Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show, Final hour of The Jesse Kelly Show, odd
A Friday and Ascid Doctor Jesse Friday. We'll talk a
little Trump's ag picked this hour. I'm just going through
your questions. Why is Utah having a hard time getting
(00:33):
its GOP in order? What happens if the illegals flood
into the Blue States or for protection? Have my thoughts
on vivek change They actually have a little bit all
that and so much more coming up this hour on
the world famous Jesse Kelly Show. Now, before we get
to any of that stuff, I want to tackle something
(00:54):
really important. First. Had a chance last night. It's been
a wild few weeks with a lot going on, but
I had a chance last night to sit and just
just be by myself for a little bit and reflect
on something. You know how we were talking last night
about going monkey hunting for those monkeys that have escaped,
(01:18):
and I said, what, Chris? I said that, remember how
you agreed that we were gonna go monkey hunting only
bladed weapons? Did? I thought you did agreed? I remember
you agreeing. I thought, well, whatever you need to come along, Chris,
as an assistant, you can carry my weapons. So I
said that we were gonna go bladed weapons only, and
(01:41):
maybe some blunt weapons like a mace or something like that.
I think we also need to include nets. I think
we're gonna No, Chris, listen, these things are fast. They
bounce around some kind of net. Have you ever seen
the movies. I'm sure these things exist where you shoot
a net at something and it got saught in Jurassic Park,
(02:02):
So it's got to exist. You shoot a net at
something and it kind of wraps around it. I think
that's the technique for the monkeys. What, Chris, what do
they use nets in gladiator fights? As a matter of fact,
they did. Gladiator fights are an interesting beast if you
ever dig into these and all citizens on Roman history.
(02:23):
So there were really three different when there was a
big day, a big gladiator day. There were really three
different portions traditionally of a gladiator day. And do keep
in mind ninety nine percent of the gladiator games did
not take place in the Roman Colisseum that was the
biggest and most important, But gladiatorial games took place all
(02:48):
over the Roman Empire. Okay, they actually touched on that
a little bit. In the movie Gladiator, how do you
kind of have the outskirts and you worked your way up.
You want to be in the coliseum. That's the professionals. Whatever.
So it had three parts to gladiatorial combat. The first
part was the execution, oftentimes gruesome execution of prisoners. This
(03:13):
was handled in gladiator games. I know, it's a little
bit nasty to think about. It was kind of like
the halftime show. People were there for gladiatorial combat, that's
what they wanted to see, but they would bring out
it's kind of an entertainment. Hey, the fighters are getting
set up, let's watch this murderer get eaten by a leopard,
(03:34):
and they would bring him out and you'd have the Yeah,
I know, Chris. It was kind of cool. The problem
was it was cool until they started doing it to
Christians just for believing in Jesus. Then it got a
little bit uncool. Christ you should know you people were
not exempt from this either. They were dragging Jews into
the coliseum as well. Well. Once it turned into religious persecution,
it got a lot less cool. It's cool when you say, hey,
(03:56):
let's break out some child predators and let's just why
them trampled by elephants. That's sweet, right, kind of not
so sweet when you're doing it for religious purposes. But anyway,
that was one portion. So one portion was the public
execution and torture of prisoners. Another portion was Gladiator. On Gladiator, now,
(04:19):
Chris asked about the nets, because anyone who's seen the
movie Gladiator knows this or has read anything about this.
You see guys, various guys. Some guy would have a
sword and a shield. Another guy would have two swords.
Another guy would have a long trident, a long spear
with a net attached to it. I want you to
think about this like professional wrestling is probably the best
(04:44):
way I can do it, only this is for real
different fighters. Remember the fighters, while yes, they were mostly slaves,
there were some freedmen who did it, but they were
mostly slaves. They were the professional athletes of their time.
Slavery in most of the ancient world there were many, many, many, many,
(05:06):
many different degrees to it. When we Americans think about slavery,
we are automatically revolted by it. And I'm glad we are,
because what do we think about We think about black
slavery here, which was chattel slavery and whippings, and it
was just awful, and every part of it was just
inhumane and awful and terrible. And oh, you're wrong, that's
been a ton of slavery. But there was slavery all
(05:29):
over the ancient world where yes, you were a slave,
you weren't paid, but you actually had a wonderful life.
In Rome, the tutors of the rich were oftentimes they
were slaves. You ate like a king, You slept in
a wonderful bed, You actually had people who worked for you.
You taught the rich guy math, you taught his son math,
(05:50):
and you had a wonderful life. But then there was
it could run the gamut, you know, there was the
dark side of it where you're a young lady from
gaul and you just got purchased by somebody and the
rest of your natural life is not going to be played. Okay,
you get the idea. Slaves. Most of the gladiators were slaves.
(06:12):
And I have no idea why I got off on this.
Most of the gladiators were slaves, but it was not
a bad life if you were good at it. Yes,
the the rom the gladiator training schools, they were run
by private individuals. Think of it like an owner of
a football team. You would buy your gladiators, you would
train your gladiators, and the discipline was very brutal, torture, death,
(06:36):
all those things. And the life was very hard, because
it's the life of a professional athlete in a blood sport.
The life was very, very hard. But if you got
good at it, if you started bringing in money for
the owner of your gladiators school, he would he would
want to reward you cash. Women like again, like the
(06:58):
professional athletes up today or radio hosts, women just throw
themselves at them what Chris seriously, But like the professional
athletes of our day, women would throw themselves. You would
be signing autographs. There were guys who were gladiators who
earned their freedom and stayed gladiators because of the life
it could give you if you were good at it. Anyway,
(07:20):
So the three parts of the gladiator fights were that
or I didn't get into the third one yet. I'll
get into it in a moment. So first you had
the torture and murder of criminals. Second you had the
gladiator on gladiator combat. And I said, think of it
like professional wrestling, where they also had different styles with
different weapons. And yes, one of the weapons styles was
(07:42):
the net and the trident, and very similar to like
mma today. You wanted to see how's the boxer gonna
fare against the wrestler? How did you it was? It
would do it would do that. And then there was
actually the most risky part of gladiatorial combat. Yes you
could die, and yes they did die when the men
(08:03):
fought each other, but often often the fights were not
to the death, and there's a reason for that. Remember,
yes he's a slave, but he's a commodity. He provides,
he provides value, especially if he has any skill at all.
So I own a gladiatorial school. Chris owns a gladiatorial school.
(08:27):
Obviously my guys would be better paid, but we clear
that we both have investments in these guys. We had
to buy them, we have to train them, we have
to feed them, we have to everything. So when Chris
agrees to put his best fighter against my best fighter,
maybe it will end up in death, after all your
fighting with swords and spears. But Chris and I have
(08:47):
an understanding that it's better if our guys can fight
another day. So if possible, if you can get out
of it without killing them, they would want that. I'm
not saying it was safe. Again they die, but that
was not all the time. The most dangerous form of
gladiatorial combat was part three, the halftime show You Kill
(09:09):
the Criminals Prime Time. The gladiators fight each other, but
then they had to fight animals. And those gladiators had
the shortest life span of any gladiator. Did you know?
That shortest life span? And it was a specialty if
you were if you were an animal fighter, you didn't
(09:29):
fight other guys. It wouldn't. That was what you trained in.
That was a specialty. And look, I really I joke
about the monkey thing. I wouldn't like to do that.
I don't have any desire to kill monkeys. I'm not
some animal rights guy. I have no problem, you know,
shooting a deer or something like that, filling up the freezer.
But I don't want to hack and kill animals. It's
(09:51):
not me. I love animals, to be honest, so don't
I wouldn't want to do it, but part of me
thinks i'd want to see it. Picture looking at a
gladiator in a big open colisseum with a spear taking
on a rhinoceros. That wasn't just something from the movies
(10:13):
that happened, and it was whoever dies, that's it. You know,
the rhino's not going to grant you mercy. It was
the most deadly form of combat because the animal's not
going to tap out. Hey, here's a trident and a net.
There's a lion. Best of luck, wild right, tell me
you wouldn't watch, you'd watch, you'd watch. That had nothing
(10:37):
to do with politics. I have no idea what we
talked about that, but you know, you know what I
do know for one hundred percent fact, if you fought
a rhinoceros, you would wake up with pain the next
day and you would need relief Factor. I know that.
In fact, I wonder, I wonder how many of those
gladiators took relief Factor as a daily supplement. Chris, I
(11:00):
bet you they did, because relief Factor they would have
taken care of their bodies. They would know that relief
Factor is one hundred percent drug free, and they would
understand if you want to wake up and fight at
Cheetah the next day, you can't do it if your
elbow hurts, So you need to take relief Factor, the
nutritional supplement you take every single day to help you
play golf or fight a rhinoceros nineteen dollars and ninety
(11:24):
five cents buys you three weeks of it. In all seriousness,
you don't have to live with the daily pain. Try
Relief Factor for three weeks and watch your pain evaporate.
Call one eight hundred, do the number four relief or
go to relief Factor dot com. We'll be back. Feeling
(11:46):
a little stocky, Follow like and subscribe on social at
Jesse Kelly's show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on
a Friday and ask doctor Jesse Friday. Remember, you can
still email the show Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com.
You can leave us a voicemail eight seven seven three
(12:06):
seven seven four three seven three Doctor Jesse. The subject
is do you trust Vivek? Have your thoughts on Vivec
changed or if not, is there anything he could do
to change your mind? Personally? I caucused for Vivek and Iowa,
but I'm cheering for a primary of Vance versus Vivek,
so on and so forth. All right, So yes they
(12:29):
have and no they haven't. So allow me to explain.
I don't trust Vivec at all. I don't. It's not
that he doesn't say wonderful things. Honestly, everything he says
is kind of perfect. He's after talking about eliminating government agencies.
Everything he says has been perfect. It really has been.
(12:54):
But I think maybe you're seeing him different than I
see him. Answers he's taking now, they're very very new,
very new. And I'm not talking like he came around
in the last ten years and the last couple years.
He came around and miraculously he came on like Gangbusters
(13:18):
and sounded like you like me, out of the blue
during a primary and sounded really really good. But there
was something else that happened during that primary. Now pause
on that something else for a moment. Let's look at
Vivek's life and extremely impressive, extremely successful business here, business there.
(13:44):
This is an ambitious, highly intelligent human being, highly intelligent,
highly ambitious. We know that his private life has shown that,
and I like that. I'm not complaining about ambition. Back
to the primary, All of a sudden, he is a
right wing lunatic like you like me, runs in a primary,
runs hard, runs really really really really really hard against
(14:07):
Ron DeSantis, blasting away over and over again, never has
a negative word to say to Donald Trump. Then maybe
you're sitting there saying, Jesse, you just yeah, you're bad
about the DeSantis. No, you don't understand. I don't give
a crap about the primary. I moved on past that
a long time ago. What does that show you? Why
would you do that? Well, if you're a guy named Vivek,
(14:30):
and you're very ambitious and you're highly highly intelligent, is
there a better way to become a star on the
right than by taking every right wing position possible and
then get into Trump's good graces by attacking his main
primary opponent and never attacking him. No, if you could
(14:55):
lay out the way to do that, that's what he did.
And now he has become kind of a darling on
the right. He has been. And if we're to believe
what Trump is saying, and there's no reason not to
believe it right now, he'll have a part in Trump's administration. Now,
all that said, I have come around definitely on this.
(15:18):
I could be wrong, by the way about the motivations.
I don't claim to know a man's heart, but I
know what I see. I've come around on this aspect
of it. Even if he's pretending, even if this is
all just about being the GOP nominee in twenty eight,
and I believe it is cross my heart and hope
to die. Viviv will be running hard in that primary.
(15:40):
But even if that's what this is for, well, I
can use people's ambition for my good. What have I
told you about politicians? They're all rental cars, every one
of them, even ones you love a lot. You use
them to get where you're going and dump them the
second you're done getting there, because they'll do the same
to you. I promise they will, all of them. Vivec
(16:02):
is no different, even if he's quote pretending or doesn't
really believe in a lot of this stuff. If he's
going to get in there and start carving up government agencies,
firing government employees, streamlining the way government is done, well
what do I give a crap of His motivations aren't
totally pure. If he's doing it so he can be
(16:24):
the GOP nominee in twenty eight and he's not doing
it to save the country, why would I care. At
least he's doing it. We need someone to do it.
So no, I don't trust him. I'm not that way.
I don't trust any of them, none of them. I
don't trust the Santus. I don't trust Trump. I don't
trust anybody nobody in politics none. I'm not saying they're
(16:45):
all bad. I just inherently am distrustful of people in power,
especially politicians. I don't trust any of them, but I
believe many of them can be used to get where
we're going. That's what I believe. And so far Vivex
sounds like a man who is interested in getting us
(17:08):
where we need to go. What is motivations for that
are not my problem. If we can use him, let's
use him. If he becomes a problem, just like that
rental car, dump it on the side of the road.
All right. And I got this email Simplify Oracle condolences
for your father. He talks about Ron DeSantis. I think
he should be Trump's AG. I know ego and personal
(17:29):
animosity issues meant he would never be VP, but I
hope of his sense of duty to the country would
allow him to be AG. So little Birdie I talked
to told me, in no uncertain terms, I don't know
about DeSantis is interested in it. I don't want to
(17:50):
act like I do, but in no uncertain terms, DeSantis's
name was brought up to Trump as his potential ag
and it not possibly have been shot down any faster
than any more loudly. Like I've told you many many times,
those two men despise each other. Their people don't, their
(18:11):
bases do not. But those two men despise each other,
and they will not be working together as an administration.
DeSantis is going to keep running Florida like a boss.
Trump hopefully will keep running America like a boss. And
that's just the way it goes. Sometimes everyone on the
team doesn't get along, all right. I get along with
Peirtop because they're on our team, because they don't take
(18:34):
my money and give it to crappy causes. Because they
save me money. I don't want to make it talent.
It's all about money. But it doesn't matter a lot
my cell phone bill getting cut in half. We were
paying one hundred and forty eight dollars a month at
T Mobile for cell phone coverage. One hundred forty eight
dollars a month. I don't want to date myself, but
(18:56):
that was a car payment when I was a kid.
One hundred and forty eight dollars a month. I pay
half that at Pure Talk. Pure Talk's the patriotic cell
phone company. You don't sacrifice coverage, and you save so
much freaking money. Don't we all want to try to
save some more money right now? Ten minutes you're ten
minutes away from saving money. It's ten minutes on the
(19:18):
phone speaking to an American who speaks English. That's how
much Pure Talk loves this country. Dial pound two five
zero and say Jesse Kelly pound two five zero, Say
Jesse Kelly. Switch to Pure Talk. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a Friday, and ask doctor Jesse Friday
(19:40):
motoring through the show today, what an incredible week it is. Man.
I hope you are going to enjoy yourself this weekend.
And if I may suggest, get some rest. I didn't
mean for that to rhyme, but that was awesome. Thank you, Corey,
thank you. I do what I can here. If I may,
I'm gonna use that a lot. Now. We need to
(20:00):
tell Chris whenever he gets back here, if I may suggest,
let's get some rest. No, seriously, you did good. It's
been a good week, Jesse. If some state governors try
to shield illegal immigrants, then the immigrants probably would flood
into the sanctuary states and it would be a big
problem for those states. Your thoughts, Yeah, I'm worried about that,
(20:21):
for our Blue state brethren, for all the anti communists
listening to me in Illinois and California and places like that.
There are I read you or I played for you. Massachusetts.
The Massachusetts governor's comments JB. Pritzker made comments pretty much similar.
Speaker 2 (20:39):
To anyone who intends to come take away the freedom
and opportunity and dignity of Illinoisans. I would remind you
that a happy warrior is still a warrior. You come
for my people, you come through me.
Speaker 1 (20:56):
So I've had some very encouraging conversations I've been telling
you about this with about Trump's people, about Trump's plan,
about the mass deportation thing. They're not backing off, they're
not slowing down. He appears to be packing his administration
with people who are dead set on getting these people
out of the country. That's a good thing. Another good thing.
(21:18):
I was asking a former Ice special agent logistically, how
does this work? How does it look? And he was
talking about their ability under the law to pretty much
deputize state police agencies, local police agencies to enlist them
and the help because it's not as if you don't
know where these people are, everyone in your area knows
(21:41):
where the illegals are. Every single person does. How would
that look in the state of Texas, the ICE doesn't
have the man powered around everyone up, but they don't
have to. Texas rangers can help you. Go through the
various red counties in Texas. You go to the sheriff's
department and list them and list their help. They make
contact with illegal for any reason. Boom, arrested, deported, gone.
(22:04):
You have legions of people who can and will help
the problem, a huge problem. We're going to run into.
The border itself will get secured. The tide will be
stopped or at least slowed down. It can never be
stopped completely, it will be slowed down. And in red
states states like mine in Texas, the deportation will begin
(22:25):
and there's going to be a lot of it. The
question is how much authority? How much of a fight
is it between the Trump administration, the federal government and
these blue states. Remember, states do have lots of power.
Now you can yell that they don't have power about
(22:47):
immigration laws, and I agree with you, you're correct about that,
But what do you do if they take the resistance
as far as they might. I told you, remember what
I used to say, say under the Biden administration, when
they were filling up the country with that many millions
and millions of illegals, rapists and murders and all this
other stuff. What did I say the Red state governors
(23:08):
should do. They should come up with their own immigration plans,
deport people themselves, secure the border themselves, and then dare
the federal government to come in and try to stop
them from doing it. Essentially defy the federal government to
protect your state and your people. And I still believe
they should have done that. I believe they failed us.
There's no way we should have to withstand fifteen to
(23:31):
twenty million illegals every time a Democrat gets elected. That
can't go on. But anyway, that aside, let's flip it now.
But we're going to have the Feds. We're at least
going to have ice and a lot of these people.
What if what if Democrats do what they often do
prove to Republicans what political will actually is. What if
(23:54):
you go marching into Massachusetts you're an ice task for
you go marching in there to round some people up,
and you find yourself face to face with the Massachusetts
State Police, who are under orders there to stop you. Now,
we know the red state governors never had the stones
to pull that off. Are you sure the blue state
(24:18):
governors don't, Because the history that I've seen is Democrats
will go for broke because they're crazy communists and because
they're always trying to move that needle that way. It's
an interesting development. But if you're any legal in this country,
tell me you're not already packing your bags for California
or Colorado or any one of these places. Woa, we're
(24:39):
a sanctuary place. Well, that's where I beheaded, Dear Oracle.
The only news on Tuesday that disappointed me was Utah's
inability to replace moderate soft Spencer Cox with Limen. Utah
is red, but should be Florida red. She said, ps,
how do you pet a dog like Fred with those
mini mittens? You know that's not light. That's not right, lady,
(25:00):
that's not right. Maybe he's anxious because the pets he
receives are insufficient. Believe me, Fred gets plenty of pets, okay,
plenty of affection. Fred is not short on affection, as
much as he may think and act like he is.
That's one two. This just goes back to something I've
said many times. I don't have to keep making the
point Red state go peers are lazy, lazy and dumb,
(25:25):
too lazy to get involved in primaries, and too dumb
when they do get involved to show up and vote
out the incumbent. I do believe that is changing. Utah
should be so insanely read. The most hardcore anti communists
should be representing Utah in every state wide election, because
(25:46):
that state is full of the most wonderful people. But
just like my state, Texas, we show up and vote
for cornon every single day gone time. Until these loser
Republicans start being afraid of their primary voting base, nothing
will change. We need them to be afraid. Don't bank
on politicians having courage. By their very nature, they don't
(26:09):
have courage. They're followers, not leaders. So what do you
do with people like that? You whip them at the
ballot box. You whip them. You shouldn't bank on Mitt
Romney having the guts to do the right thing. Mitt
Romney doesn't have guts at all. You should bank on
Mitt Romney being afraid that if he doesn't do the
(26:32):
right thing. He will be primaried out of office. Lindsey
Graham should be afraid of screwing over South Carolina voters.
John Cornyn. John Cornyn should have been too afraid to
pass that gun control law he passed with Mitch McConnell
after the Uvalde school shooting. Remember we had that huge
(26:54):
school shooting, was awful, and the Communists did what they
always do and start grabbing for guns. Mitch McConnell turned
to John Cornyn and said, hey, John, work with Democrats
on by portisan gun control. And John Cornyn did it.
Why would John Cornyn, from a red state like Texas
that loves its guns, Why would John Cornyn ever commit
(27:20):
political suicide by signing on to gun control legislation? Because
he doesn't think it's political suicide because he believes when
he's up for reelection, which is in twenty twenty six,
he believes he will take the eighty one hundred million
dollars he's going to raise, and he will put a
(27:41):
bunch of ads on TV bragging about how much he
loves guns and fezzan hunting, and he's going to deport
these illegals. And he believes the GOP voting base of
this state is either too lazy to show up and
vote him out or too stupid, and so they'll believe
his ads. And the senators who do this, Senators like
like Tillis, like Graham, like I could go down the
(28:03):
list these red states that could have good senators, they
all get away with this crap because they're not afraid
of us yet. I believe we are changing, that we
are changing, that it's just gonna take time, A right time.
All right, we have one segment left. I'm gonna churn
through as many of these ask doctor Jesse questions as
(28:25):
I can possibly get in. Let's talk about the troops
really quickly. It's actually I talked to a friend last
night who is still in What are the troops feeling
right now? What can they expect? Hang on fighting for
your freedom every day The Jesse Kelly Show. It is
The Jesse Kelly Show. Final segment of The Jesse Kelly
(28:49):
Show on a Friday. What has been an amazing ask
Doctor Jesse Friday. I have so enjoyed myself, and let's
not forget about the friends we made along the way.
I'm Dave always does. She just put her head down
and she went to work.
Speaker 3 (29:09):
What a great campaign, What a fantastic campaign, and now
watching them try to figure out what went wrong? Hey,
you guys have any idea why the coalition is shattering?
Speaker 4 (29:20):
Donald Trump has no greater friend than the far left,
which has managed to alienate historic numbers of Latino's Blacks,
Asians and Jews from the Democratic Party with absurdities like
deep on the police, or from the evacy or latinx is,
the is, the administration, the campaign, the Democratic Party looking
(29:41):
at the pandemic as the cause rather than.
Speaker 5 (29:46):
Then you have guys like this, particularly the media ecosystem
they've it's not a good one, it's a negative one.
It's a it's a radicalization funnel. But what they have
done in their online media ecosystem is build a radicalization engine,
literally the way militant groups do around the world, that
takes people from relatively low level annoyances with the world.
(30:06):
Why are eggs so expensive?
Speaker 1 (30:08):
Why? Notice just I'll let them keep going. But I
skipped over that part earlier. Notice how ridiculous they pretend
your problems are. This goes to one of the three
characteristics I say all these people have in common. You know,
they they see themselves as kings and queens, no love
of country, but then no connection to the real world
(30:31):
and how normal people live. That guy just referenced the
price of eggs as a little annoyance. I'll let them.
I'll start it again. I'll let it. Just listen, listen
to how we said it's a little annoyance.
Speaker 5 (30:43):
Particularly the media ecosystem they've it's not a good one,
it's a negative one. It's a it's a radicalization funnel.
But what they have done in their online media ecosystem
is build a radicalization engine, literally the way militant groups
do around the world, that takes people from relatively low
level annoyances with the world. Wire eggs so expensive.
Speaker 1 (31:04):
Relatively low level annoyances with the world, wire eggs so expensive.
That's a human being. I don't know anything about this guy.
His name is anon's judge lap Laplack. I can't even
say his last name. Something all on those lines, I
guarantee you, without looking up anything in his background, that
(31:27):
is a human being who has never gone hungry, who
has never missed a meal. That as a human being
who never watched his parents or is never himself sat
down and stressed about affording things my father. My father
had to go to a pawn shop one time when
I was a kid and pawn off his the only
(31:50):
pistol he owned, it was a forty five. He had
to pawn off his forty five so we could eat
that month. That's how normal. The more people live, normal
people have to go through these things. Normal people. Right now,
maybe you as you hear the sound of my voice,
maybe you're still freaking out because you're not paying the
(32:10):
bills you can't get by now. And yet these people,
these people have so ivory towered themselves with their bubble
existence that it's so become the party of the elite
that they will get on television and talk about you
not being able to afford eggs as a relatively low
level annoyance. What a low level annoyance? Not being able
(32:32):
to afford groceries sounds like a low level annoyance when
you've always been able to afford groceries. When you can't
afford groceries, it becomes the most important thing in the world.
Speaker 5 (32:42):
Why is my kid learning this new thing in American
history in school that I didn't learn? And then moves
them through YouTube videos, through podcasts, moves them from that
annoyance all the way slowly, slowly, slowly to a full
blown fascist politics. It's an elaborate, multi billion dollar infrastructure,
and there is nothing like it on the pro democracy side.
(33:03):
We don't have any When a man is just lost
and lonely and not yet radicalized, we don't have the
equivalent of Joe Rogan and Jordan Peterson to move that
man in a feminist direction. By the way, we should
educate men that it's actually really great to live with
a strong woman who makes money.
Speaker 1 (33:21):
It's actually easier. Life is easier. Gosh, I just I
can't anyway, let's talk about radicalizing you to save babies.
You want to save some babies, how about just one?
Forget about some sounds too ominous. Right right now, today
(33:41):
two hundred babies, their lives will be saved because of Preborn,
because today Preborn is going to give out two hundred
free ultrasounds. And when a woman who's about to abort
her baby gets a free ultrasound, she chooses life. Almost
every time when she hears that heartbeat, she says, no,
(34:03):
I choose life, and then Preborn keeps helping her up
to two years of care whatever she needs. That's where
your money goes, and it's tax deductible. We'll forget about
the tax deductible thing for now. Twenty eight dollars saves
that baby's life. That baby's going to die without your help.
Preborn dot com slash jesse is where you go give
(34:27):
give them whatever you want and make sure you deduct
it off your taxes. Preborn dot com slash jesse spotsor
by preborn And now here's a headline by go you
know you know the thing emails. We didn't get to you, hey, Jesse.
I was pleasantly surprised that the soldiers in my unit
(34:48):
were relieved by Trump's victory. What do you think our
military looks like under the incoming Trump administration. I think
a lot of generals are going to get fired. I
have not heard that, but I know that the Trump
administration is taking this stuff very, very seriously. And yes,
I have a good buddy. He's in. Who's in? And
he said his barracks went ape when they called the
(35:10):
place for Trump rest assured. There's all kinds of communist filth,
especially in the officer ranks of the US military. Now
they've done that on purpose. But the pipe hitters, the
guys who are on the ground, every grunt listening to
the sound of my voice right now, the guys who
do the shooting and Luton, they are very, very thrilled
(35:30):
to be done with these pieces of trash. Dear Jesse,
my family's considering fleeing Minnesota, but we don't know where
to go. Idaho, West, South Dakota, Kansas City Burbs, Ohio, Indiana.
North Carolina's our top priorities are reliably Christian, conservative, moderate climate,
low taxes in cost of living, and beautiful scenery. Where
(35:50):
would you suggest, oh Man, you know, Idaho is getting
a lot of Colorians in there. A lot of my
friends who are from Idaho are complaining that Boise has
turned into Mini La. One of my buddies just moved
from Boise. He's I can't take it anymore now. I
love Idaho, don't get me wrong, But like a lot
(36:13):
of paradices, the dirty comedies will descend like Locus on
that too. I'll tell you what, Man, North Carolina doesn't
get near enough play nationally for being such a sweet
freaking state. It really is, man, Charlotte, Greensboro, just there's
the mountains. It's I love me some North Carolina and
(36:34):
plus their barbecue elite eliite. Shut up, Chris, dear tiny hands.
How do we keep the pressure on our representatives that
actually do what we elected them to do without worrying
about offending Dems. It goes back to what I said before.
Make them fear you in a primary. Unless they fear
your primary vote, they will never change. Dear craon Eater,
(36:54):
I wanted to know what's your favorite gun to take
to the range. Ah, I am loyal to know gun,
meaning I try to mix it up each and every
single time. I enjoy it a great deal. What are
you pointing at, Chris? But it's oh, he's Chris is
pointing at my Springfield hellcat. No matter what, I shoot
with my concealed carry weapon every time I go. But
(37:15):
I'd be lying if I said it's my favorite. I
love it. I love the weapon, but I don't know.
I've always been more of a rifle guy and I
concealed carry one of those. If I could anyway, enjoy
your weekend, get some rest, celebrate, That's all