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December 20, 2024 38 mins

We need to say no. Will Trump’s cases come back in 4 years? Socializing will healthcare to bring down the cost of medicine… right? Quality goes down and price goes up. How many donuts can Jesse eat? How do we fight against the likes of George Soros and others? 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show, The Jesse Kelly Show.
Another hour of The Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday,
and ask doctor Jesse Friday. There's so much to talk about.
What's up with these Trump cases? Someone wants to talk
about health insurance? How many donuts I can eat? Oh,

(00:32):
that is so much more still to come on The
Jesse Kelly Show. I'm gonna talk about this Nancy Pelosi thing,
though Lady wrote in she said Nancy Pelosi falls down
the stairs, she breaks her hip, and then the first
thing she does is pose for a photo up. Who
thinks like this? Who does this stuff? And I've had

(00:53):
this discussion with you before, we did a show on
this a while back. But there is something interesting that
I have seen over the course of my life in
different professions, different fields, and it's actually something that scares
me because it's something I worry about happening to me.
So we'll come back to politicians and Nancy Pelosi in

(01:13):
just a moment. I have a friend of mine. He
is a radio host. He actually does exactly what I
do at a different market different I'm not going to
go into it, but I don't want to get about
who he is because I'm about to insult the guy
in a different kind of a way. But I like him.
We are friends, a wonderful human being, and I knew
him long before I was ever doing media or radio.

(01:36):
I knew him back when I was working construction, but
we got to know each other, and there is something
about him that I cannot stand. I know you're going
to find this shocking, but I actually don't like to
make a scene in public. I don't like to I
don't like to make other people. I don't like to

(01:58):
interrupt their dinner. If you ask me, one of the
rudest things in the world is all of you people.
It's either kids or old people. It doesn't seem to
be anyone in between. Young people are old people who
pull up music or videos or stuff on your phone
and watch it at full volume while other people were
eating or around. You get some freakin headphones. No one
cares about your Instagram videos like that. So that's the

(02:20):
kind of mentality I have. My kids are not even
when they were younger, They're not allowed to make a
scene in a restaurant. You stole that crap right now,
I'll be dragging you to the bathroom. In a second son,
that's not allowed. It was not allowed in my house.
I don't like making a scene. And while I have
a loud voice, my voice carries I realize that I

(02:43):
am conscious. At least I try to be about how
loud I'm being in public settings, especially in one where
people are quiet. My buddy, who's the radio host, well,
he's unbelievably loud. And he's unbelievably loud because he's been

(03:04):
a radio host for so long. You know, when you
do this, shop, it's human nature. You've heard me do it,
especially when I get mad. How you'll project your voice.
It's human nature. You elevate. And he does this for
three hours a day, and has been doing it for
three hours a day for gosh. I think he's been
doing it for twenty five thirty years. And again, I

(03:26):
love the guy. If we're hanging out just alone, I
love the guy. But two or three times I have
met with him in public at a restaurant. Hey, man,
let's stop and get some cheese sticks in a beer here.
Sounds good. And you're sitting around just discussing the news
of the day, and I'm talking to him the exact
same way. I'm talking to you now, and what do
you get back from him? I know that's exactly what
I was talking about, like sandwich, and it's like, oh

(03:46):
my gosh, can you dial that down like twenty five notches? Please? Please?
But he's not doing it on purpose, right, He's done
what he's done for so long. It is become ingrained
in his personality and how he conducts himself in his
daily life. And he now he probably couldn't stop doing

(04:11):
that even if he tried. He has rejected his voice
for so long that now that's how he talks. And
I'll tell you, because of the dinners with him, I
worry about me what if that happens to me one day? Okay,
back to Nancy Pelosi. Politicians, I am of the belief

(04:34):
that you can be I've told you this before, that
you can be a politician for too long, and that
if you are a politician for long enough that your
soul will leave you. And I don't actually mean that,
I realize that your soul is still going to be there.
We want everyone to come back to you. Lord, I
got you understand what I mean. You can be a
politician for long enough that the genuine things inside of

(04:59):
you genuine thing, thoughts, genuine emotions, and things like that.
They simply have. They've not been used for so long
you will lose the ability to use them at all.
Being a politician, politicking, messaging, everything being about a photo opera,
popularity or the poll numbers. You can do it for

(05:20):
long enough that that becomes who you are. Nancy Pelosi
takes a tumble, breaks a bunch of bones. The first
thing she does is, hey, this will be great for
the poll numbers. Hey, hey, get this shot. No, no, no, no,
camber a little higher? Yeah, get it right here? Look
at me? Who does that? Yeah? You know who reminds
me of is Joe Biden. Joe Biden is one of

(05:43):
the worst at this. So I thought it would be
a wonderful example. You've heard me scream about it on
the air, because Joe Biden lost his son Bo. What
would be worse. There's nothing I could think of in
the world worse than losing a child. Losing a child,
Oh my gosh, I couldn't even imagine. Joe Biden has

(06:06):
repeatedly brought up the death of his son whenever a
political situation gets uncomfortable for him. Maybe he's said or
done something wrong, or when he's not really sure what
else to say, or he'll pull out the death of
his son bo as if it's a card he can

(06:27):
play in various times. Look, he's just a couple of examples.
Go ahead, Chris, go ahead.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
I know you know everybody, I know, there's nothing anybody
can say or dude, I've been there.

Speaker 3 (06:41):
Yes, certainly understand.

Speaker 1 (06:48):
That was Joe Biden talking to a family who just
lost their son. There's nothing worse she can do for
someone who's grieving than to make it about you. But
for Joe Biden, that's I mean, it's not a son anymore.
There's no genuine emotions anymore. It's it's just a card
you pull. I'm not sure what else to say, my son.
But again, it wasn't a one off. I could. We
could do this for three hours.

Speaker 2 (07:09):
And they talk about inflation. You know we're dealing with
it for a hole second. Inflation is a worldwide problem
right now because of a war in Iraq and the
impact on oil and which Russia's doing. I mean, they
just give me the war in Ukraine and uh thinking,
I rack because that's when my son died.

Speaker 1 (07:30):
Screwed up, said something wrong. He knew he screwed up.
He knew his brain farts were in the news too much,
that he misspeaks too much, and so what did his
mind do? His mind immediately scrambled, Uh, Oh, I screwed up.
I better play a card. Oh wait, the bo Biden card.
My sun died Iraq. See that, guys, feel bad for me.

(07:50):
You can be a politician for too long. And I
want to caution you because I know there are a
bunch of really solid ones listening, people at the local
level who maybe you're thinking about moving up. Maybe you're
on the city council, you're thinking about going for state
or running for Congress, or you think, and I applaud

(08:11):
you for that. I want you to do that. That's
the idea. Get these wonderful local people, get involved locally,
get a good support base, learn how to raise money,
learn how to do it, and then get up there
to the national level. I want you to do it.
Be very very careful of doing it for too long.
You can be a politician for too long. And I've

(08:32):
seen it over and over and over again. Doctor Jesse
much glee about the cases he's talking about the Trump law,
fair much glee about the cases dropped their disqualifications, but
how many of these are gone forever and how many
are just in hibernation for four years? All right, Well,
let's take the Trump stuff off the table, because I

(08:52):
think I think the Trump cases, the ones we have now,
are for the most part dead. But I wanted to
read that question and I wanted to talk about it
because there's an interesting answer to that. We have this
huge election win. We had this huge election win in November,
and more than just the election, the culture itself feels

(09:13):
like it's breaking our way and most definitely breaking against them.
It's breaking against them and the things they want. It's
almost as if they pushed things too far, which of
course they did. That's what comedies always do. They pushed
it too far too fast. People are recoiling and there's
a pushback. So all that stuff is very, very good.
But there is something about the lawfair that happened in

(09:36):
the last four years that concerns me. A great, great,
great deal. Latitia James, let's just focus on Latisha James
or Alvin Bragg. The thing applies to both of them.
New York DA Alvin Bragg, New York ag Letitia James.
Let me ask you, they did all this unjust law

(09:58):
fair against Donald Trump. Is it going to hurt their
careers or help their careers? Well, the answer is obvious.
They're not going to face any political pushback for it
at all. Adam Schiff spent the last few years lying

(10:18):
about every single thing in regards to Trump and Russian
collusion and whatnot. He was not only not punished for it,
he is about to be a United States Senator from
the most powerful state in the Union, California, in large
part because of the name he made for himself smearing
dishonestly Republicans Latitia James and Alvin Bragg are going to

(10:41):
be Democrat royalty forever because of what they did. I
have concerns. I'll share them with you in a moment
before we get to that. I'm concerned that you're still
living with pain every day. I'm concerned you think that
you should just tough it out, ignore it. It's just
a back I'll get bye before you do that, before

(11:03):
you decide that you're just gonna live with it, would
you do something for me? Would you try relief factor?
All I'm asking is one time, I'm not asking to
sign up for a lifetime supply. Try Relief Factor for
three weeks before you sign up for a lifetime of
pain three weeks. They sell three week quick start kits
for nineteen ninety five. It's a nutritional supplement. It's drug free,

(11:25):
one hundred percent drug free. Take it every single day,
and three weeks from now you email me and tell
me how you feel before you accept a lifetime of
daily pain. Just try it one eight hundred the number
four relief or go to relief Factor dot com. We'll
be back Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show

(11:49):
on a Friday, and ask doctor Jesse Friday. You can
email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. So
the guy you emailed asked the question about the lawfair
again Trump? Is it all done? Is it going to
come back in four years? Don't worry about Trump anymore.
That stuff is probably done. Trump's probably Scott free now,

(12:10):
he's going to pardon himself from anything federal and that
they're going to let the other stuff die now. But
I have a huge concern what Democrats did during the
last four years was evil. It wasn't wrong, it was
evil from what they did with the border to what
they did with the law fair stuff. They finally got

(12:32):
into enough positions of power where they could use the
law against their political enemies, and in every possible way
they did January six people Trump stuff, that fake assassination
plot against Gretchen Whitmer, pro lifeers, school board moms. They
really flexed their muscle. They took over the CHEKA, the FBI,

(12:53):
the DOJ, and they used it full speed ahead, all gas,
no breaks, baby. If people don't go to prison for
what Democrats just spent four years doing, and I don't
know if they're going to, they might maybe Pam Bondy,
Trump's age cash pattel, Maybe they're gonna get in there

(13:14):
and they're gonna bring criminal charges. But if they don't,
if there aren't criminal charges for what was done over
the last four years, if that doesn't happen, then why
wouldn't they do it again? If it's just a bunch
of screaming and yelling that was wrong, guys, you shouldn't

(13:37):
have done that, why wouldn't they do it again next
time they take power? Latisia James is not going to
suffer political blowback for going after Donald Trump in an
illegal horrible way. Latisia James is gonna be the governor
of New York or Senator of New York. Alvin Bragg,
same thing. He's not gonna suffer some blowback. Oh, Alvin

(13:57):
Bragg's really screwed up. Now he didn't screw up. He's
gonna be the ag of that state or senator or governor.
Adam shift Man, that guy's a liar. He's gonna get
what's coming to him. What's coming to him is a
gigantic office in Washington, DC, that says Senator Adam Schiff,
senator from California. That's what's coming to him. If there

(14:18):
is not real punishment for the people in government who
spent the last four years attacking us, if they don't
face time behind bars, then all we've done is by
ourselves a four year pause on that kind of evil.
And I don't want that, and you don't want that.

(14:38):
We must resist the urge for calm peace. Let's get
along now. We have to do things the right way.

Speaker 3 (14:47):
No, no, no, no, no no.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
The right way is justice, not revenge, not retribution. Justice.
If you use your position in government to attack your
political opposition, you must go to prison. Dear Jesse, or
you know what, Let's do a voicemail, shall we.

Speaker 4 (15:04):
Hey?

Speaker 1 (15:04):
Yes, see, this is Lewis.

Speaker 4 (15:06):
I was going through a box in the garage that
I had by elementary school back in the seventies and
I found some racers of the Friedo Bandido and there
mint condition. They go on the back of the ten.
So I'd love to share that with you.

Speaker 1 (15:21):
That's freaking awesome. I've actually seen advertisements for those Freedo
Bandido et racers before. It makes me miss him a
yay yay yi.

Speaker 3 (15:32):
I am the Fritto Bandito. Hey, I like Frinto stornchips.
I love them. I do I want Printo scornchits. I'll
get them from you. I yi yai yi oh imb
Fritto Bandito, Give me Bricto scornchipchin. I'll be your friends,

(15:52):
the Fritto Bundito. You must not up in munch, Munch, munch,
a bunch.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
Of pritos, dear Jesse. Well before the United Healthcare CEO
was assassinated, I've repeatedly heard the argument from the left
that we need to socialize medicine. It's brought up as
a reflex. They always bring up socialized medicine and how
America's health insurance is a scam. I agree, healthcare in
the US costs so much money it's basically unattainable. I

(16:19):
have three siblings, none of whom have any health insurance
because it's too expensive for them and their jobs don't
provide any sort of plans. The insurance companies constantly screw
us over, and so do the doctors. How can we
demand change in our healthcare system without resorting to socialized
medicine or violence. Well, what we need if we're ever

(16:44):
going to get real change in the healthcare system, we
need two things. We need an understanding of why it's
so expensive. We have to understand that, and we will
discuss that in just a moment. We're going to talk
about that. We have to understand why it's so expensive.
That's one. And two. We have to be willing to

(17:07):
do something most people are not willing to do. Maybe
you're not willing to do it. We have to say no,
can you do that? Oh? Everyone thinks they can. Everyone
thinks that.

Speaker 4 (17:25):
No.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
I'm going to say no. That guy wants in my house.
I'm gonna say no. That guy he wants to borrow
my tools. Well, last time he did that he didn't
give them back. I'm gonna say no, I hope, I hope,
I don't cay no. It is a very very difficult
thing for most people to say, and probably even more

(17:47):
difficult than.

Speaker 3 (17:48):
No is.

Speaker 1 (17:50):
No you're not allowed in here. No you can't come in.
No you're not welcome. We have a very hard time
with that on the right. So we're going to do
two things. Next, we're going to discuss why healthcare is
so expensive and why saying no is necessary. Before we
do that, let's talk about the IFCJ, the International Fellowship

(18:15):
of Christians and Jews on the ground in Israel for
over forty years, providing for people who are under attack
all the time. You know, Hamas used to take the
water line. We would give them this PVC pipe. We
would give them pipe so they could provide people with water.

(18:36):
And instead of providing their people with water, they let
them die of thirst, and instead they made rocket laudgers
with them. Yeah, that's what we're dealing with. Imagine having
that for a neighbor. I'm mad at Minus won't cut
his grass. It's a little bit worse over there. Help
the IFCJ, help people who have rockets raining down on

(18:57):
their heads. Go to support IFCJ dot org, or you
can give them a call eight eight eight for eight
eight IFCJ. Let's talk about healthcare and then almost to
piggyback off that how many donuts can I eat? Hang
on feeling a little stocky, Follow and subscribe on social

(19:19):
at Jesse Kelly DC. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a Friday, and ask doctor Jesse Friday, hoping you
are preparing to have for yourself a very, very very
merry Christmas as we celebrate the birth of Jesus in
this country. Thank you Lord for coming to save all

(19:40):
of us. Now allow me to go into the healthcare thing.
United Healthcare CEO lady writes an email, and she starts
complaining about healthcare. How do we fix this without going
without socialized medicine, without resorting to violence? How do we
fix our healthcare system? First, let's understand why healthcare is

(20:00):
so expensive in the United States of America, Because it
has been and in many ways it is still very
cutting edge. So technologically we are advancing, you know, better medicines,
better this, better that, but it is so expensive now
normal people can't afford it. First, Let's get this out
of the way. But this is really going to explain

(20:21):
most of it. Let's talk about not just Obamacare, but
the laws and regulations on health, the health industry, medical industry,
I'll call it. Medical industry is always going to be ripe.
It might be the most ripe industry for government involvement.
And here is why. It's that human nature thing that

(20:44):
we've talked about so many times before. During times of sadness,
times of pain, of heartbreak, it is human nature to
look for help, and it is human nature to look
for someone to blame. It's human nature to look for

(21:06):
someone to blame. Even if there's no one to blame.
You could have you could have your wife die of
a heart attack. And during the grief process, I've seen
this a million times. During the grieving process, there will
be a day, a moment, maybe a week, where you're
mad at her about it. Why didn't she stick around,

(21:26):
shouldn't have had that extra slice of pizza, She'd still
be here with me. Now you laugh, but it's true,
during times of sadness and pain you blame. Well, medical
is awful. I was in the hospital a month ago.
I think it was don't worry that nothing serious is fine,
but I had to go to the er hospital a

(21:46):
month ago. In this er, it was like something out
of the movies. It was a mass unit. There was
a kid puke in his guts up in the bags.
The nurses are around him. I managed to get my
own room, but there were people lined up in the
hallway who were sick, injured, broken, broken arms. There was

(22:11):
a little old lady broke my friggin heart right outside
of my room. Her whole arm was bruised, and she
spent the whole two or three hours. I was there
crying out. Nurse, somebody helped me. It was awful, right,
it was awful. You're you're cringing right now, except for
the doctors and nurses. Everyone else is cringing right now.
It's awful. It's a horrible scene. So when you need

(22:33):
medical care, when someone you love means needs medical care,
it rips your heart out, and oftentimes you want someone
to blame. And even if everything gets fixed, Okay, my
son he fell, he broke his arm, and we got

(22:56):
him finally fixed up. He's in a cast. You come
home from the hospital and then you get a bill
for fifteen thousand dollars. Who has fifteen thousand dollars to
just pay for a medical bill. So what your family's
wiped out now? And off of that anger, off of
that sadness, what do people do the most human nature
thing in the world. They look for someone to blame

(23:17):
and then they look for someone to help. This is outrageous.
Someone should do something, the most dangerous words in the
English language. Somebody do something, as we've talked about many
times before. And so what happens. Lawmakers take advantage of
that and they get up and they say, these hospitals
overcharge these insurance companies. We need to pass this two

(23:41):
thousand page law to get these insurance costs under control.
It's how they passed Obamacare. Obamacare, of course being the
worst defender of this. But what happens when somebody does
something when government gets involved. When government gets involved, the
quality goes down, the price goes up, an American thing
that's universal. Once government gets involved, the quality of any industry,

(24:05):
whatever it is, goes down, and the cost will go up.
Now you walk into your doctor's office, they have so
many rules and regulations put on them. Your doctor, Harley
even has a moment to look you in the eye
if he even wants to you go sit down with
your doctor. He faces away from you. He sits in
the chair. He sits there and does data entry click
click click on his computer the entire time. Hold on,

(24:27):
I have to open up this subtab. But wait, you
said you had a headache. Was it for two to
five days or six to nine days? I have to
edge it. And after you're done with that half hour
long doctor appointment, he turns around. Okay, here's five prescriptions. Thanks. Next,
that's medical care. And that's because the government has gotten

(24:48):
involved in pass law after law and regulation after regulation
after regulation, taking over the entire industry. You want to know,
one of the fastest growing industries in the country concierge medicine,
medicine that separates itself from that only the really rich
people buy it. And I have a buddy who's involved
the starting a startup a concierge medicine company. And you

(25:09):
know what he said, His biggest problem is finding enough
doctors because the patients are lined up, lined up to
escape our healthcare system. Now, so that's one of the
reasons it's so expensed. Well, that's one of the two
things it's so expensive. One because government got involved. People
kept crying out for help. This is crazy. I hate
this bill. My mom died. I'm angry about this. We

(25:32):
should sue and then pass a law. Let sue and
then pass a law. Wait a minute, Hey, why is
this so expensive? That's why. And then the other part
of it is saying no, saying no. Let's say I'm
on a very very limited budget, which with a wife

(25:53):
I most certainly am. But let's say I'm on a
very very limited budget and we're going to have a
Christmas party at my house, and we're going to invite
ten people over for the Christmas party. And at this
Christmas party, we're going to have a big ham. We're
gonna have a gigantic ham, all right, that's going to
be the main dish. And then Chris, Jewish producer, Chris says, hey,

(26:17):
I want to come to your Christmas party, but I
don't have the money to buy anything other than ham. Well, Chris,
Chris can't eat ham. He's Jewish, that's pork. He's not
going to be allowed to eat that. So you know
what people have a hard time doing saying no, Chris,
you can't come because I'm not going to buy a

(26:40):
new dish just special for you. So no, you're not
welcome now. Of course Chris already knows he's not welcome
in my house. But you understand what I'm saying. Obviously,
it was just an analogy. You get what I mean. Though,
When it comes to health insurance, like anything else, these
politicians play to our emotions and they try to tell
you that in insurance companies should have to ensure people

(27:02):
who are already sick. Well, if you force an insurance
company to cover the guy who's already sick, then guess
what happens to all the people who aren't sick. They
have to pay more to pay for the extra insurance
cost of the guy who's sick. Your health insurance costs
so much in part because your insurance company is forced
by law to cover the guy who's going to die

(27:25):
next year. Therefore, they know they have all sorts of
costs coming costs associated with that particular guy, and they
have to turn around and charge everyone else. Look, it's
not like I'm cheering on insurance companies, but United Healthcare
CEO is just assassinated. Do you know what United health
Care company? You know what their profit margin was? Six percent?

(27:49):
I have friends. In construction, their regular profits for the
year are between twenty and thirty percent. After everything is paid, taxes, labor,
everything else, they make between twenty and thirty percent. That's
what some industries will do. In health insurance, it's six
But we look at this bill and we can't afford it,

(28:10):
and we blame the insurance companies instead of blaming the
scumbag politicians who did this to us, and instead of
realizing that some people have to be told no, no.
It's a very hard thing to tell people, but it
must be done. But I want you to say yes
to done for you real estate. That's what I want.

(28:31):
I want you. Speaking of money, how about putting your
money in something that doesn't disappear the second the stock
market wakes up in the morning and is in a
bad mood that day. How about things you can touch
and feel. Those are the things that last, Those are
the things that stand the test of time. Done for
you real estate could generate consistent tax free income for
you. You know, all those rich guys buy a property for

(28:54):
a reason. But I know you're not rich. But done
for your real estates for normal people. It's not for
millionaires and billionaire it's not. And now it's not like
Obama millionaires and billionaires, but it's not. It's for normal people.
The other people are already buying real estate. Go to Done
for You Jesse dot com and find out what they do.
They handle everything, the financing, the closing process, the rental process.

(29:15):
They'll handle everything for you. Done for You Jesse dot Com.
All right, let's talk donuts and Trump and Elon versus
George Soros. Next the Jesse Kelly Show, I Like It returns.
Next it is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday,

(29:36):
And ask doctor Jesse Friday. Oh, I'm so excited for
Christmas this year. Okay, So we have a bunch of
questions we still have to get to, and I'm going
to dive in now with something that's a little bit
heavy and something that may I be screaming at me.
But that's fine, this guy says Jesse. I'm tired of
you not addressing the real questions out there that we

(29:58):
all need answers to. How many hot fresh crispy cream
donuts can you down at one time? Also? Can your
small hands handle a box of a dozen hot fresh donuts?
All right, so let's talk I am not anti donut
at all. And to answer your question, Krispy Cream Donuts

(30:23):
are amazing. I remember the first time it discovered in
Las Vegas, the Crispy Cream Donuts store where you can
watch the donuts go through the oven and then just
get commolid with the icing and then they bring them.
They'll bring them out to you hot and fresh. They're
still warm, and I was just I'm memorized by it.
Like the first time Lewis and Clark gazed at the

(30:44):
Pacific Ocean. That was me watching my donut be made
in front of me. So I'm a Krispy Kreme fan.
I would say now, because I don't want to not
answer your question. If I had to, I think I
could eat four if I had to four. You don't
think that you don't think that's high enough, Chris Chris

(31:06):
see Chris is saying higher. It's not that I don't
think I could hammer down maybe one or two more possibly,
But this is gonna come back to my point. It's
so sweet that now it's just too much sugar. I
think I would stop enjoying it after two. By the

(31:28):
time I got to four, it's too much. And I
know every kid listening right now, screaming at the radio.
I'm an idiot. Trust me, you're gonna get to your
some point in your life when you're old and bald,
like I am, where you can have too much sweet.
What Chris? What Chris said? How sweet are they? They're
really sweet, buddy, They're really sweet. Everyone's had it, laz donut. Okay,

(31:52):
these are that. Plus they're that plus. No, they're great. No, no, no, no.
But even they're the chocolate iced ones. Even those are
glazed first and then they put the chocolate icing on them. Dude,
it's a lot. No, they're amazing. If you get them fresh,
they're amazing. I like Crispy Creme, but who it's a lot,
so I would say four. However, I am obviously I'm

(32:16):
okay with sweets. I'm not against sweets. I don't like
sweets that much. For breakfast, if you were to present
to me the biggest plate in the world of the fluffiest,
most delicious pancakes with all the fixin's whatever you wanted,
butter and syrup and all the whipped cream, everything you

(32:40):
could put on there, It's not that I'd be grossed out.
Ew got those cakes away from me. But if you
were to offer me that, and then sitting right beside
it was a plate full of eggs and hash browns,
maybe some halapinos and cheese chopped up in those hash browns,
with some bacon and stuff on there, and you were
to offer me that one hundred times, I don't know

(33:01):
that I would pick the pancakes once. I am not
a sweets for breakfast guy. When I go to McDonald's
when you're on the road, because everyone goes to McDonald's
when you're on a road trip. Believe me, if you
don't do this as soon as you have kids who
were in sports, you will do this. Oh, at six
am on a Saturday and we're driving an hour away
for an eight hour swim meet, we need to get

(33:23):
something to eat. Everyone swings through mcde's. My go to
water at mcde's is sausage McMuffin with egg sausage McMuffin,
not ham, Sorry, Chris. Their sausage is delicious, and a
couple of those little sausage burritos. I like McDonald's hotcakes.
I can eat them couple bytes, couple bites. That's all.

(33:43):
That's all. Well, Chris, what's your go to water at McDonald's,
since you can't have any of the sausage or ham.
What I'm not rubbing it in. You prefer a colotchi
over anything? Is that what I asked, Chris? Did I
say what your preferred breakfast food is? Did I say that, Chris?
Did I ask that you can eat at mc donald Oh?
There's nothing kosher, not for breakfast. Pancakes have to be kosher.

(34:10):
You don't like them at all? Jewish producer Chris said
he'd rather eat nothing than pancakes. Now, I wouldn't go
that far. What is your problem, Jesse? What can Trump
or Elon do to combat George Soros? They're doing it. Listen,
there's something out there happening right now that is incredibly important.
In some ways, it may be a little dangerous, but

(34:32):
it is incredibly important. You know what the triumvirate is
right the first trial, well's focus on the first one.
You know what the first triumvirate was? Well, Rome had
developed this horribly corrupt political system that only existed to
serve the elites and their society. It abused their citizens,

(34:54):
brought in endless amounts of foreigners. None of this is
sounding familiar, right, a terribly corrupt, evil political system had developed.
But it was so powerful, how could anyone oppose it? Well,
Julius Caesar, Crassus and Pompy Magnus they figured something out

(35:15):
because they traditionally didn't always get along, but they figured
this out. One of us, any one of us. We
cannot take on this entire evil system on our own,
but we are all three individually, very very powerful. If
we join forces, if we form a triumvirate, we can

(35:37):
take on possibly we can take on this big evil
system and win. What's happening right now, I mean, you
hate to make all these historical comparisons, but it's from
my view, it's very, very similar to that. We have
this huge, evil, criminally corrupt system right now, and Trump

(35:59):
is right against it. And Elon Musk, the richest most
powerful man in the world, well richest man in the world.
They traned his son. He is very very angry about that.
He has been very honest about the fact. He's angry
about that they traned his son. So this lifelong democrat,
for that and other reasons, got very angry at this

(36:21):
evil system, and he decided he was going to declare
war on it. He bought the most influential social media app.
He decided to publicly throw millions and millions of dollars
behind Trump for his election. They have joined forces. Two
of the most powerful people on the planet have joined forces.
Does that mean they're going to be able to snap
their fingers and defeat the system? No, I don't think

(36:43):
that's realistic. But those two combined, they do present a
significant problem that the system has never faced in my lifetime.
The system has never faced powerful opposition to it. It's
never faced something like that. So that's a good thing,
cause you're winning with that sound was I was pushing

(37:04):
a piece of paper off the soundboard and then I
fat finger to button my bad. Hey, how are your
T levels? You're getting them up. What if you did this?
What if you did this? What if you went to
chalk dot com right now and you ordered for yourself.

(37:24):
You signed up, you got a subscription for a male
vitality stack or a female vitality stack, And in conjunction
with that, what if you went and got your blood
work done, not next week, week after whatever, first week
of January. So you go get your subscription, and then
you go get your blood work done, and then after
taking your stack for a year, go back and get

(37:47):
your blood work done next year. What if you did
that and emailed me what you found, You'd be blown away.
You'll know before then that it's working because of how
good you feel. Go get some natural herbal supplements in
your body, in your life, in your mind, Make your
life better, make your life longer. C h oq dot

(38:10):
com promo code Jesse Chuck dot com promo code Jesse.
We'll be back.
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Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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