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July 9, 2024 37 mins

What Trump needs to do in the first 100 days. Joel Pollock joins Jesse and breaks it down. The battle of Ia Drang Valley. Biden’s mental decline. Diversity hire is losing her control over the press room. Medal of Honor: Bruce Crandall, Walter Marm Jr.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a Tuesday. We got all kinds of stuff this hour.
I will get to some emails later on. We have
Joel Pollack coming up about a half hour from now.
He actually wrote a book about what does Trump need

(00:32):
to do in the first hundred days if he's to
do some good out there, And I'm gonna ask him
what's in it? I actually ever read it, but I'm
fascinated by the concept, and I know Joel's a sharp guy,
So we'll talk about that before we get to any
of those things. Though you know what time it is,
well maybe you don't, but because we normally do this
on Monday, but every Monday at this time, even though

(00:53):
it's Truesday, every Monday at this time start of the
second hour, we do Medal of Honor Monday. All we
do is take a Medal of Honor citation and read it.
These men and their deeds deserve to be remembered. You
can and should do this in your own life. Maybe
it's just with your kids, your class, in your Sunday

(01:16):
school class, the team you coach, you can do this
with anybody. They're fascinating stories. Kids dove them, boys and girls.
We remember our heroes. And that's another small way speaking
of creating culture. You know, that's a way of creating culture,
promoting culture. Hey, look look at this brave man. Look
at what he did. They know instinctively, Well, that's what

(01:38):
I'm supposed to be. And because I was gone yesterday
thanks to that's stupid hurricane shutting down the roads, I
thought maybe I should do a little extended version of
this one. And so we are going to do a
little extended version. So don't get too excited, a little one,
she said Jesse. On Independence Day, I attended a flag
raising ceremony in Huntington Beach, California, hosted by hard by

(02:01):
a hardcore anti communist. Many elderly veterans were in attendance,
decked out in their former uniforms, and I had the
pleasure of having a long conversation with the Vietnam debt.
I won't say his name, but as I do my research,
I find he is very well known and has even
caught the eye of President Trump. This veteran took part
in the Battle of Ya Drang. Could you give us

(02:24):
any history of that battle. Her name is Karen. I
have done you should know. I don't know which episode
it is. I'm sure Chris will go looking. At this
point in time. I've done an extended history of the
Battle of Yadrang before, so if you were looking for
something with more depth in it, Chris will dig up

(02:44):
the episode and I'll give it to you and you
can go dig into it. But I'm actually gonna do
a couple medal of honors from this one, because there
were a couple before I get to those, though I
will do it. We'll do a few minutes. Let's do
a little bit of history of what's going on here.
You've probably heard of the Battle of Yadrang. If you haven't,
you've heard of the movie or seen the movie We

(03:05):
Were Soldiers, haven't you. It's a Mel Gibson Vietnam movie.
At least you've seen the cover of it in Blockbuster,
even though I know those don't exist anymore. Well, that
movie We Were Soldiers was based off of a book
We Were Soldiers. I believe the book's title was We
Were Soldiers Once and Young, and they just shortened that
to we were Soldiers as the name of the movie,

(03:26):
but it's a book, and of course the book is
written about the true story of the first major battle
and one of the only major battles of Vietnam. When
I say one of the only, there weren't that many
huge set piece battles in Vietnam between a large American

(03:49):
force in a large Vietnamese force. It's just not a
war that was fought in that way. Now, a small
a quote small engagement. You know, your platoon of te
he gets ambushed by a Petuna twenty, Trust me, it
feels plenty big when you're part of the twenty. Just clarifying,
But I'm talking about large numbers of forces opposing each other,

(04:12):
very very rare in Vietnam, and this battle was actually
part of the reason for that. So just brief history
on it. We have always had cavalry horseback, you know, horseback,
General Custer. Cavalry horses are wonderful before the motorized era
because they can get you where you want to go

(04:33):
with more weight and faster than you could on foot.
That's the idea, get to where you want to be
faster than the enemy can get there wrongfoot the enemy,
and you bring more things to bear than he does.
You show up with ten more in rounds, he shows
up with two. You have a distinct advantage. You see.

(04:54):
You get how it goes. So let's fast forward to
the heroes. Helicopter helicopters. I'm gonna call them helos to
make this easy. They were Huey's, but I'm just going
to call them helos to make it easy for everybody.
Right now, we started to experiment pre Vietnam with using
helicopters for this purpose where it had normally been horses

(05:16):
and tanks. And we still have cavalry tanks and things.
But what about the concept of air cavalry air calve.
It's fascinating concept. Yet, can we move mass quantities of
men immaterials from point A to point B and then
resupply them and help them using helicopters and artillery fired remotely?

(05:39):
Can we do that? And we begin training on that?
All right, we'll fast forward to all the other stuff
if you, like I said, if you want more in depth,
you can go dig it up. I'm sure Chris will
find the episode at some point in time. Is that
the episode? Did you get that one right?

Speaker 2 (05:51):
Chris?

Speaker 1 (05:51):
What's the date you said you think Chris, I think
and I know are two very different things. I have
to have this conversation with my kid all the times. Whatever,
it's lessons from history, Operation Rolling Thunder. That's what Chris
says it is, and that does sound right anyway. So
we get to Vietnam, and at that point in time,
this is sixty four to sixty five, the North Vietnamese

(06:15):
really had control of South Vietnam, and they were doing
so many things in South Vietnam because they had these
bases in what were known as the Central Highlands of Vietnam.
So you're looking at Vietnam about the center, there's mountains.
I'm just gonna call them mountains. There are jungle mountains there,
and they were wonderful staging areas for troops. I was

(06:37):
actually talking to my sons this morning. Hey Dad, My
oldest said, hey, Dad, if the Russians invade, what's the
best place to be. And so, of course, because I'm
a nerd, I said, the Russians can't invade. Son, he said,
I'm talking hypotheticals. A big army invades. Well, the mountains.
The mountains are always where you want to be. You
don't want to be on the coast. The mountains are
where you want to be. Mountains are natural fortifications, natural

(06:59):
high places, natural everything. The Vietnamese were doing a bunch
of staging and fighting from the central highlands. We Americans
decided that's where we would try to launch our first
ever air cav offense. So we launched a bunch of
guys there. The mission had all sorts of problems. We

(07:20):
didn't have enough helos, we didn't We had to take
our guys in in stages. We were too far from
the base. Look, we were learning, right, we were learning
how to do this. But we land our guys there.
I'm going to simplify some numbers to make it easy
for everyone understand. We land about a thousand guys there.
There was some South Vietnamese troops. We land a thousand

(07:40):
guys there, and we kind of stumble upon more than
double that number Vietnamese. They were there waiting for us,
and they begin attacking us. And this takes course over
the This takes place over the course of three days.
But if you've seen the movie, you have a really
great understanding of what it was like. The Vietname to me,

(08:00):
understood the power of America's bombs American artillery, and very
early on, I remember, these are crafty fighters. These are
wonderful fighters. You can hate them all you want. They
just got done running the French out of their country.
These were people who knew how to fight. They knew
that they had to get close to us in proximity.
That way, we can't you can't fire artillery if I'm

(08:22):
fighting you with a knife. I can't call artillery in
on you, now, can I. So that was the idea.
They formed up end mass and started coming at our
guys as fast as humanly possible. And we were calling
in air strikes, calling in artillery, and the heroes were
flying in and out, and our guys were going down

(08:42):
and their guys were going down. And it was nasty
hand to hand fighting a bayonets club and people to death.
Artillery people are being burned alive. It is a brutal,
brutal affair that takes place over the course of three days.
At one point the Americans were all most overrun, and
they had to do what is very very rare and

(09:03):
call in broken arrow. If you ever hear that term,
broken arrow means when you call that in, you are
about to be overrun and everyone's about to die, and
so every air unit in the vicinity, no matter where
they're at, they drop whatever mission they're on in every
air unit is immediately re routed to your area to

(09:25):
help you, because we are all about to die. That's
what broken arrow means. Again, if you've read the book
or seen the movie, was a wonderful movie. If you've
seen the movie, you will actually hear that broken arrow,
broken arrow, broken arrow means it's all gone bad and
we're about to be overwhelmed. Help help. So it was
a very touch and go affair. At the end of
that affair, we claimed victory because we killed more of

(09:48):
them than they killed of us. They actually claimed victory
as well. It was said afterwards that that battle they
didn't beat us, but because they in ways they held
their own, in ways they held their own. It is
said that that was the battle that told Ho Chi
Minh he could win against us. So we treat it

(10:10):
as a victory, and I treat it as a victory.
I feel like we won that, but so did they,
And that's kind of how it goes. Now. I set
all that to do not one but two Medal of
Honor citations from the battle of Yadran and then we'll
go back and talk some politics. Sound good. I did
that in about ten minutes, Chris, about that you couldn't
do that? What Chris? Hey, look Chris, I didn't mean

(10:34):
to be mean. I'm about to talk about the International
Fellowship of Christians and Jews. So we should come together
right now? What Chris, this is a time for us
to come together. Anyway, we'll set aside Jewish producer Chris
for a moment and do let's discuss something serious. What's
going on over there is very very serious. I'm sure

(10:54):
you saw the news from today the gaz appear that
we spent three hundred million dollars on is now gone
gone did nothing? And look people are dying every day, sirens, rockets,
attacks Hesbaalah in the north, Hamas in the South, fires.
The fire risk is horrible. We have homeless Holocaust survivors

(11:17):
right now in Israel. Did you know that? Imagine surviving
the Holocaust and in your final years you're freaking homeless
because of some horrible war. Well, the IFCJ what they
have as a petition right now, they just want Americans
to sign the petition so they can go turn it
in over there and say, look at how many people

(11:38):
are praying for you and standing with you. Would you
mind signing that for me? Support IFCJ dot org. It's
just a petition. SUPPORTIFCJ dot org. We'll be back. I've
got on Animlithide means.

Speaker 2 (11:55):
Kelly, you're listening to the Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show about to finish up
Medal of Honor Tuesday. Because I wasn't here on Monday.
Don't forget. We have Joel Pollack coming up about ten
minutes from now. He wrote a book about Trump's first
one hundred days. If he wins election again, what can
he do? He said, He's got a bunch of stuff
in there. Let's talk to him about that. But I

(12:22):
just did a little history on the Vietnamese Battle of Yadreng.
And now for Medal of Honor Monday, we have two
different Medal of Honor citations without further ado, Let's get
to the.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
First one, hey, honoring those who went above and beyond.
It's Medal of Honor Monday.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
Major Bruce Crandall distinguished himself by extraordinary heroism as flight
commander in the Republic of Vietnam while serving with Company
A two twenty ninth Assault Helicopter Battalion, first Cavalry Division.
On the fourteenth of November nineteen sixty five, his flight
of sixteen helicopters was lifting troops for a search and

(13:08):
destroy mission from play Me, Vietnam, to landing Zone X
Ray in the Yadrang Valley. On the fourth troop lift,
the enemy had landing Zone X Ray targeted as Major Crandall,
and the first eight helicopters landed to discharge troops. On
his fifth troop lift, his unarmed helicopter came under such

(13:29):
intense enemy fire that the ground commander ordered the second
flight of eight aircraft to abort their mission. As Major
Crandell flew back to play Me his base of operations,
he determined that the ground commander of the besieged Infantry
Battalion desperately needed more ammunition. Major Crandell then described then

(13:50):
decided to adjust his base of operations to artillery fire
based falcon in order to shorten the flight distance to
deliver ammunition and evacuate wounded soldiers. While medical evacuation was
not his mission, he immediately sought volunteers and with complete
disregard for his own personal safety led the two aircraft

(14:11):
to landing zone x Ray, despite the fact that the
landing zone was still under relentless enemy fire. Major Crandell
landed and proceeded to supervise the loading of seriously wounded
soldiers aboard the aircraft. Crandall's voluntary decision to land under
the most extreme fire instilled in the other pilots the

(14:31):
will and the spirit to continue to land their own aircraft,
and in the ground forces the realization that they would
be resupplied and that friendly wounded would be promptly evacuated.
This greatly enhanced morale in the will to fight at
a critical time. After his first medical evacuation, Major Crandell
continued to fly into and out of the landing zone

(14:53):
throughout the day and into the evening. That day, he
completed a total of twenty two flights intense enemy fire,
retiring from the battlefield only after all possible service had
been rendered to the infantry battalion. His actions proved critical
provided critical resupply of ammunition and evacuation of the wounded.

(15:14):
Major Crandall's daring acts of bravery and courage in the
face of overwhelming a determined enemy or in keeping with
the highest traditions of military service, and reflect great credit
upon himself his unit in the United States Army. That's
the first. Here's the second.

Speaker 2 (15:31):
Hey honoring those who went above and beyond its Medal
of Honor Monday.

Speaker 1 (15:42):
This is for a Walter Joseph Marm Junior, for conspicuous
gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life, above
and beyond the call of duty. As a platoon leader
in the first Cavalry Division, First Lieutenant Marham demonstrated indomitable
courage during a combat operation. His company was moving through
the valley to relieve a friendly unit surrounded by an

(16:03):
enemy force of estimated regimental size. First Lieutenant marm led
his patoon through withering fire until they were finally forced
to take cover. Realizing that his platoon could not hold
very long, and seeing four enemy soldiers moving into his position,
he moved quickly under heavy fire and annihilated all four. Then,

(16:23):
seeing his patoon was receiving intense fire from a concealed
machine gun, he deliberately exposed himself to draw its fire,
thus locating the position. He attempted to destroy it with
an anti tank weapon. Although he inflicted casualties, the weapon
did not silence the enemy fire. Quickly, disregarding the intense
fire directed on him and his platoon, he charged thirty

(16:46):
meters across open ground and hurled grenades into the enemy position,
killing some of the eight insurgents manning it. Although severely
wounded when his grenades were expended, armed with only a rifle,
he continued the momentum of his assault on the position
and killed the remainder of the enemy. First Lieutenant marm,
selfless actions reduced to fire on his platoon, broke the

(17:08):
enemy assault and rallied his unit to continue toward the
accomplishment of this mission. First Lieutenant Marm's gallantry on the
battlefield and his extraordinary intrepidity at the risk of his
life were in the highest traditions of the US Army,
had reflect great credit upon himself and the armed forces
of his country. We brought a little kilo version of that,

(17:32):
in a little on the ground version of that, But remember,
Vietnam veterans deserve your respect. I actually had a chance
this weekend to break bread with the guy who led
an infantry platoon in Vietnam, a marine. My boys thirteen
and fifteen. To them, it was like meeting a rock star.

(17:55):
They were floored. They were floored to talk to him.
That's why you talk about these things in front of
your kids. They're listening and they're learning what we value
and should value. Remember that, all right? You know what
I value My my pillow and more specifically, my MyPillow sandals.

(18:16):
My pillow sandals are hurricane certified. No, that's not an
official certification. I just gave them hurricane certification because yesterday
I was outside trying to make sure my fence didn't
blow over, and there was things blowing all over the place,
and I was having to run around the yard and
make sure it wasn't flooded out. And you know what,
I was worrying the entire time. My wife was making

(18:36):
fun of me. My my pillow sandals. They're indoor outdoor.
They're indoor outdoor, and they provided the comfort I needed
in the midst of God's wrath here in Houston. And
you can have a pair of my pillow sandals for
twenty five bucks. The premium my pillow with the geez
of fabric on it, twenty five bucks. It's the twenty
five dollars extravaganza sale at my pillow. Go take advantage

(19:01):
of it. When they have a list of things, it's
not one or two things. When there's a list of
things on sale for twenty five bucks, you dive on
that thing like you can't wait, because if you do wait,
they're gonna run out of your stuff. They're already running
out of sandal sizes everywhere MyPillow dot com. Click on
the radio listener. Special square used to promote code Jesse.

(19:23):
We'll call them eight hundred eighty four five zero five
four four. Joel Pollock has a plan for Trump's first
hundred days next truth attitude.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
Jesse Kelly.

Speaker 1 (19:38):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. All right, It's time
to talk to Joel about something. Joel Pollock. He has
a show. You probably already know who he is, obviously.
He hosts Bripe Art News on Serious Xmpatriot and he
also has a book out right now that I find
the concept in it fascinating and so important. The books

(19:59):
call the agenda what Trump should do in his first
one hundred days. You know, we're all celebrating right now.
I shouldn't say all of us, but I'm a bunch
of people celebrating right now. Woo, Joe Biden's going down.
But what do we do with the power if we
get it again? Joining me now, Joel Pollock. Okay, Joel,
you wrote the book. I didn't write the book. Trump

(20:20):
has one hundred days. He just took the Oval office.
What should he do?

Speaker 2 (20:26):
Well?

Speaker 3 (20:26):
Thanks, Jesse, And let me tell you the important thing
to know is that Joe Biden can still take this thing.
Democrats don't lose easily, right They fight dirty, and they
play to win, and the only thing that's important to
them is power. So even though it's looking bad for
Joe Biden right now, you can be sure that the

(20:49):
Democrats are going to pull together every possible resource, every
Soros billionaire, every vote by male scheme they can possibly
think of, fake news outlet they create to spam social
media with headlines about how terrible the Republicans are. You
can be sure they're going to pull out all the
stops because power is everything to them. So I actually

(21:12):
think Donald Trump is still the underdog in this race.
Even if Joe Biden is flailing around right now, the
Democrats are going to come up with a solution, and
they have the time to do it. They're also not
a verse of breaking rules. Remember in two thousand and eight,
Hillary Clinton actually had more delegates than Barack Obama, and
there was a snaffoo with Michigan and Florida who broke
the rules of the Democratic primary, and so the Democratic

(21:33):
National Committee just decided to give the delegates to Obama.
They had a meeting and they gave the delegates to
Obama so that he could win. And that's how they roll.
That is how the Democrats work. So with that in mind,
I sat down to write the agenda starting in late May,
just after Donald Trump was convicted in Manhattan in that

(21:57):
ridiculous Stalinist trial by the Soros funded prosecutor, and I
was so upset. My flag is still flying upside down
on my house. I do believe the country is in
a state of distress. We are at risk of becoming
a banana republic. But rather than wallow in misery and

(22:18):
sad feelings and anger, I decided to do look ahead
to January twentieth, twenty twenty five, and let's presume that
Donald Trump is the president of the United States. What
does he do to fix this country? What does he
do to make these things right, And I came up
with over two hundred executive orders and actions that he

(22:41):
can implement on day one, as soon as he takes
the oath of office. And he can do these things
without having to wait for Congress, without having to trust
the Democrats. You know, he may need some Democratic votes
in the Senate if he has to get through a
filibuster or if they control the House somehow after this
Biden debacle. And he doesn't have to count on the
republic And remember how the Republicans let him down when

(23:02):
he was trying to appeal and replace Obomecra back in
twenty seventeen. So these are things he can do himself
without stretching the boundaries of executive power, without violating the Constitution,
within his existing powers as president. These are the things
Donald Trump can do, from the border to the economy,
to inflation, to the debt, to foreign policy, to crime,
to face everything.

Speaker 1 (23:24):
Jewel again, we're speaking with Joel Pollock. He wrote a book,
The Agenda, kind of laying out a good idea of
some things Trump can do. I want to actually focus
on a couple of those things, if you don't mind, Joel. Inflation,
it's one thing to campaign on. I'll take care of inflation.
But anyone who understands monetary policy and how these things
work at all knows it's a lot more complicated than that.

(23:47):
How can he get in there and stop the spending,
the printing, the incentive What can he do if he
even wants to do it?

Speaker 3 (23:57):
So he certainly wants to do it. And you're right
that Donald Trump doesn't control the interest rates the Federal
Reserve does, and he doesn't control the purse strings Congress does.
But he does control certain things about how money is spent.
He can't decide not to spend money Congress is allocated.
But for example, this idea that Joe Biden has for

(24:19):
giving student loans, forgiving this for giving that he can
end that on day one. And those programs that Biden
has implemented actually increase inflation because they increase the amount
of discastionionary income that some people who should be paying
their loans currently have. So he can do that. He
can also start looking at other fiscal options that the

(24:40):
Treasury can consider for different ways, for example, to introduce
cryptocurrency into the market that can handle some of the
debt burden without increasing inflation. So there are all kinds
of things that the federal government can do to help
fight inflation. And they're all doable again with the execut pen,

(25:00):
the pen and the phone. As Barack Obama used to say,
he doesn't have to wait for Congress. By the way,
the Federal Reserve is not entirely politically independent. And if
you think Jerome Powell has done a bad job, and
I think some of the decisions have been very questionable,
well that's something Donald Trump can do as well. He
can refuse to renew the term of Jerome Powell when

(25:20):
it comes up, and he can already start looking for
a new head of the Federal Reserve, someone who's going
to fight inflation without slowing the economy. So I think
there are so many things the president can do within
his constitutional powers, and I've given you just a few,
but I lay out many more of them in the agenda.

Speaker 1 (25:39):
Steve Bannon wrote the foreword for this book before he
was sent off to jail by the communists who run
this country. How'd that come about? What's what's this all about?

Speaker 3 (25:50):
Well, Steve has a publishing imprint called war Room, and
they actually picked up the book. It's very interesting. It's
coming out through Skyhorse Publishing, but Steve Bannon's War Room
Books is actually putting it out. And I didn't approach Steve.
Steve wanted to write the forward, and it is, in
fact the last thing that Steve Bannon wrote before he

(26:11):
left to report to prison in Connecticut. The forward came
through on Sunday night, and he reported to prison on
Monday morning. That's how important this was for Steve Bannon
to do, and I really appreciate that. I'm very grateful
to him for doing that. But Steve is like that.
Steve likes looking ahead. Steve does not like wallowing in
the past. He doesn't like looking at how desperate our

(26:33):
situation is right now, how difficult things are now. He's
a navy guy, and he always wants to know where
we're going, where we're navigating to what's the next step.
And that's the frame of mind that I am in
right now. I think this book is really uplifting to people.
A lot of the people who have read it have
told me how much they've enjoyed it, simply because it
takes you out of the present day politics, whose poles say,

(26:57):
and it gets you into January tent twenty five. What
does the next administration do? Remember that if Donald Trump
wins the presidency, he will be considered a lame duck
because he can't run for reelection. So the pundits and
the Democrats will already be talking about who the next
president is going to be. They're not going to want
to let him govern, so he has to act right away.

(27:18):
They're also that all of these leftling groups, these lawfare groups,
they're going to sue and challenge every executive order he does,
So you have to overwhelm them. And that's why I
have well over two hundred of these ideas in the
book that he can just implement on day one and
overwhelm the opposition from.

Speaker 1 (27:38):
He is Joel Pollock. His book is The Agenda. Highly
encourage you to go order this thing. I'm very, very
fascinated with the concept, totally in agreement that this has
to be fast and it has to be vicious. Joel.
I appreciate you very much, my friend, Please come back soon.
Thank you. Look, it all depends what kind of mentality

(28:02):
Trump is going to have walking into a second term
in the White House, and no one knows what that's
going to be. I don't know. You don't know it.
Don't please don't email me and tell me you do know,
because what will happen is the people who hate Trump
will email it and say he has no intention of
doing anything, and the people who worship Trump will be

(28:24):
he already said he's gonna do it all, save the country.
Nobody actually knows. Is he walking in there like the
sword of God to clean house, clean things up, and
try the best he can to defeat the communists? I
don't know. Is he walking in there trying to be

(28:45):
just normal guy? The way he looks at it. I
got four years to get the New York Times to
accept me, and then I'll ride off into the sunset.
I don't know. No one knows. But I like that
people are already being forward thinking about what the pl is.
I like it a lot. I like that we have
a plan. That's why I wanted to have Joel on
and talk about it. All right, we have so much more.

(29:08):
Get to some emails. Before we get to the emails,
I know what you're thinking. I know what you're thinking.
I can read your mind. You're sitting there thinking, Jesse,
are you in pain right now? And the answer is no,
and you know why I'm not in pain. It's because
I take relief Factor every single day. You see now,
apparently once you hit forty two, if you drive somewhere

(29:31):
or fly somewhere, you will get there in your neghbelehurt.
And that's of course you're taking relief Factor. So I've
had to start taking relief Factor every day.

Speaker 3 (29:38):
Now.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
Remember relief Factor. It's natural, it's drug free, and it
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(30:01):
one eight hundred the number four relief or go to
relief Factor dot com. We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (30:09):
This is the Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 1 (30:13):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show odd Ay Tuesday. Remember
if you miss any part of the show, you can
download the whole thing on iHeart, Spotify, iTunes. If you
want to email me, you can what an honor for
you Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com. So I probably
should clarify before I get to the emails. How I

(30:35):
ended up in Florida because we were planning on just
staying home over Independence Day weekend. And then we decided, hey,
let's take a trip to Florida. I'm just gonna shoot
you straight here. I really, really, really love Florida. And
I found myself going to Florida as often as possible.

(30:59):
Whenever we get moment, we start going over to Florida.
We're going to various parts of Florida. Shout out, I
should note to Florida man radio WFLA, I love you.
I love love Florida. And we decided, hey, let's go
somewhere for Independence Day. So on a whim, we found
some cheap tickets, got a couple of teil rooms. We

(31:20):
fly over to Florida. It was it was fun. The
fireworks were amazing. We almost didn't get back to Houston because,
of course a hurricane goes rolling into town. But that's
where I was. Florida Pada blast. The oldest son got
a little sunburnt. You see, when we told him to
put on sunscreen. I guess he took that as a suggestion.

(31:43):
Either way, it was a great trip, not so much
for the wife. Now you remember the Mexico story. I
told you the Mexican trip. Just a brief recap for
those who weren't here for that little saga few years back,
five years back or so. We we found a deal. Gosh,
I sound like Chris. We found a deal at a

(32:03):
Mexican resort and we had never really done Cankon and wecided.
We had I think it was three days. We couldn't
afford a week. We had three days. We wanted to
go down to Cancoons. We go down to Cancoon We
go to this resort. Everyone gets food poisoning at one
point in time, everyone gets sick, and finally, on the
last day we have there, we're all healthy enough. So

(32:28):
my wife and I decide we're going to get a
couple's massage at the resort. We dropped the kids off
at some kids playland area. They had pizza and laser
tag and all kinds of crap for the kids. Were
walking out of the kid's area, my wife blows out
her ankle. Missus a step blows out her ankle that
had a wheelchair in that night, we go bowling. My

(32:49):
wife's song crutches, she trips and blows out her other ankle. Okay,
so this is the kind of vacation luck this woman has.
We go down to Florida, Fourth of July, Independance Day.
We go to the fireworks that night, we also ate
and we grabbed a quick bite at this little bar
and grill in the restaurant. I of course got a cheeseburger,

(33:10):
the basics, but she got the salmon. Don't get me
started on you weird fish people. Again, I don't want
to start. But she got the salmon, and it's healthier.
About midnight that night, sick as a dog, food poisoning
as bad as I've ever seen. Not me her. I
was totally fine, The boys were totally fine. Sick as

(33:31):
a dog. So she spent the entire weekend laid out
in bed, sick as a dog. Could hardly function. So
if you're gonna ask how the weekend was in Florida,
it wasn't. It wasn't good. It was it was not ideal.
Ended up spending a bunch of money, hardly even saw
the life. That's where I was, Oracle jar head. I'm
trying to understand why the system wants Dome if the

(33:54):
polls clearly show she ranks lower than President Boopy bands
and it head to head match up Trump. Okay, can
we can begin I guess with some I'm not going
to again. I'm told you, I'm not going to do
three hours on it. I can't some of the latest
drama when it comes to Biden. First, the press is
starting to press. See what I did there? What Chris,

(34:17):
that's funny anyway, the press is starting to press.

Speaker 4 (34:23):
Because I do take offense to what Ed alluded to.
You know, come out here. Every day there's a press briefing,
and we do our best to give you the information
that we have at the time. That's what we do,
and we understand the freedom of the press.

Speaker 1 (34:40):
She's offended. Why is she offended? Because the media is
starting to act like immediate.

Speaker 4 (34:47):
Times or at least once in regards to hold on
a second?

Speaker 1 (34:51):
Should answer by this point.

Speaker 4 (34:54):
Ed, please a little respect here. So I am telling
you that he has seen or neurologist three times while
he has been in this presidency. Right, So that is
answering that question. No, it is, it is you're asking.
I also said to you, Ed. I also said to you,

(35:14):
for security reasons, we cannot share names. We have to
We have.

Speaker 1 (35:19):
Two others he would have met with you.

Speaker 4 (35:20):
We can't share names in regards to if someone came
here we cannot share.

Speaker 1 (35:24):
Did you get the idea the media is starting to
act like a media now. I do need to remind everybody,
don't you dare give them announce of credit? All these
same people have been over backwards and forwards for years
to cover for Joe Biden's condition. They're only now acting
like a media now because they're worried about losing the
election to Trump, so they're trying to run Joe Biden

(35:46):
out of the race. So the media doesn't deserve any
credit at all. But the White House has confirmed that
Joe Biden is being evaluated constantly by a doctor whose
specialty is Parkinson's disease. Joe Biden is being routinely looked
at by a doctor who specializes in Parkinson's. Here's doctor

(36:10):
Tom Pitts.

Speaker 2 (36:11):
You notice anything that gives you a red flag as
a doctor?

Speaker 1 (36:14):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (36:14):
Yeah, I see him twenty times a day in clinic.
I mean it's ironic because he has just such classic
features of NERD degeneration. I mean word finding difficulties and
that's not oh I couldn't find the word that's from
degeneration of the word retrieval area.

Speaker 1 (36:26):
He's also overcome stuttering though, could that Could that be
part of that too?

Speaker 5 (36:30):
No, this is not a palattle issue or a speech discrepancy,
which is very different from a lemono dysfunction. Actual word
retrieval where you pick a similar question or talk around
the issue. Plus the rigidity, monotone voice. Wait, go back
to that, the rigidity, loss of arms swinging standing up,
lord doedically. You notice when he turns, it's kind of
end block turning. It's not a quick turn. So that's

(36:53):
one of the hallmarks of Parkinson's is rigidity and braded kinesias,
slow movement, and he has that hallmark, especially with the
low voices. That was a cold hypophonia. A small monotone
voice like this over time is a hallmark of parkinson ism.
I could have diagnosed him from across the mall. Let
me ask you a demo.

Speaker 1 (37:11):
What's that he said about a small monotone voice being.

Speaker 5 (37:15):
A selections about the future, not the past.

Speaker 3 (37:19):
Can you serve effectively for the next four years? George,
I'm the guy that put NATO together the future.

Speaker 4 (37:26):
No one thought I could expand it.

Speaker 1 (37:28):
I'm the guy that shut Puttin down. Yeah, so I
guess it's time we should have a Little Palace Drama.
Palace Intrigue update, huh, we'll do that next
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