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. And
there's so much to do this hour, it's gonna be
a wild hour. First, we're gonna discuss American history, Indians,
(00:31):
conflict with the Indians, conquest, things like that. Someone's got
a good question about that, being estranged from friends, family members,
over politics. Someone wants to know about work in construction?
What are my future plans for all this? All that?
Can the House of Representatives or should I say, will
they actually make a stance when it comes to the election.
(00:55):
All that and so much more coming up on the
world famous Jesse Kelly Show. I want to do this one. Hey,
history buff, you were speaking of the Indians yesterday about
conquered land. How accurate is the movie Bury My Heart
at Wounded Me, especially the Heart where Sitting Bull is
arguing with Colonel Miles on whose history is correct? Thanks
(01:17):
for reading my emails, says I can use his name.
His name is Clint. Okay, Well, I'm not gonna discuss
that movie specifically, because even if you've seen that movie,
and I have, you didn't just watch it like this
guy very clearly did. You don't know what he's talking about.
But let's discuss America in the conquest of America and
(01:38):
the crowding out, the pushing out, the killing of Indians
in the various Indian tribes. Okay, so first, before the
settlers got here originally, obviously, there were Native American tribes,
Indian tribes all over the country from the Pacific northwest
to the southwest, southeast, northwest, middle of the country, and
(02:01):
different tribes dominated different regions out there. The big powerful ones. Look,
I'm a dude, The big powerful ones tend to be
the ones that fascinate me the most. I'm fascinated by
Iroquois and Blackfeet and Crow and the Lakota, which those
are more commonly known as the Sioux, the Comanche, and
the Apache, even the Pueblos, which are kind of more
(02:23):
peaceful southwestern tribe. Like I like all these tribes. I
find them all fascinating, and they would. They lived obviously
a tribal existence, and they were in constant conflict with
each other, causing them oftentimes to relocate. Once your tribe
was defeated, the Comanche ran the Apache out of Texas.
(02:47):
It's got how that worked here. It was no different
back then. People are people, whether they're technologically advanced or not.
People are people and they generally think the same way.
There was none of this peace harmony crap. That just
was not That's something that they invented to make America
and Americans look extra bad. The tribes wanted better lands,
(03:09):
better hunting lands, better grounds better. The people are no different.
Indians were no different than you are today. What do
they want? Good weather, food, water, you know, these are
the things people seek out and they were no different.
So the settlers get here, now they're Christian settlers. The
country was founded by Christians. That's going to play a
big part in this. So there are Christian settlers and
(03:33):
immediately there are conflicts with Indian tribes and there's a
lot of coming together with Indian tribes. The relationship was complicated.
But more and more people from England, really Europeans in general,
but more and more people from England were figuring out, hey,
this America. It's dangerous. It was very very dangerous early
(03:54):
on for the weather and the Indians and the starvation
and everything else. But at least it's free. You can
come over here and be really free. You can have
the hand of the king off of you. Let's let's
try America. So we began to fill up the United
States of America. Well, you're filling up a place that
was already full. There were Indians who already had that
(04:14):
as their hunting ground, that as their sacred place, that
as there, this or that. So what happened was a
conquest began only because of the Christian background of the
people who founded it. Oftentimes the conquest was it was
attempted nicely, as if there's a nice way to conquer
(04:39):
a place, there's not a nice way. So here's instead
of instead of me showing up at your house tonight,
you answer the door and I stick a gun in
your face and I say this house is mine, Now
get out or I'll kill you. That would be one
way of conquest. That's the standard way of conquest. Instead
of doing it that way, I just kind of said, hey,
(05:01):
do you mind if I rent you might if I
rent a room, maybe one of your bedrooms, Can I
sleep there for a month? And then you wake up
one day and I've rearranged the living room furniture, and
then you go to your pantry and the kitchen and
you find that all your food has been thrown out,
and I've replaced it with my food, and I just
slowly but surely crowd you out of a home. Of course,
(05:22):
anytime you try to push back on this, I meet
you with hostility, and so eventually you find yourself out
of your home. We tried to do it that way.
And you should know this. About the conquest of America,
it was always a source of controversy with Americans. Americans
(05:43):
were always divided on this from the earliest days you
can read about this. Americans didn't know how to handle it.
You had Americans that said, these people are godless savages,
we have to bring them to God. We have Americans
who said, these people are godless savages. We should take
their land because they're godless savages. We had Americans who thought, no,
(06:06):
we should simply live side by side with these people.
Let's minister to these people. No, we shouldn't crowd anyone.
Americans were always all over the map on this, always divided.
But the thing was it was inevitable. Didn't matter the
religious background, it didn't matter what it was. If I'm
(06:28):
if I'm sitting next to you, We'll put it this way.
I'm sitting next to you. Let's say we have we
have a twelve hour flight. We're flying overseas, We're going
somewhere across the ocean, and you're beside me, and there's
one armrest in the middle. Okay, and you you're tiny,
(06:51):
You're weaker. I I'm six eight, I'm two thirty. You're
just a little munchkin. Doesn't matter how nice of a
guy I am. I'll make sure your peanuts don't drop,
I'll try not to step on you, and I have
to go pee. But it's just kind of human nature
that that armrest is going to end up being mine.
(07:15):
You really can't do anything about it. Human beings are
not going to exist beside fertile land, beside resources and
wealth and not take it if they have the ability
to take it. Conquest as terrible and deadly, and anything
you can say about it's probably true. It is the
(07:37):
nature of man, all man, every color, every religion. Every
time in history, mankind conquers areas he's able to conquer.
And so we've had these two different divisions today in
this country, and they're both, to be honest with you,
completely wrong. You have the skull bag America hating communists,
(08:02):
who tell kids that were just a genocidal country, and
of course all this should be returned back to the
peace loving Indians who didn't believe and owning property. You
have that kind of idiocy. You hear it all over
the place. But on the right you hear something equally
as absurd. Of No, we didn't conquer it. We had
treaties and stuff like no, no, no. Most of the time,
(08:24):
the Indian tribes didn't even understand the treaties, and we
constantly treated the Indian tribes as if they were a
monolithic thing run by some sort of a king. But
even within I mentioned the Lakota of the Sioux, even
within the Sioux, there were divisions all over the place.
And just because you were a big, powerful chief in
this tribe didn't mean you had even the tiniest amount
(08:46):
of authority with the Sioux tribe that was fifty miles away.
They might have nothing to do with you at all.
And we'd sign a treaty with that guy, and we'd
go back and we'd say, hey, looks like the Sioux
are pacified. And then you turn around the next day
and a group of Sue raiders coming up kill some
people steal some cattle and then you are offended. You
(09:07):
just broke the treaty. And that's how it worked, and
it was just never going to work that way in perpetuity.
How about that word, Chris, What Chris? I read that
word this morning. Now I knew I was going to
use it on the show. As soon as I read it,
I thought, man, that's a word that makes people sound smart.
And so anyway, it was never going to last that
way without end I have. I know I'm a bizarre
(09:32):
right winger in this and that I'm not angry at
my countrymen for conquering the lands, because the lands are
all conquered. And at the same time, I do feel
sympathy for Indian tribes. But that's the way it goes.
That's the way it goes if you are and that's
a great lesson for us. For Look, this lesson still
(09:54):
applies today. If you are a weaker power, a less
technologically advanced power, you are simply on the menu for
somebody who's bigger and stronger, unless you get yourself bigger
and stronger. And you can whine about that all day
long and complain about that, and I get it. I
(10:16):
don't want the world to work that way. But that's
how the world friggin works. And when it comes to
guys like sitting Bul, you know what I'm actually, I'm
up against the clock here. I'll finish up my thought
about about sitting Bul and the chiefs and the Indian
tribes and things like that, because they were divided as
well on how to deal with this. I'll finish up
my thoughts on that in a moment. Before I get
(10:36):
to that, I want to talk to you about something
the Indian tribes didn't have. Maybe this is what doomed them.
They didn't have rough greens. Right, So imagine what Chris.
Imagine you're you're an Indian and you have a dog,
and he's wonderful. In fact, the dogs used to work.
(10:56):
They used to be work dogs and protectors. Only your
dog keeps dying so early. What an advantage it would
have been if the dogs had an all natural nutritional
supplement like roughgreens that would help them live longer and
live healthier. Think about how expensive a trip to the
Indian vet used to be. Roughgreens could have saved you
(11:20):
some money there too. Pour roughgreens on your dog's food,
all natural, nutritional supplement. When you open the bag, you'll notice, Wow,
this powder is green because it's alive, full of vitamins, minerals, probiotics,
everything your dog needs. Call them free jumpstart trial bags
(11:40):
at eight three three three three my Dog, or go
to Roughgreens dot com slash Jesse We'll be back. This
is a Jesse Kelly show. It is the Jesse Kelly
Show on a Friday, and ask doctor Jesse Friday, We're
gonna get to being estranged from your woke relatives and
(12:04):
things like that. I just want to finish up this
thought on the Indian tribes and the conquest of America,
and I brought up the divisions and how divided America
Americans were at the time. How do we handle this?
Do we take everything, do we take nothing? How do
we handle this whole thing? But there's an alternate side
to that too, and that's the Indian tribes. And if
you ever do any reading about the various Indian tribes,
(12:25):
you'll notice this. They were constantly divided themselves on how
to handle these Americans, on how to handle these white
European settlers. It's not as if, again we always speak
about people modern day past, we speak about things as
if it's universal. Ah, this is what white people do,
this is what black people do, this what Jews do,
(12:47):
that's what Christians do, it's what these people do. But
nothing's universal. It's not the tribes. Even within the tribes
they didn't know. There were sitting bowl types who thought
these people are going to take everything. And he ended
up obviously he looks like an oracle now that the type.
The city bowl types were telling people very early on,
(13:10):
these people are going to take everything if we don't
ban together and fight them. We have to band together,
all of us and fight them. But then there were
so many types, so many chief types who didn't want
that kind of slaughter, who didn't think they could win,
and honestly, they have a point. They had a point too,
and they said, no, we need to trade with them,
(13:32):
let's make peace with them. And then even within those
tribes there are divisions there about how that was supposed
to be handled. Do we make peace, No, let's not
be And one chief would say, no, we're making peace,
and he would show up to make peace. At the
same time, some angry young men from his tribe would
go slaughter a settler family and blow up the peace.
(13:53):
It just they could never ever come together. And that's
understandable too. People will point back at the Indian tribes
and they they'll kind of put them down and say,
why didn't they just ban together? Well, you're asking people
who've killed each other for a long time to all
of a sudden just come together. Why was it so
(14:15):
easy for the United States Army to find scouts Indian
scouts who could help them find the Indian tribes who
were hard to find, like the Apaches. The Apaches are famous,
really cool tribe, even though they loved a lot of torture,
really cool tribe. They were famous for being able to
just disappear into the hills. They could, they could. They
(14:36):
write stories about it, and some of it sounds unbelievable,
but it's written down in many books that they'll just
disappear pretty much in front of your eyes, meaning hey,
turn around, and you turn around for thirty seconds and
you turn back around and he's gone. They would bury
themselves in the sand like they were really cool. Anyway,
how do you find people like that? You gotta find
Indians who know where they're at, know how to track
(14:57):
them down. How can you get how could you find
an I need to do that. Well, if I'm an Indian,
let's say I'm a crow. I'm just making that up.
I'm a crow Indian And you Americans you may have
just gotten here, but the Apache, they they kidnapped and
tortured my wife to death. You'd like some help knowing
where they are. Oh yeah, they'll help you out. It's
(15:21):
History's complicated, and more than anything, it's ugly. And we
don't want it to be ugly. We want history. We
want it to look like the movies where the good
guys win, and we want it to look like a
Marvel movie where the superheroes come in at the end
(15:41):
and only the bad guys get hurt and everything works
out in the end. That that's not how it that's
not how life works.
Speaker 2 (15:49):
I was.
Speaker 1 (15:51):
Reading about this guy. I'm actually not even gonna give
out his name. I don't want to go into the
whole history of it right now. But he was a
World War two pilot in the Pacific and he took
off for this extremely brave mission. And he was a
brave talented man, brave talented pilot. And he went and
he did this mission, and he did very well, and
on his way back. His plane was running out of fuel.
(16:15):
All the planes were running out of fuel. He was
desperate to get to the aircraft carrier. And here's this
war hero who just did something so insanely brave, and
the aircraft carrier tries to tell him, Hey, don't land,
you're too low. I believe he was too low, and
he said, I don't have enough fuel for another pass.
I land now, or I'm landing in the ocean. And
(16:35):
he landed, and because his plane wasn't where it should be,
he killed two guys when he landed with his plane.
Isn't that so sad? That's a real story, that's a
true story, and it is. It's sad and it's tragic.
But that's how life looks so much at the time.
And I don't know why I'm not going to go
(16:56):
off on a tangent here because I want to talk
about other things, political things, but I want to remind
you about about your life, if you ever look down
on your life or feel bad about your life, especially
in this era of social media where people only put
the good times on social media, and if you're a dude,
(17:17):
you're only going to put on social media that that
fun camping trip you had with the boys. If you're
a woman and you have Facebook, you're not going to
put the huge blowout fight you had with your husband
earlier in the day, at least I hope you wouldn't
put that. You'll put the happy family picture. Look at
our perfect life having dinner together. Everyone's happy all the time.
(17:38):
You're getting only the happiest window in other people's lives.
Everyone's life is messy, everyone's mine, yours, the guy across
the street, your neighbor with the choosel jaw, and the
pretty wife. Everyone has problems. History has problems. It's always
ugly and complicated. All right, That was a long way
(18:01):
to answer that question, but nevertheless, there it is. Now
let's talk about how to handle family friends when it
comes to politics, especially now it's election season. Emotions are
running high. How should you handle these things? Well, you're
going to need your te levels up to have this conversation,
I'll tell you that much. And that's where a male
(18:23):
vitality stack from chalk comes in. In fact, let's set that.
Let's set aside the stack for a moment. Do you
know about chalk lit powder? A lot of people they
don't want to try a stack, a female stack or
a male stack yet, but they want to get their
foot in the door and try to figure out, Hey,
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(18:43):
Am I going to feel any difference? Allow me to
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very first thing I do when I get out of bed,
the first thing I do as I go, put a
scoop of that in a glass, mix it up and
(19:04):
chuck it. I start my day vitamins and minerals immediately,
and boy, what a difference. Immediately choq dot com promo
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it a shot. Chalk dot com promo code Jesse. We'll
(19:26):
be back. Get the Cure for Rhinos eight days with
the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a Friday. Do not forget. You can email the
show Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com. Don Jesse the vest.
The subject to this one is family ripped a part
in woke organ I've just heard that I've been disinvited
(19:49):
from my family Thanksgiving and Christmas celebrations this year because
I refuse to affirm the teenage daughter of my cousin's
identity as a boy. Honestly, I'm happy to keep my
daughters away from that crap, but my marriage to their
mother already dissolved when I was declared racist in twenty
(20:10):
twenty one for saying all lives matter. My question how
much family can be destroyed before I question my anti
communist principles. My best to aunt, Peggy says, I can
use his name. His name is Zach. I know that
that probably hit home for a lot of people. I
(20:32):
get a lot of these emails, Jesse, I've I lost
my daughter, she went to the dark side. Jesse. My
wife left me, Jesse. Did We get a lot of that?
And I know that hurts. I know that hurts a lot.
I know it does. Have you ever you ever known
somebody who struggled with addiction to something like gambling? You
(20:54):
ever knowed a gambling addict or even a drug addict?
This would where Christy known somebody. Everyone has someone who
really struggled with addiction. Alcohol would work here to my wife.
My wife had a friend as a friend actually, and
friend used to pour out her soul to my wife
about her husband who had a terrible gambling addiction. Absolutely
(21:22):
ruined his family financially with his gambling addiction. And they
made they made decent money. I think he made seventy
eighty grand a year if I remember, he made really
nice money. I mean, I mean made money to support
a family. And it didn't matter what it was, whether
it was sports, it didn't matter. He got super into
the online gambling world and he just he couldn't help himself.
(21:47):
It could not help himself. And I remember one night
she called my wife and she's, you know, hey, we
need She wasn't asking us for money, we need money
for food where he is completely roomed us. And we
had this long talk with her and I basically told
her this. You know, I know you're married to him,
(22:10):
but your husband is married to someone else. You you're
the side chick, you're the mistress. And I know that's
difficult to hear. He's married to someone else until he
chooses to get a divorce, until he gets the help
he needs to get a divorce from that someone else,
(22:30):
that someone else obviously being gambling. Until he gets a
divorce from that someone else, he's never going to be
able to be you know, the husband you need him
to be. He's married. You can only be married to one.
He's married. You're the side chick. When I say communism
is a religion, I don't say that for radio. These
(22:53):
people are religious. For them, it is a belief system
that goes so far beyond an election or president Republican
or Democrat, or taxes or even any individual issue. For them,
this is a religious endeavor, a religious endeavor. And so
(23:17):
if you have a family member, whoever it may be,
and I'm sorry this happened to you, who is breaking
away from you, Well, your only hope is that they
choose to come out of that religious call. Listen, listen
to that. I'm gonna play it again. I played it earlier.
Listened to this.
Speaker 3 (23:34):
Biden did something important last night, and he transferred the
machinery of the party to Kama Harris. The Obamas renewed
the magic of the movement. That's what they were transferring.
It was a sacred task. They took it on. Well,
it was like an an oasis. I didn't realize I
had been in a spiritual desert until they created that
(23:58):
oasis on that stage.
Speaker 1 (24:01):
A sacred task I was in. What kind of a
desert was he in? Did he say he was in
a political desert? A Democrat desert? Was he in a
low taxes desert? Abortion desert, spending desert? Foreign policy desert?
What kind of desert was he in?
Speaker 3 (24:19):
Biden did something important last night, and he transferred the
machinery of the party to Kama Harris. The Obamas renewed
the magic of the movement. That's what they were transferring.
It was a sacred task. They took it on. Well.
Speaker 1 (24:35):
It was like an oasis.
Speaker 3 (24:38):
I didn't realize I had been in a spiritual desert
until they created that oasis on that stage.
Speaker 1 (24:45):
A spiritual desert. They are religious people, and religion a
belief in a higher power. Religion will always it will
always overcome everything else. If you are devout about it,
(25:08):
and if it's not a religion where other things improve
when you're devout about it, then it will blow up
your life. What do I mean by that? If you're
a Christian, I should put it this way. If you're
a Christian, let's say, sorry, Chris, if you're a Christian,
and I'm certainly not anything good, believe me. So I'm
(25:28):
not preaching to anybody. But the better Christian you are,
inevitably you will be a better husband. Inevitably you will
be a better wife. You will be a better son,
a better daughter. You'll be a better employee an employer,
You'll be a better citizen. By being more devout, you
(25:49):
will be better at all those things. It's really a
true test of your religious faith. The horrible thing about
communism is it is so exclusive. It demands you dump
on everything else in your life in service to that
(26:09):
evil religion. So you will blow up everything in your
life because that sick, demonic, destructive religion demands you blow
up everything in your life. It sounds unbelievable to me
as a parent. I have two boys, and look, I
got home last night from work. I had skipped my workout.
(26:31):
I was lazy that morning. The boys were doing a
bunch of homework, so I decided to go upstairs and
I started lifting weights upstairs. I couldn't have five seconds
a piece because my boys kept running upstairs. Dad, did
you hear about this? And Dad, it was just the best, right.
The boys just tell me about their day. And I
look at those boys and I think to myself, I
couldn't imagine sending them off to college. And in a
(26:54):
year they hate me. They come back, their hairs dyed green,
and they hate me. It's unbelievable, but that is a
reality people live across this country. Email after email after email, Jesse,
I lost my daughter, Jesse, I lost my son in college.
Why because the service to that sick, demonic religion demands
(27:16):
that you destroy everything else good in your life in
service to it. You say you lost your family. You've
been disinvited. Brother. They have a different religion, and it's
incompatible with yours, no matter what yours is, even if
you don't have one, if you don't worship theres, it's incompatible.
(27:37):
We've played this a million times this week, mockinger, and
it's true. She's mock worthy. This person is religious.
Speaker 4 (27:44):
I'm wan in paycheck to paycheck. I'm stealing from here
to pay Paul. And I know it's cyclical. I know,
you know. You can't blame the sitting president for.
Speaker 1 (27:51):
Everything that's wrong.
Speaker 4 (27:52):
You can't blame past presidents for everything that's wrong. But
come on, guys, you got see.
Speaker 1 (27:57):
Something again that was earlier this summer.
Speaker 2 (28:00):
Checked in with Michelle again after President Biden dropped out
of the race.
Speaker 4 (28:04):
How do you feel about the race?
Speaker 1 (28:06):
Now?
Speaker 4 (28:07):
This is gonna sound crazy, but I feel better because
I'm I I don't know, I know, I always I
said on my last interview, like you don't really hear
from Kamala, But I think I'm with Kamala. I've watched her.
I think she she has to get her feet wet.
She was only the vice president, like you know, but
(28:28):
I think a woman running this country, Oh God, I hope.
Speaker 1 (28:34):
That woman can't afford groceries and she's gonna go vote
for Kamala because she's a woman. That's a religious person.
And when you lose someone, even family friends, to that
religious person, to that religion, they're gone. Right. They have
a new religion. And you can still interact with them
(28:56):
if you can, try to bring them out of it
if you can. But while they're followers of that religion,
it's not your mom anymore. It's not your wife anymore,
it's not your cousin anymore. It's the way it goes.
I know it hurts. I'm not dismissive of it. I
know what broken families look like. Believe me, I know
it sucks. Whatever, Go call Done for your real Estate.
(29:20):
Go get a hold of Done for You real Estate,
because I was reading something today about what the Biden
administration is doing, and I'll just dumb it down as
much as seemingly possible. They're taking every possible avenue to
spend money right now, and they're spending every dime they can.
Just pouring as much money as they can, the student
(29:42):
loan stuff, you name it. They're pouring as much money
as they can into the public to try to ease
economic pain before the election. But that is going to
result in an economic disaster for whoever gets elected. It
doesn't matter whether it's Trump Dome. There's going to be
some very very tough times coming. Debt to GDP one
(30:04):
hundred and twenty percent by real estate, hard assets, things
you can touch and feel. Done for you real estate
is so normal people can start to do that. They'll
handle everything for you. You'll find out what they can do
at Done for You Jesse dot Com. We'll be back.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday. Of course,
(30:26):
it's an ass doctor Jesse Friday. We are having a
blast today. You can still email us Jesse at jesse
kellyshow dot com. Podcast the show if you miss any
part of it. iHeart Spotify iTunes. Oh predictor of perils.
If voter fraud becomes so rampant and obvious, do you
(30:46):
think the House of Representatives will have the courage to
decide the election? Do I think.
Speaker 2 (30:54):
The GOP will have the courage?
Speaker 1 (31:10):
I'm sorry, stop making me laugh. With a GOP I
have the courage. That's a good one. That's a good one. Look,
election fraud. I'm just gonna give this to you right
between the eyes. Election fraud cannot be resolved, will not
be resolved after an election, either you prevent it or
(31:36):
just the momentum of the system will certify every election
after it's done. I don't care if you have video evidence.
I don't care what you bring after the election is
over is too late. If we are not proactive, not you,
not me, but the RNC, the Trump campaign, if they
(31:56):
are not, are not megaproactive right now in preventing voter
fraud that's coming. There will be no fixing it after
the fact. That is not something that's possible. And when
it comes to courage, the GOP has none. They've had none,
and they're not going to have any until we anti
(32:18):
communists over the years, and it will take us years
until we slowly but surely crowd these people out run
them out of the party through the primary process. We
have to start getting involved locally. That's where we build
not only our community, that's where we build our bench,
(32:39):
our bench of people who can eventually challenge establishment types
to run until GOP establishment types are defeated. You're never
going to get courage from anybody in the House or
the Senate. GOPI I take that bit from Anybody's not fair.
You're not going to get enough courage from enough Gopers
(33:01):
in the House or the Senate to actually get bold
things done. It's just not something that's going to happen.
There's no boldness there. Everyone wants to just keep the
train rolling. Nobody wants to be a wrench in the system.
Nobody wants to blow it up. Look, the same thing,
the exact same thing happened even when Trump was president.
(33:22):
Remember the big spending bills, big spending bill after big
spending bill, and they were all just swampy and filthy,
open naked government corruption. Every Senator, every House member throwing
in his special pork project to go buy votes, and
every single one of them got signed into law every
(33:44):
single time. Well, I mean we have to fund the government.
They do it every single time. I'll believe that Gop
has courage the first time I ever see it. Hi,
Jesse love the show. Listen. Every day you've been saying
you worked in construction most of your life. Did your
father have I have a construction business? If yes, why
did you not take it over? I was wondering all
(34:06):
this time why you went to sell RVs. His name
is gleb Okay. So here's how it worked for me.
When I was a teenager, I worked other jobs, you know,
washing dishes and washing cars and things like that. Worked
at a golf course for a while, just trying to
make money as a teenager. When I was I think
it was sixteen. My father he didn't own a construction company.
(34:28):
He was a former or a superintendent at the time,
I don't remember. But I got a job working construction.
But it was just it was all in the ditch stuff,
you know, shovel in your hand, you're digging, you're you're
screwing things and you're just doing basic construction work. And
that's what I did until I joined the Marines, really
until I joined the Marines at nineteen. Then then I
left went and joined the Marines. When I went and
(34:49):
joined the Marines, about that time, my folks started their
own construction company. It was Don Kelly Construction, and they
moved it down to Arizona, and it was they ended up.
They were doing well. You know, it was a small business,
but they were doing they were doing well. When I
got out of the Marines, I went back to the
ditch and eventually worked my way and I was doing
(35:10):
you know, project kind of like project coordination, engineering stuff,
more office work than with a shovel in my hand
towards the end. And it was I mean, obviously, my
folks built this business up. There's a lot of blood, sweat,
tears and wrists that go into that, and that was
something that that they had wanted. Certainly, my dad had
wanted me to, you know, kind of take the reins
(35:32):
on that me, my sister take the reins on that
he built it. Very understandable. I I don't know how
to I don't know how to say this I'll just so,
I'll just be honest with you. I always wanted to
make my own way. I wanted to see if I
could do it, whatever do it means. I wanted to
see if I could make it without that. And I
(35:56):
don't know, I don't regret it, right, but it's one
of those things. It was a family business, and they
did retire and they did great and that the business
went away. It's gone now, so they retired once. Once
I moved on, my sister moved on, they retired and
it's gone. But you know, they did build this wonderful
business and I didn't continue it. I didn't. I I've
always wanted to make my own way and see if
(36:19):
I could do it. And I felt like I felt
like even though I would have worked hard and I
would have tried to make it even bigger and things,
I always I always felt like I would have questioned
myself if I had stayed in that. Because I developed
a passion for politics for the country, I started running
for Congress and I really started getting so sickened by
(36:41):
what I saw these people doing. And I just I
need a cause. Does that make sense? I need a mission.
I feel like I have a duty, and I need
a mission, not just a paycheck. I need a mission,
and I wanted to I wanted a mission in politics
some kind. And that's why I went that route. Now,
(37:02):
of course, it flamed out and I ended up flat
broke and busted and had to sell RVs to try
to make ends meet for a long time. It's just
kind of the way it goes, like everything doesn't work
out the way you want. But that's why. I don't
know if that's a good explanation, but that's the truth.
All right. All right, someone wants to know about the
illegals voting in elections. How's how's this going to look?
How's this gonna work? Let's talk about that. Before we
(37:24):
talk about that, let's talk about your pillow. You know,
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about illegals registering to vote, things like that. Hang on,