Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly show.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Another hour of the
Jesse Kelly Show. A couple programming notes. I sound so
professional when I say that, what Chris?
Speaker 1 (00:24):
I do? A couple programming notes.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
About a half hour from now, we're gonna have my
friend John Justice, huge radio host from Minneapolis. He's gonna
be talking about Tim Walls. Who is this guy who'll
talk about that? Next hour, I'm actually bringing on another one.
I can't believe it's a two guests day.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
I never do this.
Speaker 3 (00:43):
Our friend Bka of World News with BK. There's so
much foreign policy crap going on right now. So we're
gonna dig into that with BK. But before we get
into that, and before I get back into Walls stuff,
I do want to do some a couple other emails,
and I do want to hit on this, and it's
completely unrelated to politics. It's just it occurred to me
(01:03):
and it bothers me. So you've heard of Simone Biles.
Simone Biles is that olympian who's dominating gymnastics. Of course,
you know, my wife is a gymnast, big shot gymnast,
so she knows all about it and Simone Biles is
also a filthy comy, and she goes on social media
(01:26):
the other day. You remember how Trump, when he was
busy curb stomping Biden in that debate, he talked about
the illegals taking black jobs. And that's exactly what happens.
The urban black community gets filled with these illegals, because
that's first place all the mayors and all the people
put them. They put all the illegals in the urban
black community, and then they go in and they snatch
(01:50):
up all the jobs that are in that community.
Speaker 1 (01:52):
Payton for pennies on the dollar. They do.
Speaker 3 (01:53):
They take black jobs. This is something that's been well chronicled,
and it's also a common term black jobs. This black
job's that. Of course, Democrats tried to make Donald Trump
seem like a racist after this, and they started saying
black jobs and black jobs. So it's a complete op.
This is a common term that they abused, that they
(02:15):
ran an op on. And of course Simone Biles runs
to social media and says, I love my black job,
just being a snarky, little dirty Democrat like she is.
And then I saw this today. This is from Serena
Williams that Tennis player. She's in Paris, tried to go
to some restaurant called the Peninsula. Sounds freaking expensive, she said,
(02:36):
Yike's Peninsula. I've been denied access to the rooftop to
eat in an empty restaurant of nicer places, but never
with my kids. Always a first And she puts an
eye roll thing there, and then of course they fact
checked her and we find out the restaurant was fully booked.
She wasn't denied. They were books, she didn't have a reservation.
(02:58):
And I don't have a larger political to make about this.
My point is social media has done a lot of
good and a lot of harm in this lifetime. There's
no question having access to endless amounts of information has
been wonderful and terrible. Having access to other people, famous people,
(03:19):
normal people has been wonderful and terrible.
Speaker 1 (03:22):
On some level.
Speaker 3 (03:23):
It's really cool that you can respond to your United
States Senator. You could get on right now and respond
to Ted Cruz if you're in Texas, and maybe he'll
ignore it, maybe he'll never see it, but I know
he's on there and he might respond.
Speaker 1 (03:42):
Kind of cool.
Speaker 3 (03:43):
Right at the same time, probably not for the best.
That everyone has access to everyone else. People make themselves
out to be terrible. But social media has done the
professional athlete an incredible disservice. Idto why Because when you're
(04:05):
an elite athlete, and I've known a few of these
elite athletes can be very very very well read and
very brilliant, but that it can also be the dumbest
people you've ever met in your entire life, because they're.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
Allowed to be that they can be.
Speaker 3 (04:22):
You know that old uh, the old stereotype of the
dumb blonde, the dumb blonde woman. Hey, there were all
kinds of funny dumb blonde jokes, and there have been
a million brilliant blondes, but yeah, there have been a
bunch of idiot ones.
Speaker 1 (04:35):
Why was that a thing? Why is it a stereotype?
Speaker 3 (04:38):
Because if you're a hot blonde, you can get through
life without developing a personality or a brain because a
lot of things are handed to you. It's that way
for professional athletes a lot. If you're a kid and
you're an unbelievable football player and you're big and you're
strong and you're fast, the truth is you don't really
(04:58):
have to study. Depending on where you are, there are
lots of places you don't have to study at all.
If you're in for instance, in my state of Texas.
I've told you before my buddy, one of my good friends,
I was actually in the Marines with him. He was
the third string quarterback in high school. Third string. He
wasn't even the backup, never saw the field. He was
given a's by his high school teachers because he was
(05:21):
on the football team. So, if you're an elite athlete,
you can coast through school without learning, without reading. And then,
of course, depending on the school you choose, you can
get a full ride scholarship to some Division I school
and you don't have to go to class. You've seen
the movies, you've read the articles. You know how this works.
(05:43):
You get the pretty girl goes takes your chemistry exam
for you, and soon you may find yourself in the NFL,
a multi millionaire. And yes, you are a grown adult
and you're in your late twenties and you have all
the money in the world. But the truth is you're
a complete and utter moron. This has been the whole
(06:04):
history of sports has been littered with these people. The
problem is now when it comes to social media, now
we know it. There've always been professional athletes who are
idiots always Now we know it. Simone Biles is the
(06:25):
most accomplished US gymnast in the history of the country.
And if it wasn't for social media, she would just
be America's sweetheart at this point in time. Look at
this incredible athlete. Look at Aldora Pole.
Speaker 1 (06:42):
She is go samun go. We would love her.
Speaker 3 (06:46):
It would be universal, Republican democrat, it would be universe,
wouldn't be political. But because this moron has access to
social media and has to vomit her moronic opinions out
there now. I laughed when she fell on the balance
beam the other day. My wife told me she fell.
Speaker 4 (07:05):
I laughed.
Speaker 1 (07:05):
I thought it was hilarious. I'm tired of this Fiel.
Speaker 3 (07:08):
It's not the first time she's opened her stupid fat
mouth about something, too. I liked it before I knew
they were morons. Serena Williams too.
Speaker 1 (07:17):
You just could hit a tennis ball better than other
women could. And that's awesome.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
It's an awful it's an awesome athletics skill, and it's
cool and I'm cheering for you. But she has repeatedly,
because of social media, revealed herself to be a complete
and utter moron, And honestly, it saddens me. It saddens me.
Social media did the professional athlete a profound disservice. We
(07:46):
should have never been able to find out how stupid
these people are.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
And now we do.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
And there's that, Jesse. Let's get back to politics. Am
I the only one on the right not celebrating the
VP pick? The choice of the open the extreme left
option tells me they don't plan to lose. They know
they need the moderates. There's nothing moderate about him. Anyone
else sensing they don't fear losing with this choice. Well,
(08:16):
I understand this way of thinking. When your enemy does
something that doesn't make sense to you, it can create
in you a sense of worry. At first, you're thinking
to yourself, Wow, this is great. This guy's an idiot.
And then if you allow yourself to dwell on it
long enough, you say to yourself, hold on or is
(08:39):
he does he know something I don't know? And you
remember that clip Chris Scrabit, if you wouldn't mind that
clip of Jamie Raskin from yesterday, the clip that has
been heard around the world at this point in time.
Jamie Raskin, very very high ranking Democrat, and the House
of Representatives. He sat down in a very serious tone
(09:01):
and laid out frankly that they don't intend to let
Trump win.
Speaker 5 (09:06):
What can be put into the Constitution can slip away
from you very quickly. And the greatest example going on
right now before our very eyes is Section three of
the fourteenth Amendment, which they're just disappearing with a magic
wand as if it doesn't exist, even though it could
not be clearer what it's stating. And so you know,
they want to kick it to Congress. So it's going
to be up to us on January sixth, twenty twenty five,
(09:29):
to tell the rampaging Trump mobs that he's disqualified. And
then we need bodyguards for everybody in civil war conditions,
all because the nine justices, not all of them, but
these justices who have not many cases to look at
every year, not that much.
Speaker 3 (09:46):
I get these emails, these emails of people very concerned
that the fix is in. They're not going to let
him win. And look, it's not that I don't share
these concerns, and I'm never, ever, ever going to be
dismissive of these concerns. These are very real concerns. But
I don't want to make the mistake of constantly thinking
(10:09):
these people are evil geniuses. They're evil, and sometimes they
can be brilliant, don't get me wrong.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
But Dome is not brilliant. Dome is not brilliant. It's
to fix in before November. I don't know we're gonna
find out in November.
Speaker 3 (10:24):
But if we lose to these two, well, you know what,
let's talk about that if we lose.
Speaker 2 (10:29):
Next it is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (10:34):
Reminding you you can email the.
Speaker 2 (10:36):
Show Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com. Jesse at Jesse
kellyshow dot com. In case you're wondering why it just
been quiet. There had something caught in my throat. It
was one of the nuts, and I did to explain. Listen,
(10:59):
shut up, Chris, why don't you grow up? Listen, have
to explain something to you. I'm a huge nut fan.
Speaker 3 (11:06):
I love cashews, and the problem is every now and
then one'll come loose in my teeth and it'll get
caught in my throat when I'm doing the radio. What Chris,
when did I eat cashews? Just a couple of minutes ago?
I didn't advertise to you they were cashews. I didn't
think they were kosher. I didn't know what you were
okay with and what you weren't. Anyway, back to what
(11:27):
we were talking about, let's get back to politics. The
fixers in all right, so some of things the fix
is in, and we were just kind of doing a hypothetical.
If we lose in November, what if that day, what
if it happens you have this complete moron dome.
Speaker 1 (11:45):
I mean, this woman.
Speaker 4 (11:46):
There was the creation of fire the wheel electricity technology.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
It's an absolute game changer.
Speaker 3 (11:58):
That person combined with combined with Tim Walls. What if
she combined with this nutball?
Speaker 1 (12:10):
What if? What if these two are president and vice president?
Speaker 3 (12:13):
The back room at the Saint Paul Armory erupted after
the governor's signature made driver's license for all the law
of the land.
Speaker 1 (12:21):
We talked about this wall. I always say, let me
know how high it is.
Speaker 2 (12:24):
If it's twenty five feet, then I'll invest in the
thirty foot ladder factory.
Speaker 1 (12:27):
That's not how you stop this.
Speaker 6 (12:29):
Should cities be allowed to be sanctuary cities?
Speaker 4 (12:31):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (12:31):
Local control? Yeah, what if we lose to them?
Speaker 3 (12:36):
Okay, with the thinking is, well, what if it's illegitimate
or legitimate. No matter what, if we lose to Kamala
Harris in tim Walls in November, it's going to hurt.
I will be upset, You will be upset. But it's
not going to be the end of the world. It's
(12:58):
going to be a clarifying moment. And clarifying moments have benefits,
even ones that make you uncomfortable, even ones.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
That hurt you.
Speaker 3 (13:12):
Know, I ever tell you my dad had five bypasses done.
The Kelly Men they don't live very long. On my
dad's side. My dad, about to be seventy, has way
eclipsed the other Kelly Men. Just hellart problems and strokes
and heart attacks and things like that. But this is
(13:33):
years ago, My goodness, this is fifteen twenty years ago.
I would guess my father is. He's always worked out,
always lifted weights and hiked it. He's just very active.
He's always pounding fence posts and driving cattle and Jesus,
he's a very active man. And he was out hikings.
He's always out hiking and walking and doing things like that,
(13:55):
and walking up a hill in Montana and just can't
catch his breath, has no energy, cannot catch his breath,
and something's wrong and he's miserable, and he figures something's
really bad and they take him to the hospital and
he finds out he has all these blockages in his
heart and he has to go in for open heart surgery,
(14:17):
which when you have to go in for open heart
surgery when you're that young, it's actually easier when you're older.
When you're that young, it's brutal because they have to
saw your bones open.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
They don't hit it. It's really it's brutal, brutal surgery.
Speaker 3 (14:28):
And they had five bypasses done. Now I remember it
like it was yesterday, watching my dad. My dad's huge,
it's six ' four two thirty two forties, big tough guy.
Watching my dad lay in a hospital bed with tubes
coming out of him, miserable, laid out, and that was awful.
(14:50):
I remember being in that waiting room with my mother
and my sister and it was just awful. And you
don't know if your dad's going to live.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Was terrible.
Speaker 3 (14:56):
Every part of it was terrible. The shortness of breath
surg the recovery was awful, was awful. Every part of
it was awful. It was awful, But my dad's about
to turn seventies. Healthy as a horse, knees bugging them
a little bit, but back to working out, still pounding
fence posts, still doing things he loves to do. Active, happy, healthy,
(15:21):
because he had a very very very painful, clarifying moment.
Clarifying moments are oftentimes very very painful. If the worst
thing happens this November, and I'm not saying it's going to,
I hope it doesn't, and I don't think it will.
(15:43):
I'm not making any predictions here. I don't think it will,
but it's possible. If the worst thing happens this November
and we wake up on Wednesday morning and we've got
four years of dome walls, my goodness, I am going
to hurt that day. You are going to hurt. Will
be sad, Will we desponded? Will be this? Will be that?
Speaker 1 (16:04):
And yes it will.
Speaker 3 (16:05):
It will mean pain for everyone in the country. It
will four more years of this idiocy will mean pain,
But in a lot of ways, it will be a
clarifying moment for us. Where are we as a country
If we feel like there are some shady things that
go on, where are we electorally, what if Trump wins
(16:31):
and Jamie Raskin gets his wish and Congress won't let
him assume office again, that's honestly, it might be that
might be wartime stuff, but again, horrible, bad, awful, but
a clarifying moment. And clarifying moments, as I said, are
(16:51):
often brutal and painful and uncomfortable, and we hate them,
but oftentimes they're necessary to make the directions we need
to make in life. All right, Speaking of Tim Walls,
John Justice good friend of mine. He's the greatest talk
show host in Minnesota.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
He's just awesome.
Speaker 3 (17:12):
He knows all about Tim Walls, and he's going to
join us in a minute to talk about Tim Walls. Now,
I have no doubt that John is going to be
calling in on a pure talk phone because John is
a patriot. You see, cell phone companies, they're some of
the worst companies out there. They are always getting involved
(17:34):
in the culture war, filth against us. Always Verizon AT
and T T Mobile. Every time you turn around, they're
taking your money and they're sending it to Planned Parenthood,
and they're sending it to Black Lives Matter. It's just
freaking terrible, not pure Talk. With pure Talk, you have
the patriotic cell phone company, and you don't sacrifice service
(17:55):
because they're on the same five G network. You want
to keep your phone a number good, That's what I did.
I kept my phone, I kept my phone number. You
want new number, new phone, they can do that too.
But switch to pure Talk. You'll pay less for the
same service, and you'll pay someone who appreciates your values
and promotes your values. And it's ten minutes on the
(18:16):
phone to switch. That's nothing. Who doesn't have ten minutes?
You have ten minutes right now, Dial pound two five
zero and say Jesse Kelly. That'll save you an extra
fifty percent off your first month pound two five zero,
Say Jesse Kelly.
Speaker 1 (18:32):
We'll be back mists.
Speaker 4 (18:35):
Catch up.
Speaker 3 (18:38):
Jesse kellyshow dot com.
Speaker 2 (18:40):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show, and I am excited
for this joining me now as I have been teasing
all show long. My friend and amazing radio host out
of Twin Cities News Talk obviously doesn't need any introduction. There,
John Justice, the morning guy. If you're in many apples,
you can also hear yours truly on that station. Maybe
(19:03):
you're listening to me there right now. So, John, you
know Tim Ball's Walls better than I do.
Speaker 1 (19:09):
Who is this guy, Jesse.
Speaker 4 (19:11):
I like to refer to him as Kim John Walls.
Speaker 1 (19:14):
If we're going to be respectful, yes, I know how
respectful you like to be. John.
Speaker 3 (19:22):
Look, I've gotten I've fielded a million questions about this
guy over the last hour and a half, John, And
one of the main themes is, how does this guy
get elected in a state that is relatively purple at
least it was, and go so hard left and really
take the state with him?
Speaker 1 (19:39):
How does that happen? You've lived there, you live there.
I don't how does this happen?
Speaker 4 (19:43):
Well, it's you my process of elimination at this point.
I mean, I know a lot of people have been talking,
and I agree that I think that you know, I
think Shapiro was in the lead. But for obvious reasons
to everybody, the problems that the Democrats have in their party,
they just to go with Walls. Walls has been jockeying
hard for this position ever since that June twenty seventh
(20:08):
disastrous debate with Joe Biden. He was the first person
that I saw on the national news defending Biden's performance
and Ever since then, and through the coup and the
asking of Biden, he has been out there auditioning for
this gig. And I've got several reasons why I think
(20:28):
Kamala picked him. But I also think that Minnesota is
in play. And while Pennsylvania is crucial for Kamalo to win,
I think they also know that Minnesota is vulnerable as well,
and because of that, Walls that was one of the
reasons why Walls was chosen.
Speaker 3 (20:45):
Okay, all right, you need to lay out for me
these reasons why you think he was chosen, And I
want you to start. If you don't mind what the
fact Minnesota is in play. I never even considered Minnesota
to be in play. I feel like that's something that
GOP lies to itself about all the time. Time then
Minnesota goes blue, but you feel like it's in play
this time.
Speaker 1 (21:03):
Why what's going on?
Speaker 4 (21:05):
The poles were closing prior to Biden getting ousted, and
every single poll that was coming out leading up to
that debate showed that the gap was closing and closing
it and it was well within the margin of error.
And Trump usually lags in the poles, and some of
the poles were actually showing that Trump was leading, and
(21:26):
because of that the moment that Walls ended up being
one of the most prominent individuals that I saw out
there defending Biden. I got my spidy senses started kingling
that now he's doing this for a reason. He wants
this job. He's got a massive ego, but he also
wants to make sure that the state doesn't go to Trump. Now,
(21:48):
the other reason why Jesse and we can get into
this if you like, is I think he's a safe
pick for Kamala Harris because no current Kamala Harris supporters
are going to pitch off because you chose Wallas. He
doesn't have any real good name wrecking across the country,
and he's says they're going to cast him as a moderate.
He's a radical, but he's going to play the role
(22:09):
of attack dog. He's a crescent wrench. He's going to
be a useful tool for Kamala Harris because he's very,
very media savvy.
Speaker 3 (22:17):
Okay, so why why go from Minnesota though over Pennsylvania
if it's not the jew thing. Obviously, I've been saying
it openly. It's very clear that Democrats have an anti
Semitism problem. They hate Jews, at least their base does now.
But even though you know your base hates Jews, Okay,
(22:38):
I give you that.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
Whatever.
Speaker 3 (22:40):
The Democrat base is a bunch of dirty demons. Anyway,
don't you still have to pick Shapiro. You need Pennsylvania
more than you need to protect Minnesota.
Speaker 1 (22:49):
Right.
Speaker 4 (22:50):
But I think that I think that the word coming
out of the Shapiro camp that maybe he didn't want it,
and I think that because of that, he may have
turned it down. I think he has further aspirations and Jesse,
I think that's why so many of the prominent names
that you know, the that the listeners would throw about you,
you know, your newsum, your your whitmer, you name them,
(23:12):
those that they thought would end up being the nominee
over Kamala Harris while this was all going down. I
don't think any of them wanted to be involved either.
I think they have their own political aspirations. I think
the Shapiro was the what was the first pick, but
I'm of the opinion he probably bowed out, and so
by choosing Walls, perhaps you can lock in all of
(23:34):
those Midwest states as well. While you're at it, secure
Minnesota as well. And I want to add one more
thing here, and I know I'm going on and cut
me off whenever you like. No, no, no. But you know,
what we know about Kamala Harris isn't a lot. But
we do know that she's had a massive turnover rate
within her within her office. Okay, she's not very well aliked.
(23:56):
That's that's pretty well known. I think she those Walls
because she connected with him. Walls is a jerk, I
mean he is. He comes off like this folksy guy
when he wants to when he's talking to local media
and plays up the dad role. He really is lovesome
in flannel though, And I think that she found a
(24:17):
commonality with him. And I think that she connected with
him because they really do seem like their card from
that same political far left, radical political stone. And I
think that she found something in him. And it may
not be the best pick, but I think for her
that's what she wanted. I think this was a personal choice.
Speaker 3 (24:38):
Speaking with my friend John Justice, we go way way
way back. He's the best talk show host in the
state of Minnesota in my opinion, John, can you explain
to me this because there are issues that you care
about and I care about that. That'll go past the
norms and normas, and I get that. I know I'm
a partisan. I don't pretend to be otherwise. But the
National Guard thing, John, I opened up the show, I
(24:59):
got my freaking blood pressure up. Outs to Dagon Matt
about it. Running out on your unit right before they
deploy to Iraq is not a small thing to me.
It's everything to me. If you agree with me on
every issue, I would hate his guts.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
For that alone.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
Does that not move the people in Minnesota and the masses?
I know it probably moves you, but the masses does
that not? Does that not bother them?
Speaker 4 (25:21):
It does, But here in Minnesota, more recent events supersede that.
I understand your frustration. I echo your sentiments on that.
But here in Minnesota, the riots, well, let's go back further.
Let's go back to the to the draconian COVID lockdowns.
What he did to the businesses and the people here
(25:42):
in Minnesota is unforgivable by a lot of by a
lot of people. And when the George Floyd riots took place,
and he hesitated to call the National Guard and then
tried to defend his actions by saying that or we're
going to call up a bunch of a bunch of
young cooks. That's how he labeled them. That sticks with
the people of Minnesota more than those previous events that
(26:05):
you mentioned. There's a lot more focus on that than
there is. That was something of a controversy before, but
now that's what people are more are more focused on.
Speaker 1 (26:16):
John.
Speaker 3 (26:16):
Tell everybody how far back we go.
Speaker 4 (26:20):
As far as.
Speaker 1 (26:22):
You and me?
Speaker 4 (26:24):
Oh yeah, I mean we go back to the beginning
of your political aspirations, the start of my talk radio career.
For Crying out Loud, I think you were one of
my first interviews.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 3 (26:35):
John Justice was he was the big deal in Tucson, Arizona,
back when a young idiot marine started running for Congress.
Speaker 1 (26:45):
And it was a really, really, really big deal to.
Speaker 3 (26:48):
Get John Justice to have you on the air back then,
especially when nobody freaking knew my name, and before anybody else, anyone,
Nashally or anything else would even bother talking to me.
You kept it's binging me into the studio. That is gosh, John,
do you want to feel frigging old? I think that's
like fifteen years ago. That's how old we are now.
Speaker 4 (27:07):
Yeah, man, Yeah, it's been twenty eight years of doing
this at this point in time, and you know what, Jesse,
it's amazing to me. I listened to your show. You're
usually my my main listen on the drive in. I
catch up with your previews show on my drive into work.
And what's incredible is that I had so many instances
of people that I interviewed for the first time at
(27:30):
the beginning of their political career, just you know, entering
into the fray. And I've seen so many other people
Jesse go the other way. They've just succumb to all
of it and they just turned evil. You know, they're
no other way to put it. And it's so refreshing
after all these years to listen to you and to
(27:50):
know you you stuck to your guns. You're the same
Jesse that I knew then. Certainly way more season, but
you're the same Jesse I knew then that you are
now man, And it's a thrill to listen to you. Yeah,
it's a it's a it's it's something I never forget
in terms of our relationship and my radio career.
Speaker 1 (28:06):
Well, I appreciate you very much.
Speaker 3 (28:08):
My brother, like I said, he is John Justice Honestly,
I would tune in if I was anywhere across the country,
I'd tune in listen to John Justice in the morning.
He's as good as it gets. My brother, appreciate you
as I always do.
Speaker 1 (28:18):
He is. He's awesome. Fringing John Justice. Gosh, what a
good dude.
Speaker 3 (28:21):
All Right, we have a lot more. I'm gonna get
to some emails and stuff before I get to those. Uh,
you know, we are going to touch on the Iran thing.
In fact, I'll probably lead with that next. What is coming?
What do I think is coming? I've been I've been
reaching out to every source I have trying to figure
out what's going to come. But no matter what comes,
(28:43):
the people in Israel are going to suffer for a while.
That's the way it goes. They're going to suffer for
a while. There's going to be needs. There are going
to be medical needs, emergency food needs, flack jacket needs,
fire fighting equipment needs, armored vehicles, they need armored ambulances.
Imagine living in a place where your ambulance has to
(29:05):
be able to stop bullets. You remember October seventh. A
lot of the people who lived there lived because they
were in IFCJ provided ambulances that stopped bullets because Hamas
was shooting up all the ambulances, that's that's what That's
where your donation goes. They're looking for five hundred people
to give one hundred and fifty bucks because they have
(29:25):
a donor who's going to match those donations. Right now,
if you can give, give support. IFCJ dot org is.
Speaker 1 (29:34):
Where you go to give, all right, we'll be back.
Speaker 3 (29:38):
He doesn't care if you believe him, but he's right.
Speaker 2 (29:42):
Jesse Kelly, it is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (29:49):
Member.
Speaker 3 (29:49):
If you missed any part of the show, you can
download the whole thing on iHeart, Spotify iTunes. Let's move
off of this stuff and move on to other things,
shall we. Machine Gun Kelly is Kamala the perfect candidate
for the system In my opinion, she's the perfect win
win candidate. As an empty vessel, she's the perfect puppet.
(30:09):
On the other hand, nobody likes her, so she could
be the perfect scapegoat for losing the election. Well, that
creates an interesting scenario.
Speaker 1 (30:18):
Doesn't it.
Speaker 3 (30:19):
Of course, the system wants democrats to win. The system
is communist rum. Therefore it's Democrat one. It only helps
the system when Democrats win, but if Dome were to lose,
it would create a unique opportunity for the system, and
that she is a huge pain for them. Remember they
(30:41):
didn't want her on the national stage because the public
rejects her. The answer to your question is no, she's
not the perfect one. Yes, they love having an empty
vessel they can control, but what they really want is
a charismatic empty vessel they can control. Joe Biden was much, much,
(31:02):
much more of a perfect candidate for the system than
Dome is. And it's not because he's any more or
less capable than she is. It's because Joe Biden. And
don't you dare email me and yell at me, Joe
Biden is charming.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
Not to me.
Speaker 3 (31:20):
I despise Joe Biden, to be clear about that. But
Joe Biden has been elected for a very very very
long time by doing the Scranton Joe thing, which is
of course a lie, by being the hey I look
at me, I'm hard scrabble Joe Joe Biden. Remember when
Joe Biden squared off against Paul Ryan and just beat
(31:43):
the living crap out of Paul Ryan, And that VP debate. Like, obviously,
I was sitting there rooting for Paul Ryan, so I
didn't want us to lose that election. But as a
complete partisan hack, I watched that debate and I winced
the entire time, knowing Joe Biden was taking that lightweight
dork Paul Ryan and beating the living.
Speaker 1 (32:04):
Crap out of him.
Speaker 3 (32:06):
At the same time, Joe's an empty vessel and getting
emptier by the day as his mind melts into hot,
steamy goo. So Joe Biden was the perfect president Dome
actually creates problems for them because they have to try
to get her over the finish line. They want a charming,
(32:27):
empty vessel. Look, she's come down on so many different
sides of so many different issues that this is how
the interviews are going.
Speaker 6 (32:35):
In the twenty twenty primary, the Vice president praised the
defund the police movement, and now she says she doesn't
support defunding the police. She called for decriminalizing crossing the
border illegally, Now she supports President Biden's policies for clamping
down at the border. She supported Medicare for All at
one point, eliminating private insurance, and her campaign says she
(32:59):
doesn't support that. Now she's reversed herself on a fracking van,
what do you think that voters should think when she's
reversed herself on several issues just in the last four years.
Speaker 3 (33:10):
I think that voters should think that she's a human
being who learns new things every single day.
Speaker 6 (33:15):
But no concern about flip flopping. No, no concern about
flip flopping.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
No, not at all.
Speaker 3 (33:20):
Looks she can have a hard time getting elected, But
as we talked about earlier, if she gets elected, if
they win, it will be painful, but it will be revealing.
Speaking of revealing, since Minnesota's in the news, let's talk
about their lieutenant governor.
Speaker 1 (33:37):
Her name's Penny Flanagan. Listen to this, because let's.
Speaker 7 (33:40):
Be clear, this is life affirming and life saving healthcare.
When our children tell us who they are, it is
our job as grown ups to listen and to believe them.
That's what it means to be a good parent.
Speaker 3 (34:02):
She's, of course, referring to the fact that she wants
children to be able to mutilate themselves behind their parents back,
and that I want to pair with this story here,
this is from town Hall. I want to make sure
they get credit for it Children's National Hospital. It's a major,
major children's hospital. It's advising parents on how to help
(34:26):
their kids transition. This is such an unspeakable evil to me.
There are so many evil things going on as we
look around here right now, but the fact that children
are not only being mutilated in our society, they're being
mutilated out in the open. Politicians are bragging about doing it.
(34:50):
Parents themselves are bragging about what they're doing to their
own children. I don't ever claim to be a good person,
as you know, and I'm certainly not any kind of
a good person.
Speaker 1 (35:04):
I know that.
Speaker 3 (35:06):
But even me, even terrible Jesse, I look at what's
happening in my society and I'm so overwhelmed with the
evil I see. Does it ever hit you like that?
Sometimes it hits me like that. Whatever, Dear Pink Flower,
I've been wanting to email you for a while, considering
I've been listening to your world famous show for a
couple of years now. I'm a I'm twenty eight years
(35:28):
old with a wife and son, and I started my
own company last August. I love that I listen to
you every day. You have influenced me heavily. I appreciate
your boldness. The reason for my email is I just
tried a new dorito and it was amazing. They're called
Diddy Mita Sticks, Dynamita, Dynamita would get Chris, how do
you say that word Dynamite? It's Mexican anyway, Dynamita sticks
(35:51):
and the flavor is smoky chili caeso.
Speaker 1 (35:54):
Oh that sounds legit.
Speaker 3 (35:56):
My first thought was of you and your terrible eating habits.
They are absolutely amazing. Please try and let us know
what you think. His name is Josh, Chris. Can you
get us some did? Did the Meati sticks? Can you
order some of those?
Speaker 1 (36:13):
Chris?
Speaker 3 (36:13):
Put it on the iHeart credit card. Don't tell the
suits what you bought. You don't have to itemize things.
Tell them it was for stationary or something. They're never
gonna know anything anyway. Get us some of those, all right?
We still have an hour, got BK coming up, lots
of fun, hang on