Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
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 an incredible Thursday. We're going to
start out the show talking about speed and violence of action. Ooh,
(00:35):
that'll be spicy and fun. I'm mad about the Pam
BONDI Pete Hegg says stuff, So we'll get to that.
Speaking of Heg Seth, we have a senator, a Republican
won alleged lee Lisa Mkowski, voting against him. We're going
to discuss that. We're going to discuss Oh, look at that.
A communist who said he was going to stand up
to us was threatened with fear and pain. Now he's
(00:57):
going to be very helpful. Odd, isn't it that former
Obama staffers are lecturing Democrats about being in a bubble.
All that and so much more coming up on the
world famous Jesse Kelly Show. And somebody who received one
of those pardons from Donald Trump for January sixth, Steve Baker,
joins us. A half hour from now. We'll find out
(01:20):
how Steve is feeling. I'm sure he is feeling as
right as rain. Oh that, and do remember that tomorrow
is an ask doctor Jesse Friday. Get your questions emailed
in right now to Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
That is always a good time. Now, this is going
to be about confirmation hearings and things like that, because
(01:42):
I'm upset about something. But it's very hard to find
common characteristics, common strains with historical figures because you never
really know what to believe what not to believe. Was
he tall? Was he short? Was he good on a horse?
Never know? But when it comes to generals military commanders,
(02:07):
there is one thing that you find in almost all
of them, the real true legends. There is one thing.
It's I don't want to say universal, because somebody is
smarter than me or email in you know, an exception
of this rule, but almost universally, great military commanders believed
(02:31):
in speed. Genghis Khan was infamous for this. Now, granted,
it helps when your entire armies on horseback, but Genghis
Khan would just show up outside of your city. You
had heard he was coming yesterday, and people don't move
that quickly, right, But Genghis Khan knew I have to
(02:56):
go quickly. It helps me, it hurts them Julius C
was infamous for this. All the writings still talk about
it to this day. Caesar, in an era where you
could only move as fast as a man on foot, really,
because it wasn't all mounted, would just boom. He would
force march his guys until they almost died, because he
(03:16):
knew if he could get there before you thought he
was there, what an advantage for him and a disadvantage
for you. Look you go down the list Napoleon. Same
thing Chris brought up. Germany honestly, exact same thing. Chris
is laughing about it, but it is true. The German
military in World War One and World War Two, because
they had excellent generals. Still in World War Two knew no, no, no, no,
(03:39):
I know France has more tanks, more troops. They're better
off than we are. How will we win? Speed, violence
of action, Go now quickly, before they know you're there.
Just explode onto them and they'll just the people lose
their minds. Ganghis, like I said, all of them famous
for did I already say Alexander the Great he might
be the most I didn't say him yet he might
(03:59):
be the most famous one for this He drove the
Persians insane. They brought these huge armies out. But wait
a minute, he's fighting us here. He's not supposed to
be here yet. Why how is he moved? Speed? But why? Why?
Speaker 2 (04:15):
Is?
Speaker 1 (04:16):
Why? Is that fairly universal? Because what speed does is
it not only allows you to dictate where and when
you will fight, it prevents your enemy from properly preparing.
When it comes to Julius Caesar, we'll make it about Caesar.
(04:38):
When it comes to Julius Caesar, he's about to attack
this gigantic Gallic town. We'll call it a five hundred
thousand people. What is the difference? Now, remember these men
are on foot in a week. What's the difference in
a week? Well? How much deeper do those trenches around
the city get with a week of preparation? How much
(04:59):
better do the boo traps get with a week of preparation?
Speed matters in life, and it most definitely matters in competition.
And I'm very, very very frustrated right now with the
Senate GOP at the speed with which these confirmations are
coming down. Why do I not have Attorney General Pam Bondi? Yet,
(05:23):
why do I not have Secretary of Defense Pete hag Seth. Yet,
by the grace of God, we got John Ratcliffe CIA
in today. But it's still January twenty third, it's Thursday.
It's been four days. We have heard from how many
people and how many different reports have I brought you
about what is happening inside the walls of the federal government.
(05:44):
Our federal government is a corrupt, criminal enterprise occupied by
communists from top to bottom, communists who have waged war
on you for the last ten fifteen years. And those
communists are digging in. They are shred papers, they are
changing titles, they are deleting emails. They are doing everything
(06:06):
they can do to burrow themselves into the government as
deep and fast as they can before the reformers can
get there. The ditches are getting deeper. The booby traps
are getting deadlier. Allow me to introduce you to Lisa T. Boykin.
Who is she? You've never heard of her before. Well,
she was at the ATF the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco
(06:28):
and Firearms. And I won't kill you with that lame
joke that we've been telling for years. Actually be a
gas station. It's yes that we got it. The joke
is a little bit worn out by now, But at
the ATF. You know what her job was on January
twenty first, twenty twenty five. She was the Chief Diversity Officer,
but we gave her an extra day. You know what
her job title is now, Senior Executive Office of the Director.
(06:56):
Why was Attorney General Pam bond the not confirmed thirty
five seconds after Donald Trump was sworn into office. Why
is the GOP Senate so weak and pathetic at best,
at worst complicit in the destruction of this country? Where
(07:17):
is John Thune? Where are these leaders? On January twentieth,
the day Donald Trump was sworn in, it should have
been vote head seth, Yes, vote BONDI, Yes, vote RFK, yes,
vote reck of this. It could have been boom boom, boom,
boom boom. We've got him lined up. Every fifteen minutes,
it's vote time. Let's go baby, get him in there.
But no, Hey, Chris Corey, when's Pam BONDI taking over? Anyone? Soon?
(07:45):
Or soon? Maybe maybe next week. We gotta gather some
votes that we're gonna wait on the committee. I don't know.
We gotta. I gotta play golf this week. Gotta I
got steak with my mother? What are we doing every
single day the commune in the government, who are still
very much still in the government, are digging in and
(08:05):
the fortifications are getting deeper and wider and more difficult
to overcome, and they are moving quickly. Let's just focus
on the DOJ since I'm going off about Pambondi at
the moment. Sorry, I'm upset about this. I woke up
upset now. I knew I was going to go off
on there. I don't mean to yell. You don't like
to yell on the air. I'm upset DOJ for how
(08:26):
many years now? Definitely in the last four the communists
and the DOJ have done the most evil thing you
can do in a civil society. They have taken their
position of power at the Department of Justice. They have
taken the justice system and they have turned it into
a political weapon against their political enemies. There is nothing
more evil you can do with your government power than
(08:48):
what those people at the DOJ have done. People with names,
people with titles, and every single day they have worked
to throw pro lifers in prison, to go after school
board moms, you name it. They have done it, and
all those people still remain there now here. It is
what time is it? What time is it? It's uh,
it's six, so the ten after six, let's call it
(09:09):
Eastern time on Thursday night. We had a work day today.
Those evil communists who spent years in the DOJ doing
evil things, how do you think they spent their day today?
They went to work today. Do you think that they
went to work and decided they were going to start
(09:31):
going after just you know, criminals, murderers and rapists today.
I think that's what they did. Do you think they
were passive about it? Maybe took the day off and
it's let's do a liquid brunchby who champagne? Or do
you think the vile committed communists at the DOJ went
to work this morning and every minute at the office
(09:54):
they worked to make preparations to ensure communist rule would continue.
And the Department of Justice at this country, and yet
you can't even tell me when Pam Bondy is going
to be confirmed. We are four days into the Trump administration.
(10:15):
We have no Pete hag Seth. We have no Pam Bondi,
we have no RFK Junior, No this, no that, no this,
no that. Just taking their sweet time and the lack
of urgency. The lack of speed I'm seeing is driving
me up the wall. Where are our cabinet picks? The
low TGP strikes again like they always friaking do. Yeah,
(10:40):
I'm moving off of this for the most part. I'm
going to talk about Lisa Murkowski in a moment, but
I'm I'm frustrated. Now. We need speed, violence of action.
Let's go. The obliterator is violent. It's a blender and
it looks great, right, so you're not expecting the violence
that comes when you put all these ingredients in it
(11:01):
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(11:23):
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a little stocky. Follow like and subscribe on social at
Jesse Kelly's show. It is that Jesse Kelly Show on
a Thursday, a wonderful Thursday. And let's talk about Lisa Murkowski.
(12:04):
Oh and before I forget, remember Steve Baker's going to
join us ten minutes from now. He's a man who
understands what it feels like to be attacked from his
own government. Let's talk to Steve about what it feels
like to be free at last, free at last, before
we get to that. So today that one of the
big news items is Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, Republican kind of.
(12:27):
She formally announced that she's going to vote against Pete
hag Seth. Now, don't don't get worried. In fact, there's
nothing to worry about it all. In the end, this
is probably going to be a good thing. Pete hagg Seth,
from what I understand I made some calls, is still gravy.
Looks like he's still going to be good we could
afford to lose a couple. Not that big of a deal. Look,
(12:48):
ideally you'd have them all, but we didn't get this one. Okay,
it happens. Here's why you should actually feel good about this.
This presents us with an opportunity. We've had this talk before.
I know it gets uncomfortable for nice people. Thankfully I
don't have that problem. But for good, nice people, conversations
(13:11):
like this can get uncomfortable, and I understand it. But
we have to have a scalp. We have to a
political scalp in a GOP primary. We have to absolutely
have to take out a GOP senator in a primary.
(13:35):
We don't don't feel like it's too ominous. We don't
have to take out all the losers. Most of the
losers in the GOP Senate are only cowards. It's not
that they're actually working against us, although it ends up
manifesting itself that way. They're just gutless, loser cowards who
go whichever way the wind blows. So we have to
(13:56):
whip those cowards into line. How do you whip those
Howard's into line? We have to take one or two.
It will only take one or two of these GOP senators,
and we have to run against them hard in a
primary and take out one or two. You need a
(14:17):
scalp or two and the rest will fall into line.
Lisa Murkowski represents a state where Trump won by I
think seven six or seven. Trump made Alaska look a
lot less purple than it normally looks. It went pretty
solidly read so the people of Alaska went out, marched
to the polls and voted wholeheartedly for Donald Trump and
(14:39):
Donald Trump's agenda. Lisa Murkowski is now going to spit
in the face of all those Alaskans who did so.
We now need Alaska to step up and remove her
during the primary process. I have my own cross to
bear down here. I will work as hard as I
can to remove John Cornyan during the primary process. Oklahoma,
(15:01):
hope you're paying attention. James Langford can be removed if
we dig in and get but we have to have
a scalp. Lisa Murkowski coming out formally against Pete hag
Seth when she voted without hesitation for Lloyd Austin means
it's time. It is time. I'm glad. I hope we're focused.
(15:26):
But let's talk about the why. Because we talked about
this a lot last night. She gave some long explanation,
which of course is a bunch of gobby gobbley gook. Well,
I mean, there's a drinking problem, and I'm very concerned.
But since now that holds water, when you voted for
Lloyd Austin, why did she actually do it? Why is
there any why is there so much opposition to OURFK
(15:46):
and Pete hagg Seth and whatnot. Well, as we've been
talking about the system, what is it? What is what
I call the system or the regime or the swamp
or whatever? What is it? Really? It's a corrupt, rotted government,
a corrupt, rotted government that has lost all of its
patriots and therefore all of its patriotism. And the people
(16:07):
inside of the system. It's not just government, but we'll
focus on government. The people inside of the system now
look at America as a gigantic bank vault to be looted,
and they have decided to collude with each other to
loot that bank vault. And that's simply the way it's
been for years, for years and years and years and
years and years. When it comes to the military and
(16:30):
the defense contractors and all these people. It's been used
under the red, white, and blue. It's been used to
line the pockets of generals and defense contractors and send
it campaign coffers. The way it's always been is our
military is a multi, multi, multi billion dollar industry unto itself.
(16:54):
Here you have somebody complaining about that, Pete hag Seth.
You have somebody coming in who acts like he wants
to do something about that. He's talking about stopping these
generals from taking jobs on defence boards. Remember these generals
and admirals. The second they leave, they'll leave for fifteen
minutes and they'll go make a million dollars on the
sitting on the board of rytheon and then they'll turn
(17:16):
around and come right back in. Then they'll go back again.
It's just it's this disgusting, disgusting circle of your money.
Remember all this is your money. When he's working for
the government, his salaries, your money. When he goes to
work for a defense contractor those defense contractors, what do
you think they pay people with your money money? Given
it that this is all your money, what's happening right
(17:38):
now is an endless looting. That's the purpose of the system.
It exists to loot the treasury and to protect itself
from people stopping them from doing so. So whenever you
have genuine reformers coming, the system is going to react
in extreme ways. If you people, you tell the system
(18:01):
that Pete Haggset is coming and he's going to adjust
how things are done in the military. What the bank
robbers here is the cops are coming around the corner
and they get afraid, and it ends up being Lisa
Murkowski having to come up with lame excuses to vote
against Pete hegg Set. That's how it works. It sucks,
but that's what we're dealing with. Well, at least we're
(18:24):
not dealing with pain. At least there's that. Well, I'm
not dealing with pain. You probably are if you haven't
gotten a hold of relief factor yet. I know your
back hurt still, you're still ignoring that that back that's
hurting you all day long? That shoulder? Are you still
doing that shoulder thing? Well, it take us your shoulder
hits all day. I know what you're doing. I'd see you.
Why are you still doing that? You don't have to
live like that. Relief factors sitting there for you to try.
(18:48):
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(19:10):
life turned way down? How much better would life be
if you didn't have to live with that knee pain
every day? Try it? You might be three weeks away
from being free. Call what eight hundred the number four
relief or go to relief factor dot com. We have
Steve Baker, political prisoner now free, joining us next. He
(19:31):
doesn't care if you believe him, but he's right. Jesse Kelly,
it is the Jesse Kelly Show. And what a glorious
day it has been. I't even had a chance to
get to the fact that Trump declassified all the r
R the JFK MLK files RFK files. He officially pardoned
(19:55):
those pro lifers. He was talking about pro lifing or pardoning.
And we have a misdemeanor terrorist on the line right now,
also masquerading as an investigative journalist for the Blaze, The
Great Steve Baker joins us. Steve, congratulations, my friend, tell
us your story please.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
Oh good lord, Jesse, thank you. I don't even know
where to begin. You know, I'm one of those guys
whose story began over four years ago, and mine was
stretched out forever.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
You know.
Speaker 2 (20:27):
It took over three years before they figured out what
they wanted to do with me, which was ultimately charged
me back in March of last year. And you know,
then they did the thing that they do to all
of the misdemeanor defendants in the countries. They put me
in leg chains and marched me before a magistrate. Of course,
(20:47):
I'm being facetious there. That's not what they do to
misdemeanor defendants in this country. It's what they do to
January sixth misdemeanor defendants. I did not get swat rated,
So there was that, as has happened to so many
the other misdemeanor defendants in the j six entrap meant
slash dragnet, you know, schime. But it it was you know,
(21:10):
it was a tough year. It was not easy. Uh,
it was a tough It was a tough four and
to a half or three and a half years from
the first time the FBI called me and I knew
that there was an investigation afoot. And then there was
the threats throughout the process at various times that they
were in fact going to charge me, and then they
would back off, and then they didn't, and then they did,
(21:30):
and then they didn't, and then they came back. And
then finally, as I said, it was March first of
last year, I was required to turn myself into the
FBI Dallas Field Office and where they transported me to
the US Marshals who put me in leg chains and
put me in a cell with a meth dealer before
(21:51):
before marching me in front of the magistrate, goes leg
chains on.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
What kind of conversations did you have with the met dealer, Steve?
Speaker 2 (21:58):
You know, actually we never we never said a single
word to each other. But I will tell you this.
The US marshall who processed me, he looked down, he
looked down at my paperwork and are we on terrestrial radio?
Because I'll have to I'll have to edit my speech here.
Speaker 1 (22:17):
We are there are children listening yesterday? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (22:19):
Okay, yeah, So he looked down at the paperwork and
he said, you know, this is bull crap. And you know,
without the crap version of that of the bull prays,
and so it was, it was recognized by so many
people that this was an overreach, that they had gone
too far. And I will tell you, Jesse, I've had,
(22:41):
you know, since Monday, I've had a lot of time
for self reflection. In fact, I was in DC on
Tuesday with plans to do things and I just said,
screw it, I'm not I stayed in my hotel room
all day long until six thirty before I went to
dinner PM, that is, And I have I've had plenty
of time to go over this in my mind. And
(23:03):
I'm telling you, you know, look as blessed as we are,
as fortunate as we are to have a candidate become
president who kept a you know, very key and principal
promise of his campaign and to have done it so quickly,
the reality is is that Trump didn't do this. The
(23:26):
DOJ brought this upon themselves. And you know a lot
of people are hand ringing right now, and even Republicans.
You've got Tom Tillis, my you know, my senator here
in North Carolina, obviously, Mitch McConnell, and the likes of
those rhinos. And you've got so many others really on
the left and the and the punditry on the left
(23:47):
just absolutely wringing their hands about these violent criminals who
assaulted police officers, who have you know, been turned back
out on the street. And I want to I want
to grab every one of them by the you know,
the nape of the neck and pull their face up
to mind and explain to them that your Biden, Merrick
(24:09):
Garland DOJ did this by the overreach. That's the net
result is that they violated people's rights, they violated due process,
and they did it in the most egregious cases. I'm
dealing with a case today. I'm not going to name
his name. I'm not going to give him any air.
He's out there now after being released from prison. He's
(24:31):
a he's a lifelong criminal's career criminal, i should say.
And now he's he's telling stories about his own exoneration.
And these guys are claiming victory and that they won somehow.
You know, these some of these guys are not good guys, Jesse.
(24:51):
There were a lot of people, the vast majority of
them were good people that got caught up in a
really bad day by accident. But some of the these
guys are not good guys. But I am in favor
of every one of them walking, because even bad guys
in this country deserve to have all of their rights
adhered to and granted and respected under the law by
(25:20):
our federal Department of Justice.
Speaker 1 (25:23):
And they didn't. Steve, let me ask you this again.
We're speaking with Steve Baker, investigative journalists with the Blaze.
Did it in any way shock you how fragile and
apparently paper thin that wall is? You know, we feel
like we live in this civilized society and we have laws,
and we're a good country and we're not some tinpot dictatorship.
(25:45):
But man, all it took was the election of a
single Democrat and we became one overnight. And look, even
cynical me, it still takes me back at how quickly
we devolved into that.
Speaker 2 (25:59):
Yeah, it was. It was very It was seemingly quick, Jesse,
because the seeds of this were unfortunately planted in the
aftermath of nine to eleven through the Patriot Act. Then
it was put on hyperdrive in two thousand and nine
with the first Obama administration, and it continued to grow.
(26:23):
They were replacing the players within the Department of Justice,
within the FBI, and other key positions in our government,
so that when that time came, when that moment happened,
and that moment happened to be the January sixth moment,
that they were able then to initiate and get people
(26:44):
to act on it. Because think about it, Jesse, for
over one hundred years the history of the FBI, not
one time did the FBI so much as investigate a
misdemeanor case, much less launch swat raids early morning with
automatic rifle red dots on defendant's children. This has never
(27:10):
happened before in history. But they had to replace the
personnel in these agencies in order to make that stalinistic
initiative come to life.
Speaker 1 (27:23):
Steve, I've been going off for about the last twenty
minutes on the show before you got here about why
the delays with these critical confirmations like Pam Bondi. We
can go ahead and focus on that because of what
you were talking about. Why are we waiting a week?
Why is it four days? This is unacceptable because we
(27:43):
have so many communists entrenched in these organizations and they're
digging themselves deeper every single day. We give them, and
it's driving me up the wall knowing all the people
who did that to Steve Baker, they're all still right there.
Speaker 2 (27:57):
Yeah, And you're not being high probolog Jesse when you
say communists. These are card carrying communists holding these key
positions that must be replaced. They must be ferreted out,
They got to be sent packing, and in many of
these cases, there has to be Look, I'm not a
big fan of Trump's statement he made on the campaign trail,
(28:21):
and he said, I will be your retribution, but there
has to be justice. And in some cases these guys, Look,
I can randomly go to the files and pull any
January sixth case out of the files, and I can
go through those statement of facts. I can go through
those charging documents. I can go through the courtroom transcription,
(28:43):
and I can show you the violations of rights, the
violations of due process. I can show you where FBI
appients in those statement of facts lied about what people did.
And as I said I said earlier, even the most
despicable of the characters that we can talk about that day,
they still were not treated the way Americans are supposed
(29:07):
to be treated when we face criminal charges and that
is ultimately why. As I said, this is why this happened,
and it's why. And look, I'm very I'm very shocked,
but very pleasantly surprised that Trump did go as far
as he did. I was not expecting it. I was
(29:27):
advocating for it. I was advocating for blanket pardons, even
for the most you know, infamous of the characters, from
Stuart Roades to Henrique Tarrio to you know. Uh. And again,
like I said, there's some names I don't want to
mention because I don't want to give them air. But
the the system needed to be punished, and that's what
(29:52):
we need to focus on. And that's what our reptort
needs to be. When these cry babies on the left, CNN,
n SNBC, et cetera, et cetera, or the you know,
the politicos in DC are whining and complaining about these
people who attacked cops that day got released. It's not
their fault that they were released. It's the DOJ's fault
(30:15):
that they got released. And thank god, somebody in Trump's
circle gave him the right advice and uh. And so
I think that this was justice, even though we have
some people out right now who may may may. They
may embarrass us Jesse, and get back in sooner than later,
but it is what it is.
Speaker 1 (30:35):
Yeah, well, I'm used to embarrassment. I work with Chris
every single day. Steve Baker misdemeanor terrorist, meth headsellmate and
wonderful investigative journalist. I am glad you are free, my friend.
Go get the largest pizza you can find.
Speaker 2 (30:50):
All right, thank you, Jesse, I appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
He is right. We do have too many cry babies.
We don't have enough people on chalk. When your tea
levels get too low, you end up sounding like Mike
Johnson is sound like Lindsey Graham. Do you want to
sound like Lindsey Graham. Whenever I hear Lindsey Graham's voice,
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help you. Chalk dot com promo code. Jesse, We'll be
back the Jesse Kelly Show. It's still real to me, dammit,
(31:57):
the ternstacks. It is is the Jesse Kelly Show on
a Thursday, reminding you that tomorrow is an ask doctor
Jesse Friday, and you can email your questions right now
and you should ask me anything. All three hours will
be your questions. Email those into Jesse at Jesse kellyshow
(32:20):
dot com or leave us a voicemail eight seven seven
three seven seven four three seven three. That's a very
good point about the pillows. We were just talking about, Chris, uh,
Chris Corey me during the break. As you know, this
is a pretty intellectual show. Uh pretty uh, pretty educated
(32:41):
around here, a lot of higher education. I have almost
three years of community college credits. Had I not dropped algebra,
I would have an associate's degree right now. So look,
we we do what we're doing here and during the breaks,
we oftentimes dig into the big issues that baffle everybody.
(33:02):
And Jewish producer Chris was talking about how the wife
was on him about the discoloration of his pillow, and
he was asking, if I have discoloration on my pillow. Yes,
I have discoloration on my pillow because I drool in
my sleep, and every dude drools in his sleep. And
(33:23):
this is one of those weird things that I don't understand.
I feel like God. I feel like God gave women
a lot of a lot of subtle advantages. The dudes
like dudes on their face when it comes to male
female dudes have a lot of advantages on just that
you can see. You know, we're bigger, we're stronger, we're louder,
(33:46):
more logical, that kind of thing, better drivers, that kind
of stuff. But women, I feel like God gave them
a lot of subtle advantages in life that allow them
to get one over on us. Why don't die times
drool in their sleep? It doesn't make any sense that
I if I sleep on my side, Look, it's not
(34:08):
like it's the Indian Ocean or something like that. But
when I wake up, it's going to be a little
Oh dang, that's ambarrassing. I better rub that off before
OB rolls over and sees. It doesn't matter what Ob does.
There's never anything on her pillow, but maybe some hair
or something like that. There's never any drool, there's never
any anything. And you know what it does. It gives
her the opportunity to knife me. Oh that's so gross.
(34:31):
Viva b Ah your pillow. I can't control it. I
can't control it. It's not like it's my doing. That's
how God made me. I don't know why we're talking
about this, you know what? I like that what I
like a lot of what Trump said today at the WEF.
Speaker 3 (34:45):
And by the way, speaking of you, and you've done
a fantastic job, but I hope you start opening your
bank to conservatives because many conservatives complain that the banks
are not allowing them to do business within the bank
and that included a place called Bank of Americavative. They
don't take conservative business. And I don't know if for
the regulator's mandated that because of Biden or what, But
(35:06):
you and Jamie and everybody, I hope you're going to
open your banks to conservatives because what you're doing is wrong.
Speaker 1 (35:14):
There is a quality about Trump that I find very, very,
very appealing, and that is that Trump sees himself as
our protector instead of our apologist. That is, for the
(35:34):
people on the right who have had the hardest time
understanding Trump's appeal, I don't get it. He's not this,
he's not that. He doesn't believe this, he doesn't and
a lot of that stuff is very fair, right, a
lot of those things. He's not very traditional in a
lot of ways. Even his value system is not necessarily
perfectly aligned with what traditional conservatism has been. And so
(35:57):
for a lot of people on the right, they've found it.
I'm very confusing why Trump is so popular, and I'm
here to tell you part of the appeal, a huge
part of the appeal is it never feels like Donald
Trump is apologizing for us. In fact, quite the opposite.
(36:18):
Trump routinely he will walk right into the midst of
the enemy and he will advocate for us. This is
Donald Trump standing in front of the face of the
CEO of Bank of America and instead of to hey,
I know, Marty, we've been good friends for a while.
(36:39):
How those stupid hay seeds and the GOP, We're gonna
be a lot more reasonable than they are. Instead of that,
he stands up and essentially throws it right in his face.
Why are you de banking my people?
Speaker 3 (36:50):
By the way, speaking of you, and you've done a
fantastic job, But I hope you start opening your bank
to conservatives because many conservatives complain that the banks are
not allowing them to do business within the bank, and
that included a place called Bank of America, this conservative.
They don't take conservative business. And I don't know if
for the regulator's mandated that because of Biden or what,
(37:10):
But you and Jamie and everybody, I hope you're going
to open your banks to conservatives because what you're doing
is wrong.
Speaker 1 (37:18):
I have had many complaints about Trump. I'll have complaints
going forward. You know, the next four years aren't going
to be perfect by any stretch. I'm so impressed so far,
but they won't be perfect. But one of his finest
qualities in my mind is he doesn't I don't ever
feel like he's apologizing to me, even behind closed doors,
because that's what all the Minch McConnell types do. They
(37:38):
go behind as soon as the cameras are off, they
talk about how stupid you are and how stupid I am,
and we're so annoying. I don't ever get the impression
that's how Trump talks about us. And I like it
almost as much as I like gold. I'm a big
fan of gold and silver. It's actually not because it's
real shiny and whatnot. It's just because it's reliable. I'm
(38:01):
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the other day and we were talking about various things
on cars and whatnot, and I said, listen to kids,
anything electric is going to break eventually, it just will.
Reliability is underrated. Do you have a retirement retirement account
of some kind, you need to get some precious metals
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(38:23):
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