Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Final hour of the Jesse Kelly Show, our
final hour broadcasting here from the Republican National Convention, and
we have all kinds of ass Doctor Jesse stuff. This hour,
we are going to hit a story out of the
ap that I want to talk about really briefly. We
(00:32):
do have an author, Charlie Spearing, coming on about twenty
minutes from now. He wrote a book on Kamala Harris.
We thought it might be appropriate to get in inside
view of Harris be in his house. She might very
well be the Democrat nominee soon. Sorry I can't. I'm sorry.
I'm too excited about it. I think it's hilarious and
it's awesome. Before I get to the ask doctor Jesse
(00:53):
stuff and Charlie and everything else, I do want to
talk about this, just really briefly. Kindness. Kindness is not
as cut and dry and easy to see as a
lot of people pretend it is. People pretend that allowing
someone to walk all over you is kind or nice,
(01:16):
or speaking really softly or sweetly, they think it's kind
or nice. I've used this example before, I'll use it again.
It's great ones. It's going to apply to immigration in
this story that came out of the AP today. If
I just blow up, I get three hundred and fifty
pounds hugely fat. I just let myself go in every
(01:37):
possible way, and I go visit my folks. My mom
my dad love them both. And I walk into that
house and my mom comes up to me and says, oh,
you are so handsome. You look better than you've ever looked. Gosh,
you just look great. And my dad walks up to
me after that and says, you are a disgusting tubagoo.
(02:00):
You're gonna die of a heart attack. Get your fat
butt to the gym, and put the cheeseburgers down. Let
me ask you who was more kind to me in
that moment? Who was nicer? The normal view we have
as Americans is, well, Mom was the nice one. I say,
(02:22):
Dad was the nice one. Dad was the one trying
to save my life. There's this way of thinking when
it comes to immigration. And don't you dare think this
disease only exists with the communists. We know what the
communists want. They went the border open. Then when the
country full of rapists and criminals to flood the healthcare system,
(02:44):
flood the education system, and bring the place to his knees.
We know all that. Set that aside. We're not talking
about them. I'm talking about the various factions on the right.
For as long as I've been alive, many many, many,
many many people on the right have done what do
they call themselves immigration squishes. Well, I mean, we should
(03:04):
have a more secure border, but that doesn't mean we
have to be harsh about it. Well we should be.
We should care for these people. I mean, they got
here from Guatemala. It's terrible down here. The papoosas went bad,
and now they're here. And that's how people talk. And
people think they're nice when they say that. You every
(03:27):
single time you hear someone say it, and if you've
said it yourself, you're guilty of this. You think it's
the nice thing, don't you. It's the kind thing. Well, yes,
we live here, and I kind of want them to
be able to come here too. I mean, I don't
want to ruin the country. I'm not a dirty communist,
but I want them to I want them to be here.
I want everyone to experience the beauty of America. So
(03:48):
we shouldn't be too harsh, right, And then there's someone
like me when I say I want forget fifty foot
I want a two hundred foot high border wall. I
want a mote, I want machine gun nests. I want
every person who shows up at the border to be
turned around at gunpoint if necessary, and sent back exactly
(04:13):
where they came from. Don't even give them a bottle
of water, turn them around and point them south and
say go away. And when I say things like this,
people think I'm mean, I'm harsh, it's over the top.
I'm gonna read you just Hey, here's the headline for you,
and I'm going to do you the courtesy of sparing
most of the details for you, because I know your
(04:33):
kids listen. People listen with their kids, and we love
that this will always be a show you can listen
to with your family. Headline this is from AP housing
provider for unaccompanied migrant children engaged in sexual abuse and harassment.
If you choose to read the story, and I'm not
(04:56):
necessarily recommending that you do so, I really wish I hadn't.
To be honest, you will hear a story of horrors children,
illegal children living a life of hell. My boys, my
boys just got back from their grandparents. They have two
(05:17):
sets of grandparents who love them. They spent their time
shooting prairie dogs and whitewater rafting and fishing. They learned
how to fly fish. This morning, now that they're home,
my wife is making them banana bread and they'll be
tucked into their beds and know that they're loved. And
I'll be home to see them tomorrow, my little buddies.
And that's how children should live. The kids in this
(05:39):
story are eight years old, ten years old, eleven years old,
living in hell. What's happening with the illegals crossing our
southern border is so horrific. What's happening now is the
(06:00):
largest slave trade in the history of the world by
orders of magnitude. You realize that numbers wise, it's not
even close to any other time or place in human history.
We are bringing women and children in mass across this border,
(06:20):
and their lives are hell. The stories I've heard you remember,
I've told you stories on this show about what they
do to the kids and the women, and it's on film,
and it's just it's the most gut wrenching thing in
the world. And I want you to know something. If
you're one of those I'm in immigration squishes, it's your fault.
(06:46):
You're not kind, You're not nice, You're not empathetic, you're
not a good person. You because of your pathetic, pathetic
nice jiv Ta, you are the one paving the road
for the living hell that these children live in. There
(07:09):
is no kind, nice, or empathetic way to allow people
to illegally enter a nation. It's not kind, it's not nice.
It's facilitated by the most despicable people on the planet,
people who are monsters demons in human form. They are
the ones who facilitate and aid any kind of illegal
(07:32):
immigration and mass into a nation. And if you think
that they should be dealt with kindly, any of them,
you are the one who has enabled all of this.
And it sickens me. People think I'm mean. I'm actually
the nice one. I'm Dad telling you your two dagone
fat go to the gym. I'm the one trying to
(07:54):
save your life. I'm the one trying to save these
poor freaking women and children from living a life of
hell and dying early. It saddens me to no end
to know. Like I mentioned, my sons James and Loup.
I love that they have a life where they're surrounded
(08:15):
by loving, loving people, two sets of grandparents who are
still together who love them, and mom and dad together
who love them. That's a rare gem today. And I
tell them how that's the reason they're blessed, nothing else.
That's the reason they're privileged. They're blessed to know that
there are boys and girls the age of my little
(08:35):
buddies who as we speak, you're listening to the sound
of my voice as we're talking, you and me, they
are going through things that you don't even want to imagine.
I can't stand it, and I can't stand this false
sense of kindness and niceness and empathy that we've brought
(08:57):
into this country. It just saddens me, sickens me to
no end. I just want to remind you of that
that a lot of things sound nice, and you sound
like a good person, You sound really, really kind. After all,
you're in front of your Democrat friends, and you don't
want to sound like a barbarian. Right, those best intentions
(09:20):
have already paved the road to hell for more women
and children than you can possibly fathom. And it's freaking awful,
all right, All right before I get to the ask
doctor Jesse questions, we're gonna bring in Charlie Spearing. He
wrote a book on Dome. On Kamala Harris. Remember it's
(09:41):
not outside of the rema possibility that she's the next
president of the United States of America. You realize that
who is this woman, the woman who very well maybe
the Democrat nominee by Monday, or I take that back,
it'll be August, but she might be the nominee soon.
You never know. We'll talk to him. In a moment
before we talk to him, I'm gonna talk to you
about speaking of real kindness, empathy. You remember the story
(10:07):
of Christopher Chambers, right, Christopher Chambers was that Navy seal.
He was one of those Navy seals who went into
the water eight foot swells over there around Yemen and
lost his life. And he had a wife and a daughter,
a young daughter, and they got a knock at the
(10:29):
door that you can't even imagine. And in fact, we
have friends of the show who know both families of
both seals who passed and just their heartbroken. They're devastated
beyond belief. And you know who didn't forget about them?
It was Tunnel to Towers. Tunnel to Towers. They can't
bring Christopher Chambers back, but they did provide his wife
and young daughter with a mortgage free home. Is that
(10:51):
a dad is at a husband? No? But my goodness,
talk about easing a burden at a time of devastation.
That's where you're eleven dollars a month goes. You know that,
donate eleven bucks a month. Just sign up to give
it automatically. You won't even know what's gone. T the
number two T dot org T two t dot org.
(11:12):
We'll be back. Feeling a little stocky, follow like and
subscribe on social at Jesse Kelly's show. It is the
Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday, and everyone has seen
the news. We've been talking about it for over two
hours now, on top of everything else about Joe Biden. Potentially,
(11:33):
I want to make sure I put that out there.
Potentially dropping out and then the right for air. We
don't know whether this will work out this way or not.
But the person who's going to inherit the donor money
is dome Kamala Harris, and people don't even though we
don't like her, everyone knows they don't like her. They
don't truly understand the depth of how incapable this woman
(11:55):
is of anything at all. And Charlie Spearing joins me, Now,
he wrote a book. This is a book. It's blurred
by Tucker, Carls and all these guys. It's called Amateur
Hour and it's about Dome. Charlie, you wrote it. I
didn't how in the world did this woman get to
the freaking White House, being as how she knows nothing.
Speaker 2 (12:13):
Well, first, before I start talking, I gotta put in
my sunglasses.
Speaker 1 (12:15):
Obviously, that's the.
Speaker 3 (12:19):
Way to do it.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
Do if you're gonna be up out all hours of
the night and all hours of the morning, then let's
put on some shades. Gone right, These lights are pretty
bright too, Jess. Not for me everyone else, But that's right,
that's right. Well, yes, I when I sat down to
write this book last year, I was thinking, Hey, how
is it that we have a woman who very there's
(12:42):
a very realistic chance of her becoming the forty seventh
president of the United States, And yet most people don't
know that much about her other than.
Speaker 3 (12:49):
You know, the first three first three years.
Speaker 2 (12:52):
And her word salads and sort of her laugh and
her awkwardness. And the first three years of the vice presidency.
And so that's why I sort of sat down and
started researching her background and well, what a lot of
there is for readers to understand about a woman who
could very easily be the forty seventh president of the
United States.
Speaker 1 (13:10):
Okay, so I want you to explain that to me,
because it does it dumbfounds me that she really can't
speak about anything with any any amount of detail or
genuineness at all, even personal things like you couldn't ask
her her favorite meal and get a decent answer, let
alone policy questions. How could she rise to be vice president?
(13:32):
She came up through California. A freaking senator from California
is a big deal, and g of California is a
big big deal.
Speaker 2 (13:39):
What how Yeah, I think a lot of Democrats were surprised.
You know that she definitely has these She definitely when
she does have these casual moments.
Speaker 3 (13:47):
At one point, she starts talking about gumbo.
Speaker 2 (13:50):
There's a great clip out there of her discussing her
love of gumbo. But and you know, laughing at the
same time that she's talking about it, and you really
have a hard time on believing that her favorite food
is gumbo, but she's she definitely gets a ring for it. Look,
it's a product of the of the one party system
in California. Right when you have a one party Democratic
(14:12):
Party running the whole state, you don't necessarily have to
convince the.
Speaker 3 (14:15):
Voters that you deserve to be elected.
Speaker 2 (14:17):
You have to convince the donors and out in California
it's a perfect blend of wealthy donors, wealthy business people,
the celebrities, and then the heiresses and heirs of all
the wealth out there. And then when it comes to
the bottom, it's the Democratic Party. You have to convince
the party officials that you belong on the stage and
that you belong there. And I think that's a big
(14:38):
reason why she moved up. Also, she wouldn't she wouldn't
be anything but a you know, a humble prosecutor prosecutor
in Almita County, California, if it wasn't for her relationship
with Willy Brown. And that's really where the book kicks
off in full force.
Speaker 1 (14:53):
Oh please do tell Willie Brown, Huh how did that
all come about? Yeah?
Speaker 2 (14:58):
It's funny because you know in every online comment section
or on every social media network, and you talk about
Kamala Harris. Immediately that comes up the name Willy Brown,
and a lot of people don't think that's fair. Certainly,
Kamala doesn't like talking about it. But that's how she
kind of moved into high society. Is when she was
a you know, an all Meado County prosecutor, she started
dating Willy Brown. She was twenty nine, he's sixty. He's
(15:21):
running for mayor of San Francisco.
Speaker 3 (15:24):
So he continues this.
Speaker 2 (15:26):
Relationship with her, and people like, you know, Willie Brown
is technically separated from his wife Blanche. They don't live
together anymore, they don't spend a lot of time together.
Speaker 3 (15:39):
And Willy Brown had the reputation of being somewhat of a.
Speaker 2 (15:41):
Playboy, always having girls on his arms as he walked
around the halls of power and all the fancy receptions
and you know, in between the different business and celebrity events,
he always had a girl hanging on his arm. But
as he's running for mayor of San Francisco, he picks
up Kamala Harris and starts having a stable relationship with
an adult woman. The gossip colonists took great notice of this.
(16:02):
You know, the gossip colonists of San Francisco are perfect,
you know, because they just they're automatically start buzzing about
this new girl in Willie Brown's life and whether or
not they're serious. And that's a big part of what
kicked off her career of being a socialite. Right, all
of a sudden, she's being led into all the different
areas of power that Willy Brown moves comfortably in, and
(16:23):
he's basically teaching her how to act in those situations.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
Okay, so explain this to me, Charlie again. We're talking
to Charlie Spearing, who wrote this book Amateur Hour. Highly
recommend it. It's about Dome. Okay, so you say it's
a one party rule state, and obviously you're correct about that.
But there are a bunch of Democrats who want to
be the Senator in California. There are a bunch of
Democrats who want to be ag in California. This woman
sucks on. I really wish i'd put that differently. This
(16:50):
woman is not capable. She's not capable of speaking, well,
she's not capable of relating to people. How does she
leap frog all of them? Is it just the Willie
Brown story?
Speaker 2 (17:00):
Well, the Willie Brown story introduces her to the socialites right,
and everybody really likes how she acts in person. She's charming,
she's young, she smiles, she laughs, you know, people actually
like her laugh at this point. And so a big
part of it is she showed up and took out
a progressive prosecutor, the District Attorney of San Francisco, Terrence
(17:23):
helen En at the time, was a true progressive prosecutor,
and a lot of people did not like what he
was doing because crime was rising, homeless homelessness was rising
way back in the nineties, and so there were drug problems,
and so she launched her first campaign running to the
right of this sort of leftist prosecutor and who was,
(17:43):
you know, kind of aging out of the of the
job and losing respect from the elites in San Francisco.
Speaker 3 (17:50):
Campaign.
Speaker 2 (17:51):
You know, her campaign slogan was let's not be smart
on crime, or let's not be tough on crime or
weak on crime.
Speaker 3 (17:58):
Let's be smart.
Speaker 2 (18:00):
Oh yes, of course, So you get that slogan going,
you run a little bit to the right, and she's
spent a lot of time ripping this progressive prosecutor as
not caring about women, not caring about children, not caring
about immigrants, and she ended up winning the race, and with.
Speaker 3 (18:16):
The help of Willy Brown.
Speaker 1 (18:17):
Not on the.
Speaker 2 (18:18):
Podium, right, She's trying to distance herself from Willy Brown
and ultimately throws him under the bus at the end.
Speaker 3 (18:25):
Hello, Lilly Brown's over. He's a loser.
Speaker 2 (18:27):
I'm here. But Willy Brown was always there behind the
scenes helping her raise the money, and that's.
Speaker 3 (18:32):
How she got all the money.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
The book is amateur Hour. He's Charlie spearing. Thank you
so much, my brother. I appreciate you, Marett. It's great
to see you in person. I want to tell you
about Pure Talk. I want to tell you about not
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(18:57):
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(19:20):
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All right, let's do some ass. Doctor Jesse questions and
mass next.
Speaker 3 (19:38):
True, it's the Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
Why don't you shut up, Chris? It is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a Thursday. Sorry, Chris and I were
having a nice conversation off air about food. In fact,
I got this email. Hey, Jesse, I saw, By the way,
you can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Jesse,
I saw this morning that you wanted Mexican food in
your near Milwaukee. Go to Racine. There's a few fantastic
(20:04):
Mexican restaurants there. Okay, I'm gonna level with you right now,
just you and me talking. All right. I'm glad i'm here.
I'm glad I got to experience it. Certainly. iHeart did
it up to the max. I'm glad i'm here. All right.
I just want to emphasize that I'm glad I'm here,
(20:25):
but I'm I'm so hungry. I'm just starving. And I
know you think to yourself, you're probably thinking, Nah, Jesse,
you got all of Milwaukee. You go up to Receine
to go grab this and go grab that. I'm just
I can't properly explain to you how difficult it is
to move around because the entire it's not like it's
(20:48):
a building that's locked down. It's several city blocks are
locked down with fencing, concrete barriers. It's not like it's
not like I can knock off here and go just
go to Racine. I could, but then you have to
set aside twenty thirty minutes at a security checkpoint getting
(21:09):
back in. And it's not like I can leave here
and just order a pizza, because that's really what's on
my heart right now. I just have pizza on my heart.
I can feel it in my soul, and I don't
I haven't had any. There's this little pub in the
bottom floor of the hotel we're staying at, and it's
really not bad. It's not and the people are wonderful
because it's freaking Wisconsin. But I've already eaten everything on
(21:31):
the menu, and I'm so tired of it. I just
want some caeso or some pizza or something else, and
I haven't had anything. And then Jewish producer Chris is
being horrible about it every time he ordered for my
favorite Mexico Mexican place and he got my favorite tacos
in him and producer Michael will rubbing it in my
face yesterday that they have been eaten like kings. And
(21:52):
so I'm struggling right now. Look, I'm struggling all right.
And no, by the way, I'm not going to order
Mexican food and freaking Wisconsin. With all due respect to Washsen,
I'm from Texas. If I'm not in Texas, California, Arizona,
or New Mexico, I do not order Mexican food. They
tried to get me to do this last time. I
was in New York City too, and I love New
York City and I love the food. Don't tell me
(22:12):
that's Mexican food. You don't have enough Mexicans. Jesse, Please
help me understand why the state why states like your
native Ohio can routinely vote Republican for president yet simultaneously
vote for a dirty comedy like Shared Brown for Senate.
All right, this is this is a very interesting question.
Is why I wanted to bring it up. How does
this happen? Ohio is a red state. They have a
(22:36):
Democrat senator and it's gonna be Brown versus Moreno, Bernie
Moreno this November, and it's probably I actually had a
conversation about this in depth last night with some political people.
That's a race we really need to win and it's
probably a coin flip. And that's taking into account this
red I hate to even use the freaking term after
(22:57):
the midterms, but this potential red year that we might have,
it's taking that into account. They still said a man
Charad Brown shared Branna. However, he says stupid name. That's
tough to beat. He's very tough to beat. So I
need to explain this first. Money and this gets very
(23:18):
very uncomfortable because normal people, regular people don't like to
discuss money in politics. It feels gross, right, it kind
of feels dirty. If it feels greedy, what is that
politician putting it in his bank account? Money? No, it's
not everything. You could win races without raising the most money.
(23:38):
But money is so big in politics. Why well, that
leads me to the second and more important point about
guys like Charad Brown or really races in general. It
doesn't have to be about Ohio, why some people win
and others do not. One of the hardest things in
the world is seeing things from a dumbed down perspective
(24:06):
than the one you currently have. For instance, we're gonna
make this about We'll keep it about politics. Is that's
what we're talking about. I say this a lot, but
you are so much more informed than ninety nine percent
of the people in this country. And I'm actually not
even insulting them, and I'm really not trying to compliment you.
(24:27):
You're a political person. You could be listening to anything
in the world right now. You could be listening to
freaking jazz music if you had no taste. Instead, you're
listening to the Jesse Kelly Show. You are someone who
seeks information. Most people don't. The norms enormas. You can't
put into words how unengaged. And I don't know if
(24:48):
that was a word, but I went to community college.
You can't imagine how unengaged they are. And me, it
is a huge frustration for me, and something my wife
works on a lot. When we get with friends and
family members who don't don't learn like what you learn
what I learned. They don't dig into things like we do.
How I use more harsh terms, but how naive they are.
(25:14):
They know virtually nothing. And these are mostly Republicans. You know,
I won't drow up this stuff. But these people don't
know anything about anything. You ask them who their two
senators are, the two US senators from their state, and
they struggle. I did this the other night. They struggled.
I said, hey, just curious, how many people here can
(25:36):
We were sitting around a big table, how many people
here can name both senators? And because I didn't want
anyone to raise their hand, I just called on a
couple people, three people in neither of them. None of
the three could name both senators. The fourth guy, finally, could.
You don't realize how far ahead of the normal voter
you are, which ties back to money, which ties back
(25:57):
to guys like Brown. As a Democrat win in a
Republican state, he knows how to spend his money, he
knows how to message himself. A great example of this
is actually, forget about that. We'll go to Montana, my
old stomping grounds, where I graduated high school Montana. John
Tester is a senator up there. He's up for reelection
this year. Hopefully he loses. That's why we need to win.
(26:19):
But how does a guy like Tester, a freaking dirty kamie,
get elected in a red state. Montana's a red state.
Now it's not as red as Alabama, but it's freaking red.
How does this happen? Well, he knows who he's talking to.
He runs ads. You can go look at his ads.
I'm sure they're available on YouTube or wherever you get them.
He runs these ads. He's in he's got a shotgun
(26:41):
in his hand. Hey, I love Montana, these mountains, and
I go fezan hunting, and I know how to ride
a horse. And you should know that there have been
years where John Tester didn't even have a hunting license.
So he has no relation to any of this stuff
at all. But he knows exactly how to market himself.
Never underestimate the power of marketing. Marketing is a big, big,
(27:07):
big thing. He knows branding, he knows marketing. He knows
how to appear non threatening, and he knows how to
appear Montana. Go look at Shared Brown's articles. Go look
at the ads he runs, and he will be running
in Ohio. Is he gonna run? Hey, I'm a card carrying,
dirty communist and I believe every baby should be aborted
(27:30):
full term. You won't see any of those ads in Ohio.
You're going to see a lot of ads that look, Ohio, Hey,
it's me. It's blue collar Brown. I know what you're like,
working in the factories. I used to work in a
factory myself. It's look Joe Biden Center forever with what's
he done? This is a political animal who hasn't worked
(27:52):
a day in his life in forty years. And what's
he run as? He still did it as president? What's
he run as? I'm Scranton Joe, his hard scrabble Scranton
from russ Belttown On, Pennsylvania. And my daddy worked the
coal mines and so did my son. He died in
those coal mines. He's done that so successfully because it works.
The things we see out of these politicians that make
(28:14):
us sick to our stomach, they're effective. And that's how
somebody like Brown, that's how some Democrat gets elected constantly
in a red state like Ohio. That's exactly how it happens.
All right, all right, we still have Gosh, I'm gonna
get to as many of these it's humanly freaking possible.
(28:36):
They ended up stacking up on me. I swear I'm
going to mix some of these into next week's show
because we ended up having so many guests and so
many things going on that I there are way too
many asked Doctor Jesse questions that I didn't get to.
But in this last segment, I'm gonna churn and burn
through as many of these as seemingly possible. So that
means it'll probably be one or two, but I can't
help it. That's who I am. Look, I took my
(28:58):
chalk today, so I'm ready to go. I don't care
how late it is at night. I'm fired up and
I'm ready to go. My tea levels are fine, guys,
how are yours? Shoot, I've been taking chalk for two
freaking years. I can't imagine what mine now. It's probably
why all my hair's fallen out. At this point my point,
my tea levels have probably reached an unhealthy level. Would
you like to feel like a million bucks energized even
(29:20):
at the end of the day, you know, start taking
some natural herbal supplements and watch your entire life improve.
What's your business life improve? What's your marital life improve?
You're parenting. Your life gets better when you feel better.
That's just a fact. Do you ever talk to somebody
(29:41):
who quits drinking and they talk about how much better
every part of life is because they'm not tired and
feeling crappy all the time. That's how I would equate
a male vitality stack or female vitality stack from chalk. Honestly,
it's like life changes for you. Go to choq dot com,
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for the lifetime of the subscription, or you can call them,
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We'll be back fighting for your freedom every day. The
Jesse Kelly Show. It is The Jesse Kelly Show. Final
segment of The Jesse Kelly Show. I can't believe how
(30:26):
baritone my voice got. Wasn't that amazing? Chris? Aren't you
impressed by that?
Speaker 2 (30:30):
Just now?
Speaker 1 (30:32):
Chris? Are you there? My headphones must not be working.
I'm not hearing anything from Chris at this point in time. Anyway,
it's our final segment, and then we're gonna sail off
into the sunset, as I'm not sailing anywhere. We're just
leaving Milwaukee, and then I'll be back on Monday for
more Jesse Kelly Show. But we need to get to
a bunch of ask doctor Jesse questions which I have
neglected because it's been the RNC and it's been wild,
(30:55):
and now let's stick into it. Swami Kimberly Cheedahill apparently
thinks should keep her job. What greater job failure could
she have beyond an assassination attempt on a former president
and presidential candidate that was ninety nine point nine to
nine percent successful. Well, again, there's a reason they talk
(31:15):
like this.
Speaker 2 (31:16):
You does the president have confidence in the Secret Service
director after Saturday failures?
Speaker 1 (31:21):
I have one confidence in the director of the United
States State Secret Service. Of course he does. Kimberly Cheatle
doesn't view her job as protecting Donald Trump, does view
her job as protecting Joe Biden. She's part of a
corrupted organization, one that she has corrupted because the Secret
(31:43):
Service has traditionally been an amazing organization, but of course
the dirty Commies took it over and they corrupted it.
And now, as we've talked about all week, the purpose
of the organization is the protection of the organization. It's
not the protection of Donald Tie, it's not the protection
of Joe Biden, Pelosi or any of them. The purpose
(32:04):
of the FBI is not to solve crimes. Ah, we
got to track down these guys. Are those guys? Yeah,
they do those things on occasion, But the highest purpose
of the FBI. If you were to hook up the
leadership of the FBI to lie detectors and ask them,
they would view their highest purpose. Their number one priority
is protecting the FBI. And this goes down down the
(32:27):
list of every single corrupt institution. They now only exist
to protect themselves. You look at the Secret Service and
you understandably think, wow, surely their highest priority is keeping
people alive, and you would be correct, that's what it
should be. But that's not what it is, and that's
not how they view themselves. I want to remind you again,
(32:47):
Christopher Ray, right after he was appointed and the FBI
was catching all kinds of flag for all the dirty
crap they pulled on Trump the first time, and he
was asked, what are you gonna do? About this. What
are you going to do about that? And he said
he essentially laid it out there. I've got to go find
the quote. Hey, my job is to protect the FBI.
That's how he views himself. Hey, Jessin, my daughter hit
(33:09):
me up and said she was angry at her husband. Oh,
she was pretty upset, and of course I asked why.
She explained that she sent her husband to the store
to get a few things, including a bag of chips
from a pretty well known company. They were having subs
for supper and wanted chips with it. When he returned,
she looked for the chips, but he bought locally made
salted tortilla chips. She was mad and felt disrespected. I
(33:32):
took his side and said, look, at the end of
the day, you wanted something that crunched and was salty,
and your sub doesn't really matter. He got the job done,
so on and so forth. Am I wrong? Am I analysis?
Or should I taken her side? Well? Here's what was wrong.
It wasn't necessarily you, and it wasn't necessarily her demand
of the chips, and it wasn't necessarily her husband bringing
(33:56):
home a different bag of chips. What was wrong with
all that at is she aired her grievances with her
husband out to you. Let me give you the best
lesson I was ever given in life, especially for married couples,
The best lesson ever. You never, ever, ever, under any circumstances,
(34:22):
put your spouse in bad light to somebody else. You
don't get with your boys and golf when your wife
makes you mad and complain. Ah, she burnt dinner last night.
She's useless. You don't call your daddy or your bommy
or your sister because he stayed up too late and
had too much beer. Daddy, Cat's what he did? That
is not done. The arguments and this look this sounds
(34:44):
like a young couple, is what it sounds like. It's
a young couple. They need to argue, fight about the
stupid chips with each other and leave it in house,
in house. This is the day and age, especially in
the social media era, where people think everything has to
be public. People will break up with their boyfriend and
(35:04):
all of a sudden, it's on Instagram. People will get
fired or they're equipped from their job and the next
thing you know, it's a two thousand word Facebook post
about why their employer is terrible. That people will complain
about every single thing online. Keep things in house. There's
something to be said. We're keeping some crap to yourself. Men,
you whisper. I found a recipe online which claimed to
(35:26):
be a Jesse Kelly Berger recipe. I just want to
say this, most of the Jesse Kelly Berger recipes you
will find online are scams. They're not actually the Jesse
Kelly Berger. This is one of those really weird things
that it got popular enough that now people spoof it.
Just make it if you don't hear it out of
(35:47):
my voice. And there's video of me right here on
the first TV. The first TV has like a five
minute video up of this online. It's available. I'm sure
it's on YouTube. Matt, is it on YouTube? It's on YouTube.
If it's not me and my very and some face
telling you the burger recipe, assume it's a freaking lie. Okay. Anyway,
the guy said, what do you think the future of
the military is on its current trajectory, Well, on its
(36:09):
current trajectory, and this is something I live in constant
fear of. On its current trajectory, a lot of people
are going to die, the good people, the boys on
the ground, That's what keeps me up at night when
I talk about all the filth that's happening inside the military.
The people who will pay is the troops themselves. Are
(36:31):
best guys, man, our best guys. They're the ones who
will pay in the end. And it's got to be fixed.
And again this goes back to something we were talking
about earlier. It can't be nice. It cannot, under any
circumstances be nice. Kind. We can't try to do it
(36:54):
the right way. If Trump gets elected in November, Lord Willing,
he will go in to the United States military with
a battle axe and start firing generals and admirals so
fast it'll make your head spin, or we will not
save it. Every time the Communists take over, they purge
(37:15):
the government of people who are even slightly hostile to
them and fill up the government with allies. And every
time Republicans take over, they don't do that. They try
to do it the right way, the kind way. After all,
he's a general. Of course, well look at this guy.
They try to do it the right way, the kind way,
and with that we only lose. We only lose. It's
(37:38):
gotta be brutal, right, as brutal is living with pain
every single day? Is there anything worse than that pain?
Back pain might be the worst of them, because it's
just everything. You can't sleep, you can't sit, you can't stand,
you can't you do this? You ever do that thing
when you're bending over? Could you tell? I've had back
pain in my life before, especially when I was younger.
(38:00):
Stop living with freaking pain every day when you don't
have to. Relief Factor is one hundred percent drug free.
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sleep gets better, and it's not trash in your body.
(38:22):
Take it for three weeks, every day for three weeks.
Tell me how you feel one eight hundred the number
four relief or go to relief Factor dot com. I
will be gone tomorrow. I will be back on Monday.
I cannot wait to be home and just with you
and me again. You ready for that. I've enjoyed it, though,
That's all