Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Another hour of the
Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic Monday. We have many,
many things we're going to get to. In fact, we'll
discuss Tom Tillis New York communism, Eric Swalwell politically in
some trouble.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
Bill Gates is a nightmare.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
All that and so much more coming up in the
second hour of the world famous Jesse Kelly's Show. First,
we're going to talk about how they're all just thieves.
But even before that, you know what time it is.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
It is the.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
Start of Metal of Honor, Monday hour two. Start of
the second hour, we take an American hero and we
honor him. The email to the show for your love,
your hate, death threats is Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
But you can also send in email requests from Medal
(01:09):
of Honor recipients who are near to your heart for
one reason or another. Maybe there's a family relation, or
they're from your hometown, or you met them once, or
just like the story. But we love the ones with
a little personal note attached to it, like this one. Hey, Jesse,
thanks for the for recommending the book about Face by
(01:30):
Colonel Hackworth. That guy's a total inspiration. If you need
a citation from Medal of Honor Monday, please consider my
wife's cousin, Terry Taruo Kawamura. He was in Vietnam and
gave his life in nineteen sixty nine to save his friends.
(01:53):
So this is one of those ones that these ones
are often very, very short ed.
Speaker 1 (02:01):
I'll tell you.
Speaker 2 (02:04):
I think in the future when I do these ones,
I'm going to start reading two or three because they
are so short. And here's what this is. I'll give
away the game a little bit. The guys who jump
on a grenade or some sort of explosive to save
the lives of their friends. The citation is short because
(02:25):
the act of bravery is it's done in an instant.
When a guy grabs a grenade launcher in a machine
gun and goes and charges ten different machine gun nests
over the course of twelve hours. The citation is two
pages long because that's how long it takes to tell
his tale of bravery. But does his bravery exceed that
(02:50):
of the man who sees the live grenade land beside
his friend and in an instant his first reaction has
to be your first because you don't have much time.
But his first reaction is to jump on top of
it to kill himself. I would argue those levels of
bravery are equal. And the reason I bring all this
(03:10):
up is, you know, I read these. It's a passion
of mine to read them. It's not just like I
read them here on the air. I will occasionally, as
if I'm bored around the house thinking about heroes, I'll go.
There's all kinds of different websites where you can go
read these, and you can just start reading through them
alphabetical or by conflict, or by a branch of service, whatever,
(03:31):
you go read them. It's amazing how many of them
are stories that are he jumped on a grenade, He
jumped on a grenee, he jumped on a grenade. There
are a lot of them, and their names. Because the
citation isn't as long, they're not making a movie out
of it. It'd be a short movie because the citation
isn't as long. The lion doesn't get the credit the
(03:54):
others do, so let's read it. He was twenty years old.
Terry to Ua Kawamura. He was born in Honolulu. It
was the territory of Hawaii then nineteen forty nine December tenth,
nineteen forty nine native of Hawaii. So what did he do?
Speaker 3 (04:15):
Hey honoring those who went above and beyond its Medal
of Honor Monday.
Speaker 2 (04:28):
For conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity in action at the risk
of his life above and beyond the call of duty.
Corporal Kawamura distinguished himself by heroic action. While serving as
a member of the one hundred and seventy third Engineer Company,
an enemy demolition team infiltrated the unit quarters area in
(04:49):
open fire with automatic weapons. Disregarding the intense fire, Corporal
Kawamura ran for his weapon. At that moment, a violent
explode tory hole in the roof and stunned the occupants
of the room. Corporal Kawamura jumped to his feet, secured
his weapon, and as he ran toward the door to
(05:11):
return enemy fire, he observed that another explosive charge had
been thrown through the hole in the roof to the floor.
He immediately realized that two stunned fellow soldiers were in
great peril and shouted a warning. Although in a position
to escape, Corporal Kawamura unhesitatingly wheeled around and threw himself
(05:34):
on the charge in completely disregarding his safety. Corporal Kawamura
prevented serious injury or death to several members of his unit.
The extraordinary courage and selflessness displayed by Corporal Kawamura are
in the highest traditions of military service and reflect great
credit upon himself, his unit in the US Army, and
(05:58):
that brave young man gave up his life from the
rest of his life for his friends when he could
have escaped. I don't play taps in his honor. So
(07:00):
one story story I've told you before about the Vietnamese.
They were great sappers in filtraders. Essentially, they would find
ways through our lines and get into our camps and
do these horrible things. But it's almost guaranteed death for them.
(07:21):
Why would they do it? We forget about the religious
levels of radicalization that come in some communist circles. And
the story I told you before it was I believe
a Green Beret camp where they came in killed a
bunch of people, and of course died in the process,
because when you get in behind enemy lines, inside his lines,
you're going to eventually die. And they were wearing headbands
(07:45):
that said, we came here to die. The Sappers were
wearing those. This was what our guys were dealing with
in Vietnam. You can almost think of it. The similarities
when you read these stories are overwhelming. Just Gie hottis
were where you get some Gihati walking in with a
suicide vest with a nail bomb on it or something
(08:07):
like that. That was the level of radicalization our guys
were dealing with. And these guys who would get in
these camps, some of them were way away from civilization,
way away from other bigger American bases where reinforcements would
be there. This was part of how you lived your
(08:30):
life when you went to bed at night, even though
you were in a bunker, liked these guys were in
a bunker, a fortified bunker. And clearly you can tell
from the citation the Sappers had a plan. Throw a
charge on the roof, blow a hole in the roof.
At that point in time, you take the second one
you brought along, throw it through the hole in the
roof and kill everyone inside. And I'm sure they were
(08:52):
set up outside with their guns trained on the exit,
getting ready to mow down anybody who exited.
Speaker 1 (08:59):
They were.
Speaker 2 (09:01):
Radical man. Absolutely, radical communists are insane, radical, murderous thieves
and religious zealots. And this is the kind of crap
they do. It's kind of crap they did in Vietnam. Now,
speaking of which, I played something earlier for you. Let's
have a talk about communism, the mentality, what they do.
(09:24):
I played this earlier for you. The mayor of the
most powerful city in the world.
Speaker 4 (09:29):
And while today's true cost of living measure confirms that
the affordability crisis touches every corner of our city, we
know that these effects are not applied evenly. So often
it is black and brown New Yorkers who are hit
the hardest. This preliminary Racial Equity Plan is the first
step in developing a whole of government approach to tackling
(09:50):
that reality. It is a plan that lays out these
first steps to solve decades of neglect and discrimination, and
it places the work of forty five city agents within
a singular framework.
Speaker 2 (10:03):
So what kind of people is he hiring? What are
their plans? This plan was Oh sorry, I want to
show her some respect. Her title is the New York
City Chief Equity Officer.
Speaker 5 (10:15):
This plan was born during a defining moment in our
city's history, when New Yorkers were in the streets in
the midst of a global pandemic, calling for justice, demanding accountability,
and bearing witness to brutality and folding on our streets
and on our screens. In that moment, our city was
asked to reckon with the deep, systemic inequities that have
long shaped life here and to do better. The release
(10:37):
of the preliminary citywide Racial Equity Plan is a reflection
of that collective mandate. It is not just a document,
It is a commitment, a commitment to confront institutional and
systemic racism within our city and to begin the work
of dismantling it.
Speaker 2 (10:51):
Let's talk about communists, Why they do what they do?
Where is all this going? Maybe even a little brief history.
Jesse Kelly returns next. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a wonderful, wonderful Monday. Remember if you missed any
(11:11):
part of the show, you can download at iHeart.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
Spotify iTunes.
Speaker 2 (11:16):
Now, before we get to making fun of Tom Tillis
and everything else out there, these communists, why do they
do what they do? Well, there's something that stands out,
and it will stand out to you if you ever
start reading about communist revolutions, what happens in the wake
(11:36):
of the revolution, and this it really does apply to
all them.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
It's universal.
Speaker 2 (11:42):
The people who are doing the revolution are scum, low
life scum. It's very very common. They're almost always philosophers
or something like that, not business people or anybody with
any real experience in something generals, it's not anybody with
what you would call real world experience. It's almost always
(12:05):
carried out by some spoiled rich kid who majored in
basket weaving or something like that. And so you have
the phacipher leading the revolution, but who works for him,
Who's gonna help him? He can't do it alone. Well,
they go scrape up the scum of society everywhere they go.
(12:26):
It is every single time that the revolution takes place,
the communist revolution, they do the same thing. They find
the scum, the criminals, the people who are hated by everybody,
the uniquely violent, and they recruit those people into the revolution.
You know how, I've told you a thousand times that
I'm a crotchety old man, and I've started trying to
(12:46):
eliminate five to ten percent of the people from my
life because they're the people who ruin everything. Those people
who I am always trying to cut out of my life,
those are communist recruits. That's who they go for every
single time. So they bring those people in even if
they're not true believers. They're useful soldiers in the revolution.
But they don't just bring them in and have them
(13:08):
sit around eating coffee and bagels. Once the revolution succeeds
at any level, Once the revolution succeeds and they have power,
they then take those scumbags and they put them in
the most critical positions of power in society. If I
(13:33):
went down to the local jail, Harris County is where
Houston is. If I went down to the Harris County jail,
not that everyone in there is violent or scum, but
I went to the most violent parts of Harris County jail,
and in those violent parts of Harris County jail, I
went and grabbed twenty twenty murders, rapist, thieves, repeat offenders.
(13:54):
I went and grabbed them, and I said, fellas, come on,
you're coming out of jail. You're coming with me. We're
going to have a revolution here in Houston, Texas, and
we're going to take control of the city government. Now,
think how big Houston is. It doesn't matter if you
don't know. It's millions and millions and millions of people.
And we do our revolution and we kill enough people
and persuade enough people, and we're gonna give you this,
(14:17):
and if you do what we say, we'll pull your
fingernails out, that kind of thing, and we take over
and I win. I am now the de facto ruler
of Houston, Texas well. My rapist, murderers and thieves, those
are my boys. So guess who's going to be running
(14:37):
things around here? Now, Hey, you're going to manage this. Hey,
you're in charge of that. You're in charge of that.
These dirt balls who don't know anything, the losers, the scum,
the violent, they are rewarded with high positions of power
(14:57):
after the communist revolution is by the way, some of them,
some of them will start causing problems and then we'll
just take them out and shoot them. That's what they do.
But for the others, they are rewarded. Now, think for yourself,
even if you don't know how to run a city.
I don't know how to run a city. So it
don't feel bad if you don't know, think for yourself,
(15:20):
what would happen in the city of Houston if Jesse
Kelly and his twenty scumbags ran everything. How quickly would
things just come apart? Things would just fall apart. This,
on a smaller level, is what is happening in the
(15:41):
United States of America. It's been happening in corporate America.
It's happening in blue states, It's happening in blue cities
across the country. These people don't just get elected and
sit there. They get elected and they go find all
their scummy friends and they steal your tax money, and
then they hand them positions of power.
Speaker 4 (16:03):
Well, today's true cost of Living measure confirms that the
affordability crisis touches every corner of our city. We know
that these effects are not applied evenly, so often it
is black and brown New Yorkers who are hit the hardest.
This preliminary Racial Equity Plan is the first step in
developing a whole of government approach to tackling that reality.
(16:25):
It is a plan that lays out these first steps
to solve decades of neglect and discrimination, and it places
the work.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
Of Remember that lesbian they put in charge of the
New York Fire Department, the one who'd never been a
firefighter before, and everyone started yelling about that.
Speaker 1 (16:39):
But she's not even been a firefighter.
Speaker 2 (16:43):
That wasn't what they were looking for. You see, she's
an ally. She's oh, this lady the new head of
the New York Fire.
Speaker 3 (16:52):
Department, Bully and Bond. Signor is a career first responder.
In just nine days, she'll be running the world's busiest
fire department, one of the most important appointments of the
incoming administration. Although she never served as a firefighter, she's
confident that won't matter.
Speaker 6 (17:09):
I know the job, I know what the firefighters need,
and I can translate that to this administration who's willing
to listen. I know what EMS needs. I have been
EMS for thirty plus years.
Speaker 3 (17:22):
Mont Signor is a trailblazer for the LGBTQ community.
Speaker 2 (17:26):
Who will serve there? It is an ally, you see
now what happens from here, Well, that's the ugly part.
And why should you care, Jesse, I'm not in New York.
I will explain why you should care. Then we'll do
some emails before I explain that. Let me explain that
(17:47):
identity theft is a big, big, crime now organized crime
across the globe. They basically all have divisions now dedicated
to stealing your identity. Well, you're just a normal person.
What do they care about your Social Security number? Four?
Why do they want your name and address? It's a
multi billion dollar industry because they're going to take loans
(18:09):
out in your name, and they're going to drain your
bank account and you'll have no idea until it's too late, unless,
of course, you get LifeLock. LifeLock monitors all these things
for you, so if there's a problem, LifeLock lets you know.
If they happen to get you, God forbid, well, Lifelock's
US based restoration specialists will fix it guaranteed. Either that
(18:34):
or you can spend years trying to fix it yourself.
Speaker 1 (18:37):
Join now.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
You save up the forty percent off your first year
with the promo code Jesse one eight hundred LifeLock promo
code Jesse or LifeLock dot Com promo code Jesse. Terms apply,
We'll be back.
Speaker 7 (18:50):
He doesn't care if.
Speaker 8 (18:51):
You believe him, but he's right.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a
wonderful Monday. Remember you could email the show you love your.
Speaker 1 (19:04):
Hate, your death threats.
Speaker 2 (19:05):
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com will finish up our
talk here and that'll lead us right into commis being dirty.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
Thieves, will do some emails. I will get to Trump.
Speaker 2 (19:16):
He gave a press conference on iron today, said a
few things which we can touch on, But I want
to go back to what I was saying before about
these places in the country under complete communist rule. We'll
talk about California under communist rule, San Francisco under communist
rule headline San Francisco becomes the first US city where
(19:37):
diesel prices top eight dollars a gallon. Where everyone's talking
about New York City right now, man Donny.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
But the people who don't.
Speaker 2 (19:44):
Live there, they'll say things like, well, it's not my problem.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
It's not my problem. I don't live there.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
I don't care. I'm not buying diesel in San Francisco.
I'm not trying to rent an apartment in New York City.
Why should I care? Well? How do these cities and states?
How is it possible they can destroy their economies as
fast as they do and still exist. How's that possible?
(20:16):
New York can't print money? Headline New York City can't
afford both big pensions and free buses, And of course
they can't. How are they doing it? Then? California can't
print money, they don't have a printing press.
Speaker 1 (20:32):
How do they do it? Then?
Speaker 2 (20:35):
How's it possible? Here's how it's possible. New York City,
they will lose a fortune, they will go deep into debt,
and then New York State will give them a bunch
of money to bail them out. But how can New.
Speaker 1 (20:54):
York State do that?
Speaker 2 (20:56):
They also have this huge deficit they're taking on debt.
How can they do that? New York State bails out
New York City and then turns around to you, to
the federal Treasury and says.
Speaker 1 (21:13):
Hey, we uh we medicare.
Speaker 2 (21:17):
We got a lot of Medicare expenses and Medicaid. Look
we got we need two hundred million dollars can get
Can we get two hundred million dollars from you?
Speaker 1 (21:26):
Same thing across the country. How can California survive? How
is it possible?
Speaker 2 (21:32):
Well, they just steal from you. That's why it can
and should matter to you that places in the United
States of America are under communist control. And this is
why we have headlines like this national debt is over
four times greater than is being reported. We have a
(21:55):
gargantuan amount of debt in this country. We continue to
allow communist areas of control in the country. They are
stealing from it. They are looting it as fast as
they possibly can, and that bill is gonna come do now.
Speaking of stealing from it, it just goes along the
(22:19):
lines of everything we've been talking about. In the end,
they're all just thieves. Communists are just thieves. And I
talked about the scumbags they recruit. It's wild how often
they're thieves. They'll recruit, not a committed communist, a thief,
someone who steals for a living. Hey, would you like
to join the Communist Party? You're perfect for what I'm
(22:41):
looking for. They just steal everything all the time. They're
always stealing everything. Oh, this isn't even headline. This is
a social media post from Elizabeth Warren. The United States
Senator Jeff Bezos has two hundred twenty two billion dollars.
(23:02):
If he paid my wealth tax this year, we could
fund insulin in America for everyone who needs it, plus
free school lunch for every kid in Texas and have
plenty of money left over. Elizabeth Warren looks at a
really rich guy, and this solution is quite simple. I
should take what he has that should be mine.
Speaker 1 (23:26):
I should take it. It's how they think.
Speaker 2 (23:29):
Here's this is an older one, here's joy Anne Reid.
Listen to how they think, Listen to the thought process.
In the end, they're all just thieves.
Speaker 9 (23:40):
That if you go back before the twentieth century, there
were no income taxes, there were no regulations on business.
You could earn as much money as you want, leave
one hundred percent of it to your children with no taxes.
That's the world they want back. And to get it back,
they need society to check.
Speaker 2 (23:56):
These people used to just leave all their money to
their kids and they didn't let us steal any of it.
They used to earn a living and we couldn't steal
any of it. Can you believe they want to go
back to that? They're all just thirty thieves. And you
(24:17):
really see it in the blue controlled areas of the
country where they have all these programs. There's all these
programs in Los Angeles. You should go look at the
billions that has been dedicated to Los Angeles homeless programs. Wow,
with that much money that homeless problem has probably been
(24:38):
cleaned up, right, let's check in on that from the
local news.
Speaker 7 (24:41):
And this is bad in the area isn't safe either.
We actually had to drive a few miles away just
for safety reasons for this liveshot. But the things that
we saw, we won't forget an up close, exclusive look
underground at living conditions too extreme for words. It's hard
to imagine someone living in that human waste, in an
(25:01):
overpowering stench. Alright, I gotta get back. Just moments earlier,
we watched someone climb out of that storm drain using
the sewer as shelter.
Speaker 2 (25:12):
They're living in the storm drains in Los Angeles. So
I don't understand all this money for all these homeless programs.
How could anyone be living in the sewers in tents
in the streets. Huh, Well, they just stole all the money.
Speaker 1 (25:30):
The thieves.
Speaker 2 (25:31):
They're always just thieves. Remember the Palisades fire. Palisades fire
burns down all these homes. They put on a I
believe it was one hundred million dollars. I might have
that wrong, but I think I'm right. They put on
a charity concert and raised one hundred million dollars for
the Palisades fire.
Speaker 1 (25:51):
Yeah, they just took it all.
Speaker 2 (25:54):
They couldn't get handed out any money to the people
who were actually victims of it. No, you just now,
what do you mean? They're just thieves in the end,
Here's Iona Presley. Eviction is an act.
Speaker 10 (26:06):
Of violence and we have to do everything to prevent it.
Is devastating for the families, It degrades the help of communities.
There is great stigma associating with it and affects your
credit score.
Speaker 6 (26:18):
Housing is a human right.
Speaker 10 (26:20):
It is a predictor of health outcomes. It's a sential
for social and economic mobility. And so many people when
they receive a notice of wick or to vacate their homes,
usually because of nonpayment because wages are not keeping pace
with inflation, they don't know their rights, and a lot
of times they will just make it.
Speaker 2 (26:40):
They'll look at your apartment and they'll think I should
have that, I should steal that. They're just horrible people,
And I'll continue to circle back to this. This is
why I am so desperate to make sure these people
do not come back to power. They will do worse
(27:02):
the next time. I promise you, cross my heart hope
to die as bad as the bid administration was, as
sick and evil and tyrannical it's a Biden administration was.
They will do worse the next time, because they always do.
Not a single Democrat in the country elected or your
(27:25):
liberal and Pegy had to come to Jesus meeting with
themselves after last time and said, we went too far,
that was bad, that was wrong, we shouldn't Not one
nobody has ever named me, one even a made up story.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
Hey, Jesse, my sisters, none zero. The number stands at zero.
Speaker 2 (27:46):
Zero Democrats in this country think they did anything wrong
under Joe Biden. Well, some of them think they didn't
go far enough. They'll do worse next time. All right,
we'll do some emails. Next it is the.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
If you miss any part of the show, you can
download at iHeart, Spotify iTunes. Hey Bronco, I was thinking
about the current polling. If asked the questions on Iran
and the economy, I would be answering the same way
to give us negative polling. But I'll be voting Republican regardless.
I get it that I'm in the camp of anti Kami,
But could this be possible with independence as well. No,
(28:29):
I appreciate that you would deviously try to fool the
polsters and iplaud that, but no, remember what independence really are.
Independence are people who don't pay attention. And if you're
one of the and I I don't mean a politically
involved independent, maybe you got mad at the GOP and
you registered independent. That's not what I'm talking about. I'm
(28:51):
talking about the swing voter who votes Democrat one cycle
and then Republican the next, then Democrat the next and Republican.
It's not I'm not talking about necessarily about register their
independence when I bring that up. That's not what I'm discussing.
I'm talking about the swing voter because you know, you
understand how it works. There's a certain percentage of the
country that is going to vote Republican no matter what.
(29:11):
That's probably you, I'll tell you that's me. I don't
apologize for it. They're the lesser of two evils. That's
who I'm voting for. And there's a certain percentage of
the country that'll vote Democrat no matter what. Well, the politicians,
it's not that they don't worry about those people, because
those people are your workers. You know, they need you working,
They need you spreading the message, dragging people to the polls,
(29:32):
donating things like that. Those people matter, they're the ones
who make it go, but they're not the ones who
actually decide elections. Frustratingly, because of our ridiculous voting system
in this country, the people who decide elections are the
ones who don't pay attention. Now, pause for a moment.
Remember it's not supposed to work that way. You are
(29:55):
supposed to have achieved X, Y and Z before you're
allowed to vote in the elections of our country. That's
how the founders wanted it. Property owner, whatever it may be.
You had to achieve X, Y and Z, and if
you do that, you stop getting swing voters. Remember Rhodesia
wasn't glorious and wonderful for no reason. They had one
(30:19):
of those systems. You had to have X, Y and
Z and work great country, work great because you had
your cream of the crop choosing who led the country.
But as soon as you degrade your system to where
ours is, where anyone who lives to the age of
eighteen can choose who the next president is, then you
(30:39):
develop a system where we have now with the one
we we have now where it's just well, I'll Votobamba,
then Trump and then Biden and then Trump, and I
don't know. There are people who don't pay attention. When
you're dealing with people who don't pay attention, their own
(31:01):
specific quality of life needs to become something you make
a priority at all times with your language, all times.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
When they are pulled.
Speaker 2 (31:13):
They are angry. Like, we'll talk about Iran next hour,
I'll do. I'll talk about Trump's press conference. I was
gonna avoid it, but I am gonna. I'm gonna address.
I will talk about what he said and where we're
going tomorrow night and what may come or what it
may not come. But before we get to that, when
it comes to Iran, it's not that the uninformed voter
(31:34):
has something specific against the war itself. They may or
may not. It's that the uninformed voter can't afford gas.
So anything you're talking about that doesn't have to do
with that, he is going to dislike.
Speaker 1 (31:54):
You see. It's not that he has specific.
Speaker 2 (31:56):
Policy disagreements about Ukraine or or border policy or iron
or something like that. He cares about himself. He votes
every single time based on himself, and that's why he
wildly swings back and forth all the time. I saw
a poll today. To make my point, I saw a
(32:17):
poll today in Virginia. Now, remember, Virginia had this dirtball
Democrat governor. He made everything worse. Virginia goes out and
votes in Glen Youngkin. Glenn Youngkin, by almost every measure,
made life better for people who live in Virginia. Life
was more affordable. He ran things well. Whether you liked
(32:38):
Glen Youngin or not, he did it better, much better
than the Democrat did. Then wait what he went out
and voted in another Democrat. And now this is remember
this was November. They voted in another Democrat. She's only
been there for three months. Eighty percent of Virginian's wish
she wasn't the governor. They're unhappy, just voted for What
(33:01):
do you mean you're unhappy?
Speaker 6 (33:02):
What?
Speaker 2 (33:02):
Well, this is the problem. I only want you to vote, Sorry,
not to patronize you. I only want informed people to vote.
I want people who care enough to dedicate a portion
of their day to being informed about the issues. Even
if you and I don't agree on something on a politician,
on a policy or something whatever, you care enough to
(33:25):
pay attention.
Speaker 1 (33:26):
I only want you to vote. If only you voted,
we'd be better off.
Speaker 2 (33:30):
But that ain't the system we have. The system we have.
The people who decide elections went out and voted for
Terry mccauliffe to be governor of Virginia and then got
mad at him. So they went out and voted for
Glenn Youngkin to be governor of Virginia. And then the
next election they went out and they voted for Abigail
Spamberger to be governor of Virginia. And you and me,
(33:52):
as we sit here paying attention, we went to reach
out and just choke these people and say.
Speaker 1 (33:56):
What are you doing?
Speaker 2 (33:58):
All they know is the two in front of their face.
That's the extent to which they pay attention. They're not
interested in politics. In power is really what we're talking about.
They're not interested in politics. They're not interested and who
actually holds the levers in this country? All they know is, well,
couldn't afford gas, voted for the other guy? Nope, can't
afford gas voting for the other guy. Up, can't afford this,
(34:20):
voting for the other guy. So because of that, as
I have expressed time and time again, given the recent inflation,
if you want to win office in this country and
keep it and keep your popularity. When the American people
hear you talk, they need to hear you talking about them,
(34:43):
caring about them. You're struggling, I'm working on it. You're struggling.
I'm working on it. I know you can't afford this.
I'm working on it. We're going to make that better.
I'm working on that. That's what the people who decide
elections need to hear. That's what we brought up again
and again and again and again and again. And look,
(35:04):
Democrats have figured it out.
Speaker 8 (35:06):
We'll see a war that continues to escalate. More than
a dozen countries are involved, and billions of dollars of
taxpayer money are being spent overseas when this administration refuses
to actually spend a dime to make life more affordable
for the American people.
Speaker 2 (35:23):
Now, he's a dirt ball, he's a liar. He would
do this exact same spending. Every bad thing you can
say about him is correct. That's a lie. All that
stuff is true. But does that sound like a man
who's done the poll numbers? Does that sound like a
man who knows what I just told you is true?
And They're gonna run on that in the midterms.
Speaker 1 (35:43):
Look at you Republicans sending your money overseas well, you
can't get a job, Are they liars?
Speaker 2 (35:50):
Sure?
Speaker 1 (35:50):
Are they gonna do worse? You bet?
Speaker 2 (35:52):
But that's what they're gonna do. All right. We'll touch
on this Iran press conference to some other things before
we talk about that. I am I think I'm going
to get more and more radical when it comes to
hiring Americans. I've decided to become even worse. I am
so tired of the jobs reports like the one I
read you earlier about foreigners getting jobs by the hundreds
(36:14):
of thousands, Americans can't find work. I'm going to talk
even louder about companies like Pure Talk who hire Americans.
You know how much money pure talk could say, Boy,
it would be really good for that bottom line. There's
a call center in India begging for you. Pure Talk said, Now,
I'm not interested. This is for Americans, American jobs, American workers.
(36:37):
When you change your cell phone plan from Verizon AT
and t r T Mobile, when you pick up that
phone and you dial pound two five zero and say
Jesse Kelly, I'll guarantee you this, You're going to talk
to an American who speaks English. That's my cell phone company.
Oh and they'll save you money dial pound two five
(37:00):
zero and Sage Jesse Kelly Hire American and patronized companies.
Who do we still have an hour? Hang on