Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is that Jesse
Kelly show. Let's have some fun on a Wednesday's up day. Yes,
I know about the elections last night. Trust me, I'm
(00:32):
about to fire hose all the election talk you can
possibly handle. And don't worry, it's not going to be
all the stuff you've heard all day. Well in this precinct,
the name my favorite. We're not doing that. We're gonna
have just to talk. It probably make you feel better,
some may make you feel worse, probably make you feel
better about last night. We will get to that. That
(00:53):
is going to dominate a while on the show. I
give you my word, it will not be the entire show.
In fact, I have two totally off the wall guests
tonight because I thought it would be a good night
to break things up a little bit. We have a
guy who's gonna talk about those Chinese Russian honey pot
spies that are coming over here. That's a little James
(01:15):
Bond intrigue. And I have someone coming up in the
last hour he's gonna have He has a different view
of economics and what drives progress, totally fascinating. Either way,
We're gonna go in and out and up but down.
It's gonna be all over the place on the world
famous Jesse Kelly's show. Now, let's go ahead and begin
(01:39):
the elections last night. Elections in California, elections in Texas,
elections in South Carolina, Georgia, in Pennsylvania, in New Jersey,
in New York City. And no, contrary to everything you've
been reading today, they didn't all go against us. And
(02:01):
we'll get to some of that good news. But let's
be honest. We don't have to try to put a
smiley face on an ugly situation. It was a bad night.
It didn't go the way we wanted put it that way.
We dreamed, I dreamed, you dreamed that we would wake
up this morning and Republican governor of New Jersey, maybe
(02:23):
ma'am Donne would somehow lose in New York City, California
would strike down Prop fifty. We hoped that win some
Earl Sears would be governor of Virginia. We didn't get
any of that. In fact, it was actually worse than that.
If you dig down, dig down through the headlines, get
past the headlines. Bucks County, Pennsylvania didn't go our way.
(02:48):
Virginia had a bunch of Republicans, even long established Republicans
wiped out of their their legislatures the delegates. But I'm
just gonna go their legislature. Oh my yeahsh It's the
end of the world. It's the end of the world. Pause.
Let me say this before we go anywhere else on
(03:09):
the show, and longtime listeners probably already know what I'm
going to say, because I will say it to you
before and after every single election. We we are. It's
a good way I can put this. We are at
the start of World War two. The stakes are obviously
(03:32):
hugely important. We're facing the Japanese Empire, We're facing the Nazis.
We have to win this war, so I'm not minimizing
the stakes. However, if the army shows up in North
Africa and gets its teeth kicked in by Rammel, the
war is not lost. That's ridiculous. This war is going
(03:57):
to go on for a very long time, and there
will be battles fought here and battles fought there, and
it's gonna ebb but it's gonna flow with a We
are gonna win so many battles and we are going
to lose so many battles. We are in a battle
(04:19):
for the future of the United States of America. I
take that back. We're in a war. This is a
cultural war, a political war, a war to decide who
is going to make the choices for this country. Which
direction is this country going to go towards the light
(04:42):
or towards the dark? Are your children and their children
and their children are they going to have some semblance
of the country you grew up in or is it
going to be some disastrous, demonic communist hellhole. I know
the stakes are extremely high, but I also, oh, no,
this one bad night doesn't lose the war. One good
(05:06):
night doesn't win it. I told you this after Trump
won in November and we had the best night and
we were all happy. The next day, myself included, I
was borderlining giddy on the radio. You remember, Oh my gosh,
we won. We did it and it was amazing and
it was great and it was a big important battle.
We didn't save America that night. We won a very
(05:29):
important battle. We didn't win the war. And last night
and we took it on the chin. We did. We're
gonna talk about that in more depth. We're just doing
We're gonna go from zooming out to zooming in. We
took it on the chin last night, didn't go our way,
not ideal. Wished we would have won. We didn't lose
(05:52):
the war last night. We didn't win the war November.
We didn't lose the war this November. All right. We
didn't win the war last night. I mean, and we
didn't didn't lose it this November. It just this is
the way politics goes. This is the way elections go.
There are some mornings after an election where we're going
(06:12):
to get up and pattage our buddy on the back,
and we're going to tell our wife we're going to
red lobster tonight. That celebrate. And then there are days
we wake up like today where we feel and I
know you maybe feel like this right now. Maybe you're
in New Jersey, maybe you're listening on WR in New
York City, maybe you're in Virginia, or maybe you're in California.
Maybe you're sitting there saying, Jesse, I don't want to
(06:34):
hear anything good. All is lost. That's what it feels
like today. We march forward, all right, all is not lost,
I promise. Yeah. And by the way, we do have
big problems, and I'm going to get to those two.
Please don't think this is going to be a three
hour show tonight of patting everybody on the butt and
(06:55):
telling them it's fine. It's really not going to be that,
I promise. But that's the zoom out. Here's another zoom
out thing in life. We all want some control. A
lot of people like me, we want maximum control. I
(07:17):
want to control it all. I want to control not
just my car. I want to control every other driver
on the road. I want to control what this person does,
what that person says. I want to control this. I'm
one of those guys. Just let me control everything, and
of course me because of course I know it all.
I will fix it all. I'm one of those guys.
(07:38):
But human beings, all of us, we want some level
of control. And part of life is being constantly reminded that, yes,
there are things you can control, and there are many
that are bigger than you or me. They're simply out
of our hands. Here's one of those things. We can
(07:59):
help it. We can kind of shave off the rough
edges a little, but it remains true now in always,
in the United States of America. The way our system
works although this is very common throughout history, but we're
going to focus on us in the United States of America.
The party that is out of power is going to
(08:23):
have a level of motivation. The party in power does
not have to use a lame sports analogy. You know what,
the one of the hardest things to deal with in
sports is winning. Winning a title of any kind, the
super Bowl, the World Series? Why are repeat champions so rare?
(08:48):
You're the champion? You want I won? Do I have
to come in at five am for extra time in
the weight room. I'm the champion. I'll come in it.
I want to sleep at breakfast Tacos, then all come in.
I'm the champion. You know who wants to come in
at five am? The guy who just freaking lost. He's upset,
(09:12):
he didn't get what he wanted. Things aren't going his way.
He's gonna be in the gym. No and more. Wait,
human nature, we all do this at periods of time
in our life. Look, you may do this if you're
in the business world. If you have a job of
any kind, you get promoted, get a compliment from the boss,
(09:34):
things are going well. Hey, boss just patted me on
the back, gave me a ten percent promotion. You know
what I'm gonna do. Ah, I'm a duck out of here.
Fifteen minutes early on Friday, I go out with my friends.
That's not how you got promoted. The political party that
(09:54):
is out of power is always going to have a
level of motivation that cannot possibly be matched by the
political party that is in power. Doesn't mean it's necessarily inevitable,
(10:14):
but on some level it is. We will continue. There's
a lot to get to and I'll get to some
specifics about these races. There's so much to talk about
tonight on the Jesse Kelly Show. Before I get to
those things. How old is your dog? Let me tell
you what's already happening in our house. Bob is already
(10:38):
looking at Fred and saying, Jesse, I don't want him
to die. He's five years old. It's not about to die,
at least I don't think it's possible. I guess. But
that's how much. That's how much they become family, right,
and you start to think about the end. We don't
have them for very long. What if you could get
(10:59):
another year your dog, another healthy year. I'm not talking
about laid up in bed, another healthy year. We sprinkle
Roughgreens on Fred's food because we want that year. It's
the number one dog supplement in America because America has
found out that there's no nutrition in dog food. You
(11:21):
need to sprinkle Roughgreens on your dog's foods so they
get vitamins and minerals and antioxidants and all the things
you need. You want a free Jumpstart trialbag, go to
Roughgreens dot com. Use the promo code Jesse. Roughgreens dot
Com promo code Jesse. We'll be back. He doesn't care
(11:41):
if you believe him, but he's right. Jesse Kelly. It
is the Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic Wednesday. I
do have to tell you. Sorry, nothing I can do
about it. On Friday again, I'm not going to be here.
So to tomorrow is ask doctor Jesse Thursday. All three
(12:04):
hours belong to you. Email your questions in right now.
They're already stacking up Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
Ask me anything, as we always do on an Ask
Doctor Jesse Thursday. Even though I only went to community college. Okay,
so I'm gonna touch on again what we were discussing
(12:24):
going into the break because there's a lot we have
to discuss about last night with the elections, and some
of it's gonna get hard to hear and dark, and
some will make you feel good and some make you
feel worse. Circumstances, there are some circumstances, many circumstances that
are simply bigger than you. They're bigger than me. We
don't control them. The out of power party in American
(12:50):
elections traditionally does better in these kinds of elections. You
maybe maybe the Trump administry hasn't been perfect for you. Shoot,
maybe you're maybe you're not happy at all, but a
lot better than Biden, right, a lot better than the
(13:10):
way things were. At least a border isn't wide open.
That creates a level of comfort, So that that is
something that's outside of your control, it's outside of my control.
It's just it's just perfectly natural. That's part of it.
Here's another part of it, and this is going to
be difficult probably to hear and accept, but this is
(13:32):
one of those things that we can't control. During COVID,
I know what you're thinking. Please Jesse, don't start railing
against COVID again, but just just stay with me for
a second. It's going to matter for elections, and it
may matter for elections for a very long time. During COVID,
the world and the United States went along with this,
(13:53):
made the decision that countries should be forcibly shut down
for a virus. You should know that this is an
insane decision that has really never happened in the history
of mankind, because everyone always understood you can't stop everything.
You might have to take some steps to mitigate this
(14:14):
or mitigate that, but you don't ever stop your economy.
You don't ever ever stop your economy for any reason.
It must continue to flow. It has to. But we didn't.
You can undo that now, now that can I. We
stopped it fifteen days to slow the spread, which of
(14:36):
course turned into months and months and months. Not only
did we stop all that money, all those different parts
of our economy, a twenty threellion dollar economy. Not only
do we stop all those parts of it from moving
to and fro, we did two other things. We printed
trillions of dollars during this time, and in order to
(15:00):
keep money flowing in the economy because we stopped the
private sector from doing it, we massively increased government spending.
We printed money the government then and still is spending
at levels equal to World War II. The result of
(15:21):
this is this, The economy sucks. Everybody knows it. All
the metrics, if you actually read them, they all point
to it. Oh, but consumer spending has remained consistent. No,
read the details. That's rich people, middle class people aren't spending.
Poor people don't have anything to spend. No, but gas prices.
(15:43):
Gas prices are down five cents. Grocery prices are through
the roof, six dollars a pound for burger, six dollars
a pound for burger. Normal people have been smashed economically
(16:05):
because the value of their dollar has plummeted, and now
all the prices of everything in your life have gone
through the roof, and government hasn't stopped spending a single
freaking dime. What does this have to do with elections.
(16:26):
Here's what it has to do with elections. You know.
One of the main driving issues for people to go
vote for Donald Trump over Joe Biden last November. They
couldn't afford anything because the value of your dollar's gone
down twenty twenty five percent. But even if he wanted
to and could waive a magic wand to get the
(16:47):
process going in one year. Donald Trump has not restored
the value of the dollar. It's not even possible to
do so in one year. That's not even a criticism.
It has not happened. Pod that has not happened. You
are just as squeezed now as you were when we
had the cadaver named Joe Biden in the White House.
(17:11):
And so once again people are unhappy economically, and they
go out to the polls and they vote out the
party in power because they're unhappy economically. And there's a
chance this happens every two years in the United States
of America, as people continue to be angry about their
(17:33):
lack of spending power, and maybe this is you. They
will go to the polls and they'll say, I'm voting
for whoever's not in right now until you make my
life more affordable again. And you or I can yell
and scream at those people all you want. You don't
understand the Democrats will make it worse. Normies don't want
to hear it. Normies don't listen to it. People still
(17:55):
don't have money, Spending power is Goneomy is not good.
The stock market is up AI and data centers are
doing well. The other parts of the economy are not.
I don't know about you. I'm not in AI. I
don't build data centers. Doesn't have anything to do with me.
(18:16):
We'll continue next. You're listening to the Oracle. You love
this one. It's a scream Baby, The Jesse Kelly Show.
It is The Jesse Kelly Show on a Wednesday, a hopday.
Where we took a little bit of a licking last night,
and I guess that's just kind of the way it goes.
We're discussing the ins and outs around that. I just
(18:37):
just talked briefly about some circumstances, like the value of
the dollar, like the political party being out of power,
being more motivated than you. Some things are bigger than
you or me and out of our hands. Now. I
wanted to get those things out of the way. We
are not gonna stay on those things. So let's let's
talk about things that are in our hands, or at
(18:59):
least partially in our hands. Who is responsible for communists
winning last night? Who was it? Who's responsible? Well, I
think Zorn Mandanni actually said it better than I did.
He had a victory speech. I know when I got
(19:22):
up and spoke to my supporters I spoke directly to
my supporters in a way they would understand and appreciate.
Zorn Mandanni, the new mayor of New York City, did
the same.
Speaker 2 (19:33):
I speak of Yemeny bodega owners and Mexican abuelas, Senegalese
taxi drivers, and who's beck nurses, Trinidadian line cooks and
Ethiopian aunties, yes, aunties.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
Okay, Abigail Spamberger, the new governor of Virginia, who's responsible
for that? I don't know. Let's go to CNN.
Speaker 3 (20:05):
I always vote since I became a citizen, and that
was twenty years ago, and I migrated from Kenye originally
my family's back home in Kenya. And how I see
how things are going on, like with families being separated
as a human being, as a mother, separating families, especially
(20:29):
children from their mothers or fathers. I don't believe in that.
So that made me come out and also come and vote.
Speaker 1 (20:39):
Okay, you want to hear some eye popping stats about
who elected ma'am Donnie in New York City. Here's quite
a poll. They did some Mexic polling on it. I
was born in New York City. If that describes you
only thirty eight percent of those people voted for Mam Donnie.
(21:02):
If it was only people born in New York City,
Mam Donnie gets wiped out at the polls. I don't know.
Do you think he knows that.
Speaker 2 (21:10):
I speak of Yemeny bodega owners, in Mexican abuelas, Senegalese
taxi drivers, and who's beck nurses, Trinidadian line cooks and
Ethiopian aunties, Yes, aunties.
Speaker 1 (21:33):
I was. I wasn't born in New York, but I've
been here for more than ten years. Fifty four percent
of those people voted for Mam Donnie. I've only been
in New York five to ten years. Seventy nine percent
of those people voted for Mam Donnie. I've been in
(21:55):
New York City for less than five years. Eighty five
percent of those people voted for Mamdani. Why do you
think the Biden administration opened the border so quickly? It
was day one, And after opening the border, they then
(22:21):
for four years did everything in their power to bring
as many foreigners into this country as humanly possible, and
not just bring them in, to make sure they spread
them all across the United States of America. They didn't
just send them to New York City and LA and Seattle,
(22:42):
all across the Midwest, large towns, small towns, thousands, tens
of thousands, hundreds of thousands, buy the million. What are
you doing? I don't understand why would they do that.
I don't know why would they do that?
Speaker 3 (23:01):
Since I became a citizen and that was twenty years ago,
and I migrated from Kenye originally, my family is back
home in Kenya, and how I see how things are
going on, like with families being separated. As a human being,
as a mother, separating families, especially children from their mothers
(23:26):
or fathers. I don't believe in that. So that made
me come out and also come and vote.
Speaker 1 (23:34):
There is a coalition that wants communism for the United
States of America. There is a coalition of two major groups.
These groups have chosen to join forces, and their interest
is to burn your country to ash. One of those groups, foreigners.
(23:56):
We've covered it a million times, we will cover it
a million other times. Foreigners don't know about your constitution.
They don't care about your constitution, they don't care about
your history. They don't even understand this concept of freedom
or free markets or God or any of these other things.
What they know is in politics, you vote for someone
(24:18):
and that person hands you things transactional and tribal. Transactional
and tribal. That's how foreigners grow. That's how foreigners vote,
which begs the question, what is the other part of
the coalition? How do we get swept in these elections.
This is from NBC exit polls. Young women Eighty one
(24:40):
percent voted for Mandannia in New York City, eighty percent
voted for Chryl in New Jersey, Seventy eight percent voted
for Spanberger in Virginia. Young women have joined forces with
hostile foreigners to ensure Communists get elected in this country
and put your country to the torch. The young women part,
(25:02):
we can talk about that, and we will talk about
that in a moment. I'm not going to avoid that,
so don't think I will. Of course, that will be
horrific and offensive to a bunch of people, and of
course I don't care. Let's focus on the foreigner aspect
of it. The Trump administration and the administration's hopefully republican
(25:24):
that come after the Trump administration. The mass deportation of
foreigners is everything everything. Let me explain it this way tomorrow.
If you could snap your fingers and send fifty million
foreigners out of your country, every part of your country
(25:48):
would improve almost overnight, and it would be bordering on
impossible for Democrats to ever win a national election ever again.
And you could snap your fingers and bring in fifty
million more foreigners into your country overnight, every part of
(26:09):
your country would get worse, and it would be impossible
for Republicans to ever win any election ever again. You
may and probably do, have some quipples with the Trump
administration about this or that or foreign policy, and I'm
going to get to that. And by the way, I'm
going to talk to the Trump administration here in a
moment as we go over these election results in the
(26:31):
midterms and things like that. The mass deportation of disloyal
foreigners must happen. It must happen without apology, It must
happen without hesitation the days of the GOP working with Democrats.
But I mean some can stay here, no no, no, no, no, no, no,
not a single one can stay here. But what about
(26:52):
the women gone children just right there behind mom gone men, women, children,
and not just not just well the murderers. We should
get the no, no, no, no no murderers are Step one.
All of them gone. If you're not an American citizen, gone.
(27:14):
And then we'll address some disloyal new citizens who should
be denaturalized and deported the second they speak out or
work against this country. Gone. You snap your fingers. Fifty
million gone tomorrow. Your country's saved. You snapped your fingers
and brought in fifty million more. Your country's over. That's
(27:35):
a fat and every single poll shows that to be
the case. And you know who knows it, the communists.
Speaker 2 (27:43):
I speak of Yemeny bodega owners and Mexican ubuelas, Senegalese
taxi drivers, and who's beck nurses, Trinidadian line cooks, and
Ethiopian aunties, yes, aunties.
Speaker 1 (28:05):
Deport all of them, millions, tens of millions, and take
your country back. We will continue. In fact, I'm going
to address the women portion of that in a moment
before I address the women portion of that. You've ever
been in a store buying something and you had them
offer you a credit card. Hey, you save twenty percent
(28:27):
on this today if you get the best buy credit card,
maybe you've taken them up on that offer. I want
you to picture this picture taking them up on that offer,
and them coming back saying, ooh, sorry, we can't give
you a credit card. I don't understand. Everybody gets one
of these. Yeah, but your credit score is five point
fifty what I've always had seven hundred credit? How did
(28:50):
that happen? I don't know, sir. You don't get a
credit card or a new fridge today. That happens to
people all the time because I identity thieves steal their
data and take large loans out in their name, and
you have no idea, none until you try to lease
a car, buy a house, get that credit card. Let
(29:11):
LifeLock protect you, and if they can't, they'll make you
whole again. You want to save up to forty percent
your first year LifeLock dot com promo code Jesse is
how you do that? Or call one eight hundred LifeLock
promo code Jesse term supply We'll be back. Feeling a
(29:34):
little stocky, Follow like and subscribe on social at Jesse KELLYDC.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show and a fantastic Wednesday.
Do not forget to email your ask doctor Jesse questions
in for tomorrow Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Of
course that's gonna be a good time, like it always is.
(29:57):
All three hours belong to you. So we addressed the coalition,
the coalition that in places like New York, New Jersey, California,
in Stall's communists, the coalition of foreigners we already covered it. Now,
the coalition of younger women. What is happening there? I
(30:18):
could sit and read for you, stat after stat after
stat eighty four percent. You know what that number is.
That's women eighteen to twenty nine. That's how much they
voted for Mamdani in New York City. Now, how do
you explain that? When you think about how a guy
(30:39):
like that campaign? How do you explain a guy who
gives speeches like this and nineteen year old women love it?
Speaker 2 (30:47):
I speak of Yemeny bodaga owners in Mexican abuelas, Senegalese
taxi drivers, and who'sbeck nurses, Trinidadian line cooks and Ethiopian aunties? Yes, aunties?
Speaker 1 (31:09):
What accounts for that? Okay? So there, This is a
large subject, but it is something that we're gonna We're
gonna try to drill down on just a couple things.
How do we save our young women. How do we
save them from a life of misery? How do we
save them from burning our country down? How do we
stop this? What do we do about the gen z,
(31:32):
the younger women who are who hate this place, who
routinelet marched to the poles and install communists. Allow me
to point to this. I have this. I swear on
my life. This is the final bit of polls and polling.
I'm going to read for you tonight. But if you
(31:55):
had no high school degree, none, ma'am, Donnie got forty
percent of your vote in New York City last night.
If you graduated high school, he only got thirty nine percent.
Some college, some college forty percent. Working class people of
(32:15):
New York City rejected it outright. We're not talking about
some union workers here, some construction guys. We're not talking
about those line cooks, not the American ones anyway. They
wanted no part of this whatsoever. But bachelor's degree fifty
seven percent, advanced degree fifty seven percent. I know we're
(32:41):
supposed to live in this society where we pretend like
men and women are all the same. Men and women
are equal. I can do anything a man can do.
Men and women are not equal. They are built differently.
It's not that one is superior or one is inferior.
They are built differently. A young man, for better or worse,
(33:07):
is more inclined to rebel against the norms of society.
It's the way young men are. I certainly was like that,
and to be frank, I'm sure I probably still have
a lot of that flowing through my veins. More rebellious,
don't tell me what to do. That way of thinking, now,
that can be wonderful and it can be terrible, don't
(33:29):
get me wrong. But it does exist young women, young women.
It's all women, but this really affects young women more.
They have a desire not only to fit in with
their peer group, they want to be mothers. Does not
(33:50):
mean every woman wants to be a mother or should
be a mother. I'm not saying that you're not a
failure if you're not, but I'm not saying that. But
I am saying that is an instinct. It runs through
the veins of young women. Historically, eighteen year old women
were on their second or third kid. Historically everywhere across
(34:13):
the globe. When you're eighteen, you're already married. It's baby
making time. Your biological clock works that way. In fact,
those are your prime child bearing areas of the years.
I'm not begging you to get married at eighteen, please
and make sure you choose the right person. I'm just
saying historically, biologically, that's the way it works. Now, what
(34:35):
can happen, Not that it always happens. What can happen
to young women? You send them away from your home,
away from your dinner at night, away from your church
on Sunday, away from your influence. You send them away
from your home, and they walk on to a communist
training camp. I do not say that about the university
(34:58):
system because I'm trying to be over the top. That
is what so many of these institutions are. They are
communist training camps. And your nineteen year old baby girl,
I know she has good values now, I know you
raised her right. I'm not questioning you and your parenting
at all. She's going to get eaten alive on that
(35:22):
college campus because it is designed to eat her alive.
They are going to take those desires to fit in,
they are going to take those desires to be a mother,
and they are going to twist it like the devil
always does, and they are going to make her the
mother of the communist movement, and she will fit in.
(35:44):
When she does it, her friends will tell her how
wonderful it is, so glad you don't listen to your
Republican dad anymore. And she will, like all wonderful mothers do.
She will fight two and nail for her baby. She
will commit acts of violence and encourage acts of violence
(36:06):
against anybody who challenges her baby, who threatens her baby.
But the problem is her baby isn't a baby. The
problem is her baby is the Communist revolution. That's why
you sent your eighteen year old daughter named Brittany off
to college. She was beautiful, brunette, had blue eyes, she
(36:30):
was an athlete, played volleyball in high school. And that's
why four years later, her name's Trina. She weighs two
hundred and forty seven pounds, she has a body covered
in piercings and tattoos, and she won't come home for
Christmas this year because she thinks you are the Antichrist.
(36:52):
We are sending our young women to communist training camps,
and they are burning down the country because of it.
That's a fact. We'll move off of that because we
do have to talk about a couple other aspects of
last night, and then we'll move on through some fascinating things.
Do not discount the influence of corporate America. Either corporate America,
(37:14):
the corporate world has chosen to get involved in culture.
Verizon has You know what Verizon's been doing, handing out
your cell phone information to the FBI so they can
send the SWAT team to your house. You don't have
to believe me that it's all public information. Now, they
(37:35):
couldn't wait to collaborate with the communists against you. But weird,
I haven't. Hey, Chris, have you heard puretalk come up
in any of these conversations? Oh? Pure Talk didn't participate
in any of that. Huh. Almost sounds like that company
is led by a patriot, probably fought in Vietnam. Oh yeah,
he did so patriotic. He hires Americans switched to your
(38:00):
talk to save a fortune. You'll patronize a cell phone
company that loves you and your country. Dial pound two
five zero and say Jesse Kelly. Pound two five zero,
Say Jesse Kelly, We'll be back.