Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:15):
It is that Jessie Kelly Shaw, let's have some fun
on a disastrous Monday. That's just the absolute worst. We're
all dealing with the stock market crashing and maybe w
W three and then all right, tell you it's what
we have on TAPA tonight. And you need to pay
(00:36):
attention here because I gotta warn you, and we're gonna
be all over the place, as I tend to be
from time to time. We're gonna open up, we're gonna talk.
Actually we have a long talk about it's gonna pertain
to the stock market stuff, but it's gonna talk about patriotism,
why it's necessary, Why the lack thereof explains so much
of what you see. We'll talk about that in a moment.
(00:56):
If you're looking for details on the stock market, I
have those coming my friend John Carney, amazing economists who
knows how to speak in ways you and I can understand.
About a half hour from now, he's coming. Why did
this happen? A trillion dollars gone? Kind of a big deal,
I would say, ugly day. Just to give you some
context here, this is the worst trading day for stock
(01:17):
markets in nearly two years. I only played that because
she had a wonderful accent, and we all need something
to feel happy about. It's a bad day. John Carney's
going to explain exactly what that problem is. As you know,
one hour from now is Medal of Honor Monday time.
I figured you and me could probably use a break
after what's been a long day. So you want to
(01:39):
do a little bit of history with me. An hour
from now, We're going to an hour from now, we're
gonna do a little history leading up to the Meddle
of Honor. From there, we'll dive into so many things.
We'll dive into Dome and so many have We'll talk
about Biden. We're gonna do email roundups. There's a chance
if I'm in a fantastic mood in a couple hours,
(01:59):
I may even know it up the phone lines. I
don't know all that and so much more. It's coming
up tonight on the world famous Jesse Kelly Show. Now,
let's dig into this this mess that our leaders have
made of us, of our country of the West. Well,
it's about the West, but we're going to focus on
America for now. So tell your true story from yesterday
(02:24):
in the kitchen, I'm messing around. I'm looking in the
pantry for a snack. We have in our kitchen. Our
trash can is in a drawer. You ever see those
where it's in a drawer, keeps it you know, the
smell down keeps it out. You got to open up
a drawer put stuff in the trash. Maybe you have
one of those our trash cans in a drawer. One
of my sons comes out, he's got a rapper in
(02:44):
his hand. What a shock. They're snacking. I turn around
in time to see him open up the trash can
and instead of just dropping this rapper in the trash can,
I see him jam it down into the top and
then give it another shot. And I said, well, hold on,
hold on, because he was closing the drawer. And I
(03:05):
walk over there and I look down and the trash
can is full. Oh, it's overflowing. And I said, son,
look at this, look at this. What do you think
you should do? And he looks down at it and
he knows right away he's busted. And he says, I
should take the trash out and replace the bag. I said,
that's right, that's right. But why why Well, because you
(03:30):
want me to be more responsible, that's that's correct. Yeah,
that's that's fine. But you're doing fine there, you're improving.
But why And we ended up getting into a little
talk about this. And this is before all the stock
market stuff came out. Didn't know what was coming. But
we ended up getting in a talk about you do
things like that because of what it reveals inside of you,
(03:53):
about how you think about yourself, your family, how you
think about your home. You Why do I take out
the trash when I see the trash is overflowing? Why
do I take out the trash? Because when I look
at an overflowing trash, can I immediately think to myself, well, crap,
the trash is overflowing. If I don't do it, someone
(04:14):
else in the family is going to or maybe the
wife will be making dinner and she'll need it emptied
and it won't be emptied. And plus it's gonna smell.
If I don't do it, it's gonna stink up the house.
I feel an obligation to take the trash out when
I feel like the trash. When I see the trash
is overflowing, I feel like it's my duty to take
(04:36):
it out. Why Because I love my home, I love
my family, I love my home, I appreciate them. I
appreciate my home keeps the rain off my head, and I,
because I love and appreciate it, naturally feel an obligate
(05:00):
to it, feel a duty to my home because I
love it. When you truly, truly love something, the feeling
of obligation and duty comes with it in a million
different ways. Now, what's this have to do with a
(05:21):
stock market in America? In everything, Well, the truth is,
we are led by people who do not care about
the United States of America, and that is very, very
hard for a patriot like you to understand. In fact,
true patriotism, real patriotism is actually quite rare anymore, not
(05:45):
just in the leaders, in the people themselves. Allow me
to explain, to explain, when you bring up patriotism or
America or something like that, you'll generally get two different
responses depending on who you're talking to. If you're to
a Democrat, because they're America hating, demonic savages, you'll always
get eye rolls or sneers or something derogatory about America
(06:09):
because they just genuinely hate the place. If you're a Democrat,
that's how you're brought up. America socks A's eve. I
have to burn it down. That's how democrats think. But
with your normy Republican friends, I'm not talking about you,
with the norms and normas in your life. What is patriotism? Well,
what do you get? Yeah, man, look at my beer can,
Look at my American flag, beer cans. It's July fourth,
(06:31):
baby worth, fireworks, America, I got guns. I love America.
And there's nothing wrong with beer cans. There's certainly nothing
wrong with Independence Day, and there ain't nothing wrong with guns.
But that's not patriotism. That's not feeling a obligation, an obligation,
(06:54):
a duty to your country. That's not service to your country.
That's not a deep feeling inside of you that makes
you want to make your country better. Is what is
America to that? It's a mascot. Patriotism becomes a mascot
you roll out every single July fourth. But that's not
(07:17):
real patriotism. Real patriotism is what you feel inside of
you right now. And I want you to understand it's
very very rare what you feel inside of you right
now when you look when you wake up in the
morning and you see like what we saw today and
you see a trillion dollars in wealth gone, and the
Japan's going down, and that's gonna bleed over into US,
(07:37):
and we're potentially looking at a big world war with
Americans dying and your what is it? What do you
feel inside of you? You feel heartsick? Right? Don't you
feel anger and frustrated and sad and sick? Even if
it's not for you, Even if you did find today,
even if you're gonna weather this storm and we will
weather this storm, I need to clear, be clear about that.
(07:58):
Even if you're you're you know whether this storm or
you did fine, Even if you're fine, you had a
moment today where you thought about the person, the old
person on fixed income who just got wiped out today
and they're not gonna make it. And it hurt, didn't it?
It hurt thinking about your fellow American citizens and what
(08:19):
they're going through. It hurt you to know we are
on the precipice of some rocky financial times and what
that means for your kids and your grandkids who will
come after you. And what it hurt? Didn't it? It
made you feel something, and you know why it made
you feel something? You should feel very very proud about
this because you're a patriot in the true sense of
(08:43):
the word. You love your country, you appreciate your country.
And when you see the trash can overflowing, you grab
the bag, you sench it up, and you take it
out to the garage. And here's the problem. We are
not led by people who fell out anything today. Patriotism
(09:04):
is not a cliche. It's not a mascot you roll
out on Independence Day. It is the essential element for
any country, large or small, powerful or weak. If you
have a nation full of people who love it and
appreciate it, and if you're led by people who love
and appreciate your country, you will weather the storms, and
(09:26):
you will weather the trials, because the trials will come.
And if you are led by people who don't care
about it at all, it doesn't matter how good the
times are, you will eventually fall. And we here in
the United States of America have a severe patriotism problem,
top to bottom. And that is what we must dig into.
(09:46):
And we're going to dig into this a lot more
and just a moment, the patriotism problem. How we can
fix it. Remember, I have John Carney coming up fifteen
minutes from now. Explain this stock market stuff before I
do that. I obviously you know about the news, the
news over there with Iran Israel. Iran is informing Israel
(10:08):
through proxies in hungry. They're attacking, they intend to attack.
This is how things are done. And this doesn't look
like right now what it was last time. Couple rockets,
a couple of people got hurt, no big deal, and
in Iran goes back to doing what they do. This
looks like it might. It might be significant, possibly Russia's involvement.
(10:29):
Remember to say a prayer and remember IFCJ International Fellowship
of Christians and Jews. They're over there building bunkers as
we speak, providing bulletproof ambulances as we speak, body armor
as we speak, food as we speak, medical care, firefighting equipment,
(10:49):
and boy, sadly are these things going to be needed
even more shortly, Yes they are. They're looking for five
hundred people to donate one hundred and fifty bucks. Go
and do it. Support IFCJ dot org. If you can go,
do it, or call him eight eight eight four eight
eight IFCJ, We'll be back. He doesn't care if you
(11:12):
believe him, but he's right. Jesse Kelly. It is the
Jesse Kelly Show, odda Monday, of course, Medal of Honor Monday.
You're gonna do a little history around that. Coming up
about forty five minutes from now, John Carney, the economists,
breaking down in more detail the stock thing from today,
(11:34):
the market, what happened. He's coming up about ten minutes
from now. In case you're just joining us, we're talking
about patriotism and how it leads to so much of
this stuff. So let me just explain it in a
more specific way. Why will we even bring this up
on a day like today, Well, we can sit and
talk about the market, and we will with John Carney,
(11:55):
and that'll help us understand what happened today. But what
happened today happen for the same reason they've opened up
the border and allowed thirty forty illegals to flood into
your country, rape your women, take your jobs, and destroy
your healthcare system. What happened today is happening for the
(12:17):
exact same reason. They send billions and billions and billions
and billions of your dollars over to pay the pension
of corrupt Ukrainian government employees while you can't afford eggs
what happened today happened for the same reason. They would
shut down your school, shut down your business. Of course,
the liquor stores can stay open, and if you want
(12:38):
to join and buy some weeds somewhere, you can go
do that. But don't think about opening your little small
mom and pop breakfast shop. You'll get shut down immediately.
They'll send the swat team after you. You see what
happens over time. Over time, as you get further and
further away from the founding of your it gets and
(13:02):
harder and harder to maintain a population and a leadership
that has a genuine love for that country. No different
than you know of any family businesses that have gone under.
Eventually Dad starts it, works his fingers to the bowl, blood, sweat, tears,
(13:23):
eighty hours a week. Finally, if he's lucky, not all
of them work. But finally, if he's lucky and blessed
makes it go. It takes off. Dad raises his son
and or daughter to be part of that family business.
They learn the business working with Dad. They saw Dad
go through the hardship. Eventually Dad hands it to them.
They take it over. Maybe don't do quite as well
(13:44):
as Dad, but still do really well. There's an appreciation there.
Son has a son, a daughter. They're not raised in
a single family own They're raised in a mansion when
they're not at their vacation property in Nantucket. Son daughter
that takes over next doesn't quite love it as much,
doesn't quite need it as much. Why do I need
(14:05):
to be here? I was just in Barbados. You get
far enough down the line on the family business, you
will come to a child who destroys it. Same thing
happens with countries, the exact same thing. How in the
world could Republicans and Democrats get together in a lame
(14:25):
duck session of Congress. The GOP had just won back
the House in the midterms. We had just won back
the House, and in that two month period of time
between when we won back the House and when we
got sworn in, that's considered a lame duck session of Congress.
A lame duck session is very rarely a busy session,
(14:46):
and it's just out of a sense of obligation decorum.
You don't pass anything in a lame duck session. It
would be wrong. We just lost the House. You wait.
Mitch McConnell joined with Democrats and passed a trillion dollars
omnibus spending bit bill that was a gigantic handout to
all their government friends with your money. How could they
(15:07):
do that? How could Chuck Schumer do that? How could
Joe Biden sign that? How could Mitch McConnell do that.
How could they do that to me? I can't afford bread.
Mitch McConnell doesn't ever think about America. Chuck Schumer doesn't
think about America. These are things you think about that
never occurs to these people. How could Democrats, and they
(15:29):
have to own this one all the way, How could
Democrats pass a trillion dollar bill that does nothing about inflation?
It's a trillion dollar green handout bill that hands out
gobs and gobs of your money to all their quote
green energy communist friends in the business world who turn
(15:53):
around and donate that money back to their campaigns. They
passed a trillion dollar bill that did nothing for you,
nothing for energy, nothing for inflation, nothing for anything. It
was a trillion dollar check where you got nothing and
their political allies got a trillion of your money. How
could every single Democrat sign on to that and nobody
(16:16):
stepped up and said, wait, this is wrong. How could
that be? They don't ever think about America, and now
here we are facing financial ruin, and it goes way
beyond money. American women are being raped and murdered repeatedly
by illegals, raped and murdered, young girls, grown women, freaking
(16:41):
sickens me attacked by these barbarians, always getting in some
horrific DUI car crash, wiping out families. And the people
who run the government opened up the border on purpose.
James Langford and Mitch McConnell tried to ensure the borders
stayed open with a bill like fifteen minutes ago, Joe
(17:04):
Biden rescinded all the Trump rules opened up the border.
Every Democrat wants it open. Republican after Republican in leadership,
not all of them, but the ones in leadership bent
over backwards and in James Langford's case, forwards to make
sure the border stayed open at all times. How could
they do such a thing. Don't they have a heart?
(17:26):
Don't they think of They don't think about America. They
don't think about America. America never occurs to them. I
have actually asked several United States Senators in person. I
have asked them, do none of your colleagues know what
is coming financially if you keep spending all this money.
(17:46):
It's black and white, it's not Democrat or Republican. Do
they not know? And to a man and to a woman,
some of them are women. They have told me, oh,
they know, they don't care. They don't care. We don't
have a financial problem. We don't have a border problem,
(18:06):
a foreign aid problem. We have a patriotism problem and
from that comes every other problem. That's our problem. All right,
we're gonna talk to John Carney, the economist next. He
puts this in terms we can understand. What did happen today?
Is it done? It kind of leveled off at the end.
(18:27):
Is it gonna get worse? Let's ask John about it next.
Feeling a little stocky, follow like and subscribe on social
at Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a Monday. Do not forget. You can email the
show if you want Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
All right, that's enough for the kind of thirty thousandth
(18:50):
of you stuff. I want to know what exactly is
going on with the economy. Are we gonna wake up
tomorrow in breadlines. I don't know, but I bet John
does joining me now, my friend, he's, of course the
big cheese economic guy with Breitbart, always breaks his stuff down,
so I can understand it, John Carney, John, the flour
is yours. What happened today.
Speaker 2 (19:11):
So we had a massive sell off that was really
a continuation of the selloff we saw on Friday, which
began because people realize the economy is doing a lot
worse than people thought. We're a lot more economically fragile
than we looked just a couple months ago. This came
out because the job's numbers came in very bad, of
(19:32):
one hundred and fourteen thousand jobs compared to one hundred
and eighty expected. The unemployment rate went up to four
point three percent. Those aren't objectively bad numbers. Four point
three percent is not a terrible unemployment rate. The point
is the direction things are going in. The unemployment rate
almost never stays the same. It's always going down or up,
(19:53):
and so the direction of going up and going up
pretty rapidly makes people worry that we may be headed
for recession, or perhaps although I don't think we are,
but perhaps we may already be in a recession.
Speaker 1 (20:08):
Okay, let's focus on that part of it, because I
have a couple other things. Unemployment. You mentioned that number
is not bad. I thought the same thing when it
came out. Now it's easy for me to say I'm employed.
If you're unemployed, it seems bad. But in and of itself,
that's not a bad number. Foreign change, no big deal.
But if it's what is a big deal? Is what
I'm trying to ask. If the next one comes out
(20:30):
and it's six or is it batten down the hatches time,
what's a big deal?
Speaker 2 (20:34):
Yeah? Well, so what the thing that really matters is
the speed and the direction. So even though the number
is low, it's because we started from a very low base.
But we've gone from a three point eight to a
four point three and a pretty rapid amount of time.
And so when you can see that employment is deteriorating,
unemployment rising rapidly, even though it hasn't gotten to the
(20:58):
emergency stage, you can say, whoa why? You know, it's
a little bit like if you're you know, if you're
in a car and suddenly it's accelerating and there's a
wall ahead of you, right, Like you're like, why are
we accelerating right now. We should be slowing down. This
is part of the problem. When you're accelerating in unemployment,
that means that there is a building problem happening. And
(21:22):
Claudia sam who's a liberal economist, but she did a
lot of studies on this. They call it the sm rule,
where if the three month average of unemployment is half
a percentage point higher than the lowest three month average
you've had over the last year, then you are usually
in a recession. You've been in a recession every time
that's happened since nineteen forty eight, and we triggered that
(21:46):
we are now at the level where historically when unemployment
does this, we are in a recession. Now because it
is so low, I would say we're probably not in
a recession right now, but it is a warning sign
that we have to get ready for something bad happening.
And frankly, I think that's what the stock market, what's
(22:08):
behind the selloff. A big part of it is people say, oh, wow,
we are actually, you know, verging on a recession. Think
a lot of people got used to ignoring recession signs
because frankly, we've had so many of them over the
past two years that they're like, Okay, maybe it's not coming.
But when they saw this one, that's when they got worried.
Speaker 1 (22:29):
John, what's the Magnificent seven? People keep referencing that today
when it comes to the economy. I keep thinking about
that wonderful movie. I don't understand what is this?
Speaker 2 (22:40):
Yeah, so this is just a collection of some of
the biggest tech stocks and people. They really have been
driving the you know stocks, the stock market. They've been
the leaders of the stock market. So the mag seven
is Google out Event, Meta, Tesla in videos than the
(23:05):
big one, so the Amazon.
Speaker 1 (23:08):
Microsoft, Microsoft.
Speaker 2 (23:10):
Yeah, so these big, you know, big tech companies, they
really did really well over the last two years. They
haven't been doing very well during the selloff in video
shares fell six percent today. Yeah, but what to put
this in a little context. The stock market, as in P.
Five hundred was up thirteen or fourteen percent going into
(23:34):
the selloff on Friday. So even though we are down,
we're still up by ten percent for the year. So
the stock market is not doing terribly. We weren't going
to keep going up. I mean, you know, you don't
really go up in the stock market twenty percent year
after year. You go up around eight percent. So anytime
you're doing better than than eight percent, you have to
(23:57):
think either it's going to go down or it's going
to go up very slowly in the future. So we
were kind of overdue for this. I do think there's
a political angle that you'll really like to this though.
Speaker 1 (24:08):
Oh please give it to me again. We're speaking with
John Carney economist Bright Bard. Go what is it.
Speaker 2 (24:13):
So one of the big things that's happened in the
past two weeks is stock market did really well in
the second half of June and for most of July.
It did well, particularly because I think because Donald Trump
was rising in the polls. He was way ahead of
Joe Biden. He was going to crush Joe Biden. He
was up by three points in the popular vote. If
(24:34):
a Republican wins by three points in the popular vote,
it is going to be a landslide in the electoral college.
That's changed. Joe Biden dropped out because he was a
terrible candidate, and they pulled him out, subbing Kamala Harrison.
Kamala Harris is ahead in some of the polls, some
of the prediction markets have her head, some of the
you know, the election models have her actually winning, and
(24:59):
I think that's people partly because they thought we were
going to have a relief. The other problem is Kamala
Harris has given no interviews since she became the presumptive nominee.
No major you know, where is she on sixty minutes
or even CNN or you know, put her on MSNBC.
She hasn't been on anything. She's if you look at
(25:21):
her website, we have an article about this at Breitbart.
There is no policies on her website. So she is
And by the way, whenever you bring up a past policy,
she's supported her her campaign advisor and say, oh no,
no bandfracking. She doesn't believe in that anymore. Abolish I said, no,
we're not doing that anymore. Default the police, No, no, no.
(25:41):
That was back a long time ago, four years ago.
So what is Kamala Harris's policies? Nobody can say. And
that's also really scary for the stock market because people
want to know what they can feel like they can
invest in. Are we going to ban fracking? That's a
big investment decision for people. Well, if we are, then
that's a problem. If you are in stocks that need
(26:03):
pracking to do well, and if we're not going to,
you'd like to know that too. The uncertainty I think
is adding to the stock market selloff we've been seeing.
Speaker 1 (26:13):
Okay, so I'm going to ask you something, and I
understand you don't have a crystal ball. You know a
lot about this stuff, but I want to know, and
I'm sure I'm not alone in this. Are we going
to wake up tomorrow to a repeat of this and
then the next day and the next day. Or do
you think this was okay? We had a rough Monday,
and maybe things won't go back to that way they were,
but rough Monday, Let's move on. Life goes on. Are
(26:35):
we in the beginning of something crappy, John? Or was
this a one day it kind of hurt and then
we move on.
Speaker 2 (26:41):
I don't think it's a one day hurt, but I
do think we will bounce back. We had a big
sell off on Friday, a big sell off on Monday.
I think that what you'll start to see is a
little bit there was a bit of panic in the
market today. I think you'll see a bit of a bounce,
but nothing that's going to make up for what we
sold off the last two days so have you. So
it went down, it'll go back up again. But I
(27:04):
think there will be a problem between now and election day,
or at least now and until the polls become clear.
If Donald Trump takes a lead, I think stock market
might start to do well again. But as long as
Kamala harr, as long as it's basically a toss up,
I think that the stock market is going to have
a lot of trouble recovering back to where it was
and has a decent chance of ending the year lower
(27:28):
than it is right now, which is not great if
you're an investor.
Speaker 1 (27:32):
Yeah, okay, John Carney, Brightbard, go rita stuff, my brother,
Thank you. We all needed that little dose of sanity.
Appreciate you very much. All right, Speaking of Dome, they're
hiding her. We all know why they're hiding her. But
man alive, you thought you knew. We got a little
audio clip. You're really going to find out why they're
(27:53):
hiding her. Next? Is he smarter than everyone he knows?
Does he think so? Yeah? The Jesse Kelly Show, It
is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Monday. Ten minutes
from a little bit of history and then a medal
of honor Monday citation attached to that history. I hope
(28:16):
we're not ten minutes away from Iran attacking Israel, because
who knows what that's gonna kick off. But man alive.
Either way, don't go anywhere. Everything's happening right now. And
I think I think maybe the history story I tell,
my intention is to have it be kind of helpful
if you've had a rough day, to just hang on
(28:37):
for that, even though it's actually horrifically vinment. I think
it might be helpful. So let's let's make fun of
Dome for a minute, do a couple emails, and then
we'll go do that, shall we. They're hiding her. John
Carney just talked about it. Headline from Newsweek, Kamala Harris
hasn't met the press in weeks. Republicans have noticed she's
not doing press conferences. She's the Democrat nominee for president,
(28:59):
she's not talking to the media. Why, well, I want
you to listen to this. I'm not the most technologically
capable human being on the planet, as you well know.
Everyone makes fun of me for that. Jewish producer Chris
and Michael kind of have to handle all the text
stuff around here. But if I was asked to explain
(29:23):
the cloud, this is how I wouldn't answer it.
Speaker 3 (29:26):
So you're now no longer are you necessarily keeping those
private files in some file cabinet that's locked in the
basement of the house. It's on your laptop, and it's
then therefore up here in this cloud that exists above us.
Speaker 1 (29:44):
Right, it's no longer Sorry, I should stop. I'm gonna
play it again. I need to stop. So I need
to just explain something. The cloud, your data, all the
data all these Internet people were stealing from you and
me at all times, it is actually stored in physical locations.
(30:04):
Physical locations you should see. Go look, go to an
Internet search for a data farm or a data storage center.
They look like gigantic Amazon distribution centers. If you've ever
driven by one of those, they're enormous buildings. Because I
don't know if Dome knows this, but there's not actually
a physical cloud above us where they're storing it. It's
(30:27):
a place where they store it. Anyway. This is the
woman who might be the next president.
Speaker 3 (30:32):
So you're now no longer are you necessarily keeping those
private files in some file cabinet that's locked in the
basement of the house. It's on your laptop, and it's
then therefore up here in this cloud that exists above us. Right,
it's no longer in a physical place.
Speaker 2 (30:54):
I can't it.
Speaker 1 (30:57):
So I'm gonna say the most painfully obvious thing. I
know this is not some kind of amazing revelation. But
she doesn't know anything. Now, I've never met a person,
man or woman that age who knows nothing. It is
(31:19):
like it is she ses you like a twelve year old.
But even that's not fair, because I know some really
really sharp twelve year olds. My youngest son is thirteen.
He knows everything. But she's like a child. She doesn't
know anything about anything. And these are the people who
(31:40):
lead the West. Then, look, that's what I was talking
about about a lack of patriotism. Biden headline. Biden is
dumping billions into these green plans before he bails, before
Joe Biden leaves, just taking billions and billions and billions
of your money and dump it into all the climate
(32:01):
comedy garbage. They just never even think about you. And again,
we are not going to exempt the GOP from this.
There are a lot of Republicans today who vote for
omnibus bill after omnibus bill, trillion dollar bill after trillion
dollar bill, and then they came out today and said
(32:22):
it's all this Joe Biden spending. Look at this Biden
Harris inflation. I would check your own voting record on that, Pal.
Dear Maximus showgun. I was just listening to your Thursday podcast.
I heard you ripping the men for the transgender nonsense
in the Olympics, Jesse. Men didn't do this. Men have
(32:43):
forgotten how to say no to women. But women voted
for this. Women wanted it, women demanded it. It first
came at the expense of countless boys, and no one
spoke up. And now what women voted for is visiting
consequences on them. Suddenly we care. Question Mark, Okay, I
(33:04):
understand what you said, and what you said is not inaccurate.
I'm not gonna blast away at you at all. He
finishes off. This email goes on a little bit and
he says, they voted for this. I understand that. But
no matter who did what, I as a man, still
(33:26):
have an obligation, no matter what, to protect women, to
protect women. If I'm if I'm driving my car in LA,
I'm driving LA wife's with me, and let's say we're
getting a big old blowout fight. We don't do that anymore.
But let's say we're getting a big old blowout fight.
(33:48):
I want to get something delicious like Arby's for lunch,
and she wants to go somewhere healthy to get a salad.
And we get a big, big old knockdown, drag out
fight about the whole thing. And we're in a bad neighborhood.
Let's say, and she says, let me out, let me
out of the car. I want to walk. I might
let her out. I'm certainly not going to trap her
in there. I don't want to get busted for kidnapping
(34:09):
after all. But I'm not going to take off. I'm
not going to leave her in the bad neighborhood. Is
it her fault she's out of the car?
Speaker 3 (34:19):
Yep?
Speaker 1 (34:19):
Is it one hundred percent on her? You bet it is.
I still have an obligation as a man to protect her,
even if it means from her own choices, from her
own emotional decisions. It is the weakness of men that
has led to the downfall of the West. We allowed
(34:42):
this sick spirit to take over this place. Now and
now you can't even watch the freaking Olympics without getting
bludgeoned in the face by demonic tranny flu. That's the
fault of men. Men have to do better. Did women
make this call? You bet they did. They were a
huge part of it, a major part of it. The
(35:03):
beating heart of Western communism is the liberal white woman.
I've said it a million times. Men should have stopped them,
and still should. Now you're not ready for that. Not
the end of the world just means you haven't got
your tea levels up yet, means you need to give
the boys at Choca call. You See, Chalk is out
there raising tea levels without sticking a needle in your arm.
(35:26):
Chalk is out there with natural herbal supplements making people's
lives better in a million different ways. It's not just
male vitality stacks that jack your tea levels up or
female vitality stacks. I got this one, hey, Jesse, don't
want to burst your male listeners bubble. But they also
have men who answer the phone at Chalk as Well.
Called the other day and a dude answered the phone.
(35:48):
Don't know if he was a dime or not, but
they might be a little surprised when a deep voice
answered the phone, and not the kind they were hoping for.
Thanks for turning me on to them. Chok lit powder
is the best. Her name as Heather. So, ladies, there's
even some dudes who will answer. There are some dimes
who will answer. Call them, text them, find out the
natural herbal supplement that can make your life better. They're
(36:10):
standing by five zero chalk. That's cho Q three thousand,
five zero chalk three thousand. Get a subscription, save a
bunch of money. Just tell them I told you to call. Okay,
all right, I don't know about you. I need to
break bad jobs report and bad market and badness and
bad that. We do a little bit of history with me.
(36:32):
We'll do a little history leading up the Medal of
Honor Monday. Sound like a plan. Hang on,