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August 4, 2025 38 mins

A bad night’s sleep in Boston. Treating these animals with kid gloves causes them to act worse. The disgusting state of our cities and the Democrats who choose to let them languish. Salena Zito with what does middle America think of Trump now that the honeymoon is over? Medal of Honor: Yukio Okutsu

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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a fantastic Monday, thrilled to be here. We are going
to get to immigration, how to handle it the right way,
how to handle it the wrong way, which we're very
much doing. We'll talk about having a just safe society

(00:35):
that's going to go right along those lines. We'll do
a bunch of emails this hour. They want to steal
your organs, all that stuff before we get to any
of that. Though, you know what time it is. It
is the start of the second hour on Monday, and
that means it's Medal of Honor Monday time. Every single
Monday is the same thing. At this time, we take

(00:57):
a medal of honor. Citation, we read it now. I
haven't had a long talk about this for a while,
so let me do this for a minute. Heroes, or
maybe hero is the wrong way to put it. But
people you look up to it is a really important
part of your development, of my development, of human development.

(01:22):
The people who are held up as hey, look at
this guy, look at this girl, look at what he did.
It matters if you constantly hold up in front of
kids dirt balls and scumbags and losers, then you are
going to have more kids who turn out to be
dirt balls and scumbags and losers. If the people in

(01:45):
your society who are held up are America haters who
are constantly trash in the country, America socks dah blah
blah blah blah, then we are going to have a
bad percentage of people who think that way, and vice versa.
If you hold up people who love the country, who
do wonderful things, brave things, selfless things, then you're going

(02:07):
to end up with more people like that. One thing
has been fascinating to me because you know, I'm fascinated
with this stuff. How can someone charge a machine gun
nests which is essentially what this guy did, but we'll
get to that in a moment. How can people do that?
And so I've always I've been fascinated by how do
you create these people? I have two sons, and believe me,

(02:28):
I don't want them to die in combat, But how
do I raise the kind of men? Would who would
jump on a grenade to save a friend? Would? How
do you raise those types of men? And every time
I ask that question, I get people who email in
who know men like that or my uncle was one

(02:48):
or something like that, and almost to a man, they
will say, well, their dad was that way, or they
were always talking about those kinds of things. My dad,
I became a cop. I became this, he wrote cop
because that's what my dad did, It's what my uncle did.
They were surrounded by these types we should have. And

(03:10):
I know there are great Medal of Honor museums. By
the way, I heard the one in Dallas is amazing.
I haven't been able to go yet. There are Medal
of Honor museums and things like that around the country.
That's something you need to bring your kids to if
you ever have the opportunity. I know money doesn't grow
on trees. Whenever I get a chance, I'm dragging my
sons up there, and we're gonna walk through it and
we're gonna learn about it. And that is powerful. It

(03:33):
makes an impact. Read Medal of honor citations to your children,
to your employees, you can read these at work, to
your class, to your sports team. It does matter a lot. Now,
Yo Kio Okutsu he was in the US Army World
War Two. He was born in why second generation. His

(03:58):
parents immigrated from Japan. Now the Japanese obviously American Japanese.
During World War Two, you already know about the FDR
and putting them in camps, and that you understand all that.
Everyone understands that basic history. And so a lot of
these people with their parents in camps said, I don't care,

(04:20):
I want to join and fight for America anyway. I
love America. And we were suspicious back then, so they
generally did not get sent to the Pacific. We were, well,
if they fight the Japanese, what if they joined their side,
It sounds ridiculous now, didn't sound ridiculous at the time.
So they would cobble together all Japanese units for the

(04:43):
most part and send them off to Europe. They did
a lot of fighting in Italy. You are aware, as
I've told you before, the fighting in Italy. The Italian
campaign is one of those parts that's not talked about
near enough in World War Two, Normandy and all this
other stuff that gets all the glory and all the headlines.

(05:04):
Fighting in Italy was freaking brutal because the whole place
is mountains and rivers. It's a defender's dream, and those
dirty Germans. They know how to do that kind of stuff.
They're really, really, really good at it. They bounced the
Italians out of there really quickly and said, okay, we'll
handle this. You guys are basically useless, and the Germans
had things fortified. It was tough sledding, so without further ado.

(05:28):
He was born in Koloa I Hope, I said that right,
Hawaii Yo Kio Okutsu, US Army, World War two. Hey,
honoring those who went above and beyond. It's Medal of
Honor Monday for conspicuous gallantry in intrepidity at risk of

(05:53):
his life, above and beyond the call of duty. Technical
Sergeant Yukio Okutsu distinguished himself by extraorordinary heroism in action
on the seventh of April nineteen forty five on Mount Belvedere, Italy.
While his platoon was halted by the crossfire of three
machine guns, Technical Sergeant Okutsu boldly crawled to within thirty

(06:14):
yards of the nearest enemy emplacement. Through heavy fire. He
destroyed the position with two accurately placed hand grenades, killing
three machine gunners. Crawling and dashing from cover to cover,
he threw another grenade. Sorry, he threw another grenade, silencing
a second machine gun, wounding two enemy soldiers and forcing

(06:37):
two others to surrender. Seeing a third machine gun which
obstructed his platoons advanced, he moved forward through heavy small
arms fire and was stunned momentarily by rifle fire which
glanced off his helmet. Recovering, he bravely charged several enemy
riflemen with his submachine gun, forcing them to withdraw from

(06:59):
their positions. Then rushing the machine gun nest, he captured
the weapon in its entire crew of four. By these
single handed actions, he enabled his platoon to resume its
assault on a vital objective. The courageous performance of Technical
Sergeant Okutsu against formidable odds was an inspiration to all.

(07:19):
Technical Sergeant Okutsu's extraordinary heroism and devotion to duty are
in keeping with the highest traditions of military service and
reflect great credit upon him his unit in the United
States Army. That is awesome. Imagine having a rifle round
bounce off your freaking helmet. That's crazy. That reminds me

(07:43):
of that one story of uh oh Man. I'm gonna
forget his name now, it's not Art Jackson. For God
forgive me. I'm gonna forget his name. He's a United
States Marine, a hero. He won a Medal of Honor,
earned a Medal of Honor in the Pacific War. And
he was a flamethrower. He had a flamethrower. He was
one of those guys. Now, the Japanese may have been

(08:05):
willing to die more than willing to die. Wanted to
die for the emperor. But nobody on Earth wants to
burn to death. Nobody. That's no way to go. So
we used flamethrowers to burn them out of caves and
pill boxes and things like that. The guys who held
the flame throwers were dead meat most of the time,

(08:27):
because that's what it's one of those things. It's like
a heavy machine gun. Whenever you see one, he's gonna
get most of the fire, because that's that's the thing
you're trying to silence. You're going to try to stop
the flamethrower guy. And I forgot gosh. Woody Williams, is
it Woody Williams, Chris Hershelwoody Williams dagget nailed it anyway.

(08:48):
Woody Williams, he talked about he was a flamethrower guy.
He cooked a bunch of Japanese guys in the islands.
When he was crawling. He was low crawling with his
flamethrower on his back. Bullet were whizzing off of his
flamethrower tank. Oh my gosh, what's going through your mind?
Every time you hear a ping and a bullet whizzes

(09:09):
off the tank actually leads me to this email. Hey Jesse,
like your show, You're innovative. Don't harp on the same
topics everyone else's hashed to death. There's something I note
about you that puzzles me. You seem obsessed with the
glorification of war and combat. In my opinion, after millennia,
mankind should have found a far better, more intelligent and

(09:30):
non violent way of settling differences or even usurping power. Harold.
Every man is the eternally the fall guy, the tool,
the indoctrinated victim of those wanting wealth and power, while
the power hungry sit insulated from danger and send nameless,
faceless ponds to suffer and die. They make fighting, killing,
and dying seem like a glorious act, so they continue

(09:52):
to enlist the masses to do their dirty work. Okay,
I understand what you're saying. I do. I get that,
and I'm not even gonna say there's no truth to
what you're saying. I admire bravery, even bravery in a
cause that may be a bad one. Maybe there's been
dishonesty almost always there is in war. Maybe the men

(10:15):
who sent the others off to die are cowardly and useless.
All those things are true. Everything you just said that
they're oftentimes true. But that doesn't take away from the
men who do the acts, who do the deeds. I
think it's awesome. I think bravery is something that is underrated.

(10:36):
It is an admirable trait, and when I find it,
I talk about it and I admire it. Now, let's
talk about a just society and a brutal night in Boston.
Next time Jesse Kelly returns. Next it is the Jesse

(10:59):
Kelly Show on a Fantastic Monday. Remember you can email
the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. We got
Selena Zito coming up ten minutes from now. We'll see
if she has anything to say. Liz Wheeler next hour,
we'll do a bunch of emails. We still have to
talk about a just society, criminality, illegal immigration, all that

(11:20):
and so much more still to come on the world
famous Jesse Kelly's Show. Now, before I get to any
of that, I have to tell you, I just have
to get this off my chest. There's not even a
point for this story. Well, I guess maybe there is
a point. But so last week I was in Boston.
We went out to Boston to go see WRKO, hang

(11:40):
out with them, Me Jewish producer Chris Corey, we all
went out there. We get a hotel in Boston, but
I couldn't believe how cool Boston was for such a lefty,
dirtball commie city. Very clean, very walkable. Anyway that's studying
that aside. Really really liked it, really liked it. I'll
be back. Stay in this hotel that's close to Fenway Park.

(12:04):
It's baseball season. Now, this next part I only heard.
I don't know, but it's gonna matter for the story.
I heard that the Houston Astros, the baseball team who
was in town, that they were staying at our hotel,
that that's where they were putting the team up, which
would make sense. I mean, it wasn't super luxury, but

(12:26):
it was close to Fenway and so it would be
easy drive it it made sense, but I never saw him,
and I don't know. Just put that in your back pocket.
So Friday night, Chris and Corey they go to the game.
I I was flying out. I had to get up
at three thirty am. The next morning. I was flying

(12:49):
back home be with aub and the kids, so I
didn't go to the game. I instead went to bed
like the old man. I am at eight o'clock. Eight o'clock,
I was calling into knocking out. At twelve fifty woo,
woo woo, the freaking fire alarm starts going off in

(13:11):
the hotel with an announcement that you need to evacuate
the floor. Now it's not just like a quick beep
in an announcement. It just starts. It keeps playing over
and over and over. Evacuate the floor, evacuate the floor.
Fire alarm, fire alarm, fire alarm. Now this part I

(13:31):
need to encourage kids to not be like me, because
ob was mortified when I told her this part of
the story. So was Jewish producer Chris. He's such a nerd.
I don't evacuate unless I personally see something wrong. Everyone's
evacuating the floor. I'm tired. I have to get up

(13:51):
in two hours. So I do the American thing, and
I open up the hotel door. I poke my head out.
I'm in my underwear. By the way I poke my
head out the door. I don't see any smoke. I
don't smell any smoke. I can't see anything. So I
slam the door shut and go right back to my room.
I grab a pillow, throw it over my head and

(14:13):
attempt to go back to sleep. Eventually, the alarm turns off.
I'd say five minutes. Twenty minutes later, it's one twenty
or something like that.

Speaker 2 (14:25):
We we weeve.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
The freaking alarm starts going off again. Now this point
in time, I think, okay, maybe maybe there's something to this.
I'd throw on the little hotel slippers they keep in
the closet, and I throw on a jacket and some jeans,
and I start evacuating with everyone else. We have to

(14:47):
evacuate the stairs, and we're going down, and they have
their escorting us out the back entrance of the hotel.
We walk around the front of the hotel. Everyone's standing
in the front. Some young girls are there. One of
them is having a nervous break down with her parents
on the phone. It's complete anarchy. So I just walk
right back in the front of the hotel, and there's
all these people gathered in the lobby, and I decide,

(15:10):
I still don't see any smoke or anything. I walk
right what Chris, it's fine. I walk right back to
the elevator, hit the button, go right back up to
my room, Go drop all my clothes, crawl back into bed.
Now the clock is ticking. I've got about an hour
and a half of my alarms about to go off
and wake me up, and I have to go to

(15:30):
the airport. Another twenty minutes go by. We're we're we're
same freaking thing happened. The lesson in this for you
and the lesson in this for me is this because
we all know what happened. Some hammered Red Sox fan
left the game. Hammered Red Sox fan left the game,

(15:54):
heard the Astros were staying in the hotel, and chose
to go start yanking the fire alarm to screw up
the team's sleep so the team wouldn't win the next day.
You've heard stories like this several times in your life.
Maybe you, when you were young and stupid, you even
did something like this. The lesson in it for you
is this. If you ever sniff that you are staying

(16:20):
in the same hotel as the out of town sports team,
high school, college, pro, whatever it is, it is worth
the effort and it is worth the money. Pack up
your stuff and get out. I'm not even gonna name
the hotel because they didn't necessarily do anything wrong, although

(16:40):
I would beef up security a little bit at the
fire alarms. I'm never staying there again. You could give
me a free room, and I would not stay there again.
I'll never ever trust it again. I am still Look,
I'm forty four years old. It takes three or four
months to recover from a bad night's sleep. Now, at

(17:02):
this point in time, my next still hurts. You understand
what it's like. You never essentially recover. I may die.
I'm never staying there again. I love Boston, never staying
there again. Like I said, even if it was a
free room, I'd give it to Chris because we all
know he would accept the free room. Now, let's talk
to Selena Zito and find out if this ever happened

(17:23):
to her. I don't know. I'm probably not gonna ask
her that. Let's talk about Middle America. Before we do,
I want to talk to you about your dog. When
I got back from Boston, Fred had a hard time
controlling himself, and this gigantic ball of fur came careening
out the front door, plowing into me. Because I had
been gone for like four days or something like that,

(17:44):
they acted like I'd been off to war. Isn't that wonderful?
Is there anything better than coming home to your dog
making you feel like the most important person in the world?
And frankly I am. Rough Greens will keep your dog alive.
Roughgreens will keep your dog healthy. It's America's number one

(18:05):
dog supplement for a reason. Dog food is dead. That's
why it's brown. So you need to sprinkle Roughgreens on
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dog's coat. If you don't see anything else, which you will,
just the coat alone, you'll know, Wow, my dog's finally
getting nutrition. Try it. Try a free jumpstart trialback. Go

(18:30):
to Roughgreens dot com promo code Jesse or call them
two one four Roughdog Go, get your puppies some Roughgreens.
Selena Zito next, Fighting for your Freedom every Day The
Jesse Kelly Show It is the Jesse Kelly Show on

(18:53):
a wonderful, wonderful Monday. It's wonderful because I'm here and
it's what Chris it is, and it's wonderful because Selena
is here joining me now, my friend, wonderful writer Selena Zito.
Her book Butler is out. As you already know, you
need to go pick up Butler. It's weird. Toby Keith
was a Democrat that loved America and that used to

(19:18):
be a thing in this country. Selena, When did that
stop being a thing?

Speaker 2 (19:23):
That stopped being a thing right around the Iraq Afghanistan War.
Not in the beginning. In the beginning, it definitely was
people were to come together. We had been attacked on
nine to eleven, so there was this sense of being
part of something bigger than South and protecting the homeland.

(19:44):
But that started to fade and people just, I don't know,
they just started being divided over everything. But patriotism was
one of the first things to sort of fall. Right,
don't put in an American flag or you're this ist
or ism or something like nefarious.

Speaker 1 (20:06):
Selena. I'm going to ask a question, but you just
you seem like the right person to ask this question too.
I was I've been nerding out on a lot of
Vietnam stuff, recently documented document Why can't documentaries and books
and I'm so stupid documentaries and books and things like that.
And the lying to the American people from yes, the

(20:28):
Kennedy administration, but most definitely the LBJ then Nixon. The
lying to the American people of that era looks to
me like a huge moment in this country where the
American people started to separate from their government. Did I
overstate that?

Speaker 2 (20:46):
No? No, No, that's absolutely what happened. That is, at
that point there was a it was like a seventy
uh support for uh the government and believe in the government,
faith in the government, but also in journalism. And that
moment of the Vietnam War you combine out with Watergate,

(21:10):
and all of a sudden everything starts to crumble and
the biggest swing away from trust in government, trusting institutions,
and trust in journalism started to crumble and pretty dark quick.
If you look at the Edelman Trust Indicator, it's really
really good. It comes out every year. You can see

(21:30):
how much we trusted our government in like nineteen seventy
and then how much that fail by nineteen eighty.

Speaker 1 (21:37):
Gosh, that is so sad. Speaking with Selena Zito, author
of the book Butler. Okay, Selina, let's focus on today.
Texas Democrats are famously you know, they're going to arrest them,
or at least they've called for their arrest, and they
flee to Illinois, and the party just it looks to me,
has such a bad brand, and it looks like they

(21:59):
don't I don't have any idea how to fix it,
or if they do, they're too afraid to fix it.
Does that wash with Middle America, where you spend your time.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
Well, so, I'm old. So I remember them doing this
in two thousand and three, running away from Tom Delay
and it didn't work out. And that wasn't that long ago.
I wish people had history books, right the Democratic Party,
their problem is they are unwilling to go back to
being more of a champion of the middle of the country.

(22:32):
And if you are not championing things that are important
to middle class, working class voters, you will not win elections, period.
And that's the place they're at right now.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
What are middle class voters? What is middle America? What
are they saying about Trump? Still? We are long past
the honeymoon period. Here, we're past six months in. Are
they starting to chafe? Are they as happy as they've
ever been? Are they happy or unhappy? In why?

Speaker 2 (23:06):
Very happy? You see that in particular in states like
Pennsylvania and Ohio. I hit the road tomorrow. I'm driving
cross country to get more of a field of the
other states. But you see a resurgence in the rest belt.
I mean, I have spent my career writing about the
decline of the rest belt. It is very, very different

(23:27):
right now. You see manufacturing reshoring. You see you know
people were worried about AI. I would be one of them.
I'm not a robot fan. I saw Space Odyssey two
thousand and one. Scarred for life. However, the building of
AI data centers is going to be done in states

(23:48):
like Ohio and Pennsylvania and West Virginia and Missouri and Indiana,
in Michigan where there's access to clean energy and those
those data processes centers, which most of those data processing
centers are going to be used for research in universities
but also medical research. Right They're going to need power

(24:09):
for that. They're very, very thirsty, and the only power
that is going to sustain them right. That is trustworthy?
Is nuclear? Coal and natural gas?

Speaker 1 (24:22):
Are we going to see coal again? Coal celebrated again
instead of shame, because even Republicans don't talk lovingly about coal.
They act like it's we're trying to send the kids
back down to the mines. Coals amazing, coals amazing.

Speaker 2 (24:36):
I'm going down to a into a mine. In two weeks,
I'll be following a piece of coal from the bottom
of the mine, sixteen hundred feet straight down up up
to the top of the surface processing center, on a
dump truck, on a train, on a tugboat, and into
a coal fired power plant. And that one piece of
coal will power an entire main street in seven hours.

Speaker 1 (25:00):
Speaking with Selena Zito, author of the book Butler, Selena,
let mean legal immigration, by the way, Oh, I'm not surprised.
I'm not surprised that. Again, the book is Butler. Legal immigration. Obviously,
illegal immigrations a pretty obvious thing. American people are against that.
Are you noticing? I certainly am a real chafing against

(25:24):
legal immigration now that our legal immigration system has been
so abused. Or is that not something people are passionate about.

Speaker 2 (25:32):
It's not something people are talking about at least where
I'm reporting from. In fact, there's a lot of frustration
that it's not more fluid. You know, a migrant's coming
in being able to work on farms then go back home.
Those kinds of visas have been very, very difficult to get,
and farms rely on them. They're not people that stay

(25:53):
here permanently. They come in during the harvest season or
the farming season and the calving season, and then they
go back home. That has long been something I have
talked about, how we need to make that more streamline
and more open so that those kinds of jobs can

(26:15):
be filled if they're not filled by people that live
here already.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
Selena John Fetterman. Is John Fetterman popular in Pennsylvania? Is
he unpopular with Democrats? He'll pop up every now and
then and say something sane, which makes him a bit
of an abnormality with the Democrat Party today. How do
they think about him in Pennsylvania.

Speaker 2 (26:40):
He's wildly popular in Pennsylvania now, not with the far left,
but with Demo Democrats and Republicans grudgingly and independents. They
find him refreshing and they like that him and McCormick
worked together really well, which is beneficial for the state overall.

Speaker 1 (26:59):
Selena Zito, her book is Butler. Thank you so much, Selene,
I appreciate it. Thank you very much. Now, Jesse, do
you think Marxist Democrats are behind in fundraising because Act
Blue is under investigation in USAID is being closely managed

(27:19):
by Marco Rubio. Well, we've been talking about this, and
we touched on this again in the opening of the show.
The Democrat Party is not a fifty to fifty party
in this country. They appear they have appeared to be,
because they take vast quantities of your money and they
falsely hold up the party with your money. When you

(27:41):
get elected as a Democrat, you understand whatever level of
treasury you have access to, you have to find a
way to open it up and dig your dirty fingers
into it and hand it out to other Democrats. All right,
let's get back. You know what I'm going to talk
about one of the creepier articles I've ever read in

(28:01):
my life in the New York Times, and that's saying
something before we get to creepy, let's get to wonderful memories. Man.
It's something that we have started to do more in
our house. You know, I've told you before we don't
necessarily like to buy our kids a lot of stuff.
It's not that we don't get them gifts or whatnot,
but we are more of a memory family. If the

(28:22):
choice is buying you a new phone or something like that,
versus hey, let's take a weekend trip and let's go
to a museum together, or something like, I'd rather go
to the museum. We want to make memories. That's what
our pictures are, That's what our videos are. We need
to preserve those. What would you give for a video

(28:44):
of your great great grandpaf You could hear him talk,
if you could look at him doing something on your phone.
Legacy Box will preserve your memories. They digitize your hard
copy pictures. They digitize your Super eight films, your VHS films,
cassette tapes, photo negatives. Let Legacy Box digitize that stuff,

(29:07):
not for you, not even for you, for your kids,
for their kids, for their kids. Legacybox dot com slash
Jesse Legacy Box dot com slash Jesse. We'll be back,
misstos catch up Jesse kellyshow dot com. It is the

(29:30):
Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful Monday. Remember, you can
email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Now,
I don't want to spend a bunch of time on
this because it's dark, but I want to remind you
that the rampant criminality from illegals and others in this
country is a choice our society has made. And we

(29:53):
know who made these choices. Illegals, lefties, commies, all of
them joining forces to protect the evil people and pillage
the good people. And if you reside in a place
that is completely controlled by communists, now you need to
get out. Did you hear the story about this guy

(30:15):
in Somalia. He's well, not in Somalia. He's from Somalia.
He's been in America since two thousand and six. He
abducted a twelve year old girl from his back from
her backyard, forced her into his car. I'll skip over
the rest, but it did not go well for her.

(30:37):
She was assaulted terribly. Twelve year old girl. Imagine the fear.
Imagine what she's gone through. He got an extremely light
sentence just recently from a Minnesota court after the mosque
in his area penned a letter saying he's a devoted
family man who just didn't understand the culture. Do you

(31:00):
know one of the reasons these people commit so many
crimes when they come to our country. It's one of
the main reasons. Actually, it's not just because they come
from garbage cultures like Somalia. It's not just that, and
Somalia is a putrid, horrible place. It's not only that.
It's because they are protected by America's communists when they

(31:23):
get here, and they would be way more law abiding.
If we throw them in cages the second they step
out of line, you know that they would be They
do these things not because they don't understand the culture.
That's of course part of it. They do these things
because America America's cities, communists run cities, have a system

(31:46):
put into place where they know they'll be treated with
kid gloves when they act like the animals they are
and abuse our people. If you started making examples of
these people instead of calling them, instead of protect them,
we would see criminality drop in America's cities at an
astounding rate, even the legals illegals whoever they are. We

(32:10):
started making examples of people, you would find that the
people who show up in this country as guests would
mind their queue, their p's and q's a whole lot
better if they were sent to the cages where they
belong as soon as they commit a terrible crime. But instead,
because Democrats are the spawn of Satan, they understand wherever

(32:32):
they are, wherever Democrats control things, these people, the animals,
wherever they're from, foreign or domestic, will be protected at
any cost. And that's why the criminality is out of
control in blue cities. That's why illegals commit all these
all this crime over and over again in this country
because they are coddled and protected. I'll play you one more,
because it's not just foreign, it's domestic too. We talked

(32:55):
last week about that group of animals who beat up
those people after a jazz festival, and since and the
police chief came out and yelled at you and me
for posting about it on social media. Their mayor, the
mayor of Cincinnati, Cincinnati. Let me see what's his name again,
af tab pur Reval. I wonder what part of Cincinnati
he's from. He's the mayor of Cincinnati. He was asked,

(33:19):
the lady who was beaten unconscious, have you maybe reached
out or anything like that?

Speaker 3 (33:24):
I have not I mean, look again, this was a fight.
It was a horrific fight. But as a council member
and others have said, we have significant other public safety challenges.
We have children who are far too often the victims
of gun violence. We have oftentimes, far too often the

(33:45):
perpetrators of the gun violence being children. We have violent
crime like every other major city across the nation.

Speaker 1 (33:53):
Of course, he has to turn it into a communist
talking point. Maybe you remember the police chief, remember what
she said afterwards, social.

Speaker 2 (34:00):
Media and journalism and the role it plays in this incident.
And yes, guys, that's you, that is you.

Speaker 1 (34:10):
Social media.

Speaker 2 (34:11):
The post that we've seen does not depict the entire incident.
That is one version of what occurred.

Speaker 1 (34:22):
Yeah, we got it, we got it. They act like
animals because they're allowed to, because America's Democrats wherever they
control anything, they now will protect the evil, They will
protect the violent, and they will not protect you. In fact,
if you make the mistake of standing up for yourself,

(34:45):
they will come after you and they will throw you
in a dark hole. This is a choice. The state
of America's cities is a choice. They do not have
to be full of crime, full of animals, full of homeless,
full of illegals, full of a rape here and a
murder there, and a car theft here. That is a choice.

(35:06):
There are cities all around the world that don't have
that at all. You can send your wife out to
the sidewalk and have her walk ten city blocks at
two am on Friday night in Tokyo, Japan, one of,
if not the largest cities in the world, and she
will return to you completely unharmed. Because Japan and other

(35:27):
places around the world, not just them, has made a choice.
And part of that choice is when we find animals
here who do animal things, will throw them in cages
where animals belong. But you can't send your wife at
two am walking through Cincinnati, or you'll never see her again.
Because they elect animals, oftentimes from other countries. They elect animals,

(35:48):
and then the animals get in there and they protect
the other animals who were sitting there on the streets.
It is a choice. The state of our cities, the
disgusting state of our cities in this country, is a choice,
and it's a choice made exclusively by Democrats. It's not bipartisan.
It is a choice made by democrats in this country

(36:09):
who know their power base are animals, foreign and domestic,
and so it doesn't matter what happens to good people
inside the city limits, they will stand up and they
will protect the animals because that's how they remain in power.
And that sucks. You know, I told you I went
to Boston last week, and I know Boston has a

(36:32):
dirty commie mayor who's trying to ruin that city too,
But the difference between Boston and New York for cleanliness
and crime feeling was shocking to me. I didn't know.
I hadn't spent much time in Boston. I didn't know
it was shocking. Why Boston made a choice so did

(36:54):
New York. Let's move on. Let's talk about Oregan Doner.
We'll get to that next hour. Let's do some emails
before we do that. Let's do some chalk, Let's get
some natural herbal supplements. Throw it throwing, not throwing that
wouldn't make sense, flowing through our veins. I love feeling good, man,

(37:17):
I love being full of energy. I love how my
mind feels. I like how my mood is. Don't you
get down sometimes almost inexplicably. I'm not talking about when
you're watching Old Yeller I mean just inexplicably, you get
down sometimes. That's because our levels are all screwed up,
all of us, because men, women, all of us were

(37:38):
drinking synthetic estrogens. Is horrible for us, it's reckon us.
Let Chalk in their natural herbal supplements change your freaking life.
And now they have a special website for you chalk
dot com, cho q chalk dot com slash Jesse. If
you have questions about what they have, Hey, I want

(37:58):
to improve in on this. I want that ask them.
They will help you. They're wonderful. Thank you, Chuck for
how you are to my people. Chalk dot com slash Jess.
We have an hour left.

Speaker 2 (38:10):
Hang on
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Host

Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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