Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is the Jesse Kelly Show. Kit is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show. On
a wonderful Monday and absolutely wonderful Monday. We're gonna talk
about capping credit card interest rates. This hour, We're gonna
talk about my poor decision making. I'll get to emails, hopefully,
(00:32):
I'll get to your sock emails. All that and so
much more still to come this hour. But you know
what time it is. It is the start of hour
two on Monday, and that means it's time for Medal
of Honor Monday. Every time somebody has ever earned a
medal of honor in this country, they write up a
(00:55):
citation for them. Those citations are available for everyone for free,
not just one multiple Internet sites. Multiple sites on the
Internet will tell you, hey, this guy. You can sort
it by conflict, by branch, Marines, Navy, Army. It is
(01:15):
amazing the database of heroes that is out there that's
available for free for you in me. Now, this is
a story that if you've watched the movie We Were Soldiers,
or if you read the book We Were Soldiers Once
in Young that's the name of the book. You're aware
of this in case you are not aware of Ed W. Freeman,
(01:40):
or at least aware of the bravery of it, let
me explain something about helicopters in Vietnam. Vietnam brought about
a brand new kind of warfare. Yes, we use helicopters
in Korea, by the way, but Vietnam was the one
where they were really central to the war. Was simple,
(02:02):
take the men, take the equipment you need, fly a
fleet of helicopters into where you're going, drop them off,
and then when you need to bring them out, or
when they're wounded you need to evacuate, or the men
you brought in need ammo or food or water, you
send the heroes back in. This is kind of one
(02:23):
of those things we're at the stage now, especially we
recently had that thing in Venezuela, helicopters flying through Caracas,
and now it's just kind of old hat for us. Well, yeah,
he thos do this, he loos through that, but this
was relatively new in Vietnam, at least using them at
that scale was brand new. But there's something you always
(02:45):
need to keep in mind. An AK forty seven. Have
you ever looked at an AK forty seven? Round the round?
It shoots. It's a seven point six y two round,
But don't worry about that number. If you don't know
guns or whatnot, don't worry about that. But I would
encourage you, if you're not driving right now, to look
up a seven point six y two round. The Vietcong
(03:10):
and the North Vietnamese Army they shot AK forty seven's mainly,
but they also had bigger weapons, anti anti aircraft weapons,
all kinds of things like that. So that AK forty
seven round you're looking at, that's as small as they got.
Do you have any idea how much damage one of
(03:32):
those rounds does to the human body if it hits you,
you don't even want to know. It doesn't have to
be in your heart. If you take an AK forty
seven round to the bone somewhere your forearm, that bone
is destroyed, shattered. If you had if you had on
(03:56):
a flackjack, a bulletproof vest, and let's say the bullet
proof vest actually stopped the AK forty seven round from
killing you and it hit you anywhere in the abdomen,
did you know you will most likely have broken ribs.
That's how heavy and hard that round hits. And I
(04:18):
want to stress that that is the smallest round that
was shot by the Vietnamese army at the time. The helicopters,
the helicopter pilots, the helicopter crewmen were some of the
most insanely brave human beings in Vietnam because the enemy
wasn't stupid. The enemy was very, very crafty, and it
(04:40):
took him about half a second to figure out what
our war plan was. It took him half a second
to figure out those helicopters. That's their lifeline. That's bringing
in troops and food and AMMO, and it's bringing out
the wounded. We don't have to kill the masses of
men on the ground first, kill the heat and everyone dies.
(05:03):
They knew it. And so when I read this, keep
in mind we're not talking about bulletproof helicopters here. We're
talking about helicopters with rounds going through them like a
blow towards through butter. So out of Nearly Mississippi born
in nineteen twenty seven, Nearly Mississippi. Here's the Medal of
(05:24):
Honor citation for an ed W. Freeman right Hey, honoring
those who went above and beyond. Its Medal of Honor
Monday for conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of
(05:44):
his life, above and beyond the call of duty. Captain
ED W. Freeman, United States Army distinguished himself by numerous
acts of conspicuous gallantry and extraordinary intrepidity of the fourteenth
of November nineteen sixty five, while serving with Comp. Two
and twenty ninth Assault Helicopter Battalion, First Cavalry Division. Pause
(06:06):
for a moment on the citation. This is as I said,
It's the story of we were soldiers. But if you
don't know, just know that we flew in a fairly
large Army unit. This Army unit landed at the base
of a jungled mountain. But in that jungled mountain were
several times more North Vietnamese than the Army unit that landed.
(06:30):
The Army unit that landed far from home, and they
have nobody but the helicopters. Back to the citation. As
a flight leader and second in command of a sixteen
helicopter lift unit, he supported a heavily engaged American Infantry
Battalion at landing Zone X Ray in the Idrang Valley,
(06:51):
Republic of Vietnam. The infantry unit was almost out of
ammunition after taking some of the heaviest casualties of the
war fighting off relentless attack from a highly motivated, heavily
armed enemy force. When the infantry commander closed the helicopter
landing zone due to intense direct enemy fire, Captain Freeman
(07:12):
risked his own life by flying his unarmed helicopter through
a gauntlet of enemy fire time after time, delivering critically
needed ammunition, water, and medical supplies to the besieged battalion.
His flights had a direct impact on the battle's outcome
by providing the engaged units with timely supplies of ammunition
(07:35):
critical to their survival, without which they almost would surely
have experienced a much greater loss of life. After medical
evacuation helicopters refused to fly into the area due to
intense enemy fire, Captain Freeman flew fourteen separate rescue missions,
providing life saving evacuation of an estimated thirty seriously wounded soldiers,
(07:59):
some of whom would not have survived had he not acted.
All flights were made into a small emergency landing zone
within one hundred to two hundred meters of the defensive perimeter,
where heavily committed units were perilously holding off the attacking elements.
Captain Freeman's selfless acts of great valor, extraordinary perseverance, and
(08:21):
intrepidity were far above and beyond the call of duty
or mission, and yet set a superb example of leadership
and courage for all his peers. Captain Freeman's extraordinary heroism
and devotion to duty or in keeping with the highest
traditions of military service, and reflect great credit upon himself
his unit in the United States Army. And I will
(08:43):
simply cap this little story with this. I've read more
Vietnam books than I can possibly count of different units,
Army units, marine units, MACVIE SAG units, long long long
distance reconnaissance units. That helicopter sound for those guys when
(09:05):
they were besieged behind enemy lines, when they were surrounded,
that helicopter sound was the greatest moment of their lives,
and vice versa. Because these stories are out there, there
are plenty of them. Every helicopter pilot was it ed
W Freeman. Helicopters that got close and then simply took
(09:30):
off because the danger was too great to hear the
emotions of the guys on the ground as the helo
leaves you want to cry into the book you're reading.
They feel like, well, that's it. I'm gonna die now.
That was my one lifeline, my one chance to get
(09:52):
myself out. My buddy, he's gutshot, he's bleeding out. I
need him on it. That was his one chance. That
helicopter is gone. They were not all ed W. Freeman,
but there were many, many, many insanely brave helicopter pilots
in Vietnam. If you have one in your family, maybe
(10:13):
you don't realize that. Now he wasn't a Green Beret.
Maybe you don't realize the things that guy did. May
I simply suggest ask him about his time in Vietnam.
Maybe it's been long enough that he'll feel comfortable talking
about it. You might have a genuine American hero in
your family, and we don't. We don't have much longer
(10:35):
with our Vietnam Vets. They're getting old. All right, All right, now,
I'm gonna make you mad. Let's talk about credit card debt.
Next the Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a wonderful Monday. I know I said we were
gonna talk about caps on credit card debt, but you're
(10:55):
gonna have to hold off on that for a second
because I have a guilty conscience and I just want
to let you know what a terrible failure I am
from time to time. So here's what happened. Maybe this
will maybe this will be inspiring to you to not
be like me. But here's what happened. I've told you.
I know it's lame. I know it's lame. Don't make
(11:18):
fun of me that I'm trying to make twenty twenty
six the healthiest year of my life. Why are you
already laughing, Chris? How do you think this makes me feel?
It's not gay, Chris, it is not. Anyway we're going
to ignore, Chris. I'm going to try to make it
the healthiest year of my life. And so little steps, Okay,
(11:39):
I'm not off. I'm not eating lettuce all day. Little steps.
I have joked before about fasting for two hours or
three hours, but on occasion, I do fast on Mondays,
I'll eat dinner on Sunday and my next meal will
be dinner on Monday. I can't sit and tell you
about this science of it because I don't know. I
(12:02):
know that fitness guys I talk to and I'm friends with.
Tell me it's great to reset your body. It's great
for your blood sugar, it's great to burn up fat.
That I just keep hearing it's great. So it's not
all the time. I'm not a monk. It's one day
a week. Today. I wake up messing around with ab
(12:22):
in the house, and I tell you know, I think
I'm gonna fast today until dinner. Bob has this dinner plan.
She's making this garlic chicken pasta, heavenly stuff. I see,
you know, I think I'm gonna fast until dinner. Well,
I have to go get my haircut. I go get
my haircut before work. Shut up, Chris, you know there's
(12:45):
more to it than you think. I have to go
get my hair cut before work. Get my hair cut.
I'm on the way to work. There's an in and
out burger on the way to work. No, Chris, listen,
let me finish the story. I decide, you know what, No,
if you're going to break your fast early because I
(13:06):
was really hungry, at least, don't let it be in
an out burger, don't go don't go all in. All right,
don't go all in. So I'm proud of this. I
drove right by the in and out burger. But then
temptation sometimes is too much. Sometimes if you're not strong enough,
(13:31):
temptation can bring you down. I pass in an out Burger.
But what's coming up in the distance on the way
to work a Torcheese tacos. I don't expect you to
know what Torchies tacos is. If you're in Texas, you
definitely know what it is. If you're not, just know
that they have things like fried chicken tacos that have
(13:53):
queso poured in them. Okay, it's just amazing. There's a
Torchies taco coming up, and I break. I decide I'm
going into Torchies tacos, but but I'm not gonna go
all in. My normal all in order at Torchies tacos
is two of those fried chicken tacos with queso in them.
(14:16):
Then I get chips and kso, and then I get
a Mexican coke to wash it down with. That's my
normal go to order at Torchies. But I'm fasting and
I'm having a healthier twenty twenty six, so not today.
On the way to Torchies. Once I make the commitment
that I'm going, I decide, you know what, I'm getting
one taco instead of two today. I'll get my chips
(14:40):
and kso, but I'll get one taco, chips and kso
in a water. Just gonna get a water, gonna hydrate
with all of it. That's why are you rubbing your head, Chris.
That's half of what I normally do. But then by
the time I pulled in, I was really hungry, and
(15:00):
I decided that one taco probably wasn't going to be enough.
So I know, Chris, the flesh is weak. I walk
into Torches tacos and I go up and I'm ordering,
and I got the two tacos, and I got the keso,
and then they had the cokes in one of those
clear fridges right what, Chris, right behind the catch register.
(15:23):
They had the clear cokes right there behind the catch register.
And I got a Mexican coke too. And it's not
just that I got all the tacos and the caso
and the coke. I ate every single bite.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
And I drank every single drop of the coke. I
wanted today to be a success. I want I really
truly wanted it. I could, and you know what, I
felt like it was gonna be I felt like today's
gonna be my day.
Speaker 1 (15:55):
It wasn't. I failed, But tomorrow's a new day. We
shall try again, maybe all fast again tomorrow. Chris, Hey,
I did, Yeah, I did skip breakfast. Let's be honest.
I skipped the breakfast, burning fat. Here was Trump talking
about credit card debt.
Speaker 3 (16:11):
I want a cap card credit card interest rates because
you know some of them are twenty eight almost thirty percent,
and that people don't know they're paying thirty percent. So
the people out there and you know they're working, and
they have no idea that they're paying thirty percent. A way,
I'm putting a one year cap at ten percent, and
(16:31):
that's it. They know it. They've really abused the public,
and credit card companies have totally abused it. I'm not
gonna let it happen.
Speaker 1 (16:39):
Okay, all right, So what I'm about to say is
going to be insanely offensive, potentially to you. It is
important to remember Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com is
my email address. But it is critically important that you
remember that. I don't care if you were offended, right,
(17:00):
it doesn't matter to me at all, because what I'm
about to say is My intention is to help you,
not hurt you. My intention is to help. It may
not come across very nicely, but I'm going to give
it to you. You ready, hang on? Did Jesse Kelly Show?
Speaker 3 (17:20):
It's still real to me?
Speaker 4 (17:21):
Damn it?
Speaker 1 (17:22):
The Turnstacks. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic, wonderful,
wonderful Monday. If you mess any part of the show,
you can download the whole thing on iheard Spotify iTunes.
All right, it's time to offend some people. Here was Trump.
Speaker 3 (17:39):
I want a cap or credit card interest, Rachel, because
you know some of them for twenty eight almost thirty percent,
and people don't know they're paying thirty percent. So the
people out there and you know they're working, and they
have no idea that they're paying thirty percent. No way,
I'm putting a one year cap for ten percent, and
(17:59):
that's it. They don't. They've really abused the public, and
credit card companies have totally abusive. I'm not gonna let
it happen.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
Okay, now, I am not going to defend the credit
card company. So if you're waiting for that, you're going
to be waiting a long time. And I'm certainly not
going to defend thirty percent interest. Thirty percent interest is insane.
Ripping people off for thirty percent is crazy. However, you
(18:29):
should be paying off your credit card every month. You
should never carry a balance on your credit card. If
you find yourself in dire straits vehicle bills, medical bills,
home bills, something like that, find someone else, a local bank,
you have a relationship, someone who will loan you money
(18:52):
at single digit interest rates. Don't freak out. I need
a new transmission and put it on your view visa card.
Don't do that. Thirty You never get out of thirty percent.
That's mafia rates. I'm not defending the rates. I'm not
defending credit card companies at all. But let's discuss how
(19:15):
this works economically. I'm going to put a cap on
it at ten percent. All right, let's stick with Visa
because that's a big one. Everyone will know Visa. I'm Visa.
I'm gonna make up a bunch of numbers here, Okay,
just to make it easier to understand, I'm Visa. I
make one hundred million dollars a year. They obviously make
(19:36):
a lot more than that. Again, I'm gonna try to
make it easy to understand. I make one hundred million
dollars a year. That's what I make in visa. Now,
what do I give back to customers in order to
incentivize them to get a Visa card? Because I don't
want them to have a Master card. I don't want
(19:57):
them to have an American Express card or a Discover card.
I want them to have a Visa card. Well, in
order for them to get a Visa card or choose
a Visa card over other cards, I have to present
them with something. So what does every single credit card
company do now, every one of them. You see it
all over the television set every day all day. What
(20:17):
do they give you? They give you something back. Maybe
it's cash back. Maybe you have an airline credit card.
I looked up one over the weekend, just kind of
curious about them. United has all these United Visa cards
where you could get a free first class ticket a year,
or free access to the United Lounge, or free the
(20:38):
free hotel upgrades. They're giving you giving the customer something back.
It's always small, but something back to incentivize you to
choose them. Now, how do they give it back? Because
we all know nobody gives it anything. In order for
(21:02):
the United visa card to give me and my wife,
I don't have one of these, but in order for
United to give me and my wife free first class
tickets every year, Well they have to make money. But
they don't make money on me because I got my
first credit card when I was fifteen. Yes, back in
(21:23):
the day, you could get a credit card if your
parents co signed at that age, because my parents wanted
me to start building credit. And so I'm coming up
on thirty years. Well yeah, thirty years where they've never
made a dime on me. I pay my one off
for every month. So if they don't make money on me,
how do they make money. They make money on all
(21:47):
those buffoons who pay thirty percent interest because they don't
pay off their credit card every single month. Now, pause
for a moment. If this is you, I want you
to understand something. I have known people in my life
who buried themselves in credit card debt, and I've known
(22:08):
people who have clawed their way out and never did
it again. If it is you, if you've made these
bad decisions, you can get out of it. It will
take time, there are things, there are steps you can take,
but I promise you can get out of it. Just
because you did something done in the past doesn't mean
it'd have to continue. So keep that in mind. You
can get out of it. Now back to what we
(22:28):
were discussing, it's the people paying the thirty percent that
allow the credit card companies to give anything back to anyone.
So what happens if I'm Visa, I make one hundred
million a year and now the all powerful federal government
(22:51):
comes in and says you're not allowed to charge those
interest rates. We can skip over a bunch of other steps,
but let me explain to you what's going to happen.
Normal people with normal credit will no longer have access
to credit cards, and or the interest will eventually go
(23:12):
up because he said we're going to cap it. The
first year Visa still has to make it's one hundred
million dollars. You see, it's a for profit corporation. They're
not going to change that. The federal government, any government
putting in price controls, always, always, always, always, always burn
this into your memory. A thousand percent of the time,
(23:35):
the price controls will hurt the poor. The price controls
always hurt the people they're sold as trying to help.
This is the will. They don't know any better. People
don't know they work. They're paying thirty percent. You know
what they're gonna know when they don't get a credit
card at all. My credit scores over eight hundred. It's
(23:58):
not because I have money. It's because I pay off
my bills every single month, and I always have for
forty four years on this planet. No matter what, I'm
going to have a credit card. Credit card companies are
going to compete for me. Credit card companies are going
to offer me new and improve benefits because they want
my business forever. But that person with a six point fifty,
maybe that's you, person with a six hundred. The credit
(24:21):
card companies are going to say, uh, I have to
take it. I have to take a risk with you,
and I only get to charge ten percent. Sorry, you
don't get a credit card or they'll tell you this, Yeah, no, no, no,
We'll give you a credit card. Congratulations. One thousand dollars
(24:42):
annual fee is what it's going to cost you to
take our credit card. You know that credit card you
get for free, Now you're ready to pay one thousand
dollars for it next year. I understand the thinking in
the Trump administration. And in fact, I actually want to
applaud the motivation behind it. At least you're attempting to
help working people. I like the idea of helping working people.
(25:02):
Price controls do not work, they have never worked, they
will never work at all. And I hate credit card companies.
Thirty percent is robbery. Don't pay them that either. Don't
get a credit card, or if you get one, pay
it off every single month. If you are buried in
credit card debt, find a smart way. Go into your
(25:23):
local bank. Don't call one of these ripoff phone numbers.
Go into a local bank, say here's where I am.
I'm maxed out here, maxed out there. What can you do?
You may find yourself with a six percent interest loan
from your local bank, credit cards paid off. You eventually
pay that off. You're free and clear and done. But
(25:43):
don't pay thirty percent interest. And the solution for that
is not the federal government putting a cap on it.
It's only going to make the whole crappy industry even
crappier somehow. And don't send me your freaking emails about
you don't understand. I had a frozen pizza for Christmas
one year. Don't tell me I don't understand what it's like.
(26:04):
I know exactly what it's freaking like. I know exactly
what it's like. Yeah, yeah, but I yeah, but I
we're not changing a national policy that will wipe it
out for three hundred million people because you're tranny Blue.
I'm sorry, ridiculous, crazy, stupid, populous crap. Let's set that aside.
(26:25):
Just go to Port some more people and arrest FBI agents.
We'll do some emails. Next. You're listening to the Jesse
Kelly Show. You're welcome. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a fantastic Monday. You can email us Jesse at
(26:45):
Jesse kellyshow dot com Jesse. Since this idiot got herself
shot by ice, this guy says, all I hear from
the writer qualifiers, this is a tragedy. No one wants
to see anyone killed, et cetera. Forget that she got
exactly what she deserved, so on and so forth. Okay,
that's that's your take on it. And I understand that
(27:06):
we're sick and tired of the communist street animals. I
get that. I well, I'll tell you something. I feel
bad for people in prison. We get you, well, look,
I got this email, Jesse. I'm Mexican. I just got
out of prison doing ten years. But I read so
(27:26):
much history and real history. I listened to you for years.
I became a patriot of America. Yes, I was deported,
but I understand I lost the privilege I had and
the best country in the world, so on and so forth.
I have a heart for people in prison. And you
know why because I had two parents, not perfect, like
(27:48):
no parents are perfect, but I had two wonderful parents.
They taught me right and wrong. They taught me my dad.
You know why I know about credit cards and credit
card debt because my dad taught me well about finances
and money. Everybody didn't have that. Why do I speak
so harsh to you on the subject, Because sometimes I
have to be America's daddy. I understand that. But lots
(28:11):
of people in prison they didn't have that. Come from
broke and busted up homes, crappy families, no one to
guide them, follow in with the wrong crowd, wrong to influence.
And I know that makes me sound like a flowery
lefty or something. It's not that I believe you should
do your time if you commit crimes. I's not no
problem with that. And if you're one of these violent people,
(28:33):
hurt women, murderers, just bury them under the prison. I
don't care about that. But I have a heart for
people in prison because life is imperfect, extremely imperfect. That
thirty seven year old woman is dead. She made all
the wrong choices, and it's her fault. I'm not blaming.
(28:55):
I'm not blaming someone else. However, have you seen a
pick sure of that woman, not the one they keep
putting up in the media that make her look like
a normal suburban housewife. I mean the real woman, the
less doubt bug eyed freak that was there later on
in life. Have you seen her a real picture of her?
(29:17):
Does that woman seem like she's mentally stable? That is
a human being who is probably already messed up inside anyway,
and had I am sure, a variety of outside influences
that made her mental illness so much worse. That is
(29:40):
a woman who goes home at night and listens to
stuff like this on TV.
Speaker 4 (29:44):
Gun thing. The fact that she was shot like this
for what almost hitting this agent, I mean, the fact
that guns were used and she was shot and killed
in this way, to me is the most horrifying part.
Why does an ice agent have a gun?
Speaker 1 (29:59):
Why does an e ice agent have a gun? That's
a ridiculous statement to me and to you. But if
you're already mentally broken, probably stupid, and you consume that
stuff all day, every day, you can end up making
choices that get you killed. And I think that's sad.
(30:19):
I think it's Look what I told you. We went
to New York City for Christmas and because we don't
feel like we'll probably be back because they're going to
destroy that place really quickly. It's already been going downhill.
Do you not feel pity for the homeless, drugged out
guy tweaking right by you and the sidewalk? I do.
(30:40):
It was cold there. We're walking back. We've all went
out and got a nice meal Christmas Eve night. We
wanted to have a nice Christmas Eve meal. We all
went out and we're walking back to the hotel, just
walking down the sidewalk, and there's some guy freezing cold.
It was I think it was twenty degrees something like that.
It's cold, wind was blown homeless guy laying on a
(31:03):
piece of cardboard on the sidewalk with everything he owned
wrapped up around him cold, crazy, drugged out. Do you
not have a heart for that person? I do. I
can't fix him. I'm probably not even gonna give him
a twenty because I know where it's going to go.
But I have a heart for that guy. I don't
(31:24):
want to see anybody killed. I don't want to see
communist street animals killed. I want to see communist street
animals woken up. Remember that they're in a cult. They
are in a cult, and they're deep in it, and
it's hard to pull someone out of a cult. And
(31:45):
you can tell because they're all still pushing this lie. Right,
she didn't drive it. I'm sure they're pushing lie after
lie after lie after lie after lie, and I mean, look,
they get the lies from the news.
Speaker 4 (31:56):
Nicole Good as you hear her say, she's not mad.
She's sitting in her car, peacefully waving cars to get.
Speaker 1 (32:05):
By, peacefully waving cars to get by. You can show
the communist videos, the street communists. She can show them
a video of what actually happened, but they will still
deny it. And you know why they'll deny it, because
if they admit the truth of this one thing, this
one story, there'll be another scandal this week. You know,
(32:27):
it's only Monday. I promise you we'll be moved on
by Tuesday or Wednesday. There'll be another scandal if you
were to show them the truth of this one story.
It's not that it would, it's not that it would
just kind of pour cold water all over their lives.
Of this one story. It destroys their entire religion. They
(32:49):
are in a religion, They are deep inside of a cult.
We want them out of it. We don't want them killed.
But hey, look, this is not blaming the ice officer.
Somebody drives it. You in a car, you're gonna the
bad decisions lead to bad decisions, lead to bad decisions,
and those bad decisions can eventually end up with you
getting killed. It's her fault. She got killed, her and
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her wife's fault. Drive baby drive. That's what her lesbian
wife was saying to her. And now she's dead. And
I think that's insanely sad. Not just that she's dead.
I think it's insanely sad that you can be that
mentally broken, that broken, that shattered mentally, that you would
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find yourself even parked in front of an ice agent,
let alone hammering on the gas with one inside, with
one in front of you. That is freaking horrible. I
think it's tragic. I don't want anyone to die. I
think it's tragic. I want them to wake up. She
got herself killed, that's terrible. I still would rather she
(33:51):
just woke up rather than die. I'd rather you switch
to peer talk too. By the way, I mentioned earlier
in the show about how all this stuff is funded,
organized and funded. Corporate America funds it too. Don't ever, ever,
ever forget when police departments across the country were being
(34:12):
gutted and destroyed. They're still gutted to this day. It
was Corporate America paying for the street animals to do it.
Verizon AT and T T Mobile, they're the ones who
did it. Are you still paying them for it? Pure
Talk doesn't do that. Pure Talk hires Americans. Pure Talks
(34:35):
CEO is a Vietnam veteran, and Pure Talk will have
you paying way less. We switched from T Mobile. We're
pocketing cash right and left half. Our bill got cut
in half. If you join now, you save an additional
fifty percent off your first month. Here's what you do.
You pick up your cell phone. You dial pound two
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five zero, and you say, Jesse Kelly, pound two five zero.
Say Jesse Kelly. All right, we still have an hour.
We'll beat inflation next