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July 29, 2025 38 mins

Trying to fend off the japans kamikaze pilots. The picket stations in the pacific. The Battle of Okenawa. Rules for thee not for Mamdani. 

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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Final hour of The Jesse Kelly Show on
my anniversary, which I totally didn't forget, even though ob
sets I did because I didn't get a card or anything. Anyway,
on the final hour, we're gonna finish up our comic

(00:33):
Kazee talk. We're gonna talk about this dirty commy if
I get to it, this dirty commy, having a beautiful wedding,
luxury wedding when you shouldn't have any of these things.
We'll talk about gen z men, college degree versus no
college degree, emails more. But first let's finish our kamikaze story.

(00:55):
Now America is making its way into the Philippines. I
already explained that the Philippines are critically important to Japan.
They have to have these resources. They took the Philippines
on purpose, they needed to keep it. But again, they
don't have an avy anymore. They don't have their top
tier fighter pilots anymore. They don't have them in Japan

(01:18):
decides it's time to begin recruitment of Kamakazis, of men
who will join the special attack squadrons. That's what they
call them special attack force, special attack squadrons. I saw
both that didn't call themselves Kamakazis all the time, but
they did refer to themselves as that. Why, well, we

(01:42):
have to go clear back to last night and hour three.
Remember the Mongols tried to invade and conquer Japan twice.
A typhoon wiped out the Mongolian navy and its army,
which was sleeping on the navy twice. Japan called it
a divine wind, a wind from God. Kami kazi is

(02:06):
the word for it. So when a horrible, huge, ugly,
conquering force is coming to take Japan, the belief is
a divine wind will rise up and save the country.
And for hundreds of years, that took place in the
twelve hundreds. For hundreds of years, that's what the Japanese

(02:30):
were taught. That event has a reverence had and has
a reference for the Japanese people. And so, if you're
going to sell suicide pilots and subs and other things
like that, what do you sell? How do you sell it?
It's not a hard thing to sell at this point

(02:52):
in time. Let's look at the Japanese perspective. I'm believing
I'm not doing. American's are the bad guys thing. We
are looking at this from the Japanese perspective, What is
happening to you in your homeland? American planes are flying
overhead and they are bombing your cities and burning them

(03:14):
to ash. Remember that we fire bombed Tokyo and we
killed twice. We burned to death twice as many people
in Tokyo as we killed in Hiroshima or Nagasaki with
the atom bombs. We just flayed straight up dropped napalm.
For lack of a more, I don't want to go
into details of it. We burned the place down, and

(03:37):
that was not unique. It wasn't just Tokyo, it wasn't Hiroshima,
it wasn't Nagasaki. Almost every single major Japanese city was
being put to the torch. Right now, now you can say,
why were they so afraid of us taking over? We
weren't the Soviets, you know, we weren't going to treat
people the way they were treating people. How could you

(03:59):
know that? If you're a Japanese civilian and your whole
family just burnt to death in Tokyo, how are you
supposed to sell that family, that the Americans are going
to be lovely to you, which we turned out to be,
but that Americans are going to be kind and lovely
to you when you take over. You're not going to
believe that in a million years. You're going to believe
the propaganda that the people who just burnt my whole

(04:20):
family to death they will come do terrible things to me.
They will wipe out out my entire bloodline. We need
a divine wind. Now combine that with well, there was
a Japanese rear admiral. There were many guys like this,
but there was a Japanese rear admiral who believed in
suicidal attacks. This story's going to be, uh, not reliable,

(04:43):
the one I'm about to say. And it's going to
be not reliable because I think I read five different
versions of the story. I'm going to give you the
version of the story that was sold to the Japanese people.
This rear admiral believed in suicide attacks. He was sending
his pilots off to go do attacks. They weren't going

(05:07):
off to do suicide attacks, but they were going to
do attacks. He chooses. Remember he's a rear admiral, he's
a big shot. He chooses to fly with them, and
in an effort to save the homeland, he crashes his
plane intentionally into an American aircraft carrier, causing all kinds

(05:30):
of death and destruction, almost sinking it. That is the
version that was sold to the American people, and that
may be true. By the way, I got versions of
this that said, he missed that. He didn't crash his
plane into it all that he tried, but he dropped
the bomb that hit. There are a bunch of different
versions depending on what you read. That's not important. What

(05:51):
is important is the Japanese people. This word spreads far
and wide by the government across the country. Look at
this hero, Look at this lion. Look at what he did.
Let's build a shrine to him. What a hero of Japan.
He is the divine wind. Now, young men, do you
want to do the same. Do you think a country

(06:12):
like that would have volunteers? Of course they would. The
volunteers start coming in and coming in and coming in.
Now America's fleet gets into Leyte Gulf of the Philippines.
Don't worry about the details. They get to the Philippines
and it is a massive fleet, a massive fleet this
is when MacArthur returned to the Philippines. We're taking back

(06:33):
this critically important part. We get a kamikaze. He flies
right at the ship, crashes into the ship. At first,
the Americans thought the exact same thing. You would think,
what an idiot, must have been an accident. Did he

(06:54):
pass out in the cockpit and he did this accident?
What a moron? They quickly realized that Japan had changed
its tactics. Now let's stop for a second, because we
have to talk about a couple nerdy military details that
will matter. You know, in all warfare, no matter the age,

(07:14):
World War II or ancient Sparta, that doesn't matter what
the age is, there is always a development in tactics,
in weaponry, and then a counter development. The enemy will
do something, you figure out how to counter it. You
will do something, the enemy will figure out how to
counter it. Americans, they found out early on in the
war that air power can take out a ship the

(07:36):
way our ships were currently configured. What do you do
about that? We did a few different things about that,
had a few different things, and so here are the
things we had done. And this is going to be
important when it comes to the kamikazes themselves. The first
thing is, at first we did not have enough guns

(07:57):
anti air guns on these Navy ships. You need way
more guns than you think you need. It's very, very
difficult to shoot a plane out of the sky, even
with advanced anti airguns from a ship. So if you
look at any World War two era ship, whatever it is,

(08:19):
a battleship, a destroyer, does it doesn't matter what it is,
you will see what look like. You go, look what
up right now, as long as you're not driving, you
will see what look like almost big steel coffee cups
along the outside of it, little half pods, if you will.

(08:39):
Those are gun stations that we had been adding as
a country to our ships. We need more guns, more guns.
Each one of those little steel coffee cups holds an
anti air gun. That's where we're putting our anti air
guns in. Okay. Now, we did other things. We even
created things like proximity fuses. Remember I just said it's

(09:03):
very hard to shoot a plane out of the sky.
It gets a whole lot easier when you come up
with i'll just call it a bullet. When you come
up with a bullet that doesn't have to hit the plane.
If it gets close to the plane, it will read
that it's close to a plane and explode, damaging the plane.

(09:25):
That is a huge advantage when you're trying to shoot
these planes down. We had all these things that were done,
and there were other things as well, and they were
all done in an effort to stop Japanese planes from
torpedoing our ships. Remember they had torpedo planes from dive
bombing our ships from and these things we had done

(09:48):
had proven to be very very effective at stopping what
the Japanese had previously been doing. The problem is those
things are not nearly as effective against a plane that
is trying to crash into you. If he's trying to

(10:11):
fly over you and drop a bomb on you and
fly away, or he's trying to fly at you, load
to the water and drop a torpedo and fly away,
that's one problem, and that's a problem you figured out
how to deal with. What do you do when he
has that bomb and he's not trying to fly away,
he's trying to fly it into you. What do you do?

(10:34):
What do they do? Well? In the Philippines, we are
figuring all this out, and we'll talk about that next
while we talk about that. I want you to do
me a favor, do me a favorite. Think about this.
I want you to think about your house or your apartment,
wherever you live. What is the most precious hard copy

(10:57):
picture you own. I'm not talking about when you took
on your phone. What is the most precious picture you own?
Is it in your baby album? Is it in your
wedding album? Is it something from your dad or your mom,
grandpa something there's something isn't there? Or or a home

(11:18):
movie there's something isn't there. Well, you are one fire away,
maybe tonight, from that thing being gone forever. Once you
digitize it with Legacy Box, you get to keep it forever,
come fire, flood, no matter what. Let Legacy Box hand

(11:41):
digitize your stuff. I did it, do the same Legacybox
dot com slash Jesse. By the way, they're doing a
special nine bucks a tape that home movie digitize for
nine bucks Legacybox dot Com slash Jesse. We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (12:02):
True. It's the Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on what is now
completely a history show. Apparently tonight talking about the Kamikaze
of Japan. We'll get back to our regularly scheduled programming,
either tonight or tomorrow, maybe next week. I have no idea.
If you want to email the show, you can Jesse
at jesse kellyshow dot com. Japanese planes start intentionally crashing it,

(12:28):
crashing into our ships when we're in the Philippines taking
back the Philippines. At first we are mortified. We stay mortified,
and this is something we have to discuss here. Remember, wars,
especially in the modern era, they really need public support
to continue, or in the very least, they can't afford

(12:50):
widespread public outrage. By this point in the war, American
resolve isn't what it was right after Pearl Harbor. The
Americans are tired of their boys dying, dying in Europe,
dying in the Pacific. It's a lot of death, a
lot of suns lost. The American military apparatus is horrified

(13:14):
by this new Japanese tactic, and so they start lying
about it. Initially they completely banned the press from talking
about it, and they started lying about it. That's how
horrified they were by it. Now let's fast forward past that.
How do you handle this? It becomes a problem. The

(13:35):
admirals are screaming at the high command. Someone better come
up with the plan, because again, you can't stop these
things with anti air for the most part, And it's
just a question of momentum. Even if he's diving right
at you, even if you kill the pilot, even if
you shoot the plane to bits, momentum says the plane
is still going to end up where it was aimed

(13:57):
at before. You can't blow it up. We don't have missiles.
Doesn't work that way. What do you do? We come
up with a concept. The concept was essentially the entire
anti Kamakazi concept was known as the Big Blue Blanket.
But here's what the initial concept was. If we can't
stop them hitting the ships, let's stop them on the ground.

(14:20):
We have incredible pilots. We having a lot of planes,
incredible planes. Let's send them out constantly to look out
to take out any Japanese planes they find that are
concentrated on the ground. When you see a Japanese airfield,
assume those are all about to be kama kazi's and

(14:41):
you take them out on the ground. It was not
that effective. Somewhat effective, but not that effective. Why Japanese
are not stupid either. Always easy to think of your
enemy as stupid. The Japanese knew what we were going
to do. We'd been doing this kind of thing. They
had built legions of fake plan planes and left them
out on the runway, and they hid the real planes

(15:03):
in the jungle, again, frustrating our efforts. Measures countermeasures, measures, countermeasures,
What do you do? As far as the techniques the
planes used, I don't know which one would be more
difficult to deal with. Remember, the Japanese knew, they were
well aware that we had radar. Radar was a huge
problem for them. We could detect planes coming in. They

(15:27):
used a few different techniques. The first one was super low.
You fly your plane essentially. I've seen there's video of this.
You can go look at these kamic cazes. It looks
like the plane is ten feet above the ocean. You're
that low, you're off radar. They get a plane flying
in that low oftentimes you can't see him until it's

(15:51):
way too late and the radar didn't pick him up,
and soon he's slamming his plane into the side of
your aircraft carrier and kill three hundred sailors. Or they
would fly super high. The exact opposite. Cloud cover became
a nightmare because the Japanese would stay in the clouds.

(16:13):
They would stay in the clouds, and maybe you're sitting
there wondering, well, what about the radar. Didn't the radar
pick them up? Again? Japanese not stupid radar. Radar then
wasn't what radar is. Now. I know that's kind of
an obvious point. But now radar on a ship, it'll
tell you everything about that plane you're looking at, everything

(16:34):
about that plane you're looking at. At least you would
know everything about it. Back then, it's just a blip.
It's just a blip. The Japanese they would wait until
our planes were coming back from patrol. It was known
as cap combat Air patrol, but that's not important, and
they would hop in behind it. They would fly right

(16:56):
behind our combat air patrol. Radar is looking at it.
In radar's mind, that's just our boys coming back from
combat air patrol. They don't know there are Japanese kama
kazis in there. They think our guys are coming back soon.
Our ships are being pummeled. Now we win the Philippines,

(17:19):
We move on. We move on. We fight Ewojima. In Ewojima.
We do get some a few Kamakazis, but not many, really,
not many at all. We think we have stopped this problem.
You know, when you get pounded like we did in

(17:39):
the Philippines with these things, and then you fight another
major war for Ewojima. We needed that Ewojima airfield and
you don't get anything near that volume. You think, well,
our countermeasures clearly worked. Clearly the big blue blanket worked.
We are good to go. We take Ewojima, we take

(18:00):
the airfield. Then we move to the worst moment in
US Navy history, far worse than Pearl Harbor was, and
most people don't even know about it. It was the
Battle of Okinawa. And I will try to finish this
story next. Before I finish this story, let's get your

(18:21):
dog taken care of with some actual nutrition, real actual nutrition,
which your dog does not get from dog food. I
cannot stress this point enough. Dogs don't get any nutrition
from dog food. Is your dog food brown? Is your
cat's food brown? Well, congratulations at empty calories, and I'm

(18:43):
not judging. Fred's food is brown. How do we get
nutrition in him? We sprinkle rough greens on his food.
People talk about Fred's coat all the time and his stupidity,
but They talk about his coat all the time because
it shines. It shines because he gets vitamins and minerals,
he gets antioxidants in omega oils and digestive enzymes. He

(19:06):
used to have these horrible digestive problems after every meal.
Never has them anymore. This is all thanks to Roughgreens,
the number one dog supplement in the country. They'll send
you a free Jumpstart trial bag of it. Go to
Roughgreens dot com and get one. Make sure you use
the promo code Jesse, or you could call them two

(19:27):
one four Rough Dog Promo code Jesse. We'll try to
wrap this up.

Speaker 2 (19:34):
Next miss something.

Speaker 1 (19:36):
There's a podcast, get it on.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
Demand wherever podcasts are found, The Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
It is The Jesse Kelly Show on a Wonderful Tuesday,
trying to finish up our our Kamakazi history. Actually I'm
not even trying. I'm having myself a good time. So
the Japanese have tested Kama Kazi's in the Philippines and
had some success. Then we took you will gee. Now
I need to explain once again the B twenty nine

(20:05):
super Fortress in what it was doing to mainland Japan.
Already because this really drives home the fear they had had.
The B twenty nine super Fortress was our bomber, our
new bomber. I personally, I am a huge fan of
the B seventeen Flying Fortress. You've seen those the movie
Memphis Bell, You've seen those B seventeen Flying Fortresses. It's

(20:28):
my favorite plane. Ever, I admit that the B twenty
nine super Fortress is better than it in every way.
It's bigger, faster, more range, in every possible way. It
was a super plane. It also flew at thirty thousand feet.
The Japanese over cities like Tokyo. They did not have

(20:51):
an anti air gun or a fighter plane that could
reach thirty thousand feet. Not only were these super bombers
laying waste to Japanese cities, the Japanese were completely helpless
to stop them. Picture what that feels like. You don't

(21:14):
have a weapon to stop the super bomber from wiping
you out. And this is what they think is coming
for every inch of Japan. That is truly Godzilla. It's
what they think is coming. It's already arriving. Then America
lands the largest fleet man ever created outside of Okinawa.

(21:40):
The Marines, the armies. They go on to fight Okinawa.
We're not going to go into that's a whole other story.
Horrible fighting Okinawa. The Japanese had like one hundred thousand troops.
There was crazy, bloody, awful. We have this huge fleet
outside of Okinawa. They decide this is their moment to

(22:00):
send the divine wind because if America takes Okinawa, they
know the B twenty nine's will simply rain hell all
over Japan and they are powerless to stop it. So
they send waves and waves. We have not found inappropriate
countermeasure yet. So I touched on this a couple nights ago,
maybe last night. Came up with a new concept. This

(22:23):
whole flying around looking for the planes on the ground
thing obviously was not working. They were hiding their planes.
It wasn't working. We came up with picket stations. They
were called. And these men you probably have never heard
of these men unless you're a World War two buff
They deserve so much of your respect. We had fifteen

(22:45):
picket stations, draw a big circle, a big ring around
Okinawa and mark fifteen different stations. What they were was
a few smaller ships. We're not talking big battle ships.
And aircraft carriers. We didn't want to waste our most
prize ships on this. We would send a few ships

(23:07):
out so their radar could pick up the Japanese planes
coming from mainland Japan early enough that we could send
our planes up and take out the Japanese kamikaze before
they hit our ships. Because because that is really the

(23:27):
only super effective way to do it. The Japanese actually
had a suicide rocket plane. It's amazing. It was called
the Oka. It was known as the Oka. It didn't
end up doing a ton of damage because they had
to attach it to the bottom of a Japanese bomber
and it couldn't take off her land. Chris, the Oka
could not take off her land. They had to attach

(23:48):
it to the bottom of the bomber. The bomber would
have to fly towards the American fleet. Then the pilot
would crawl down get in the Oka. It was a
suicide bomb essentially, and it was rocket propelled. It was
going six hundred miles an hour. He would break off
the betty break off of the bomber. Sorry, it was
called a Betty Jay break off the Japanese bomber and

(24:10):
zoom towards our ships. Your anti air has no chance
of stopping that none. But we figured out quickly it's
actually not a big deal. The Oka might be fast,
but the Betty ain't. Let's go shoot the Betty out
of the sky before the OCA ever takes off. So
we figured out, you have to catch the Kama Kazis
before they get to your ship. They are raining hell

(24:33):
on the United States Navy outside of Okinawa. Did you know?
Did you know that we lost roughly twenty six twenty
seven hundred Americans live lofts in Afghanistan? Did you know that?
Did you know we lost five thousand American sailors outside

(24:54):
of Okinawa because of Kamakze's Double, the deadliest battle by
far in US Navy history. It was not one Kami
Kazi here or one Kami Kazi there. They would come
in waves. They would come alone, they would come at night,

(25:15):
they would come during the day, and they were they
were killing us. The thought was one plane, one ship,
That's what the Japanese were selling, And so we sent
these brave men out on picket stations. But remember, put
yourself in the mind of a seventeen year old young
Japanese man. You're scared out of your mind. Maybe you volunteered,

(25:36):
maybe you were voluntold. But you know it's a one
way trip. Now I need to pousit real quick. Why
is it a one way trip? Oh? They use words
like shame. Oh, your family will be shamed. You know
what that looks like In Japan, most of these men
came from rural areas, small Japanese villages where everyone works together,

(26:00):
everyone knows each other, everyone supports each other. If word
got back that your son chickened out, your son didn't
give his life to the emperor, the entire family would
possibly starve to death. The entire family would possibly be

(26:21):
jumped by the other villagers and beaten to a pulp.
That is how big of a deal the shame was
back home. So now you're a seventeen year old young
Japanese pilot, you understand this is a one way trip.
There's nothing you can do about that. You obviously you'd
like to take out an aircraft carrier, but you're gonna

(26:43):
take out the first American ship you see. You're gonna
be tempted to take out the first American ship you see,
especially because remember about one in ten of these pilots
actually made it to their destination, made it to the ship.
We are shooting down a bunch. You know, your odds
aren't great. So you across a picket station, a few
little dinky destroyers down there. Screw this carrier stuff. I'm

(27:07):
going into a dive and I'm getting mine. I'm getting
mine right now. Our men died in droves, in these pickets,
and droves that medal of honor citation. I read McCool
from yesterday last night, hour two. That's where he earned
his Medal of Honor. Men dying on his ship, men burning,

(27:30):
They were on a picket station and a kama Kazi
came screaming in and took them out. I'm gonna wrap
this thing up here. I think that's probably about as
much about kamakzes as you need to learn from me.
After Okinawa, of course, we dropped the atom bombs and

(27:51):
Japan ends up surrendering, and you understand all that. But
I want to repeat what I told you earlier. They
had legions of the prepped and ready to go for
our invasion of Japan. We discovered things after we occupied
Japan that blew us away. And while the Marines in

(28:12):
the army. They were dying on Okinawa. The brave men
in the United States Navy, they would wake up and
just look at the sky and just wait, and they
knew today might be the day you burn to death.
You're scalded to death. You drown because the kami Kazis

(28:33):
would come screaming in and they'd smash into the elevator
on the aircraft carrier. So now it's all the fuel
and bombs, or they'd smash into essentially the command structure.
Now your commanders blown up. Now you're five thousand sailors
lost in Okinawa. Now something to marinate on. As we

(28:57):
brought up last night, is that suicide? That? Yeah, But
do you understand them a little bit more now than
you did before. I don't know that I've ever researched
a history topic that interested me and had my mind

(29:17):
change as much as it changed when I was reading
about these young men, young men who are still celebrated
in Japanese museums to this day. You can show up,
you can read their names, you can read their letters
home foolhardy, evil by the government, no question about it,
but young men giving their lives to try to save

(29:40):
their country. From total destruction. That's the story of the Kamikaze.
Let's do a couple political things before we check out it. Here,
shall we. I bet your tea levels are through the roof,
Now what, Chris, don't roll your eyes. I bet they are.
Look I know mine are because I take a male
vitality stack from Chok. I understand full will well that

(30:01):
my water is full of estrogen. Synthetic estrogen comes from
birth control. It's terrible. We shower in it. They don't
treat it out of the water. We have a testosterone
crisis that is a national crisis as severe as the
national debt. Because you can't continue as a country with
a bunch of effeminate men. You can't even make enough babies.

(30:21):
You're not gonna have enough energy, enough strength to go on.
Chalk is out there to save America. Honestly, there really are.
If we can get American men to find themselves again
by getting their tea levels up naturally, we can save
the United States of America. They have a website now,

(30:42):
special for me, Special for you, Special for our listeners.
Chalk dot com, choq dot com, slash jesse go see
what they can do for you. Ask them questions they'll
answer chalk dot com slash Jesse We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (31:01):
Miss something, There's a podcast, Get it on demand wherever
podcasts are found. The Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 1 (31:09):
It is The Jesse Kelly Show. Final segment of The
Jesse Kelly Show. And what has been a wonderful Tuesday.
We'll be back to our regularly scheduled programming tomorrow. I
hope you enjoyed it. I certainly did. Jesse at Jesse
kellyshow dot com as the email address. If you missed
any part of that history or the rest of the
show from tonight last night, go download the podcast. iHeart

(31:32):
Spotify iTunes. One final quick word on the comic cause
that I did not know something I thought was interesting.
These planes when they crashed into the ships. Obviously is
a lot of fire and bombs and things like that,
But if the plane remained on the ship, the Japanese plane,
oftentimes the pilot was relatively intact. I mean, I'm sure

(31:56):
he doesn't look like he's ready for prom but he's
relatively inten act. Occasionally, much more than once, the American
sailors the Navy would come up with or find a
Japanese flag and they would pull him out of that
ship and they would bury that young man with honors.

(32:20):
Let see the same way they would their They killed
so many, and don't we were wrong. They were hated.
The Japanese were hated by our troops in World War Two,
there's no question about it. But the men who were
dying and whose friends were dying oftentimes thought of these

(32:40):
young fanatics. Yes, as fanatics and crazy, but as warriors
doing what they could for their country. That's what the
men felt at the time, some of them. Anyway, nothing's universal,
you know, it is universal Communists living a life of
luxury while making you poor and miserable. That's a Zorn

(33:01):
Mamdani guy, That Kami who's running to be mayor of
New York City. He probably going to be mayor of
New York City. You know, he talks about eliminating things
like private property. He talked about abolishing private property, abolishing
private grocery stores. Of course, he's one of these defund
the police, eliminate the police types.

Speaker 2 (33:24):
You know.

Speaker 1 (33:24):
He had a wedding in Uganda. It was a ridiculous
three day wedding in a compound with an army of
massed security guards. In a cell phone jamming system. I

(33:46):
only brought this up. This was not for the right
wingers who were listening. This wasn't probably for you. This
is for you, Kamis, you street animals who hate listen
to the show. I know you think, Ma'm Donnie will
be your revenge, your revenge against the people who make
what you don't make and live or you don't live

(34:07):
and look like what you want to look like. It's
he is your vehicle to hurt the people you blame
for your problems. I understand that completely, but you should
also understand that he doesn't consider himself one of you
at all. You are a useless foot soldier to him.

(34:29):
You mean nothing to him. He will pretend as best
he can to try to know like he act like
he knows your struggle, that he lives like you, But
he doesn't and he has no intention of doing so.
Elite communists always follow the same playbook. They are always
surrounded by security and armed guards and delicious steak and

(34:51):
beautiful mansions and private jets while they deploy you, the useless, miserable,
angry mouth, contented street animal out to get hurt, arrested,
hurt other people, and completely destroy your life, just letting
you know it's fools gold and it always has been. Now,

(35:15):
with New York City and Cincinnati and everything else in
the news, this is probably a good time to remind
you about something else. Even if we deported every single
we legal. The United States of America are cities especially,
but really lots lots of it. We have cultivated a

(35:35):
culture of crime because our elected officials intentionally keep violent
people out of jail, set violent people loose from jail.
That is the country we live in. Now, What to
you carry to stop a bad man from hurting you?
I just watched a video actually during the break of

(35:57):
a guy who had to be six' three six', four
gigantic walked right up to some tubby dude on the
sidewalk and hit him so hard the guy's parents could.
Feel it dude's knocked. Out done what does your daughter
have to stop that animal from doing it? TO her
burna has a compact launcher, right now you can seal

(36:19):
carry it on, your body right in your, little purse
right in. Your pocket we're talking about the size of a.
SMARTPHONE here i don't. Like guns it's non, lethal shoots tear,
gas balls, pepper balls. Kinetic rounds it stops bad men
from hurting. Good people and the best part is it's

(36:39):
legal everywhere all. Fifty states you don't need, a permit
you don't need a. Background check you need to go
on BURNA, by rna burna dot com and get one burna.
Dot com, all right don't hope for. The best set
aside that ridiculous. Wishful, thinking now let do. Some headlines

(37:03):
and now here's. A headline why, you know you know the.

Speaker 2 (37:06):
Thing headlines we didn't get.

Speaker 1 (37:08):
To as an. Immigration lawyer an immigration Lawyer asked ice.
For help she gave the they, she said they gave
her the Number For. Taco, BELL see I knew I.
Loved ice i'm all. About that trump's border numbers continue
to plummet to a new record low four thousand and twenty,

(37:30):
seven days a reminder that any modern nation that has
an unsecure border has done. So intentionally, it's really really
quite simple to secure. A border Is Jis lain maxwell
trying to blackmail her way into. A, pardon, well yes
that's really the essence of. All pardons i'm going to give.
You this i'll. Protect them you let me out, of

(37:52):
Prison breaking Corporation For public broadcasting gave tax dollars To
the soros backed. Censorship giant not exactly breaking news on.
This show everyone who listens to this understands it's all
a gigantic scam to bloodsuck money out of your wallet
and distribute it To The. Communist Revolution appeals Court nix's

(38:13):
orgon rule forcing adoptive parents to affirm radical. TRANSGENDER ideology
i hate these headlines Out of orgon because organ it
might be the most beautiful state In The united States.
OF america i adore, that place and it just sucks
to filthy Comies in Portland. And salem Salem and eugene
have ruined the rest of that blood. Red State, all

(38:35):
right we're gonna be back tomorrow to do, it again
and we're gonna have. SOME fun, i promise. That's all
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Host

Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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