Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a great, great Friday. It's the final
hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on a Great Friday,
where we have been all over the map, and we're
gonna continue to be all over the map. We're gonna
talk about these shows, like the view getting propped up?
(00:33):
What the aren't podcasts prepped up? Does Obama really have immunity?
We'll talk about documentaries, how do I find them? All that,
so much more coming up on the final hour of
The Jesse Kelly Show, and then we're checking out here
until Monday, where we will return. Now let's get back
to him. Dear mister big hands, I've heard you bag
(00:53):
on MacArthur. That would be Douglas MacArthur a little bit.
But you just did a great piece on how Japan
became an ally. I think MacArthur, or don't you think
MacArthur deserves a lot of credit for turning back communism
in Japan. I love the show. Please feed the bar okay. First,
(01:19):
let's be crystal clear about this. There was no communism
in Japan. Japan back at this time was one of,
if not the most anti communist countries in the world,
to the point where there is a picture and I
don't have his name. I don't have his name, but
(01:41):
there is a picture you can look at of I
think he was considered a socialist, a Japanese socialist on
stage and he is about to be stabbed to death
by an assassin who's killing him because he's a communist.
The assassin was arrested and leave killed himself in jail
(02:02):
a few days later. But they killed all the communists
in Japan. Japan was ruled by an emperor, not a
communist place at all, No communism. But I don't want
to major on the miner here. Let's go back to this, don't.
I think MacArthur deserves a lot of credit. Look, Douglas
(02:23):
MacArthur did a lot of awesome things. When I dog
on him, I'll give you my reasons in a moment,
when I dog on him, it's for specific reasons. It's
not to say the guy never did anything right. He
was a brilliant, brilliant military commander, just a brilliant man period.
(02:43):
He was also brave, really really brave. I'm talking about
his own physical bravery. He was a brave human being.
He did good rebuild in Japan, had a real love
for those people, had a real love for the Filipino
who loved him back too, helping them out, building them up.
He did good. He did good. He did good with
(03:06):
his strategy in Korea of landing his forces or our
forces behind the North Koreans, forcing them to scatter and
turn around and come back at us, and things like that.
He did a lot of good things. He is a brilliant,
brilliant man. My issue is I have this thing about
(03:27):
leadership where I hold leaders accountable, I hold them to
a higher standard than normal people. And in the military,
I hate it when a commander does not suffer the
way his troops suffer. I despise it. And historically commanders
(03:50):
have known that that is just good leadership. Alexander the Great,
he would get off his horse if you were digging ditches. Now,
this is Alexander the Great. He didn't have to do
a thing. He can go back and let some Persian
girl feed him grapes and fan him. Nope, He'll sit
there and dig ditches with you. Julius Caesar several times
(04:13):
threw himself into harm's way in the front line because
he understood that's what troops respect. That is what troops follow.
Guius Marius speaking of the Romans. He's a Roman commander.
You should know. But because of our crappy school system,
most people don't Guius Marius. Same thing in the ditch,
with you, eating, with you what you ate. Napoleon would
(04:36):
do this. Napoleon would eat what his men ate. He
would be in the mud with his men. They loved him,
they respected it. The great military leaders will suffer with you.
Sleep where you sleep, eat where you eat, walk through
the muck. Where you walk through the muck. What happened
(04:57):
in Baton in the Philippines, that's the Baton Death March
was Philippines. For those who don't know. What happened in
Baton was the Japanese attacked us. It was a surprise attack.
And I'm not judging MacArthur for the preparations he made
or didn't make for something like that. I really not
mistakes happen. I'm not judging there. There's no judgment. But
(05:21):
when our troops retreated to the Peninsula of Baton, where
they were essentially trapped because we didn't have a navy
to get them out, and the Japanese were coming at them.
There is an island off the Philippines there. I guess
it's part of the Philippines called Krregador, and go look
it up. Corregador. In fact, pretty sure there are pictures
(05:44):
of his little outpost out there. Douglas MacArthur sat on
that island safe while the guys were starving to death.
This is one of the things about the Baton Death
March people don't know a lot of It's not just
that they got our guys and they marched them all
(06:04):
these miles in the brutal heat and tortured them and
killed them and dehydrated them. It's not just that the
men who started that march were half dead already. They
were sick as dogs from all the dysentery and yellow
fever and everything else in the jungle. They were starving.
(06:24):
They were so hungry they would be catching snakes and
lizards and monkeys to eat them because they had run
out of food. They looked like skeletons before they started
the march. While Douglas MacArthur sat on Corregador and ate
like a king. That bothers me and it bothered them.
(06:48):
They called him dugout Doug because he was not there
with them. He was just fine, nice and safe on
the island, nice hot meals. Corregidor was being shelled and
things like that. It wasn't all sunshine and roses, believe me,
but it was not with his men. Now let's go
(07:08):
to Korea. You know, I'm a Korean War I don't
know if I would say fan, but it's called the
Forgotten War, and it is criminally underplayed. That war was terrible.
The conditions, the savage fighting, the freezing, to everything else
are troops. If you have a Korean War veteran in
(07:29):
your life, maybe they don't speak about it, most of them.
Don't you pay that man respect. I'm telling you those
guys went through ugh misery, misery. Douglas MacArthur was in
charge of that whole thing. He did not spend a
single night in Korea, not one that bothers me. It
(07:56):
doesn't have to bother you. People have different views of
leadership and other things. That doesn't have to bother you.
I'm not saying he's the devil himself. I'm not very
capable of man, very smart, a lot of great things,
and personal showed personal bravery on multiple occasions, no question,
about it. But when your men are calling you dugout, Doug. Mmmm,
(08:19):
that's not good, Jesse, Why is it the Rachel Maddow
and the ladies of the View do not have a
popular podcast or radio show. All the lefties are losing
their TV gigs and they don't have a radio show
to fall back on like Hannity and Company. Could it
be that nobody wants to listen to them? Well, remember
(08:40):
it's all based on a world of make Believe you.
By the way, the View might be getting canceled because
they're losing too much money. But yes, left wing radio.
Left wing podcasts has never been and will never be huge.
There are a couple of them out there that are big.
But because it's com completely dependent on choice podcast Now
(09:03):
I realized this is a radio show, but it's also
podcasted on iHeart, Spotify, iTunes. If you download the Jesse
Kelly Show, it's because you want to. You have options
to download anything you want you want to. If you
watch the View, it's because you have ABC on. It's
because the doctor's office has ABC on. ABC was just
(09:25):
something you'll stream in your house all day and you
go right from that to soap operas or whatever else
is around it. TV is an interesting bird, but TV
itself because of this, TV is propped up really by
the oldest of us. Yet that's why the oldest generation now,
(09:45):
instead of being the most conservative, which they had been,
it's by far our most communist generation. Sixty five plus men,
sixty five plus women, they are both majority Democrat. Did
you know that? And obviously it's not all of them.
We have so many hardcorees thing right now? Who are
that age who listened? But sixty five plus women sixty
five plus men are the two demographics in the country
(10:07):
that are still Democrat. Why they watch TV? They watched
TV all day. When they want to watch the news,
they sit down and watch CNN, they sit down and
watch NBC. They said, this is why this takes place,
all right. Someone wants to know about Obama's immunity. Someone
wants to talk about where I get documentary ideas from.
(10:30):
Someone wants to talk about tattoos. All that and more
still to come on the world famous Jesse Kelly Show.
I want to talk to you about testosterone. Really, when
I talk to you about that, I want to talk
to you about energy and mood. How is your mood?
How are your energy levels you feel good, energized, ready
(10:51):
to go? Or are you just always tired, a little
down another day at the office. You know Chuck will
change your entire life. You know Chuck will change your
life at work. Did you know that I am so
much better now than I used to be because I
feel good. When you sit down and you do a
show and you feel good, it's a little different than
(11:13):
when you're sitting there, It's awful. Try some natural herbal
supplements from Chalk will change your life. Go to Chalk
dot com slash Jesse get a male Vitality Stack subscription
or a female Vitality Stack subscription. I have a male
(11:34):
Vitality Stack subscription. Oh best thing I've ever done. Chalk
dot com slash Jesse. We'll be back, miss dast catch
up Jesse kellyshow dot com. It's the Jesse Kelly Show.
I almost forgot who I was there for a second
(11:55):
on a Friday, a wonderful Friday, and ask doctor Jesse.
It hasn't even been heavy. He's as heavy as tin
boxes that you might be moving. And remember you can
email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Let's
get back to as many of these as we possibly
can before we check out of here and enjoy our weekend. Jesse,
(12:16):
you ever thought about getting a tattoo? Wedding band? I
was complaining because you don't know what he's talking about.
I was complaining the other day that I hate wearing
a wedding ring. A wedding band I always have. I
used to have a big, fat one, like a traditional one,
and I hated it. It was always uncomfortable. I then
moved to this super thin, tiny one, and it's going
(12:38):
to rip my finger off every time I do something physical.
I catch it on things that drives me crazy. I
bet we got one hundred emails of people saying, have
you ever considered getting a tattoo? One? So let me
just bare my soul here for you for a second.
And I know, no matter what, I'm going to get
made fun of, and that's fine. It's part of being
the oracle. I am forty four, and I am of
(13:03):
as of this moment, tattooless. I don't have any tattoos,
and I don't have anything against tattoos, and I mean
nothing at all. It's just not something that bothers me.
Sometimes they look cool, Sometimes they look terrible right. Like
anything else, you overdo it, it ends up looking bad.
I think they can look cool on dudes. I think
(13:24):
they can look pretty hot on women if they're done right.
But you know, it's also not a requirement. OB doesn't
have any either. We're just not tattooed people. A tattooed
wedding band. It's not that I'm against the concept, and
I appreciate the suggestion. At forty four, am I not
(13:45):
too old to get my first tattoo? Once you've made
forty four without them? Am I not? Am I not
too old? I feel like I'm past the age. And
I'm not saying if you're a tattoo person you shouldn't
get any more at forty four. I mean, if you've
(14:06):
gone forty four years without one, do you want one now?
And again, I have nothing against getting one. I've actually
stood in a tattoo parlor with all my Marine Corps
buddies at one point in time in Hollywood, California. It
was late and probably not the time to be making
those particular decisions, but I was ready to go. A
(14:30):
couple of them got them. I couldn't settle on one.
It was the permanency of it. I was looking at
all the different designs they had on the wall, and
I liked a couple a little, and finally I passed.
So it's not again. I'm not against it. I'm forty four.
Now I think it's too late. Maybe a tattoo of
(14:50):
my face somewhere on my body I've always thought would
be cool. What, Chris, is something like a big one
taken over my entire back or something like that, it
would be awesome. Or on my hands? What if I
got it on the palm of my hands, Chris? What?
Don't reject me? Hey, Jesse, I need help understanding President
Obama's immunity. I don't understand why he can't be indicted
(15:15):
even if he can't be tried or even found guilty
and can't be sentenced. Please discuss. Okay, So I really
burst everyone's bubble when I dropped this one on you
last week. We even got some hate mail of people
who were mad at me about it. And No, that
stuff's fine. So let me explain again. Presidents have immunity.
(15:38):
They'll just stay with me. Just stay with me here, please.
Presidents have immunity up to a certain point because the
evil communists tried to throw Donald Trump in prison of
a hundred different ways. The Supreme Court had to step in,
you remember that recently, and they had to essentially reassert
what was already true. You can't throw the president in
(16:02):
prison for doing the things he was doing as president
of the United States of America. And I already know
what you're screaming at the radio, so just hold on,
hold on. So now, Barack Obama, he can't walk up
to a gas station and stick a gun in someone's
face and rob the register. He'd be arrested, he'd be charged,
(16:24):
he'd be sent to prison. As president of the United States,
he cannot walk up to that cash register and stick
a gun in their face and take all the money
because that is not considered a prosecution of his duties
as president. However, as president, and this is not what
(16:46):
I want, Okay, this is not what I'm campaigning for.
This is how it is. And if you don't like it,
too bad, So sad. If the president of the United
States of America tells his FBI director, Hey, go dig
up some dirt on my political opponent and then investigate him,
that is evil. It's sick, it's wrong. You can even
(17:08):
argue it's unlawful. You can say all that, and you
are probably correct about that, but according to our laws,
that is considered to be part of his duty as president.
The same way you can't prosecute George Bush for the
war in Iraq. They have weapons of mass destruction and
(17:31):
that didn't turn out to be the case. And you
can say the lefties were always saying that dom in prison,
dom in prison. You can argue he's sick, he's evil,
he's wrong, it's bad. You can argue all those things
and all that. Stuf's fine. Argue it till you're blue
in the face. He gave that order as part of
his presidential duties. Therefore he can't burn for it. I
(17:53):
am not celebrating this. There's nobody on the planet i'd
rather see in prison more than that evil communist Barack Obama.
I wish he could burn for this. He's not going
to burn. If you are holding out for that, you
will be disappointed. It's your daddy's show, time to bring
you back to reality. All right, all right, let's talk
about documentaries. Let's talk about backlash. If one of these
(18:16):
people go down, someone asks a question about a pack hey,
tune in for that one, Chris. Before we get to
a pack, what are you going to leave behind for
your kids? And I don't mean houses and money and
then gold coins and things like that. All that stuff's mine.
(18:37):
But when your children want to see you, will they
be able to on their phones, on their computers, When
your grandchildren, when your great grandchildren want to know, what
did mom sound like? How was Dad? Are they going
to be able to? Legacy Box? Is you passing down
(19:03):
your legacy to generations you will never meet? Get your
home videos digitized, your pictures, your hard copy pictures. Get
them digitized. This American company, Tennessee Company, will do it
by hand and send you all your stuff back. Get
it done now, stop putting it off. Legacy box dot
(19:27):
com slash Jesse. Legacy box dot com slash Jesse. We'll
be back. Feeling a little stocky. Follow legend, Subscribe on
social at Jesse KELLYDC. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a magnificent Friday. Remember if you miss any part
(19:48):
of the show, you can download at iHeart, Spotify, iTunes.
If you want to send us an email, your love,
your hate, your death threats. Everything is welcome, including ask
doctor Jesse. Questions Jesse Jesse, kellyshow dot com. Jesse, you're
the last one I trust. Can you explain a pack
and how it affects our political futures or whatever? He said,
(20:11):
We will leave out past assassination theories, etc. Okay, for
those who do not know, a pack is the Israel
pack apack, it's Ai Pac. Now let's describe. Let me
describe what they are. It's fairly obvious they are a pack,
(20:31):
a well funded pack, and they dole out large chunks
of money to everyone. To be honest with you, everyone Republicans, Democrats.
I remember when I was running for office, I told
you my campaign manager is Jewish. Is Jewish, but he
was Jewish back then too, And I asked him because
(20:54):
I was totally unfamiliar with him, I said, so, what
are they? Republican Democrat? He said, oh, they're everything. So
what are they? Here's what they are. They donate huge
amounts of money to ensure American politicians have a more
favorable view of Israel. Now let's lay this out in
(21:16):
a very very frank way. That will, I'm sure offend everybody,
but too bad. So sad packs, All packs have an
interest that's the purpose of starting a pack. Packs like
APAs have an interest. There are packs you love and
packs you hate. Ones that are pro life, ones that
are pro abortion, ones that are pro guns, ones that
(21:37):
are ban guns. And they dole out their money to
politicians in the hope that the politicians, having received their money,
will enact policies that are favorable to their cause. It's
a very fairly obvious point. Now, what makes a pack controversial?
Israel from its very i'll call it seconmation the modern
(22:01):
state of Israel. When they were reconquering the land, they
did not only do it through guns and buying property
and all kinds of different things. And all those things
happened too. They engaged politically and internationally. They knew they
(22:24):
needed the aid, the ear they needed powerful countries, including
the United States of America, to back their play. And
so it was not a look, it wasn't a passive endeavor.
It was very focused. It was well funded. There are
going to be Jewish ambassadors, I should call them Israeli
(22:44):
although they're all Jewish Israeli ambassadors in the office of
every major government that would welcome them, asking will you
help us here? Can you do this. Can you sign
on for this? Can you sign on for that? Lobbying
is as old as government itself, and the Israeli government
lobbying other governments around the world to get in their
(23:06):
favor is as old as the modern state of Israel itself.
Now in American politics today, Israel is more controversial than
it has been in the past on the left and
the right. Now the left they just flat out hate
them by now, but the right it's become more controversial.
Still more controversial too. People, Hey, why are we getting involved? Hey?
(23:31):
Do the Jews run the government and all this other stuff? Now,
if you're somebody who thinks like that, the Jewish people
the state of Israel has a heavy influence on our government.
They run the government. Maybe you think that way. That's fine.
If you're somebody who thinks that way. And then you
(23:54):
pull up campaign donations and you find out a politician
who votes so way you don't like, got one hundred
thousand dollars from a pack. What does that do? It
reinforces to you what you already thought. The Jews run
the government. That completely reinforces it to you. Now, I'm
(24:16):
not here to talk you into or out of anything.
But I am going to clarify a couple things that
everyone has to understand. One, this pack is by far
it's not even close to being the biggest donor of
the packs that are out there. It's not even close.
There's a lot of misinformation out there that they donate
more than any that's not even close. They're not that powerful.
(24:39):
There are other packs that carry a lot more weight
than APAC does. That's one. Two. Every pack, as I
laid out, has an interest. A pack's interest is Israel, period.
And every country around the world they have a pack. Well,
I should say every country around the world. Many entries
(25:00):
around the world have a pack, and they are in
the ear of our politicians. I'll tell you a little
story about this one. The Armenia is kind of in
the news. Turkey, of all this stuff in the news,
from the stuff that happened today, it doesn't matter. But
you know about the Armenian genocide, at least you've heard
of it before, where the Turks were expelling the Armenians
(25:24):
and they killed a million of them, and it was
this really terrible affair. When I was running for office,
I had both packs. You know they both have packs.
Did you know that most people don't know that I
had both packs come to me before I was even
in office. Of course, I didn't end up getting there
before I was even in office. I had both packs
(25:45):
come to me because they wanted to ensure that once
I got to Congress, if I got to Congress, that
I was going to be an ambassador on their behalf
for that specific instident. That's how deep the lobbying goes
and how pervasive it goes inside the country. Meaning I
(26:06):
had the Turks saying, hey, you're not gonna say we
genocided those people, right, And I remember think it was
so odd, like, hey, maybe you guys should let that go.
And then the Armenians too, Hey, when you get there,
you're going to tell everyone what the Turks did to us, right?
And I thought the same thing back then. And by
the way, I love Armenian people. I don't know why
(26:26):
I've always gotten along with them, but I thought the
same thing back then. This is odd, it looks bad,
and they all do it. The reason more people talk
about a pack than other packs is there is that
reputation that is not completely unwarranted. There is that reputation
(26:50):
that the Israeli government does heavy lobbying with Western governments
in order to get the backing of Western governments. And
that by the way, like I said, I'm not trying
to be melely mouthed about this. That reputation is not undeserved.
They do. That's part of how they establish their state.
They do a lot of it, and they will they'll
(27:10):
be very very overt with getting you over there to
tour it. Hey, we want to bring you over there.
Why do you think there's always a congressional junket in Israel.
They will have a fortune spent to grab ten congressmen
and fly them over their first class. And we're going
to put you up in the best hotels, and we're
going to show you the sites. We want you to
(27:31):
fall in love with Israel. We want you to stand
with Israel. We want you to protect Israel at any cost.
And all that stuff's fine, that's well and good whatever.
But the people who naturally who are more isolationists, and
certainly the people who kind of give Jews the side eye,
Wait a minute, are you manipulating things again behind the scenes.
(27:53):
If that's how you think, it looks bad, doesn't it.
If that's how you think, if you think the American
government is run by Israel? If the Jews are running
the world, wait to go, Chris, If you think the
Jews are running the world, and then you pull up
your phone and you find out, Wait a minute, a
congressional delegation of twenty people are at the whaling wall.
What what our whole government is owned by a pack?
(28:16):
Look like? Anything? Like everything? Some truth, a lot of falsehood,
a lot of truth. Gott to suss out what is
real and what is not real before we go flying
off the handle. All right, all right, let's talk about
Obama's people, get it going to jail? Is there going
to be a backlash? My documentary love? Where do I
(28:37):
find them next? He doesn't care if you believe him,
but he's right, Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly's Show.
Final segment of The Jesse Kelly Show. On a wonderful,
fantastic Friday, and ask doctor Jesse Friday going to get
(28:58):
to as many of these as possible, So Jewish I mester.
Chris brought up during the break that he said, I
think what a lot of people complain about when it
comes to the APAC stuff and the Israel stuff is
that they have an outsized influence, because like you said,
there are more pack There are many bigger packs who
donate more money in every country as a pack. But
APA's the one you hear about. You see congressmen waving
(29:20):
Israeli flags all over the place, and so to people
it seems bad. Well, there are two reasons for the
outsized influence, because that is not incorrect at all. The
first reason I already laid out. They focus on that
and have always focused on that. It has always been
a focused effort to get in the favor of powerful
governments in order to help them. That's true. But the
(29:43):
second part is America's evangelical base makes America a ripe
place to use that influence because of the Israeli connection
in the Bible. I mean, look, I would know there too,
and it was a holy land trip because it's a
(30:03):
holy land for me, you know, that's the thing. It's
it's a holy land for Christians, it's a holy land
for Jews, it's holy land for Muslims. It's the Holy Land.
So when you have that kind of crossover, you're naturally
going to have a country in America that is going
to lean way more pro Israel than Oh, I don't know,
Saudi Arabia someplace like that, Doctor Jesse. You say, in
(30:27):
your free time you consume history, whether books or documentaries.
Where do you watch your documentaries? You have a favorite
streaming service. Okay, So I have the worst answer for
you here, because I know you're probably I know you.
I know you're probably hoping that I'm going to hand
you some gem and I can't. Here's what I do.
(30:50):
I don't seek out a documentary or documentary service or
documentary channel. I wait until there is a history subject
that has sparked my interest, and then I go searching
and hoovering up every bit of information on it I
(31:10):
can find. As far as where I find a documentary,
I actually have subscriptions to places I really don't care
for and don't even like, just for documentary purposes. I
will look. I'll look up YouTube. I'll see if there's
anything that's well done there. It's a bunch of crap.
You can't really rely on that, but I'll look and see. Remember,
(31:32):
when I do a history story or I'm interested in something,
I try to pull from as many sources as I can.
I'll never watch a video because you never know if
that guy's full of crap. I'll go to YouTube. I'll
look and see if Amazon Prime has a series on it.
Does Netflix have a series on it? Now, most of
those three things, YouTube, Prime, Netflix garbage. Even if you
(31:55):
find one, it's garbage, it's commy. It's now, there'll be
a gem in there. And when they do it right,
they do it right. Hbo Hbo again a garbage commy company.
But when they want to do a documentary right, man,
(32:16):
can they do it right? But again, like Netflix, they
have a new Vietnam documentary out. I think I already
told you this. What's it called a Turning Point? I
think it's called Turning Point. Its about Vietnam. I made
it two episodes in and I just turned it off.
I couldn't take it anymore. There was some good information
in there, it didn't quite outweigh the relentless COMI propaganda,
(32:40):
so I dropped it. There was a subscription I got,
and I think I still have it. I think the
channel was called the Documentary Channel. Gosh, I should have
looked that up before I did this. I think it's
called the Documentary Channel. I don't have a magic bullet
for you. I sift. I watch, and I'll turn it off,
and I watch it, I turn it off, and eventually,
(33:01):
because I've done this for so long, it doesn't take
me long to figure out, Okay, this is well researched.
This is somebody who knows what they're talking about. Chris said,
what's the ratio good to bad? Uh? I bet you
I turn off sixty to seventy percent of the ones
I start. It's just really hard, if you're into history
(33:24):
to find history that is not framed as America sucks,
the West sucks, everyone else is great. It's it's hard
to find history that is presented that kind of way.
Sixty seventy percent. I bet it's I bet it's yeah.
I bet that's it. You asked about the boring ones too. Oh,
I watch the boring ones too. When I watch, remember
(33:49):
in my mind, I'm I'm trying to do a good
show for you. I'm trying to do a good history
show for you. Yeah. It's obviously a labor of love
because I nerd out on that stuff. But I watched
a World War One one once and it's like one
of those movies they used to show you in school
with the grainy crappy video and the guy who talks
(34:14):
in the monotone voice like this, and then General Johnson
sailed up the straight And if I didn't have to
watch that, I wouldn't have. But there was so much
good information in it. I watched it anyway. I wanted
to do a good show, and so sometimes you gotta
(34:34):
slog through that pack that stuff to do a good show. Now,
before we get on and talk about Obama here, I
want you to fortify your retirement this weekend. Case this
little spicy trade war with India and China continues apace.
Let's not wake up on Monday and be wiped out.
(34:55):
Let's make sure, no matter what good times and bad times,
precious metals you should always be acquiring a little, not everything.
You don't put your eggs in one basket, a little,
a little more today, a little more next month. You
should have precious metals in your retirement already. Gold Co
(35:15):
will do that for you. Let gold Co do it
because gold Co makes it easy. Gold Co has over
six thousand five star reviews, a plus rated from the
Better Business Bureau. Let gold Co fourtify what you worked
so hard for. You busted your butt, your whole life.
You put that money away, don't give it away because
(35:37):
the market goes pop. Call them eight five point five
eight one seven gold or go to jesse likesgold dot com.
All right, they'll get you a free copy of their
Golden Silver Kit, which I would recommend. Hey, Oracle, I agree,
we must see former Obama people go to jail. But
(35:58):
do you think the public are prepared for the violent
backlash that will surely follow. I have doubts about how
much violent backlash we will see in this country as
long as the DOJ continues to realize they should go
after the funding of this public backlash, and then it disappears. Jesse,
is there a way to break the mind virus spell?
(36:19):
The person in my life calls it a belief system.
Other examples of people who have Remember the democrat in
your life is in a cult, and people can wake
up from cults. They have woken up many, many, many
times throughout history. You stay calm, keep bringing up facts,
little tidbits of information can with the right person, work
(36:42):
their way in start creating that doubt. They already know
it somewhere in the back of their mind. This can't
be right. Is something wrong with this. Just be patient.
It's not going to be fast. It's not going to
be easy. Jesse, Why are you always looking so angry
because I have kids? All right, it is time for
the weekend. You put your phone down and go enjoy yourself.
(37:06):
That's all