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September 30, 2024 36 mins

Can we deport the illegals to sanctuary cities? They have spent 4 years importing people from the 3rd world. Why are we still letting the national government handle immigration. Medal of Honor: Tony Burris. Understanding Korea. How many Medal of Honors never got issues because no one was alive to report on it?

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Another hour of the
Jesse Kelly Show on a Monday. And this hour, we
of course are going to tackle Medal of Honor Monday.
Right off the battle. Get to that in a moment.
I will finish up my thoughts on the John Carey
Western elites, what they think about us audio we'll dive
back into that. We're gonna have a return to politics

(00:39):
from a bad guy. And I told you that was coming. Oh,
that's so much more coming up this hour. We'll get
to emails, other things coming up this hour on the
world famous Jesse Kelly Show. Remember if you want to
send one of those emails, you can send love, hate,
death threats, and Medal of honor suggestions if you have
ones you like, You can send anything you want to

(01:00):
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. We got this one.
As a matter of fact, remember Medal of Honor Monday
for you new listeners, dedicated to a hero to his deeds.
We read a citation. That's what that's all we do.
That's all there is. They did it. We read the citation.
We honor the men, We honor their sacrifice. This guy says,

(01:22):
great greetings, fellow oracle. It's that American Indian professor again.
While visiting my family back on the Choctaw Reservation in Oklahoma,
I learned of a local hero named Tony K. Burriss,
who fought in Korea at the Battle of Heartbreak Ridge.
I'm worried not enough of the next generation knows about
the true cost and brutality of the Korean War. Can

(01:44):
you please read Sergeant Burris's Medal of Honor citation and
I would be honored to do so.

Speaker 1 (01:51):
Hey, honoring those who went above and beyond. It's Medal
of Honor Monday.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
And Tony K. Burris was a Sergeant first class US
Army Anyway, Sergeant first class Buris, a member of Company L,
distinguished himself by conspicuous gallantry and outstanding courage above and
beyond the call of duty. On the eighth of October,
when his company encountered intense fire from an entrenched hostile force,

(02:25):
Sergeant first class Burush Burris charged forward alone, throwing grenades
into the position and destroying approximately fifteen of the enemy.
On the following day, spearheading a renewed assault on enemy positions,
on the next ridge. He was wounded by machine gun fire,
but continued the assault, reaching the crest of the ridge

(02:46):
ahead of his unit and sustained a second wound. Calling
for a fifty seven millimeters recoilists rifle team, he deliberately
exposed himself to draw hostile fire and reveal the enemy position.
The enemy machine gun emplacement was destroyed. The company then
moved forward and prepared to assault other positions on the

(03:07):
ridge line. Sergeant first class Burists, refusing evacuation and submitting
only to emergency treatment, joined the unit in its renewed attack,
but fire from hostile emplacement halted the advance. Sergeant first
class Buris rose to his feet, charged forward and destroyed
the first emplacement with its heavy machine gun and crew

(03:30):
of six men. Moving out to the next emplacement, throwing
his last grenade which destroyed this position, he fell mortally
wounded by enemy fire. Inspired by his consummate gallantry, his
comrades renewed a spirit of assault which overran enemy positions
and secured Hills six zero five, a strategic position in

(03:53):
the Battle for Heartbreak Ridge. Sergeant first class Buris's indomitable
fighting spirit, outside standing heroism and gallant self sacrifice, reflect
the highest glory upon himself, the infantry in the US Army,
and we will play tabs in his honor. Rest in peace, brother,

(05:09):
And first I'm just going to do a couple of
minutes here. We're not going to do a history. I've
done a bunch of Korean War history. But if you are,
if you have any interests in it at all, I
would just say it's a an under talked about I
know that's not a word. Conflict. It was a horrible,

(05:32):
horrible affair by the men who were on the front
lines in the teeth of it. And you've probably heard
of Heartbreak Ridge or the Battle of Heartbreak Ridge. I
know Clint Eastwood made a movie called heart I think
it was Clint Eastwood Heartbreak Ridge. Anyway, there were a
lot of quote heartbreak Ridges in Korea. Remember Korea was

(05:54):
the Chinese pouring half a million we don't know the
number of troops across the border. We were kicking the
crap out of the North Koreans and Mao he wanted
a resounding victory over America, and so we just poured
in overwhelming numbers and we were in freezing cold, mountainous
North Korea, and what we had to do was take

(06:16):
these hill top positions. You heard in the middle of
honor citation they referenced, what was it, hill six zero five?
I think it was six zero five. What's that mean?
He'll s yeah, it was six zero five. What does
that mean? Well, if you look at a topographical map,
or just look at a topographical map and you were
in Korea, they would number the hills. They didn't give

(06:36):
them fancy little names. That's not what they would do
in the military. This would be hill two eleven. This
is hill six zero five. And because you always want
the high ground. Everyone knows that in war you want
the high ground. The Chinese wanted the high ground. We
wanted the high ground. Sometimes they were there, we had
to charge up the hill and fight them and run
them off of it, and then we had to try

(06:57):
to hold it because they would counterattack with the the
human wave assaults where there'd be more people than you
could kill. You'd run out of AMMO because you're killing
so many of them. And then sometimes we were there
and they wanted it, and they would send these assaults
after you, and sometimes they would take it, and then
we would have to counterattack and run them up. It's
a battle of freezing cold hill tops in North Korean Hell.

(07:21):
That's really really the essence of the Korean War. And
there are amazing books on it, amazing documentaries on it.
If you're not a big reader, I'll tell you again.
I could list a few for you here. But probably
the best Korean War book I have ever read in
my life, as far as giving you a complete overview.

(07:43):
You will understand the Korean War if you read one
book and it's really readable, it's really interesting. The book
is called On Desperate Ground by Hampton Sides. And remember
you can podcast the show if you miss anything I
say here live. It's free. You just go to your phone, iHeart,

(08:06):
Spotify iTunes and podcast it. So I'll give out the
name of the book and the author two more times
and then I don't expect any emails asking what was
the name of the book? On Desperate Ground by Hampton Sides?
One more time, one more time. On Desperate Ground by
Hampton Sides is the name of the book. Great book. No,

(08:29):
he's not a friend or anything. I don't even know
the freaking guy who knows. But it was a great book.
But Korea I highly recommend it, and that actually leads
me to this. I wanted to play this before we
get back to I want to talk John Carey and
politics and other stuff. But we got this. Remember we
take voicemails on the show. Now, don't do a lot
of calls, just don't do them off and I don't
like them, but we do take voicemails. Eight seven seven

(08:51):
three seven seven four three seven three is where you
leave those eight seven seven three seven seven four three
seven three. We got this.

Speaker 3 (09:00):
One Jesse today is Medal of Honor Monday, and it
really makes me wonder how many thousands of soldiers would
have earned the Medal of Honor but there was no
one there or left alive to report it.

Speaker 2 (09:15):
Fascinating, It is fascinating, and that's a great voicemail. And
for me, everyone has it different, But for me, part
of the reason I read these citations is it's honoring
all the men who could have earned it or would
have earned it, and they simply didn't for one reason

(09:37):
or another. You know, here's the truth. If we like,
I just read that there we're talking about Buris, Sergeant
first class Buris, and you're reading about this lion and
he's charging machine gun in placements, and he's doing these
crazy brave things. Why did he do all these crazy
brave things. Well, because he's a beast and courageous and

(09:57):
he's awesome, and yes, all these things are true. But
one of the reasons he did all these crazy brave
things is none of the bullets they were shooting at
him hit him in the face. In time, Burris is
a lion, a warrior, a hero, and should be thought
of as such. But so is the guy who saw

(10:20):
someone coming at his friend and jumped on top of
his friend to save his life and both of them
got shot and died. That dude's a Medal of Honor
recipient too. We just never got one. No one saw it.
Everyone's dead. There was no one there to put him
in for a medal. I read these, and these are
a tip of the iceberg of heroism that has happened
in various ways and the history of American combat. You

(10:44):
read these, but it's to honor all of them. It's
a very very good point. There is a lot of
them out there who could have and should have, and
for a variety of reasons, just didn't. All right, let's
talk about John carey before we get to emails and
the return to politics, something I was actually right about.
But I want to talk to you about rough greens.
You see, we have a dog. He's useless, but we

(11:09):
love him, and his name is Fred. Chris has actually
gotten to meet Fred. Fred is well. Fred likes attention
all right. But Fred also has an upset stomach. He
has a nervous stomach. He's a nervous dog. We have
the only dog I believe who has anxiety problems, and
so we had to start. We had to find a solution.
Fred kept having digestive problems after he ate every time

(11:33):
he ate. We found one thing, and one thing only
that worked. We started sprinkling rough Greens on Fred's food,
the all natural nutritional supplement that has digestive enzymes and
probiotics and things like that. Fred's going to live longer
because of rough Greens. Fred doesn't have digestive problems because
of rough Greens. Go give your dog some rough Greens

(11:55):
free jumpstart trial bags ate three three three three my
dog or Roughgreens dot com. Slash Jesse, We'll be.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
Back truth attitude, Jesse Kelly.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. And I will get
to emails, and I'll get to the Democrat returning to office,
just like I told you he would. But I did
want to spend just a couple more minutes on a
couple examples, if you will, about what I've been talking
about the mentality of Western leaders. How you love your

(12:32):
freedoms and you love your country, but they hate your freedoms.
And that's not just radio talk. They really they think
your freedoms hold them back. And if you listen, the
communist will tell you what he believes, if you simply listen.
They used to they used to share letters with each other,

(12:54):
and they'd publish newsletters and you had to dig through
that to read. But today we live in the vomit
everything on social media era, where there's video of everything,
and people they'll just vomit out every single thought on
this line at Starbucks.

Speaker 1 (13:09):
Ah.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
So, now you have the advantage of the communists telling
you time and time again that he hates you. He
hates your freedoms, and he thinks they are holding him
back and he intends to destroy them. You love the
First Amendment, he hates it. You love the second he
hates it. For him, these things are what's holding him

(13:34):
back from being the king he needs to be. John Kerry,
thank you for making my point.

Speaker 4 (13:42):
Look, if people go to only one source and the
source they go to is sick and you know has.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
An notice, how look will positive a couple times? Notice
he already determined. If you go to sources that don't
agree with him, your sources are.

Speaker 4 (13:58):
Sick Jenda, and they're putting out disinformation.

Speaker 2 (14:03):
Disinformation like the COVID vaccine stops the spread.

Speaker 4 (14:07):
Our first Amendment stands as a major block to the
ability to be able to just you know, hammer it
out of existence.

Speaker 2 (14:14):
So our first Amendment holds me and my fellow communists
back from doing what what do they need to do
that out of information or the person sharing it? What
do you do with that sickness? Well, we need to
hammer it out of existence. Now, those were two very
important things to link together. First amendments, this major block.

(14:37):
We got to hammer it out of existence. So that
was bad. But don't sleep on the last part of
it because it's significant. And if you listen to what
he actually says here, what's he saying. What he's saying
is they intend to seize enough power that these amendments,
these rights this Constitution won't matter at all. That's what

(15:01):
he's saying here at the end. If you read between
the lines, and you don't exactly have to be a
genius to read between the lines, what's he saying here.

Speaker 4 (15:11):
What you need, What we need is to is to
win the ground, win the right to govern.

Speaker 2 (15:17):
By win the ground, win the right to govern. We
need to take enough political.

Speaker 4 (15:22):
Power, hopefully having winning enough votes that you're free to
be able to.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
Implement change.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
They dream of winning enough votes, getting enough power in
the right places, so that they're not going to have
to stress about these freedoms of yours anymore. They'll simply
have so much power they'll take them away from you.
They're not alone. They all talk like this now. If
you listen, if you have years, you can hear I

(15:55):
talk constantly law for years.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
Constutional law. What ever, was a second Amendment meant to
be absolute?

Speaker 2 (16:04):
You never taught constitutional law. And for the entirety of
our history as a country, if you were an American
politician and you said an amendment wasn't absolute, your political
career would be over. And most of the time you'd
have to move to a country and change your name
because that's the kind of thing Americans would reject outright
on every side. Now they all talk about it your

(16:26):
first Amendments holding them back, your second Amendment. It's not
even absolute. Isn't look even things like AI advancements in
the future. You think they're not trying to grab a
hold of that power here it's bill Okay.

Speaker 5 (16:41):
Yeah, free speech, But if you're inciting violence, if you're
causing people not to take vaccines, you know, where are
those boundaries that even the US should you know, have rules.
And then if you have rules, you know what is it?
Is there some AI it encodes those rules because you

(17:02):
have billions of activity, and you know if you catch
it a day later, the harmis is done.

Speaker 2 (17:09):
This freedom of people to say whatever, isn't there a
isn't there a computer program we can put into to
stop you from spreading things around you? Hear this lady
on MSNBC. Listen to how these people think.

Speaker 6 (17:22):
They believe that she is a communist, that she is
a socialist. There are these memes going around with her
dressed in a mouse at tongue suit with a cat
that has a hammer and sickle. So that's what you're
up against right now. And frankly that's something that she
has to address, not not governor walls, she ultimately has

(17:45):
to address this because these images that they have, that
they have created, are actually taking off.

Speaker 2 (17:53):
These people. They hate your freedom, they hate your free
The leaders of the West are trying to take it
away because they feel like your freedom's you, your love
of country, your freedom, that's what's holding back the planet

(18:14):
and that's what's under attack. All right, all right, enough
of that. Gott to reach my hands over my shoulders.
Good things. These hands are so huge, and pat myself
on the bat. Why well, I told you somebody you
thought was gone was not really gone, and now he returns.

Speaker 1 (18:35):
Hang on truth attitude.

Speaker 2 (18:39):
Jesse Kelly, It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Monday.
Remember if you missed any part of the show, including
Medal of Honor Monday or some extremely in depth analysis
about the port strike that is coming tonight at midnight.
If you miss any of that or any of my
other witty I'm and Terry Cat and download a podcast

(19:03):
of the show at iHeart, Spotify and iTunes. Now I
mentioned all that, but the truth is, I don't want
to make it all about me and how I'm right
all the time. You know, no one likes that guy
that said. Do you remember, now this was a couple

(19:27):
of years ago, at least, I'm sure you remember. I'm
sure you hang on every word. But do you remember
this is kind of a long prediction. But remember, way
way back in the day when Jesse the Oracle Kelly,
that's me, Chris. I don't know if you know the
oracle that's me. Don't shake your head, Chris, remember back

(19:48):
in the day when Jesse the Oracle Kelly said this
back in March of twenty twenty two. I'm sure you
have every show memorized. Do you remember when I came
on the air and I said this, Why is Andrew
Quill coming back? I mean, millionaire, wealthy family friends in
high places. I don't care how persona non grata it is.

(20:08):
Andrew Cuomo could simply wait a couple months, maybe a
year if he has to do a lot of fishing
on his yacht, pretend to like his dog and his wife,
come back and sit on some board of some finance firm.
Couple million bucks a year, not hard to find those
in New York. They grow on trees. Why come back?
Why come back?

Speaker 7 (20:26):
At all.

Speaker 2 (20:28):
Well, he's sitting on all this power. He's sitting on
eighteen million dollars, and the nature of man, the nature
of man is to use power when you have power.
Andrew Cuomo gone, Is that some kind of a joke?

(20:49):
Is a traditional political family? We got them all over
this country. How many of them ever leave? From the
Clintons to the Bushes to everyone else. You can't get
rid of them.

Speaker 8 (21:00):
These people get in there and they want to stay
in there, and then their kids get in there, and
then their kids get in there. Why because they can
Why would Andrew Cuomo come back after all that disgrace,
national disgrace. Well, eighteen million dollars buys yourself a lot
of power. Headline from the New York Post today, Andrew

(21:22):
Cuomo would quote trounce Eric Adams in a Democrat primary
for mayor, the polls show just remember who told you?
Right as soon as Magic Fingers got kicked out of
office in New York, who remember who told you he
would most definitely be back. So that was an interesting

(21:46):
bit of audio because that was actually a callback to
twenty twenty three, and that was me giving myself credit
for a callback i'd made the year before. So this
is like exponentially three times the credit. And here I
am looking at an article townhall dot com. Look who's

(22:07):
eyeing Eric Adams mayor seat?

Speaker 2 (22:11):
And I'll just read one. Just want just a couple
of sentences and then I'll move on. I certainly I
don't want to rub it in that I told you
this was coming and now it's here. Just just a
little tidbit for you. Despite being pressured to resign in
twenty twenty one from his governor's seat amid sexual harassment allegations,
Cuomo believes he would farewell as the city's next mayor.

(22:32):
He reportedly still has millions of dollars left in his
campaign funds, which technically he can use. Chris, how are
you feeling right now?

Speaker 4 (22:46):
What?

Speaker 2 (22:47):
Why are you don't shy away from the microphone? Chris,
tell me tell me everything that you're feeling right now?

Speaker 6 (22:53):
Are you?

Speaker 2 (22:54):
Do you feel honored to be in my presence? What
I would look if I was you, I would feel
insanely honored to just be what I feel honored for
you on your behalf, I feel honored.

Speaker 9 (23:07):
Let's get to some emails before we get to other things,
because we do have other things. Jesse I just left church,
the preacher said. In thirty years he was never given
a sermon about politics, but.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
That changed today. He said his duty was to speak
the word of God was more important than offending someone.
He went on to display Bible versus how the apply
issues of today abortion, gender, immigration, Israel, religious freedom. While
not telling anyone who to vote for, the message was clear.
He finished off by saying that Christians need to come

(23:40):
together and fight for our country. I wanted to stand
up and clap. Her name is Laura, Laura. I want
to stand up and clap too. In fact, I got
a message or I spoke to somebody this morning. I'm
not going to go into who it is, but their church.
For the first time ever, vote registration in the indoor,

(24:03):
in the outdoor set up, show up, vote yes, go in,
worship God. Then come out and get your freaking hands
dirty and get involved in your culture, in your society.
There's a million bad things we could point out, and
we talk about them all the time, but there are
really really good things happening beneath the surface. If you're

(24:25):
paying attention, we can rise up and fight back. Oracle
of Oracles, I recently saw Hungary held a referendum on
deporting their border crossers. It got me thinking, after some research,
a national referendum here is not what the founders wanted
to instill. However, some states do. Do you think Red
states should hold a referendum and have voted for deport

(24:45):
all illegals to sanctuary states? Okay, well, let me say
something here. You know that the federal government in this
country has not all handled immigration, citizenship, deportation, things like that.
That has not always gone to the feds. The states

(25:09):
used to do that themselves. No, the Red States shouldn't
get together and deport illegals to Blue states. The Red
States should get together and deport illegals back from whence
they came. We undersell the power of states in this country,
the United States of America. Part of the reason I

(25:32):
am so hopeful for some of us in the future.
I'm not hopeful if you're stuck in a blue area,
I'm just not sorry. But for some of us in
the future, I am so hopeful because of the incredible
sovereignty and power of the individual states of this country.
And when it comes to illegal immigration, the federal government

(25:54):
has declared war on the American people, What do you
do when the federal government opens up the border on
purpose hauls it. What do you do? Well, here's the headline.
Listen to this. This is from Jim Garritty, one of
the most jaw dropping Friday afternoon news stumps of all time.
The US Immigration and Customs Enforcement revealed that the agency's
docket included more than six hundred sixty two thousand illegal

(26:18):
immigrants who either had a criminal conviction or were awaiting
a verdict in a criminal case, thirteen thousand convicted murderers,
fifteen thousand convicted of sexual assault, and more than twenty
five hundred convicted of kidnapping, and more than sixty two
thousand convicted of assault. Your government, the federal government of
the United States of America, brings these people into your

(26:42):
country as fast as they can, on purpose, trying to
remake and destroy your country. And they're not doing it
a year from now, six months from now. They've been
doing it since Joe Biden walked into the Oval Office.
The time for Red States to join together, ban together,
defy the federal government, and handle every single aspect of
their own immigration. That means border security, It means arrest

(27:05):
and deportation. The time for Red States to join together
and do that is like ten minutes ago. It's not
something that should happen maybe ten minutes ago. Of course,
everyone will wake up to this fact, like they always do,
about five or ten years after I'm done saying it.
And then I'll get a bunch of people who were
arguing with me at the time coming and say, Oh, Jersey,

(27:28):
I wish i'd listened to you. You were right, Like
happens to me all the time. If I sound like
I'm getting fired up, I am. Where are you? Red States?
We're drowning, We're dying. They're importing rapists and murderers as
fast as humanly possible. Instead we get James Langford trying
to help them do it. Gosh, I could throw up anyway,
Let's talk about reclining your seat on an airplane.

Speaker 1 (27:50):
Hang on, it's the Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 2 (27:57):
It is the Jesse Kelly's Show. Oh on a Monday.
It was a Medal of Honor Monday, and we had
Ross Kennedy on. There's so much to come. We actually
have an activist, a local activist coming next hour. Wanted
to bring her on and just maybe maybe provide a
little bit more inspiration for all of us. So that'll

(28:18):
be fun. There's a voicemail, a hate mail. I get
to play for you in a moment, and that will
be fun as well. I just had the hiccups. Anyway.
I saw this headline Hong Kong's Cafe Pacific. Apparently that's
an airline bands a couple over a reclining seat argument.
I'm not going to go into a bunch of airplane

(28:39):
etiquette here, although I could, I'm not going to. I
am going to do this reclining your seat. I understand
you have a little button there. You press it and
you can put your seat back. If you don't look
behind you before you do it, it's rude. And I

(29:03):
understand why people don't think about this. If you're not
six foot eight like I am, it's just not something
that would occur to you. Of course, you're going to
sit down in your seat and put your seat back.
I when I fly commercial, well, when I fly commercial,
like I fly any other way. When I fly if
I'm flying economy, my knees are buried into the seat

(29:28):
in front of me, and if you put that seat
back an inch, it's brutal. Pain horrible. You gotta have
to twist your legs up. It's awful. I'm not saying
never recline your seat, just a little courtesy look to
make sure some adonnis like me isn't sitting behind you.
Just a courtesy look, that's all there is to it.

(29:49):
Remember my story. I told you one time my father
was doing a construction project in California on a golf course.
I was in the Marines, but I had a few
of liberty a few days. I was on leave for something,
I think. Anyway, I went home and my dad wanted
to take me out golfing, so he takes me comfortable.
We had to fly there, so we flew southwest. Of course,

(30:11):
we fly southwest, fly out there. We're flying home. Guy
in front of me's trying to recline his seat and
it won't recline. And I'm sitting there thinking, oh no,
don't recline your seat. And then I see him trying
to do it, and I say to myself, gosh, this
is gonna suck. But wait, it actually got way worse
than that. As he's pushing hard trying to recline a
seat that won't recline. The seat breaks, the back of

(30:35):
it breaks in the sharp meadow. Edge of it smashes
into my knee behind him. I am in debilitating pain.
I ended up having a I think it was a
deep bruise or a bone bruise on my kneecap, it
was that bad. But it smashes into my knee and
I'm grabbing my knee. I'm just in miserable pain. I'll
never forget it. The stewardesses went running down the aisle,

(30:57):
worried only about him. Even turn around. I'm right beside him,
just horrible pain. That ever even turn around and asked
about me. It was just about this frigging guy. It
was amazing anyway. You know eight seven seven three seven
seven four three seven three, that's the phone number you
can call in and you can you can leave voicemails. No,

(31:19):
we're not. No one's gonna answer. We have a it's
just a voicemail. And we've enjoyed these so far. Love
hate and you know, metal of honor suggestions maybe a
joke as long as it's family friendly. And of course
the hate is wonderful. I think this guy probably need
to talk, though.

Speaker 7 (31:39):
Well, I was calling and I've called Mini talk show
talk radio shows.

Speaker 2 (31:46):
Let's pause right there. He goes on for about a minute,
just giving you a little inside baseball. That's a red flag,
automatically red flag going off. Not that I'm against calling
into a radio show. I think I've called into a
couple myself in the past whenever we do take calls.
Happy that people want to call in, that's a good thing.

(32:09):
But if if you're a hate listener and you spend
your day waiting on hold to get on the air,
that's probably all politics aside. You're probably not in a
very healthy place mentally, you're not in a great place.
So again, red flag number.

Speaker 7 (32:25):
One AM talk radio kind of thing. And that's the
thing is not you know, you don't do talk radio.
You only think you do. You know what you and
everybody else does that this thing is turned into it's
turned into monologue radio or brainwash radio. That's all you do.

Speaker 2 (32:44):
Monologue radio. You know what a monologue is, Well, it
just means you're talking to yourself by yourself, is really
what it means. It's mono singular, just me. But I'm
the only one here with a microphone, so really the
entire radio show is a monologue what's he getting at?

(33:05):
Oh here it is? Oh wait, oh crap, I pressed up,
hold on, I press stop. Why don't you gonna have
to listen to that again? Well?

Speaker 7 (33:12):
I was calling, and I've called many talk show talk
radio shows, AM talk radio kind of thing. And that's
the thing is not you know, you don't do talk radio.
You only think you do. You know what you and
everybody else does that this thing is turned into it's
turned into monologue radio or brainwash radio. That's all you do.

(33:36):
Talk radio is when you get on and you maybe
do a couple of minutes and talk about some things,
and then you take phone calls for one hour, two hours,
three hours.

Speaker 2 (33:45):
I'd rather kill myself.

Speaker 7 (33:46):
How from long your show is one hour two hours?
That one dude has a three hour show, I don't
really appreciate it.

Speaker 2 (33:53):
But Chris just said that he can actually see the
guy standing there with his hands on his hips. And
now that you said that, Chris, I can't get the
image out of my mind for the entire minute. It's
a minute long voicemail. I'll let him keep going. He's
got another twenty seconds the entire voicemail. I just see
this effeminate little man baby with his skinny jeans on.

(34:14):
You know, he has those glasses on that every lib
dorc you can see him listening in his Subaru outback,
screaming at the radio. You know it. I can't stop
picturing it. Chris. His hands are on his hips right now,
they are.

Speaker 7 (34:28):
You know, he doesn't even do talk radio. You don't either.
All y'all do brainwash radio, and it's disgusting and I
wish you'd stop doing this and start doing talk radio.
That's what it was about, talking with the public for
the whole show. Your opinions really don't matter that much.

Speaker 2 (34:51):
So he's upset.

Speaker 10 (34:56):
I love these eight seven seven three seven seven four
three seven three, and I want to encourage everybody this
is Maybe this applies to you, Maybe it applies to
any one of the filthy comedy dorks like this guy
who are listening.

Speaker 2 (35:14):
Start your own show. It's nothing to buy some podcast stuff,
some microphone equipment today. Go on Amazon, buy that stuff,
be delivered to your home. If you have something to say,
start your show. Maybe it's really good, maybe you'll have
a good time. Maybe it sucks. I mean, look, that
guy's not gonna have a successful show. No one cares
about what he has to say about anything, but you
might end up having something that's decent. Make sure your

(35:36):
chalk is in your body. Though you're gonna need the energy.
You're gonna need it. You hear me. Remember, chalk is
more than just male vitality stacks. That's what I tell
you about because that's what I take. Chalk is endless
natural herbal supplements. That's where we need to focus. Natural

(35:57):
herbal supplements. There's chalk powder. I always recommend people start out.
If you don't want to go for a male vitality
stack or female vitality stack, start out with chocolate powder.
Pour it in your smoothie, a glass of milk, glass
of water, whatever, juice. I don't know, that might be weird.
Sin's chocolate every single morning. Just chuck it. Pour it

(36:17):
in there. It's delicious. It's chocolate powder. Check it. Vitamins, minerals,
every one of them in your body. Are ready to
start your day? Go get a subscription. Could you save
a fortune on subscriptions? C hoq dot com promo code
Jesse Chuck dot com promo code Jesse. We'll be back
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Host

Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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