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December 5, 2024 37 mins

Creating a culture were our senators don’t fear us. The GOP trying to torpedo Trump’s reformer nominations. We have neglected our electoral process for the last 15 years. You only need to replace one or two RINO’s for the rest to get the message. Big government change takes time. Are we going to see any arrests from inside the FBI? 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Let's have some fun on a Thursday, and
it's going to be a good time here on a Thursday.
We're gonna talk about change to changes, changes or whatever

(00:34):
is the song what Chris, I don't know who sings
the song. I think it with sticks or somebody, right,
look that up. Anyway, you're gonna talk about change. People
are angry with the GOP Senate Joni Ernst about the
hag says stuff. I'll address that in the beginning. Talk
about again, how much of the opposition, the things we
see on television that make us mad, how much of

(00:55):
it is paid for and organized. Russia's issue warning to us.
There's some COVID reckoning stuff we have to discuss again.
And some dude fought a polar bear. All that. Tons
of emails. I'm actually gonna get to a few of
the ask Doctor Jesse questions tonight because we have so many.

(01:17):
I'm worried that I'm not gonna get through all of them. Oh,
that and so much more is coming up tonight on
the world famous Jesse Kelly Show. I want to begin
here a couple different emails really, because I'm getting a
lot of this. So just here's an example, Jesse, you
need to start a betting tool, a betting pool on

(01:38):
who will be and when? Who will be the first
Senator to switch parties? Will it be Romney Murkowski? Who's
it gonna be? So okay, this guy, says Jesse, why
should we think Trump will be successful against the deep state?
At some point his administration will have to rely on
the same bureaucracy to terminate their fellow comrades. They'll slow
walk to paper where blah blah, bah bah blah says

(02:00):
his name is Paul. I didn't mean a blah blah.
Your email, Paul was a good email. I'm just not
going to read the whole thing. But you get a theme, right,
So pause on that for a moment. We're going to
get to Joni Earnst in the United States Senate trying
to torpedo Trump's nominees, already having done so successfully once.
But this is where this is going. But I ever

(02:22):
tell you I lived in a mobile home before. I
told you that before, right when I was in the Marines.
I mean, I spent some time in mobile homes when
I was a kid, A bunch of my friends lived
in mobile homes. But when I was in the Marines,
I it's a long story, but it's at some point
they allowed me to live off base for I think

(02:43):
it was about a year six months to a year,
and I had a roommate, so I couldn't afford to
rent this mobile home on my own. And he was
one of those strong men types, meaning he competed in
that World's Strongest Man competition, those kinds of competitions. I
don't know if he ever went to actual World's Strongest Man,
but you know what I mean. He was always doing

(03:04):
those kinds of strong man competitions. He was huge. He
would he would eat I'm not making this up. He
would eat a pound of bacon every morning. I didn't
have a bedroom in the mobile home. He got the bedroom,
so I slept on the couch, which is in close
proximity to the kitchen in a mobile home. And he
would get up, open up a pack of bacon, drop

(03:27):
the entire pound in a pan, and eat the entire pound.
For that's good protein. You know. It was one of
those guys. I loved him. I love him to this day.
He's hilarious, but he was huge, big, strong guy, and
as a side gig he would train other dudes who
wanted to do that kind of thing. Either they just
wanted to put on masks or do strong man stuff.

(03:49):
And we were always hanging out. Of course, you live
in a mobile home, you're gonna get to know the
person you live with pretty well. We were always hanging
out after work whatever, and his constant frustration. You know
how people usually come home from work complaining about an
aspect of work that's normal, Like, God only knows what
Chris and Corey must complain about. That's normal. Hey, the

(04:09):
job does this, the job fails at this. What he
would complain to me about all the time was this,
guys would show up. They'd show up, and they haven't
they haven't been treating their body particularly well when it
comes to being big and strong. They've been eating too
much fat, not lifting heavy enough. For years and years
and years and years and years, guys would mistreat their bodies.

(04:34):
And then they would show up and they'd be hey,
but train me, teach me how to get big, And
he said, Jesse, almost every one of them. They will
dig in and work their butts off for two three
weeks a month, and then they quit. And I would
always ask why, why, why is it? And the answer
is always the same. After two three weeks hard work,

(04:55):
a month of hard work, that's a lot of hard work.
That's a lot of time in the gym, that's a
lot of pushing around. They would expect results that in
no way are realistic given their past. You've spent fifteen
twenty years mistreating your body, given their past, and given
the fact that putting on large masses of muscle takes

(05:20):
years anyway, even if you were good in your past,
it takes years to put on masses of muscle. And
so they get disheartened because everything didn't work in three
or four weeks, and they're not big and strong like me,
and they quit and they give it up. I heard
him complain about this. I'll just use his first name.

(05:41):
Lance was his name. I heard Lance complain to me
about this. I swear it was every night. It wasn't,
but that's what it felt like. Another one quit, dropped out,
didn't stay with it. You're angry right now with the
GOP Senate. I'm angry with the GOP Senate. You're angry
at senators like Joni Ernst of Iowa, who voted to

(06:03):
confirm Lloyd Austin voted to confirm Merrick Garland. But as
of right now, sure sounds like a no to me
on Pete hex It sounds to me as if the
hearing will be critical for his nomination. Am I right
about it?

Speaker 2 (06:17):
I think I think you are right. I think for
a number of our senators they want to make sure
that any allegations have been cleared.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
And that's why wait, just a quick pause. All allegations
have been cleared. There are no uncleared allegations. This is
all a media thing. There's no allegations hanging out there.
Everything's been cleared. She knows. It's the course.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
You have to have a very thorough vetting process, and
that's why I was happy to sit down with Pete
and have that conversation with him yesterday. So again, all
I will say at this time is that we did
have a very thoroughed discussion over a number of those issues,
and the vetting will continue, I am certain through the

(06:58):
next month or so we approach that hearing date and
he has.

Speaker 1 (07:02):
Some Yeah, right now, she sa a no. And right
now the word is, as I told you yesterday about
Lindsay Graham. Word is that Lindsay Graham and Jony Ernst
are trying to torpedo the nomination of Pete hagg Seth.
And you should understand, these are all the same people
who already torpedo Matt Gates. And when they're done torpedoing

(07:23):
Pete hag Seth, they'll go for Cash Patel, They'll go
for Taulsea Gabbard, They'll go for RFK Junior. One by
one by one, they will shut down these nominee nominations.
I don't know that they're gonna win. That's not what
I'm telling you. But that is their plan. That's the plan.
And you're angry, and I'm angry. But here's the truth,

(07:43):
and this is meant to be encouraging, so please don't
take this as discouraging. Here's the truth. We byself included
in the GOP. We have neglected our bodies for fifteen
twenty years. Donuts not working out as when it comes
to electorally, we have neglected the electoral process. Oh, I

(08:06):
voted in every presidential election. Congratulations, that's not even the
bare minimum. We have not gotten involved locally, we have
not gotten involved in primaries. We get motivated once every
four years when we can put on our Maga hats,
and other than that, we have been neglectful. We win
this huge election in November, and now we think that

(08:26):
that should be enough. Right, But you see, forget about
looking forward. We'll get to that in a moment. Yes,
we want a great election. We did good, You did good.
We did good in November. But the thousand battles we
lost behind us, we still have to pay for those.
There's a cost to losing all those. There's a cost

(08:50):
to constantly neglecting the primary process, and that cost we're
experiencing it now. So we've been in the gym and
we worked hard, and we got Trump elected, and we
got the House, and we got the Senate and we
got Trump in there, and we did the work. Now
I've been working out hard for three four weeks. Why
are my biceps not looking like haul Cogan. Because we

(09:13):
spent fifteen twenty years sitting on our fat butts not
doing anything. And that's not to lecture you or me.
Because we can't change the pass. I can't go back
and get more involved in primaries in my youth. I
can't go back and undo all the mistakes I've made.
I can't uneat all the donuts. I can't do that.
You can't do that. This is a heads up for

(09:37):
all of us that change and reform is a long,
brutal slog. And as I said and screened endlessly into
this microphone before the election, if Trump loses, all is
not lost. If Trump wins, all is not won. How
many times did you hear me say that? Because it's

(10:00):
that's the truth. He won. It's great, it's important. We
want a huge battle, but we lost a thousand before
this one, and those thousand losses allowing people like Joni
Ernst to get through the primary and Iowa a blood
red state. Well now we pay the price for fifteen

(10:21):
years of donuts. And so going forward we have to
adjust how we think. And we'll discuss that in a moment.
Before we do that, that's discuss getting rid of the
pain in our lives. There is nothing that just nothing
holds you back from doing things you love. What don't

(10:42):
you do that you used to do because of pain?
Does your job hurt you? Work construction? Do you hurt
more now you not golf, hike, swim? What don't you
do that you used to do You don't have to
sit and live with endless pain. You don't, and you
don't have to take things to masket and trash your body.
Relief Factors there for you. They have three week quick

(11:06):
start kits. It's one hundred percent drug free. It's a supplement.
It supports your body's response to inflammation that pain. It
might just get turned way down or even disappear. Do
you realize almost seventy percent of the people who order
Relief Factor order more forever? Does that sound like something

(11:28):
you might want to try? Call one eight hundred the
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We'll be back.

Speaker 3 (11:38):
Jesse Kelly returns next.

Speaker 1 (11:43):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday, and
I want to thank you for your outpouring of sympathy
because of my broken pen from yesterday. I want you
to know that we are recovering grieving. You know, grieving
takes time, but we are recovering still and getting along famously.
And I also want to remind you that tomorrow is
ask doctor Jesse Friday, and the questions are pouring in already.

(12:08):
Get yours in right now Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot
com every Friday is an ask me anything, all three
hours dedicated to you, doesn't matter, doesn't even have to
be political. Jesse at jesse kellyshow dot com, or you
can leave it on a voicemail eight seven seven three
seven seven four three seven three Changing a nation, draining

(12:35):
a swamp, reforming a corrupt government, however you want to
describe it. It takes time, and it takes more than
one election. We are frustrated in banging our heads off
the desk. I've seen more times and maybe you've said
this to yourself already. These people have to put Trump's
nominees through. They have to confirm these appointments this Senate.

(12:58):
This has to happen now, and I get the desperation.
I feel it too. This has to happen now. But
that's not how it works. You can't sit on your
fat butt for fifteen twenty years not working out, and
then show up in the gym and expect to be
chiseled in two weeks. It doesn't work that way. We
are paying now for the sins we have committed in

(13:20):
the past. The sins of neglecting the electoral process have
allowed the GOP to fill up the United States Senate
with a bunch of corrupt, scumbag losers who feel they're untouchable.
Why do they do things like this? Why is it
the Lindsey Grahams of the world, the John Corns, the
James Langfords. Do you realize how jaw dropping it is

(13:41):
that amnesty bill James Langford pulled? Given how red Oklahoma is?
Why does Jony Earnst, a state chief from Iowa, a
state Donald Trump won by thirteen points. Why would Jony
Ernst even feel comfortable, even a little bit comfortable stopping
one of Trump's dominees. Why why who's at fault? Who's

(14:02):
at fault? We are? We are? You see, there's such
a thing, as you know. He's a great example of
it in ancient warfare, like when Caesar was fighting the Gauls,
and he knew there was a huge force. It was

(14:24):
double the size of his force, more than double the
size of his force of galls coming for him. They
were coming to get him. And he knew a mass
that size charging it his troops. He knew that was
going to be a problem, and that he probably couldn't
stop it outright, not in the beginning, but what he

(14:45):
could do was slow down the momentum of the force,
so they don't hit him like a semi truck. Right,
There's it's one thing. If a semi hits you going eighty,
it's another thing. If it hits you going twenty. It's
gonna hurt either way. But that's totally different degrees of hurt,
you understand. So what do they do? Well, it's not
that he put up a wall right away. He put

(15:09):
up a bunch of I call them little annoyances, although
they'd be horrific and sometimes deadly. Instead of a wall,
why don't we just put in a bunch of pits
in the ground. We'll make them a foot deep. Now
does that have to be deep? Two feet deep? Let's
put a couple of spikes in there, and we'll just
litter the ground with these things. What does that do?

(15:31):
Is it going to take out an army of three
hundred thousand dolls? Of course it's not. But if you
have three hundred thousand gulls running at you as fast
as they can and guys start shattering ankles and ending
up with spikes through their feet and legs, guess what's
gonna happen. Things are gonna slow down. You know how
the GOP Senate sees themselves. You want them to be

(15:54):
the charging galls who are gonna storm the fort and
take things back. The GOP Senate see themselves as the
pit in the ground. They are trying to slow you down.
They're not even on your side. They're on the other side,
and they think their job is to slow down us
changing things. They want to stop change. They want to

(16:17):
swamp to remain. You mad at Joni Ernst. Go look
up her FEC reports and look at her donations from
defense contractors. Why in the world would Jony Ernst feel
comfortable stopping Pete hegg Seth Two reasons. One, she gets
gigantic amounts of campaign money from defense contractors. In two,
she understands what John Cornan understands, what James Langford understands,

(16:41):
what Lindsey Graham understands, what Mitt Romney understands. She understands
what all these gopeers from red states understand. They understand
that they have historically been able to take a steaming
crep on the GOP base, and the GOP base and
their states will forgive them for it come election time,
come primary time. Look, this is the culture we have created.

(17:07):
This is the culture within the GOP that we those
of us who voted it, who participate in it, we
have created this culture. We have created a culture where
our senators don't fear us. They don't they don't fear us.

(17:28):
They know what they've always known. That they can screw
us over mightily once or twice. Can't do it all
the time. Voters will end up catching on, But on
the big ones they'll step in. There'll be that pit
in the ground. Oh shoot, did your efforts fall? Did
you break an ankle? Oh that spike looks like it's painful.

(17:50):
They can do that once in a while. But because
they're only up for election every six years, they know
they have enough time to heal their reputations. Run a
twenty million dollar ad campaign about how they're going to
deport illegals, and the GOP primary voter will forgive. Now
that's the bad news. Do you want the good news?

(18:11):
Because there is good news at the end of this
talk about the good news in a moment. Here's some
good news before we get to that. The good news
is there are places that help you prepare. You know,
when you think about preparing for disastrous scenarios, any MP
going off, or just societal collapse, God forbid, whatever it

(18:34):
may be. It can get ominous because you're not an expert.
I'm not an expert on these things. How do you prepare?
You don't have to be an expert now because there
are all kinds of companies that do it for you.
My Patriots Supply handles the food. There's a reason millions
of Americans have gotten their emergency food kit from my
Patriots Supply millions. Good look at the reviews and it's

(18:55):
good stuff too. It's like creamy Alfredo pasta that's two
thousand caalaries a day, and right now, four week emergency
food kits are fifty dollars off. You have to go
to prepare with Jesse Kelly dot com. Everyone who lives
in your home needs emergency food. This is a basic necessity.

(19:18):
Water and food, not negotiable, more important than Ammo. Believe
it or not. Prepare with Jesse Kelly dot com. I'll
give you the good news about all this network.

Speaker 3 (19:29):
Feeling a little stocky, follow and subscribe on social at
Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 1 (19:36):
It is The Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday. Reminding
you you can download the show if you miss any
part of it. Iheardspotify iTunes. Now to the good news.
All right, we're frustrated. We're frustrated. Things are things are
not going as quickly as possible, and there's going to
be more to that in the moment, so just get
with me. But the good news is this one. We

(20:00):
we are waking up, We are getting better. That is
going to at some point. I don't know when that
is going to start translating into GOP primary wins against incumbents.
It will at some point in time. I really believe

(20:20):
it will, because people are waking up, they are getting
better about this stuff. I'll get into what we're gonna
need for that in a minute, so just stay with me. Two,
you know what decimation is. Talked about it before. But
you've heard of Crassus. Crassus was one of the richest

(20:40):
men who ever lived. He was ancient Rome. He's a Roman.
He was a businessman and a general. Really, all Roman
high society were generals at one point in time. And
you've heard of Spartacus, of course, if you haven't Spartacus,
he was a slave, but a gladiator slave. Remember most gladiator,

(21:00):
almost all of them. Not all, but almost all of
them were slaves who were really pretty much forced to
become gladiators. You would show up after you defeated an army.
You know, everybody, if you're looking at it from a
completely non Christian way, everyone serves their own purpose, right.
The women, you'd use them for certain things that I

(21:20):
know it's terrible to think about. But the young strong
men you're looking for the most value. You're gonna want
them to work in your fields. Or if these are
troops you've just captured, well we could make money. Let's
train them out to be a gladiator. And that's what
Spartacus was. We don't know exactly what his background is.
There are theories that he was a general actually very

(21:42):
very capable military man. He leads this big revolt. They
have this huge slave revolt where he gets all these
gladiators and slaves and they have a huge slave revault
in Rome. And the thing about this slave revault was
they were led by a capable man and Spartacus defeating
Roman armies a complete humiliation, and at one point there

(22:08):
was a five hundred man unit of Roman troops under
Crassus who disgraced themselves. They broke and ran, and I
wasn't there. You weren't there. Who knows whether it was
actually their fault or not, but they broke and ran
five hundred man unit. So what Crassus did, because this

(22:29):
was a humiliation, a national humiliation. Why can we not
defeat this slave army? Crassus gathered the five hundred men,
divided them up into units of ten, and then had
them draw lots, essentially draw straws to see who the
one unlucky man was. And that unlucky man he was

(22:54):
beaten to death by the other nine, usually with clubs,
sometimes with just fists. Fifty men were beaten to death
by their own brothers in arms. This is It was
very rarely used, you should know, but it was extremely effective.

(23:14):
It put the fear of God into the entire rest
of the Roman army. It was just a tiny five
hundred man unit that went through it. Fifty men dead.
Now that matters if you're one of the fifty men,
but on a big scale, that doesn't mean anything. Oh
eight meant everything to the rest of the Roman army.
Why it's a horrible practice. I don't support it, but
it put the other ones on notice. There will be

(23:37):
no running. There will be no cowardice. The next time
we fight Spartacus, you win or you die. And eventually
they did. The good news. When it comes to the
GOP Senate, we have failed up to this point to
primary these people out, but it will only take one

(23:57):
or two before the others fall in line. Oh yeah, no, no,
I want a primary.

Speaker 4 (24:03):
M all.

Speaker 1 (24:03):
Don't get me wrong. I've got my list too. It
looks just like yours. To listen, Thune and Rounds and
Cornyn and Graham and all the learnst and all the
other dorks. I've got the same list. I get it.
But one, we need certain things. We might as well
talk about this now. To primary a senator. To primary
a senator is very difficult. You will need one, not ten,

(24:28):
not three, not even two. You will need one quality candidate.
Everyone else in the base can rally around this quality candidate.
Candidate will have to have the ability to raise money.
He's going to have to raise money. No, he doesn't
have to raise as much as the current senator. That's
not what I'm saying. He's gonna have to raise enough

(24:50):
to run a statewide campaign wherever that state is. So
you were gonna need one quality, established candidate who people
in the GOP already know most likely, and he's gonna
have to have the ability to raise money. Now that
formula I just laid out is true, but it won't
be something we can pull off everywhere. That thing that

(25:11):
may not happen in Iowa. It might not happen in
Texas when we challenge Cornan, it might not happen in
Oklahoma when we go off to Langford. It's hard to
find that combination. But we are looking. And now that
people are aware that we want this, there will be
more of an appetite for this, so we'll get more
and more people. All that's gonna take is a scalp

(25:33):
or two. You don't have to decimate the whole army.
Take one unit, fifty men. The whole army will get
the message. These people pull this crap because they've never
been sent a message by their primary sounds to me
as if the hearing will be critical for his nomination.

(25:54):
Am I right about it?

Speaker 2 (25:55):
I think I think you are right. I think for
a number of our senators they want to make sure
that any allegations have been cleared, and that's why we
have to have a very thorough vetting process, and that's
why I was happy to sit down with Pete and
have that conversation with him yesterday. So again, all I

(26:16):
will say at this time is that we did have
a very thoroughed discussion over a number of those issues,
and the vetting will continue, I am certain through the
next month or so until we approach that hearing date
and he has some.

Speaker 1 (26:31):
You're mad, I'm mad, but I'm here to tell you.
Change won't come as fast as we want, but it
is coming. We are getting better, we are getting more involved,
and there's going to come a day. It might not
be twenty twenty six. Ernst is up in twenty twenty six.
John Cornyan is up in twenty twenty six. We might
get our scalp, but at some point we are going

(26:54):
to get our scalp. We're going to get a scalp
or two. We are going to knock one of these
red state GOP senators off in a primary, and you
just watch how fast the other ones stop screwing us over.
They screw us over repeatedly because they can, because they

(27:16):
see themselves as the defenders of the deep state, not
the reformers or destroyers of the deep state, and because
they feel like they can get away with it and
we will let them go. But we are changing. And
the great news, this is the great news. It actually
excites me. They're always behind the public on what the

(27:38):
mood is, on how we feel. Politicians just by their nature,
they're surrounded by yes men. They live in the DC bubble.
They're always behind. Where you are, you have a better
sense of the mood than they do. The first one
it happens to, that person's gonna be shocked. They're gonna
be shocked. They'll have a real primary and they'll think, oh,

(28:01):
I'll be able to beat them anyway, no big deal.
And then about a month out from when the actual
primary election is, they're gonna start getting poll numbers that
show it's neck and neck or they're down five, and
panic is going to set in. And on that day,
whenever that day comes, on that day when we finally
defeat that red state primary GOP senator, the other Red

(28:21):
state GOP senators are going to quake in their granny
panties because that will be a message to them, we
will come for you next. But it doesn't happen instantly.
And for now, we have to deal with this crap.
So anyway, let's do some emails. Hang on, miss something.

Speaker 3 (28:41):
There's a podcast, get it on demand wherever podcasts are found,
The Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 1 (28:48):
It is The Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday. Remember
tomorrow's and ask doctor Jesse Friday. Get your questions emailed
in now to see At Jesse kellyshow dot com. You
can email the show. You can call the show and
leave a voicemail eight seven seven three seven seven four

(29:10):
three seven three. I'll get to those in a second.
Just one more thing on the reforms. I know this
stuff is hard to hear, but it's important that we
get ourselves in the right frame of mind. Elon Musk, Vivek,
we've talked about this before. I don't know if you saw.
Joe Biden just made a move to try to sign

(29:31):
a contract with the federal workforce to ensure they can't
be forced back to work. This comes on the heels
of this. This is from the New York Post. Only
six percent of federal workers show up in person on
a full time basis, a scathing Senate report reveals, And
so you me. We look at Elon Musk and Vivek

(29:53):
and they're talking about we're gonna fire this and everyone's
coming back to work, and this is what's gonna be done,
and this is what's gonna be done. Already Senate aids
GOP Senate AIDS are giving information to reporters saying, I
don't know what these guys think that it's going to
be done, but you can't do this. You can't do that.

(30:14):
They're not going to be allowed to do this. You
can't do that. I'm not trying to bring you down.
I'm trying to make sure we are where we need
to be mentally, use some caution when you're getting a
little too hopeful about how fast changes are going to come.

(30:35):
Change takes time. Elon Musk and Vivek. They're not walking
into some text startup they just bought where they can
point to you. You and you your fire. That's cut
and no more free coffee in the mornings. That worked
great when you bought Twitter. The federal government is the swamp,
and they make it famously difficult to reform it. Period.

(30:56):
They will do great things, don't get me wrong. They will,
and it's good. It is. It's not going to happen
as fast as you or I want it to happen.
I mean, these people are such freaking losers. So Mike Johnson,
Mike Johnson's been out there, he's been talking about Elon
and the things they want to do. I want to

(31:17):
take government agencies from four hundred and twenty eight to
ninety nine.

Speaker 4 (31:21):
Can it be done?

Speaker 5 (31:22):
We certainly hope. So we want to be willing partners
in that. And we have a new ability to do this.

Speaker 4 (31:29):
Now.

Speaker 5 (31:29):
Remember the Supreme Court overturned to Chevron doctors, right, that's
a game changing kind of situation. Not in my lifetime.
We had the opportunity to go in and really take
back control from the administrative state. For a long time,
they've been acting as judge ury and execution are on
the rules that they make on industries and small business
owners and the rest. So we have the ingredients, we
have the conditions right now to actually be able to

(31:50):
make really dramatic change.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
Okay, all right. He also said this.

Speaker 5 (31:54):
We have long lamented the size and scope of the government,
that it has grown too large. And let me be
for about this government. Uh is too big and there's
too many things, and it does almost nothing well, and
the taxpayers deserve better. They deserve a more responsive government,
a more efficient government, the one that is leaner and
more focused on its primary objectives. And that's the opportunity

(32:15):
that we have here now. We believe it's an historic
moment for the country.

Speaker 1 (32:19):
Yeah, I want you to picture this moment. I want
you to picture me walking into my front house, to
the front door of my house tonight, and I'm standing there,
and I want you to picture me saying, Matt, the
lawn around here. This lawn looks like garbage. Someone we
need to get this lawn mode. And wow, this fence,

(32:40):
this fence panel fell off. We got a Why has
this fence pan not been nailed back on? It takes
ten minutes. That's what you sound like, Speaker of the House,
Mike Johnson complaining about the size of government. Mike Johnson
sitting around. Oh, I'm just glad Elon's here to save us.
All you are of the House, you dork. You were

(33:03):
the ones signing on to every single government funding bill,
and now you're like, Wow, this government's way too big.
I'm glad Elon's here to help us out. You're the
most powerful person in the House of Representatives. In fact,
if God forbid something happened to the president and vice president,

(33:27):
you would assume the office of the President of the
United States of America. You're not some bystander lamenting what's
going on. You own the house. If the lawn needs mode,
go mow it. If the fence panel needs fixed, go
fix it. But these people, they just totally help us. Well,
I mean, I really hope. So the same dork who

(33:50):
allowed these people to run rough shot over him for
the last year. This is why I speak about chock
so lovingly. This is exactly why, because if we don't
get testosterone levels up, then we're finished. Can't you can't
take a country back? Do you want? Is this you?
Does this sound like you must want to take government
agencies from four hundred and twenty eight to ninety nine,

(34:12):
not just a woman.

Speaker 5 (34:13):
But we certainly hope. So we want to be willing
Parkers in that. And we have a new.

Speaker 1 (34:20):
Get your TA levels up fellas testosterone levels are too low,
fix it naturally natural herbal supplements from Chalk Ladies. They
have female vitality stacks for you. They have chuck Lit
powder for the morning. They have pre workout called Chad Mode.
Go get a Chalk subscription and live twenty twenty five

(34:42):
way better than you live. The twenty twenty four c
hoq dot com promo code Jesse, all right, all right, hey, Jesse,
do you think it's even possible for Cash or anyone
else to just go into the FBI and release the documents?
Why would the current gangsters in the Hoover building just

(35:03):
leave all that stuff there? Certainly all that evidence will
or already has been destroyed. Oh, they're destroying mountains in
mountains of evidence. You are never going to see just
how deep the rabbit hole goes. Remember I had to
any of that conversation I had with the former CIA
ops guy, and he was not one of these analysts.
He's one of those guys who's heard shots fired in

(35:24):
anger around the world, coups and everything else. But I
was talking to this CIA guy about the JFK files
and he was fairly dismissive of them, And I said, why,
he's like, Jesse, go ahead and release the files. I
know exactly how CIA operates. Anything that would have pointed
to anything damaging for anyone within the CIA was shredded

(35:46):
about thirty five seconds after the bullet went through JFK's brain.
Go ahead and open up the files. I'm sure there's
some stuff in there that doesn't look good, but anything
truly truly damning got deleted. That's not to say that
there's not a lot there. There's a ton there. But
remember they're using this lag period for a reason. A

(36:08):
gigantic industrial paper shredder truck didn't pull up in front
of the DOJ because he ran out of gas in
the Hoover building. But the illegal crap they've been pulling there,
and the thought that a reformer like cash Betel may
be coming in, Oh, trust me, things are getting shredded.
Lots and lots of things are getting shredded, lots of

(36:31):
them through the voicemail here.

Speaker 4 (36:32):
By Jesse Great topics. I want to know who did
the auditing of the Defense Department. They can never see
where the money went. Who's paying the auditors? So they
government workers too? Why was no one fired for not
having their ducks in a row and then audit their
financial information available? There's layers and layers of data entry people,

(36:54):
and it's obvious they know where every penny's going, they
just don't want to tell. I hope it's going to
some useful advanced tech project, otherwise they gotta go through
in clean house. Thank you.

Speaker 1 (37:09):
Yeah. Let's actually talk really quickly about the audit and
what an audit actually is. What why do they keep
failing audits. That's an interesting thing to bring up because actually,
my wife, ob is an auditor and she's stay at
home mom, but by trade, she got an accounting degree
from University of Arizona and that's what she's done. Her

(37:29):
most recent job was she was an internal auditor. Let's
talk about that next
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Jesse Kelly

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