Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly show.
Speaker 2 (00:15):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Let's have some fun
on a Tuesday. It's a Tuesday, and it's gonna be
a gigantic show tonight. Christopher Ray, the head of the FBI,
testified in front of the Senate. We have all kinds
(00:35):
of things to talk about there. The climate change genocidal
people are at it again. The GOP standard. GOP doesn't
understand what they're saying, doesn't take them seriously. We will
discuss that. We have so much to get to. We're
gonna talk about the diesel engine, in the history.
Speaker 1 (00:55):
Behind that forty five minutes from now.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Oh that in so much much more is coming up
tonight on the world famous Jesse Kelly's Show. I need
to do something before we do any of that. Dough
before we do any of that. Do you remember the
osprey that crashed off the coast of Japan. We have
an update courtesy of the US Military, Air Force and Marines.
(01:22):
We have the names. We read the names of people
who die in training on this show, and we honor
them with taps. We always have, we always will. These
are heroes who died for a cause, doesn't matter what
you think they died so others may live. Lessons will
(01:42):
be learned from this, and these families deserve to have
their sons honored as the heroes they are.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
Here are their names.
Speaker 2 (01:53):
Staff Sergeant Jake Gallaher, Major Jeffrey T. Honerman, Major Eric V.
Spend Love, Major Luke A. Unwrathed, Captain Terrell KA. Brayman,
Tech Sergeant Zachary E. Lavoy, Staff Sergeant Jake M. Turnage,
(02:18):
Air Force Senior Airman Brian K.
Speaker 1 (02:21):
Johnson.
Speaker 2 (02:23):
They gave their lives for something and they deserve to
be honored, and we will do so right now before
we do.
Speaker 3 (02:30):
The rest of our show. Rest in peace, brothers.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
All right, enough, now, before we get to the Dick
Durban thing about illegals serving in the military, the Christopher
Ray stuff mocking the GOP, we have to do a
couple things that are way more important than that, way
more important than that. First did John carry fart? I'm
(03:48):
gonna play look, I'm gonna play you the sound. I
don't want to make accusations when I can't confirm them.
Has anyone reached out for John Carey to John Carey
for comment? Do we know what's going on here? So
I'm just gonna play it for you. All I can
do is report you decide.
Speaker 4 (04:07):
It can be avoiding responsibility for taking away those things
that are killing people on a daily basis, And the
reality is that, do.
Speaker 3 (04:18):
You hear it?
Speaker 2 (04:20):
Look, let's play it again. Let's see if we can
zero in on this whole thing.
Speaker 4 (04:23):
Can be avoiding responsibility for taking away those things that
are killing people on a daily basis, And the reality
is that.
Speaker 2 (04:34):
That's a fart, that's one hundred percent apart. Again again, Look,
all we can do is investigate, right, All we can
do is investigate. I'm now pretty much a detective, so
I have to dig through the evidence to try to
figure out what's true and what's not.
Speaker 4 (04:50):
Can be avoiding responsibility for taking away those things that
are killing people on a daily basis, And the reality is.
Speaker 2 (04:58):
That not only was that a fart, I'm here to
tell you right now, that was a reliever part.
Speaker 1 (05:06):
You know how you can.
Speaker 2 (05:07):
Tell a reliever f art being he was trying to
hold that thing in, and then you could tell just
the way the fart came out, you could tell that
was like, oh that feels better moment that that fart
hurt him. A little bit, and you could almost you
can almost sense the relief in his voice when he unloaded.
Speaker 4 (05:23):
This can be avoiding responsibility for taking away those things
that are killing people on a daily basis. And the
reality is that.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
It's almost like the crowd was clapping. The fart which I.
Speaker 4 (05:35):
Was can be avoiding responsibility for taking away those things
that are killing people on a daily basis. And the
reality is that.
Speaker 2 (05:44):
To hear the crowd y, I bet you feel better anyway. Look,
I think it's a fart. It's up to you. I
report you decide, all right, I report you decide that
we had to do.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
First, here's what we have to do.
Speaker 2 (05:56):
Second, we'll get to the illegals in the FBI stuff
here in just a moment. There are things that I love, cheese, burgers,
wonderful music. We'll get to that in a little bit.
I got a new invention here in the studio I'm
pretty excited about. But the thing I'm most fond of
(06:17):
is being right about stuff.
Speaker 1 (06:19):
You know this.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
That's why I gave myself the nickname the Oracle. Do
you remember? You probably do? But do you remember back
in March of twenty twenty two, I'm sure you have
every show memorized back in March of last year. So
by my estimation, this is like two years ago. Do
you remember when I came on the air and I
said this, why is Andrew Cuomo coming back? I mean, millionaire,
(06:44):
wealthy family friends in high places. I don't care how
persona non grata it is. Andrew Cuomo could simply wait
a couple months, maybe a year if he has to
do a lot of fishing on his yacht, pretend to
like his dog and his wife. Come back and sit
on some board of some finance firm. Couple million bucks,
and you're not hard to find those in New York.
They grow on trees. Why come back? Why come back
(07:06):
at all? Well, he's sitting on all this power. He's
sitting on eighteen million dollars, and the nature of man,
the nature of man is to use power when you
have power. Andrew Cuomo gone? Is that some kind of
(07:28):
a joke. Is a traditional political family. We got them
all over this country. How many of them ever leave?
From the Clintons to the Bushes to everyone else. You
can't get rid of them. These people get in there
and they want to stay in there, and then their
kids get in there and then their kids get in there.
Why because they can? Why would Andrew Cuomo come back
(07:51):
after all that disgrace, national disgrace. Well, eighteen million dollars
buys yourself a lot of power. Headline from the New
York Post today, Andrew Cuomo would quote trounce Eric Adams
in a Democrat primary for mayor. The polls show just
(08:12):
remember who told you? Right as soon as Magic Fingers
got kicked out of office in New York, who remember
who told you he would most definitely be back.
Speaker 1 (08:23):
Ah.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
So, now that we've tackled the John carry Phart and
we've congratulated me on being correct, let's dig into everything
that's happening right now. First, I want, I want, I'm
gonna go over something here. Where are you gonna lead
with an email? Then we're gonna get to Lindsey Graham
and Dick Durban. But this email, Jesse Jane Goodall's statement
(08:45):
about overpopulation was misinterpreted. Imagine that, No, she does not
want to kill people. Research what you speak of? Okay, misinterpreted,
I misinterpret this.
Speaker 5 (09:00):
My name is Jane Goodall, My age is at My
job is giving people hope. If I'm allowed to change
a few things. If I just have this magic power,
I would like to, without causing any pain or suffering,
reduce the number of people on the planet because there's
(09:21):
too many of us. It's a planet of finite resources
and we're using them up. But what I really, really,
really would love to change.
Speaker 1 (09:31):
Is the unsuspen misinterpreted.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
Huh so she doesn't want a bunch of people to die? Okay,
why bring up an email? Where am I going with this?
I heard this one from Lindsey Graham today and he's
always good for these just man the low tgp ear
in their.
Speaker 6 (09:50):
Names seem to be comfortable. My friends on the Democratic
side were making small changes to a big problem, nibbling
around the edges of this problem. It'd be like sending
guns to Ukraine without any bullets. You're really robust when
it comes to Ukraine, and I'm with you, But when
it comes to our border, you're playing a game of
(10:11):
doing the least amount possible to pick tenor.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
Playing a game?
Speaker 2 (10:18):
Is Jane Goodall? Was she not really serious? Misinterpreted?
Speaker 1 (10:23):
The comments? Are Democrats?
Speaker 2 (10:26):
Are they playing a game with the border? They're just
playing games. Let's discuss these things and then we'll get
to Christopher Ray and so much more before we get
to any of this. Are you ready for Christmas?
Speaker 7 (10:40):
Me?
Speaker 1 (10:40):
Personally, I hope.
Speaker 7 (10:42):
I am.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
The wife does most of the shopping. But if you're not,
you understand that mantis x is your one stop Christmas shop,
right mantis X for the experienced shooter in your life
or brand new shooter in your life. Every single person
who owns a weapon needs to have a mantis X
(11:03):
if nothing else, just for the fun of it. Set
the training aside. You understand that they put you through
drills on mantis X. You're practicing in your home without
firing a shot, dry fire practicing. They're putting you through drills.
They're keeping score. You'll compete with family, friends, or by yourself.
Whether you are a brand new shooter, you can get feedback. Essentially,
you're getting coaching in the home or you're super experienced.
(11:27):
Don't handring about Christmas. It's right there mantisx dot com.
They're serving up Christmas to you on a silver platter.
Mantisx dot com. Go train with your weapon. Let's talk
about should we take these people seriously?
Speaker 1 (11:45):
Are they playing games? Hang on?
Speaker 2 (11:48):
Jesse Kelly returns next it is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a Tuesday, getting to the bottom of all the
heart Is.
Speaker 4 (11:58):
Show and the avoiding responsibility for taking away those things
that are killing people on a daily basis, and they're out.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
We heard it, We heard the fart.
Speaker 2 (12:07):
John anyway, joining or not joining me? Joining me here
in ten minutes, I say, joining me out, joining me
in ten minutes.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
Remember, we're going to learn a.
Speaker 2 (12:14):
Little bit about the inventor of the diesel engine and
it's really freaking cool, So just buckle up for that one. Also,
you can email the show your love, your hate, your
death threat. You're asked doctor Jesse questions whatever, email me
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Someone emailed in and
said Jane Goodall's comments about reducing the world's population by
(12:36):
ninety percent, that those were taken out of context. She
doesn't want to kill people. Lindsey Graham student front of
Democrats as they open up our borders, and he said,
they're playing a game.
Speaker 6 (12:50):
You seemed to be comfortable, my friends on the Democratic
side while making small changes to a big problem, nibbling
around the edges of this problem. It'd be like sending
guns to Ukraine without any bullets. You're really robust when
it comes to Ukraine, and I'm with you, But when
it comes to our border, you're playing a game of
(13:11):
doing the least amount possible.
Speaker 2 (13:13):
Jane Goodaw isn't serious. She doesn't want about your people
to die. The Democrats are playing games at the border.
The American conservative, Republican, libertarian, anti whatever. The American on
the right, time and time and time again, on top
(13:36):
and on bottom, makes the same mistake. They don't take
the enemy seriously. When the enemy will propose things or
announce things, they're always horrific. When the communist accidentally gets honest,
you know, he he generally tries to lie or in
(13:58):
the very least put the nicest sounding voice on whatever
his horrific plans are. I mean, look again, I'll play
it again. Like the Jane Goodall thing. This is a
discussion about eliminating billions of people, about taking steps that
will starve more people to death.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
Than MAO ever dreamt of. That's what this is. But
of course, well, no no pain and suffering.
Speaker 5 (14:22):
My name is Jane Goodall, my age is eighty. My
job is giving people hope. If I'm allowed to change
a few things, if I just have this magic power.
I would like to, without causing any pain or suffering,
reduce the number of people on the planet.
Speaker 2 (14:42):
Because please take Jane Goodall seriously, Please take Democrats seriously.
The border isn't open because they're quote playing games. They
didn't grew up at the border. The border is open
(15:03):
because they have a plan to end the United States
of America, to burn it down so even the ash disappears,
and they are implementing this plan Jane Goodall, and more specifically,
the elites who have real power in this world. They
are trying to destroy life as we know it. They
(15:29):
are the most genocidal people who have ever walked the planet.
Let me repeat that again. The climate change movement, the
people who believe in man made climate change. They are
not innocent. They're not not Eve, They're not Jedi Sis,
the hippie. They are the most genocidal people in the
(15:53):
history of the planet.
Speaker 1 (15:54):
Jesse. What about Hitler? Are Stalin? Hitler? Stalin?
Speaker 2 (16:00):
Now all of them, combine all of their body count.
You know what, give the entire World War II body
count to Hitler Stalin, Lump, lump everything you can in there.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
It wouldn't sniff.
Speaker 2 (16:14):
The amount of death in suffering that will come if
we attack cheap available energy. It wouldn't sniff the body count.
Speaker 8 (16:26):
Hittler is laughing about the people who believe in climate
change calling him genocidal, because the people who believe in
climate change will kill billions with a B, not millions
with an M with a B, and they announced their
intention to do so all the time, and they're prepping
(16:49):
the ground over and over and over again to kill
those billions.
Speaker 4 (16:55):
Scientists are saying this moment is alarming. It's without precedent.
It is terrifying, some have said, and others will say,
we are in uncharted territory.
Speaker 2 (17:09):
That's alarm and gets terrifying, gets without precedent.
Speaker 1 (17:12):
This is uncharted territory.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
My goodness, we're gonna have the Arctic ice is gonna matter.
Speaker 7 (17:18):
I wish he were really up to state of the
art with respect to the science on global climate change.
You have sea ice which is melting at a rate
that the Arctic Ocean now increasingly is exposed. In five years,
scientists predict we will have the first ice free Arctic summer.
Speaker 2 (17:41):
Oh but Jesse, he made that prediction. It turned out
to be wrong. You're not understanding it. That's not the point.
He didn't make the prediction so he could be right.
They are prepping the ground for the genocide they are
already implementing reducing cheap affordable energy. Reducing the availability of
cheap affordable energy is the most genocidal thing you could
(18:04):
possibly do to the people on this planet. Nothing else
nuclear weapons wouldn't kill as many people as reducing the
availability of cheap affordable energy. Please stop thinking these people
are playing games or not serious or naive.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
They're dead serious, dead serious. All right, I have more
on that.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
We're gonna We're gonna talk to Doug Brunt about the
diesel engine first. Fascinating. I learned so much. But I
want to talk to you about a gigantic hunk of meat.
I want to talk to you about a ten pound ham,
spiral cut heritage pork, the best freaking ham you'll ever
(18:50):
eat in your life. Would you like one of those
for Chris? Do you think you can use that at
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I tell you all the time about good Ran signing
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(19:12):
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Speaker 1 (19:25):
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Speaker 2 (19:26):
Now's the time to sign up good ranchers dot com
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Speaker 1 (19:33):
Go get you some.
Speaker 2 (19:34):
We'll be back The Jesse Kelly Show on air and
online at Jesse kellyshow dot com. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a Tuesday. Did I ever tell you
I was an inventor Chris? In fifth grade, we had
a challenge that we had to invent something, and I
invented this thing where the cops would stand on springs
(19:57):
and bounce up and down to practice shootouts with bad guys.
Speaker 1 (20:00):
And I ended up getting an F on it.
Speaker 2 (20:02):
The teacher said it wasn't very practical, but I like
to consider myself a bit of an inventor. So Rudolph
Diesel and I have quite a bit in common, you
might say, joining me now, the author of an amazing
book that not only I love, my wife loved it.
It's sitting on her nightstand. The mysterious case of Rudolph Diesel.
Doug Brunt joins us. Doug, this diesel guy. I didn't
(20:24):
know anything about him.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
What a book?
Speaker 9 (20:27):
What now you do? And you and here like brothers
from another mother.
Speaker 2 (20:31):
We are we are, you know, just a couple of
great minds. Doug just doing doing things that inventors do.
But he didn't invent some excellent system for cops. He
invented other things. What did he invent?
Speaker 9 (20:44):
Well, the surprising thing is the ice cube as well,
the drinkable ice cube for bars and restaurants and things.
But he invented a diesel engine, which even I seven
years ago did not know I was a diesel, was
a fuel option, and you go to the fueling station
spelled with a lower case D. But there is this man,
a German, Rudolph Diesel, who invented the diesel engine in
eighteen ninety seven.
Speaker 1 (21:05):
What a shock.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
A German came up with something brilliant. They tend to
do that, but then, of course they blow it all
in the end. Okay, Well, how how did it land, Doug?
I'm assuming the world, especially the most powerful men in
the world, received him with open arms when he came
up with such a wonderful invention that's still used widely
to this day.
Speaker 9 (21:22):
Well, he was strongly courted by many, but the engine
presented a threat for others. And the book is called
the Mysterious Case of Rudolph Diesel because he disappeared mysteriously
right before World War One in nineteen thirteen. And just
to sort of briefly set it up, I came across
the diesel engine when I bought a boat and repowered
to diesel, and I was like, oh, I learned all
about the diesel engine. You know, you can one hundred
(21:43):
percent of boat fires come from gasoline engines, zero from diesel.
The fuel is not flammable. You can drop a lit
match into a barrel of diesel fuel and nothing happens.
They're no fumes, and you get four times the range.
So when I bought these diesel engines for my boat,
suddenly I became a diesel guide. And then I discovered
there was a man behind it, and he disappeared mysteriously
at sea in nineteen thirteen. So he's traveling across the
(22:03):
North Sea from Belgium to Great Britain on an overnight
passenger ferry, and in the night he disappears, and they
hold the ship at sea and they do a search.
All they find or his hat and his coat neatly
folded at the stern of the ship by the rail,
seeming the mark where he might have jumped overboard. And
so the prevailing theory was suicide. But there were also
two theories of murder, that he might have been murdered,
(22:24):
either by Kaiser Wilhelm the Second, the Emperor of Germany,
or John Rockefeller, founder of Standard Oil and the richest
man in the world. And the weird thing, now, Jesse
is like you and I, we didn't know there was
this Rudolph Diesel figure in history, but at the time
he was a huge celebrity. To put it in today's terms,
it would be like Elon Musk suddenly disappearing overnight, just
vanished into fun air, no body, no evidence or anything.
(22:47):
And so the newspapers around the world in nineteen thirteen
went Crazy was the headline of the New York Times.
All the papers in London and Western europebout to Russia,
speculating on the disappearance of Diesel and speculating on the
potential murder side as well.
Speaker 2 (23:02):
Speaking with Doug Brown, author of the book The Mysterious
Case of Rudolph Diesel. Okay, so why break this down
for you? Why exactly would the German Kaiser want this guy, Dad?
I would think he would want to court such an individual.
Speaker 9 (23:18):
He did want to court Diesel. The reason why everyone
was scrambling for Rudolph Diesel's expertise and his engine was
that by nineteen thirteen, the diesel engine had emerged as
the only engine that could power a U boat or
a submarine. Kerosene and gasoline engines wouldn't work, their constant
fires and fumes killing the crew, and it didn't have
(23:39):
the range and didn't other power. So this and remember
this is the time. You're a history buff. I know
you've written a number of books on it in that
era too. You know Bolshevism around World War One, so
you know this is a time of militarism and nationalism
and the Anglo German naval arms race. So the navies
of every major power are scrambling for Diesel expertise to
build their submarine fleets, and Diesel was still the main guy.
(24:02):
The entwine was still fairly new, and he was really
the main guy who the expertise to deliver it for
undersea use. And the reason he was traveling across the
North Sea on that day in September of nineteen thirteen
was to get to Great Britain, where he was founder
and board director of a new diesel engine manufacturing company
whose mandate it was to build diesels for the British
(24:22):
Royal Navy submarine program. So the Kaiser suddenly was realizing
that his German citizen was working for the rival, right,
you know, four hundred miles across the North Sea. So
he was very threatened by that, and that's why people
pointed at the Kaiser as one potential murder suspect.
Speaker 2 (24:37):
Why Rockefeller, I would think, Now, I don't know him.
I bet you I don't know near as much about
John D. Rockefeller as you do. But he always struck me,
from what I've read, as the type of guy who
would hire Rudolph Diesel instead of pushing him off the
side of a ship.
Speaker 9 (24:53):
Well, he would either hire you or he would take
you out. I mean, in those days, Pinkerton Detective Agency
was really like the paramilitary wing of big business. And
so when Rockefeller met a threat he couldn't fix, he
could also go after it in that way so that
he did have that reputation and dealing with you know,
coal mining strikers and things like that. And the reason
the diesel engine presented a threat to Rockefeller was that
(25:16):
Rudolph Diesel advocated that we not be using petroleum products.
He was suggesting that every country could have fuel independence
if they had farmers. He won the nineteen hundred Paris
World's Fair with a diesel engine running on peanut oil.
He could run on peanut oil, vegetable oil, coal, tar,
and he was running around a trip in nineteen twelve
in America saying I can break the American fuel monopoly
(25:39):
and I don't need a law to do it. I
can do it with the power of my technology. And
so it was a threat to Rockefeller. They had Diesel
running around, you know, advocating flexibility and alternatives with fuel,
and that every nation with farmers could have their own fuel,
and we all need to be beholden to Rockefeller's products.
Speaker 2 (25:57):
Doug, let me ask you just because my mind works
this way, and it's it's awful that it does. But
you're the one who did so much research on this.
Do you believe that maybe he pulled some kind of
James Bond escape plan and hopped on some diesel powered
submarine and lived the rest of his days in Barbados
or something like that.
Speaker 9 (26:17):
Well, I don't it. Typically I like not to spoil
the ending, but I have solved the case. Then the
most ida is it was not suicide there it was
a different outcome, and the circumstantial evidence is overwhelming. I
vetted this conclusion by former CIA, former FBI, former British
(26:38):
intelligence all who unanisously come back and say absolutely, this
is what happened. So in the book, it starts out
as sort of a biography and an explanation. You know,
it brings that whole Gilded Age period to life, the
quarter century before World War One that I jokingly referred
to with my wife as the Downton Abbey, the early seasons,
you know, before World War One hits and everything changes.
So it brings that whole air to life with characters
(27:00):
a Dolphus Bush, the founder of Ennheuser Busch, is a
huge Diesel figure in North America, Winston Churchill play the
huge role the Nobel family in Russia. It brings it
all to life, but it solves the mystery in the
end of what actually happened to Rudolph Diesel. And it
will the more you kind of know about the era,
the more you're you can kind of get grounded, and
(27:20):
then the more this conclusion will blow your mind.
Speaker 7 (27:22):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (27:23):
My wife geeked out on it specifically because she loves
that Downton Abby show and she's all, this is the
same time period. And I told her and she went
crazy for it. It had all the history stuff for me.
He is Doug Brunt. The book is the Mysterious Case
of Rudolph Diesel. Highly recommended. I'm not going to give
away the ending, Doug.
Speaker 1 (27:42):
Thank you, sir. I appreciate you very much. That was
freaking awesome. That's before it's it's good. It's really really good.
And remember remember this.
Speaker 2 (27:52):
I was having a conversation last night with my son,
my oldest son, and I was telling him, Hey, you
need to start picking up more.
Speaker 1 (28:00):
I want you to read more.
Speaker 2 (28:01):
No, I don't need you to have a gigantic in
home library or something like that. I don't need him
to nerd out on books all the time like me,
but I want you to read more. And he said, Dad,
I don't like to read. And I said, son, listen
to me. I have one son who loves to read,
to one who doesn't. I said, son, listen to me.
History and reading have two things in common, or have
(28:22):
something in common.
Speaker 3 (28:23):
I should say, you know what.
Speaker 2 (28:24):
That's something is Everybody loves them everybody, just a lot
of people don't know it. Everyone loves history. Everybody does.
You just maybe haven't found someone who presents it the
way you like it or the time period that interests you.
But the story of history is the story of man, action, drama, suspense,
(28:46):
everything the same with reading. Give it a try. You
might like non fiction books more than you think. All right,
don't give it a try and buy the book anyway.
The Mysterious Case of Rudolph, How about that?
Speaker 1 (29:00):
All right?
Speaker 2 (29:02):
You want to talk about something good. I'll have a
little bit of good news for us. There are good
things happening out there. You want to talk about that?
Hang on, before we get to that. Tis the season?
What season is that? Oh, there's a bunch of murders
and assaults going on. It's the season for that. As
the mental health crisis, the drug crisis, homeless crisis, illegal
(29:24):
everything is putting violent people on the streets. The George
Soros DA's to everything. Go get something and carry it
on you that will allow you to protect yourself. That's
what the hero gun is. That's what the hero arrow is.
The hero arrow even has one hundred and twenty decibel alarm.
(29:45):
Ah but Jesse, my daughter doesn't like guns. It's not
a gun, it's not even lethal. You don't need a
concealed carry permit. If fits right in her little hot
shit purse, if it's right in a little shorts whatever.
Hero twenty twenty dot com Code Jesse gets you a
special discount. Go it's a great Christmas gift. Hero twenty
(30:07):
twenty dot com Code Jesse.
Speaker 3 (30:11):
You're listening to the Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 1 (30:14):
You're welcome.
Speaker 2 (30:17):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Tuesday. Remember,
you can email the show of hey death threats, ask
doctor Jesse questions for Friday. Email those into Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com.
Speaker 1 (30:31):
Before we get back.
Speaker 2 (30:32):
To all the things, and there are many, many things
we have Christopher Ray. I'm gonna dig into that next hour,
FBI director in front of the Senate. There's all kinds
of stuff we can talk about there, Mike Johnson. There's
a lot to get to Chris Hayes and Rachel Maddow
discussing Trump and fascism and other things. But before we
get to that, I'm pretty excited about something I have
(30:52):
to share it.
Speaker 1 (30:54):
I didn't think that.
Speaker 2 (30:55):
I didn't feel like Chris and Michael were as excited
as I was. But I found something new out there.
I was in the studio yesterday and I was listening
to something on my phone. I was just trying to
bone up on a couple of things, listen to something
on my phone, and I was walking around on my phone,
holding my phone up to my ear, you know, wore
my phone with a volume up, just walking around getting
(31:17):
stuff done. And I thought, there has to be a
better way, right, There has to be some kind of
a new invention out there, And so I did some digging.
I bought a portable speaker, and this speaker it's really small. Honestly,
it's like the size of an apple. I'm not even kidding.
(31:37):
And why don't you look impressed? Chris, and it sits
right here in the studio and it plays whatever is
on my phone. It connects bluetooth wise to my phone
and plays that. So if I'm listening to a podcast
or even my incredible music selection, this plays it. And
again there's no chord. It bluetooths right to this speak.
(32:00):
So look, I don't want to rub. I don't want
to rub our advanced technology here in the studio in
anybody's face.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
But I have a portable speaker.
Speaker 2 (32:09):
Well look, I'm proud of it, very proud of it,
and I'm glad I got to tell people. And I
don't appreciate it all Chris and Michael's reaction to any
of this. Dear Jesse, you had the foresight to see
Gavin Newsom's aspirations for the White House and that was
a wake up call for me. Now seems that Biden
will run, However, he hasn't announced this running mate. I
suggest he might pick Newsom and after elected, bow out,
(32:33):
leaving Newsom in the Oval office. By the way, I
love your Medal of Honor.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
Mondays.
Speaker 2 (32:37):
My father was a Marine fighter pilot in the Battle
of Okinawa and flew the F four.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
U course air.
Speaker 2 (32:44):
He only got the DFC but flew over thirty missions
supporting ground marines and chasing Kamakazis. He would be one
of your major supporters. Thanks for exposing Communists and Marxists
for what they are. We need more like you, says,
I can use his name. His name is David Okay.
Battle of Okinawa. I'm not gonna do a lot of
really any history here, just a couple of kick things
(33:04):
because there's too much political stuff I want to get to.
But for you non history buffs, you should know that
the Battle of Okinawa was. Look, they were all uniquely horrible,
all the Pacific battles. It was really really really really
really terrible because it was considered inside the defensive perimeter
of Japan. Okinawa is on the southern tip of Japan.
(33:28):
If we took Okinawa, the Japanese knew it meant that
our bombers would bomb all their cities to dust. And
they did, of course, and so they set up all
this huge defensive line called the Shuri Line. It doesn't matter,
and they killed a bunch of our guys on land,
but at sea. Everyone has heard of Kamai Kazi's the
Kamakazi Plains. The Battle of Okinawa is where the vast
(33:53):
majority of those came out because it was a last ditch,
desperate effort.
Speaker 1 (33:58):
A lot of.
Speaker 2 (33:59):
Americans gave their lives to Kamikazi pilots on Okinawa. And
like this guy's dad a marine fighter pilot, our fighter
planes were constantly up in the air. And think about
how crazy this would be, how nerve wracking this would be.
They're in the air and they have to identify these
(34:19):
planes and not just win a dog fight, right, they
have to take this plane out of the sky because
the plane is heading towards a ship and it's going
to try to cry. He's trying to die. Now hard
it is to take out somebody who's trying to die.
It's not like I'm fighting him, he's fighting me. I
(34:41):
have to take the plane out or he will kill sailors.
And our fighter pilots were constantly up in the air
doing it. And get this, you want to hear something
really cool. You know how good our fighter pilots were.
So the Japanese in World War Two, on all the islands,
they really had this in common. They would go to
the caves. They would either go to natural caves or
(35:04):
improve natural caves, or build their own caves. But they
were always digging into the ground, digging into the side
of a mountain. That was a huge cave battle, and
that's why the flamethrowers came out. It was the only
way to get them out of there. You got to
cook a mountain whatnot. Our fighter pilots got so good
that if they could see, or if the Marines on
(35:25):
the ground and Army guys on the ground marked it properly,
our fighter pilots could fly over these caves, drop a
bomb with a special setting on it and boom, bounce
a bomb off the ground into the cave where the
bomb from the plane would blow up.
Speaker 1 (35:47):
That's true story. Did you know that.
Speaker 2 (35:49):
That's how incredibly skilled these pilots were, and our guys
on the ground were suffering incredibly The environment itself was suffering, right,
all that malaria, all that death. The Japanese were uniquely horrible,
all the torture and death, and the terror tactics they
(36:10):
would use. Remember the Japanese would they would sneak into
your fighting hole in the middle of the night, knowing
they were going to die. They'd just sneak in your
fighting hole with a sword and try to cut your
head off. You'd wake up in the morning and find
your buddy's dead in the fighting hole beside you, and
maybe the Japanese dead with him. Right, It was a
terrible war in that way, that that portion of the
war was so terrible. The appreciation if you read the
(36:34):
stories from these guys, the appreciation they had for the pilots,
and how many lives those pilots saved with the things
they did for the men on the ground. They would
it brought up cheers. You're sitting there, you're suffering, you're dying,
You kicking these guys out of a cave. Your buddy
just got shot. He's on the ground in pain, and
then along comes the pilot and he fixes it for you.
Speaker 7 (36:58):
Man.
Speaker 2 (36:58):
They had such incredible admiration for those guys, and vice versa.
The pilots would look at the guys on the ground
and had unique admiration for them. But just I thought
it would be I thought you'd enjoy that little tidbit.
We have to talk about what Dick Durbin said about
illegals joining the military, and we're going to address that,
(37:19):
and then we're going to address the Christopher Ray stuff. Gosh,
next hour is going to be jam packed. I did
promise you good news, so let me give you this
as I missed out on that little promise. Patrick McHenry
loser Rhino in the house. He's going to retire from
the house. We're losing the old guard that needs to
be gone. They're retiring, they're sick of you.
Speaker 1 (37:42):
That's awesome.
Speaker 2 (37:44):
I can feel the testosterone levels rising in the GOP.
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(38:07):
for ninety days? Yet? Give it ninety days? Take your
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percent increase in your t levels in ninety days naturally,
not getting injections in your arm and crap like that.
Speaker 1 (38:22):
You're gonna feel so good, Ladies.
Speaker 2 (38:24):
The female Vitality stack, You're going to feel so good.
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And take advantage of sales man.
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Choq dot Com promo code Jesse is how you get
those sales chalk dot com promo code Jesse, go, get
some chalk. It's time to discuss illegals in the military
and Christopher Ray next