, I want you to understand
that the people who are living under rocket attack, terrorist attack, murder, rape,
and just all that horror that they're going through still
every day. It's not in the news every day, but
they're going through it every day. They think if you
talk to people over there, they think America doesn't give
a crap because our because of our media, because how

(10:01):
horrible our media is. So the reason you sign the
pledge is they're gonna turn it in one big pledge,
all these signatures. They're gonna go over there and present
it to net and Yahoo and present it to them
and let them know, Hey, a lot of people care,
a lot of people care, a lot of people are
praying for you, A lot are you're not praying for them?

(10:22):
Go to support IFCJ dot org and sign the pledge.
That's all they're asking for. That I'm asking for money
and they're not. That's all they're asking for is just
signing a pledge support IFCJ dot org. If you would,
all right, we'll be back. It is the Jesse Kelly
Show on a Thursday. Do not forget. You can email
the show. We'll be right back on Monday. I'm not

(10:44):
gonna be here tomorrow. I'm traveling from this convention. But
now I'm to be back on Monday. You can email
the show Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com. If you
miss any part of the show, you can download the
whole thing on iHeart, Spotify iTunes. Now let's get back
to the asked Doctor Jesse questions. And I should update you.
The Biden campaign has come out since this news is

(11:06):
breaking news that he's planning on stepping down, some Biden
people have come out and said that's not true at all.
He's not stepping down. Look, we're not gonna know that again.
Like we talked about many times, you're not in until
you decide you're in, and you're not out until you
decide you're out. It's just let's wait and see. But
I tend to believe the story anyway. Let's do some
ask Doctor Jesse questions, Dear Jesse, machine gun Kelly, why

(11:30):
is early voting bab? All right, I'm gonna explain this
because this would be a good way so for you
to explain to norm and Norma because they can get confusing.
Why would you care? Why is early voting bad? All right?
Here it is. There's a thing called chain of custody.
You've probably if you watch legal shows, cop shows, you've

(11:50):
probably heard this phrase chain of custody. So evidence. You know,
I rate a drug dealer's house and I pick up
the cocaine. Okay, so it goes from me, from my possession.
I have to turn it into an evidence locker. It
has to be signed into the evidence locker. So that's
an ironclad chain of custody. So there's a time a
date where you signed it in and then it leaves,

(12:13):
and that has to be signed out at a time
and date. Who signed it out? This proper chain of custody?
Why is that so important? Because they understand important things
moving to and fro tend to disappear, things tend to happen.
I'll make it. I'll make it even simpler than that.

(12:34):
I've used this example before. Let's say we live in
a little hundred person village, okay, and in this village
we all get to vote. We get to vote. We're
voting on the new chief, who's chief in our village.
And so there are two scenarios. On the first In
the first scenario, there's a voting hut. There's one specific hut.
You show up on election day, you walk in there,

(12:55):
you show your ID, proving yourself to be a citizen
of that village, and you vote and drop your thing in.
You put your little piece of paper in there. Okay.
That's one way. On that day, at the end of
the day they add up all the votes. Winner is
the chief. That's one way. Second way is this, Oh, sure,
there's a voting hut, and on election day you can

(13:16):
wait and you can go vote in the voting hut,
and a lot of people do. But also they've mailed
these ballots out to a bunch of different people, and
if you want, you can you can fill out your
ballot and then it doesn't go to the voting hut.
The ballot someone will come by and he's in charge
of the mail of the village and he's gonna grab
your ballot from you and then he's gonna take that

(13:37):
ballot into a separate hut where they store the mail
for a while, and then it gets sorted in there,
and then eventually it'll be moved from that hut into
another hut, and they're gonna get things organized, and then
eventually from that hut it'll make its way down to
the voting hut. Now, which of the two ways is
more safe and secure? Which of the two ways is

(13:57):
more I don't know, appetizing for a cheater or beyond
absolute malfeasance. Which of the two ways is right for
just an accident? It doesn't have to be a bit fraud.
What if the male guy who shows up at your
house and grabs your ballot and he's walking to the
other hut, and the big gust of wind comes by

(14:19):
and there goes your ballot. It floats off, and the
ballots off, and it floats into the river, and now
your vote doesn't count. There is a reason, nation after
nation after nation has banned mail in voting, early voting,
any form of electronic voting, and they've gone paper ballots,
same day voted voting counting of the same day. That

(14:42):
is why early voting is bad. Now, if it's available
to you. Do it. Look, vote, I don't care how
you vote. Vote, but in general, you don't want that
in a society. All right, Jesse, do you think the
Republican National Convention seems a little dated? I can't tell
if they're running a Miss America pageant or the oscars.

(15:03):
I think newer Republican voters would rather see something with
the excitement of a cage match, or for that matter,
a Trump rally. The old guard prefers pomp and ceremony. Well,
they'll vote Republican anyway. Thanks for all you do. His
name is Michael, Okay. Does it feel dated? Look, there
are some things that are a tradition and they continue

(15:26):
on as a tradition, whether or not they make total sense. Now,
I need to explain that these conventions, they've been going
on for as long as anyone can remember, very similar
to you know what. Here's a good example, weddings, the
American wedding tradition. What happened? What happens normally? I realize

(15:48):
there people do it differently, but normally what happens you
you find yourself a dime or you find yourself a dude,
and you decide you're gonna get married and live happily
ever after, and you're gonna go smoochi smoth and life
is good, and that's good. I hope you do that.
Wonderful good for you. And you decide you're gonna get married,
and then you do what. You send out invitations to

(16:08):
everybody all across the country, friends, family, wherever you go,
and everyone has to then take a few days off
of work and buy a plane ticket a hotel. By
the time you're done, If you're flying a family of
four to somebody's wedding, that's a three four thousand dollars affair.
Most likely by the time you're done eating, flying, staying.

(16:31):
That's crazy, but that is the American tradition. And traditions
are very very very powerful things. And well, I'm not
a tradition fan. Traditions have their place. It's always been
done this way. Members of the Republican Party delegates people

(16:53):
from all across the country. They come together for a
gigantic event. And I will tell you, look, I'm you're
not here, but I'm here. I will tell you there's
value in coming together. There is value in coming together.
What have I told you before that you, especially if

(17:14):
you're an introvert. You need to avoid the temptation. I'm
pointing fingers at me. I'm an introvert. I need to
avoid the temptation when I'm not working, of just going home,
keeping to myself, watching my documentary, read a good book.
It's very tempting and it's very easy today in this
era of the cell phone, the smartphone, social media. And

(17:35):
I've told you you need to get out there and
force yourself into groups of like minded people. There's value
in community. There's value. Look, there's value in a PEP rally.
There is So does it feel dated when I like
a cage match? I understand Dana White speaking, and I yes,
of course feel stated. But at the same time it

(17:56):
feels traditional, and I don't necessarily think it's a bad thing.
All right, all right, but look, there are bad things
like living with pain every day. That's a bad thing.
That's not something you should do. And here's what we do.
We either tough it out when we have this daily pain, back, pain, neck, pay,

(18:19):
whatever it is. We either tough it out, or we
start taking things that are harmful to us just because
we don't want to live with that. I don't want
to live my foot or it's all the time, but
my back, I can't my leg. Instead, why don't you
seek out something natural, drug free. That's what relief Factor is.
It's natural, it's drug free. Wouldn't it be nice to

(18:41):
wake up tomorrow morning pain free? Relief Factor. You take
it for three weeks and you see what happens. Call
them all. I'm asking three weeks. If it doesn't work, stop,
you'll be ordering more. I guarantee it. Call one eight
hundred the number four relief or you can go to
relief Factor dot com. Don't live with pain every single day?

(19:04):
All right? All right, let's talk about Biden, the courts,
an inside job, and the assassination attempting more next True,
it's the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly
Show on a Thursday. Did you hear the w W

(19:25):
two vet who spoke last night at the convention. I'm
not big. Look, I'm not big on speeches. I'll be
honest with you, just doing me talking here. I haven't
seen a single speech in person, and I'm not going
to either. I'll watch it on TV. I'm gonna go
get some chicken wings. I'm gonna go I can't hear.

(19:47):
I can't hear the speech. Everyone's talking and everything. So
but I did watch this one last night, and man,
a love, this was fretting awesome.

Speaker 4 (19:54):
People say, people is America is an idea, but I
believe America is much more than that.

Speaker 1 (20:05):
America.

Speaker 4 (20:06):
America is our home.

Speaker 1 (20:08):
You know.

Speaker 4 (20:09):
And I was fighting in Europe and I came back home.
I kissed the ground, thank God that I'm back home
in my country and where I come from. When somebody
comes for me, for my home, you're digging your boots

(20:31):
in the ground and never look back. That's the attitude
that saved the free world and President Trump back in
commander in chief. I would go back to Marie Enlists
today and I was storm whatever beach you want, my

(20:52):
country wants to needs meet.

Speaker 1 (20:55):
You fight a gaunt tell me you're not ready to
stand up and cheer right now. It was friggin awesome.
And JD Vance was awesome last night. JD Vance was
also very, very aimed in one direction last night. Let's
talk a little that's not set aside the pomp pumps

(21:15):
for a minute and talk a little political strategy. I
don't know if you watched the speech, but it was heavily, heavily,
heavily what it was about JD. He was introducing, introducing
himself to a lot of people who don't know him. Look,
remember you're a nerd. I'm a nerd. We're political nerds.
We know who these people are. Norm and Norma don't.
So he was introducing himself, introduced his mom who's overcome addiction,

(21:37):
and things like that. That's wonderful. But he also was talking.
Notice how many times he mentioned Pennsylvania, rust belt manufacturing, Michigan.
I think he said those words about nine thousand times
last night. That is the plan for JD. Vance. I
bet you he might as well buy a second home

(21:59):
in Pennsylvania, a third home in Michigan, and maybe even
a fourth home in Wisconsin, because until July, he's going
to reside permanently in those states. JD. Vance is the
weapon they're going to aim at rust belt voters, rust
spelt swing voters who feel disenfranchised, they feel like their
country has screwed them over repeatedly. And he was speaking

(22:22):
to the working man last night, And as you know,
that is what I love, That's who I love, and
I love how much the communists hated it. This was
on MSNBC.

Speaker 5 (22:32):
He started talking about what America is is that America
is not just an idea. It is a group of
people with a shared history and a common future. The
thing about America is that it's not a group of
people with shared history. In fact, I think a lot
of people would argue it's quite the opposite.

Speaker 3 (22:46):
It's a lot of.

Speaker 5 (22:46):
People with different histories, different heritages.

Speaker 1 (22:49):
His in laws don't share the history exactly. And that
noticell just pause for a moment. Notice how much they
despise the very idea that we have a culture here,
we have a history, we have a culture. Lose this
stupid melting pot talking point. That's a bunch of crap.

(23:09):
We have a history in a culture. Our culture in
this country believes in freedom. Our culture believes in family goodness.
We believe the government should be small and out of
our lives. That is American culture. It's not some meaningless

(23:30):
thing that just kind of floats with ever any way
the wind blows. That's what the communist wants you to believe.
Is it unique to anyone's skin color, No, it's not.
Is it unique to anyone's heritage As far as what
country they come from or race. No, it's not. It's
not even really unique to anyone's religion. Although America was
founded by Christians, that's not debatable, and it is a

(23:52):
Christian history, of course it is. But it is a
country that has a culture. It is unique. It is wonderful.
The Communist has done wonders watering down that concept in
the minds of Americans. Anyway, I'll let this hag continue.

Speaker 3 (24:08):
Piece of it.

Speaker 5 (24:09):
He goes on. He went along sort of a paragraph
at least about this plot in eastern Kentucky where his
seven or six generations of his family are buried, and
his hope is that his wife and he are eventually
laid to rest there and their kids follow them. And
I sort of understand the idea of sharing the burial plot,

(24:31):
but it also is it reveals someone who believes that
the history that the family should inherit, and indeed, the
history that should be determinative in the story of the
Vance family is the history of the Eastern Kentucky Vances,
and not the Vances from San Diego, which is where
his wife is from and where her Indian parents are from.
But in America doesn't always have to be the white

(24:51):
male lineage Trump's that defines the family.

Speaker 1 (24:56):
You can't possibly treat these people with enough disdain, disdain you.
They hate you, They hate every single part of your country,
your culture, your history, and your values. And know you
don't have an obligation to live peacefully with them. These
people should be run out of the circles of power

(25:19):
everywhere they are found, because they are a poisonous cancer
on this country. Remember that, Jesse, in your opinion, how
many people would have had to be in on this
if it was an inside job, local cops too, so
on and so forth. Okay, so I guess we're doing hypotheticals.
What if this was an inside job? You know, no
one's ruled out anything, at least I haven't ruled out

(25:39):
I then who knows? Who knows? We may never know. Well, look,
it would only really take one or two. It wouldn't
take that many. You take somebody who's in charge of this,
in charge of that, You assign someone here when he
probably should be here, but you're in charge. It wouldn't

(26:00):
take that many. As far as the situation on the ground, now,
if we're going to do this inside job thing, he
was a train operative and who knows. I mean, maybe
he was, who knows. Let's let's put it on Iran,
because that's the one that makes us feel better than
that being our own government. So they would if Iran
wanted to do it well, on the day of, you
would only need a few, like I said, one, two, three,

(26:20):
You could make it happen if you had them in
the right places. But it would take a lot more
than that leading up to it. Planning, pepper, preparation, equipment.
These things take time. Takes a lot of time. Jesse,
how come you get to make up your own commercials?
Are you? How come you are allowed to do that?
You know? I have this question a lot from a

(26:42):
lot of people who are in radio, people who do
what I do, people who listen. They asked me, how
do you get away with this? How do you get
away with saying this? How do you get away with
doing your commercials this way? How do you get away
with well? Whoever said you couldn't, Here's what happens. Whenever
you would have you do a job, whatever your job is,

(27:02):
whether you're in construction or a lawyer or whatever you do,
you feel like you're supposed to do it the way
everyone else does. It, but you don't have to. That's
an unspoken thing that you don't have to. Why would
I do it that way? And look, as you know,
this is an advertiser supported show. I don't charge to listen,

(27:23):
I don't charge to download the podcast, and Lord Willing,
I can't promise this, but Lord will think it will
never happen. I wanted to always be free. But it's
not a charity. It's a business. So it's advertisers supported.
And so if you're going to read ads on the show.
It's not like people tune in for the ads, but
if you're gonna read ads on the show, you in
the very least could make an effort one to treat

(27:44):
your advertising partners the way they should be treated. That's one,
and two, make an effort to at least make it
a little bit entertaining. That's how I've always felt. I
don't understand why you feel like you have to do
some monotone or rate it off the thing. I think
that's freaking rutal. And to be honest, it's unfair to
advertising partners. It is whether you buy something or choose

(28:06):
to patronize one of these advertising partners of the show,
that's fine, it's your business. I don't want you to
ever do anything that doesn't fit for you, or you
don't like or doesn't work for you. I would never
say that, but they are the reason the show goes.
You know, it doesn't happen without them. When I talk
to you about Done for your Real estate's actually a
really great example. Done for your Real Estate's a great example.

(28:27):
What do they do? Done for you? Real estate helps
normal people invest in real estate. They'll they'll find the
homes for you. They'll get you the financing, the closing,
the rental costs of the rental process. They do all
this stuff for you. It done for you. Real estate
has such a place in people's hearts. They've been spoken
about at people's funerals because a father I believe it

(28:50):
was ten homes he eventually got from Done for your
Real Estate, passed that down to his kids. That's what
they do. Now. If that doesn't interest you, fine, my goodness,
don't call them. But if you do, these are my friends,
and they're wonderful people, and they might just make your
life better. This is for normal people to begin investing
in real estate, which is a really smart thing given

(29:12):
what we see from the dollar and the markets and
everything else. Go to done for you Jesse dot com
If that interests you, all right, done for you Jesse
dot com and tell him I said, Hi, I love
those guys. Brionna Morello, host of The Brionna Morello Show,
joins us next, Jesse Kelly Vaccian It is the Jesse

(29:37):
Kelly Show on a Thursday. And joining me now a
very special guest, longtime friend of mine who has her
own show now, as I always assumed she would, Brionna Morello,
host of The Brionna Morello Show. It's on Rumble. It's
on Twitter. Highly recommended. Okay, First, why in the world
would you go? Because I get these emails a lot

(29:58):
from people of Hey, Jesse, I want to I'm going
to start trying radio, or I will want to start
trying TV. I want I want to start doing this.
Why why would you do it? Why? Yeah?

Speaker 6 (30:08):
It sounds crazy, doesn't it?

Speaker 7 (30:10):
But I'm a little crazy, and I also really enjoy
not being censored. So so many of my stories would
get rejected when I pitch them during editorial calls. When
I worked in the corporate world, and I was so
upset and so heartbroken over it and so now nothing
gets rejected because it's just me.

Speaker 6 (30:26):
And that's the best.

Speaker 7 (30:27):
Part in all of this, Right, I'm able to now
report on things honestly and fairly and cover things that
they don't want to talk about, like JA six, like
the DOJ, lying to the American people, lying to the
juries that are all surrounding J six, the judges, and
it's it's great. You know, I'm and I always joke
about this, but I'm always pissing off the right people.

Speaker 6 (30:45):
That's the goal of every day, and so that's what
we do it on my show.

Speaker 1 (30:47):
That's a very good goal to have. Okay, let's let's
talk about the DOJ, because of all the things they've
taken over, that might be the most frightening. Once you
take over the legal system, once they can turn you, me,
the poor January sixers into enemies of the state, criminals
that they have the power to do whatever they want
to a storey in a cage, kill you, They can
do whatever they want to you. And this is one

(31:08):
of those things that feels daunting because Trump was in
there for four years, had two ags and they both sucked.
Neither of them drained that swamp can that be done,
or is it there and we can't remove it.

Speaker 6 (31:21):
I think it can be done.

Speaker 7 (31:22):
So when President Trump went back to the White House,
I am confident that he has great people around him,
people like Jeff Clark, who was over at the DOJ.
He was one of the rising stars that really came
up towards all of the election fraud questions, and now
he's being prosecuted because they are hoping to turn Jeff
Clark against the president. But Jeff Clark, like I've spoken
to him before, says that, you know, President Trump didn't

(31:44):
do anything wrong and there's no crimes that were being committed,
but they've indicted him in Fulton County. People like that,
people like Mike Davis. I'm pretty sure that they're going
to be key players in all of this and purging
out the wrong, the people who should not be there
in the first place.

Speaker 6 (31:57):
So I'm optimistic from that sense.

Speaker 1 (31:58):
Now.

Speaker 7 (31:59):
What's so worries though, is we've watched everyone keeps saying, oh,
just let the system play it out. But the system
we're watching the DOJ become weaponized, and everyone just thought
it was okay just to continue to sit back and watch.

Speaker 6 (32:10):
We have Republican attorney generals who.

Speaker 7 (32:12):
Have sat back and watched as other attorney generals have
gone after President Trump just because they don't like him,
manipulating laws, doing all of these legal gymnastics to make
sure they could criminally prosecute him, and they never stepped
in on any of this. Now we're watching the Missouri
ag kind of step up and kind of challenge a
lot of this. But it shouldn't have taken this much time.
We should have jumped in on the sooner. And that's

(32:33):
the part that's so concerning, if they've allowed it to
play it out for so long.

Speaker 6 (32:36):
When they shouldn't have waited this long.

Speaker 1 (32:37):
Well, they allowed it to happen to the January sixth
political prisoners, and look, these people matter too. It frustrated
me to no end. And I know you've been speaking
about this to your credit for a long time as well,
that these people, their lives, their livelihoods, their freedom matters too.
And you couldn't get enough people to care until it
was Trump under the gun. These freaking poor people from

(33:00):
the January sixth, they have been assaulted and abused by
their government in horrible ways and really forgotten by most
of the GOP.

Speaker 6 (33:08):
Yes, Jesse. That's the most outrageous part in all of this.

Speaker 1 (33:11):
Now.

Speaker 7 (33:11):
I know the name Stuart Rhodes has a very negative
image in the media, but he is somebody who ran
the oath Keepers and has never been accused of a
violent crime. The oath Keepers, because I want to go
dig into them. I've never seen anything regarding like a
video of them coming in a violent act or anything
of that nature. So I was a little I was
a little down the middle when I first started talking
to these individuals. I got on the phone with Stuart Roads,

(33:32):
who was in the DC goolog and he said, and
remind you, he's actually ivyly educated. He was a defensive
criminal defense attorney as well. He said, what they're doing
to me is the blueprint for what they want to
do to President Trump. And I thought at first sounded
like a little dramatic, and then it actually happens, and
they did lay out the groundwork against Stuart Rhodes, and
then they got eighteen years in prison because of it.

Speaker 6 (33:53):
Yeah, egregious, disgusting.

Speaker 7 (33:54):
I've been covering his trial. They've committed perjury the DOJ.
They withheld evidence from his criminal defense attorneys. They have
also just recently, we've come about going through an email
that both the DOJ and his attorneys did receive, but
the judge in that case, Judge Meta, an Obama appointed judge,
actually said that this was not going to be seen

(34:16):
in front of the jury. The email, specifically from the
DOJ saying that there was no evidence linking Stuart Roads
to before j six telling the oath keepers to go
into the capitol. They went through his signal messages, his emails, everything,
and they had no evidence of this, and Jesse that
email was withheld from the jury.

Speaker 6 (34:33):
And then the most.

Speaker 7 (34:34):
Egregious part in all of this, too, is that when
the FBI agents were put on the stand during the trial,
they openly admitted, yes, we didn't have any evidence showing
that Stuart Roads ever planned any of this out in advance.
So what do they do while they got an oathkeeper
who was under the same amount of pressure to go
on the stand and to say that, well, we didn't
say it. It was just kind of assumed that we're
going into the capitol. And because of that, he is

(34:55):
now sitting in prison for eighteen years until someone intervenes
in this.

Speaker 1 (35:00):
Years. Yeah, I mean, it's essentially you're your adult life.
It's gone. It just disappears. Anyway. Again, we're speaking with
Brianna Morello, host of The Brianna Morello Show. All Right,
So it broke an hour and a half ago, two
hours ago, this story from Mark Halpern saying Joe Biden's out,
he's writing his farewell speech. He's gone. Since then, the

(35:20):
White House has come out and said, no, this is ridiculous.
It's a bad story. It's not true at all, except
the story was multiple sources. Who knows where do you
fall in all this?

Speaker 7 (35:32):
Yeah, I mean, I think it's obvious he's not gonna
be able to make it to November. I think that
they have created this pressure campaign, and then they've done
it so successfully. At this point, we're watching all these
big name Democrats throw their names out there and say
he's got to take his name off the ballot in November.
So I think that he's going to bend to the
pressure eventually. But then again, who's going to replace him?
I mean, I know they're going to lose at this point.
There's no way that they could put somebody else in there.

(35:53):
Maybe Michelle Obama at this point, but again, I think
everyone else any other candidate would not be inspirational for
folks to go out and vote for it. I think
the messaging is clear if we kind of just stake,
you know, a little down the middle on these issues.
And I know people don't like hearing us it's rhino comments,
but ultimately we've got to win over these moderate voters,
and I think the best way to do that is

(36:14):
just keeping at pace of what we're doing now. You know,
President Trump is going to speak tonight, and I think
that his speech is going to be very It's going
to try to unify the country at this point, and
I think that's the best way to go about it
right now.

Speaker 6 (36:24):
I know it sounds crazy.

Speaker 7 (36:25):
I probably would have told you that a couple of
months ago, but I think this is actually the way
to go.

Speaker 1 (36:29):
That's where I'm at, very moderate and very down the
middle is, you know, That's.

Speaker 6 (36:32):
That's how I fall on Yea, That's what I've always
told people, you know.

Speaker 1 (36:35):
Jesse, Kelly, Brianna Morello, thank you so much. I appreciate you.
I'm very proud of you and your success. I knew
you would make it. I appreciate you.

Speaker 3 (36:41):
Thank you, Jesse. I appreciate you all right, So.

Speaker 1 (36:44):
We still have an hour left, and as you heard earlier,
there's a lot of talk that it's going to be Dome,
that it might end up being domed. Joe Biden might endoor,
sorry might not. He might even drop out. We don't know.
But what if it is at some point next hour,
I think like twenty minutes from now, we have a
guy who wrote a book on Dome. It's worth sticking

(37:06):
around for it. And other than that, it's just us.
It's just you and me. It's just ask doctor Jesse
time and we're going to have a good time. All right. Now,
Before we get to that, I want to talk to
you about your sleep. We neglect our sleep. We neglect
our sleep because we neglect our betting. Our pillows are

(37:28):
mattress toppers. We neglect the things on our bed. We
get one, we get something that's suitable, and we keep
it forever. You know that my pillow was there to
change all that. And let's remember, speaking of putting our
money where our morals are, this is the company that's
lost a fortune out there campaigning on your behalf, on

(37:48):
my behalf. You know what queen size premium? My pillow
is nineteen dollars and ninety eight cents right now? Did
you know that you want a new mattress topper as
low as sixteen. It's like getting a new mattress. It
changes your life. Your bed just holds you. It's glorious.
Go to MyPillow dot com, click on the radio listener

(38:09):
special Square and use the promo code Jesse Go take
advantage of all this, or you can call them if
you'd like eight hundred eight four five zero five four
four We will be back with us, doctor Jesse. Hang
on
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Jesse Kelly

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