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May 11, 2024 37 mins

Will the democrat norms and normas help elect Trump? What can Trump do to fix our problems in the 4 years he’ll have? Saving America is a process not an event. The battles to take back the country are all around us, they are not just the presidency. What normal people want. Why do two thirds of American Jews vote democrat? Massage rules.

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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 Friday, and ask doctor Jesse Friday getting through as
many of these as possible. There are so many great
ones today. And then I mean, what else are we
going to talk about? Joe Biden?

Speaker 2 (00:33):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (00:33):
Anyway, dear rubber room survivor what Trump only has four
more years if he survives to get elected. The tarnish
on our nation is going to take longer than four
years to part to polish out. Our only hope is
he disrupts, disrupts the status quo enough to alarm the
normy norms to pay more attention.

Speaker 2 (00:56):
My question is what.

Speaker 1 (00:58):
Can Trump really do to fix our problems? It seems
like all he can do is play defense. Do you
think America will survive? Okay, well, what do we say
often now on the show? Saving America is a process,
not an event. It is a process, not an event.

(01:23):
It will not ever come down to one election, to
a presidential election, a congressional election. Senate here and Senate
that we have lost a million battles to get us
to this place as a country. We will have to
fight and win a million battles to take the country back.

Speaker 2 (01:49):
This is one battle.

Speaker 1 (01:51):
I'm not gonna say it doesn't matter. I'm not at
all saying that, but I will caution, especially people who really,
really like hardcore Trump people, it's easy to fall into
this trap. If you find a politician who really speaks
for you and speaks to you, and he pushes the
things you like, it's easy to view a politician as

(02:15):
a savior're a savior who will do all the things
you want done. And we've talked about this before, how
they become a symbol. And this is it's not unique
to Trump. It's happened a million times throughout history. You'll
take a man who's just a man, and you'll take
all your wants and your hopes and your dreams, and
you'll project that onto him, and you'll say, you do everything,

(02:40):
and in your mind he is the lion who will
go forward and fight for you for all the things
you care about. And that's no man, not Trump or anybody.
Those kind of men do not exist on the planet.
They don't exist. All of us will dig in and
save the country or we will fail.

Speaker 2 (03:02):
When it comes to.

Speaker 1 (03:03):
Trump, if he gets elected again in November. It's better
than Joe Biden being elected. Okay, it's better than Joe
Biden being elected. However, and I'm not at all trying
to lower your excitement. You need to temper your expectations

(03:23):
extremely even. Look, what's one of the main Trump campaign
talking points at this time. He's using it a lot.
I support the talking point, I support.

Speaker 2 (03:38):
Him doing it.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
But what is one of the main Trump campaign talking points?
Mass deportation? He has brought it up several times now,
Mass deportation, This mass deportation. That do you hear Mike Johnson?

Speaker 2 (03:53):
Today?

Speaker 1 (03:54):
Trump just backed Mike Johnson, went down, took a picture
with him. Trump backs Mike Johnson wants him to remain,
as speaker has said so publicly. He went to social
media and said it publicly yesterday. Trump and Mike Johnson
have decided to join forces for November. It's an understandable thing.
It helps both of them out. Mike Johnson needs the
cover Trump provides. Trump, if he is elected again, is

(04:18):
going to need a Congress who will work with him.
But did you hear what Mike Johnson said?

Speaker 2 (04:22):
Listen to this.

Speaker 3 (04:23):
The former president who wants to be the next president
said One of his plans, is he talked to Time magazine,
is to round up the eleven to fifteen million illegals
and then go through them and find out who belongs
here and who doesn't.

Speaker 4 (04:34):
Would you support that absolutely? And President Trump and I
have talked about this at length. But the challenge we'll
have is finding them, Brian, As you know, they've been
spread out everywhere DHS, the Department Homeland Security in may Orcus.
The reason we impeached him is because he's an abject
failure and they're not keeping track of where these people are.
So we will have the greatest challenge of our generation

(04:54):
to try to find them, to round them up first.
And that's a very serious problem.

Speaker 1 (04:58):
Well, we know where the hotels are. We could point
you there.

Speaker 3 (05:00):
We could help in New York City.

Speaker 2 (05:03):
You heard it, didn't you? What'd you hear?

Speaker 1 (05:07):
The excuses have already begun. Do you really think Mike Johnson,
who has caved to Democrat media pressure every second of
the way since he became speaker, do you think Mike
Johnson is going to turn into some deportation warrior. It
doesn't matter. I will take all the incoming fire. We

(05:30):
must save America by rounding up all these people and
deporting them. Do you get the impression that that is
that what you heard here?

Speaker 3 (05:38):
The former president wants to be the next president said.
One of his plans, is it talked to Time magazine,
is to round up the eleven to fifteen million illegals
and then go through them and find out who belongs
here and who doesn't.

Speaker 4 (05:49):
Would you support that absolutely? And President Trump and I
have talked about this at length. But the challenge we'll
have is finding them, Brian, As you.

Speaker 1 (05:56):
Know already, the excuses have begun. Let's say Trump gets
in there and Trump really is some drain the swamp,
deep state fighting warrior who wants to go all in
and deport twenty million people and go after all these things.
And I'm not saying that's the case. I actually have

(06:17):
not seen evidence of that with his FBI comments and
everything else.

Speaker 2 (06:20):
But let's say that is the case.

Speaker 1 (06:21):
That he is this deep state America for his warrior,
and he's gonna drain a swamping. The next four years
are gonna be different. Okay, even if we had that.
He needs Congress, he needs the house full of warriors
who will back him up laws everything else. Senate full
of warriors who will back him up. He needs judges

(06:43):
ags across the country backing him up. This is if
he's the deep state draining warrior. Temper your expectations. It
will be better than with Joe Biden. Will have fewer
economic regulations, which will help the economy, growth, will open
up the job market. We will have better immigration enforcement

(07:06):
at the border. No, there won't be a mass deportation.
Anyone telling you that's a liar or an idiot. But
there will be better enforcement at the border. All right,
Is that enough? No? But look, these things are getting better.
We will have a more sane foreign policy. But is
he going to get there and save America?

Speaker 2 (07:24):
No?

Speaker 1 (07:25):
No, And in fact, to wrap this up, so I'm
want to move on to other things. You finish up
the question of I'm worried it's too late. Look if
it's too late, or if it's almost too late. If
that's how you view it, and a lot of people
view it that way. If that's how you view it,
then whether or not Donald Trump gets elected is not
going to matter. It's not the November election does matter.

(07:49):
Every battle we fight does matter, is important, but they
are all just one battle in a million. There's not
going to be one decisive battle that decides whether or
not America is saved or not.

Speaker 2 (08:06):
That is not going to happen.

Speaker 1 (08:09):
Saving America is a process, not an event. November is
just another part of that process. Maybe we will win
that battle and make some marginal gains or at least
stop the losses. Maybe we will lose that battle then
continue to lose ground. But even if we lose that battle,
it's still a process. We have a million other battles.

(08:29):
I've told you before. Look, we here in Texas, we
have school board elections this year. We could wake up
on November after the election day and we could wake
up to Joe Biden having beaten Donald Trump. Hope that
doesn't happen, but it could. We could wake up to that. Yet,
we could wake up to that combined with one hundred

(08:53):
school board wins. I'm talking school boards across the country
being flipped taken from the dirty commis, and we win it.
Would you consider that day If that's what happens, it's
a big if. There's a lot of work to do
between now and then. If that happens, would you consider
November a success or a failure? Well, it's important you

(09:17):
think about that the right way. That is an unbelievable success.
If we end up winning all these school board races,
but god forbid, lose the presidency, because we'll have won
all these other little battles. The battles are all around us,
and on a larger level before we move on to
other things. Remember this is why I don't harp on

(09:39):
people on the right who have different pet projects they're into.
Whether it's you, you're into something, or this radio guy
or this writer or something. People have so many different
things they're passionate about. I want to fight against the
climate change stuff. All the LGBTQ stuff growses me out.
I want lower taxes. We have to fight communism in
the corporate world. We have to create movies and music.

(10:01):
We have to do a fight for school boards only
school boards. Hey, we need to take back the sheriff's
offices in the country. And people will come to me
and say, Jesse, what do you think about this? Yes, yes, fine.
There are a million battles. Like Jesty Puller said when
the Marines were surrounded at Korea, we're surrounded. That simplifies
our problem. We can attack in any direction we want
because they're all around us, because we are so culturally surrounded.

(10:26):
Just fight something, because we all have to fight these battles.
All right, all right, somebody's worried about, well, not worried.
Somebody thinks Democrats might stay home because they're so sour
on Biden.

Speaker 2 (10:38):
What do I think about that?

Speaker 1 (10:40):
Somebody is Jewish and fighting with their Jewish family. How
much should you fight with your family? Some dude wants
to know if dudes should ever get a massage from
another dude. All that and more is still to come
before we get to those very important topics. Let's do
something that really does matter. That's taking care of widows

(11:01):
and orphans. That's what you do when you support Tunnel
to Towers. Tunnel to Towers started in the wake of
nine to eleven, and immediately they began to help families fallen,
First responder families, gold Star families, because who is there
for that widow and kids? The VA who's there when

(11:25):
dad doesn't come home. Tunnel to Towers is paying off mortgages,
They're building catastrophically injured veterans smart homes. They're getting homeless
veterans off the street.

Speaker 2 (11:35):
They really are.

Speaker 1 (11:36):
It's just the most blessed organization, and what they ask
is eleven bucks a month. Sign up to give it automatically.
You will never know what's gone. Go to tthanumber two
t dot org, t twot dot org. We'll be back,
Jesse Chilly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on Friday,

(12:00):
and ask doctor Jesse Friday. Remember you can email the
show anything you want, love, hey, death threats, Ask doctor
Jesse questions.

Speaker 2 (12:08):
We are live here. You can email us.

Speaker 1 (12:10):
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Let us get back
to them big Montana, he says, do you think come
November a large chunk of Democrats will stay home because
they secretly know life was better under Trump. The hardcorees won't.
But Dems have norms and normous too.

Speaker 2 (12:27):
What say you?

Speaker 1 (12:28):
I do?

Speaker 2 (12:29):
Actually I do? How many? I don't know?

Speaker 1 (12:32):
Is it going to be enough to overcome the things
Democrats do? I don't know, but there's no question there
are norms in normas. Who are Democrats? Most of these
Democrats are older ones, older, more blue collar ones. And
remember how many Democrats are on fixed income Democrats and Republicans,
we have a lot of older Americans who participate in elections.

(12:55):
Older Americans are much better about voting than young people are.
People out there are Democrats living on Social Security and
now you can't afford the grocery bill every month.

Speaker 2 (13:07):
You think that's gonna affect how they vote.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
It's gonna it's gonna matter how much. I don't know,
but it is definitely going to matter. Like we don't,
we all want to know, because we're so invested in elections.

Speaker 2 (13:22):
We all want to know.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
We want someone to tell us that everything's gonna be okay,
that it's gonna that we're gonna win, We're gonna do this.
That nobody knows how November is going to turn out, nobody,
No one knows these presidential elections. Every now and then
you'll get someone who calls it right. But everyone, myself included, guesses.

Speaker 2 (13:47):
On these things.

Speaker 1 (13:48):
We can see these big societal trends. But oftentimes political
people like you, like me, we're oftentimes the worst ones
to ask about who will win an election because we're
too close. We know you're hyper informed. I'm hyper informed.
We know all the issues. We know this, and that
the people who decide elections aren't like you, they aren't

(14:10):
like me. That's the hard part about being hyper informed.
You know so much more than everyone else around you.
We don't know what the norms in normas see and
what they don't see. I was discussing this with you
last week when it came to all the campus protests
and all the other stuff, and the GOP won't do anything,
but they're passing bills on anti Semitism. And I came

(14:31):
on the show and I said, Man, I hang out
with norms and normas all the time. Not one person
has brought up college protests to me. They don't we
have a crap. They care about jobs in the economy
and inflation and stuff like that. Yet if you pay
attention to the GOP media and the Democrat media, it's
all they'll talk about is college campus. The normal people
don't care about Columbia. They don't they don't want anti semitism.
They don't care about NYU. They're not emotionally invested in it. Hey, Jesse,

(14:55):
could you discuss in further detail why we should buy
gold slash over, what would it be used for, How
to determine how much you need, how long you think
a person has to get the right amount set aside,
I am fairly prepared except for in this area. And
I know I need to do something. I have a
good amount of money in savings as well as money
in the stock market and IRA accounts with a financial advisor.

(15:18):
Plus I own my home.

Speaker 2 (15:19):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (15:20):
Okay, Well, there will be many people who disagree with
me on this. But when it comes to preparations, AMMO water,
medical supplies, do not forget medical supplies, basic medicines. That's
a part of preparation. And gold or silver coins coins.
Remember bars don't do you any good. You're not going

(15:41):
to walk around with gold bars. Get gold or silver coins.
When it comes to that stuff. I'm a huge believer
in doing it incrementally, in never ever ever doing something
that makes you uncomfortable now, meaning puts you out.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
Now.

Speaker 1 (15:58):
I love to buy munition, and I do buy ammunition.
I never go out and buy ten thousand rounds.

Speaker 2 (16:05):
It's too much money. I wait.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
I monitor websites, I wait until it's on sale, and
oh hey, look for one hundred bucks, I can get
an extra this and I'll just buy a little there.
When it comes to things like gold and silver coins,
I don't want you to do anything like that. And
now know I'm probably supposed to tell you to do that.
I'm never going to do that. Do not unload your
life savings and go buy gold or silver coins. What

(16:29):
can you do comfortably? What can you do comfortably? Then
do just that all But I don't have a million
dollars worth?

Speaker 2 (16:37):
Okay, who does? No one has that kind of stuff.
I certainly don't.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
No one has that kind of stuff. Something. Now, as
far as what you can use them for the beauty
of gold and silver coins is your options with precious
metals are endless. Look, maybe we'll have a zombie apocalypse
and the Chinese will invade and you'll have to use
silver coins in order to purchase food so your family

(17:01):
doesn't starve to death. I don't think that's ever going
to happen, but it could. You know, I don't think
that's ever going to happen, but it certainly could. What
if the dollar continues to go down and the government,
in response to the destruction of the dollar, changes our
currency to being exclusively the digital dollar. They've wanted the

(17:25):
digital dollar forever so they can control your spending and
track your spending. If the government does that, freedom loving
people like me, like you, we will have to walk
away from that system. I will not have my dollar
tracked by the government.

Speaker 2 (17:40):
I will not. You cannot either.

Speaker 1 (17:42):
Precious metals are how you get by in situations like that.
Go look at the Soviet Union, go look at places Ugoslavia,
and it was when it was breaking up things. Having
tangible things of value that you can exchange for things
you may need is always a good idea. But I

(18:03):
want to make sure I stress this again, and I
believe you should have gold and silver coins as part
of your retirement account as well. Do not go crazy,
Do not go prepper crazy and unload your life savings
on that stuff. That is not what you need to do.
Do what you can do comfortably. What can you do
without hurting yourself. I didn't give you a specific example

(18:25):
because I don't know what that is. Maybe maybe you've
got tons of money and right now you can go
drop fifty g's on gold coins without a second thought.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
Good for you.

Speaker 1 (18:33):
Go do that. Maybe you can't and you got to
get less. Whatever, just something, Just do something, whatever that
may be. And yes, obviously reach out to Oxford Gold
if you want to do that eight three three nine
nine five gold. They'll do the get it in your
retirement account. They'll get it in your physical possession. Reach

(18:53):
out to Oxford Gold if you want to do that,
but do not go crazy. Do what you can do comfortably.
All right, all right, Hey, Jesse, I am the only
member of my large Jewish family whoever votes Republican. I
try to avoid discussing politics at family gatherings because I
get so aggravated. They only read publications like the Washington

(19:16):
Post New York Times. I don't know how any rational person,
but especially any Jewish rational person, can vote for Biden,
but I am sure the rest of my family will
do so. Should I raise these concerns and risk a
major family.

Speaker 2 (19:29):
Fight or just keep my mouth shut?

Speaker 1 (19:32):
Okay?

Speaker 2 (19:33):
Are you trapped in Democrat hell with your family? Let's
talk about that next.

Speaker 1 (19:39):
Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday,
and ask doctor Jesse Friday. And you can still email
the show if you want Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.

Speaker 2 (19:55):
We still have a ton to get to.

Speaker 1 (19:57):
There's so many good ones. Okay, so let's address this
one lady writes it. I'm not going to go over
the email again. She's Jewish, She's the only person in
her Jewish family who votes Republican and someone has someone
asked a question. I'll go over this in just a
second about why that's the case. Why do two thirds
of Jewish people in America vote Democrat. There is a

(20:18):
little bit of history there. But how should you handle that?
She said, she gets aggravated every time she brings it up.
They're still going to vote for Biden, so on and
so forth. She doesn't understand it. Listen, I'm not telling anybody,
and I would never tell anybody to give up on
your family. It's your family, your mother, it's your father, sisters, brothers,

(20:38):
it's your family. You don't give up on your family.
I'm not saying that. However, you have to, at some
point in time understand when certain people politically cannot be
saved and you only hurt yourself, only hurt yourself by
trying to save them. You've seen this in your personal life,

(21:02):
I know I have. Maybe you've gone through this people,
maybe someone who's struggling with alcohol or drugs, or maybe
you struggle with alcohol or drugs and you get really
hooked in and you get addicted, and people are trying
to help, They're trying to pull you out of it.
Let's get you to rehab, let's do this, let's do that.

(21:23):
And because you're so in it, or they're so in
it with the addiction that they only end up getting
hurt and sad and angry by trying to help you.
And the truth is you probably have to get to
a place where you want to help yourself before anyone
can help you. If you are trying to wake up

(21:43):
family members and they don't want to wake up, at
some point you just got to let them go. Some
people cannot be pulled out of the world of make
believe in which they live. Those would be Democrats. Some
people the most Democrats, especially once they get older. This

(22:04):
is really hard for people on the right to understand.
They don't want to leave their world of make believe
and they know in some cases it's a world to
make believe. Remember we read that email a while back
and the guy wrote in I forget what the situation was,
but one of his friends was a Democrat, and his
friend flat out told him, I don't like talking politics

(22:26):
with you, because when I talk politics with you, I
end up questioning everything I believe.

Speaker 2 (22:34):
After a certain.

Speaker 1 (22:34):
Age, you would rather live the lie you've always known
than step out of that window, step out of that world,
to make believe and know the truth. That's a fact
I've told you before about me and a buddy, the
two New York buddies of mine. One's a Republican, the
other one's a Democrat. The acquaintances, it's more of what
I would call it. And we were having the three

(22:56):
of us were having an argument one day, well, they
were having an argument. The republic guy was all over
the Democrat, don't you see what's happened in New York?
Look what's happened to our city. I can't believe this.
In the Democrat it was like it was like you
were talking to the wall and they I haven't seen
anything wrong. Oh, it all seems fine to me. And
he was obviously either lying or blind. Everyone can see

(23:17):
what's happening. And my Republican buddy's beating his head against
the wall. What do you mean you can't see? And
he's getting his blood pressure up, and he's screaming and
yelling and find that he reaches out to me privately
and he says, Jesse, why won't you back me up.
You're the one who knows all this stuff, And I
just flat out told him, brother, I don't spend much
time arguing with Democrats because they don't listen. It's like

(23:38):
speaking to the wall. Why would I bother look at you.
Your blood pressure's up. He's still a nutball. I'm sitting
over here totally calm. I won, and so did he.
You're the one who lost. Let him go, Hi, Jesse,
perhaps you could explain to me why Jews typically vote Democratic.
That was from Michael Rotman. Well, one of the main

(24:01):
reasons is tradition. A lot of people vote the way
they vote because of tradition, because that's the way mom
and dad voted, and so that's how you were raised. Now,
why is there a tradition for Jewish people to vote
Democrat in America? This goes clear back to FDR. Remember,
people hating Jews is not exactly a new phenomenon. It's

(24:24):
been around for as long as there have been Jews.
It's just the way it goes, and in America that
was the case, very very very much for most of
our early history. I don't want to act like we
were a bunch of jew hating savages in here. I'm
not saying that, but Jewish people because we were founded
by Christians and we were at least a Christian nation.

(24:47):
There was always that kind of tension there, and so
Jewish people were not welcome in the government for the
longest time, and the government people would flat out say it.
A lot of that stuff has been covered up by history.
But people in government, Republican and Democrat, ah, no, we're
not going to have a Jewish person here. That's not
going to be No, we're not going to do that.
And then FDR came along. FDR the Democrats. Democrat he

(25:13):
was the first, the first American president to welcome Jews
into his administration.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
That led Jewish.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
People in America to believe, well, hey, that's our party.
Republicans didn't Democrats welcomed us, and so tradition is powerful.
Look I go through this in my family. Why did
I start voting Republican. It's not because I had any
knowledge about politics or anything like that. My parents and
they're not hugely political people. We never talked to a

(25:45):
lot of politics, but they were Republican and they told me.
I asked them one day, Dad, what are we We're
Republican and that's what I knew. So I started because
that's how my parents started. And that's a very, very
very powerful thing. The tradition is a powerful thing. Jay Steele,
I'm a sixty year old dime from the Free State

(26:06):
of Florida. I have a statement and a question. My
mom was a housewife and she was the greatest woman
who ever graced the planet. She passed away in twenty nineteen.
I miss her every day. When people would ask what
she did for a living, I would respond, I'm a
domestic engineer. Question, are strawberry blondes? Redheads are blonds? My

(26:27):
dad always called me Blondie growing up, so I always
considered myself a blonde. But I was in a restaurant
the other day and a woman came up to me
and said, you have the most beautiful red hair.

Speaker 2 (26:37):
I was horrified.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
Please settle my personal nightmare. Marcy is her name, Marcy.
This is gonna hurt. Okay, but it shouldn't hurt. But
it's gonna hurt.

Speaker 2 (26:50):
All right.

Speaker 1 (26:52):
You're a redhead, Marcy, all right, you're a redhead. It
doesn't matter how much chocolate you put in a glass
of milk. Even a drop makes it chocolate milk.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
Marsy.

Speaker 1 (27:06):
The reason your dad called you blondie is because he
only wanted to see the good things about you, so
when he looked at you, he couldn't see the red
in your hair. He only wanted to think of you
in a positive light because your father loved you so much.
For your dad, he probably went to his death actually.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
Thinking you're blonde.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
But the stranger in the restaurant.

Speaker 2 (27:31):
Was a woman.

Speaker 1 (27:32):
Women are way more perceptive about details and little things
like that. You're a redhead, Marcy, and look, hey, don't
sit there and beat yourself up over it. People live
with disabilities every single day. Maybe you'll qualify for one

(27:54):
of the handicap stickers for your car. How about that
primo parking everywhere you go? And you live in Florida
where every parking lot basically half of them are handicapped
parking spots.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
So there's that.

Speaker 1 (28:05):
Maybe you can reach out to the Social Security Administration
and let them know, I've been diagnosed as a redhead.
Do I qualify for disability? Do I do these things?
You don't have to be down just because it's sixty
You've now found out there are some things about yourself
that are.

Speaker 2 (28:24):
Horrible.

Speaker 1 (28:25):
You just keep on marching, keep your head down. Maybe
die at first, and then keep your head down and
keep on going. All right, All right, Now we have
to tackle a couple big issues. One George Soros, big Pharma.
The other one should dudes ever get a massage.

Speaker 2 (28:44):
From other dudes?

Speaker 1 (28:46):
That?

Speaker 2 (28:46):
And something out of the military next, Jesse Kelly baccion.

Speaker 1 (28:55):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday, and
ask doc there Jesse Friday. If you miss any part
of the show, he can download the whole thing on.

Speaker 2 (29:04):
iHeart, Spotify, iTunes. Jesse.

Speaker 1 (29:07):
So, if Ken Paxton and worthwhile leaders cannot go after
George Soros, big pharma and the real corruption in our country,
what hope do we have of saving our once great country. Well,
what he's referring to is I talked about this the
other day. What she's referring to or he whoever it is.

(29:29):
Ken Paxton is the Attorney General of State of Texas,
and he got impeached. They tried to impeach him, to
toss him out of office by the Republicans in the state legislature.
And this was right after he started digging into big Pharma,
right after Ken Paxton started using his position as he
should to attack the system itself.

Speaker 2 (29:51):
Now couple things.

Speaker 1 (29:54):
One that failed, it did fail, but two, this is
what I mean when I say it's a process, not
an event.

Speaker 2 (30:06):
To save the country.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
We need better Republicans all across the board. We put
our heart and soul in hopes and dreams into the
presidency or the House or the Senate. I need a
better school board in my town. I need a better
state legislature in my state. We have so much work

(30:32):
to do. The reason that impeachment came is because Texans GOP.
Texans had previously been lazy and uninterested in improving the
Texas State GOP. It turned into a swampy, corrupt, rhino
field disaster, and that revealed how bad it was. And

(30:53):
since then, I'm proud to say many of those Republicans
have been bounced from their seats. So the next time
a Texas AG or Ken Paxton or otherwise just chooses
to fight the system, he will have the backing of
Republicans behind him to stop something like that from happening.

(31:15):
The reason I've been well we talked about it earlier,
tempering expectations for what Trump may or may not be
able to accomplish in his next four years.

Speaker 2 (31:24):
If he gets them.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
Is not necessarily about what he wants to do, what
he can do, what he can't do. It's not really
about him at all. It's about these people who he's
going to need.

Speaker 3 (31:35):
The former president who wants to be the next president
said one of his plans, is talked to Time magazine,
is to round up the eleven to fifteen million illegals
and then go through them and find out who belongs
here and who doesn't.

Speaker 4 (31:46):
Would you support that absolutely? And President Trump and I
have talked about this at length. But the challenge will
have is finding them, Brian. As you know, they've been
spread out everywhere DHS, the Department Homeland Security in May York.
Is the reason we impeached him is because he's an
abject failure and they're not keeping track of where these
people are.

Speaker 1 (32:05):
This is why I don't like jd Vance being Donald
Trump's VP, and he's on the short list. It's because
I love jd Vance. It's because jd Vance is one
of the good senators. Donald Trump is going to need
a lot of allies if he's going to accomplish anything.

(32:26):
He's going to need allies in the House, allies in
the Senate, it's so much bigger than one position. But
that again, it comes back to the Ken Paxton question.
It comes back really to this. We have a million
battles to fight. There's not one. It's not white house
or bust. There are a million battles to fight. As

(32:47):
for you, let's talk about you. Are you ready to
stop a bad man from hurting you? I mean physically
if you run into a bad man tonight. I saw
a video yesterday out of New York City. Whe one
of the more eye opening things. Some dude, very clearly
a professional scumbag, came up behind some woman right on

(33:12):
the sidewalk and had some lasso thing ready to go
zoop right around her neck from behind, dragged her in
between some cars in New York City. Do you carry
something on you that will allow you to stop a
bad man from doing what he wants to you. That's
what burna is about. It's a non lethal pistol launcher.

(33:35):
Swat teams around America use berna. What it shoots either
pepper balls or tear gas balls or these kinetic rounge,
just these hard plastic things. But it's legal in all
fifty states. You don't need a permit you don't need
a background check. I carry lethal and non lethal. I
believe in that. I love having a non lethal option.
If I go out to my car tonight after the

(33:57):
show's over and there's some half crazy homeless dude laysing
around my car and I don't want to kill the guy,
maybe I'll just pop him one in the chest and
call the cops so he can live and I can
have a clear conscience. Be Hyrna Burna dot com slash
Jesse gets you ten percent off, get your hands. Get

(34:18):
everyone in your family a burna. You sleep better at night,
Mother's days coming up. Get mama Burna. She'll thank you
for it. Hopefully she doesn't need to, but it may
save her life. Jay Steele, My wife has falling into
the routine of getting one hundred dollars massage every month
and goes on and on about how great it is.
It sounds wonderful, but nevertheless, I've got a conundrum. I

(34:42):
think I'd feel guilty getting a massage from a female,
and as sure as heck, ain't getting one from a man.
Why do women have no issue getting a massage from
another woman? Am I up the creek?

Speaker 2 (34:54):
What say you?

Speaker 1 (34:55):
By the ways. Thanks for putting the image of you
stuck on the toilet after your.

Speaker 2 (35:00):
Lunch is in my head.

Speaker 1 (35:02):
Okay, Look, there are very simple rules when it comes
to massages for men and women, and there are very
simple double standards here and there should be. For a dude,
you cannot get a massage from another way. It's not allowed.
You don't allow another dude to put his hands on

(35:26):
you when you are undressed.

Speaker 2 (35:28):
That is not.

Speaker 1 (35:29):
Something that's done. If that's something you want to do,
go join the navy.

Speaker 2 (35:33):
That's one.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
So if you're a dude and you want a massage,
it has to be from a woman. Now, if you're
a woman, you also have to only get massages from
other women because the wife is not going to go
get disrobed and have some dude put his hands on her.
Because I'm a dude and I know how dudes think,

(35:58):
and that's going to be a no for me. Absolutely no.
So meant, whether you're a man or whether you're a woman,
you can only ever get a massage from women. Essentially, dude,
massage therapists should not be a thing. It should not
be a thing that exists. In fact, it should be outlawed. Dear, Jesse.

(36:19):
I'm concerned about Trump's primary votes about a month ago
in Pennsylvania and Indiana. Last night, this was from Tuesday.
Each state voted twenty two percent for other. All right,
I addressed this a little bit last night, but I
didn't actually finish every part of it. This keeps happening

(36:39):
in these GOP primaries where everyone has dropped out of
the race. Donald Trump's the only Republican running. Donald Trump's
going to be the nominee. Yet in these states, and
this is happening every single state, about twenty twenty five
percent or so, they're not voting for Trump, They're voting

(37:00):
for other. They're not coming home. Now, I'm not going
to go over what I went over last night that
most people eventually come home, because they do. Traditionally, that's
the way it's gone. You stand strong for your guy
in the primary, then you end up voting for the nominee. Traditionally,
that's how it's gone. Now, looking at what's happening in

(37:20):
these primaries, should Trump fans be concerned? Let's talk about
that next
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