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May 12, 2025 37 mins

Taking a closer look at Trump on Thom Tillis. Getting in trouble on Mothers Day. We want Epstein arrests. Information can be a hazard to your health. A revealing moment as Democrats destroy the country when they are in the majority and Republicans can’t be bothered to do anything about it when they are in the majority. 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a wonderful, wonderful Monday, and we are going to get
into so much swamp stuff this hour, so that'll be
a good time. I'll probably get to some emails, try

(00:31):
to remember to talk about what I've got mad about
for Mother's Day. But beyond that. You know what time
it is, don't you. It's the start of the second
hour on Monday, and that means it's Medal of Honor
Monday time. Every Monday we take a Medal of Honor
citation and we read it so we can remember the heroes,

(00:52):
remember their names. You don't know these names. I don't
know these names. We should remember these names. Remember the names,
remember the d and more importantly, teach the next generation
about what heroism actually is, about what it looks like.
These are the people we should be looking up to.

(01:12):
And remember you can email in suggestions when I give
out the email address Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
Love hate death threats, but Medal of Honor suggestions are
more than welcome. Now I want to clarify something though
I'm not asking for these because we necessarily need them.

(01:35):
Believe me, we know where to find the Medal of
Honor citations. It's just lots of times these things mean
something to someone. It's a family friend or a member
of the family, or you met him once or and
those are always cool things to kind of humanize the story.
So if you have those, you're welcome to email them in.
Just know there also is a backlog. Just it's really weird.

(01:58):
The show got popular, ask me why, and now there's
like a year long backlog for these things, so it
might be some time before we get to your particular
email and suggestion. Now, this one was actually from June
of last year. Like I told you, it was about
a year long backlog. Guys said, is male of honor suggestion?
It's for a Donald Arthur Gary. This is from the email.

(02:22):
This man has an FFG named after him. I believe
it's a guided missileship. I hired a kid from cow
Maritime to be my assistant at the then Mare Island
Shipyard when I was the general manager. His grandfather was
best friends with this man, and he told me stuff

(02:43):
about really about what really happened, and it was much
worse than what it said in the citation. Having been
in the Navy for eight years, I could only imagine
very impressive, and so without further Ado's Honor World War
Two Navy. He was a lieutenant at the time, Donald

(03:05):
Arthur Gary born in Findlay, Ohio, Hey honoring those who
went above and beyond its Medal of Honor Monday for
conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life

(03:27):
above and beyond the call of duty as an engineering
officer attached to the USS Franklin when that vessel was
fiercely attacked by enemy aircraft during the operations against the
Japanese Home Islands near Kobe, Japan, nineteenth of March nineteen
forty five. Stationed on the third deck when the ship

(03:50):
was rocked by a series of violent explosions set off
her own ready bombs, rockets and ammunition by hostile attack,
Lieutenant Gary unhesitatingly risked his life to assist several hundred
men trapped in a messing department filled with smoke in

(04:11):
no apparent egress. As the imperiled men below decks became
increasingly panic stricken under the raging fury of incessant explosions,
he confidently assured them he would find a means of
affecting their release, and groping through the dark, debris filled corridors,

(04:32):
ultimately discovered an escapeway. Staunchly determined, he struggled back to
the Messing compartment three times, despite menacing flames, floodwater, and
the ominous threat of sudden additional explosions, on each occasion,
calmly leading his men through the blanketing pall of smoke

(04:53):
until the last one had been saved. Selfless in his
concern for his ship in his fellows, he constantly rallied
others about him, repeatedly organized and led firefighting parties into
the blazing inferno on the flight deck, and when firerooms
one in two were found to be inoperable, Number three

(05:15):
Or entered number three fireroom and directed the raising of
steam in one boiler. In the face of extreme difficulty
and hazard. An inspiring and courageous leader, Gary rendered self
sacrificing service under the most perilous conditions, and by his
heroic initiative, fortitude and valor, was responsible for saving the

(05:38):
saving of several hundred lives. His conduct throughout reflects the
highest credit upon himself in upon the US Navy. Now
this needs probably a little bit more context because maybe
on its surface, because he wasn't eating grenades and charging
machine gun nests, maybe this didn't blow you away like

(05:59):
some of the other action movie ones have. I will
tell you this story in particular might be the bravest
one I've ever read. Let me explain why we've talked
before about a ship. Just picture a big navy ship.
A Navy ship is a gigantic ball of shrapnel. It's

(06:24):
all steel, iron, it's all metal. Okay, So that's one
thing to consider. Another thing to consider is it's full
of explosives, inflammable things. It's full of fuel, jet fuel
or aviation fuel would be avgas in this case aviation fuel.

(06:46):
It's full of bombs, black powder. It is one gigantic
explodable thing. If fire gets out of control, So that alone,
that alone makes it terrifying. I have long said in
a being in a naval combat in that way, it

(07:06):
for me would be the scariest thing in the world anyway.
So just the fire, just the meadow alone would be
bad enough. But there's also the fear of drowning, the
fear of darkness. So the fear of burning. But on
top of that, we're going to get to the fireroom
thing in a moment, the fear of scalding with steam.

(07:27):
So I want you to just picture this scenario. Okay,
I want you to picture You're in a fifteen by
fifteen foot steel room. You're in a room. It's a
steel room. Okay, there are there's a big box of
explosives of black powder sitting in the corner. The lights

(07:48):
go out in the steel room. The room begins to
fill up with water that's on the bottom of it.
On the top of it, there are flames heating up
the room and licking everything around it and burning everything
around it. And the flames are itching, inching their way
towards the black powder. The room is full of smoke,

(08:11):
The room was full of filling up with water. The
room is pitch black, and the flames are about to
explode the black powder. That gives you some some idea
if you're using your imagination, what it is like below
deck on a navy ship that has been bombed by
the way, they were dive bombers. They dropped a couple

(08:31):
two hundred and fifty kilogram bombs on this particular ship
that's what happened. That gives you some tiny idea of
what it would be like to be trapped below deck
on a navy ship that has had bombs dropped on it.
This particular ship was also listing leaning is what that means.
It had been bombed so badly. It wasn't moving, it

(08:52):
was taking on water. It was leaning to one side.
You're losing power. Everything's on fire, filled with smoke and
taking on and this guy finds out three hundred men
are down below. He then proceeds to lead rescue party
after rescue party down to get them and guide them
through the burns and the agony, and then as far

(09:15):
as the fireroom stuff goes. This is probably my biggest
fear in the world, which makes this one so uniquely
awesome to me. The ships use steam. These World War
two ships use steam to power themselves. Horrible story after
horrible story I have read is about these steam steam compartments.

(09:39):
I'll put it that way to make it easy to
understand exploding in combat. And you read these stories about
these navy guys who die or are horribly injured from scalding.
And have you ever seen the movie RoboCop? I wouldn't
recommend it for the kids. But the original RoboCop. Did

(10:00):
you ever see that scene where the guy got hit
with the acid and he's walking around and kind of
his skin and everything is draped off of his body
because he melted. You know, that's real. That happened to
our sailors in World War Two. That's what happens when
you read the description of guys who get scalded. This

(10:21):
guy saw that in two different fire rooms, and he
walked into the third one to get it up and
running so the ship could move again. Could you imagine
volunteering to go stand by the exploding ball of steam
so you can save your ship and your men. It
may not have sounded like much when I read the citation,
but when you that's basically the sum of all fears.

(10:43):
I don't want to burn, I don't want to drown.
I don't want to be scalded. I don't want to
do it in the dark. I don't want to And
this dude put himself down there voluntarily to get our
sailors home. Pretty fringing awesome, right, Pretty fringing awesome? And
he lived? How about that? He lived to see gold
prices skyrocket, which is good what Chris. I'm sure he
liked that. Look. He's dead now, but if he was

(11:06):
still alive, he would have seen Gold hit record numbers,
just hit records. And remember that talk we had about
the China America trade deal. That isn't really a deal.
We got a ninety day reprieve until something's gonna have
to be addressed. Why don't you take this time to
get gold in your retirement, maybe your physical possession. Let

(11:30):
gold Co handle it for you. I partnered with gold
Co because I trust them, A plus rated by the
Better Business Bureau. I am a customer. I've already dealt
with them, and they just make it easy. There's a
reason they got that a plus rating. Let them help
you at least find out what they can do for you.

(11:50):
Eight five five eight one seven gold or go to
Jesse likesgold dot com. We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (12:00):
Your freedom every day.

Speaker 1 (12:03):
The Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show.
And I hope all the mothers out there had a
wonderful Mother's Day. Hey special post. Happy Mother's Day to
my wonderful mother, she's the best. And my wife, who's
a wonderful mother to my kids. Bob did have a

(12:24):
little something to say today. You see, yesterday we made
sure we treated her right on Mother's Day. I got
her a little something, and the and the boys got
her a little something. Luke went to some place that
sells soaps and lotions and all that other stuff and
got her, you know, the stuff women like, all that weird, fruity,

(12:44):
smelly stuff. James, my oldest, got up and made her eggs,
made her scrambled eggs and brought it to her in bed.
So I don't want to act like I was ignored. Okay,
but we'll get back to politics in a second. There's
a system in our house, a dishes system, and the

(13:09):
dishes system is quite specific. Okay, you need to get
your dishes. You pick them up, and you take them
over to the sink, make sure the food is off
of it and everything, and then you put the dishes
in the sink when the dishwasher is done. The boys
part of their responsibilities around the home is unloading the dishwasher.
Very common, but in general we are not allowed to

(13:33):
load the dishwasher because ob says we don't do it right.
She says it's inefficient and that we just throw things
in there and that's only partially true. But she said,
we are no longer allowed to load the dishes, so
we put stuff in the sink. Well, apparently Bob was

(13:57):
hoping yesterday would be the day that, after all the
cooking for her and everything else, that we would just
clear out the sink and run the dishwasher so she
didn't have to do anything. And she wakes up this
morning and her and I are having a cup of
coffee in the kitchen, and she said, I want you
to look at this. And I looked, and there was

(14:18):
dishes in the sink. And I looked and I said, well, yeah,
you've got some dishes to do. And apparently that was
the wrong thing. She said, do you mean to tell
me that on Mother's Day? You boys slowly but surely
filled up the sink with dishes all day long and
it never once occurred to any of you to maybe
do the dishes on Mother's Day. And I'll be honest, no,

(14:42):
it didn't. It didn't occur to me once. What Chris, what?
That's exactly my point, Chris, And that was the argument
I made this morning. Chris said. The last time I
did it, I got yelled at. That is verbatim what
I told her this morning after she brought it up.
And I'll tell you your response was not that nice.
It wasn't that nice at all. She did not see

(15:05):
things my way. All right, quit, let's do some emails
JK forty seven. I don't want the Epstein files released
to the public. As Pam Bondi made clear, the FBI
is in possession of tens of thousands of videos which
are clearly not suitable for mass consumption. I don't want files.

(15:26):
I want arrests. Okay, Well, let's deal with this, shall we?
Cash Bettel I didn't play it last week, but he
had to sit in front of the Senate and answer
some questions, and Senator Kennedy of Louisiana had some things
to say.

Speaker 3 (15:42):
Did Jeffrey Epstein hanging shell or did somebody killing.

Speaker 4 (15:46):
Senator?

Speaker 2 (15:47):
I believe he hung himself in a cell in the
Metropolitan Attention Center.

Speaker 3 (15:52):
Are you going to release all the information about that? Senator?

Speaker 2 (15:55):
We are working through that right now with the Department
of Justice.

Speaker 3 (15:58):
When you think you'll have it done.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
Cash uh, I think in the in the near future, sir, like.

Speaker 3 (16:05):
Before I'm die.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
Center, we are, we are, We've we've been working on that,
and we're doing it in a way that protects victims
and also doesn't put out into the ether information that
is irrelevant for production of the public, such as c Sam.

Speaker 1 (16:32):
Okay, so I've got a bunch of emails about this.
We have more Epstein files emails than I can count.
So I wanted to talk about what he just said
right there, and where we're at and the swamp and
powerful people and things like that. First of all, you
already know who Jeffrey Epstein is, billionaire financier, trafficked girls,

(16:55):
women with other powerful men. You are aware of so
of Epstein's associations the same way I'm only aware of
some we're never going to know. We know this is
public record. We know that he was signed into Bill
Clinton's White House several times. We know that Bill Clinton
and he were so close that he had a painting
of Bill Clinton. We know that we know that Bill

(17:19):
Gates has had some sort of a relationship with Jeffrey Epstein.
We don't know the depths of that relationship, but Bill
Gates has been forced He's been asked about it several
times on camera. We know another possibly revealing little thing
is that Bill Gates's ex wife, Melinda, She flat out

(17:40):
told a publication that part of the reason she divorced
Bill Gates was his association with Jeffrey Epstein. Now, OB's
been mad at me a million times. She's even been
mad at people I'm friends with a million times. She's
never threatened to walk out the door or over it. So, boy,

(18:01):
that must have been a relationship that Melinda really didn't
approve of. So we got all that. We got all that.
But let's talk for a while. This is gonna take
a while about the swamp. Yeah, some of it'll be
about Epstein, but about the swamp and corruption and what
we have ahead of us. All right, hang on the
Jesse Kelly Show. It's still real to me, damn it.

(18:24):
The TRN stacks. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on
a wonderful, wonderful Monday. I remember if you missed any
part of the show, including Medal of Honor Monday. He
can download the whole thing on iHeart, Spotify, iTunes. All right.
So Cash Betel says the FBI, he couldn't possibly have

(18:45):
been any more vague that they're going to release the files. There.
They're efforting it they're working on it, but we don't
have a date soon sometime soon. It's sounded very very noncommittal.
Let's set the Epstein styles files aside, because I've hold
you my thoughts on the release of the files. Some
of that protect the victim stuff is real. I'll just

(19:06):
tell you that some of it is real. Remember it.
It's a very dangerous thing to have damaging information on
rich powerful men. It's a very dangerous thing. It can
be hazardous to your health. It always has been. When
there's somebody who has means, money and power, if he

(19:32):
sets aside if he doesn't have any morality, or or
sets aside his morality, if there's someone out there, somebody
I'm going to say the word unimportant, but I hope
you know what I mean by that, somebody who doesn't
have a lot of power, and they're causing you problems
for a lot of rich, powerful people. Well that's a

(19:55):
pretty easy fix, isn't it. What if this somebody just
stopped existing anyway, So some of the protecting the victim's
stuff israel. It does exist. Remember some of the stuff too,
is when that list comes out, if we ever do
actually get a list, when that list comes out. What
are you going to think about every name on that list?

(20:17):
I know what I'm going to think. I'm a human.
The second I see that someone flew on Jeffrey Epstein's jet,
maybe visited his gross little private island, I'm automatically going
to think that person is some sort of a rapist
or a dirt ball. I'm automatically going to think that, well,
that might not be true. What if it was just
a business flight. I mean, he took those two. He

(20:39):
didn't become a billionaire financier just by trafficking underage girls.
He clearly did other things in the business world. Maybe
there are people on there who are innocent. I don't know.
I don't know, I don't know the names. But beyond that,
let's talk swamp. Because there was a Trump SoundBite last
week that I want to play again because I have

(21:01):
I have a little bit of a different take than
I had before on it. Not that I have at
all changed my mind, not at all, but I listened
to it again a couple times this weekend. I don't
know why, but I couldn't get it out of my mind.
So I listened to it a couple Actually, yesterday I
listened to it a couple times yesterday. You know that
Trump he pulled the nomination of Ed Martin. Ed Martin

(21:24):
was going to be the head of the DC. You
had us attorney in DC. You know that that particular
area is really the beating heart of the swamp. It
protects the swamp, it throws Republicans in cages. I mean,
you could make the argument, and I would make the
argument that particular area is as evil a justice system

(21:45):
as exists on planet Earth. And I mean North Korea, Russia,
anywhere that particular justice system there is no justice. Democrat judges,
Democrat prosecutors, Democrat juries. Democrats never go to jail. If
you're a Republican who's been it's on the sidewalk, you
go to prison for the rest of your life. It's
that kind of an evil, evil, evil place. So Ed
Martin was supposed to go in there clean it out.

(22:08):
Republican Senator Tom Tillis of North Carolina destroyed his nomination.
I was frustrated, and I still am. I'm not saying
I've changed my mind that Trump didn't threaten him, didn't
just crush him the way Trump will do to anybody.
Republican or Democrat. But I listened to the sound bite
again and I'm still frustrated he didn't crush him. But

(22:31):
I heard something a little different than I did the
first couple of times I listened listen to this.

Speaker 5 (22:38):
He wasn't getting the support from people that I thought.
You know, he's done a very good job. Crime is
down twenty five percent in DC during his period of time.
I'm very disappointed in that. But I have so many
different things that I'm doing now with the trade. You know,
I'm one person. I can only make poom, I can
only lift that little phone so many times in a day.

(23:00):
But we have somebody else that will be great.

Speaker 6 (23:04):
I just want to say Ed is unbelievable, and hopefully
we can bring him into whether it's DOJ or whatever,
in some capacity, because really outstand to me, it was disappointing.
I'll be honest, I have to be straight.

Speaker 5 (23:17):
I was disappointed.

Speaker 6 (23:18):
A lot of people were disappointed, but that's the way
it works sometimes.

Speaker 1 (23:24):
Setting aside my frustration that he didn't blast Tom tillis.
You know what I heard as I listened to that
over the weekend. I'm only one guy. I got the
things I've got to pick up the phone. I can
only do that. Somebody times frustration, exhaustion, maybe possibly overwhelmed

(23:49):
at the depth of corruption, at the amount of drainage
that needs to take place. He sounds exhausted and frustrating
in that clippy sund That's how he sounds. And you
don't hear him sound like that a lot, but that's
how he sounds. And that's very, very understandable. Because let's

(24:10):
talk about this. We talk all the time about how
there's a thousand political battles we have to fight if
we really want to drain the swamp and save the
country and whatnot, that it's more than just a presidential election.
We talked about that before. But think, think about the
worst not you've ever had to try to untie in

(24:31):
your life. Everybody has him. Anyone who's ever gone fishing
has had him. So fishermen know exactly what I'm talking about.
But maybe it was a bunch of wires or one wire,
may's your shoestrings, whatever it may be. At some point
in time, you have encountered a night and marish not
in your life. Well, first, let's address how it got there.

(24:53):
How did it get to be so bad? Time took
generally a lot of time and effort, maybe not the
good kind of effort. But you left the wires all
together in the same box for a few years. You
move three times, everything's shaken around, move around, you come back,
and you've got something that's just impossible. It takes time

(25:17):
to get a knot to a place where you can't
untie it. Now, how do you untie it? Time, due diligence,
lots and lots of time and focused effort. You don't
look at it and snap your fingers and untie it.
That's not how it works. It got that way over

(25:39):
a long period of time, and it's going to take
a long time to get rid of it. When we
look at the rampant criminality and corruption in Washington, DC,
we want and it's a good thing that you want it.
It's a good thing that I want it. We want
it stopped, we want the swamp grain. We want that.
That's what we want, and we have every right to

(26:00):
demand the people we elect to go try to do it.
But we also have to understand that the corruption is very,
very deep in this country. The knot, it didn't get
tied under Joe Biden. It didn't get tied under Obama
or the first Trump or Clinton or Reagan or the

(26:23):
Nixon or whoever. Decades and decades and decades of negligence
by the American public not caring about politics. I don't
do politics once the game on. Decades and decades of
that kind of thinking has led to where we are now,
where the largest criminal organization on the planet is our government,

(26:46):
and the corruption is everywhere. And the truth is it's
going to take a lot of time to untie that knot.
Did you know this little stat came out over the weekend.
We control the House and Senate, and this Congress has
sent Trump the fewest bills in seventy years. It was

(27:07):
the Korean War the last time we had a Congress
do this little There's a ton of work to do
by all of us Trump, House, Senate, governors, state House,
local as a ton of work for a ton of time,
and it's going to take time. I mean, did you

(27:28):
hear this story about what the Biden administration did. You
may think I'm over the top when I say the
largest criminal enterprise on the planet. Oh wait, do I
play you this little bit before I play you that.
Let me do this, Let me get you some free
courses from Hillsdale College. And no, it's not one of
these things where you take half a course and then

(27:49):
they want to charge you one thousand dollars. Hillsdale's offering
more than forty courses online for free. Do you want
to understand capitalism? Really really understand it? Not whatever we
have now, but real freedom and free markets and private
property rights and human nature and how that comes, how
that is it's taken into account. You want that, Hillsdale

(28:12):
will teach you that for free. They have an Understanding
Capitalism course. It's very interesting. You want to learn about
the Roman Republic, about the constitution. Hillsdale's offering this to
us for free. You can do this on the weekend.
You can do this on a road trip. Listen to it.
Listen to them. Why wouldn't you do it at no cost?
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(28:38):
Hillsdale dot edu slash Jesse. You want to talk criminality?
Here it is Hang on the Jesse Kelly Show. It's
still real to me. Dammit, the Terians dance. It is
the Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic Monday. Remember you
can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.

(29:01):
So I'm going to work as hard as I can
to not get your blood pressure shooting through the roof here.
But we're going to talk about the depths of corruption
and how I mean, I really do understand Trump's exhaustion.
I brought up Congress. We'll come back to them in
a moment. Chris Wright, he went on Fox News and
talked about the Biden administration. Maybe you think I'm being

(29:24):
over the top when I say the United States government
is the largest criminal organization on the planet. Listen to
what the Biden administration did.

Speaker 3 (29:32):
A little over.

Speaker 4 (29:33):
Forty billion dollars was supplied in support through the Loan
Program Office in it's fifteen years of existence. A little
over forty billion.

Speaker 1 (29:41):
And okaya, pause, pause, loan office. I just want to
make sure you're clear on the numbers, because he moves
pretty fast. Forty billion over fifteen years. This is a
government loan office. Right, forty billion was given out over
fifteen years. Now, listen to what the Biden administration did
after he lost the election.

Speaker 4 (30:02):
Then almost one hundred billion in the seventy six days
after they lost the election and before President Trump's inauguration. Look,
if those were great ideas that were benefit to the America,
why didn't they do it in the two and a
half years after the Inflation Reduction Act was passed? What
did they wait till they lost the election? They changed
terms and loan covenants. They basically tried to set bombs

(30:24):
to make it hard for us to unwind the mess
they'd created. That's just not a responsible way to treat
American taxpayer money and to move our energy system forward. So, yes,
we've stepped into.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
Just take this into account. And I know communists hate
listen to the show, and I know that asking you
to come over to my side it's futile. I'm not
trying to do that, but I really want you to
consider this. The Biden administration, they lost an election to

(30:58):
Donald Trump and then proceeded to funnel one point three
billion dollars per day to their various friends and NGOs
until Trump officially got sworn in. A hundred billion dollars

(31:19):
in taxpayer money funneled as fast as humanly possible to
left wing groups before Trump could get sworn in. That
is so criminal in evil, it's stackering. Now when you
listen again, does the exhaustion and frustration maybe make more sense.

Speaker 5 (31:43):
We have somebody else that will be great. I just
want to say it is unbelievable.

Speaker 6 (31:48):
And hopefully we can bring him into whether it's DOJ
or whatever, in some capacity, because really outsind it was.
To me, it was disappointing.

Speaker 5 (31:57):
I'll be honest, I have to be straight.

Speaker 6 (31:59):
I was just a pointed a lot of people and disappointed.

Speaker 1 (32:02):
He sounds tired. Chip Roy came on my show, and
I'm right, and he was talking about Congress. You see,
Joe Biden did something else they passed. I just still
can't believe they called it the Inflation Reduction Act. They
just took a gigantic, green new deal bill. They just

(32:24):
took a trillion dollar bill that did nothing about inflation
and called it the Inflation Reduction Act. Just the most shameless, evil,
freaking liars in history. Anyway. It's a horrible, evil bill
that destroyed so much and continues to do so. But
we have a GOP House, so we have a GOP
Senate and we have a GOP president. Why haven't they

(32:47):
repealed it? I asked Chip Roy that question. So the
Republicans saying they won't repeal the IRA. They're just Republicans
getting fat federal checks for their district.

Speaker 7 (32:56):
Right, That's exactly right. And so to be clear, the
CBO said that we could save about seven hundred and
fifty billion dollars. Right now, I'm being told that they're
going to find four hundred billion in savings. You know
what that really means is three hundred and fifty billion
or a bunch of the Hey, I need to bring
home the checks to my corn states or let me
be bear. There are Texans. Oh, we have oil and

(33:16):
gas companies that wanted their free money too.

Speaker 1 (33:19):
I don't exhausting, isn't it? Democrats crammed through an evil
trillion dollar handout to their friends, and we can't get
rid of it because some Republicans want the handouts to
It's exhausting. I sympathize with people, I genuinely do. I

(33:41):
sympathize with people who take breaks from politics. I don't
sympathize when you walk away, because we can't do that.
We can't stop bailing water. But people would just say, Jesse,
I'm done for a week. Jesse, I'm done for a month.
This kind of stuff can wear you out. This level
of criminality, and then when you look at the losers
on our side who are supposed to be fighting for us,

(34:06):
like the Democrats. Did you see the Democrats. I'm sure
you saw the video of the Democrats assaulting federal agents
at the ICE facility. They didn't just show up in chant.
They're elbowing. I'm pushing them. If you or I showed
up at a federal facility and we so much as
laid a finger, just touched a federal agent, that would
be a felony if we elbowed one. Well, I hope

(34:32):
you like talking to your wife and kids through the
reprison class, because you're going to for a very long time.
Democrats did it out in the open on camera. This
was Republican Michael mccaully. I'm just curious.

Speaker 2 (34:44):
Should ICE be arresting or even threatening to arrest members
of Congress.

Speaker 8 (34:50):
I mean, that's obviously a very drastic move. I would
only do that if they were complicit with a crime.
I don't know all the facts behind this, if they were.

Speaker 1 (34:58):
Just it's a drastic move, Isn't it so revealing how
the two sides see themselves. Democrat politicians, they see themselves
as the vanguard of the revolution. They are so committed
to being that vanguard, they will mob up at an

(35:18):
ICE facility and on camera, they will assault federal officers
trying to get illegals released. When Republicans are asked, should
those criminals because that's a criminal act, Should those criminals
be arrested, we get merely mouthed crap like this. I'm
just curious.

Speaker 2 (35:38):
Should ICE be arresting or even threatening to arrest members
of Congress.

Speaker 8 (35:44):
I mean, that's obviously a very drastic move. I would
only do that if they were complicit with a crime.

Speaker 1 (35:50):
I don't know the a drastic move. Of course, the
time is finally here to throw criminals in prison, and
all we get from why. I mean, I don't want
to be drafted. Let's not take things too far. That's drastic.
I don't want to. That's frustrates me to no end.
It frustrates me. There are people who still don't own

(36:10):
an IQ Sense. How many times do I have to
tell you about the IQ Sense? That frustrates me too.
I keep telling you that it's the greatest, the greatest
thing I've ever bought. I have requests for brisket. I
don't even know what I'm doing I'm a complete rookie,
and people in my neighborhood who know what they're doing

(36:30):
ask me for leftovers. Chris, how is a brisket? I
made a Yeah, you know why because I buy the brisket,
I put the seasoning on it, I put the IQ
Sense in it, and I throw it on the smoker
and walk away. I don't have to think about it again.
In fact, I don't think about it again. My phone

(36:52):
tells me when it's done. You leave the thermometer in
the meat. You want one, you have fifteen percent of
You have to go to chefiq dot com and get
yourself an IQ Sense. They sell ones, twos, threes, I
think they even sell fours. I use the twos, but
get whatever you want. Chefiq dot com promo code Jesse

(37:15):
gets you that fifteen percent off, so make sure you
take advantage. We'll talk a little bit more swamp drainage,
but it's too heavy because I don't want to spend
too much time on it. We have to talk about
Nazi files in Argentina and gambling on chess. Next,
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Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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