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.
Speaker 1 (00:18):
Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on a Wednesday. Remember,
you can email the show whatever you want Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com. I'm gonna talk about credit card
debt dome. We're gonna open up with some Tim Walls
talk a little bit more Tim Walls talk here, because
that's still this stuff just freaking steams me to know.
And I'm not gonna go off like I did at
(00:39):
the beginning of the first hour last night. If you
listened last night, I'm sorry. I got a little bit
upset at the opening of the show. It happens to time.
It was a little upset Chris. Anyway, I'm not gonna
do that again, So I've let that go. If cooled off.
The wife even told me when I got home, she said,
you really need to relax.
Speaker 2 (00:55):
I was worried.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
I'm fine, I'm fine. Look how calm I am. I've
never been more calm. But man, they're stolen valor. And
then there's what Tim Walls has done and said here.
And I'm telling you, I think Democrats might have a
real real problem on their hands. This might have been
a disastrous pick. They might even have to walk away.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
From folkol Cup like many of you did five weeks ago.
And Dad said, Dad, you're the only person I know
who's an elected office. You need to stop what's happening
with this. I'll take my kick in the butt for
the NRA. I spent twenty five years in the army,
and I hunt and I gave the money back, and
I'll tell you what I have been doing. I've been
voting for common sense legislation that protects a second amendment.
But we can do background checks, we can do CDC research,
we can make sure we don't have reciprocal carry amongst states,
(01:40):
and we can make sure that those weapons of war
that I carried in war is the only place where those.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
Weapons were a.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
Weapons of war that I carried in war. But Tim
Walls was never in war. And when Tim Walls's National
Guard unit was getting ready to go to war, Tim
Walls tucked his tail between his legs, retired promptly from
(02:08):
the National Guard, and ran for Congress. Unless you're counting
the streets of Minneapolis, Tim Walls has never been in
a war zone. And the reason I'm bringing this up
I'm not actually gonna go off on the stolen valor
thing again. Tim Walls is now getting asked about this
(02:28):
from mainstream reporters from We're talking the ABC, CBS, NBCs
of the world. They're confronting him on his stolen valor.
I carried a weapon of war in war? Why didn't
you deploy your National Guard unit? A bunch of guys
from his National Guard unit are blasting him and have
blasted him publicly for running out of him. And the
(02:52):
reason I say this might become a gigantic problem for
the Democrat Party is this, and this is something we've
talked about before. The Democrat Party has a patriotism problem
when it comes to the voters. This is what I mean.
Democrats hate America. Talked about that before. There's a reason
(03:12):
Democrats don't even fly the American flag. They don't even
fly at their own convention. There's a reason when you
hear them campaign, no matter where they're campaigning Congress, Senate, President,
every part of the platform is America sucks. You've been
done wrong. This country sucks, doesn't it. It's always sucked
for you here. This sucks. That's how they campaign because
(03:35):
they're Communists. It's the religion of the malcontent. They campaign
on open hatred of the United States of America. That's
what they believe, it's how they campaign. But they have
to be very very careful about how overt they are
about American hatred because there are a bunch of older Democrats.
(03:58):
Maybe you're one of them, listening to the sound of
my voice, who loved the country, maybe even fought for
the country. And maybe you're a Democrat because your dad was,
or you are or were a Union guy, and that
that you've always felt Democrats were more friendly the Unions
than Republicans. But there are Democrats, especially older ones, who
(04:20):
do not hate the United States of America. And while
they may not become registered Republicans, they would stop voting
for Democrats if they woke up and realized how much
Democrats do hate the United States of America. So you
take a guy like Tim Walls with his twenty four
years in the National Guard, and you run him. Democrats
(04:43):
love to do that. They love military mascots because what
military mascots like Tim Walls do is they kind of
pour a little bit of cold water on that America
hatred image. You know, they know they hate America. That's
what they're selling to their base. They hate America. But
(05:04):
you get a guy like Tim Walls, so the order
Democrat can talk himself into Wow. I mean, they don't
hate America. I love America and I don't hate it.
And see Tim Walls served. But what if the military
mascot Tim Walls. What if that goes from a benefit
(05:25):
to a huge negative. If you go from having a
military mascot to having a coward then someone who runs
out on his unit the second combat comes along, Well,
now your military mascot only encourages, it only amplifies. I
should say the image that Democrats hate the United States
(05:49):
of America. Tim Walls being in this race, he might
hurt a lot more than he helps, because this stolen
stuff is real. And yes, please Chris play me that
Clint web thing.
Speaker 2 (06:04):
Remember it.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
Chris brought it up because there's a little part of
this little comedy skit.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
It's from the Whitest Kids.
Speaker 3 (06:10):
You know.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
I've played it many times before. It's the most hilarious
and honest parody of a political ad. And there's a
little part of this thing. You'll hear it that it's
just it was written for Tim Wallas.
Speaker 4 (06:23):
Hi, I'm Clint Webb and I'm running for Senate. I
have a short, cropped haircut, a pretty enough yet accessible
looking wife, and a newborn baby that I've dressed in
a suit to prove to you that I mean business.
For the last fifteen years, I've lived my life in
such a bland, uncontroversial, and repressed manner that it's almost unnatural.
(06:44):
Why Because I've been preparing to be a representative since
I was a child. Most well adjusted, sane men would
be hesitant to take a job where their decisions would
so drastically affect the lives of so many. Not me.
I possess a sort of sociopathic narcissism that makes me
think that I should be in charge of everyone. But
(07:05):
all of that needs to start here at home, in
this beautiful state. But I've grown to love since I
moved here eighteen months ago. Together, we can piggyback some
of our state's legitimate needs onto my unquenchable lust for
self glorification. And that's a promise. Oh and one more thing,
I have a dog. I enlisted in the military for
(07:25):
the minimum amount of time and a position that would
never see combat. Why well, because it would help me
be your senator. I don't make friends, I make acquaintances.
All of my motives are ulterior. I'm self involved to
the point of psychosis. My soul is terrifying. And that's leadership.
(07:46):
So this November, let's send Washington a message.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
And what is that message? Hey me, Tim Walls for
vice President? I enlisted in a position in the military
that would never see combat. Why because I knew it
would help me become your vice president. I'm Tim Wallas.
In fact, as soon as combat came around, I bailed.
(08:13):
And now this story is getting legs, and I think
Democrats may have made a horrible decision because between now
an election day, they will do everything they can do
to try to lessen that America hatred image. Tim Walls
(08:34):
being a dirty coward, it only amplifies it. Jay Steele,
I'll come right out and ask, do you think Harris
will lose a bit of the black vote because she's
married to a white dude?
Speaker 2 (08:47):
Oh gosh, that reminds me. Did you hear this?
Speaker 1 (08:51):
Every part of this, just honestly, every part of this
made my tea levels drop. This is Dome's husband, Doug,
being interviewed I don't. Honestly, I don't know what's gayer
and more feminine the question or the answer as being
second gentleman. I'm sorry, I just set the stuff on
that already right off the bat. Dude, Honestly, I love
(09:16):
my wife, but I think if she ever got elected
vice president, I would have to divorce her because I'm
not getting called the second gentleman. That is just that's
really bad. It's really bad. Ah, if you're listening, don't
ever go for it, because this is not going to
work out for me anyway.
Speaker 5 (09:28):
Here. It is as being second gentlemen, change your own
view of perceived gender roles of what it means to
be a man.
Speaker 6 (09:37):
That's this is something I've I've thought about a lot
and something I've spoken about a lot. There's too much
of toxicity, it's masculine toxicity out there, and they're kind
of confused what it means to be a man, what
it means to be masculine. Where you've got hold.
Speaker 1 (09:53):
On the second gentleman's about to tell us how to
be a mess.
Speaker 2 (09:56):
Trope out there that you've got to be tough and
you know and.
Speaker 6 (10:01):
Lash out to be strong. It's just the opposite you know,
strength is how you show your love for people. Strength
is how you are for people and how you have
their back.
Speaker 1 (10:11):
That was the second gentleman thug.
Speaker 5 (10:14):
I'm actually going to address the I'm going to answer
the email in a moment, but I realize if I'm
going to play that for you, I also have an
obligation to you when I play things like that for you.
Speaker 2 (10:27):
About the second gentleman.
Speaker 1 (10:28):
As being second gentlemen.
Speaker 2 (10:31):
Your tea levels are dropping. I know.
Speaker 1 (10:34):
That's why I now need to introduce you to a
male vitality stack from Chalk. We're talking a twenty percent
increase in your tea levels in ninety days. Is that
enough testosterone to counteract hearing someone in that voice call
someone else the second gentleman, I don't know, but without
it you have no chance whatsoever. Chalk is all natural
(10:57):
herbal supplements. They have lots of different kinds. I personally
I drink chocolate powder first thing in the morning, and
I take a male vitality stack with my breakfast in
the morning and before workout, I do take chad mode
if I'm being honest.
Speaker 2 (11:12):
But they have everything.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
They have something for everyone. Fellas get on a male
vitality stack. Unless you want to be a second gentleman
one day. C hoq call them, text them five zero
chuck three thousand. Tell them I told you to call.
They will talk to you. There are dimes on the
other end of the line and some dudes, but they're
(11:34):
ready to help. They're not just taking orders. They're ready
to help. You have questions, They'll answer your questions. Five
zero chuck, three thousand.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
We'll be back.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
Truth attitude. Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on Wednesday.
Speaker 2 (11:54):
Don't forget.
Speaker 1 (11:54):
You can email us Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
JD Van speaking of walls before I will get back
to the email. I know I'm a little disjointed here,
but look I'm trying.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
My focus is just stay focused.
Speaker 1 (12:09):
JD Vance has been dynamiting here. He was calling out walls.
Speaker 7 (12:12):
It really bothers me about Tim Waltz as a marine
who served his country in uniform when the United States
Marine Corps, when the United States of America asked me
to go to Iraq to serve my country, I did it.
I did what they asked me to do it, and
I did it honorably.
Speaker 2 (12:24):
And I'm very proud of that service.
Speaker 7 (12:26):
When Tim Waltz was asked by his country to go
to Iraq, you know what he did. He dropped out
of the army and allowed his unit to go without him,
a fact that he's been criticized for aggressively by a
lot of the people that he served with. I think
it's shameful to prepare your unit to go to Iraq,
to make a promise that you're going to follow through,
and then to drop out.
Speaker 2 (12:46):
That's really well done.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
All right, back to the let's get through some emails.
The guy said, Jesse, I'll come right out and ask,
do you think Harris will lose a bit of the
black vote because she's married to a white dude. Well,
let's talk about something we tend to political people do
this all the time.
Speaker 2 (13:04):
I'm guilty of it.
Speaker 1 (13:05):
You're guilty of it. It's really a human nature thing.
We tend to make all encompassing statements too often. I am.
I relatively sure that that will bother some black people. Well, yeah,
I would assume. So, yeah, is that going to be
(13:26):
a gigantic number. No, people will make excuses to vote
however they want to vote. Everyone does this all the time.
So look, I if you're a black person and you're
a Republican or a libertarian, or an anti communist, or's
something along those lines, you're gonna vote for Donald Trump.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
You would vote for.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
Trump if it was black, white, yellow, brown, whatever, whatever
the different, you would vote for Donald Trump. If you're
a black person who's a Democrat and you've always voted Democrat,
your mom is always vote Democrat. It really doesn't matter
what domes color is. It doesn't matter what color her
husband is. You're gonna crawl across broken glass to vote
(14:09):
for the Democrat.
Speaker 2 (14:11):
Is this?
Speaker 1 (14:12):
These are things that we wonder about, these things, and
we make these statements. You know what, Let's make this
about Jewish Americans. We've talked about this. I think we
talked about it last night. There are a bunch of
Jewish Americans who care very deeply about Israel, and they're
concerned about the Israel hatred and frankly Jewish hatred they
(14:34):
see out of the Democrat Party, and they're going to
either not vote or maybe even vote for Trump. We
see that in some poll numbers across the country. But
there are many, many, many Jewish Americans who don't care
about Israel. At all. It never enters really their mind.
Chris has backed this up. My old campaign managers Jewish,
like all my old friends who are Jewish, my friends
who are Jewish, they'll they'll tell me that to this day,
(14:56):
that Democrats could come out right now and say school
is that's I don't care if Iran bombs them off
the map, and it wouldn't sway them even a little
bit to stop voting Democrat because Israel's not the main thing.
But we can, we can fool ourselves. Like I like
to joke with Chris about that, just because it makes
me laugh and it's inappropriate. When I bring up Israel
doing something, I point at Chris and I say, you, people,
(15:18):
it's funny, because it's not true. He's not Israeli. He's
a freaking American. Not every American Jewish person feels some
deep affinity for Israel and the way Israel does things.
Many do, many many do, but many do not. So
you have to be careful, always be careful about these
all encompassing statements. Right, all right, hey, Jesse, I guess
(15:40):
we're just gonna do some of these todays.
Speaker 2 (15:42):
Jesse.
Speaker 1 (15:43):
Three questions for you. What's your favorite part of the chicken.
Are you a breast man a thigh guy?
Speaker 2 (15:49):
All right?
Speaker 1 (15:49):
Well, I love breasts and I love thighs. I've always
been more of a chicken wing guy, though I like
the wing. I prefer that what Chris. Everyone knows wings
are the superior. It's not a child's answer, Chris, it's
a white trash answer. I can't help who I am.
You don't like chicken wings. Didn't you just order chicken
wings like yesterday? It's not thighs. Look, I love thighs,
(16:12):
all right. I love breasts. I love wings the most.
Wings are probably my favorite. What's my most preferred cut
of steak?
Speaker 2 (16:18):
Ribbi?
Speaker 1 (16:19):
I used to be a filet man, but then I
realized you kind of have a little fat. Fat equals flavor.
So I'm a Ribbi guy. And for the coupdi gras,
he says, Velvita shells and cheese or Kraft Mac. I
love Velvita shells and cheese. But we've always been Kraft
Mac people because you can go to any one of
these big box stores and you can get you can
get boxes of a hundred of Kraft Mac for nothing,
(16:41):
for something like fifty cents a box. You can eat
on Kraft Mac if you have Kraft Mac, butter and milk,
and obviously you need to put a bunch of pepper
in there, like a Dagone American. If you have those things,
you can eat like a king for ages. But but
I need to clarify. I'm sure you probably already know
(17:02):
about this, so I don't want to act as if
it's breaking news, but maybe it kind of is.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
It's journalist Jesse. There's just no one better.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
We love Jesse.
Speaker 5 (17:12):
He's the best.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
Yessie.
Speaker 5 (17:13):
Please kiss my baby, Yessie.
Speaker 1 (17:15):
Jesse, Jesse, Jesse, Jesse. Have you ever had the cheese
burger mac recipe that is made with velveta shells and cheese?
You haven't, Chris, Well, I guess yeah. It probably wouldn't
be kosher. But I have, Chris, and it's so good.
It's too bad you don't get to have it. Oftentimes
(17:37):
it's on the box, but in this internet age, you
can find the recipe on the internet. But there is
a cheese burger mac recipe that pairs with velveta shells
and cheese, and it is one of the best things
I have ever eaten in my life. If you put
a big vat of that in front of me, or
(17:58):
an amazing steak in front of me. I don't know
that I would choose the steak. That's how delicious velveta
shells and cheese is. And here's the kicker, it's even better.
The next day you reheat it and it's kind of greasy,
and those flavors have gotten to know each other.
Speaker 2 (18:14):
Gosh, I'm freaking starving. All right, we need to go.
I'm starving. I'll be right back.
Speaker 1 (18:18):
Truth Attitude, Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a Wednesday.
Speaker 2 (18:28):
A home day.
Speaker 1 (18:29):
I just want to touch on this story very very quickly.
Speaker 4 (18:32):
Here.
Speaker 2 (18:32):
It's this from the Daily Caller.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
American jury convicts a man of spying for the Chinese
Communist Party. China has been so aggressive with their infiltration
of the United States of America, with their infiltration of
the military. We have Chinese spies throughout the military. How
many times have you read a story about a guy
(18:56):
getting busted for sending info to China? And it makes
me nervous. And it's not that I think we're going
to have open warfare with China. I really I could.
I have a hard time seeing that happening because they
need us, we need them. You actually heard BK talk
about this a little bit last night. But man, knowing
(19:16):
our lack of intel inside China, there was a big
story a few years back we for some really horrible reasons,
are spies we had in China all got rounded up,
tortured and murdered. So our country is full of Chinese
spies and we don't have that many spies inside of China. Man,
if God forbid it ever came to something spicy between
(19:39):
us and China, they know a lot more about us
than we know about them. And that's a problem. You
know what else is a problem the fact that the
people who lead the country are all really, really old
and drunk half the time.
Speaker 8 (19:52):
Well, the first bill, the first bill protect so COVID,
shots in the arm, money in the.
Speaker 2 (20:03):
Pocket, that's Grandma vodka. That is not edited. We didn't
edit that.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
The people who lead the country were all either hammered
or old or old and hammered and manned. What a
place to be. Let's get to some emails, shall we, Jesse.
For the large part, Democrats failed to get Trump in
the courts. Hold on pause pos possible. For the most part,
(20:28):
they failed. We caught some lucky breaks and some things
went our way. Supreme Court ruling in our favor the.
Speaker 2 (20:36):
Way they did helped. Honestly, what happened in.
Speaker 1 (20:39):
Georgia was a really really lucky We really really lucked
out there. It was the ultimate lucky break because Georgia
was the one that was going to send Trump to prison.
Fanny Willis ends up having an affair and wasting taxpayer money.
She has an affair with the prosecutor who's supposed to
(21:00):
secute that case. So the case blows up on them
before they could try and convict Trump. And remember, because
of Georgia's appeals process, the way it works there, the
second he's convicted, he goes right to prison. You can
appeal from prison. That was the one that was gonna
send him to prison. So we caught a real lucky
break there. And remember we still have sentencing coming in
(21:24):
New York and I have no idea what they're gonna do,
house arrest, probation, jail. I don't know what they'll do.
So we're not out of the woods yet anyway, Except
for the large part Democrats failed to get Trump in
the courts. Do you think they moved on and put
a hit on Donald Trump. I got to admit, it's
strange that a twenty year old was doing the shooting.
(21:47):
You still have so many questions about the shooting, and
I have so many questions about the shooting. And You're
gonna have to learn and I'm gonna have to learn
to have peace with something, and it sucks. We're going
to have to learn to have peace with not knowing
the truth. Our institutions all lie to us at all times,
(22:11):
the institutions we should rely on. They've been taken over
by filthy, corrupt, selfish, dirty communists, and they lie at
all times about everything. The FDA is lying to you
at all times about what is safe, what is unsafe.
(22:31):
We have video now andless amounts of evidence of them
admitting on camera they are bribed, bribed to approve the
food and drugs and pharmacutic the things that you will
eat and I eat their bribe to approve that stuff.
The CDC, the Center for Disease Control, completely taken over
(22:57):
by filthy, rotten communists, and you saw this during COVID.
You can't trust what the CDC says.
Speaker 2 (23:05):
The FBI.
Speaker 1 (23:06):
Let's talk about the Trump assassination. There's not an independent
investigation going on right now. There's not a private investigative
team digging into all this stuff right now. The lead
on this case is the Federal Bureau of Investigation. So
the same organization that did everything it could do in
(23:26):
twenty sixteen to stop Trump's election, that did everything it
could do and frankly succeeded in twenty twenty to stop
Donald Trump's reelection, that is the organization that has been
charged with investigating the attempted assassination of Donald Trump. I
don't know what their final report is going to say,
(23:47):
but I know I won't believe a single solitary word
of it. Why would I believe the CHEKA? Why would
I believe the secret police agency that's been rounding up
pastors and old women protesting in front of abortion clinics.
Why would I ever believe a single word the organization says,
(24:08):
the same organization that labeled angry school board moms domestic terrorists.
Why would I believe the organization that's spent three and
a half years now tracking down peaceful me maas who
sauntered through the Capitol while acting like they can't apprehend
Antifa Because they wear masks. That is the organization that
(24:32):
is charged with telling me and you the truth about
what happened during the Trump assassination. You're never going to
know the truth, not just about this, about many things there. Look,
there are some things. It's not like all hope is
lost because of social media, because of independent journalism. There
(24:53):
are some truths we'll be able to sift through and discover.
There are things that we'll be able to figure out
on our own. But the days of being able to
go to your traditional institutions and having them tell you
the truth, those days are gone. Who was it, Chris,
(25:14):
the FDA or CDC who called ivermectin horsetee wormer. I
believe it was the FDA if I remember right, it
could have been it was a CDC, Chris.
Speaker 2 (25:22):
It was CDC.
Speaker 1 (25:24):
The Center for Disease Control. Took a drug that humans
had taken successfully. By the billion, billions of doses of
ivermectin have been taken worldwide. Nobel Prizes were handing out
handed out for ivermectin, but because they thought it would
(25:47):
hurt Donald Trump in some way, the Center for Disease
Control called it horse stee wormer and told you not
to take it. It's hard to live, it's hard to accept.
It's hard to accept that you don't get to know
the truth about some things, that I don't get to
(26:07):
know the truth about some things. Yeah, that's a good point, Chris.
Now the CDC admits it helps stop COVID, of course,
of course, But the truth is we have to get
comfortable not knowing, and I will always wonder. I don't
know what happened that day. I don't know if that
piece of trash I refuse to say his name. I
(26:28):
don't know if he is a twenty year old who
did a bunch of digging on the dark web, gather
enough enough information on reconnaissance and shooting. And I don't
know whether he acted alone, maybe with some internet tutorial help,
and came within two inches of blowing Donald Trump's head off.
Speaker 2 (26:50):
I don't know. Maybe that's true.
Speaker 1 (26:52):
I don't know. I'm not gonna sit here neck like
I don't I.
Speaker 2 (26:54):
Know, I don't.
Speaker 1 (26:56):
I don't know whether Russia, China, Iran. Iran's been trying
to assassinate Trump since Trump took out Solamani. I don't
know whether that guy, that shooter. I don't know whether
he was Iranian trained. These organizations they know what they're doing.
(27:16):
They could train a man like that to pull something
like that off. They certainly know how an assassination works.
Maybe Iran did it. I don't know whether the CI
ated it, the FBI did it, the Secret Service did it.
Look pick your name it.
Speaker 5 (27:32):
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (27:33):
It could be the sour Patch Kids. Maybe they did it.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
Honestly, I don't believe sour Patch Kids is guilt to
you that, but who knows. Remember when we found out
the shooter was an extra in a Black Rock ad. Now,
is that a complete coincidence? It might be, It absolutely
might be. Maybe they just happened to be in Pennsylvania,
in the same town and they didn't form any kind
(27:58):
of a relationship with an next It's not like you
form relationships with the extras. And maybe he moved on
and that had nothing to do with anything. Maybe it
had everything to do with everything. Maybe it's a lot.
Speaker 2 (28:10):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (28:12):
You don't know, and we'll never know. I will tell
you what I think. What I think is an untrained
twenty year old didn't do this alone. That's what I believe.
Beyond that, I don't know what to believe, and I'll
never know, and neither will you. All Right, all right,
(28:33):
let's talk about credit cards.
Speaker 2 (28:34):
Hang on the Jesse Kelly Show. I like it returns next.
Speaker 1 (28:40):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Wednesday. Do
not forget. You can email the show. We love your emails.
I'm gonna get to a bunch of them here shortly,
Jesse at jessekellyshow dot com. I just want to again
point out I know we talk about so many issues,
try to focus on what's important. Sometimes we miss it,
sometimes we hit it that I got this one from.
Speaker 2 (29:03):
A Charles bilelo.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
US credit card debt hit a record one point one
four trillion dollars in the second quarter, rising eleven percent
over last year. Maybe you're buried in credit card debt.
Speaker 2 (29:21):
Maybe you're not. But it's more what this shows.
Speaker 1 (29:24):
It chows Americans are not making it. They are not
making ends meet, they are not keeping up. Now, all
the things we talk about, it all kind of pales
in comparison when you're not paying the bills, doesn't it.
And I know this bothers me so much because I
know what that feels like. I know what it feels
(29:46):
like to have bills outweighing the money you have come in.
Remember I've been out of work before. I'm My life
is not you know, all sunshine and roses. It just
hasn't been that way. Your life isn't that way. That's
not how life works. And I know what that feels like.
It's brutal. And to know that there are so many
people not making it or barely making it, struggling every
(30:10):
day to keep their head above water, freaking guts me.
Speaker 2 (30:14):
And it's why.
Speaker 1 (30:15):
And I know it's one of the least popular things
you can talk about on the radio, is spending. Government spending.
It's just not a sexy topic. It sounds kind of
nerdy and wonky, and it's hard to get people to
understand why it matters. Plus, people in general love government spending.
Republicans and Democrats no, no, no, build us a new airport,
(30:37):
give us the new We need our stimmy check, we
need our this. Americans love those government checks.
Speaker 2 (30:43):
They just do.
Speaker 1 (30:45):
So you don't want to talk about spending as much
as I do. But I'm never going to stop because
that's why you suffer.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
Right now. You can't afford eggs.
Speaker 1 (30:54):
Because of government spending and printing. I want you to
understand that you're watching your standard living go down and
down and down because they pass trillion dollar bill after
trillion dollar bill after trillion dollar bill, and then they
just print more money and print more money and print
more money, and they're going to try to print more
money to get us out of the debt disaster that's
(31:15):
coming because the interest on the debt already outpaces military spending,
and that problem gets exponentially worse from here, and you're
the one who pays. I don't give a crap about
anyone in DC. I really genuinely do not, even the
politicians I like. I don't sit in stress about them.
(31:38):
I stress about you. I hate that Americans are having
half empty grocery carts for the same amount they used
to pay. I hate that people are having to make
decisions in this country on whether to buy chicken or
beef instead of both. I hate that Chris has to
wonder which koach or meal he's gonna eat next. But
(31:59):
then again, he was always liked that, whether there was
inflation or not. Anyway, let's get to some emails. Jesse
Bumper music. Who chooses it? This sixty eight year old
white male loves it? His name is Van Well, who
chooses it specifically. Chris would probably try to take credit
(32:21):
for it, but you should understand Chris is a liar.
This most of this music, what Chris, don't interrupt. Most
of this music comes from my playlist. Yes it does, Chris,
Yes it does. What it's not half and half, It's
like seventy five. Okay, Chris picks some of the music
and Michael picks some of the music when he sits
(32:42):
in Chris's chair. But the thing, look, I'll just tell
you right now. You know how I'm not. I haven't
done this for my whole life. I'm fairly new to
this whole thing. I was a radio consumer a long
time before I ever sat down behind a microphone, because
I was always working out of it town or driving to work,
whether I was working construction or RV sales. It's just
(33:05):
spent a lot of time in my truck. I was
always going to and fro then, just trying to nerd
out and gain as much wisdom as I possibly can.
And so you learn what you like and what you dislike.
A lot of what you hear and don't hear on
the show. It's because of my years spent listening things
that I liked and didn't like. Why don't I take
(33:25):
many calls? I think calls have always sucked for the
most spart calls suck, They're boring unless you have a
fun or funny topic. I don't do many of them
generally suck. They do, so I prefer emails. They're more controlled.
That's why, because every time they'd go to the phones,
I'd think, oh gosh, this is gonna suck, and they would.
(33:47):
I don't do many guests if I was listening to somebody,
whoever may be. Look Rush, Rush was a great example.
Rush didn't do many guests. I loved that. I didn't
want to hear someone else talk. I didn't mind a
new perspective. He brought someone in, and I'll bring people
in for perspective on specific issues. But the reason I
don't do many guests is I very arrogantly assume you
(34:08):
want to hear me talk, so I do the talking.
Plus it feels lazy. Sometimes you ever hear these shows.
You ever hear these shows that have five guests song
stuff like that, four or five guests in a show,
in a three hour show, it almost feels like the
host is just kind of mailing it in that day, David.
(34:32):
We did our shows at the RNC when I was
at the convention, and we had way too many guests.
It's just kind of how it worked there. They come
and they drop in your lap, and it was guests
after guest after guests. I'm just gonna tell you if
right now I felt like I cheated you. I did
not like those shows. I didn't enjoy the shows. I
enjoyed being at the convention. I enjoyed the setup we
(34:52):
had there. It was really really well done by iHeart.
I didn't feel like I gave you the best shows.
And I was complaining to Chris and Mike about it
after the shows and they would try to tell me, now,
it was a good show, and I've got no.
Speaker 2 (35:03):
That show sucked. I felt like I cheated you. I
didn't like it.
Speaker 1 (35:07):
So that's why I do the show I do. And
I always hated bumper music. Back to your question, I
thought the lame bumper music suck. Can we hear some jams?
Can we hear something that it's radio? It's an audio product.
I want to hear some.
Speaker 2 (35:21):
Jams, man. You know what else?
Speaker 5 (35:23):
I want?
Speaker 1 (35:24):
I want you to get a MyPillow Mattress topper for yourself.
Mattress toppers look mattresses. You know you're supposed to buy
a new one every ten years, that's what they say.
The springs deteriorate, you're supposed to buy a new one.
When's the last time you priced a new mattress. My
youngest son finally had outgrown the bunk bed we'd stuck
him in since he was a child. Only now he's
(35:45):
a monster, so we had to go bed shopping up
a couple weeks ago. You can't imagine what they charged
for beds out there. Now. I sounded like Chris in
that place. I was mortified at every single price. If
you get a MyPillow mattress topper, it's like getting a
new mattress. So they got them as low as sixty
nine ninety eight. Right now, it's like it holds you
and it's wonderful soft MyPillow hands and I probably shouldn't
(36:08):
have put it that way, but it's really nice.
Speaker 2 (36:10):
Go get one.
Speaker 1 (36:10):
They're on sale MyPillow dot com. Click on the radio list.
Their special square used to promo code Jesse. They even
have Queen size Premium I pillows for nineteen ninety eight.
Call them if you want eight hundred eighty four five
zero five four four. We have an hour left.
Speaker 2 (36:28):
Hang on