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November 19, 2025 37 mins

Rep Stacey Plaskett and her text buddy Jeffery Epstein. The GOP leadership in congress doesn’t have the stones to censure a Democrat. Getting demoralized. Jesses’s experiment. The cost of everything is going up and if we can’t make things more affordable it will cost the GOP in the midterms. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly show.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Let's have some fun
on a Wednesday, Houp Day. Life is freaking grand. Put
a smile on your face. We have crested the hump
of the week.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
And it's all downhill from gear. We have such a
big show today. It's one of those things. I'm about
to tease a lot of things, and I'm not making
any promises that I'm getting to everything. Here's what we're
gonna do. I am reluctantly because of a conversation I
had this morning with a congressman. I am reluctantly going

(00:57):
to talk about the Epstein stuff from yesterday, and then
I'm moving on. I honestly don't even feel like it,
but I feel the need to tell you what I
know and just express something, and then we're going to
move on. Hopefully that'll just be a few minutes, maybe
a couple segments, I don't know. We're going to talk
more about affordability, We're going to talk about the Communists
being after your children. Will of course set aside sometime

(01:21):
to make fun of Michelle Obama tracking down all these
poor illegal slave kids in the country. A woman got
set on fire in Chicago by a repeat fellon emails.
So much more coming up tonight on the world famous
Jesse Kelly Show. Now, I'm going to read you something.

(01:44):
I am not going to tell you who it's from
because I was not given permission to do so. And
that's just the way it's going to be. A sitting
member of Congress. I was texting with this guy today
and he was disheartened, beyond belief. This guy is one

(02:07):
of the good ones. And contrary to what you and
I like to believe, sometimes there are some really solid
people there. They're just like you, they're just like me.
They want to save the country. They're there to do
some good. And he sounded close to retirement. I'll be
honest with you, that's how crushed he was. In fact,

(02:28):
I probably don't need to read it exactly what was
he crushed about, because you know, we had that big
Epstein vote last night. It was something like four hundred
and twenty seven to one. We had the big Epstein vote.
The House voted, hey, release the files. The Senate voted okay, okay,
sounds good. So what's the problem. Well, let me walk
you through this in case you've kind of been out

(02:49):
of the news. There is a congresswoman by the name
of Stacy Plasket. She's a congresswoman from the Virgin Islands.
I know, it's weird, it's okay. Well, Democrats thought they
were going to hurt Trump and hurt Republicans with the
release of all this Epstein stuff. But it turns out

(03:10):
that Stacy Plasket was so close with Jeffrey Epstein that
while she was having a meeting, a committee meeting meeting,
she's interrogating someone. Someone's standing in front of sitting in
front of her, and she's asking them questions under oath.
Epstein is texting her the questions to ask the person

(03:31):
during the committee meeting. Now, I know multiple members of Congress,
and I don't know of one of them who would.
Now I've never done it, but who would text me
back during a committee meeting. Maybe they would, I don't know,
But that's kind of business time. So as all this
stuff gets laid out, Stacey Plasket doesn't look that great.

(03:54):
Democrats look terrible. It's now the story of the day.
Here's her.

Speaker 3 (04:01):
From Jeffrey Epstein, who at the time was my constituent,
who was not public knowledge at that time, that he
was under federal investigation.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
It was already knowledge, it was public knowledge that he
was a criminal, and who.

Speaker 3 (04:18):
Was sharing information with me?

Speaker 1 (04:20):
Okay, well that's a lie obviously. Okay, so now she
looks bad. She has to defend herself, but it's not
really defensible what happened. And remember this is not my opinion.
These are black and white things. This happened Democrats because
they're communists, and all that matters is the revolution quickly
locked shields and attempted to defend her. Here was Jamie Raskal.

Speaker 4 (04:38):
Well, they want to give them another headline, which is
that they've arraigned a Democratic member for taking a phone
call from her constituent, Jeffrey Epstein, in the middle of
a hearing. And of course I don't think there's any
rule here against taking phone calls in a hearing.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
Right, Grihalva, she's a new member of Congress, said this.

Speaker 4 (05:03):
I know she's a Democratic colleague was texting with a
sexual predator in twenty nineteen.

Speaker 5 (05:09):
Yeah, I think it's important for us to understand what
that whole transaction was. Having been able to see just
what happened with my colleague and an attempt to censor
him in chewey Garcia. I know that, like most of
the time, when you hear one little snippet of what happened,
it's not the full story.

Speaker 1 (05:29):
And hey, you don't have the full story. It just obviously,
as you can figure out, they were trying to censure her,
essentially punish her for this egregious thing that she did.
Democrats are stopping it. Okay, Jasmine Crockett went so far?
Is to just tell a gigantic lie. Remember, as you know,

(05:50):
communists lie about everything all the time, not just small
little eyes not shading the truth. They will look at
a body of water and tell you, well, the water
is not wet. All that matters is the revolution. So
they will tell gigantic, verifiable lies to your face and
repeat them over and over and over again without the

(06:13):
slightest moral hesitation, because their morality doesn't in any way
reflect the morality of human beings. Here is Jasmine Crockett.
Keep in mind, as she reads this list aloud, the
Jeffrey Epstein's she's discussing, none of them are the Jeffrey Epstein.
They all just share the same name. So it's just

(06:34):
a gigantic life.

Speaker 6 (06:36):
Folks who also took money from somebody named Jeffrey Epstein,
as I had my team dig in very quickly, Mitt Romney,
the NRCC, Lee Zelden, George bush Win, Rad McCain, Palin,
Rick Lazio. I just want to be clear, if this

(06:57):
is the standard that we gonna make, just non expose
it all and just know that the FEC filings they
are available for everybody to review.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
It's a lie. She knows it's a lie. She knows
your liberal and Peggy is dumb enough to believe the lie.
So that's why they tell it big gigantic lies, outright lies,
verifiable lies, easily verifiable lies. You knew it was a lie,
you paid attention to the news about eight hours ago.
A verifiable lie. All right. Why did the vote to

(07:28):
censure Stacy Plaskett to punish her for what she did?
Why did the vote fail? Well, it failed because because
we have a problem in our midst Corey Mills is
a congressman from Florida. You can do your own research.
It's he's got all kinds of controversies around him, not

(07:50):
not one, multiple multiple. It's it's ugly. The financial stuff.
It's just it's really really bad. And it failed because
Republican leadership cut a deal with Democrat leadership that essentially
went something like this, hey, don't punish Stacey Plaskett and

(08:12):
we won't punish Corey Mills. Congressman Tim Burchett of Tennessee,
one of the good ones. No, he's not the one
I was texting with. The audio is a little fuzzy,
said this. He just exposed it all. So it failed.

Speaker 7 (08:25):
And what they did was they cut a deal. They
cut a deal on another on an ethics arred on
a Republican and that's just wrong. If everybody, I'll just
stand on their own if they were truly, we don't
care whose party.

Speaker 1 (08:41):
Tim Burchard exposed it. Anna Pauline A Luna, another one
of the good ones.

Speaker 8 (08:45):
You said it, And I was wondering if the Speaker
of the House of Representatives can explain why leadership on
both sides, both Democrat and Republican, are cutting back end
deals to cover up public corruption in the House of
Representatives from both Republican and Democrat members of Congress.

Speaker 9 (08:58):
General Lady has not stated a popular a proper parliamentary
inquiry very much, But.

Speaker 8 (09:03):
I think the American people know what happened tonight.

Speaker 1 (09:06):
Text I got this morning from one of the good ones,
one of the people. Boy, boy, do we need him there?
Text me, and he says right out three words. I
hate it here, said ah Man, And I knew he's
not the look, he's not one of these where your
emotions on your sleeves, touchy feely guys. Oh that's four words.

(09:27):
Shut up, Chris, I went to community college. One of
those words. Can. But whatever, we don't need you counting numbers.
I hated here, he says. We went back and forth. Hey,
what's wrong? He is there to drain the swamp, to
save the country, and to have our own GOP leadership torpedo.

(09:53):
A vote to censure an evil communists was about enough
to have him put in his retirement papers and not
run for reelection. Spend my morning, well not my morning,
spend probably twenty minutes trying to talk him off the ledge.
Think I successfully did, but spent quite a while this
morning trying to talk him off the ledge. Let's talk

(10:15):
about Washington, DC, politics, life, America, good people before we
move on to so many other things. Let's talk, shall we?
Before we talk, let me talk to you about another
ugly aspect of life, since it's about to get ugly

(10:35):
on the online world. It's ugly in a million ways.
It could be wonderful in a million ways. It's ugly
in a million ways. And the online world, your data
is everything. Everything, there's a value to it. Why do
you think every time you buy anything in a store
now they're asking for your phone number, your email address.

(10:56):
By the way, you should always say no. Why do
you think they're doing that? Because that has a value
to it, your email address, but your social security number
has a value much more. Why do they want something
so personal? Why would they want that because it allows
them to take gigantic loans out in your name, destroying
your finances, wiping out your credit score, your bank account,

(11:16):
and ruining your life. And you didn't do anything wrong.
The only thing wrong you did was you didn't get LifeLock.
LifeLock would have told you, LifeLock would have let you know,
and if they did clean you out, LifeLock would have
made you whole again. LifeLock go look up their reviews.
They've been doing this for a long time, not some
scam service. They've been treating us, you and me right

(11:38):
for a long time. You want to save a bunch
of money. You join now. You save up to forty
percent off your first year with the promo code Jesse.
Call one eight hundred LifeLock promo code Jesse or go
to LifeLock dot com promo code Jesse. Terms apply, We'll
be back the Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 2 (11:59):
It's still real damage, then, Stacks, it is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a wonderful Wednesday.

Speaker 1 (12:08):
Remember you can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow
dot com. So all the Epstein stuff got voted yesterday,
released the files, and then of course they came out
already and said, well, we have to redact some things
for national security reasons, which of course begs the question
why would why would why would there be national security

(12:29):
reasons for Jeffrey Epstein's files. Anyway, setting that aside, they
failed to censure Stacey Plasket, who was texting with Jeffrey
Epstein during a committee meeting. Democrats are knee deep involved
in the Epstein stuff, and they failed to center Stacey
Plasket because Republican leadership cut a deal with Democrat leadership.

(12:51):
Will protect our guy, you protect your girl. We'll all
work out well. And the good ones are mad about.

Speaker 8 (12:59):
It, and I was wondering if the Speaker of the
House of Representatives can explain why leadership on both sides,
both Democrat and Republican, are cutting back end deals to
cover up public corruption in the House of Representatives from
both Republican and Democrat members of Congress.

Speaker 9 (13:11):
General Lady has not stated a popular a proper parliamentary
inquiry very much.

Speaker 8 (13:16):
But I think the American people know what happened tonight.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
They do, and this is the kind of thing that
doesn't just dishearten the good people in Washington, DC. You've
seen these moments before. If you've been paying attention for
long enough so of I you've had these moments, these
moments where you almost slump your shoulders and say, man,

(13:41):
screw this, it's not even worth it. I'm done with politics.
That screw them all. I'm not even voting anymore. But
if you've said things like this, I want you to
know something I have to I get it. I have
had multiple moments in my roughly twenty year involvement in

(14:04):
politics where I have sumped my shoulders and said, you
know what, man, screw this. I'm going to go back
to just watching football on the weekends and just not
ever turning on the news, and I'll just be a
dumb normy who doesn't participate in my country. I don't
care anymore. It's worthless that I want to do an

(14:25):
attempt to encourage you with something though. Before we move
on and we're going to talk about affordability and the
education system and everything else, we have all kinds of
stuff to get to. I wanted to encourage you with
this that that is exactly what the evil, evil people
in this country want, in fact, lots of the time.

(14:48):
That's the purpose of it. Have you ever heard of
Tokyo Rose. Maybe you have, maybe you haven't. But Tokyo Rose,
she was a woman. She would come on over the air.
During World War II, our troops would be out on
ships in the Pacific, or occasionally, if you got your

(15:11):
hands on a radio, you'd be on land. Let's say
you're in Okinawa, you're in Guadalcanal, you're a marine, you're
a sailor. You've watched your friends die, you're going through hell,
and you're looking for any kind of an escape. You
can only smoke so many cigarettes, you can only talk

(15:32):
about so many girls and food and things like that.
Back home. You're always looking for an escape and music.
Music is one of those very powerful things. Music creates
feelings in people. I know you've experienced it, even if
you didn't necessarily know what was happening. If you listen

(15:54):
to music that's upbeat, you're going to get more upbeat
and feel good. To music that's said everybody hurts, you're
going to be more sad. Women will do this. Ob
does this. If you want to have a good cry,
if you're already sad, you turn on sad music and
you just wade into it. Right, I do the opposite.
But whatever to each his own. Music is powerful. It

(16:15):
creates feelings in people. Japan understood the power of not
just music, of demoralization. So what they did was this,
They would put out music over the airwaves. Japan did this,
Music's coming out over the airwaves. What kind of music?

(16:36):
All the popular music of the day, all the music
back in the day, back in the forties that the
troops would be listening to if they were at the
drive in movie theater with their girlfriend back home, that
they'd be listening to in a bar. That all the
music that you would want to hear if you're a
nineteen twenty year old man Japan grabbed it and played it.

(16:58):
But in between the music. In between the music, Tokyo
Rose would come on the air and she would say
things like, hey, oh you Marines getting ready to invade
Okinawa tomorrow. I want you to know you're all going
to die. We've already made plans to kill every one
of you. Your mom back home is going to get

(17:21):
a letter over and over and over and over and
over again. Why well, to demoralize the other side is
more powerful than you can imagine, and evil people know it,
and evil people will use it to their advantage. Don't

(17:45):
let them get you down. Even on bad nights where
you find out corrupt GOP leadership cut a corrupt deal
with Democrat leadership, so a corrupt GOP congressman and a
corrupt Themocrat congresswoman would not find themselves in serious trouble.
Even on days like that, when your shoulders slump over

(18:07):
and you say, screw this, I'm watching the game and
I'm out of politics. Take a day if you need it,
take a breath, eat a pizza, then get back on
your horse. Don't let don't let them get you down.
It's verbatim. What I told that congressman who was ready
to retire this morning. Don't let the bad guys demoralize you,

(18:32):
all right, all right, let's move on and talk about
costs and things that matter to you and me. Speaking
of costs, what did it cost you? You can look
it up if you like. What did it cost you
the last time you took your dog to the vet?
How much you know? I know, I remember how much
ours was? Six hundred dollars, six hundred dollars for one

(18:59):
vet visit. Swear all my life we didn't amputate his
leg or something. Six hundred dollars. Would you like to
never really have to go to the vet, or at
least go a lot less. You know, if you give
your dog nutrition, your dog doesn't need to go to
the vet so often, just like you. If you eat better,
you don't have to go to the doctor as much.

(19:19):
It's just human nature. Sprinkle roughgreens on your dog's food.
It is the number one dog supplement in America for
a reason. Live nutrients your dog can't find anywhere else.
Sprinkle it on your dog's food. Watch your dog come
alive and stay alive, and stay away from the vet.

(19:41):
Roughgreens dot com promo code Jesse hits you a free
Jumpstart trial bag. Roughgreens dot Com promo code Jesse We'll
be back. I've got on Anymoisie. Don't mean, says Jesse Kelly.
You're listening to the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the

(20:02):
Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful Wednesday, all home day.
So before we get to the affordability stuff of the
news and things like that, so I'm doing a little
self experiment. I teased it before the show, and Jewish
producer Chris was really mad that I wouldn't expand. So
I'm gonna go ahead and tell you, Chris. At the
same time, I'm telling all of the United States of America,

(20:26):
even though I'm warning you right now this is the dumbest,
most pointless thing in the world. It fascinates me. The
human mind fascinates me. What makes people tick? Does it
fascinate you? Not just that people do things? Why do
they do things? What drives people to do things? And
we've had to talk before about a candy dish. Its

(20:48):
secretary has a candy dish there, and we've joked about
it's always the Three Musketeers left because it sucks, and
people will tell you it doesn't suck, but it does lie.
The candy dish doesn't lie. When people have options, they
don't choose three musketeers. I I know we're about to

(21:09):
talk about affordability, so I don't want to rub my
wealth in anyone's face. But I don't just have one
highlighter here at the studio. We buy the five pack
of highlighters here, five different colors. In case you're curious
what I do with them. I try to make connections

(21:31):
in my mind between stories and audio and things like that.
So I highlight things just so what pops into my head,
trying to do a better show anyway, wealthy five pack
of highlighters. The first time we got a five pack
of highlighters, the yellow ran out right away. Why I'm

(21:52):
used to yellow highlighters. It was always the one I
grabbed first. Whatever the biggest thing was, the thing I
had to highlight the most, I went yellow. Now I've
moved on now in an effort to save money, I'm
trying to evenly distribute my highlight or usage. But I
don't track it. I just try to grab a different

(22:15):
one for a different story or a different topic. I
have a pink one, a green one, a yellow one,
a blue one, and an orange one in front of me.
If you're watching, Yes, that's a chalk bottle that I
keep them in. Which one's going to run out first?
I don't know, Chris says yellow. Still, I don't know.

(22:37):
And what does it say about my mind if one
has a bunch left and the other one runs out first?
Maybe nothing. Maybe there's some psychiatrist nerd listening who will
understand there's some meaning behind it. But one is going
to run out first, Chris, And I'm going to be
curious as to why what Chris? I was right that

(23:01):
this was stupid. I warned you it was stupid. Okay,
I warned you that it was stupid. I can't help myself.
I have stupid things that run through my head. Let's
talk about something horrible, then, Chris, we'll talk about something
important and horrible. Look, no, no, you did it. You
don't want to talk about stupid. Then let's talk about
real stuff. How about this one? Marist? Now, Marist is

(23:22):
a polling company I should clarify, and a bad one.
I want to make sure I'm clear about this. A
bad one don't do the extremely dumbed down thing we
do on the right. And every time there's a poll
you see that you don't like, you say all the
polls lie. We do that every time, and then when
we see when we like, we say, oh, that's a

(23:42):
good polster. No, there are good pollsters and there are
bad pollsters, depending on the methodology, how many people are
pulled the questions they asked who you actually asked? What
percentage of Republicans, what percentage of Democrats. There are good pollsters,
there are bad posters, and there are sometimes really reputable
good pollsters who have polls that don't make us feel

(24:05):
very good because we're not doing very good. I know
where you stand politically, and you obviously know where I
stand politically. We have to get past that and figure
out what's going to win or lose elections. So again,
back to this poster, who's a bad poster? I want
to clarify they legitimate Merist is legitimately not a great poster.

(24:28):
But they ran a poll on something called the generic ballot.
Now that is something maybe you've heard of before. Let
me pause because I want to explain what that actually means.
A generic ballot, What in the world is a generic ballot.
You call somebody someone actually answers and chooses to answer
your questions, and you simply say, hey, who do you

(24:53):
trust more on the economy, the border? Or if you
want to go super generic with the generic ballot, you say,
who are you going to vote for in the mid terms?
Which party do you like more? Way generic? Marist again,
admittedly a bad polster just did one. They have Democrats

(25:15):
up fourteen points in the generic ballot. Stop for a second.
You are correct that that's a bad polster. Even a
bad polster is probably not off that far. But let's
build in for the fact that Marist sucks. You know what,

(25:36):
let's way build it in. Let's cut that number in half.
Let's say seven points. That's a lot. All right, that's
a lot. Why why are we looking at an ugly midterm?
Have you bought berger lately? I you bought anything? Look,

(26:02):
here's here's a story. It's it's not huge, but Fox business.
Hidden cost of home ownership jumps, tightening the squeeze on buyers.
Now what hidden costs? Well, there are all kinds of
costs that come with owning a home. But I have
one that's near and dear to my heart. In fact,
we got an email someone else just went through the

(26:24):
same thing our AC went out, And I'm sure this
is a complete coincidence. Our AC went out this is
last summer, about five minutes after the warranty expired. So
too bad, so sad. You have to buy an entirely
new air conditioning system for the house. The last air
conditioning system I had to buy in my life was

(26:46):
years and years and years ago. I admit that years ago,
and I don't remember the sizes and brands. I know
there were different ones, but it was four thousand dollars.
That's a lot of money. This one was nine. When
he gave me the price, of course, I tried to
remain calm. I said, I'm going to get another opinion,

(27:10):
and I did. Actually I got two other opinions, and
they were all roughly the same. Life is expensive now,
very very expensive. Now. Now I didn't get that nine
thousand dollars bill and say that's ridiculous. I'm voting for Democrats.

(27:30):
But of course I would never do that, and you
would never do that. I'm not saying that. I'm not
putting that on you at all. You're not a moron.
You understand there are all kinds of things that go
behind that. I know you get it, then I get it.
It would never occur to me. I was mad for
a variety of reasons, mainly because I didn't want to
spend nine thousand dollars. But I got it. You got it.

(27:50):
I'm not going to have a political hissy fit about it.
I am not. You are not Seran people are they are?
And the American people the normies in the American people,
I shouldn't say all American people. The normies in America

(28:12):
are the ones who decide elections. They are the ones
who decide elections. And that is a frustrating place to
be for people who are knowledgeable and people who are involved. It's,
in fact, it's one of the most maddening things in
the world if you allow it to just completely take

(28:33):
over your mind. I'll stew on this for hours before
I calm myself down. How is it that we're in
a place that the normie morons are the ones who
will choose the direction of the United States of America.
How can that be? Shouldn't it just be the most knowledgeable?
Shouldn't be shouldn't it be you shouldn't it be me?

(28:53):
Shouldn't it just be us who care? We care enough
to pay attention. Okay, but let's not do the child
who the thing and say it shouldn't be that way.
It is that way. How bad is it? I'll tell
you in a minute. Fighting for your freedom every day
the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show

(29:19):
on a wonderful wednesdayday. So ignorant people decide our elections
and it drives us crazy. And I've got I've got
a doozy for you here. You want to hear about that.
This is from Woke Spy. The headline is ignorant people
want to keep the Department of Education informed? People don't quote.

(29:41):
At the outset, fifty one percent of respondents said the
opposed shutting down the department, while thirty eight percent supported
the idea. Oh that's bad, So they don't want to
shut down an apartment of the education Okay. After learning
that K through twelve funding would remain in place and
that functions would be reassigned to other federal agencies, support

(30:02):
rose to fifty six percent. Opposition declined to thirty percent.
Now it is hard to take in and accept that
These are the morons who decide elections. People will go

(30:24):
to the polls and vote for who leads their community,
their state, and their country without even the most basic
knowledge of how those things actually work, of the functions
of government, what they should be, what they do, what
they don't do, and it drives us nuts. So as

(30:46):
you hear me rant and rave for the next year
about affordability, about inflation and immigration, inflation and immigration, inflation
and immigration, try to bear with me because I'm trying
to get the point through to me and to you
about what will actually decide elections. And as I said before,

(31:10):
whatever you're hot on, it's probably something very very worthy.
I'm not insulting whatever issue you are hot on. Everyone
has their own motivations and things they like me. You
know how hot I am against abortion. I've always I've
always just been that way. I'm a ext I'm borderline

(31:31):
militant about it. I just despise it, despise it. I
don't demand the GOP run on it. I don't also
make this critical critical mistake. I also don't think it's
an issue that matters to normies. It just doesn't. Does
that mean abortion stopping it is not important. Of course, Doc,

(31:56):
It's majorly important. We're killing babies. It's hugely important. Whatever
your thing is, election integrity, hugely important. You could argue,
it's everything. You could argue if you dig into Democrat
cheating in elections long enough that it's the only thing.
I'm not insulting your passion about it. Normanis don't care.

(32:21):
They don't care. Normies don't care about Epstein, they don't
care about all these Israel arguments people have. Normies don't
really actually care that much about taxes. Did you know
that normies don't care about spending. I know that's insanely said,
and we can go into that more, but I'm talking
about government spending. They don't care. They don't normies because

(32:45):
they're uninformed morons. Normies they vote on what's happening in
their life, in their household, and in a way that's understandable.
I call them morons, but I guess that's the essence
of being a normy. It's not necessarily that you're a moron.
You just don't necessarily care about the politics of your country.
You only care about you and focus on you, which

(33:06):
is a bit myopic, but it is the way it
is my opic is a great word that I learned
last night, Chris. I knew I was going to work
it into the show today. I worked it into the
show in the first hour. I might point out, in fact,
I'm going to use it again today. I might use
it several times today now that I've learned a new word. Yes,

(33:27):
I will, Chris, Why are you being so myopic? I will?
That's another one, you know what, starting a tally? That's
too hang on, I gotta write this down. That's too
already that I've view anyway back to what we're saying.
But there are also things that the administration has got
to keep in mind. They know about affordability. They're talking

(33:48):
about it a lot now. They understand they have to
address it. But here's one that went right by you,
almost went by me, usade. That's the Department of Energy.
They partner with Microsoft. Do what well you've heard of
three Mile Island nuclear reactor. By the way, nobody died
in that disaster. I know they lied to you about

(34:10):
all that, but no one died. It was fine, It
all worked fine. But three Mile Island got shut down.
They're going to fire it back up again. Sweet, all right,
they're given a billion dollar loan out. Sounds good. Microsoft
is involved, great, sounds good. If those energy costs down,
we need we need more nuclear power should be going

(34:30):
on all over the country. Ooh, except Microsoft is going
to buy all the energy from it for the next
two decades. This is all about AI. This is about
data centers, is really what it's about, which we've discussed
before on the show. These data centers are enormous. They

(34:51):
can't possibly build them fast enough. They're also energy suckers,
like you cannot believe. They just hoover up energy. We
don't have enough energy to power them fast enough. So
so I understand the game. Microsoft is gonna get it.
Microsoft's gonna figure figure out how everything gets built. Then
Microsoft's gonna get all the power from it for two decades.
I understand that. Now, that's the kind of thing that

(35:14):
looks good on the bottom line of the country but
doesn't look good on your bottom line or my bottom line.
And I know there are all kinds of reasons for it.
I get it. But that's the kind of thing that's
gonna hurt us in the midterms. How about we just
built thirty new nuclear reactors and it's all going to

(35:38):
bring down your power bill. Your power bill every month.
Next month, your power bill is going to be twenty
percent less because we just got a nuclear reactor on board. Boom.
Now we're talking baby. Now we're ready for the midterms.
Nobody in the midterms is going to go to the
polls and vote for the GOP because Microsoft got their

(36:01):
own nuclear plan. We have got to stay focused, at
least our elected officials. You can still focus on what
you care about. Obviously, it's not my job to tell you,
and I'm gonna stay focused on what I care about.
But we have got to make sure kitchen table issues
remain at the forefront because the normies don't know any better.

(36:21):
They know about the cost of burger and beyond that,
they own no squad. All right, they know relief factor works.
That's good. I'm at least happy the word has gone out.
You know a million people have tried it, over a million,
actually over a million. Why has this company, there's a
small company, How have they blown up like this? Over

(36:43):
a million people already? Because the word goes out. That's
not just from me. It's not just me telling you.
All I tell you is to go by three weeks
of it. After that, I can't help them out. Either
it works or it doesn't work. It's a supplement you
take every day for three weeks. It's not drugs. You
take it for the pain that holds you back from

(37:05):
doing the things you want to do, the daily chronic
pain that hurts your life. Why why have they gotten
so big? Because it works? Did you know nearly seventy
percent of people call and order more. You have a
pain solution right there. All you got to do is
go to reliefactor dot com or call one eight hundred

(37:28):
the number four relief nineteen dollars and ninety five cents
to take away that back pain. How's that sound nineteen
ninety five relieffactor dot com. All right, we're going to
talk a little bit more. I touched on it yesterday
about that treasonous video Democrats put out. Next
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Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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