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November 17, 2025 37 mins

How the economy feels for people under 50 vs people over 50. How did we lose so much buying power especially since the covid lockdowns. Why are we just now finding out more about the first trump assassin? All the oddities stacking up around the first trump assassin. Why is no one going to the movies anymore? 

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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Final hour of The
Jesse Kelly Show on a.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
Wonderful, wonderful Monday. The week's just getting started.

Speaker 2 (00:25):
So we're gonna talk a few about the economy, keeping
the Big Deal, the Big Deal as much as we
possibly can, the economy, inflation, immigration, things like that. We're
gonna touch on this FBI Secret Service, Thomas Crook's stuff
this hour. I'm gonna get to some emails, why people
aren't going to the movies, gun fighting with Haitian gangsters,

(00:48):
and so much more coming up. And I have the
hiccups in case you can't tell, and so much more
coming up in the final hour of The Jesse Kelly Show. Now,
this one, Snoopole came out. Americans over fifty largely view
the economy as fairly good, while Americans between eighteen and

(01:10):
forty nine say it's from fairly bad to very bad.
Over fifty, you think the economy's fine under fifty, not
so much. Before we get into the administration and things
they're saying and what they're doing, the good and the
bad and everything else. Let's just address a couple reasons
for this one. Let's just go to the basic reason.

(01:33):
When you've hit fifty. Nothing's universal, but generally you're making
pretty decent money, probably the most money you'll ever make.
That's your last ten twenty years of employment, when you've
been promoted enough times or got your business going for
long enough that that's generally the time where you have

(01:54):
the most amount of money coming in. So let's set
that obvious point on it a side. When you're eighteen,
you think the economy sucks and everything sucks because you
have an entry level job, you're barely making ends meet,
and that just you look around and say, I have
no hope.

Speaker 1 (02:09):
When you're over fifty, not so much. So that's part
of it.

Speaker 2 (02:12):
Another part of it that goes along with that is
the idea of investing in whatever way you invest that.
I'm not some investment expert.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
I do the same thing you probably do.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
I send it to someone and say invest it and
don't lose all my money. I'm not stocks and bonds.
The only thing I trust is golden Land in real estate.
You know that, But I do invest. But you have
a four to one K something like that. Again, similar
to the argument we just had, I started a wroth Ira.

Speaker 1 (02:45):
When I was.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
Nineteen years old, maybe younger, eighteen or nineteen years old.
I believe I started it with two hundred dollars. You
don't have any money. They didn't have any money, and
save for that, Hey invest this for me. Well, when
you're pulling up your roth Ira on your phone and
it reads two hundred and twenty six dollars, you think

(03:11):
to yourself, man, I'm broke. But then by the time
you're fifty, after a lifetime of socking away five ten percent,
if life works out that way for you, and you
pull it up and it's worth five hundred thousand dollars,
you think to yourself, Okay, well, I guess we're okay.
Made some money this year, hopefully be able to retire that.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
You know.

Speaker 2 (03:33):
So there's those two things. Let's set those aside. A
part a part of why it's such a struggle right
now for so many people is the economy.

Speaker 1 (03:46):
The world economy, but we'll make it about America.

Speaker 2 (03:49):
The world's economy is having a change, a change similar
to the Industrial revolution type change. And the sad part
about that is when it comes to technological progress, it's
virtually impossible to stop it. For instance, here's a great example,

(04:14):
a great example, long haul trucking.

Speaker 1 (04:19):
I adore it.

Speaker 2 (04:19):
I've always been fascinated by it. And when I say
I adore it, I just love truckers. I've always gotten
along with truckers. I respect what they do. It's a grind.
The nation runs on it. So many small businesses, by
the way, where you basically you work and buy a truck.
You have a truck and that's your business, and you
work in it, you live in it half the time.

(04:39):
So anyway, truckers really cool profession. The ones who are
here legally anyway, really cool profession. What if tonight, What
if tonight I invented a long haul truck that did
not need a human being. It had let's say Eli

(05:00):
MS Tesla level technology that it would self drive all
over the country safely, would never get in a wreck,
it would simply deliver the goods and services on time,
without ever needing to sleep because remember, it would be
just a robot, a program. This isn't out there yet,
but you understand what I mean. What if I took
out the need for a human being technologically well on

(05:24):
a macro level, for a country, for an economy, that
would probably be good, right, except now you have all
these wonderful truckers that are out of freaking work. So
how would it be good? How would it be good
to take all these wonderful, hardworking Americans and eliminate their job? Now,

(05:47):
that was a very simplistic version. Don't worry truckers. That
technology doesn't exist yet, and I hope it doesn't ever exist.
I don't want your livelihood to go away. But as
technology is improving so rapidly now with AI and so
many other things, younger people are walking into an economy

(06:09):
that is changing so rapidly that if they've been making
the right decisions and putting themselves on the right career path,
sometimes even then after quote doing everything right, you're running
into roadblocks. Wait, you told me, you told me to
be an engineer. You told me to be an electrical engineer,

(06:32):
and that if I was an electrical engineer, I would
make good money. I've been out of work. I graduated
six months ago. I can't even get a phone call back.
This economy sucks. I don't have really inspirational words right now,
mainly because I don't know where this is going. All

(06:54):
I can do is look back historically at times where
there's been huge technologic leaps forward, and while overall, if
you look at the course of human events, it's been
beneficial for mankind, the truth is that the people who
had to live through those transitional periods had all kinds

(07:15):
of suffering and hardship, and it was completely out of
their control. If you're one of those truckers, maybe right
now you're cruising down the highway listening to my voice
and God forbid that that technology. What if it did
drop tomorrow? What's not going through? You're fine, but what
if it did drop tomorrow?

Speaker 1 (07:31):
What do you do?

Speaker 2 (07:32):
You're forty five years old. You worked your fingers to
the bone to get a truck. Now you have your
own truck, and you finally have some good money coming
in and you're not wealthy, but you're making a good living.
And now you're what well, now you're unemployed. Now you're
on unemployment, got your own snap benefits? What's your resume? Say, well,

(07:56):
I'm a trucker. That's my skill. It's the skill I've
been developing to make a living my whole life. Now
apparently that's on the out. So that's a devastating period
of time. To go through. And I think we're in
either the beginning, the middle, or the end. I don't
think it's the end. I think we're either in the
beginning or the middle of one of those transition periods

(08:17):
right now for a variety of reasons. There's all kinds
of reasons where it's going to be a struggle, especially
for younger people who aren't established, but not just younger people,
order people too, where their position just isn't needed anymore,
and where the boss looks at their salary and looks
at their need and he decides their baggage outweighs the talent.

(08:40):
It's a terrible place to be and we hope it
will get better. And Scott Beissent, he's on the news
and he's saying, hey, bright things are kind.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
I think we are going to see a substantial acceleration
in the economy in the first second quarter. They increase
in real income. I think America's are going to feel
it in the first quarter, second quarter. I think twenty
twenty six, thanks to President Trump's signature plans, is going
to be a great year for working Americans. For the markets.

Speaker 2 (09:11):
Okay, we don't know. Look, Scott be sents obviously a
straight shooter, very good communicator. I think he's been wonderful
for the Trump administration. You neither of us know whether
or not he's just being a good messenger for the
administration and throwing out some hopeful thinking, or whether he
really thinks that he's the guy sharp enough to maybe
look at things and say, boy, I could really see

(09:32):
it increasing. So maybe maybe it is about to get better.
And he says he that these jobs people are clamoring
for jobs. I know you can't find a job, but
this job creation is just getting gone. Just the Treasury
Department and the dollar itself in your job have to
do with lessening job in security in this country.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
Well, I think what President Trump's doing in terms of
bringing back high paying percentage of manufacturing jobs to the
US is all about job security.

Speaker 1 (10:00):
How many jugs have come back?

Speaker 3 (10:01):
Sorry, that is just starting, all.

Speaker 2 (10:05):
Right, So we haven't brought back a bunch yet, or
else he would have said that, but he said it's
just started. Maybe hopefully, like the deportation stuff, which has
the machine has to be built, maybe we're about to
go gangbusters next year, and maybe we're not. I'm not
here to carry water for the administration or anyone else.

(10:25):
But maybe it's about to get better. Maybe they're going
to help us through this transition. All that said, we
do have to discuss something about why people feel the
economy is not working for them before we get to
that specific thing, and then this assassin and emails and
other stuff. You know, you don't have to live with pain.

(10:50):
It is the holiday season, you know that relief factor.
It is a supplement. You know it's drug free, and
you know, as I've told you before, it works better
the longer you take it. If you're taking it for
a day, may not see much of a difference, but
it builds and builds and builds. It Soon your pain
is just gone. Your back doesn't hurt anymore, your your
your legs, You're so soon, it's just gone. What if

(11:14):
you could give yourself the ultimate Christmas gift? Why don't
you start now and maybe wake up on Christmas morning
and your hand doesn't hurt anymore.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
Why don't you just try it three weeks.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
If you don't feel better after three weeks, just don't
call them back. All you're out is the nineteen ninety
five you spent the first time Call one eight hundred,
the number four relief or go to relief factor dot com.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
He doesn't care if you believe him, but he's right.
Jesse Kelly, it is the Jesse Kelly Show on a
wonderful Mondaimember. You can email us Jesse at Jesse kellyshow
dot com. So we were talking about the economy and
I'm want to drive this home because of something else

(12:05):
that they're about to try to push out. Okay, I'm
going to drive home something that I can lose sight
of and you can lose sight of. We talked about
it last week. I'm just going to keep reminding you
and myself. I'm trying to remind me about this going
into the midterms because we are insiders. You're an insider,

(12:26):
I'm an insider. You're someone who pays attention. You know
the issues, you know the players, you know the game.
You are going to be in a bubble of your
own creation, just like I am. We're in the same bubble.
We're trapped at a bubble together. But it's not people
like us who decide elections. We help win on behalf

(12:48):
of our side, no question, but our votes, our votes,
Your vote in my vote did not put Donald Trump
in the White House. You were already going to vote
for Donald Trump, so was I. It's the normies out
there who don't pay attention, who aren't insiders. They don't

(13:08):
know the news, they don't even know really what's important.
They are the ones who decide elections. Donald Trump is
in the White House instead of Joe Biden or Kamala
Harris because inflation ran out of control during Joe Biden's
four years and because immigration went out of control during

(13:32):
Joe Biden's four years. Of course that was the Democrat's fault,
so that they earned all that. But it doesn't matter.
Donald Trump is in the White House because of inflation
and immigration. Insiders like me and insiders like you, we
hate that. I know, I do you know what I
want to say to you. No, he's not. Donald Trump's

(13:54):
in the White House because America got tired of the FBI.

Speaker 1 (14:00):
No, they didn't.

Speaker 2 (14:02):
Now they're tired of the FBI. The FBI poll members
have gone down. But that's not why Donald Trump's in
the White House.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
Not at all. That did.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
That issue did not drive people to the polls. Something
you might say, or I might say, no, election integrity
is whyse in the White House because.

Speaker 1 (14:18):
We need it and the people want it. That's a
freaking lie.

Speaker 2 (14:22):
I know that Democrats cheat in every election every chance
they get. You know, Democrats cheat and every election and
every chance they get. You know how important that issue is.
Norman doesn't know that. Norman Norma have no idea. If
I bring up election integrity or Democrats stealing elections to
MI normy friends, I can tell they're almost patting me

(14:43):
on my balding head. Oh okay, tinfoil guy, sure thing.
If I actually laid out the facts of them, they'd
be mortified. But they don't know Donald Trump is in
the White House because during Joe Biden's presidency, the American
people watch their buying power disappear. They watch their credit

(15:03):
card bills go through the roof. Their buying power disappeared
to the point they had to take second jobs, and
that buying power has not returned. Inflation delivered the White
House to Donald Trump as much as any rally he
ever did. The American people in a short span watched

(15:25):
their buying power disappear, and they want that buying power back.
Every poll shows it. I just ready the economic numbers.
Younger people especially think it's bad to very bad. The
American people's buying power has not returned. Now, how do

(15:49):
we get inflation? Why do we get inflation? Where's it
come from?

Speaker 1 (15:54):
Do you do it? Nope, you have no power over
it at all. Now that do I?

Speaker 2 (15:58):
Inflation comes from God spending and printing of money, period,
That's where it comes from. We have this insane inflation
because they won't stop spending, they won't stop printing. So
what do we do with this.

Speaker 4 (16:13):
We're going to issue a dividend to our middle income
people and lower income people of about two thousand dollars,
and we're going to use the remaining tariffs to lower
our debt. We're going to be lowering our debt, which
is a national security.

Speaker 2 (16:26):
Thing, two thousand dollars to everyone making under one hundred
thousand dollars. So I'm just going to set aside the
class for warfare part of that, which ticks me off
even more. But I'm not even going to talk about
that right now. We're going to cut two thousand dollars
steamy checks. Whether or not we keep the White House

(16:48):
in twenty twenty eight will not be decided by whether
or not you get a two thousand dollars steamy check.
It'll be decided by whether or not norm and Norma
feel like they're buying. Power has returned to them. We're
just going to have. How much is that bill going
to be? I mean, Scott Assent tried to sell it

(17:10):
as best you go.

Speaker 3 (17:11):
The two thousand dollars dividend could come in lots of forms,
in lots of ways. George, Uh, you know, it could
be just the tax decreases that we are seeing it
on the President's agenda. You know, no tax on tips,
no tax on overtime, no tax and solid security deductibility
of auto loans. So you know those are substantial deductions

(17:32):
that you are being financed in the tax bill.

Speaker 2 (17:36):
Okay, Look, if we're talking just some tax cuts for you, fine,
I'm all in. If we're talking another trillion dollar bill
where we hand out two thousand dollars checks, that's going
to lose us the White House in twenty twenty eight
because inflation is going to go out of control again.

Speaker 1 (17:54):
It's the fact.

Speaker 2 (17:56):
All right, let's talk about this, you know, let's do
a couple of emails and we'll talk about this assassination.
Before we do that, I have told you again and
again and again, and I'm gonna have to stop saying
it soon. That Legacy Box. You already know what they do.
They digitize your home movies, they digitize your hard copy pictures.

(18:16):
You get them forever. They're on the cloud, they're on
a zip drive forever. You don't have to worry about floods, fires.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
You already know all that.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
You know that this is a wonderful family company in Tennessee.
I'm not asking you to send your stuff to Cambodia, Tennessee.
They'll hand digitize it and send it back. Did you
know you can have it back by Christmas time if
you get it in soon. This is the greatest Christmas
gift you will ever give. Your mother, your father, your wife,

(18:45):
your husband. This is the greatest gift. We're talking something
that they're going to cry when they watch it. Do
this for the ones you love the most. I promise
it means more than then. Nextazon gift card. Go to
Legacybox dot com slash Jesse, it's Christmas time. Legacybox dot

(19:08):
com slash Jesse.

Speaker 1 (19:11):
We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (19:12):
He doesn't care if you believe him, but he's right,
Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Fantastic.

Speaker 1 (19:25):
Monday, Do not forget.

Speaker 2 (19:26):
If you miss any part of the show, you can
download it on iHeart, Spotify, iTunes, exw some emails I
haven't done like any tonight. Jesse, thanks for the info
about the influencer game. That kind of info was critical
to being a savvy digital consumer. It reminds me of
a Facebook post that made the rounds during COVID. It
was around the same time as Biden's only the only

(19:48):
dep or epidemic we have is of the unvaccinated. Speech
started seeing a bunch of people copying and pasting it,
so on and so forth. Yeah, look, that's not the
last conversation we're gonna have about propaganda campaigns, influence campaigns
that are happening all the time, especially on social media

(20:11):
media and social media, for a variety of different reasons,
with a variety of different interests. It might just be
basic sales interests, political interests, one nation's interest versus this
nation's interests. If there are all kinds of different reasons,
and by the way, they're all not dark and dirty,
it's not all Russian intelligence. Sometimes, like I said, it's

(20:33):
selling cookies or something like that. There are all kinds
of influencer operations happening at all times. We have to
be sifters of information, we have to be people of discernment.
And there's another aspect of this. I did not mention
that I'll throw in next time. On top of the

(20:55):
people getting paid for a specific opinion. Read I read
you the message. I was just offered money. It's not
the first time either. Hey, I have firms I'm working with.
They love to work with influencers. Are you interested in that?
What that means is there are large companies pr companies. Essentially,

(21:17):
they want to come pay you to have a specific
opinion about something. Hey, Jesse, here's five thousand dollars. We
want you to say that oreos are delicious. Can you
put up a tweet and something on Instagram saying oreos
are delicious? Now, my opinions are not for sale. I
have bad opinions opinions for free, so you don't have

(21:37):
to worry about that. But the other aspect of this
I didn't mention before that you should probably be aware of.
And Jewish producer Chris and producer Corey are much better
about technological stuff than I am. But the concept of bots.
Have you ever heard of a bot? I'll just explain
it this way as a person who doesn't know technology.

(22:00):
It's not a human being. It's a fake account. And
so you'll have maybe one guy, one woman, maybe not
even here in China and nda who knows, somewhere. You'll
have one guy operating fifty different Twitter accounts. He's part
of the same paid influencer campaign. So I get on

(22:21):
there and I say, yeah, I love oreos. Oreos are
the best. And then you unsuspecting normal person look at
the replies and there's all these replies. Yeah, man, I
can't wait Oreo for life, baby Orio woo. Except you
just read seventy five replies, and sixty five of them

(22:41):
are not even human beings. They're bots that are created
for this purpose. Again, just be just be sifters of information,
all information, especially information you really really really want to
be true. I am so guilty, and I know you
probably are too. I always this is what makes me

(23:03):
pause when I read something and I go oh nice
that that immediately freaks me out. Hold on, hold on,
is this even reo? I'll send it to Chris, I'll send.

Speaker 1 (23:14):
It to court.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
Did you see this and multiple times they have come
to me because they dig and they said, ah, it's
a little manipulated, it's a little off, it's a little old,
it's a little it's a little it's a little bit.

Speaker 1 (23:27):
Yeah, it's it's just be sifters of information, all right. Now.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
Speaking of sifting information, remember when someone shot Donald Trump
in the head and killed Corey comparator that the man
who was there with his family, you remember that. Well,
I'm not gonna name him, so I don't do it.
Although his name's already out there, but Christopher Ray had
a deputy.

Speaker 1 (23:51):
His name is Paul Paul Baute. I believe how you
say it.

Speaker 2 (23:54):
He told Congress that the guy's social media a count
he had a It appeared to reflect anti Semitic and
anti immigration themes, to espouse political violence and describe as
extreme in nature. So Ray's FBI said essentially tried to
call the guy some naxie, a right winger or something

(24:17):
like that. Except now we know that that was all
a lie. Why, well, it was a lie by omission,
he left out a huge part of this guy's online presence. Essentially,
it looks like this guy went from being a very
confused right winger to being a very confused and very

(24:38):
violent left winger, and he started getting rapidly anti Trump,
very very violent, and then went dark, although dark meant
he still had accounts on YouTube, Snapchat, Venmozelle, group Me, Discord,
Google Play, quizltchess dot Com, want a Nerd, and Cora.

(25:01):
So he turned into a violent left wing communist, and
the Federal Bureau of Investigation hid that fact from Congress
to try to make him look like a right winger.
Add in the fact that we still don't know hardly anything,

(25:25):
hardly anything about this guy. This Donald Trump dies that
day on camera.

Speaker 1 (25:36):
You watch it.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
If he doesn't turn his head at the exact moment
to point out an immigration chart that Senator Ron Johnson
had given to him. Senator Ron Johnson one of the
few really good senators by the way, anyway, If Trump
doesn't turn his head at that exact moment, he dies.

(25:59):
Where are we right now?

Speaker 1 (26:00):
What is the date today?

Speaker 2 (26:02):
November seventeenth, twenty twenty five. Where are we as a country?
Where are we If Donald Trump gets his brains blown
out in that moment and a young, relatively untrained assassin
gains access to the event, gains access to the event

(26:25):
with a weapon, gets onto a rooftop that should have
been secured, and makes the shot. We talked about this before.
We call him a failed assassin, and I don't necessarily
think that's right. He did everything right. He reconned it.

(26:47):
He got up on that rooftop with his weapon, a
functional weapon, He lined up the shot, and he made
the shot. Now, look, nothing you can do if the
guy's going to turn his head split second your finger
touches the trigger. But he did not fail. We were
blessed by God that day to not watch Donald Trump die.

(27:11):
The assassin did not fail. And the FBI is doing
what about it? I'll tell you what they're not doing.
They're not being very forthcoming. I don't know about you.
I'm not drowning in information here. Secret service is not
being very forthcoming. What's the scale of possibilities here? You

(27:32):
know what they are? Do I have to lay them
out for you. I'm as well, the scale of possibilities
on the good end. On the good end, the best
case scenario is the FBI, Secret Service, and of course
local law enforcement. They were there too, were embarrassingly bad
at their jobs, and now they're embarrassingly bad with the

(27:56):
follow up.

Speaker 1 (27:56):
That's the worst case scenario. Another case ani they.

Speaker 2 (28:01):
Were really bad at their jobs, but they're decent at
the follow up, and they're trying to cover up how
bad they were at their jobs. The worst case scenario
is they were part of it. Look, they cremated his body.
Five minutes after they pulled his blown out skull off
the roof, they grabbed a hose in hose down the

(28:23):
roof right away. A man was taking pictures and told
local law enforcement to send him all the pictures they
had taken. We got his number, well, Senator Ron Johnson did.
It turned out the man was an ATF agent. Senator
Ron Johnson reached out and said, hey, what's up, and

(28:44):
the guy said.

Speaker 1 (28:45):
Call my lawyer. It looks bad, really bad.

Speaker 2 (28:51):
We'll be back The Jesse Kelly Show on air and
online at Jesse Kellyshow dot com. It is It's the
Jesse Kelly Show. Final segment of The Jesse Kelly Show
on a wonderful, wonderful Monday.

Speaker 1 (29:07):
Remember you can.

Speaker 2 (29:08):
Email us Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com. So a
couple of things before we get to the headlines. I
didn't get to.

Speaker 1 (29:18):
This is a story.

Speaker 2 (29:19):
It's from a while ago, but it came up again
in my house over the weekend, so I wanted to
bring it up that movie theaters are trying everything to
bring audiences back. Audiences are not returning to the movies.
People don't want to go. I I'm in one of
these weird situations. Remember I told you my dad hated fun.

(29:42):
It was just not big on fun, even music. It's
not really no turn it off, We'll ride in silence.
My dad was not a movie guy. I think probably
in response to this, I became a movie freak. There
was nothing I love the more as a kid than
to go to the movies with my family. But it

(30:06):
was something I can remember two. There were probably more,
but I can remember two family movies where we went
to the theater as a family when I was a kid,
Indiana Jones in The Last Crusade in Jurassic Park, by
the way, In case you're wondering what the two are.
There were probably more, but there weren't many more, right

(30:26):
I remember too. So as I got older, I started
going to the movies every chance I got. And not
to sound like your grandpa, but you could go to
a matinee movie in my hometown for four bucks. Four bucks,
even when you're young and poor, you got four bucks
for a movie. You dig through your change, you got
four bucks for a movie, even especially if for not

(30:47):
eating sneak in some snacks.

Speaker 1 (30:49):
We all know how we did it. Four bucks.

Speaker 2 (30:52):
It's one hundred dollars to go to the movies, now,
you know them, right, It's one hundred dollars. We try
to go to Matine's.

Speaker 1 (30:59):
When we go.

Speaker 2 (31:00):
But even then, if you're getting popcorn, a coke, something candy,
you're spending eighty to one hundred dollars at the movie theater. Now,
and when you combine it, it's a dangerous combination for
the movies when you combine it with the second part.
And that's all the dirty comy filth Hollywood puts in

(31:22):
the movies things that you did not have to worry
about in earlier years when I was a child. Yes,
parents had to worry about, you know, an inappropriate scene
that's more adult themed. You had to worry about violence,
you had to worry about language. But those things were
very clearly laid out on there. This was at a
time before they were trying to shoehorn every lesbian into

(31:45):
the country into a movie. Somehow, how do we make
this this is about racism, somehow.

Speaker 1 (31:50):
How do we make that? Immediately you're mortified? And they'll
do it for kids movies. Now, I told you.

Speaker 2 (31:55):
I think the last kids movie we went to see
was that DC Pets Super Pets. Whatever it sucked anyway,
don't go watch it. It was a cartoon movie and
I think it was ten minutes in. And of course
it's a couple lesbians in the friggin park. Well, now
you just dropped one hundred bucks and now you're ready
to go. And I don't know how you handle these things.
But the second I get the deiicmy garbage. Joh, the

(32:18):
climate man's burning it down.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
I want to leave. I want to leave.

Speaker 2 (32:22):
Ob won't even start TV shows with me for the
most part now, because she knows we could be six
episodes in. If I get it a second I get
the training.

Speaker 1 (32:30):
Character, I'm gone. I'm gone. I can't do it. Chris,
you the same way you want.

Speaker 2 (32:36):
Chris said, you already paid for the movie. Well, if
I don't physically walk out of the movie theater, which
I've done before, I will be mentally checked out. That's
one two. Here's your problem. Here's the problem with this, Chris.
I paid for the movie. That's a good point. I
paid for the movie, but I've already paid the money.

(32:58):
What happens from here is inconsequential because I'm never getting
the money back. The one hundred dollars. We're called one
hundred dollars. The one hundred dollars is gone. Right, we
can both agree on that they're not gonna give me
my money back. I'm not gonna be that guy. The
one hundred dollars is gone.

Speaker 1 (33:14):
Now.

Speaker 2 (33:16):
I can be one hundred dollars less while being miserable
for two hours, or I can be one hundred dollars
less and only be miserable for one hour. Then I'll
spend the next hour doing something I want to do.
I'm one hundred dollars less, no matter what what. I
know you paid for the experience, Chris, and I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
I realized.

Speaker 2 (33:38):
I knew this was gonna hit close to home for you.
I know you already paid money. I understand that, but
it's gone, buddy, You're if the experience is bad. You know,
if I if I pay one hundred dollars to get
a haircut and I walk in and she starts slapping
me in the face and cutting my ears with the clippers.
I'm not gonna stay till the haircut is done because

(34:00):
I already paid.

Speaker 1 (34:02):
That's simply not going to happen at all. The money's gone.
But let it go, Chris, let it go.

Speaker 2 (34:09):
This is why, Chris, have you tried Meowgreens yet? I
know you have a cat, all right, everyone knows. But well,
now everyone knows Jewish producer Chris has a cat and
not a dog. I just want to tell everybody you
know that Roughgreens is the number one dog supplement in America.

(34:30):
You sprinkle it on your dog's food, your dog will
finally get vitamins and minerals and actual nutrition. That's how
rough Greens works. Your dog will live longer, better breath,
better coat, better energy, just a better dog. What a
lot of people don't know is that they also have
Meowgreens for your cat. Same thing with your cat. You

(34:52):
want a healthier cat that lives longer. If that's the
kind of thing you want, go to roughgreens dot com.
Use the promo ode Jesse gets you a free jumpstart
trial bag. Roughgreens dot Com promo code Jesse, I still
canna believe this.

Speaker 5 (35:10):
It doesn't take long for me to pick up on this.
People are obsessed with Trump. They're fixated, They're hyper fixated
on Trump, and they talk about some of the features
of this disorder. They can't sleep, they feel traumatized by
mister Trump. They feel restless. I had one patient who

(35:30):
said she couldn't enjoy a vacation because anytime she saw
Trump and the news or on her device, she felt triggered.
So this is a profound pathology, and I would even
go so far as to call it the defining pathology
of our time.

Speaker 2 (35:46):
Communists have mentally broken their followers. That's why you saw
so many of them celebrate after Charlie Cook was assassinated.
That's why they didn't change the rhetoric after Donald Trump
got shot in the head. They really leave this stuff
and they're not sorry.

Speaker 1 (36:02):
And now here's a headline, why go?

Speaker 4 (36:03):
You know, you know the.

Speaker 1 (36:05):
Thing headlines we didn't get to.

Speaker 2 (36:11):
Marines forced into gunfight with gang members outside the US
embassy in Haiti. I swear on my life I would
re enlist tomorrow if I knew I was going to
get to go gunfight with gang members in Haiti. I
am so insanely jealous of these devil dogs.

Speaker 1 (36:28):
Gosh, that's awesome.

Speaker 2 (36:29):
Man charged after suspected fake Navy admiral at Landundo remembrance
event event that Why are all these words so hard
to say?

Speaker 1 (36:39):
Whatever?

Speaker 2 (36:40):
I've always kind of thought it was hilarious when people
do the stolen valor thing, because it never ever ever works.

Speaker 1 (36:45):
It never works.

Speaker 2 (36:46):
There's always some uniform expert there who can spot a
phony a mile away. Just be honest about what you
did or didn't do. Plus, I mean, it's the navy.
Graham Platner calls to stack the Supreme Court and impeach
at at least two sitting justices. A reminder, we'll talk
about this a little bit more tomorrow. The older, more

(37:06):
moderate Democrats are retiring or being pushed out, and this
new crop was going to be a whole other thing entirely,
that's all
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Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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