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April 2, 2020 76 mins

6.6 million out of work, people are going to start getting desperate.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Your holster is way more important than you think it is.
It's just way more important than you think it is.
What look, and I get that the holsters not the
sexy part of carrying firearms. All right, You want to
talk about your weapon and your ammunition. You want to
talk about your safety training. You want to talk about
how you did at the range. Oh, look at my groups.
I was doing these failure drills today, and all that

(00:21):
stuff is really important. I mean, really really important. I'm
not discounting that, but I've known so many people who
do all those things. They take all the necessary steps,
and then they carry with a holster they bought from
a big box hunting store that was made a thousand
at a time. Please don't put your life in one
of those holsters. You need to trust Northwest Retention Systems

(00:44):
because it's all custom made gear. It's the only thing
I carry around NW Retention dot Com. That's NW Retention
dot Com used to promo co Jesse gets you ten
percent off a big man. Huh, good idea. This is

(01:05):
the Jesse Kelly Show on KPRC nine fifty. Here's Jesse Kelly.

(01:30):
You know something morbid I think about Maybe this is
my personality. Maybe this is uh Marine Corps thing. Maybe
it's just a guy thing. I don't know. But I

(01:50):
think about my end, you know, my death. I don't.
I don't mean think about it. And I don't want
to die. I mean I don't. I don't want to die.
Not superhuman here, But that's I don't think about it
in that way. I think about how I want to go.

(02:11):
And I guess part of the reason I think about
that is I love these great figures in history. I
say great. I mean, some of these guys are monsters.
But as we've always said, what's that great lord act?
In line, almost all great men are bad men. I

(02:34):
like the ones who got to go out a great way,
their own way, the way, you know, if they penciled
out their life. I want to do this and this
and this, you know what, and this is how I
want to die. I think that's awesome. Like Alexander, the

(02:56):
great story, that's that has always bummed me out. I
don't mind that he died young, was thirty two thirty three.
But this amazing general, maybe the greatest tactical general of
all time, always outnumbered, tears through everybody, never loses a battle,
and get sick and dies. Maybe poison, they don't know.

(03:18):
But Alexander the Great should have died with a spear
in his hand somewhere right. Let us talk for a
moment about King Pyrus. Now you need to be thinking
two fifty BC. That's I mean, that's rough, but you

(03:40):
know I always keep it rough for you. King Pyrus
was He was the king of Eperus. Now I understand
all these words are starting to clash together already. Don't
let your eyes glaze over. Let me explain. You can
picture the boot of Italy. Now, off the southeast coast,

(04:01):
across that little body of water, there was this place
called Epirus. It was Greece. They were Greek. And understand
this about the Greeks, and this is difficult to understand
when we look at history, because everything tends to glob together.
We do that to simplify things, and I do it
too all the time, We all do it. Greece wasn't

(04:24):
necessarily grease, but it was Greece. And I mean that
in this way, each city state had its own thing,
very much, its own thing. Sparta here Athens there eventually
Macedonia or Macedonia. You have all these different and there
are so many others, all these different Greeks, and they

(04:45):
were always fighting. Picture them like brothers who didn't get along.
They were already always fighting and often killing each other. However,
there was this thing about being Greek where they would
kill each other all the time. But there are plenty
of times they just didn't take kindly to you trying

(05:08):
to kill one of their Greek brothers. No, no, I
can beat up my brother. You can't beat up my
brother's that's gonna be a no for me. Which brings
us to the city of Tarentum. They are on the
Italian Peninsula. They're on what you would picture as Italy

(05:29):
to a again across the water from Eperus, and Tarentum
is a Greek city. Now you have to understand, and
this can be difficult because again we glob even time together.
Rome was not quite Rome yet, not the Rome you
think of the Rome that rules the Nome world, the
Rome that rules the Mediterranean. Yes, they were very powerful,

(05:51):
but they were still an upstart and just got done
taking over the middle of the Italian Peninsula. They didn't
even have the South yet, they did not even own
their own peninsula yet, and Tarentum was one of those
Greek states on the bottom, and they were in some
trouble in King Pyrus Pieris, I'm sorry, was a bad dude,

(06:15):
and I mean a bad dude. You remember Hannibal. We've
talked about Hannibal before. Hannibal Barka, Hannibal of Carthage maybe
the greatest general ever. He said, Pieris was the second
greatest general who ever lived, besides Alexander the Great. When
I say Pierus is a bad dude, I mean a

(06:35):
bad dude. And he goes over and fights the Romans
and he kicks the crap out of them, and then
he goes down to Sicily where the Carthagens are. You know,
they're kicking everyone around down there in Sicily. Was like, hey, Pierce,
can you come help us? And he says, yes, I
certainly can, and he marches on down there and kicks

(06:58):
the crap out of them too. Then he goes back
to Italy and he's like, maybe I'll fight Rome again.
And this is basically what this guy did. He took
his twenty five to thirty thousand troops, including war elephants,
which is sweet, by the way, and he went around
stomping everybody else now he ran into a problem. By

(07:22):
the time he got back to Italy, Rome, who had
already hurt him badly. Even though he won the last battle,
the Romans were waking up. You see, he tried to
attack the Romans again, this time in anticipation of Pierce's
war elephants. The Romans took a bunch of pigs, covered

(07:42):
those pigs in soot, in pitch. I mean, it's flammable oil,
all right, sticky flammable oil. And they lit the pigs
on fire and sent the pigs down the hill towards
the elephants. One, obviously, that sounds horrific. Two, I bet
that smelled wonderful. Stop Chris. Three, imagine how that sounded,

(08:08):
a screaming, burning pig running down the hill. Now, know
that elephants can be a little skittish, you can imagine
how that went. Before Pieris knew it, his own elephants
were ripping through his own people because they were scared
to death. Long story short, Piis ends up back in Greece,

(08:31):
got about eight thousand dudes with him, looking around, and
he thinks to himself, well, we gotta do something right,
And all of a sudden there's this guy in Sparta.
Now understand this, this is not again all time and
history globs together. This is not the Sparta, you know,

(08:53):
the three hundred Sparta, the Spartans who are the bat Now,
they're still Sparta. They're still bad dudes, but they're not
at their peak nowhere near. And there was a former king,
royal blood, guy Cleonymus of Sparta, and he said, my
fellow Spartans hate me. I bet you I can hire Paris,

(09:14):
and Paris will go and attack Sparta and then make
me king. They'll put me in his king Pieris says, well, yeah,
we need some money, right. Then they march on down
to Sparta. Now here's the problem for Piaris. Sparta may

(09:35):
not have been Sparta of old, but how many times
have we talked about Sparta on this show. You remember,
even the women are rumored to be some of the
most beautiful in the world because they were even fitness freaks,
because the Spartans believe that a fit woman and obviously
a military man would create a stronger air, a stronger
military next generation. Well, you don't just march into Sparta

(10:01):
and start slapping people around. They had everybody, men, women
and children, stabbing spears at him. Pieris has to back away. Well,
now Pierres needs something to do. Pieris looks over and
there's a little dispute in this town called Argos. And

(10:21):
here we have this greatest general, Hannibal Barca himself says,
the greatest general whoever lived, looks over at Argos and
says to himself, Wow, this should be easy, right. It
wasn't easy. I saw a little thing approaching me. She said,

(10:44):
I've never seen a man who looks well alone. Could
you use a little company on my way? My girls
a little bit. I just want to use your love tonight.

(11:28):
Stand but keep it. I just I don't Chris. We
need to mix it for eighties, we do, right, you

(11:49):
know what, we neglect the eighties. That's a good jam
right there. You'd never picked that jam was one of
the you know, top twenty songs of all time. But
every time that song comes on, you're listening, huh. I
haven't heard that song in ages. As soon as it
came on, I'm like, dude, yes, yes, let's do this.

(12:10):
King Pieris heads to Argos. It was going to quote
settle a dispute, but there was another army on the way.
He didn't think they were there, yet they were there.
They get in a massive street battle in the streets

(12:32):
of Argos, and we have this amazing General Piaris, and
I I had to gloss over so much of his
life as we have time constraints on the show, but
I would highly highly recommend you read up on him,
and I'll talk about him again with individual battles and

(12:54):
things like that. I will, but just know this, this
dude was a beast. And I don't mean the kind
of beast that sits back in his tent while everyone
else is out there bleeding. I'm talking about the kind
of guy just like Alexander. He was at the front

(13:15):
of every battle, chopping people to bits, taken wounds. He
got in one battle that was so bad against the Romans,
and he had on special armor and this big purple
cloak and he was just putting bodies in the ground.
According to the stories, I mean the dudes on horseback
chopping people up. And finally all the Romans are coming

(13:37):
at him because they can see Paris's own troops are launching.
And let me tell you, if you've never been there,
when your leader is putting himself in the most harms way.
There is something about that that is inspirational, and his
troops were looking at this dude thinking dude, I will
lay down and die for this guy. Finally, so many

(13:59):
guys are trying to kill Piis. His people make him
take his cloak off. He's like, dude, we love you,
but you're gonna die. Please, please, When your own troops
love you so much, that like, bro, come on, let's
be a little safe here. That's love, people, that's love.

(14:21):
And he got himself caught in the street of our Streets,
of our ghosts, Age of forty six, and finally he
orders a retreat. He's like, men, we gotta get out
of town. Pack it up and pack it in. Let's
get out of this city. They start heading towards the
city gates. Only there's a problem. Pieris had brought his

(14:43):
elephants with him into the city. One of those elephants
was standing in the city gates panicking and nobody could
get through. And now both sets of soldiers are there
hacking away at each other, and Paris, because he's well,

(15:04):
he's Piis dives in, starts killing people and eventually takes
a spear threw the breastplate into his chest, turns to
see who got him, and it's a teenage peasant boy

(15:28):
with a spear in his hand who was just defending
his city, and piis still very much alive, gets ready
to kill said boy. When the boy's mother leans out
her window, takes a big, heavy ceramic tire or tile

(15:50):
and throws it down from the second story hits piis
in the back of the neck, shattering his vertebrae, paralyzing him.
On the spot here has falls down dead. That story
has always bummed me out for the same reason the

(16:11):
Alexander story bummed me out. You have this amazing general
doing this and that, and he's taking on the Romans
when he has no business beating him, and he's winning,
and he's got war elephants, and he's amazing, and he's
killed by a woman with a ceramic tile. I can't

(16:37):
believe what we're seeing right now. In the United States
of America, job's numbers are out. You remember the three
point two million unemployment that was called in last week,
and everybody acknowledges the three point two million is light,

(16:58):
and I mean extremely light for what it really was.
It shattered every record. The previous record was seven hundred
thousand and change. I believe three point two million shattered
every record. It was also light because the unemployment lines
and all the states, the phone lines were full of
people could not get through. I heard those stories by
the thousands, plus the self employed people who couldn't declare,

(17:22):
so on and so forth. The numbers what was way
higher than that. Numbers come out today six point six million,
more than double. I don't know how to put this
to you, that that number gets worse. Did you know

(17:52):
that it took until the second year of the Great
Depression to get to nine percent unemployment? Do you know
we just hit that number on April second. We're at
nine percent unemployment six point six this week does not

(18:13):
turn into one or two next week. Next week it's ten,
then it's fifteen. You want to talk about exponential growth.
I understand there is a virus, a deadly virus. I'm

(18:35):
not discounting it at all. We are about to see
deadly in this country. Deadly. That's what a great depression is. Deadly.
We have suicide rates spiking all across the nation. Knoxville

(18:55):
a ten percent increase already in suicides by April second.
That's not talking about the drug addiction that's about to
go through the roof. Alcohol sales are up fifty five
percent in America. Spousal abuse as people are desperate and
trapped at home, child abuse. You think that's bad? Oh

(19:18):
oh wait, I have a couple others. Your jaw's going
to drop. Well, we know what that music means. That

(20:04):
means the one, the only. My buddy, Sean Parnell joins
US Afghanistan vet or, author of some really sweet books,
and running for Congress against the Democrat in a swing district.
Keep that in mind, people, Sean Parnell, Sean buddy, there
are plenty of times where I enjoy being right. Six

(20:27):
point six million people being out of work today after
three point two million last week is not one of
those times. My brother. Yeah, I know, I mean, you've
you've been screaming from the rooftops for a long time
about this. I mean, and and you know I think
that you know, you know where I fall on this.
I don't think we should throw throw caution to the
win with the virus. We should take it seriously. But

(20:48):
you know, our pandemic response I think needs to be
more surgical. I think the President was on the right
track when he was looking at designating you know, high
risk areas versus low risk areas and sort of sending
people back to work slowly to get the economy going again.
I mean, the only way a shut down works and
social distancing like this work is if it's short term

(21:09):
and in the goal then is to keep as many
of these businesses open and pay the rent to keep
the lights on, and maybe they have to furlough employees
for a short time. But once this passes, they can
hit the ground running, pick up where they left off,
and rehire all those people. But the longer this goes on,
the more difficult that becomes. And you know, save if

(21:30):
restaurants or retail change shutter and close their doors forever,
those people who were laid off and who are furloughed
aren't going to be able to go right back to work.
That's my big fear is that this can't the government
can't print enough money to keep this economy going. Uh.
It's it's it's not a pragmatic solution, because even the

(21:50):
most extreme measures that we take without a vaccine aren't
it will be minimally effective over the long term. You
see my point. We could be facing a second epidemic
here in America in November and December, only this time
on far weaker economic footing, and that's really what concerns me.
And we can't shut down the country for twelve to

(22:11):
eighteen months, which which is that that's the time they
think it's going to take for us to develop a vaccine.
So we need a more curgical response, and we need
it soon. Sean, this is my problem. And I guess
I am not bagging on doctor Fallacy, doctor Burkes, although
I've had a huge issue with a couple of things
they've said. I'm not bagging on these people are acting
like their radiots or some kind of deep state plants,

(22:33):
or I'm not saying any of that. My problem is this, Yes,
we have these two docs. They're telling us how to
kill a virus. That's telling us how to kill a virus. Yes,
they should be in the room, they should give advice,
we should listen, but they can't all of a sudden
run America. America is not a virus. We cannot become

(22:53):
wholly focused on only the virus because we're going to
kill the rest of us. And that's what we're doing.
We're murdering the country for our virus. Yeah, it's it's um.
That's why presidential leadership is so important. And I think too,
I think I think in large part the President thus
far has done a good job. But I think he recognizes,

(23:16):
you remember, he was saying for a time the cure
can't be worse than the problem itself. So the president
recognizes that restaurants, retail stores, small businesses all over America
are in are in peril right now. And so it's
the president's job to balance the risks that put forth
and the recommendations is put forth from these doctors, but

(23:38):
also look at how America is handling this as a
whole and make decisions. It's it's like being it's like
being a leader in combat when lives are on the line. Uh,
leadership is about making decisions. And I think part of
what we're seeing is is this crisis has highlighted that
many of the politicians that we elect maybe haven't been

(23:58):
I'm gonna saying all of them, right, but maybe haven't
been a leader in crisis when lives are on the line.
The point I'm trying to make here, Jesse is that
there's no path forward right now, in the midst of
this crisis that will be without risk, right, And so
I think Americans need to recognize that as we move
forward and try to balance the health of all Americans

(24:22):
with the health of our economy, because if our economy
crashes and these small businesses closed, right, and if they
close forever, the Americans that were furloughed or laid off
won't be able to go back to work when this
storm passes. Right. The good news is is that if
this shutdown is short, I think we will be able
to pick up where we left off because the fundamentals

(24:44):
of this economy was the best ever in American history.
I think you know, if you look at the Great Recessions,
the fundamentals of that economy was poor. There was a
housing crisis. We had to rebuild certain sectors of the economy,
and that took time. It took years. So in this case,
we're talking about months, not years, precisely because Donald Trump's
economy was so strong. But if this shutdown goes on

(25:06):
too long, my concern is restaurant or small businesses closed
and people can't go back to work. Sean, I feel
like maybe military people view this a little differently. But
I don't know about you, although I'm relatively positive this
is the case. I had plenty of people who were

(25:26):
high ranking officers heavy and made the officer types, but
officers with a lot of brass on their caller who
were absolute utter morons. Now I had several that were amazing,
but I had several that were utter morons. And I
feel like that has given me, and I'm sure you
an ability to not I don't see a doctor and
a lab code and automatically think, man, that guy is

(25:48):
probably a genius. I bet he knows it all. Now,
I feel like he has a lot of education. But
you go ahead and tell me why I should view
you as being an expert. And my issue with shut
down the country is twofold. One, it's disastrous for the economy. Two,
it's not even realistic. People are not going to do

(26:08):
that in a country of three hundred and fifty million people.
It's not realistic. So how was it ever considered? Sean?
I'm as well order you to go grow wings and
jump off the roof and fly. Yeah, it's that. This
is what I'm talking about about. A draconian lockdown without
a vaccine is going to be minimally effective right without

(26:29):
I mean because no matter how long, like we could
lock down this country for four months, right and without
a vaccine, the virus will not be eradicated. So I
think the whole point of the shutdown was to be
short term to buy our healthcare system time. Right. So
if it's me making the decisions, you know, I'm looking
at the most effective affected areas, and I'm mobilizing the

(26:50):
National Guard to build additional field hospitals, and you know,
get let's get charities into those areas to build up
additional field hospitals, get more beds, to make sure our
healthcare system has a little bit more resiliency, um. And
I think the President's doing that um. But at the
same time, our response needs to be more balanced. We
can't simply just say we're going to shut down in perpetuity.

(27:11):
And this leads me to something else, like when we
see this through, when when we put out this fire,
we have got the whole China accountable for what they've
done with the virus that they've perpetrated on the world China.
If it's up to me, we've got to bring all
of our medical device manufacturing and all of our antibiotic
production and medicine production back home, all of it, one

(27:33):
hundred percent of it. And we need to offer tax
incentives to companies like Apple to come back home to America. China.
How do we hold China accountable? By the way, sorry
to interrupt, I mean, how do we do? What does
that look like? Man? How do we hold them accountable? Well,
we need to get all our like like I just said,
we want to bring our supply chain home. That's the
first step, right. The second step is forcing to pay

(27:56):
some sort of financial reparations to America and the rest
of the world that we're devastated by this virus. And
it starts with canceling our debt. China holds north of
a trillion dollars of American debt all that needs to
be canceled. And because this is costing, this is costing
America trillions of dollars in economic damage. And so the
first step is, let's cancel our debt and let's pay
reparations to the rest of the world. Because it's the

(28:19):
fact China unleash this plague. Here's something that also kills
there's something else that drives me crazy. While Democrats were
focused on impeachment and I'm not even trying to politically
snipe here. While Nancy Pelosi was passing on impeachment pens,
President Trump was forming a coronavirus task force. On January fifteenth,
when the virus, the first case of coronavirus was here

(28:41):
in this country, impeachment managers were being appointed on the Democrats.
So you think this was the cost of a lawless impeachment?
Do you think that it might have distracted us from
protecting Americans? You see the cost of poor leadership, right?
Do you know it's so important we elect leaders are
not politicians. It's so funny because you never yeah, I mean,
you know, you can get mad about the impeachment stuff

(29:03):
when it was going on, and I know you were,
and I was, but you don't. You don't even realize
there's extra cost to it that you can't see at
the time. And you're right, and now we do see it.
While you remember, there's a video of them marching their
somber impeachment documents New Capital like a bunch of stooges.
And now we're all looking and we're like, wow, while
this virus was spreading, that's what you were doing yeah,

(29:25):
and now you have Adam Schiff out there talking about
forming a nine to eleven styleth commission to investigate President
Trump's response to the virus. And it's like, you know,
my god. You know, the president band travel from China
on January thirty first. I was among some of the
first people, with Tom Cotton, who actually called for a
band from travel to China before the president did. But

(29:46):
my god, when the President made that decision, he was
called xenophobic and racist. And you know, there are super cuts,
the jump cuts on the Internet and on Twitter of
all these Democrats talking about how it's racist and that
they should go out to they should go to a
Chinese surroundtation. He needed now that this was about racism.
It was about keeping the country safe. It was about
identifying a viral plague and making sure that we keep

(30:08):
our country safe from it, you know. And so this
is why this is, this is why it's so important
to take the house back. This is why race is
like mine matter, because if we don't take to the
house back right, then not only will we probably see
impeachment two point zero, but the next four years of
this president's administration will be plagued by nothing but investigations

(30:31):
into his response here. And I think most Americans know
the President's approval ratings in an all time high. I
think Dallas at sixty three percent, which is just unbelievable.
Most Americans know that a viral plague created by China
or that started in China that came here is not
the president's fall. Do we want four more years of
nonprop investigations than the president? Maybe even impeachment two point

(30:54):
zero can give you. Yeahan, Sean for Congress at CEO,
appreciate you, my man, Sean Parnell, go knock him dad brother,
all right, thanks broad Sallow Hero follow hero Hero every

(31:45):
time blows there is. I'm trying to think of the
best way to put this to you, and you know
how to wrecked. I've been with you this entire time.
I mean, jeez, we did a segment on eating Grandpa
the other night. You're gonna have to go back and

(32:07):
get the reference. All right. I'm not even gonna explain
it to you who but I've promised you that I'm
gonna be direct. I've promised you that, you know, I
promised you honesty. I will never promise you that I'm
a good person I am not. I admit that I
am a disassociated sociopath. As my good friend Michael Berry says,

(32:29):
I know. I know all that, but I will always
give it to you straight. And you should know I
generally do lighter radio. As you've heard the show. As
we go along. Yes, I'm hammering this topic, but I'm
trying to branch off and talk about other stuff and

(32:50):
tell little stories and talk about food and stuff, just
because I know for a fact that you are being
barraged with bad news all day long. It's all over
the TV, it's all over the radio. Maybe you have
bad news in your life right now. I know there's
a chance you're worried about your job, you're worried about
your income, you're worried about your spouses, incomes, your kids.
I get that. So I'm not trying to bring you down,

(33:13):
and I never will even when we're done with all this.
I am not here to stress you out. That's part
of the show I do. I don't sit and scream
into the microphone all day long. Yes I get upset sometimes,
there's no question, but I don't do We're all gonna
die radio, But I want to I want to read

(33:34):
you a few things. First, briefly, don't worry. I don't
do a lot of reading articles stuff. First headline, this
is from ABE ABC seven dot com prosecutors engineer deliberately
ran train off the tracks an attempt to smash the

(33:55):
USNS Mercy SAM This is in San Pedro, Angels. An
engineer deliberately ran a train off the tracks at high
speed near the port of Los Angeles and an attempt
to crash into the USNS Mercy hospital ship. Pacific Harbor
train line derailed Tuesday, so on and so forth. Federal
prosecutors alleged that train engineer Eduardo Moreno forty four of

(34:19):
SAM Pedro intended to hit the ship. He said, saying
he thought it was quote suspicious and did not believe
this ship is what they say it's for. The USNS
Mercy is one of those hospital ships they're bringing in.
Keep in mind there's another one of these hospital ships
in New York. Understands something when you see the headlines
about these ships not taking on any passengers. The ships

(34:41):
are not taking coronavirus passengers. That's a bit of misinformation
that's out there. They're taking the passengers who specifically don't
have it so they don't have to be hospitalized with
people who do make sense. Okay, so we have a
train engineer seize the ship, who knows what conspiracy theory
went through his mind, decides to try to drive a

(35:01):
train into it, which did its own way. It's kind
of impressive, Chris. I had no idea you could steer
him like that. I figured you were pretty much bound
to the tracks. But nevertheless, here we are Fallacy's security.
This is the second headline. This is from theour dot
com Fallacy. That's the doctor Fallacy. His security is stepped up.
As doctor and as doctor in face of US coronavirus response,

(35:24):
receives threats. Anthony Fallacy, the nation's top infectious disease expert
in face of the US response to the novel coronavirus pandemic,
is facing growing threats to his personal safety, prompting the
government to step us up his security. According to people
familiar with the matter, the concerns include threats as well

(35:45):
as unwelcome communications from fervent admirers. Oh there's another headline,
March shattered. This is from Freebeacon dot com. March shatters
monthly gun sales records US faces down, threat faces down,
threat of coronavirus. Now, what do all those stories have

(36:05):
in common? We are facing desperate times. I Am not
trying to freak you out. We are facing desperate times

(36:26):
that are going to be filled with desperate people, and
we're going to discuss this very, very frankly. Hang on, drummers,

(37:02):
I want christ goes, but I'd say I'm gonna go dark.
You don't have to ramp up the darkness. But the
stones painted black. Dude, good grief. I feel like we

(37:24):
got a voodoo dolledge here. We're not trying to have
people swan dive off the buildings. Look, it's just time
we have a talk about this. And I have avoided this.
I had a private conversation with my buddy Buck Sexton
about it last night. We were texting back and forth

(37:45):
and we were trying to figure out I mean, he
has a national show. I have a national show, and
there is everybody knows I don't do that. I'm changing
the world radio. I'm just screwing off trying to make
your day fit better for fifteen minutes, that's all. However,
there there is a certain out of responsibility that comes
with the platform, like this there is it just is
I feel responsible people are listening. People will do the

(38:11):
things that I say. It's bad of an idea, that's
it is. So I've been hesitant to I've been hesitant
to lay this out in such a frank way and
the way that I'm about to do. But you need
to hear it. You need to hear it. So the

(38:46):
one you got, because you might can't run on the
all you might get the shot now, stolest of God,
just get it off my chest. Never had to battle
it prof from being tangled off your body. Gave the
big man huh need Now what a good idea? This
is the Jesse Kelly Show on KPRC nine fifty. Here's

(39:12):
Jesse Kelly. Arch shatters monthly gun sales record. Doctor Faci

(39:34):
now has to have security after death threats, and a
train engineer out in LA tries to drive his train
off the tracks and slam it into the medical ship
that's out there the USNS mercy, What do all these
things have in common? Desperate people are dangerous people. I

(40:04):
am happy about the gun sales record because that tells
me enough of you are already taking this seriously. But
for those who aren't. Let me just be really frank here.
I understand guns may make you uncomfortable. I understand you

(40:25):
may have children in your home, and that's a major concern.
Now what happens if he gets a hold of you.
It is not an option anymore for you to have
a weapon in your home. You must you must. You

(40:46):
find a way to get a weapon or two in
your hands, in the hands of your wife, figure out
take a class, take a virtual class if you have
to figure out how to use it safely. Remember safety
first at all times. Safety first at all times. Treat

(41:08):
every weapon as if it were loaded. Never point a
weapon is at anything you don't intend to shoot. Know
your target and consider its background. That's also an important thing.
Be careful those of you in a home pulling out
the street howitzer to potentially shoot a burglar in the hallway,
because his soft, pudgy body is not going to stop

(41:30):
that round completely if you choose the wrong one, and
those plaster walls may not stop it either. I'm just
telling you consider these things. Get a weapon, figure out
how to use it safely, and figure out how to
be deadly with it. Now. I know you might be
saying yessy, I care they close the gun range. Do

(41:52):
you have any idea the gains you can make with
your weapon when you have unloaded it and ensured it's
unloaded about twenty thousand times, and you practice with it
in front of a mirror, practice with it against a
dot in the wall, squeezing that trigger, making sure that

(42:15):
your sites don't go off of that spot. Is it perfect? Oh,
it's not perfect, but you can make sure you are
functional with the weapon. People. We have trained engineers trying
to drive their trains into medical ships. It's April second.
We had three point two million unemployment claims last week.

(42:35):
Let's be kind and assume that was nine or ten million,
and that's probably closer to what it was. We doubled
that number this week. That number is going up again.
The following week. That number goes up again, the following week.

(42:55):
That number goes up again the following week. As businesses
run out of capital, these numbers are going to skyrockets.
That growth doesn't slow. Do you want to talk about
exponential growth of a virus. That's what exponential growth looks like.

(43:17):
People are about to be desperate, and not everybody is
as sane as you and no, this isn't you know,
just in the bad neighborhoods, that upper middle class, white
neighborhood you reside in. Everybody's got everyone's got a Yukon

(43:39):
and a beamer in a driveway, white picket fences. Kids
have a nice bike. I think John works in banking. Yes,
John works in banking. I should say he worked in banking.
You see, they were way overleveraged. John had just bought

(43:59):
a boat and they had got a lake house just
last year, so they overspent a little because John was
actually due to get promoted, get a big pay raise
here in a couple of months. You see, John's a
vice president at a bank. He's he makes three hundred
and fifty thousand dollars a year. Now right now they're
spending five hundred a year and that's really getting desperate
and the kids are getting ready to go to school.

(44:20):
But all that's fine because he's actually scheduled to get
this promotion, said John's John's doing fine. Everything's fine, and
then wham, coronavirus hits and now instead of getting promoted,
John just got sat down by the boss and told
we have to let you go, and we can't afford
to give you a severance package. So now he's spending
five hundred thousand dollars a year bringing in zero dollars

(44:41):
a year. On top of that, John, you know, had
maybe some substance abuse problems beforehand. Now John maybe hitting
the peels a little bit too hard. Now John's desperate.
Now John's wife screaming at him. Now the kids are asking, Dad,
I can't they just canceled by? Are you still paying myself?

(45:04):
And now John's maybe thinking about hurting himself, maybe thinking
about hurting someone else too. I'm sorry if that's too
frank for you, but you know that's coming right. We

(45:25):
are firing people by the millions. The desperation that comes
with that cannot fully be understood. Have you never been
out of work? If you haven't been, let me explain
something to you. You cannot imagine that feeling. You cannot

(45:48):
imagine the feeling of the business, of the bills still
coming at you like a tidal wave, of your wife
looking at you like please do something. Of your kids
saying Daddy, do we have to eat kraftback and cheese again?
And you looking them in the eyes and wanting to

(46:09):
tell them, son, be happy. We're eating kraftmac and cheese.
Enjoy those last few boxes. That creates a desperation in people.
You don't want to imagine. And look, that's fine for
the majority, For ninety nine people out of one hundred,
they'll find a way to get through it. They'll pray
through it, they'll find charity, they'll find family, they'll find friends,

(46:31):
they'll get through it. But all you need is one
person out of a hundred. He's not gonna be fine.
He's going to get in his train one day and
try to steer it into a ship. He's gonna make
phone calls to doctor Foucy and threaten him. He's going
to look around, maybe at the place he used to work,

(46:58):
maybe at the convenience store up the road, maybe at
the bank that just told him he's about to get
kicked out of his house, and he's going to start
considering some desperate measures, some irrational, disgusting, violent measures. So

(47:18):
allow me to circle back to what I just told you.
You don't have an option anymore. So I'm just uncomfortable
around guns. Get comfortable around guns. The time is now,

(47:39):
in Demons Green, that we're just done. I got to
got to gotta digg its foe when de man Chris,

(48:26):
you have a sixth sense to you, Chris sends me
these You know what, Chris is amature? This Laguna Beach
City Council meeting is bombed on Zoom with with apparently
some dirty pictures or something. The incident occurred at five
thirty pm during the Tuesday, March thirty first meeting, just

(48:50):
as city Manager John Petig the game detailing coronavirus related
closures at the beaches, parks and trailheads planned for the
month of April. The meeting was the city's first virtual
meeting since the coronavirus quarantine. First to appear, but so
you understand, I understand some people are a little confused
on zoom. Let me explain this before I go on zoom.

(49:15):
It's on your computer. And again, I'm not a tech
wizard here, although I'm super smart, Chris. Zoom is a
place where ten of you can sit down in front
of your computers from your homes and your face will
be up. You know, you'll see everyone's face. And so
you were having a virtual face to face meeting. That's
zoom right. First to appear were dirty sketches with profane

(49:41):
words written on our whiteboard on the feature that allowed
users to annotate on a shared screen. Laguna Beach Mayor
Bob Whalen immediately asked Gavin cure In, the city's director
of Administrative Services, who was hosting the meeting, to disconnect.

(50:01):
Can you put a stop to that? Can you turn
off that screen? Gavin Waylan asked, it appears someone is
posting an inappropriate message. It's very disappointing someone would do
something like that. Sorry, I can't stopping I can't stop
picturing it. About five minutes later, when everyone except for

(50:23):
city Councilman Peter Blake Kieran and city Clerk Lazette shell Walker,
who were physically present in the council chambers were dialed in,
the meeting continued, only to be interrupted again five minutes
later by a live you know, a live scene of
people being affectionate. Sorry, I know that's inappropriate. I know

(50:50):
that's inappropriate. I do. I know that's inappropriate. But that's funny, man,
that's very funny. There was a video floating around gosh
a few days ago where people were on one of
these zoom calls and people people get confused when they're

(51:12):
on a conference call, and when they're on a zoom call,
and what happens is this is what happens. We all
know this because it's happened to us. I know it's
happened to you because it's happened to me. You're on
a conference call or in this case, a virtual zoom call,
and you're not really paying attention because you shouldn't be there.
Let's be honest. Let's just be honest about how these
meetings work, especially now when everything's virtual. I mean, the

(51:36):
whole country is locked down. Wow, we did what I'll
toid of us on a conference call tomorrow. And you're
thinking to yourself, dude, no please, because the truth of
the matter is this nine percent of conference calls, this
is prior to the shutdown, but ninety percent of conference
calls or you know, corporate meetings should not even happen.

(51:59):
People are in general scared to lead. They want to
share responsibility, they want to make sure everybody feels good.
And so you'll get a manager in charge of ten
people and he'll he'll say, all right, wait, we need
a corporate meeting, we need a conference call. When no,

(52:21):
you don't. You need to send out an email and
say this is what we're doing. Period, let me know
if you have any questions. So ninety percent of these
meetings should never happen. They just shouldn't. And at least
fifty percent of the people invited to these meetings and

(52:42):
conference calls now have no business being there. But we've
become way too inclusive as a society. That's become like
a word everyone wants to be. Oh, I'm very inclusive. Well,
we have to make sure we include Tammy from accounting
because we didn't include her last time and she complained
to HR that she was very offended. Can Tammy from accounting?

(53:03):
Can shut up or go find a new job. Well, look,
we have to invite Bill. I mean Bill. Bill has
been been with the company for thirty years and he
really likes to be invited to these things. I don't
give a crap what Bill likes. Bill can go powder quit.

(53:25):
I know that sounds mean, that sounds harsh, but look
that's me, and I'm right. I am the same way
I've been right about this virus response the whole time.
I'm right about this too, and everyone knows it. Most
of these people should not be there. Oh why wasn't
I invited because you're not important enough for the decision making.
We'll let you know. I know that's mean, but again,

(53:49):
you can't say that these day. Well, we have to
make sure we include everybody. No, you don't. Your board meetings,
you're a big corporate meeting should probably be like one person,
maybe too, Hey, John, what do you think about this?
You agree? Okay, we should go a different All right,
we'll go that route. Sounds good. Send out an email
to everybody. Done, corporate meetings done. So what happens now

(54:12):
is everybody's working from home. And working from home has
huge advantages. I'm glad we live in a society where
people were able to do this. I know it's a
big help to a lot of women who would like
to take care of the kids and get some stuff
done at home. This is fine whatever, I'm glad we
can work from home. But it also creates a more
relaxed environment. There's a reason that militaries wear uniforms. I mean,

(54:40):
there are a lot of reasons to it, but a
lot of it is for the person wearing the uniform.
You put on the uniform and you feel more buttoned up,
more ready to go. This is okay, It puts you
in game mode. You know, you ever played football, you
ever played basketball, You put on the Uni form, all
of a sudden, you're ready to roll. You remember the

(55:04):
story I told about Paris at the very beginning King
Pieris when he was taking on the Romans. Remember, Romans
were I mean thought to be barbarians by the Greeks
at this time. They weren't the fancy white marble Romans yet.
And Paris is gearing up for war against the Romans,
and the Romans had these advanced legions and military tactics.
Impius looks across at the Romans with their camps, because

(55:25):
the Romans were emphatic about having their camps lined up right.
Everybody was in uniform, weapons were all set up right,
I mean, super super discipline. And this is what he said, quote,
these may be barbarians, but there is nothing barbarous about
their discipline. We will see in action what it's worth.
It meant something to him. This great general looks across.

(55:48):
Everyone's in uniform, everything's lined up, Okay. They take this serious.
Same thing at working from home versus at the office.
You're at the office, okay, I've got on my business
slacks today, I've got my button up shirt. I mean,
so people get home and they're more chilled out. You
can't help it, you're more chilled out. I mean, yes,

(56:09):
I'm gonna be on the conference call, but I can
make some scrambled eggs while I do that. If I
just put it on mute, I can do all that, right.
Only only this one girl. She was on one of
the zoom calls again, one of the video calls, and
maybe got a little a little too relaxed while everybody

(56:33):
was on the call. While she was you know, had
the camera facing her. She walks into the bathroom, sets
the phone down away from the john to give you
a nice wide view, drops her drawers, plops down on

(56:54):
the toilet, and I don't mean for like half a second, Chris,
I'm talking. I'll have to look again. It was like
thirty seconds, bro, And everybody else on the call starts
to pick up on it because they can see what's
going on. And now they're all laughing and they're trying
to hold back the laughter and they're just there. And

(57:17):
finally and you can see, you know, the moment's gonna come.
The girl on the john freaks and like leaps off
the john and grabs the phone and heads the call.
I've never left so freaking heart it all my life
because because you know that person and that moment wants

(57:41):
to die, wants to actually physically die. If you could
handle a weapon at that moment, she would just end
it all. That's that kind of devastation. And I said it,
it's so funny because now I'm not exactly one of
these people. I know. I know you may find this shocking.
I'm not exactly one of these people who you know,
was dreadfully scared of what other people think. Dude, I

(58:05):
would be very embarrassed. I mean, that's that's embarrassing for
a woman like I said that video to my wife
and she kind of half laughed, and then she said,
you know, honestly, I would quit that day. And I
was like, no, you wouldn't, And she said no, I
wouldn't even my job right now that I love, I
would never go back again. As much as I love

(59:29):
to focus only on myself, Chris talk about only myself,
I realized a lot of people were saying, wow, Jesse,
you were right all along, You were right all along.
Oh I was not alone, Ladies and gentlemen, my guest
now as a friend of mine. He's a national security expert.
His name is Jordan shackt L and he has been

(59:51):
all over our illiterate response to this virus from the
very beginning. He's been all over the projections, which have
been he's been all over the economic devastation, which has
been crap. And Jordan six point six million new unemployment
claims this morning, but it's just a pause, right, Hey, Jesse,

(01:00:13):
thanks for having me on. And I'm also hearing that
pretty much every state's unemployment system is on the verge
of crashing or has already stopped working because there's so
much of a backlox. But ten million, we both know
that's that's not even close to the real number at
this point. It's not I tried to explain that at

(01:00:35):
the very beginning of the show, because I was hearing
the same things. I mean, I know personally companies who
have said only twenty percent of their employees who qualify.
I've already filed. People were trying to call. I know
a guy who waited on hold for three hours in
Ohio and then finally got hung up on I know
it was Cuomo himself, who said they had something like
seven hundred thousand calls when the previous record or no,

(01:00:57):
it was one million, one point two million. All he
had in the previous record was fifty thousand. The systems
simply are notwithstanding it. The numbers way over ten million. Way. Yeah,
it's just it's just crazy. I mean, I just kind
of was talking about this on social media that a
month ago the government officials were talking about social distancing,

(01:01:19):
and now all of a sudden, social distancing means you're
lockdown in your house until we say it's okay to leave,
and the timelines keep extanding, but the language remains the same.
You know, it's just like so incredibly orwellian what we're
dealing with right now. And it seems that Americans don't
have a vote, we don't have a voice, and we're

(01:01:39):
just listening to our bureaucrats that are advising us what
to do. And doctor Anthony Fauci has now called this
inconvenience quote quote unquote inconvenience many times, and these people
just don't get it, and people need to speak up
because it's getting it's getting absurd, and you know, our
nation is coming closer and closer to the brink of

(01:02:01):
economic collapse much sooner than we think. And you were
one of the first people to call us out, Doctor Fauci.
I'm not a doctor. I'm doctor Burks. You know, I'm
not a doctor. I'm not one of these people. I
don't I don't know their education. I'm sure it's hi.
I'm sure that you know all the Ivy League schools
and things like that. But Jordan, I'm looking at these numbers.
I mean, doctor Burks gets up to the podium two

(01:02:22):
days ago and says, well, if we don't do anything,
two million people were dead. But even if we do,
we're gonna have one hundred to two hundred thousand dead Americans. Now, Jordan,
maybe that's the case, maybe that's the truth, but I'm
not looking at numbers anywhere close to that. Where are
these numbers coming from? What? What are we looking at?
Do they have some intail out of China? We don't

(01:02:42):
have what's going on? Yeah, So, as you know, they're
looking at two models right now, and both of those
models are regularly revised basically daily, if not hourly. Because
the projections that they said at the beginning of the week,
the beginning of the month they're always wrong, so they're
just they're just guessing. And this, this two million number

(01:03:02):
was came from the first white white paper projection from
a college out of London that and the scientists behind
that has already revised his projections downwards I think twenty
times for his London model. So if you go down
twenty times from the Imperial College US model, you know,
it's the same ballpark that we're dealing with. And you know,

(01:03:25):
it's really frustrating because people will tell me, like, oh,
Trump setting himself up for a win, and like, you know,
politics is the last thing I want to worry about
right now. Like, we need to focus on giving the
American people realistic numbers so they can have some skin
in the game about this decision that we're making to
lock ourselves down indefinitely. How does this catch on? Jordan?

(01:03:46):
And honestly, this is in You and I may disagree
on this, although I doubt we do. I found the
entire concept of locking down an entire nation to be
frankly the dumbest thing I've ever heard in my entire life.
I can't believe it was widely accepted. I don't care
how many doctors agree that was the case. That has
never been done in the history of the world. They

(01:04:06):
have quarantined buildings, they've quarantined areas. I know, I believe
it was in Marseille. They actually built a wall around
the actual city one time when they had a plague.
But you cannot lock down an entire country. It's not
even possible. We see we've seen people screaming about everybody
while they're not social distancing. You can't lock down three
hundred and fifty million people. It's not even possible. Why

(01:04:28):
bother with it. This is what really got my attention
early on because you know, a lot of us you know,
I'm mostly a foreign policy national security guy looking at
the big picture events, and I had to do some
preliminary research to make sure that this was indeed the case.
And I was looking at the CDC, you know, all

(01:04:49):
these international health organizations that have dealt with pandemics in
the past, and none of them have recommended lockdown. You know,
this is a giant social experiment, and the government is
is not putting it that way, but that's realistic. We
are in completely uncharted waters. The scientists that are recommending
this have no idea what the end result is going

(01:05:12):
to be. And that's why it's so important that people
with common sense, who tend not to be politicians and
government bureaucrats raise alarmed about this because they don't see
that in the cure is becoming far, far worse than
the disease. How how does Donald Trump not see it?

(01:05:32):
I need someone to walk me through that, because everybody
knows I have been a Trump fan, still going to
vote for Trump again, honestly vote voted for him last time.
But Donald Trump, he's not bucking what they're saying. He's
going along with what they're saying. And I'm not pretending
to understand the stress with having a doctor come in
your office and tell you you have to lock down

(01:05:53):
the country or two million people were about to die.
I understand that's a decision I wouldn't wish on anybody.
But now at this point, or you have got to
look at these numbers if you're the president and be like,
the juice is not worth the squeeze here? Right? Yeah?
And you know, I think he was caught up a
little bit in the the situation in Queens, in his hometown,

(01:06:17):
literally the worst place for COVID nineteen in America. Where
you know, they're struggling exponentially worse than any other place.
And I think the President was really caught up in that,
and that's kind of where you saw his narrative change
from you the sure can't be worse than the disease,
to kind of handing delegating the political our entire society

(01:06:42):
to these two physicians scientists. But I really do hope
he takes the reins back soon, because you know, we're
a we're on a slide right now, and eventually you
can't get off that path to a great suppression and
it's coming much to than people think. And you know,
you were one of the first people to point this out.

(01:07:04):
I remember going through your your social media pro posts
and you said, you know, even these experts dire predictions,
double that, triple that, And that's exactly what's happening, because
it's so unprecedented. You can't even calculate for locking down
entire society. It's so tough to put projections on that
because of how outrageous the policy is. I don't want

(01:07:26):
to be right, and I don't understand how I can
see it and all these big brains cannot see it.
How can you see it, and all these all these
all these fancy schmancy people walking into Congress, walking into
governor's mansions, walking into mayor mansions. How can they not
see that this is national suicide. That's what's blowing me away. Man. Okay,
they have new hard numbers right now, and I'm telling

(01:07:47):
you I don't want to be dooming gloom, but I
feel like we're already on that path where they can't.
They couldn't reverse it now if they wanted to, and
we did it to ourselves, we only got about thirty seconds. Yeah,
I just want to kind of give people some level
of awareness about how DC operates. These people are not
any more intelligent than you guys. In fact, there there,

(01:08:10):
you know, street smart level is probably hundreds of times
lower than yours. So we should not be relying on
bureaucrats for this whatsoever. And do not put too much
faith into these politicians of bureaucrats because the government is
not here to save you. It is up to the
people to stand up for common sense and reason. And

(01:08:33):
I'll leave it at that. Jordan, thank you so much.
My brother come back soon. Thanks, man, could have a
big every money. Oh my god, it's bad I know

(01:09:19):
it's not bad. I see it fucking years. It fun.
We get our one now. Everybody knows I like to
make fun of democrats. You know that. I enjoy it,
and I realized throughout, you know, especially over the past
ten twenty thirty years. It's a common phrase, you know,

(01:09:40):
liberalism is a mental disorder and stuff like that. It's look,
it's fun, it's funny, but maybe we should consider it.
And the reason I say that is that I saw
this headline and I know joke. I thought it was
the Babylon Beat. The Babylonbe is that hysterical. I highly

(01:10:02):
recommend it if you're looking for a way just to
brighten your day because it's hilarious. It's a satire website,
and it's always satire, poking fun at poking fun at
the left, poking fun at at like mega churches and
stuff like that, because it's run by a bunch of
hilarious like Christian comedians. They're just it is pants wedding funny.

(01:10:23):
And I saw this headline and I thought it was
Babylonbie and it's not. This is real. It's one hundred
percent real. Deblasio, you know, mayor of New York Deblasio
very concerned about anti gay evangelical group running Central Park
Coronavirus Hospital. Let me explain. Samaritan's Purse is a charity,

(01:10:46):
a big charity, and I mean when I say big,
I mean all over the world big. They go everywhere
there is a major disaster. And unlike some other charities,
I don't work for Samaritans. First, they don't pay me
or anything like that. But unlike other major major charities,

(01:11:10):
when you give to a certain cause at Samaritans first,
like let's say you did it right now, you gave
to coronavirus, it actually goes to coronavirus relief. It doesn't
go to the CEO's summer cottage in the Hamptons. It
goes to coronavirus relief. It really is whatever your religious affiliation,
it is a good one. It highly highly rated as

(01:11:31):
far as their ethics goes. Because you have all these
watchdog groups that look into charities now as they should.
I've always said, you can call me a cynic all
you want, but I've worked within that industry. Y'all need
to start being a lot, a lot more diligent looking
into the groups that you give to. I got to

(01:11:54):
know a lot of their books when I worked back
in DC for about a year. And man, there is
some gross scum in the nonprofit community, like you can't
even imagine. They become gigantic slush funds, a lot of them,
and I mean big ones. They get all the head

(01:12:18):
guys rich and do it. This is the grosspark because
I have no problem with being rich. They do it
off of your emotions. I just want to give to
hurricane relief in Haiti. Here's here's my fifty bucks. I'm
gonna give up. I'm gonna give up eating today and tomorrow,
and forty five or or fifty bucks goes to some

(01:12:38):
CEO's bonus check. That's not an exaggeration. And this is
major ones that you would know either way. Samaritan's Purse
is not one of those ones. It's run by Franklin Graham.
That's Billy Graham's son. Surely I don't have to tell
you who Billy Graham was, you godless savages, Chris, do
you know? But even even Chris knows who Billy Billy

(01:12:59):
Graham was. He'swish it's Billy Graham. Franklin Graham's son runs
Samaritan's purse. And what they did was because they're freaking awesome.
They got word that New York was going to get
hammered by coronavirus, and New York has been hammered, especially
areas like Queens. I mean, look, New York is a

(01:13:20):
virus's heaven. It just is. It's old super system, old
water pipes, and it's so vertical. I try to drive
that point home that people because I know so many
haven't been there. But I love New York City. I
love it. I love the place, but it is different one.

(01:13:41):
When you go there, it feels old. And I like
old because you know, I geek out on history. It
feels very old, and it is shockingly vertical. Everything is
stacked on top of everything. You will have a three
or four story building with retail, retail shops, different ones

(01:14:05):
on every floor. Well, you can buy clothes on this floor.
There's actually a jeweler up on the second floor. You
can get your taxes done up on the fourth floor.
Then on the fifth floor it's a video game arcade.
I'm not it's just because space is so limited. Everything
is on top of each other. It is heaven for
a virus and So New York is absolutely getting it

(01:14:27):
between the eyes with coronavirus. Samaritan's Purse asking not for
a dime from anybody in the government or the taxpayer,
they get some hospital tents set up, they get hospital
personnel up there. Now obviously Samaritan's Purse, it's so, I mean,
the good Samaritan. Everybody knows that story. Chris probably even

(01:14:50):
knows it, even though it's the New Testament. Samaritan's Purse
is a Christian organization. They make no bones about it.
So let me see if I understand this. New York
is getting so blasted by coronavirus, and they're so desperate,
and we've been told for days there aren't enough hospitals,
and there run enough beds, and there aren't enough anything.

(01:15:12):
And they're seriously considering closing down a hospital tent because
it's Christian. Y'all have lost your freaking minds. Man, all right,
we're gonna rock and roll again tomorrow and then Monday
we go National Baby. That's all Newton Group Transfer. They

(01:15:54):
are here to help you if you're stuck in a timeshare.
These stories from people who have these time shares and
can't get out of them. They're shocking these timeshare companies,
not all of them, but so many. They get their
hooks into you and you can't give them up. You
can't give them up or they'll they'll do things like
they charge you thousands of dollars. One girl she got

(01:16:18):
past her time share when her mother passed away. She
gets past the timeshar. Doesn't want the time shar, doesn't
use the time share. They tell her she can get
out of it for four thousand dollars. She has to
come up with a four thousand dollars check. This is
not right, it's unjust and Newton Group Transfers is here
to help you. If you are in a timeshare and

(01:16:38):
one out or knows someone who is, call eight eight
eight eight four five three seven seven three that's eight
eight eight eight four Jesse or go to timeshare Jesse
dot com Newton Group Transfer They will help you out
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