Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a Friday. Of course, it's an ass doctor Jesse Friday.
We'll get to the jobs report at some point in
time this hour, maybe play a voicemail or two, maybe
(00:31):
a little World War One talk about the tunnels. But
before I get to that, I want to get to
this one here, and I want to remind you. You can
email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com and
you can leave us a voicemail eight seven seven three
seven seven four three seven three. Now, hey, Jesse, I
(00:51):
have a ticket for the Trump rally in Butler tomorrow
Trump for those who don't know, Butler, Pennsylvania obviously where
Trump almost got killed. He's going back there for a rally,
which I do think is I think it's really really
cool to go back and just it's a good show
of defiance. I like it. Anyway, she said, I'm excited
to go and see him in advance speak in person. However,
(01:13):
I'm concerned about some unhinged street commie using this very
public event to either try and hit Trump again or
take out his supporters. If I were your sister, what
would your advice be, attend or listen on the radio. Thanks,
keep up the work you do. It makes a difference
to a lot of people. Okay, so let's have a
(01:35):
frank talk about this. I have told you before about
certain areas and not protesting there, like blue areas Washington, DC.
You should not be attending political protests in Washington, d C.
Not that you don't have a right, not saying that,
(01:57):
but Washington d C should be treated as the Soviet Union,
because that's what it is. It is run by communists
at every single level of power. Talk to one of
the January sixth political prisoners and they will inform you
about the justice system. In Washington, d C. The federal
government will entrap you, throw you in a cage for
(02:20):
the rest of your life without the tiniest bit of hesitation.
They'll do the same thing to you in New York
City in LA. Keep your protests out of blue areas.
I've told you that before, and I've also told you
that's why you need to get to a red area.
That said, communists survilent. We know that they've been committing
(02:40):
acts of violence against the right for decades now. Decades. Again,
if we had a media, this would be widely known
how violent street communists are. But the American media wants
you to be hurt, so they cover up these things.
Should you go? If I were, if you were my sister,
should you would I say go? We cannot, We must
(03:03):
not allow violent street communists to stop us from gathering together.
If you want to go to a Trump rally in Butler,
Pennsylvania tomorrow, put on your freakin' Maga hat and your
Sunday best and you go out there and listen to
(03:24):
what will hopefully be our next president, and cheer and
bring friends and have a good time. And if God
forbids something happens to you, something happens to you. But
we cannot allow these people to intimidate us out of
having a life at all. You know, you remember remember
after nine to eleven, this's got a lot of talk
(03:46):
and when Isis was rampaging through Europe and killing people here.
Remember they did kill a lot of people here too
when Isis was on the rampage. This was a central
theme of don't let the terrorists win. And what were
we all saying? Then, don't let the terrorists win? If
you stop living your life. I'm not going to fly here.
I'm not going to visit there. I'm not going to
(04:07):
do this. I'm too scared about this. I'm not going
to go to Paris. I won't visit Africa. I don't
want to go to Chicago. This is the only life
you are ever going to live. You will not be reincarnated.
This is the only period of time God gave you
to live on this planet. Go live. If you want
(04:27):
to go to a Trump rally, get your butt out
to a Trump rally and live it up and celebrate it.
Don't let the moment pass go all right, all right,
let's do some voicemails here, Jesse.
Speaker 2 (04:41):
Kelly, you did this wrong out here, man. I live
in rural Colorado. I just stopped at the first BUCkies
that they've opened here. What a hot mess. It looks
like a cracker barrel exploded inside a real gas station.
Teachy stuff everywhere, a ten dollars ham sandwich and matters worse.
No squeegees by the pumps. This is Colorado. How can
(05:06):
you not have squeeges out by the gas pump?
Speaker 3 (05:08):
Keep up the good work.
Speaker 2 (05:09):
We appreciate what you do. We love you. You're a
real example of what somebody which is not a whole
lot of skills can do.
Speaker 3 (05:15):
We appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (05:18):
Well, that's not very nice. That's not a very nice
voicemail for two a ten dollars ham sandwich. I've never
paid ten dollars for a sandwich. And BUCkies, Chris, you
would know are sandwiches? What they're not? Ten dollars? What
do you get on that ham sandwich? I get the
Philly cheese steak. And by the way, you didn't listen
to the menu, whisper. Let me tell you a little something.
(05:40):
This is something that happened recently. Chris won't want me
to tell you, but I'm going to tell you anyway.
So we have this taco place. This will come back
to BUCkies. Just stay with me. We have this taco
place close to us. I would always get this special
kind of taco they have there. It's glorious. It's got cheese,
(06:00):
it's got fried chicken in it, fried chicken in the taco,
and it's just amazing. Chris. Chris would get the Jamaican
chicken taco and he swore, oh no, it's better, it's better,
it's better. You got it it's better, and that we
would order together all the time. I'm getting my tacos,
(06:22):
He's getting his crappy Jamaican chicken tacos. And finally, one
day I forget how this happened. Maybe I ordered extras
or something. Chris, he CaMLA down one of my fried
chicken tacos. What do you think Chris orders every single time? Now?
(06:42):
I don't remember the last time I saw Chris order
one of his Jamaican jerk chicken tacos. And I tried
to explain, Chris, you work right beside the greatest orderer
of food in the history of mankind? How could you
not just order what I order? Whatever I do food wise,
just me and you'll be an incredible food success like
(07:03):
I have been so back to you and your complaining
about BUCkies. I wouldn't need a ham sandwich if you
gave it to me for free. Ham sandwiches suck. I
told you to go in there and get the Philly
cheese steak burrito. How many times did I say get
the Philly cheese steak burrito, Chris? How many times every
time I talk about BUCkies? I tell you to get
(07:24):
a Philly cheese steak burrito and you walked in there
and got a hand sandwich like your mama cast and
you're upset that it costs ten dollars and you ruined
your BUCkies experience. And yes, I will admit there's a
lot going on. There is a lot of the core
stuff and you can buy Oh, I can get a
(07:45):
cutting board and wool dress for winter, and there's nothing
you can buy a smoker. You can get whatever you
want in BUCkies. Maybe you weren't ready to handle BUCkies.
Maybe the problem isn't BUCkies. Maybe the problem is you.
And as far as the squeegee goes on your windshield,
(08:07):
I don't know about you. I have a little thing
where I press a button and it sprays stuff. I'm
a windshield. My little windshield wipers just washed themselves. I
know it's pretty advanced technology, but it sounds like a
you problem. Poo anyway, Jesse, question for your show. No
one has mentioned how the disaster in the South will
effect voting coming up in just over thirty days. What
(08:28):
attempts will be done to ensure those facing disasters will
be heard? Well, look, you don't want to make a disaster,
especially what people are going through, right now about an
election or politics. I know that's not where you're trying
to do. It's a very fair question you asked, and
I actually asked a similar question to someone who would know.
I said, Okay, I don't want to make it about
the election, but what does this mean for these people?
(08:49):
What does it mean? And really, if you want to
look at it electorally, it probably hurts Democrats in these
areas more than it hurts Republicans because they're chasing down
more ballots. They have a more robust ballot chasing operation.
And if there's no cell phone service, no power, no nothing,
(09:11):
it makes that more difficult. No matter what, I hope
something is done to make sure all these people are
able to vote. Now again, I'm not going to run
with unconfirmed reports. I am not, but I have now
heard from several different sources that older folks are still
(09:34):
dying as we speak, especially ones who are in need
of medications. They're running out of medications. The power is
going out. You know a lot of times, when you're
older and your health is going down, you need equipment
that has electricity attached to it to help keep yourself alive.
This is not a problem that is gone and now
(09:55):
they're just picking up the pieces. The problem is ongoing.
And if you've never s spent any time in the mountains,
I've spent tons of time in the mountains because I
grew up in Montana and I'm in Tennessee. I was
down there all the time. I know what all this
stuff is like. You don't. You don't have a good
grasp of how remote, how isolated it is, and even
(10:15):
in this modern era, how you can be cut off.
There aren't a bunch of routes. It's not a super
highway everywhere is in Chicago, there aren't a bunch of routes.
In Oftentimes there's one. If it's gone, you're on your own.
It's it's that way, all right. Let's talk aboutle World
War One? Shall we Next? You're listening to the Oracle?
(10:38):
You love this one. It's a scream baby. The Jesse
Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday,
and ask doctor Jesse Friday and don't forget. You can
send us an email. We are alive here Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com. He can leave us a voicemail
eight seven seven three seven four three seven three We'll
(11:02):
get back to some of those in a bit, but
I got this one step away from politics for a minute,
Dear History Professor extraordinaire. I watched a series on Netflix
called Peaky Blinders, in which the main characters were having
nightmares and PTSD due to their service in the World
War One British Army. They are part of a small
group digging tunnels. They could hear the Germans digging tunnels two.
(11:26):
At some point the British and German tunnels intersect, influx
of air blows out the candles. They're forced into hand
to hand combat underground in the pitch black. Is this
a true account? What were the purpose of the tunnels?
Says I can use his name. His name is Benny.
All Right, we haven't done a World War One talk
in a while, so let's do a little World War
(11:47):
One talk as it pertains to the tunnels. This may
take a little bit, but just trust me on this.
It's worth it. World War One is so under rated.
Underrated now underrated it's a hard word, and maybe that's
(12:07):
not the appropriate word to use, because it was awful. Awful.
World War One did so much to shape the world.
We have the thing is World War One is so
overshadowed by World War Two, which was bigger and more
damaging and killed more people and involved more countries that
(12:28):
World War One is just not talked about much anymore.
It's not understood. It was also and I know we
have pictures in video from it, but it's not great.
World War two was not only big, it was not
only bigger, but we had all the video, we had
video documentaries, pictures. It was just it was so it's
more alive for us. But World War One, it was
(12:52):
we had never seen anything like it on the planet
where nation states could throw army after army after army
and they would just die and then they could produce
new armies. So people were dying in droves. Twenty five
percent of the French male population casualties of war. We've
(13:14):
never seen numbers like that anyway. So why was that, Well,
obviously you know about trench warfare. We're not going to
go into the whole thing. But artillery really changed the game.
Artillery and the machine gun changed the game before that.
The weapons, I'm not gonna say they were all single
shot weapons, that's not true, but they certainly weren't fully
(13:34):
automatic machine guns and artillery had been around forever. Really,
you could call what the Romans were using with catapults
in such artillery. But cannons count as artillery. But there's
a big difference between a cannon that can shoot you
five hundred meters away and an artillery shell that can
shoot you twenty five miles away, and the round it
(13:58):
fires is the size of a there's a monumental difference
between the two. You know, once you lose entire units
once or twice, you start having to make adjustments the
very beginning. There's actually a great book on this. The
very beginning of World War One is super fascinating. The
(14:19):
whole conflict is fascinating, but the very very beginning of it.
The book is called Guns of August. It's one of
the best books I've read about the start of World
War One. Let me say that again. Guns of August
is the name of the book. Again. If you miss
any part of the show, you can download a podcast
on Iheartspotify, and iTunes. But allow me to do this
one more time, so you don't send me an email
(14:40):
asking the name of the book Guns of August. Anyway,
at the beginning of the war, nations hadn't really figured
out this whole machine gun artillery thing, meaning they hadn't
figured out the destructive power of it. So when you
look at what the Germans did in Belgium, the Germans
were sweet through Belgium and you had artillery pieces blowing
(15:03):
up forts that were buried underground, and you had men
just charging machine gun after machine gun, bodies stacking up
so high you had to go out and push them
over to open up the fields of fire. It was
just eventually, if you're in any military, German, French, it
didn't matter what the military was, you're getting casualty numbers back.
You know, they're bringing you pieces of paper with casualty numbers.
(15:26):
You're yelling at the guy thinking he missed a he
missed a Kamma somewhere. This can't be right. What do
you mean? This is this is the entire unit. What
do you mean they're all gone. So that kind of
shock is going to get a reaction. You know, in combat,
there's weapons, and then you find things to counter the weapons,
and then you find things that counter the weapons. The
counter the weapons. That's the way combat, that's the way
(15:47):
war has always worked. What do you do when the
air is full of deadly things like shrapnel from the
artillery and bullets from machine guns. Where do you go?
You go down, You have to dig, You have to
go underground. To this day, in the Marine Corps we
would dig fighting holes and in the Army they call
them foxholes. To this day men will dig in Russia, Ukraine,
(16:11):
huge trench fighting whole thing because the air is full
of things that will kill you, so you have to
get below the air. Trench warfare became the name of
the game, and that's what most people know World War
One for trench warfare. But what trench warfare creates is
a situation that is just more terrible than you can imagine.
(16:35):
Because lines aren't moving. Battle lines don't move. We have
our trench. You have your trench. You're dug in. It's defended.
You have snipers, you have machine guns, you have barbed wire,
you have artillery. They are dug in. They have all
the same stuff you have. But you both want to advance.
(16:56):
You want to advance into their trench. You need to
take territory. That's the nature of war. And so just
like you've heard stories about, they would send entire units
over the top. It's what they called it. They'd blow whistles,
your whole unit would go over the top, and oftentimes
the whole unit would die almost immediately. Just bullets would
feel the air and die. So if you can't go up,
(17:19):
you must go down. And that's where the tunnels come in.
I'll explain a little bit more in a moment, then
we'll get back to politics. Before I do that, you
may need some chalk for this next segment. You're gonna
need some tea levels because we're talking hand to hand
ancient combat in the dark. It's crazy and it's awesome.
And also he just needs some natural herbal supplements from
(17:41):
chalk in your life to make you feel better all
the time. And it is Choctober. Maybe you woke up
today thinking, oh my gosh, it's October fourth, You're dead wrong.
It's Choctober fourth, baby. Choctober is the discount month, the
discount month. If you've been waiting wondering, I'm not sure,
(18:01):
I don't know if I want to spend the money.
Stop wondering. Now's when you try it. Go get a
subscription choq dot com promo code Jesse take advantage of Choctober,
or you can call them text them five zero chalk
three thousand, five zero ccho q three thousand, take advantage.
(18:25):
We'll be back to talk World War One. Hang on,
Jesse Kelly, Baccian.
Speaker 4 (18:33):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday, and
ask doctor Jesse Friday. We are going to get to
the talking heads talking about Trump and new charges against Trump.
We have voicemails to get to attacking Iran's nuclear sites.
All this stuff is still to come. Yeah, we'll talk
a little bit about the jobs numbers.
Speaker 1 (18:53):
There's a big fat disclaimer and we need to throw
on that thing. All that and more is still to
come on the world famous Jesse Kelly Show. For now.
The guy was asking a guy emailed a question asking
about the tunnels of World War One. He didn't understand
why they were there, what happened. So I just talked
about the trenches and why the trenches became. And remember
there are places that're very overgrown. Now I've never personally been,
(19:17):
but there are places in Europe where you can see
the trenches to this day. The trench network was so extensive.
There were rooms, there were barracks, there was wallpaper in
some of them, carpet I don't want to make it
sound like it was nice. It was not. It was
a horrific place to fight, a horrific way to fight.
But they were that extensive. But you still need to advance,
(19:40):
and they were constantly beating their heads against the wall
trying to figure out each side was how do we
advance against a dug in enemy. One of the reasons
the Germans used gas poison gas. That's famous now everyone
knows the Germans used poison gas. One of the reasons
they did it they thought it would be and for
(20:02):
a while it was an effective way to clear out
the enemy trench. If the gas is heavier than the air,
you wait till the winds are right, you released your
gas canisters. You let it float across the field, it
gets to the trench, it sinks in the trench, everyone dies,
a horrific death, I might point out in the trench.
And okay, so you get the idea, how do you
(20:23):
take out someone in a trench. Tunnels began almost immediately,
and tunnels were used for a couple of different reasons.
One of the main reasons they would use tunnels is this,
They would dig a tunnel towards the enemy trench with
the intention of packing that thing full of explosives when
(20:47):
they got under the enemy defensive fortifications and setting off
the explosives. There was The British did this, and I
don't have the details because I'm doing this off the
top of my head. I forget some of the details
of it. But the British did this once, and it
was so big I believe it may still stand as
(21:08):
the largest non nuclear explosion in the history of the world.
They blew they essentially blew up a mountain they spent
forever digging underneath the Germans. The Germans were dug in
on this mountain and they just set it all off
at once and just straight up vaporized a mountain of people.
That was the point of the tunnels. And both sides
(21:30):
were doing it. Both sides were digging tunnels. Now, I
don't know how much how much experience you have with
underground stuff that it is. It's not for everybody, you know.
I come from a construction family. That's what my dad did,
that's what his dad did. That's what we did. But
we didn't build houses or roads, and I've done some
(21:52):
of that stuff, but what we did was underground infrastructure,
underground water in sewer lines. That's really what we did.
That's what the Kellies did. And so I've spent a
lot of time in a trench, a very very very
deep trench thirty forty feet you're just looking up. Quit
(22:13):
shaking your head, Chris, Oh, Chris. It's nerve wracking. And
you see the shoring, the things you put up to
keep the trench walls all right, sounded like Batman there,
the things you put up to keep the trench walls
from caving in. And even then it's claustrophobic. It's kind
of intimidating. And that's with modern technology, modern regulations. It's
(22:38):
a lot. Now rewind to back then, think about the
technology they were working with. You would dig straight down,
You dig a hole straight down, and then with shovels,
that's really what it was. Shovels and picks and buckets.
You and a crew of men would aim towards the
enemy trenches and you would start digging your time their direction. Now,
(23:02):
the problem is this, Honestly, this might be one of
the most it really might be. This in the tunnel
rats of Vietnam, it might be the most horrific combat
I think I've ever heard of in my life. I
just I don't think. I don't have whatever that is,
whatever these guys had. The enemy's digging a tunnel towards you.
You're digging a tunnel towards them. You are not. You
(23:23):
are not generally planning on running into them. That's not
the idea. You are diggers. You send diggers down there.
They're digging things out. I told you what the plan was.
The plan was, you get it far enough, pack and
full of explosives, blow up the other guys. But oftentimes, look,
there's only so much ground. You're fighting over a specific area.
(23:45):
Oftentimes the tunnels would be heading towards each other and
the two sides wouldn't know it. It's not like you
gave the other side a heads up, Hey we got
a tunnel here. It's not how it works. And if
that wall was breached, and this happened many, many, many times,
(24:06):
if that wall was breached, well, you don't shake hands.
You don't say, hey, Fritz, it's good to see you
down here. It's on. When you run into each other,
it's on. And the men of World War One who
had to dig these tunnels are some of the bravest
human beings who have ever lived. They would bring brass
(24:26):
knuckles with them. They would bring daggers with them, blunt
you name a blunt or relatively small weapon, they would
bring it along. And they would bring it along because
with a decent amount of regularity, you would run into
the opposing sides tunnel and you would have a fight
(24:49):
hand to hand in a tunnel under the ground, in
the dark. You don't even know if you read some
of the accounts. Let's say you brought a dagger with
you and you get in one of these tunnel fights. Look,
you don't have a ton of light anyway. You're dealing
with little old lamps and such. But how quickly does
(25:12):
one of those lamps get kicked over, knocked down, broken,
even if it's even if it's on, it's not providing
that much light. You're just stabbing any piece of flesh
you find trying to live in the dark. You think
you know bravery, I think I know bravery. I don't
know nothing about bravery. I couldn't even imagine the only now.
(25:34):
Maybe it's because I'm claustrophobic, not with things over my
mouth or something like that, not in a plane or
an elevator, not in that way. But if I'm in
something where my shoulders are touching the walls or something
like that, that's a no go for me. So maybe
it's that, But I couldn't imagine anything more horrific than that.
He reminds me, that's right, Chrisy. It reminds me of
(25:56):
the tunnel rats of Vietnam, those absurdly brave. Here, here's
a flashlight and a knife. Put it in between your
teeth like a dagone pirate, and crawl underneath inside of
a tunnel where there are booby traps of snakes and
spiders and just spikes themselves. Viet Cong sitting down there
(26:18):
waiting to shove a bamboo spear in your neck and
trap you there. That is something that happened. It's just
I could not imagine that kind of combat. But men
are brave. There's a lot of courage out there, and
men are brave. Some men are brave enough. I'm not
brave enough to do that, but some men are, and
they deserve our unending respect. Go pick up some World
(26:41):
War two books, and if you ever see a decent
World War or World War One books, I'm sorry and
if you ever see a decent World War One documentary,
there aren't very many of them. Watch it. And again,
the reason there aren't that many of them is there's
not as much picture in video. They can still do
a good documentary on it. They do great Civil war documentaries,
(27:02):
and there was no video obviously from back then. But
I just there aren't that many decent World War One documentaries.
That movie that came out not long ago, nineteen seventeen.
Nineteen seventeen was the name of the movie. Now, I'm
a World War One buff, and so I went into
that movie ready to be extremely judgmental about how they
did it. I will tell you it was outstanding and
(27:26):
extremely accurate for what a lot of World War One
combat was like. Not for kiddo's kids. Make sure you
ask your parents. It was definitely rated R. I don't
think there was any perverted stuff, but it was. It
was a gory affair. It was definitely bloody. Nineteen seventeen.
If you want to if you're more of a movie person,
or if you like Chris and you can't read, all right,
let's talk about disaster preparation, attacking Iran's nuclear sites. What
(27:49):
the media is doing to Donald Trump in so much
more non perishable food. It's something that's certainly in the
news now, isn't it. You know again, when I tell
you about my Patriots Supply and their emergency food kits,
they sell these four week emergency food kits which are
fifty bucks off right now. But when I tell you that,
(28:12):
it can be hard to convince yourself to spend that
money because you don't need it right now. But that's
the problem with disaster preparation. You don't know when you're
going to need it. You don't have a heads up
ahead of time. I I'm gonna tell you something. It's
gonna sound weird. I hope your my Patriots Supply stuff
goes to waste. I pray mine does. I don't ever
(28:35):
want to have to have to need it. But if
I do happen to have to need it, if the
grocery store is gone, emp flood, whatever me my family,
we will be eating well. Go get an emergency food
kit fifty bucks off. Prepare with Jesse dot com is
the website. Prepare with Jesse dot com. We'll be back.
(29:02):
You're listening to the Jesse Kelly Show. You're welcome. It
is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday and ask
doctor Jesse Friday. Remember you can send us love, hate,
death threats, ask doctor Jesse questions, whatever you want. Jesse
at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Leave a voicemail if you'd
(29:24):
like eight seven seven three seven seven four three seven three.
Let's go back to the voicemail.
Speaker 3 (29:30):
Great Oracle. One thing JD. Vance does that Trump could
really learn from is not taking the bait. Regardless of
how you watch him in the debate last night or
any interviews he does with these communist news anchors, he
does not take the bank and is able to immediately
go on the offense instead of constantly on the deepense.
Speaker 1 (29:50):
Yeah, look what JD did was awesome, and what that
guy just said is a big part of it. He
never takes the bait. Never took the bait, Never took
the bait. Look, we all have we all have weaknesses
and flaws, right, I have more weaknesses and flaws than
you do. Believe me. We all have things about us
that are that aren't perfect. Nobody's perfect. Trump has a
(30:14):
weakness that Kamala Harris and others have exploited before she
exploited it during that debate. Trump has a gigantic ego.
He does. Look. Most people like that in that kind
of leadership position have gigantic egos. He's not unique there.
It's just to be one of those guys you have to.
He has a gigantic ego. He's proud of things like
(30:37):
his business resume. He's proud of things like how many
people show up at his rallies for Trump. That is
a source of pride. He's proud of those things. He
brags about it often. And Kamala Harris, honestly, it was
a smart move by her campaign. Kamala Harris decided to
(30:57):
exploit that pride during the debate and get him talking
about something other than inflation and immigration. And so that's
why you know, you toss that out there. Guy's got
a big ego. It's like telling someone they have tiny hands.
It wounds them. Hey, Jesse and Chris, I noticed, I'm
noticing that the regular talking heads in the media are
really trumping up the false claim that Trump was refusing
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to leave office, and the DOJ is now bringing new,
modified charges against him. Do you think this will be successful?
What you're seeing right now is desperation. That's why Jack
Smith has come up with these new charges. I had
a chance to talk to Josh Hammer, kind of a
legal expert friend of mine. He's come on the show
several times, and he said, these are all ridiculous, and honestly,
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the Supreme Court will probably wash these away. Look, put
a smile on your face, even if you are one
of these people who hates Donald Trump. It looks like
the law fair against Donald Trump. If he wins the election,
I need to put in that disclaimer. If he wins
the election, it looks like all this evil lawfair Democrats
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tried to do to Trump failed. Now, some of that
went our way because of the Supreme Court. That was huge,
A huge chunk of it went our way because we
look we lucked out. Fanny Willis having an affair with
the prosecutor she put in charge to go after Trump,
really blew up the Georgia case that was going to
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be the big, big, big problem, was going to send
him to Georgia State prison. It looks like the law
fair failed on some level. I almost didn't want to
use the word failed, because one Trump is still dealing
with this gigantic financial judgment in New York. It's hard
to make people care about that, because Trump's a billionaire,
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and people don't feel bad about billionaires losing a bunch
of money. But the injustice of that, that was a
ridiculous judgment that still went through. You know, he's still
a felon. That matters to people. Some people it wouldn't
bother me, but it matters to people a lot. That's
a big deal. So as far as it's stopping Trump,
it's not gonna work. They're desperate right now. They're showing
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their desperation right now. You are seeing it in the polls.
You're seeing it in the betting market. The betting market
is actually something that's kind of smart to follow when
it comes to politics. Is they know that everything right
now looks like it's going our direction. Does it mean
we get complacent, doesn't mean we sit at home. It's
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from my perspective, it's difficult to see how Kamala Harris
could win the race with the numbers I've seen. She's
lost every man, she's not getting every woman. She's still
going to get a majority of the women. Trump is
probably gonna get a higher percentage of the black vote
than anyone has on the Republican ticket for a long time. No,
he's not going to get fifty percent, don't believe anyone
(33:52):
who says that. But he might get fifteen. If he
gets fifteen, that's a big deal. He might get fifteen
to twenty, that's a big deals in a break off
half the Latino vote in the country. Republicans don't do that.
It looks like it's going our way. We'll see what happens,
but it looks like it's going our way. So what
you're going to see between now and election day, it's
(34:12):
a lot of desperation. That does make me nervous. A
desperate communist is a very very dangerous thing. But still
put a smile on your face, Jesse. After Iran has
attacked Israel twice, don't you think we should attack their
nuclear sites blow it up. Well, for one, we shouldn't
do anything nothing. If Israel wants to conduct a war, understandably,
(34:38):
Israel should conduct a war. And Israel frankly doesn't need
our help conducting this war. They've not asked really for
outside of munitions and things like that we buy for them,
they haven't really asked for any significant assistance, nor should
we give it, nor can we afford it. We have
Americans who can't afford to live right now. We are
(34:59):
not in other people's business right now, even allies of ours.
The only job we would have if Israel decided to
go all in on Iran, the only job we as
a country would have would be running interference against the UN.
The UN hates, they hate, they hate Israel, they hate
the Jews, they hate Israel. They would they would immediately
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try to launch some kind of a significant effort to
stop Israel. But the UN can't really do anything that
defies us because we are the UN. We provide so
much of the funding and everything else the UN. Really, look,
I don't want to say we are the UN, That's
probably not the way to put it, but we have
(35:41):
veto power. The UN is not going to do anything
that the United States of America doesn't want them to do,
So that would really that'd be all that be all
we need. Now. That doesn't mean we can't do things
on a personal level to help the Israeli people. Maybe
we talk about the IFCJ all the time, what's that about.
That's about the civilians and the hell they're living through
(36:06):
right now. I just look, I've been in bunkers before,
and it's not pleasant. And that was when I was
in uniform and was expected to be school kids going
to a bunker. That's awful. Having to have ambulances that
are armored, that's freaking terrible. But that's how you live
(36:27):
right now. If you're if you're a civilian in Israel.
So if you want to help the citizens, if you
want to help the people there with what they're going through,
I f CJ need your help eight eight eight four
eight eight I f CJ. Or you can go online
to support IFCJ dot org. All right, support IFCJ dot org. Now,
(36:51):
maybe you saw some bragging today about the jobs numbers.
We've got some jobs numbers out there, and the White
House ran to spike the football on the jobs numbers.
Look at these amazing jobs numbers. Well, one, I need
to remind you that virtually every job's report this administration
has put out has been revised down, way down later on,
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because they always lie about the first jobs report. That's one. Two.
When I actually give you the details of this job's report,
it's going to make your head pop off. So let's
pop off your head next