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January 14, 2025 37 mins

The GOP found their spine thanks to you. You were instrumental in getting these confirmations done. The silent majority is useless, you got loud and made the country better because of it. Putting the fear of God into the GOP Senate. Building an underground city. If 75% of Americans don’t want their kids learning about trannies then why is it taught in all 50 states? A weak DOJ means there will be no accountability for the crimes the government commits. 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly show.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Tuesday, another
hour of the Jesse Kelly Show. We're gonna discuss a
few things and move off of this hegg sets stuff
here in just a few minutes. I'm gonna pay you
a compliment in a second before we get to that.
This hour, we're gonna talk about the law fair getting
dropped against Trump, but not totally dropped.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
Why not, we'll discuss it. Three quarters of.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
American parents don't want tranny insanity in their schools, yet
it's in the schools.

Speaker 1 (00:41):
Why we'll do emails.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
Might even talk about a little bit of wildfire stuff.
All that and so much more coming up this hour
on the world famous Jesse Kelly's Show, And don't forget.
You can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Now,
Pete hegg Seth's gonna get confirmed. It sounds like if
you believe these senators who I've been talking to, it

(01:06):
sounds like they're all gonna get confirmed. Bondie RFK, Taulsi
vought down the line. It sounds like it's gonna be yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, But.

Speaker 1 (01:23):
What changed, don't don't you remember. Let's let's rewind.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
We don't have to go back too far. Trump gets elected,
week or two goes by after the election, and he
starts putting.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
Up names that are going to be his nominee.

Speaker 2 (01:40):
In fact, I believe if I remember, Matt Gates was
the first one. Matt Gates is going to be my
attorney general. And almost immediately the hand ringing started in Washington.

Speaker 3 (01:52):
D c h.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
I'm just not comfortable with the ethics. I'm just dotcher
over in Boom. Matt Gates drops out right away, okay,
and then Pete Hegseth.

Speaker 1 (02:03):
In fact, he was.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
The one that really really got their hackles up. Pete
Hegseth comes and immediately, I'm not talking about what the
Democrats said, set that aside. We all know they're crazy communists.
Immediately you had Republicans like Joni Ernst of Iowa counter
signaling Pete Hegseth. Well, I mean, I do have a

(02:25):
lot of concerns that these accusations. I'm just not very
comfortable with it. I'm not really sure so far. I
have a lot of just don't know about this. And
she wasn't alone. Lindsey Graham was actually working behind the scenes.
Did you know that Lindsey Graham, who Donald Trump sticks
up for at every turn, was trying to torpedo Donald

(02:46):
Trump's secretary of Defense. Well, I mean, I'm just not
comfortable with Pete Hesath. I heard he likes women and
over and over and over again. And then what happened?
How do we get from that?

Speaker 1 (03:01):
They're all over them. I don't know about r FK.
I don't like Pete.

Speaker 2 (03:04):
How did we get from that to here? We are
sitting here January fourteenth, and it looks like they're all
going to sail through. All we have is some impotent
yelling from Democrats through the confirmation hearing, but none of
that's going to go anywhere.

Speaker 1 (03:21):
How did we get from that? Well? You did that?
Do you know that you did that?

Speaker 2 (03:31):
The right for the longest time, For the longest time,
bought into this ridiculous, childlike notion of the silent majority,
and we always use that as the comforting blanket. Well, sure,
I mean, these communists are really loud, but we outnumber them.

Speaker 1 (03:53):
Guys.

Speaker 2 (03:54):
We don't say anything, we don't ever speak up, but
there's more of us than them.

Speaker 1 (03:59):
We're good, right, But that, of course means absolutely nothing
at all.

Speaker 2 (04:04):
Either you speak up, you get loud, and you become
an activist for your cause when you live in a
representative republic, or your cause isn't going to go anywhere.
I actually had somebody ask me, I've had this question
a bunch of why does everything seem so anti Christian

(04:25):
in our country now, which is odd for a country
that was founded by Christians? Why is that the case?
How is that the case? It's the group you can
dump all over, you can pass laws against them. Why
the politicians, especially on the left, well mainly on the left,
feel totally comfortable blasting them publicly?

Speaker 1 (04:42):
Why? What the uncomfortable answer is, Christians don't advocate, They put.

Speaker 2 (04:48):
Their head down and they go along. Well, I just
got to pay them my taxes and turn to the
other cheek. And that's why you end up in a
country and a culture where you are savaged to the bottom.

Speaker 1 (05:00):
That's why.

Speaker 2 (05:00):
That's how back to what we were talking about. These senators,
they came out immediately. I don't know about Pete. I'm
not comfortable. You got angry and you started to pour
that anger on these senators. You started sending emails. Maybe

(05:23):
you even wrote letters. Maybe you called your congressman, called
your senator. We live in the social media era, and
as I've told you before, they're all on social media.
And don't think for a second it's their staffers. I
know these people personally. They're on Twitter. When you're on Twitter,

(05:43):
they're reading the comments, they're looking at what's trending. Did
you see this Facebook post? Did you see this on Instagram?
These are not people who are above that. They're knee
deep in it. And you took to social media and
you poured venom on these low TGSP losers who were
thinking about screwing over Trump's nominees, and you poured so

(06:05):
much fedom on them. You had senators like Lisa Murkowski,
you remember this cut. She's going out publicly proclaiming, I
don't even understand a primary that's not supposed to happen.

Speaker 4 (06:17):
Don't get on Santa's naughty list here, because we will
primary you. I mean, we are seeing that play out
in real time right now with the nominees, the nominees
who have just been just been named. There's been no
committee process on any of them. They're just kind of
doing their courtesy calls right now. And my friend Joni
erst Ernst, who is probably one of the more conservative,

(06:40):
principled Republican leaders in the Senate right now, is being
hung out to dry for not being good enough, and
you're gonna get primaried. Well, you know what's this all about?

Speaker 2 (06:54):
What you hear her voice, shocked and INDIGNANTY is what's
this all about? Primary? Wait a minute, that's not supposed
to happen.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
I'm a United States Senator. I'm a Republican senator.

Speaker 2 (07:15):
I forever have been allowed to do whatever.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
I want to do.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
Screw my voters right left, up and down every single
chance I get. And then the brain dead GOP primary voter,
he will just always walk to the polls and vote
me in again. So why can't I become a swamp creature?
When they're talking about primary me, they were shocked at

(07:46):
the venom you poured on them. Congratulations, that's why you
speak up and speak out. Don't you dare think for
a second your supposed to be nice to these people.
Don't you think they're on your team in some way?
The Republicans in the United States Senate, not all of them,

(08:09):
but most of them view their role as stopping you.
You are the bane of their existence. They hate that
they even have to pretend to care about you. They
want to just serve the swamp, which of course means
serving themselves without end. And they have been used to
the system that allows them to screw us all and

(08:33):
we never do anything about it, We never say anything
about it. Well, where the sign that majority, Guys, I'm
turning my cheek no more. Bully your local goper, your
state gopier, and your federal goper every single chance you get.
Every time they show cowardice. Just know that's their natural

(08:54):
inclination is cowardice running from a fight. And if you
don't pull out a bull whip and whip them back
in line, they're gonna screw you over and run the
other direction, the same way they always have. You want
to keep Jony Ernst in line. She's never gonna do
the right thing because it's the right thing. You better
get out there and make sure she knows her job

(09:16):
is on the line. Jony Ernst. Today she practically got
on her knees and kissed Pete hegg sass rear end
during the confirmation hearing.

Speaker 1 (09:25):
How did we go.

Speaker 2 (09:26):
From well, I'm just not sure I mean that there
are a lot of very concerning allegations. I definitely want
to talk to the accusers of this media campaign. How
do we go from that? To Jony Earnst gluing her
lips to Pete hegg sass rear end today?

Speaker 1 (09:39):
How did that happen? You did it?

Speaker 2 (09:42):
You had enough of this crap and you did it.
Good job. I'm proud of you. Shoot, I'm proud of me. Well,
I'm not Chris. I'm proud of Corey. I'm proud of
all of us. No more silent majority. John Cornyn's feeling
it right now too. I told you in a hypothetical
head to head matchup in his Texas primary, which is

(10:05):
next year, he's currently down ten points to Texas Attorney
General Ken Paxton.

Speaker 1 (10:12):
If we can.

Speaker 2 (10:13):
Secure that, watch the GOP Senate get more in line
than they've ever been. If we put the fear of
God in them, all that will take is one scalp.
Take one scalp, and then watch the rest of them
get in line. Good job and along those lines, Actually,
I'm going to talk about this parents and trainees in school.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
We'll get to emails.

Speaker 2 (10:37):
I'll get to those next, and other things before I
get to those things. I want to talk about something amazing,
which is saving babies. The best thing we do, probably
the best thing I'll ever do on this show. If
it was one baby's life, I don't know how long
it'll be before they kick me off the air, but

(10:57):
whenever they finally do.

Speaker 1 (10:59):
The truth is, if if.

Speaker 2 (11:01):
All that time resulted in the life of one baby,
it will have been worth it. And that's what Preborn does.
Every day. Preborn saves two hundred babies a day, giving
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(11:23):
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You give them as much as you want. Preborn dot

(11:44):
com slash Jesse sponsored by Preborn.

Speaker 1 (11:47):
We'll be back the Jesse Kelly Show. It's still real
to me, dammit. The Tarrance das.

Speaker 2 (11:55):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Tuesday. Remind
you not only can you email the show Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com, you can leave it's a voicemail
eight seven seven three seven seven four three seven three.

Speaker 5 (12:11):
Jessie, Sergeant Greasy here for tire Law Enforcement. You know,
I was gonna call and talk about the ghost thing
and say something, you know, amazing, like maybe you're a
ghost considering how often you disappear from work. But I'm
gonna go with of course you've met a ghost. You
work with a ghost, Chris. I mean, every time the
bill comes for food, can't you just see him disappear?

(12:33):
Don't you hear the chains rattling.

Speaker 6 (12:35):
In the woo. I don't have my wallets?

Speaker 2 (12:40):
Oh yeah, yeah, you want to see you want to
see Chris get t rex arms.

Speaker 1 (12:44):
Just wait, just wait till the bill comes and beyonde.
I can't reach it. How did you already get it? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (12:49):
We all know how it goes, Jesse. At what point
in time did fighting wars shift from battling for survival
and conquering to creating a crisis on purpose to support
corruption and money as we see it today, There is
nothing new under the sun. Okay, don't just because we

(13:13):
all love look, human beings love war history. We are
fascinated with carnage and violence. And I'm not I'm guilty
as anybody. Carnage and violence and conquest and all the
things that come with it. War fascinates us. And when

(13:34):
we read history stories or when I talk a history
story with you about an ancient battle or an ancient war,
you love it. And we nerd out and we're trying
to put ourselves there and we're talking about But don't
have some lofty view of war that wars were, you know,
we used to be. We used to fight wars for

(13:54):
the right reasons, but not now like we do today.
Wars have been fought for great reasons and terrible reasons.
Throughout the history of mankind.

Speaker 1 (14:08):
People have gone to war because of.

Speaker 2 (14:11):
Personal slights before, people have gone to war to increase
their popularity at home.

Speaker 1 (14:20):
People when they lose sight of.

Speaker 2 (14:23):
Human beings and when they lose when they lose the
appreciation for human life, which is very easy to do.
Once you become in charge a command or a general,
a king, or whatever it is, it's very easy to
forget about the value of the individual human being, and
human beings will go to war over nothing.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
It has always been that way. And I'll tell you something.

Speaker 2 (14:52):
Once you allow a military, a standing military, to be enormous,
once you permit that, you are on the road for trouble.
The founders talked about it all the time.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
We were not.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
Supposed to have a large standing army. Once you get
a large standing army, you're gonna use it. It's going
to drain the treasure of the country. It's going to
drain the blood of the country when you look. And
this is a human nature thing goes back to power,

(15:32):
which we've talked about so many times before. If you
walk around holding a hammer, you want to hit something
with it. It's natural you're holding it in your hands.
You have this power, you want to do something with it.
When you take command of a large army, you want
to use it. It's human nature. And when you do so,

(15:54):
people in that army will die. Brave people who join
for the right reasons will die. It has to be
used sparingly and only when it is absolutely necessary. But
wars being fought for reasons that aren't good.

Speaker 1 (16:09):
There's not some.

Speaker 2 (16:10):
Modern American invention by any stretch of the imagination. It's
how it goes when your country gets corrupted. We have
our government now is a criminal enterprise. We have a
criminal government. I call it the system. It only exists
to protect itself now like all criminal organizations. Think of

(16:36):
it like an Italian mafia family. The only real purpose
of the family, at some level is protect the family.
There's no higher calling. The people in our government because
of the neglect of the citizens. The people in our
government are morons, scumbags. They are only there for themselves,

(16:58):
only there to enrich and empowered themselves. And that includes
the top brass in the United States military. You think
when I say that, you think about politicians and the
people in suits, and yeah, I mean, you don't need
any help to hate Chuck Schumer or Nancy Pelosi. You're
already there. But what if I what if I stood

(17:19):
a general in front of you, and especially today, He's
gonna have a lot of ribbons and medals on his
chest and you don't even know what those things are.
I mean, shoot, I don't even know what half those
things are. Man, he sure is he must have done
a lot, probably really brave, and been fighting for the

(17:40):
country forever he's done. I'm looking at the ribbons and medals.
Those don't lie. Of course, if I stood that guy
in front of you with all those ribbons and medals,
would you be as suspicious of that general as you
are of the Senator? If the answer is no, you
should be. And that's right, Chris. Back to that conversation

(18:01):
we had on that one show. We are a country
now run by credentialed morons.

Speaker 1 (18:06):
Oh. I know the scientist has a bunch of degrees.
I get that.

Speaker 2 (18:10):
Oh I know the General has been to all these
different schools and he's got all these accommodations. Oh I
get that. He's an idiot and a dirt ball. Now
let's focus on something wonderful you twenty twenty five. What
if we could all make this year a healthier year. No,

(18:30):
I'm not going to scream at you about cutting cutting.

Speaker 1 (18:32):
Back on carbs or something lame like that.

Speaker 2 (18:36):
What if you started some natural herbal supplements from Chok
and it changed your life. Chuck has changed my life.
I will never stop taking a male vitality stack. I
take it every day when I travel. It comes with
me and those little pill dispensers like old people have.
That's how much I love the natural herbal supplements from Chalk.

(18:58):
That's the difference it's made for me in my personal life,
in my work life. When you have energy, when you
feel good all the time, when your mood is good,
your life gets better and it's waiting for you. At
Chalk dot com c Hoque dot com. I personally take
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(19:18):
lit powder. It's what aub puts in those smoothies. It's
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code Jesse We'll be.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
Back feeling a little stocky.

Speaker 2 (19:34):
Follow like and subscribe on social at Jesse kellydc. It
is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Tuesday. Remember you
can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.

Speaker 1 (19:49):
Sir, have you ever heard of the.

Speaker 2 (19:53):
Darren Cuu underground city in Turkey?

Speaker 1 (19:57):
Chris, you need to look this up. It's an under.

Speaker 2 (20:00):
Round city that was built in the seventh or eighth
century BC. The city could house twenty thousand people. There's
air ventilation and well water for all five floors of
the city. I too wake up dreaming of owning my
own underground city. Gosh, I want to own an underground
city so bad, or at least an advanced tunnel complex.

(20:23):
I am concerned about the costs and the safety of it,
but I want one and I want.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
Did you look it up? Chris? Is it cool? Does it?

Speaker 2 (20:29):
What?

Speaker 1 (20:30):
Why are you coming in hind what Chris said? It's
just a bunch of houses dug into a cave. It's
like two thousand years old. Chris.

Speaker 2 (20:43):
Were you expecting fresh dry wall or something like that.
Of course it's not gonna be like my tunnel system.
We're getting design ideas, Chris for later on. Three quarters
of the parents in the country don't want trandye education
in school, So why is it in school? Why? But
I'm going to play something for you right now. This

(21:05):
is the mayor of Denver now Denver. Denver has a
terrible reputation today, But you should understand that I grew
up in the Rocky Mountains and whenever because Bozeman, Montana
was real small back then. It's gotten bigger now. But
if you wanted something modern, like a good concert, if
there was a band, the Metallica is coming to town.

(21:27):
If I wanted to go see Metallica, and I was
a big Metallica fam when I was younger, you had
to go to Denver or Salt Lake City. It was
kind of our hub. So I was always down in
Denver or Salt Lake City. Denver was one of the
great American cities, and people, especially people back east or

(21:48):
down south who've never been there, you convince yourself that
it must be dreadful weather. You're just picturing it being
twenty below all the time. But it's not that it
doesn't get cold. It's not that it doesn't snow, but
a surprisingly balmy climate considering where it is. Denver is awesome,

(22:09):
or at least it was very, very awesome. But in
recent years, because the people of Denver vote Democrat, and
Democrats are all communists. Now they have taken all the
positions of power in Denver, and they have destroyed that
wonderful city, which I love so much. I will always
I will always love it. I just love me some Denver.

(22:31):
I want you to listen to this. This we'll come
back to the trainings in school their Denver went out,
He went out and about listen to how he was greeted.

Speaker 3 (22:38):
Yeah, I saw you.

Speaker 2 (22:39):
In the Great Power Mare.

Speaker 5 (22:42):
It's your fault, find woman, Democrats are burning the city down.

Speaker 2 (22:51):
If you're not city worried, that's somebody who's done being
the silent majority. Seventy five percent of the parents in
this country don't want training nonsense in their kids' school,
Yet training nonsenses all throughout the school.

Speaker 1 (23:11):
Why is it?

Speaker 2 (23:12):
Because the twenty five percent who want that filth in
the school are the ones who speak up. They're the
ones who step up. They're the ones who organize, run
for school board. They're the ones who make sure they're
grabbing every single position of power, and they look out
at the seventy five percent who don't want it, and

(23:33):
they're not concerned with silent majority whatsoever. This piggyback's off
of what I was talking about earlier about why Pete
Hegseth and if we believe the senators all the other
nominees are going to sail through the Senate when it
was looking like there were going to be some serious
stumbling blocks.

Speaker 1 (23:52):
They're going to sail.

Speaker 2 (23:53):
Through the Senate not because the GOP found a spine,
but because you bull whip them in line and they
started getting afraid for their jobs for the first time ever,
and now they're all out there voting yes. If you
want things fixed in your city, in your school, in
your county, in your state, you must go do something

(24:14):
about it.

Speaker 1 (24:15):
You don't look to your right, don't look to you,
don't look across it. Well, my neighbors, the one.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
In politics you get involved normal people abstaining from the
political process is exactly how a country as wonderful as
ours can be run by the most despicable, demonic filth
out there. That only happens when the people neglected. That

(24:41):
was an encouragement go run for office. Jesse la is
on fire. You mentioned on your show that the Libs
on social media are already talking about rezoning some areas
for high density rebuilds like they've done in Lahaina. Is
this the COVID way that the dirty commies are going

(25:02):
to land grab by taking advantage of these tragic fires
instead of the government commies overtaking it your thoughts, No, listen,
this is what happens when there's blood on the street
by property that's a saying way older than me.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
I don't even know who came up with it.

Speaker 2 (25:16):
I suppose I can look it up, but that would
involve doing research for the show, and that's just not
my thing. But when there's blood on the street by property,
that's an old principle in business. You know the guys
who make a fortune on the stock market, you know
what they do. They wait until there's a crash, until
there's a dip, and they buy on an extreme level.

(25:39):
There are people, developers, business people. They are generally either
sitting on capital or have access to fast easy capital.
And when there is a tragedy, because some of these
people are devoid of any humanity, they don't look at
Leahina burning and feel sorrow for the people. They don't

(26:02):
look at La burning and feel sorry for the people.

Speaker 1 (26:04):
They don't look at.

Speaker 2 (26:05):
North Carolina drowning and now freezing and feel sorrow for
the people. They look at an opportunity to buy real
estate for pennies on the dollar. You know how much
money you can make. This is personally not my thing.
I'm not going to do it.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
But we lived.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
Remember I told you when we moved to Montana, we
didn't have any money, and we moved every single year
trying to make money. My dad was really really good
at it, just identifying something that had better value. He
would buy it, flip it, buy it, flip it, buy it,
flipp it ten houses in ten years that we were
always moving, always, and no one moved us. We didn't
have any money for that. It was me and my

(26:42):
dad in the U haul haul and all their stuff
in and out ten times in ten years. That's how
we grew up. So I learned a bit about that
area enough to be functional, right, enough that I've done
okay when I've had to buy and sell, you know,
whenever I moved various times across the country. People who
know what they're doing can make a fortune snapping up

(27:05):
homes that have been foreclosed on. Did you know that?
Now you have to know what you're doing. You have
to know how to improve it, preferably either on your
own or you have some bargain basement contractor But why
is that so lucrative? Because you're buying a house that's
being undervalued. Last person didn't make the payments and finally

(27:26):
asked to go back to the bank. Normally, the home's
not going to be in the best shape because somebody
who doesn't make the payments, oftentimes as somebody who doesn't
care for the home But if you're willing to put
in the work, if you're willing to buy it on
the low, improve it, and flip it, you can make
a fortune on an extreme level. When the wealthy developers

(27:48):
of this world, not just America, of this world look
at some of the choicest property in Malibu going up
in flames, they aren't pulled, their heartstrings, aren't tugged to
go send food and water and baby formula and things
like that.

Speaker 1 (28:05):
They look at each other.

Speaker 2 (28:06):
And they think, oh, my gosh, can you even imagine
how much money we would make if we bought up
just a couple blocks of this and through a big
apartment complex on it. They'd be printing money for the
rest of their lives. And that's how people like that think.
And will a lot of those people be dirty comedies
like black Rock type black Rock Vanguard State Street. Of

(28:28):
course they are, of course they are. That's also why
you put your money where your morals are when it
comes to the private sector. You did switch your cell
phone over to pure Talk, right.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
Right?

Speaker 2 (28:40):
I know you already know that Pure Talk's the patriotic
cell phone company, the one who's CEO fought for the
country in Vietnam. But you understand how easy it is
because I didn't know when I switched to Pure Talk.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
I didn't know.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
So I get a hold of them on the phone,
and I'm thinking, oh, here we go. I'm gonna be
on phone for an hour. They'll probably even leave me
that I've got to have to They'll call me back
in forty five minutes.

Speaker 1 (29:04):
No, no, no, no. I think I was on hold
for a minute.

Speaker 2 (29:07):
I got right through, And what really shocked me was
I was speaking to an American who spoke English. You
see Pure Talks customer service team. They're right here in
the US of a Americans who speak English. It's fast,
it's pleasant, they're actually nice. It takes ten minutes on
the phone and you're switched. You don't even have to

(29:28):
give up that phone or phone number you have. You
can if you want, but they practically do everything for you.

Speaker 1 (29:34):
It's cake.

Speaker 2 (29:36):
All you have to do is dial pound two five
zero and say, Jesse Kelly, you're ten minutes away from
not supporting corporate filth anymore. Pound two five zero, say
Jesse Kelly, We'll be back. Feeling a little stocky, follow
like and subscribe on social at Jesse Kelly DC.

Speaker 1 (29:58):
It is the Jets.

Speaker 2 (30:00):
See Kelly's show on a Tuesday. Remember if you miss
any part of the show, you can download the whole
thing on iHeart, on Spotify, on iTunes. Now, I wanted to.

Speaker 1 (30:12):
Just get to this voicemail really quickly.

Speaker 6 (30:15):
Talk about preemptive pardons. That's all a bunch of Barbara
streisand as Rush would say, I think the DOJ should
just ignore them. They're not a real thing. Nobody's admitted
to any crimes. I think the DOJ should ignore them
and try them anyway and let the Supreme Court figure
it out.

Speaker 2 (30:33):
Okay, I don't hate that, but this goes back to
what I've been talking about. And I don't want to
get on this too much because I don't want to
give you a preemptive negative view of Pam Bondy. Pam
Bondy is Trump's pick for AG. He picked Matt Gates.
Matt Gates lasted five minutes before he dropped out. Trump

(30:55):
turned around and picked Pam Bondy. Pam Bondy former AG
of flour Okay, former AG of Florida. And I don't
I don't want you to get this impression that Pam
Bondy is some kind of a disaster that I've heard
from a guy who heard from a guy that she's,
you know, a secret COMMI or something like that. I
don't want to give you that impression. I have heard

(31:17):
good things about Pam Bondy. I'll say this again. I
have heard good things about Pam Bondy. Not all good.
There's been a little of this, little of that, but overall,
I've heard good things about Pam Bondy. However, the Washington
Post gave her a thumbs up when it comes to

(31:38):
attorney general. All right, well, that's not going to work.
It's not going to work if we have an attorney
general who is quote qualified.

Speaker 1 (31:51):
That's what they said.

Speaker 2 (31:52):
She's very qualified because she was attorney general for eight
years down in Florida. Qualified or unqualified. That's not what
we need in an attorney general. What we need, what
we must have in an attorney general is somebody willing
to blow up the norms of this government, because as

(32:13):
of right now, the norms of this government are the
criminals in the government never get held accountable for the
crimes they commit because of the DOJ. Senator after senator,
house member after house member has told me, jesse I
referred them to the DOJ. Jesse I refer them to
the DOJ. Jesse I refer them to the DOJ. And

(32:34):
there's nothing I can do from there. And they're telling
the truth. If the senator, if Senator Schmidt, he's one
of the good ones of Missouri, good job Missouri. If
Senator Eric Schmidt, if he's trying to get some information
from the FBI, and the FBI does what it always does,
and they stonewall, and maybe he thinks there was some

(32:55):
perjury there, and he eventually says, hey, they're committing crimes.
And Eric Schmidt submits a recommendation to the DOJ. It
is then completely up to the DOJ whether or not
to prosecute that FBI agent. And as of now, under
Republicans and Democrats, they have all shared this. The attorney

(33:20):
general leaves government people alone. Oh, they'll go after this
or that, or the cartels here, the traffickers there, counterfeit
money here, whatever, the Italian mafia, whatever, they happen to
be hot on at any given moment. But what you
never see is an attorney general indicting, trying, and sending

(33:41):
to prison people in the government.

Speaker 1 (33:44):
We must have that.

Speaker 2 (33:46):
And while I have not heard a negative word, not one, well,
not many about Pam Bondi, I have not talked to
a single person who thinks she's that going to be
from what I'm told, normal, and we can't afford normal.

(34:07):
The most important job, the most important nominee. Honestly, attorney
General might be more important than the presidency itself when
you look at the levels of criminality and corruption inside
of our government. The next Attorney General has to tear
through the government like a blow towards through butter, to

(34:29):
clean the criminals out of the government. And I have
seen and heard nothing that leave me to believe Pam
Bondi's going to be that one. Now she's going to
be the one. She's going to get confirmed. She's already
the nominee. It's Trump's pick, not my pick. You're not
your pick, not anybody's pick. That was his fallback plan
after Matt Gates fell through. So that's what we got.

Speaker 3 (34:52):
But I have doubts when it's Sarta's Jesse. This is
Joe from Wisconsin. I have a Spanish speaking buddy who
was looking for for your podcast in Spanish. He couldn't
find it, so I told him to look by the
keyword small hands. They still couldn't find it. Since you, obla,
could you help us out please?

Speaker 2 (35:11):
It's not very nice. I don't know why you put
that one on the list, Chris, And that's not very.

Speaker 1 (35:15):
Nice at all.

Speaker 2 (35:16):
Oh, so I have an opinion on something before we
get to the law fair against Trump, which I will
get to in a moment. Of course, Jack Smith dropped
the whole thing on his way out. Jack Smith dropped
the He basically dropped his report, the investigative report.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
Why would you do?

Speaker 5 (35:35):
That?

Speaker 1 (35:36):
Was just a way to.

Speaker 2 (35:37):
Publicly smear Donald Trump on the way out the door.
That's why he dropped it. Well, I mean, I'm dropping
the case, but uh, here's all the bad stuff he
did in case you're interested in reading it. It's a
really terrible thing to do. It's unprofessional, it's evil, it's wrong.
But he's a communist, so that's kind of how he operates.
Before I get to that, which may not be dropped
all the way, I'm going to talk about something it

(36:00):
goes beyond Joe Biden, something that has become normalized in
this country. And what I say is going to sound
extremely rude, cold, hearted. I will explain myself. But I
don't know after my explanation if you're still going to
think I'm rude and cold hearted.

Speaker 1 (36:23):
But here we go. Joe Biden.

Speaker 2 (36:26):
He's having to pretend to be a functional adult during
the last six days of his presidency. And the major
thing he's dealing with at the moment, when he's not
pardoning his son and other criminals and turning terrorists loose
from Gitmo, the other thing he's having to deal with,
or pretend to deal with at the time is these

(36:47):
wildfires in Los Angeles. Kind of a big deal when
you have this disaster, not natural, but when you have
this disaster burning through everything, Now, everyone, what about the aid?

Speaker 1 (36:58):
We can't afford it. I don't have assurance. And so
during one.

Speaker 2 (37:02):
Of these various photo op things, Joe Biden got up
on the speakerphone and said this, I'm.

Speaker 1 (37:09):
Getting them help right now.

Speaker 4 (37:10):
As you all know, people impacted by these fires who
are going to receive.

Speaker 2 (37:15):
One time payment of seven hundred and seventy dollars one
time payment. The people impacted are going to receive a
one time payment of seven hundred and seventy dollars. That
is a bunch of garbage, and what has happened in
this country and our concept of government is garbage, and
I'll explain what I mean next
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Jesse Kelly

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