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, Final hour of the
Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday, and we are going
to tackle this Tim Walls creating problems for Dome's campaign
and why they missed it.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
Talk a little bit more about the school board local
election stuff because Jewish producer Chris just brought something up.
He actually made a really good point, which I think
is the first time ever. We'll get to some emails
they're grabbing guns. We'll talk about Americans and their susceptibility,
will all of us and our susceptibility to propaganda. Oh,
that's so much more coming up this final hour of
(00:52):
the Jesse Kelly Show. Before I get to the Walls
thing much I teased, I actually do want to finish
up this point because Chris brought up a really good
point about I told you I was going to a
school board forum tonight and if it's open to the public,
if we're allowed to ask questions, as you can imagine,
I'm going to. And what Chris said to me during
(01:16):
the break was your abnormal. That stuff doesn't make you uncomfortable.
You need to inform everyone else. They'll get more comfortable
the more they do it. He makes a good point.
I enjoy that stuff because I hate politicians in the
way they abuse their power. So I enjoy showing up
in a public forum and abusing these people. But I
(01:36):
understand it can be intimidating. I do it can be intimidating.
It gets your heart pumping. You're speaking in front of people.
It's confrontation. People are uncomfortable with confrontation. If you're unlike
me and you're a nice person, you don't like arguing.
You don't like confrontation. I get all that. I'm not
telling you to change your nature. You can't change your nature.
(01:58):
But it is a good point that the more you
show up at these things, ask questions. You don't have
to yell and scream and make an idiot or yourself.
Ask questions, Be direct, be forceful, make your voice heard.
The more you do it, the easier it gets. The
more you do it, the easier it gets. It's just
(02:19):
like when I've encouraged you to run for local office
because our future is legal and local. It's the way
we can save this country. And because it's a healthy
outlet for you. You feel hopeless because you're not involved.
The second you get involved, you start to feel hopeful,
like you're contributing, like you're doing something. It's helpful. If
(02:39):
you're just sitting watching, it feels hopeless. You get involved,
you feel more hopeful. So there's a laundry laundry list
of reasons to get involved. But if you're uncomfortable with
that first speech, it's not something you do for a living,
you're this or that. It will get easier every single time,
Every every single time, it will be easier than the
(03:03):
time before it. I'm not gonna say you're ever going
to be some magnificence, magnificent speech giver. I'm not saying
you're going to be Ronald Reagan. You're not going to
be that. I'm not going to be that. But it'll
get easier and easier. So just get involved. Okay, Now
let's deal with the Walls fallout, because Walls, I may
(03:26):
have been wrong about something post debate. When we came
out here post debate, remember I said, jd Vance, that
was the best political debate performance I've ever seen in
my life as far as a national presidential debate. It
was amazing. Walls, I said, I said, I didn't think
he hurt Kamala Harris. He obviously wasn't great, and he
(03:48):
looked terrible compared to jd Vance. But most people would
have looked terrible compared to jd Vance in a debate
like that. Whoever your favorite politician is, even the ones
you like, they would have looked awful debating jd Vance
on that stage. He's really really, really good at it.
Trump would have looked bad, Desantus would have looked bad.
(04:10):
The Democrat you hate would have looked bad, Ted Cruz bad.
It doesn't matter how much you like him. That was
the dude's really good at that. So your favorite politician
wouldn't look that good. But Walls, I didn't think he
looked as bad as I thought he was gonna. And
I didn't think he hurt Dome. I may have been
wrong about that, because for the last forty eight hours
(04:34):
there's been a lot of anti Walls protection in the
American media. Politico ran an article today. The title was
it was something along the lines of Walls misspeaks sometimes
and that's okay. Now, why would you even bother writing
that article? Why bother? The only reason you would write
that article if you're a disgusting COMI rag like Politico
(04:58):
is if your team had internals that showed Walls's lies
or mattering to people, lying about being a command sergeant major,
matters to people lying about being in combat matters to people,
and these other huge lies he's told, lying about being
in Tienaman Square. And remember, Chris, grab it if you can't.
(05:19):
I told you I wasn't gonna need it, but of
course I need it. Remember Tim Walls was actually I
can't believe they actually did it. He was asked about
it during the debate, and he filibustered for as long
as he could. I'm from a small town at Nebraska.
He did the best he could to cover it up.
But then in the end he just simply said, I'm
a knucklehead, and I didn't think that would move the needle.
(05:43):
It was an uncomfortable answer. I know it's long, Chris,
but the length of it is the point I want
want people to hear. The filibuster point part of it.
But remember when he was asked about Hey, you claimed
you were in Tienaman Square. That was a friggin lie.
Speaker 4 (05:56):
Remember his answer, Governor Walls, you said you were in
during the deadly Tieneman Square protests in the spring of
nineteen eighty nine. But Minnesota Public Radio and other media
outlets are reporting that you actually didn't travel to Asia
until August of that year. Can you explain that discrepancy?
Speaker 3 (06:16):
Yeah, well, and.
Speaker 5 (06:17):
The folks out there, it didn't get at the top
of this.
Speaker 3 (06:19):
Look.
Speaker 5 (06:19):
I grew up in small, rural Nebraska town of four
hundred town that you rode your bike with your buddies
till the street lights come on, and I'm proud of
that service. I joined the National Guard at seventeen, worked
on family farms, and then I use the GI bill to.
Speaker 3 (06:34):
Become a teacher.
Speaker 5 (06:35):
Passionate about it, a young teacher. My first year out,
I got the opportunity in the summer of eighty nine
to travel to China thirty five years ago. Be able
to do that, I came back home and then started
a program to take young people there. We would take
basketball teams, we would take baseball teams, we would take dancers,
and we would go back and forth to China. The
issue for that was was to try and learn. Now, look,
(06:57):
my community knows who I am, they saw where I
was at. They look. I will be the first to
tell you I have poured my heart into my community.
I've tried to do the best I can, but I've
not been perfect, and I'm a knucklehead at times. But
it's always been about that those same people elected me
to Congress for twelve years, and in Congress, I was
one of the most bipartisan people, working on things like
(07:20):
farm bills that we got done, working on veterans benefits,
and then the people of Minnesota were able to elect
me to governor twice. So look, my commitment has been
from the beginning to make sure that I'm there for
the people, to make sure that I.
Speaker 3 (07:32):
Get Okay, Okay, yeah, he feel a busted. He didn't
answer it. I'm a knucklehead thing. I knew it didn't
sound good. But how do you make a lie sound good?
How do you make a black and white lie sound good?
If I sit here and say I was in New
York City for nine to eleven, I was not. I
was in the Marine Corps at the time. But if
(07:53):
I sit here and say I was in New York
City in nine to eleven, and then someone digs into
it and says, Jesse, we have the dates you were
in twenty nine Palm's Marine Corps based California on nine
to eleven. I'm not a knucklehead. I'm a freaking liar.
I lied. It's a black and white lie. I was
not in New York City on nine to eleven, and
to act like you were is a lie. But I
(08:14):
didn't think it would resonate. Walls's lies are resonating Walls.
The governor of Minnesota is below Kamala Harris in popularity
in Minnesota. I've never seen that before. You pick a
(08:34):
VP candidate in part because he's supposed to help you
carry the state you picked him from. That's why almost
all of them come from swing states. It's not an accident.
The VP candidates always seem to come from Ohio, Florida, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Arizona.
That's what they do. You grabbed Walls to help you
(08:58):
carry Midwest, white guy who's a moron and votes Democrat,
and you thought it would guarantee you Minnesota, which is
always sold as a swing state even though it goes
Democrat every single time. Walls is below Dome in Minnesota,
and so you get articles like this. Walls says, he
(09:21):
quote speaks like everyone else, and it's not working for
the campaign. This is from Politico. This is the ultimate
commie rag. And then the little subtitle is subheadline. Key
members of Harris's circle weren't aware of some of Walls's
inaccurate statements until they became public, despite the vetting process.
(09:48):
How does that happen? How does that happen? Do you
know what a presidential campaign is. It's a short term,
billion dollar corporation with a B. That's what a presidential
campaign is. It has more employees and directors and vps
(10:11):
and offices than you can possibly imagine. So how could
you miss all these lies when right wing media found
them five minutes after his announcement. Let's talk about the
how next Before we get to that, how do you
(10:32):
think your dog gets nutrition? Because you know your dog's
a living, breathing thing, obviously, how do you think they
give nutrition? Well, I'm sure you said dog food, but
that would be incorrect. You see, because there's no nutrition
in dog food. Dog food is dead food. Dog food
is all brown because dog food is all dead. They
(10:52):
kill it everything in it in the factory. It's like
giving your dog a fast food double cheeseburger for every meal.
It's just empty calories. Even even if Muffy likes to flavor,
we got him the shrimp. He hates it. Sorry, Chris,
some dogs eat shrimp. But what does your dog do
for nutrition? Nothing? Then, And that's why all dogs die
(11:13):
too early. That's why their coats get dull, their breast stinks,
their joints go bad, their eyes go to crap, their
digestive systems terrible. Start putting Roughgreens on your dog's food.
All natural nutritional supplement created by naturopathic doctor Dennis Black
is just scoop, a little green scoop. It's green powder.
Pour it on the dog's food. Your dog will love it.
(11:37):
Free jumpstart trial bags eight three three three three my
dog or Roughgreens dot com slash Jesse, We'll be.
Speaker 1 (11:47):
Back fighting for your freedom every day the Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 3 (11:55):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show reminding you tomorrow and
asked doctor Jesse Friday. Get your questions emailed in right
now to Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com or voicemails
are fine eight seven seven three seven seven four three
seven three. Tim Walls is hurting the Dome campaign his
(12:17):
endless lies. I was in combat. I was a command
sergeant major, I was in Tiennaman Square. Endless lies are
hurting the Dome campaign. Harris's campaign says they weren't aware
of the lies until they became public. Despite the vetting process,
How does that happen? How can a billion dollar presidential
(12:41):
campaign not vet properly? There are two reasons that happens. First,
basic incompetence. Incompetence caused by communist priorities. You see, if
I'm a Democrat, let's say I'm in charge of the
(13:03):
Kamala Harris campaign, I am not running a meritocracy. So
when I seek out a team, perhaps the team that's
going to be vetting potential VP picks well. It affects
campaigns the exact same way it affects private businesses. If
(13:24):
I start a cheeseburger company and I only hire the best,
the brightest, the most polite people to work for me,
and Jewish producer Chris starts a cheeseburger company and he
has all these diversity requirements. No, no, we have to
have so many Asians and black people. Do we have
enough gays?
Speaker 4 (13:42):
Up?
Speaker 3 (13:42):
We got to get a trannee and the mail department.
Then my cheeseburger company is inevitably going to be better
than Chris's. If you're a Democrat running a Democrat campaign,
you have diversity quota after diversity quota, and the people
who work for you are going to be dumber and
(14:03):
less capable than the people who work for a campaign
that is purely run on merit. Basic incompetence explains so much.
In fact, we talk a lot about Helene right now
and the failure of the government's response. Yes, a big
part of it is because the government is evil and
hate your guts and certainly doesn't care about rural red America.
(14:24):
That's a huge part of it. Another part of it
is we've spent decades now filling up our government with communists,
and we hire them because they're gay, 're black, or whatever, Indian,
a million different reasons other than what matters. And so
our government is run by the dumbest people in our
society because they're all diversity hires. Back to the Harris campaign,
(14:46):
that's part of it. That's one of two reasons basic incompetence.
Another reason, and this is something we actually all have
to guard against, is confirmation bias. You see, if you
asked me if my kid runs cross country, James, He's awesome.
(15:10):
I don't know what kind of kid goes to cross
country practice in the morning that gets home from school
and goes for another long run. That's wild to me.
But that's what James. I know, that's what he does.
But let's say I started coaching the cross country team.
Believe me, I'm not going to and I coached him
for an entire season, all the boys, all the girls,
an entire season, and you asked me to sit down
(15:31):
and give an honest assessment of each kid. Who's valuable,
who's not, Who's lazy, Who's this, who's that. I'll be
honest with you. I love that freaking kid. James and
Luke my sons. I love them so much it hurts me.
That's how much I love being a dad. That's how
much I love my buddies. If I had to give
(15:55):
an honest assessment of his performance that year, I don't
think I could. I really don't think I could, because
I already have such a deep affinity for him. I
could probably be honest about all the other kids. They're
not my kids. It's not that I dislike them. I
like them fine, but they're not my kids. I could
be very honest. Well, she needs to work harder on this.
(16:18):
He needs to break out harder, out of the gates.
He needs to learn out of pace it. I could
be much more honest about those kids, but because I
have such an affinity for James, I could never be
totally honest. I couldn't. I'm his father. I love him,
but die for him. The same thing happens when communists
are vetting other communists. Tim Walls is a disgusting loser
(16:43):
who has trashed the state of Minnesota. He did nothing
while Minneapolis burnt. There's all kinds of insane left wing
lunacy going on there. And while you may be disgusted
by that, and I may be disgusted by that, to
the average American Democrat who's in charge of vetting Tim Walls.
Speaker 1 (17:05):
They love it.
Speaker 3 (17:08):
Tim Walls's wife is on camera talking about how she
kept her windows down so she could smell the fires
burning in Minneapolis. These are sick freak communists. And while
that grosses you out and grosses me out, if you're
part of Kamala Harris's vetting team and you find out
(17:31):
Tim Walls was pouring gas on the fires of Minneapolis,
you love him for it, and so you end up. Yeah,
you may see a lie here or a lie there, whatever,
Who cares. He's a revolutionary. We love tim. That's how
these things happen. How could they miss it? Confirmation bias
(17:53):
is real and incompetence is real. All right, let's get
to how propaganda works, or an example of it working,
some emails and some other things. Before we do that,
let's do this. Speaking of nine to eleven, let's remember
that's where Tunnel to Towers began. When the wake of
(18:14):
nine to eleven, all that pain, all that tragedy, all
those people dead, an organization arose, wanting to care for
the first responders. They're families, the ones who had fallen.
Who's going to care for them? Tunnel to Towers decided,
you know what, we will, and then war began Afghanistan, Iraq,
(18:37):
and gold Star families started piling up around the country.
Tunnel to Towers looked and said, who's going to care
for those families now? And they said we will. Here,
I am send me. That's what Tunnel to Towers does
to this day. When the firefighter dies in training, Tunnel
to Towers is there. When the soldier doesn't come back,
(18:58):
tunnel to towers? Is there tunnel to towers? Is there
caring for these families when their loved ones don't come home?
And that's where you're Eleven dollars a month goes and
more than ninety five cents of every dollar goes right
to its programs. Unheard of t the number two T
dot Orork T two t dot or org.
Speaker 1 (19:20):
We'll be back fighting for your freedom every day.
Speaker 3 (19:25):
The Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a Thursday and amazing Thursday. All right, I'm gonna
do a couple emails before I get into this propaganda
A great example of how it works and how powerful
(19:45):
kind of that Sky's green stuff is. Man Alive. This
is a I didn't see that one coming, but you
always got to remind yourself people were susceptible to propaganda.
Let's do some emails first, Jesse, I have to listen
or I listen to you say commed DEM's rage. Listen
to you you show what would you say your average
listener does when they listen. I feel like the show
(20:05):
is as heavy as ten boxes you might have to carry.
Sometimes it is.
Speaker 4 (20:09):
As heavy as ten boxes that you might be moving.
Speaker 3 (20:13):
But most of the time I have a big grin
on my face, just waiting for the next bit of comy,
raging comedy. I love the show. His name is Ben.
What do most people do when they listen? You know,
it's really weird just to have a talk here. It's
really weird that the show has kind of grown into
this big national thing because when Chris and I did
(20:37):
the very first show we ever did, which is the
first show six years ago, we were in a room.
We were just we were in a studio. I was
sitting there at a desk with a microphone, and Chris
was I was a little smaller, but Chris was in
his little nerd producer room with all the buttons and
knobs and crap that he has to push. And you know,
(20:57):
six years later, it's a big national show and we're
super important now, but I'm still sitting here by myself
with a microphone. Rooms a little bigger, they got cameras
all around me and all this fancy stuff now, but
it's still just me in a desk and a microphone
and Chris and now Corey beside him, still sitting over
there in the production room. It's kind of the same
(21:20):
here so we don't things have to happen in order
for us to have any real appreciation for what the
show means to people, what they do when they listen
to it. Remember when I did the book tour. I
wrote the book just the national bestseller, I don't want
to brag, the Anti Communist Manifesto, which is available at
(21:41):
Jesse kellybook dot com. And I did the book tour
where we did four or five cities. I know everyone
was mad at didn't come to their city, but we
did four or five cities and we showed up at
the first stop and the line was around the block.
It was something like four hundred people. It was supposed
to be I think it was supposed to be. I
(22:01):
forget the details. Two hours and it had to go
four to get everyone there. And I thought, okay, well
the first one was in the Houston area, the next
one won't be like that. They were all like that.
The line was around the block. I had no idea
that many people even liked the freaking show. I had
no idea. And then you get emails, the emails of
what people do when they listen. It runs the gamut.
(22:25):
It's a lot of people listen when they drive. Most
of the people listening on the radio are driving home
from work, maybe to work if you work a double shift,
maybe at work, if you have a kind of job.
We can have the radio on the background. Bunch of
construction dudes will just turn the show on and blast it,
which I think is really freaking cool. People will listen
that way. A lot of people who podcast it, you know,
(22:49):
because you can download a podcast of it on iHeart,
Spotify iTunes. They do anything because all that requires is
having your phone. People work out. I wouldn't do that.
I would like to listen to music when I work out,
But a lot of people like it. It helps them
when they do cardio. It's just something to distract you
from the misery you're going through. People do it when
they mow the lawn. A lot of women do it.
(23:11):
A lot of women seem to do it when they're
making dinner. They turn it on when they're making dinner.
The kids are there doing homework at something in the background.
A lot of dudes do it when they're in the
garage doing woodwork and stuff like that. People have a
million different things they do when they listen, which so
weird to me. Good weird, not bad weird, not Tim
(23:31):
Wall's weird, good weird. Jesse, I was just listening to
you talk about reclining air seats on your show. My
son is just about as tall as you and has
a similar story about the seat ahead not being able
to recline because his knees were pressed all the way
into the seat. Look, I only told that story for
my own selfish reasons, me and all the other tall
(23:51):
people out there. If you're not super tall, you have
an honest excuse for not realizing putting the ears plane
seat back might be physical agony for someone behind you.
But if you're not super tall, you don't realize that.
You've never had to concern yourself with that. When I
uh my wife, my wife when she rides in the
(24:13):
passenger seat because I don't let her drive because I'm
a man. When I'm in the past, when she's in
the passenger seat, she will put down the visor, the
sun visor, she puts it down. She's done that her
entire life. My wife is five to two. Her father
is not tall, No one in her family is tall.
No one's tall. She's five to two, she's tiny. I
(24:35):
am six foot eight. You can put the visor down
when you're riding with other people who are five to five.
I need that area of vision. I've had to explain
to her. She gets it now, but she never got
it before. How would she get it? She's five two.
I had to explain to her, you can't do that
when someone who's six ' eight needs to see out
(24:56):
of that portion of the window. Please put the visor
back up and gets some sunglasses. The visor needs to
stay up. But how would she ever know? It's not
her fault she's five to two. She could put put
a sunscreen over half the window and she'd still be
driving looking through the steering wheel like all the rest
of you midgets. Anyway, the American people hate the grocery
store now, which is interesting. It shows you how propaganda
(25:19):
works trends in American's opinion. This is from Gallup in
twenty twenty six. Over sixty percent. Looks like about sixty
five percent of the American people had a positive view
of the grocery industry. You know, without you know what
that number is today, thirty three. And what it shows
(25:43):
you is how effective propaganda can be. Grocery prices started
going through the roof because of endless government action, government shutdowns,
government spending, government, this government. That grocery store run on
profits that, honestly, I don't understand. Grocery stores run on
(26:06):
about one or two percent, even huge grocery store chains,
around one or two percent is the profit margin they
run off. That's absurd. I don't know of any other
industry that runs on margins that margins that's small. It's
crazy they're still in business with margins that small. You
have no pardon the pun, margin for error. You have
(26:28):
one or two percent. That's insane. Grocery Stores don't make
a lot of money. But when you're an evil communist
and your policies have made people's groceries more effective, and
you spend enough time running to the podium saying things like.
Speaker 6 (26:44):
This, anything like me. You like to be surrounded by
a snack or two while watching the big game. You know,
when buying snacks for the game, you might have noticed
one thing. Sports drinks bottles are smaller a bag of
chips is fear of chips. They're still charging it chest
as much as a nice lover. What makes me the
most angry is that ice cream carts have actually shrunk
in size, but not on price. I've had enough of.
(27:07):
Whether they call shrink flation, it's a ripoff. Some companies
are trying to pull a fast one by shrinking the
products a little by little and hoping you won't notice.
Give me a break. The American public has tired of
being played for suckers. I'm calling our companies to put
a stop to this. Let's make sure businesses do the
right thing now.
Speaker 3 (27:30):
Oh believe me, there are industries who will take advantage
of certain things, and they will price gouge. The grocery
store isn't one of them. But Democrats, of course, in
their media allies, launched a quote price gouging campaign against
grocery stores, and public approval of the grocery industry got
(27:52):
cut in half because some brain dead geriatric in the
White House told you shrink flation was the fault of
Pigley Weekly. That shows you just how effective propaganda can
be and how programmable so many Americans are. All right,
let's do a couple more emails, we get the headlines
(28:14):
I didn't get to, and then we're checking out of
here until tomorrow. Before we do that, let's talk about
war and what it does to the civilian population. That's
the most heartbreaking part of war. It's what made World
War Two more uniquely terrible than really any other war
in the history of mankind. It was the civilian suffering.
(28:36):
Right now, civilians in Israel are suffering. They are the
lack of food, the lack of shelter, the lack of
a place. Where do you go when Iran launches one
hundred and eighty ballistic missiles on your major population centers,
where do you go? Well, you better get your butt
(28:58):
to a bomb shelter. Gonna get in one of those,
hopefully someone built one. Who built one? The IFCJ, the
International Fellowship of Christians and Jews, they're building bomb shelters,
They're providing food, providing safety, bulletproof ambulances. They are on
the ground. They're not over here shipping things FedEx. They're
(29:21):
on the ground doing everything they can do to help
support these people and get them through to the end.
Help them, help them. Call eight eight eight four eight
eight IFCJ, or go online to support IFCJ dot org.
That SUPPORTIFCJ dot org. We'll be back.
Speaker 1 (29:46):
You're listening to the oracle.
Speaker 3 (29:48):
You love this one. It's a scream baby. The Jesse
Kelly Show. It is The Jesse Kelly Show. Final segment
of The Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday, Tomorrow's Ask
Doctor Jesse Friday. So get your questions emailed in right now,
Ask me anything. Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot Com will
(30:10):
spend the whole show answering your emails and voicemails eight
seven seven three seven seven four three seven three. There
are portions of the American public that are waking up,
large portions waking up to what the true evil, the
truth threat to this country is. I want you to
listen to something. This is on MSNBC, and this is
(30:33):
an impeachment witness of Trump. This is a Trump impeachment witness.
Listen to what this guy says.
Speaker 7 (30:39):
Now, I've now lived four years under the Biden Harris policies,
and I have to say that those policies are not
only becoming an existential threat to our country's way of life,
but to our allies as well.
Speaker 3 (30:56):
So when it has so, I'll let you finish. I
want striking. You said it was a no for me.
Speaker 4 (31:03):
After that they did, and here we are right now,
I did, and you're saying it's a yes for you.
Speaker 7 (31:08):
It is a yes. For me, it is an absolute
yes for me. That is how badly the Biden Harris
team have prosecuted their job. But the whole point you
seem to be making was that January sixth.
Speaker 5 (31:21):
And that kind of attack on democracy is bigger than anybody.
Speaker 7 (31:24):
I am seeing so many attacks on democracy that eclipse
January sixth.
Speaker 3 (31:32):
Wow, people are slowly waking up, slowly waking up to
what is happening. And remember they used January sixth. Whatever
you think about January sixth, Democrats love it. You think
they hated it, They love it. It was used as a
(31:54):
reason to crack down and arrest a bunch of Republicans.
It's been used as a campaign prop against Trump and
every other Republican. January sixth has worked out amazingly well
for Democrats. Oh and then there's this guy. This is
the dean of the Columbia has a journalism school. This
(32:15):
is the dean. Now, I just want to make sure
I say that again. Columbia. Fancy Columbia. They have a
journalism school Ivy League, Columbia. This is the dean of it.
The communist only cares about power. Why do we have it?
(32:36):
What's one of the big reasons we have. He's asking him,
why do we have inteleectoral college. Why do we have it?
What's one of the big reasons we have it.
Speaker 8 (32:44):
So one of the reasons that we have, the really
fundamental reason we have it, is to balance out the
political power of large states and smaller states. And that's
a generic answer.
Speaker 3 (32:56):
Yeah.
Speaker 8 (32:56):
The real answer is that it was a means by
which which slaveholders would be able to use the bodies
of the people they were holding in slavery to count
and the census in order to give them additional political power.
Speaker 3 (33:14):
The legal industry and the medical industry are the two
most horrifying industries right now. Because your doctor hates you,
your next judge hates you, or potentially does. I shouldn't
say they do. In a while, they will, They all will,
because the medical institutions and legal institutions at the highest
(33:40):
levels have been taken over by these people. It's wild
to think about. Wild. All right, before we do headlines,
let's do another email. Fellow Son of Ohio, I've been
listening to the Oracle daily for about four years now.
Congrats on the growing audience, well deserved. I admire your
often admission of unsuccessful Congressional runs, as it takes confidence
in humility. However, I think what you do now has
(34:02):
a larger impact on our beloved country than Congress ever
would have. Keep up the great work. Yeah, look, I
mean you look back on it, and it hurt, man,
It hurt. It hurts to run that hard and believe
because I was true believer then, just like I am now.
And then you work hard and you think I had
convinced myself it was destiny. You ever had something like
(34:23):
that in your life. Maybe you're trying to make a
sports team, or you're trying to talk to a pretty
girl you like, and you've already convinced yourself it was destiny.
I had convinced myself that I was destined for Congress
because I was going to go clean out that swamp
and I was going to go kick some butt. And
that election night happens twice, and you're the loser, You're
(34:44):
the guy who didn't make it that. I'll tell you, man,
it hurt free, It hurts bad. And I look back
now and I see how all that was used for good.
And shoot, I wouldn't go to Congress if you paid
me to. Now you'd have to pay me in real estate, though,
because that's the only place that's worth putting your money. Now,
hard assets, hard assets. There is a debt crisis. It's
(35:07):
already here. They're lying about it, but it's already here.
I'm not going to say it's coming. It's here. You're
starting to see it, you're starting to feel it. It's here.
So what do you do with your money? Hard assets?
Real estate can't miss. I know real estate markets go
up and they go down. So what markets do you
(35:29):
let done for your real estate? Handle that. They'll find
you the best property in the best market. They'll handle
the financing, they handle the closing paperwork, they handle the
rental process. Let them handle it for you. And what
you're doing, you're beginning to generate consistent tax free income
over time. You couldn't retire on that. You realize that
(35:50):
people have retired undone for you real estate. You start
with one ouse turns into three, turns into ten. You're
retiring and leaving it to your kids. How do you
do that for millionaires? Not at all. It's for you.
Go to done for you Jesse dot com. And by
the way, when you go there, if you use the
promo code Jesse you get a free book of theirs.
It's called Microwins to millions. It's excellent. Done for you
(36:14):
Jesse dot com. And now here's a headline by go
you know, you know the thing.
Speaker 1 (36:20):
Headlines we didn't get.
Speaker 3 (36:21):
To Massachusetts Governor Mara Healy to rush sweeping gun control
measures into law to avoid voter's scrutiny. Remember, the communist
hates your guns, not because of school shootings or crime.
He understands full well those things aren't a result of
(36:44):
guns at all. He hates your guns because they are
the ultimate limit on his power. Never give them up.
Will Smith farted on men in black set and the
crew was evacuated for three hours. I gotta be honest,
that's really disgusting. But at the same time, if I
was able to evacuate an area for three hours, I'd
probably laugh and brag to my friends about it. Biden
(37:05):
opposes Israeli retaliatory strike on Iranian nuclear sites. Biden opposes
anything that might affect his re election. And that's the
only thing Biden opposes. The rear abbro butt gig that's
not actually in the headline. Rear rabbraro butt gig goes
to bat for the union says that shutting down America's
ports over I completely screwed the headline up, Pete, but
(37:30):
Gig goes to bat for the union that's shutting down
America's ports over a seventy seven percent pay raise. Pete
Buddha Jeedge may use a bat, but he's not ever
going to bat for anybody.
Speaker 1 (37:41):
Oh.
Speaker 3 (37:41):
Speaking of which, for former Marvel showrunner bou de Mayo,
bow To Mao claims Disney told him to make X
Men's ninety seven characters less gay. It's kind of funny.
Disney shares downgraded. Disney shares downgraded as theme parks face
more trouble woke streaming series flops. Gosh, the day Disney
(38:03):
finally implodes on itself is going to be amazing. What
a poisonous company that has become. I will see you
tomorrow for ask doctor Jesse Friday. I'm off to a
school board forum.
Speaker 1 (38:12):
Yippie.
Speaker 3 (38:14):
That's all