Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of The Jesse Kelly Show on
a wonderful Wednesday. The India Pakistan thing, I know you
have questions about it. I have questions about it. It's
a very confusing part of the world. B K. You know, Bka.
(00:31):
BKA is going to join us about thirty minutes from now.
He knows all kinds of stuff about that. We're gonna
ask BKA give us a little background. What's going on?
Why are these people beating each other up? And things
like that. Okay, before we get to the emails and
what Trump said about Colorado and so much more, let's
(00:52):
talk about the Pam Bondi cash patail thing. The thing
being the press conference from today. Uh Pam Bondi came out.
Speaker 2 (01:02):
She said this, Today, we are proud to announce the
results of the FBI's Operation Restore Justice initiative. This historic,
unprecedented nationwide operation led to the arrest of two hundred
and five child sex predators. Unbelievable in just five days.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
Okay, Cash Mattel said this our children.
Speaker 3 (01:29):
If you harm our children, you will be given no sanctuary.
There is no place we will not come to hunt
you down. There is no place we will not look
for you, and there is no cage we will not
put you in should you do harm to our children.
The prioritization of this administration in general, BONDI, has made
it abundantly clear to child predators you will be hunted
(01:51):
down and you will be prosecuted.
Speaker 1 (01:53):
Okay, well, don't look for me to complain about a
bunch of scumbags who hurt kids being taken off the streets.
That's a good thing. It's a good thing. But we've
kind of had this talk before, so let's have it again.
I am wary right now, wary watching, and I'm wary,
(02:17):
and this is what I'm wary of being played, being played.
I got a text message today from a special agent
the FBI. He saw the same press conference. You want
to know what he said verbatim. I'm going to read
it right off my phone. FYI. The FBI bragging about
(02:40):
arresting child predators is a rebrand. They do this every year.
They just change the name of the program to play
the conservative media. Used to be called Operation Cross Country.
It was done for twenty plus years now. That's from
an FBI special agent. I am not here to complain
(03:03):
about arresting a bunch of child abusing freaks. Throw them
in the Pacific Ocean for all I care. I don't care, right,
I'm not complaining about that. I'm glad those people are arrested.
I'm glad they're off the streets. I'm not here to
complain about the Attorney General or the FBI director giving
a press conference. I am, however, wary of being played,
(03:31):
Meaning give us morsels, little morsels of things, you know,
we like. Who on the right is going to complain
about this? Everyone's thrilled about that. Only the left is
worried about taking petos off the street. The right loves
that kind of thing. But are they doing this to
distract from things like this? This was James Comer, he
(03:52):
was on with Benny Johnson.
Speaker 4 (03:53):
I hope James has the Epstein files, because I don't
think the Department Justice has them, or at least the
Attorney General does not have them, or she would have
turned them over. The President ordered them release, the Attorney
General ordered them released. We all know they have not
been released. And one of my biggest fears that I had,
and I expressed this with was cash, Fatail and a
(04:16):
lot of people Stephen Miller and a lot of people
going into the to the new administration. I'm like, you know,
I hope they're not shredding document.
Speaker 5 (04:26):
Tright.
Speaker 4 (04:26):
Now, this was a few weeks before the transition. I said,
I hope they're not shredding document. But you all need
to go on that first day and try to get
all this stuff released, because you know, my fear is
from what I've dealt with in investigations and in communication
with this deep state apparatus, is they're probably in their
(04:47):
shredded documents as we speak.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
Let's think about that. Remember that long talk we had
last night, And in case you missed it, I'm not
even trying to get you just to download the podcast,
but iheart's Spotify iTunes Hour one from last night. I
really laid out a lot of the FBI's recent history.
So let's think about what James Comer just said. James
(05:11):
Comer is somebody who would know he's worried that they
destroyed the evidence. Well, who's they the FBI. Let's recap
another story that I didn't talk about an hour one
last night. Jeffrey Epstein, as you know, billionaire abused women
(05:33):
with other powerful people around the globe, including America. He
got busted in New York. There's a picture. You could
go look it up. The picture is available online. I'm
not making it up. There's a picture. When they busted
his home, they opened up a drawer. I believe it
was in his office, but they opened up a drawer.
In In this drawer where a bunch of DVDs that
(05:57):
he had made. These of well, things you probably wouldn't
want to see. He loved to gather blackmail material. We
know this about Jeffrey Epstein. He loved to gather blackmail
material on the people who I hate to even say
(06:17):
it like this, I don't even know. The whole thing
makes me want to vomit used his services, if you will,
If you used his services, he would record you, so
we had blackmail material over you. FBI gets a warrant,
they raid his home in New York. They find an
entire drawer. You should see this drawer. They're stacked in there.
(06:39):
They leave the drawer and all that stuff alone. The
FBI did. Eventually they were told, hey, go back and
get that stuff. They went back to go get it,
and of course it was all gone, they'd cleaned out
the evidence. The FBI, the same FBI that covered for
Larry Nasser while he was abusing gymnasts. When he says,
(07:00):
when James Comer says they maybe destroyed the files, he's
discussing the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Now, Jeffrey Epstein had
damaging information exposing very powerful people. If the Federal Bureau
of Investigation had possession of that information and destroyed that
(07:26):
information so it can't come to light to protect powerful people,
whoever those powerful people may be. That's a big deal,
and it makes me wary of things like this. Our children.
Speaker 3 (07:42):
If you harm our children, you will be given no sanctuary.
There is no place we will not come to hunt
you down. There is no place we will not look
for you, and there is no cage we will not
put you in should you do harm to our children.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Now, if the mass arrest of two hundred pedophile freaks
comes in conjunction with the mass arrest of two hundred
FBI agents, sign me up, all on board. But if
the mass arrest of two hundred child pedophile freaks comes
(08:19):
in order to placate me so I stop demanding government arrests,
then that is not okay, and I am worried that
that's what it is. And I don't know yet. I
won't know yet. And don't send me your emails complaining. Ah, Jesse,
you're too hard on. Don't do that. If you're looking
(08:40):
for pom poms, you've come to the wrong place. I
have demands, not cheers. I have demands as an American citizen.
I hope you have demands. As an American citizen. You
have every right to make demands of this administration of
the people you voted for. You voted for them because
you're a free American who wants things done. Stay demanding,
(09:04):
not cheering. Demanding. We'll see, we will see. Do some
more emails. Hey, Jesse, what do you think about vance
advanced Trump ticket in twenty twenty eight? A winner or
a loser? Okay, Well, obviously we'd love to talk about
this stuff because we're we were into politics and we're
thinking about the future. What does twenty eight bring? What
(09:26):
about Vance Trump? Well, here's my thinking. I'm okay with that.
If it's Don Junior. I like Don Junior. I think
he's really sharp. I have never in my times talking
to him, I've never gotten the indication. I've never gotten
the feeling that he wants to run for office though,
So don't think that I'm telling you who's running. I don't.
(09:49):
But as far as Trump Senior goes, he's been the
central figure in the GOP for ten years now. Remember
is the decade. It's been a long time. At some
point we are going to have to chart a path
forward without him, no matter what. I'm not saying that
has to be in twenty twenty eight. But that makes
(10:11):
me kind of hesitant to do the Vance Trump think
which Vance Trump wouldn't happen anyway. Trump's not playing second
fiddle to anybody. JD. Vance or anyone else. Every reporter
would just talk to Trump all the time. It wouldn't work.
If we try to get QT like that, it wouldn't work.
And Trump has said he's not interested in that. He
just came out yesday and said, now I'm not doing anything.
All right, let's talk about Trump versus Colorado and the
(10:35):
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Say Jesse Kelly, We'll be back. Missed, dost catch up
Jesse kellyshow dot com. It is that Jesse Kelly Show.
(12:01):
On a wonderful Wednesday. Member BK with World News with
BK is coming up ten minutes from now. Talk about
this India Pakistan thing. Probably it's something we should keep
our eye on being it's how they're both nuclear powers.
Generally that's not ideal. So let's just discuss this really quickly.
Trump did something that raised some eyebrows. He sent the
(12:27):
Department of Justice essentially after Colorado. This is what he said, Tina.
It's talking about. Tina Peters is an innocent political prisoner
being horribly and unjustly punished in the form of cruel
and unusual punishment. This is a communist persecution by the
radical left Democrats to cover up their election crimes and
(12:48):
misdeeds in twenty twenty. After all that, anyway, he goes
on and on and on, and he is, uh, Colorado
must end this unjust incarceration. I am hereby directing the
Department of Justice to take all necessary action to help
release this hostage being held in Colorado prison by Democrats
(13:08):
for political reasons. Free Tina Peters. Now, Tina Peters is
a gold star mom. Her son died, Navy seal died.
She's yeah, wonderful, look a hero, right, a hero who
gave up her son for this country. Colorado Democrats, of course,
locked her in a cage. Trump is saying, let her
(13:32):
out now or I'm sending the Department of Justice after you,
and I just want to talk about the reaction to this.
I've seen from a lot of people on all sides
that this is too far, and they're thinking about, well,
this opens up a whole new can of worms. Think
about the American president sending the DOJ after an individual
(13:56):
state because the state arrested someone the president liked. My
point in this talk is simply this, times have changed,
not for the better. I'm not saying they have, but
times have changed, and this is where we're going now
(14:16):
as a country. The election in November didn't change that.
The next election of the midterms, or the election after that,
or the election after that, nothing will probably change where
we're going right now. And where we are going is separate.
We are dividing, We are balkanizing already as a country.
(14:40):
The left and right share nothing in common anymore. Is
there are a bunch of savage demons trying to burn
it down. You can't share a country with places like that.
And so on a thirty thousand foot view, the country
will continue in various ways to balkanize and separate and
(15:02):
draw lines that we're going to fight over right now
it's Donald Trump saying this to Colorado. This is why
I have begged red state attorney generals. Yes, I know
it's attorney's general. I don't say that stupid word. I've
begged attorney generals. I have begged Republican governors in red
(15:25):
states to begin forming coalitions with each other. Coalitions design
not to defy necessarily the federal government. That's not what
I'm saying, but to defend their citizens against the federal government,
because our future is one of division. There's no way
(15:47):
around it. If you're mortified by what the communists did
last time, they'll do worse next time. Communists don't put
on the brakes. They don't reverse, they don't express regret,
they don't look at all the horrible laws they broke
and norms they blew up, or any of that stuff
and have a moment of sympathy. I've asked before, I'll
(16:07):
ask you again right now. Donald Trump, as you know,
was shot in the head. He was prosecuted in multiple jurisdictions.
All the prosecutions were ridiculous. As everyone knows. They raided
his home. The Democrat in your life, the liberal and
Peggy in your life. Have you heard them utter a
(16:30):
single word of regret about how they used the Justice
Department when they had control of it, over how Letitia
James used New York's Justice Department. Have you heard a
single Democrat in this country say, yeah, that was probably
wrong to use the legal system to go after our
(16:52):
political opponent. You haven't the I've asked this question before.
It's universal. Nobody's ever heard of regret. The only regret
I've heard out of one person he said, well, I
think it probably hurt us in the election. That was
their only regret. Their only regret was, ah, maybe cost
us some votes. They believe in silencing people, censoring people,
(17:15):
arresting their political opponents, hurting their political opponents. Once you
get to that place as a country where they have
dehumanized you and they want to hurt you, the future
is only division. Without them reforming, the future is only division.
As I've talked about so many times before, reformation of
(17:38):
the Democrat Party is necessary. We have to have it
if we're going to save the United States of America.
We can hold off and hold out for a while
until then, but we have got to have a different
Democrat Party than we have now. All Right, we're leaving
the shores of America and we're going over to India
in Pakistan, to the land known as Kashmir. Yes, I
(18:02):
know that's a wonderful led Zeppelin song, but that's not
what we're talking about. For our purposes, We're gonna get
with BK and figure out why these people are shooting
each other and I'm assuming throwing poop at each other.
Speaker 5 (18:12):
Next feeling a little stocky.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
Follow like and subscribe on social at Jesse Kelly Show.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. We're about to find
out about what's going on in India and Pakistan. It
all seems really strange. But first, as BK host of
the World News with BK podcast, former Air Force PJ
(18:36):
joins us BK. Right before I joined the Marine Corps,
I wanted to have a big blowout concert with my boys,
and so we road tripped it to Denver and went
to the Summer Sanitarium Tour where Powerman five thousand in
System of a Down opened for Kid Rock Corn in Metallica.
Now that was a concert.
Speaker 5 (18:56):
You know. You tell me this, and yet now I
suspect that you dislike any good music and you probably
listen to like old man country music while slamming me,
I happen to like Powerman five thousand and syndrome of
a down and I'm not gonna apologize for it.
Speaker 1 (19:15):
Look, just because I had a good time at the
concert doesn't mean the music itself is great. Well, we
don't have to go into the details. Let's do go
into Let's go into the details of that far off
land known as India and the land adjacent to it
known as Pakistan. All we get are the headline speak.
(19:35):
This area is very confusing to most people. Not insulting people,
It's just there's all kinds of history here, all kinds
of ugliness here. I give you the radio show. What's
going on? And why should I care?
Speaker 5 (19:47):
Well? Jesse as somebody as probably the podcasting world's foremost
expert in Kashmir. I probably talked about it more than
anybody else in the United States. It's been a long
time coming. You know, this really started. It started to
kick off with the great partition, of course, of India
and Pakistan, which happened right after World War Two. Because
one of the main reasons was the Brits were broke, right,
(20:10):
they didn't have the manpower they have the money to
keep administering this colonial state of India. So they had
some civil servants sit in an office drop the mat.
They divided the country up into two masts of slaughter
ensued with bolsa because now you have a bunch of
Muslims living in now India and you have a bunch
of Indians living in now Pakistan. They got to get
back home. They're killing each other the whole way. Like,
(20:32):
up to millions of people died during that. So meantime,
the very northern tip is up where Kashmir is now.
This place had always been kind of semi autonomous. This
is the land of the Maharajas. They were landed. Think
of them as like mayors with land, right, but they
were like the local rulers. And when the Brits were like, okay,
we didn't have time to deal with you. There's five
(20:54):
hundred plus maharajas. You guys decide which country you want
to be a part of, we're out of here. So
one guy, the guy who pretty much ran Kashmir, he
was a Hindu man himself, but his land was like
seventy five percent Muslim. He decided, being a Hindu, he
would side with India, right, that is what created They
(21:15):
almost immediately went to war because all of a sudden,
now once he decides I'm going to be with India,
all kinds of Pakistani militans start coming into the country
to try to fight for Pakistan. He's like, well, I'm
gonna go with India in exchange for security guarantees. War
ensues and they had ceasefire actors ceasefire. Then we get
to the eighties and now in addition to the Pakistanis
(21:36):
and the Indians fighting over Kashmir, now you have the
Kashmir insurgency. The natives who are living there, who are
deciding like, wait a minute, we don't want to be
with either one of you. We have our own language,
we have our own culture, we want to be our
own country. And that kicked off a whole separate insurgency.
That's why Kashmir, they say, is one of the most
militarized areas in the entire world. Jesse and then it's
(22:00):
been sporadic. They kind of crushed that independence rebellion so far,
it sparks up again every once in a while, but
it never really went away. So now this latest kickoff
was the story I covered in depth several weeks ago,
and this was the murder of the tourists in Kashmir,
and they were almost primarily of Hindu descent, and they
(22:21):
were all pretty much unarmed. And India looked at this
and knowing the sentiments of its people, decided that this
cannot go unpunished. They totally assumed the Pakistani funded militants
were behind this newest tack yet again. So the safe face,
they decided they had to zoo something and they launched
the strikes Jesse. So that's a very very brief history
(22:44):
of what happened in Kashmir and why the way it
is today.
Speaker 1 (22:48):
Okay, well, I have about eight million follow up questions.
I'll just settle up on one for right now. I
get what you just said about this area of Kashmir.
But when I get these casualty numbers in my head
over one area, it normally tells me that area provides
some sort of value that each country wants. I've never
(23:08):
been to Kashmir. I can't I don't even know what
it looks like. What's the value in this? Why are
people killing each other for it?
Speaker 5 (23:15):
So part of it is all about money, you know,
Kashmir is up near Nepal. It's considered just a gorgeous,
geographically beautiful area and it receives heavy, heavy tourism every year.
I've never been there myself either, but it's considered, like
they call it, like the Switzerland of Asia, to kind
of give you a kind of mental image, you know,
(23:36):
breast taking views, the mountains, the valleys, and in that
valley of Kashmir, the main valley, that's where real the
true Kashmir insurgency began, because those are the people who
speak that separate language of Kashmir. They don't speak Indian
or Pakistani, and that's pretty much why they've been fighting
over it, and then a lot of it. And I
(23:56):
think the second reason really is just this long, decades
long campaign of fighting each other and nobody's willing to
back down. And you know, Jesse, we don't really understand
this in America because we're much more of a melting
pot than any other country. But ethnic tensions and tribalism
(24:17):
are responsible for ninety percent of the conflicts around the globe,
and in my opinion, this one's no different. I think
that's what is. I think neither one's willing to back down.
They're like, hey, and it's very very tribal up there,
and that's just the way it is.
Speaker 1 (24:31):
BK. Again, we're speaking with BK, host of the World
News at BK. Not that people are experts on India,
which is a very large, very complicated place anyway, But
Pakistan talk to me about their government, BK. Who runs it?
Are they our friends? Are they our enemies? Talk to
me about Pakistan?
Speaker 5 (24:49):
Well, Pakistan. It's kind of we the United States have
kind of soured on Pakistan in recent decades because they
really weren't playing ball. After the whole globe war and
terror kicked off. We suspected Pakistan, of course, of hiding
militant leaders who would attack our troops in afghan across
the border. Yeah, I know, shocking, right, of course, famously
(25:11):
they were hiding Osama bin Laden, right, but they didn't
know anything about that. The government, right, even with their
vast secret police apparatus, they didn't know anything about that.
So we've kind of soured on Pakistan. And then you know,
Trump and India was like the up and coming, right.
India is now the number one most populous country in
the world, and we considered them the more friendly opened
(25:33):
democracy government of Trump and Rendra Modi, especially in Trump's
first term, we're really hitting it off. We have a
enormous Indian American population and many immigrants from India, so
I think that all comes to times and at the
end of the day, I think I don't think. I
know that a lot of our national security apparatus believes
(25:55):
Pakistan is much more sympathetic to terrorists and terrorism than Indias.
Speaker 1 (26:02):
I just can't get my head around the curry bka.
It's the smell is so bad and the flavor. I
was just in a restaurant and they gave us these
chips and I took one bite. I almost had to
spit it out, and I asked, what's on these chips?
And they put curry on the chips. I just I
don't understand the curry thing.
Speaker 5 (26:21):
Yeah, and I don't really get it either. Say you
know curry is the UK's national dish. Confuse me because
I was like, I was like, wait a minute, that's
not even like British. I mean, we've all had British
big air quotes here Jesse food before, so it's not
surprising that they would adopt a spicy, flavorful dish. And
somebody as else told me, well, it didn't really exist
(26:42):
like this until the BRIT's got it. But yeah, I'm
not a fan. I get it sometimes our local farmers
market as a little Indian placer. I get it every
once in a great while, the chicken tandory, but I'm
not a huge fan of it. And I certainly have
no desire to go to India and eat their street
food because I like my stomach and not exploding into
million pieces.
Speaker 1 (27:01):
Yeah, I'd rather not melt my insides unless it's American
food like Taco Bell.
Speaker 5 (27:06):
B K.
Speaker 1 (27:07):
Appreciate you as always go download World News with BK
if you want, if you want a lot more knowledge
about foreign affairs. I just thought I thought everybody, myself
included could use a little India Pakistan primate if you
will primary, Thank you, brother, I appreciate it all right.
You know what you could use an IQ sense I uh,
(27:34):
I'm about to tell you about something horrific I went
through last night. It was a concert for the kids
and an art display. Yeah, I know it was. It
was a lot, but one good thing did happen there.
As I was leaving, I got stopped by one of
the security guards, and he said, hey, are you the
one who gave us these IQ senses? Because chef iq
(27:57):
they sent me a bunch of these wireless cooking thermometers
the Q Census and I handed them out at the school. Yeah,
everybody thinks I walk on water there. Now They're like,
this is the best thing I've ever had in my life.
I'm telling you, the IQ sense is going to change
your life. A wireless cooking thermometer that you leave in
the meat, not opening, closing, checking, checking, checking. You just
put it in the meat, put it in the oven,
(28:19):
put it on the grill, put it on the smoker,
and you walk away. Your phone tells you when it's done.
You just set the desired temperature and baby beep done.
It's perfect every time. You can't miss. An idiot like
me can do it. You want one fifteen percent off
at checkout at chefiq dot com code Jesse chefiq dot
(28:44):
com code Jesse. We'll be back. You're listening to the ouricle.
Speaker 3 (28:49):
You love this one.
Speaker 1 (28:50):
It's a scream baby, the Jesse Kelly Show. It is
the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Wednesday. Okay,
I have to tell you about something horrific that happened
to me last night, and then we'll get back into
the news, do some emails and things like that. So
(29:10):
my kids, I have kids, two sons. One of them
is taking high school art. You have to take some
kind of fine arts, so he chose art. The other
one is in the middle school band, plays the what's
the big one, Corey, what's the big one? That is it?
The trumpet? No, that's a small the tuba, that's right,
(29:32):
the tube. That's what he plays. He sits back there
with the tube and he plays the tuba. I'm sure
that's probably because he's one of the worst ones or
something like that, but either way, he does that. Last night,
after the show, it was school concert slash art display night,
(29:53):
meaning I had to race home, throw decent clothes on,
and go to the school. First. It was an art exhibit,
which I care about my son's art, which I'm a parent.
It all looks good to me because he's my son.
But I don't care about any other kids art, and
that doesn't do anything for me at all. That's one
two concert starts. My youngest son's in the eighth grade.
(30:18):
We have to sit there while the fifth graders play,
and then the sixth graders play, and on and on
and on. Finally the eighth graders are playing, and he's
on about the last song and we're gonna leave before
the high school starts playing. Bob looks up at me
with those puppy dog guys. She haes these amazing blue eyes,
(30:40):
and she says, can we please stay for the high
school thing too? And I immediately look at her and
I say no, I'm not staying, absolutely not, and she
looks as she says please, and I broke down and
I agreed.
Speaker 5 (30:59):
It was.
Speaker 1 (31:01):
Brutal, beyond brutal. I just had to get that off
my chest. I feel better about it. Yeah, that's a
good point, Corey. I'll make that her Mother's Day gift.
I can't wait to tell her that. I can't wait
to let her know this Sunday is Sunday, right, Sunday,
Sunday's Mother's Day. Remind her to you, Sunday's Mother's Day.
I'm gonna let off know. I'll put it in a card.
(31:22):
I'll put a note in there. Your Mother's Day gift
is the fact that I stayed late so you could
listen to the high school band play. That was the
Mother's Day thing. Jesse. The stupidity of giving illegals one
thousand dollars to leave is moronic. By Christy Nome. It's
an incentive for more people to come into the United
States illegally. She doesn't seem too bright. Okay, so this
(31:44):
guy's angry. For those who missed it, we didn't really
talk about it much yesterday. Trump his administration has a
new thing. Their new thing is they're going to pay
if you're here illegally. They'll give you one thousand dollars
to leave, and they're trying to do the carrot and
stick thing. If you leave voluntarily, we'll give you a
thousand dollars and you can come back. If you don't,
(32:06):
then we're going to find you. Though you in prison
and you're never allowed back.
Speaker 5 (32:09):
Ah.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
Look, I understand what they're doing. What they're doing is
trying to figure out how to make mass deportation happen
because America's system won't allow it to happen, So they're
trying to come up with new and inventive ways to
get these people out. It's hard for me to kill
them for that because I understand what they're doing. I
understand why they're doing it. It's just look, it's all
(32:33):
a big old mess. Oh, I forgot about this one.
Listen to this one. Subject to this one is your
show saved me. Hey, Jess, I'm not sure how to
say this without sounding sappy, so I just come right
out with it. You and your crew has helped me
through one of the darkest periods in my life. I've
been a daily listener for three years now. Over that period,
(32:54):
I've encountered one tragic event after another. I've lost friends, family, pets,
my job, and my wife. At the end of last year,
I was so down every day I had to think
of reasons to continue. I knew I was in trouble
when thoughts of suicide made me feel upbeat and hopeful,
(33:16):
as if there was some way out of the pain.
I wouldn't actually go through with it. My folks are
still alive, and there's no way I would put them
through that kind of grief. I turned to Jesus and
prayed like never before, and I continued listening to your show.
I'll pause for a moment here and tell you that
I am blind. I essentially live in a world of sound.
(33:39):
Every time you come on the air. I can hear
the smile on your face. It's strange. Even though we've
never met, I've come to think of you as a friend,
a big brother, and I trust you more than folks
I have interacted with. I'll wrap this up by saying
that I'm so grateful for you, Chris and Corey, for
hanging out with me for three hours a day. Your example,
(34:01):
your heart is so critical at this moment in history,
not just for me, but for the world. I hope
to meet you all someday. The seventy five dollars tequila
is on me. I love you guys. Well, we're a family. Brother. Look,
I'm not differ than you. I'm on the radio right,
but we're all in this together. We're all in this
(34:23):
struggle together, this political struggle, cultural struggle, and the daily
struggles of life that come. And it sounds like you
certainly have gone through plenty of those, and I'm glad
you found your way through. Keep just keep going what
I've always told you, No matter what, whether it's a
divorce or job loss, or or an illness of some kind.
(34:45):
We cancer, you know something, everyone everyone goes through horrible things.
Everybody does. Just keep going. Just keep going. Don't ever
consider ending it. Don't ever consider that you that you're worthless,
that nobody cares. The struggle that's the victory. If you're
struggling with addiction. I tell you that all the time.
(35:06):
If you're struggling, that means you're winning. Doesn't feel like it, Jesse,
but I'm struggling. That means you're going to find a
way out eventually. Maybe not today, maybe not tomorrow. I
don't know when takes time. You'll find a way out.
Just keep going, all right, all right, let's do before
we get back to the emails. I'm going to do
(35:28):
a couple things first. Scott Bessent had to give some
testimony today and he said something about the payments and
why everybody's failing audits. That pairs pretty nicely with this
story about a foreign aid official who was stealing. There's
not another way to put it, stealing. Let's combine all
(35:49):
these things and have a little talk about the looting
of the treasury before we do that. You know what
your mom wants for Mother's Day? She wants her dog
to live longer. That's what she wants. She wants another
year or two with her dog, Now, maybe you're thinking
you can't do that for her, but that would be
a mistake because your dog, your dog can live longer
(36:13):
and healthier if your dog gets rough Greens. If you
sprinkle rough Greens on your dog's food, your dog's food
doesn't have anything in it. It's all empty calories. But
rough Greens is vitamins and minerals, It's probiotics, omega oils, antioxidants.
Why do you think you will see a difference in
your dog? And you will quickly. You'll see it in
(36:35):
their energy and their coat. Well don't you feel different
and better and look better when you get real nutrition
free jumpstart trial bags for you and mom? Eight three
three three three, My dog will go to Roughgreens dot
com slash Jesse. All right, all right, so Scott Pissent
(37:00):
not only sat in front of Congress today and verbally
beat up poor Maxine Walters. He also said something about
the payments and the government, and like I just said,
it kind of pairs pretty well with this story of
the foreign aid official. We'll talk about all this next