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May 3, 2024 37 mins

How did Chris and Michael get their jobs? Giving money to politicians in a down economy. Hollywood’s total lack of knowledge about boot camp. Where are all the parents of these college protesters? Are we even worthy of freedom.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Final hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a Friday, and ask doctor Jesse Friday, I'm going to
talk about being press secretary Trump's press secretary. Someone wants
to know how did Chris and Michael get here? Why

(00:31):
are they still here? That's really the question. But we'll
talk about that. We'll talk about the radio show. Would
it be better if if Biden wins? We'll talk about
military movies and their accuracy, all that and so much
more coming up on the world famous Jesse Kelly Show.
Let's begin, freedom Fighter Kelly. If Trump wins the twenty

(00:52):
twenty four presidential election and he offers you the job
of press secretary, would you accept the job? It would
give you a global platform form to call out communism.
My fear is your Hubris will not let you. His
name is Keith Chris. What does hubris mean? That's pride
or something right? That's pride? My pride. I'm not sure

(01:13):
exactly what you mean by that. I'm assuming well, here,
let me just explain. No, I don't think And here's
why I had to answer it in such a mealy mouthway.
I love what I'm doing now, and no, it's not
an important job. I'm not important. I like to joke

(01:35):
about being a huge, famous celebrity, but I do radio
in TV. It's not important. I do, however, believe it
is doing some good for someone, and maybe not saving
the country or something like that, but people get benefits
from it. You email tell me about how it's helped
you with addiction or your marriage or whatever whatever it

(01:57):
may be. So it provides so thing for someone, and
in my opinion, being able to have a bully pulpit
like this does more good than being a press secretary
for anybody, whether it be Trump or anyone else. A
press secretary works exclusively for the White House for the president,

(02:21):
and you say the things you're told to say, and
you don't say the things you're not allowed to say.
I am allowed to sit here and say whatever I
want right now, as you can tell. That's why the
show is so offensive. Premiere. I cannot believe it has
never scolded me ever once. They've never said Jesse, you

(02:42):
said that on the air. Don't say it again, Jesse.
We didn't like that. I never get those phone calls ever.
Text message is nothing. They just let me go. That's
what they believe in. As press secretary, even Trump's I
would have rules. I don't do very well with rules.
Now said, maybe because of this. I do love my

(03:05):
country and I feel an obligation to serve it. I've
wanted to better it and serve it for my entire
adult life. I've wanted to fight for this place that
I love so much. As why I'm rent for office.
It's part of why I joined the Marines. It's I
love politics because what do we talk about. It's a
study of power. So if my president called and said, hey, Jesse,

(03:30):
I need help, I don't know that I would be
able to say no. Now, he's not good at Don't worry.
I'm not going anywhere. Trump's not going to make me
his press secretary. There are other people in Trump's orbit
who work for him are intensely loyal to him, and
that's who he should have around him. I'm not loyal
to any politician, nobody, none, not one, none of them.

(03:53):
They're all rental cars to me, use them to get
where you're going, and dump them on the side of
the road. You don't need someone like me as your
press secretary. Harry you need someone who will lay down
and die for you as your press secretary. That's what
you need, dear pitmaster. I'd love to hear a little
backstory on how Chris and Michael got hired. Did they
apply via a job board post? Were they friends of

(04:13):
a friend? What did Chris think about the Jewish producer label?
Was it his idea? Please enlighten us. His name is Dave. Okay, Well, Chris,
here's a funny story about Chris. I mean really, just
talking about Chris in general was funny to me. But
what Chris, It's fine. No, here's a funny story. So
little backstory on the radio show and how it got started.

(04:34):
I feel like I'm talking about myself a lot, Isn't
it awesome? Anyway? This is six years ago. My mentor,
Michael Berry. He's this big, nationally syndicated radio show. He
does an incredible show. He's my mentor. He's the reason
I'm here talking to you. He was the one pushing me, Hey,
you're not supposed to be selling RVs. I'm telling you
you could do media. You could do media, really well,

(04:55):
you do media. So he pushed and pushed and pushed
on top of the pushing started working on the Big
Cheese at iHeart down in my area. I don't know
if he would be okay with me saying his name.
I think he would. His name's Eddie. I'm not gonna
say his last name. What Chris I didn't say. His
last name is great dude. But Eddie's the one who

(05:16):
makes decisions. Michael and Eddie they work on getting me
an hour long evening show. I show up. It's seven
to eight o'clock at night at the local radio station
here in Houston. This is six hours, six years ago.
I've never done a radio show of any kind. I've
never done a podcast. I mean, I've done interviews from
when I ran for Congress, but I've never done in
my own show. I've never sat here and be on

(05:38):
a microphone and done anything. And the first well, we'll
set aside. The board op the first night was supposed
to be a Democrat, someone they knew in the studio
was a hardcore Democrat. Could you imagine me working with
a Democrat. It wouldn't work. For whatever reason they called
in six something got shuffled around. Chris was there the

(06:00):
first night as the board up, not a producer yet
a board op. Now, what is a board up when
you have a radio show. In fact, if all your
local radio shows probably have something like this, you don't
necessarily have a dedicated producer who helps you make content
and cut stuff up. You just have something like cut.
When I say cut stuff off, I'm talking about audio

(06:21):
and important things like that. He's just running the soundboard.
When do you press this button and go to commercial?
When do you press this button and do that? When
do you do that? You need some guy doing that
so you can do your show. Chris was just the
board up. Now, Chris, Chris always wanted to be a
producer on a nationally syndicated show. Chris had no idea

(06:44):
and I had no idea when I sat down that
night that this would turn into this. But Chris, to
his credit, Chris didn't just show up and press buttons.
Almost immediately, Chris was invested. Chris was invested, and he's
a board up. He doesn't work for me at the time,
It didn't work for me at all. He works for everyone.

(07:05):
He runs the board, he presses buttons on every show.
But I'm showing up and I'm talking about something. Chris
is chiming in making suggestions. He's finding audio if I'm
talking about Joe Biden being an idiot, and we probably
weren't talking about that back then. It was a different story.
But he's coming up with he's invested, he's you know, hey,
performed for the job you want, right, and he's so invested.

(07:26):
He's helping move the show along immediately, helping make a
better show for you. That when the time finally came
to get syndicated and then Premiere and whatnot, I told
him because Premier had a different producer in mind, not
that he was a bad guy. It always a great guy,
very experienced, And I told him, no, I'm bringing Chris,
and they were like, okay, I'm fine, you could have Chris.

(07:47):
And it was it was no if ans or butts
for me. Chris is coming. And they didn't push back
on that at all though, like all right, you want Chris.
That's your guy. That's your guy. That's how Chris is here.
We began this journey together. As far as the Jewish
producer Chris thing, I don't know, I'm just really offensive
and I've said I've called him that forever. I make
fun of all my friends in their races and their religions,

(08:08):
and really, if you can name anything about any one
of my friends, I've mocked them to their face about
it relentlessly. You know why, because I'm a dude, and
that's how dudes are. That's how dudes talk. I realize
in this sanitized Weeni society we have now, you can
never do anything offensive to anybody. But I've been in
locker rooms, I've been in the Marine Corps, I've been

(08:29):
in all dude environments for most of my life. In
dudes rag on each other. They'll talk about your mom,
your religion, your ugly face, your feet, your everything. And
that's how dudes relate to each other. And that's how
you test each other. And that's why I do the
show I do and some when people email it, oh
I'm really offended about this. I'm offended about that. Go

(08:49):
pound stand. I don't give a crap if you're offended.
We're not doing a show for people who get offended.
Never did I want to do a show for people
who get offended. That never interested me in the least.
The show's not supposed to be forever. Buy Michael. Michael
was a few years ago, Michael two three years ago,
along two. Three years three years ago, three years ago,

(09:10):
we needed help. The show started growing way beyond what
Chris and I ever thought it was going to grow,
and we needed help. I needed help on the TV side.
Remember I do a TV show every night at nine
pm Eastern two. I needed help. And Michael was one
of these tech wiz video production guys. He's probably gonna
be a big shot TV producer of some kind somewhere,

(09:32):
but that's where. So we had an interview process and
I had, you know, rules, I had rules of what
I wanted and what I didn't want, and they had
narrowed it down for me to three guys. And then
it was time for me to step in and interview them.
One I discounted immediately. He had no manners whatsoever on
the phone. He just immediately I knew it was a

(09:53):
bad fit. The other one, at the time of our interview,
he did not answer the phone when I called. In fact,
he didn't answer the phone when I called the first
three times. He finally answered ten minutes late and said, sorry,
my phone was on, do not disturb. Okay, you're not
getting hired. Sorry, you do not invest it enough at all.
And then and I had this on speakerphone. My wife

(10:14):
was there for all these because women are better with discernment.
They just are my wife. Thirty seconds into Michael answering
the phone for the phone call, She's mouthed at me
in the back too loud too, that's the one I
like him. I'm like, well, you pipe down. You're not
even supposed to be on the call. So really she
was as part big a part of that as anything else.
And boom, there's Michael. And that's how Chris and Michael
got here. We do have to hire someone else, Phyllis,

(10:37):
we are we're officially looking anyway. Enough about me, let's
talk about you and the country and Joe Biden. Hang on,
Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday,
and as Doctor Jesse Friday. You can still email us.
We are live here Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.

(11:00):
Dear Oracle, how often do you donate to political campaigns?
I find the idea mostly revolting. Other than Ron Paul,
I've never given a candidate money. I don't see myself
doing it any time soon. I'm very generous in giving
to my church and other charities, but I don't trust politicians.
What say you? All right? I have given to politicians before.

(11:24):
It is not something I do regularly. I have told
you over and over again my philosophy on politicians. Many
of you love that, many of you hate that. I
do not believe in loyalty to politicians because none of
them believe in loyalty to me. None of them do.
They're all just rental cars. That said, when I find
one I believe in, I donate. When I find a

(11:48):
cause I believe in, or a group that does great work,
I donate, and don't. I don't make a habit of this,
and as you've probably noticed, I don't make a habit
of asking you for that because I don't trust people either.
That said, locally, it doesn't take a ton of money

(12:10):
from you or me to change a local election. Local
elections are not congressional elections or Senate elections or presidential elections.
It doesn't take half a million dollars to run for
school board. So if you're involved in a school board race,
maybe you're not running yourself, but you know someone who is.
You're supporting someone that fifty bucks means a lot. It

(12:31):
means a lot to that person. And I would recommend
doing it. I need to do more of it, local donating,
local donating. I get more heads up on national causes,
but local donating. And I'm not against donating to a
politician at all when I find one that's a hardcore
anti communist one I believe in. Yes, I will give

(12:54):
politicians need money. And I know that's the least popular
thing in the world right now. Should suck anyway. We're
so used to being screwed over and lied to, no
one wants to give to one and I totally get that. Plus,
the economy is a complete disaster. Everyone's being squeezed. Don't
get me wrong. I don't want to take the focus
off of Columbia, but the economy is horrible and it's

(13:15):
crushing people. So you don't have a bunch of money
laying around to hand over to senator idiot. I know that,
But if you're emotionally invested in your guy winning, whoever
he may be, mayor governor Congress, I don't care what
it is, and you have the means to do so.
They do need your money. We saw that when I

(13:37):
didn't realize how big it was until I started running
for Congress and understand why we've talked about this before.
If everyone was like you, hyper informed, seeking out information,
then there would be no need for a dime in politics.
There really would not. I'm not talking about a hot woman.
I mean like a dollar there there'ld be no need
for money in politics. But everyone isn't like you. Most

(14:01):
people are not like you, norm and Norma. They don't
have any idea what they believe. Even if they have
some vague idea, they need to be told. They need
to be told who to vote for, why to vote
for them? Why don't you vote for the other guy?
They need to be told. You seek that information out.
We had a local election here on Monday. I went

(14:22):
and voted in. You had to find that. You had
to know that was coming. Norm and Norma need to
be told on the television set. On this day and age.
With social media, it's more social media advertising. When you
pull up YouTube, you need to see an advertisement for
Congressman Kelly, He'll protect the border. You know that kind
of thing. They need your money. If you find when

(14:43):
you believe in give hey, Jesse, the story about the
older woman was delivering groceries to your house for the
party really hit home for me, I listened to your
show while I deliver food for Instacart in the evenings
and weekends to make ends meet. With gas prices at
five bucks, some days you barely break even. It's a
thankless side hustle. But what you're going to do. Respect

(15:05):
for you, buddy for one, for hustling big time, big time.
Any of the guy says, what's your question? My question
I just asked is My question is wouldn't your radio
show be better off if Biden wins reelection? There's so
much low hanging fruit to make fun of. If these
clowns get booted out of office, you're gonna have to replace
half your soundboard. Well, all right, couple things the soundboard.

(15:29):
People who've been listening a long time, they know it's
already experienced all kinds of turnover. When we get tired
of something, we move on. There are some things we'll
never get tired of. But then there are other things
that we've moved on from because we don't use them
that much. But to your question, is it better for
the show if Biden gets re elected? Probably? I don't care.

(15:54):
This show. We were blessed to blow up on this
show before there was ever a Joe Biden, before there
was ever a President Biden. When Trump was still in office,
this show ended up blowing up and getting big. But
even if it meant the end of the radio show, man,
I'll go do something else. I'm not a media guy.

(16:16):
I haven't been doing this my whole life. I have
all kinds of other stuff I'll go do. I'll go
back and sell r v's. I don't care. I'll go
back and work for a living. I would rather save
the country than have the radio show be big. So
would it be better for the show. Oh, of course
Joe Biden gets re elected. Everyone's mad, everyone hate listens
every day, tell us what that dirty old commy's doing.
Of course it would be better for the show that man.

(16:39):
Don't get me wrong. I'm not some great person, some
charitable person with a great heart. You know. I'm not
Mother Teresa. I like a paycheck as much as the
next man. You can take your paycheck and shove it, though.
If it ruins my country, I'd rather have a country.
Wouldn't you rather have a country. I'll go find something
else to do. I'll drive Instana cart myself. I love food.
That's one of the jobs I never had when I
was a kid. Is delivering peace, says Michael. Chris, did

(17:01):
you guys ever deliver pizzas when you were a kid?
Michael said no, I wanted to, and Chris didn't. I
wanted to too, and I never got to. Oh, Michael
said he was too young. You had to be eighteen.
That's a bunch of crap. My friends were doing that
at sixteen when I was a kid. These dag gone
laws to see. This is what I'm talking about, child

(17:22):
labor laws. You know what I should deliver is chalk.
I should say, what, Chris, I should start a chalk
delivery service and call it high tea delivery, and what Chris?
Listen to me, No, you're not understanding. I take a
car full of male vitality stacks from chalk and female
vitality sacks who want to be accommodating to the ladies,

(17:43):
and I drive all over when people order them and
I deliver them myself, and when they open up the door,
they look and they're like, oh my gosh, talk about
high tea, and then they want to take it even
more chalk. You understand, with natural herbal supplements, you can
boost your tea levels twenty percent and ninety eight without
sticking a needle in your arm or doing anything like that.

(18:04):
Just nature. That's what a male vitality stack can do
for you, gentlemen. Try it. I maybe double up on
the tongcat one hundred every now and then, too, Choq
dot com. I might even deliver it myself, Chuck dot
com promo code. Jesse, ladies, men, go get some all right,

(18:25):
all right, one more word on the pizza thing, then
some politics. Hang on. This is a Jesse Kelly show.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday, and
ask doctor Jesse Friday. Joe Biden's still out there rolling
this line out to the Teaching is not what you do.
It's who you are. It's who you are. Know for real,

(18:48):
I know that, Believe me. I know that. By the way,
I actually taught for a number of years in law school,
and then I was a professor at University of Pennsylvania. No,
I don't go. No, No, he didn't. That's an outright lie.

(19:08):
He's never taught a class. He keeps doing this. It's
wild to me. Dear machine gun Kelly, let's start by
apologizing for using any incorrect military terminology reason. I've been
watching a variety of World War II programs, saving Private
Ryan Banner Brothers specifics, so on and so forth. I
noticed a trend in some, not all, of soldiers training

(19:28):
in boot camp with their officers drill instructors, and then
being deployed with these same leaders in movies in later wars.
I don't recall that being the case. Was that, ever,
or is being deployed together a normal practice. His name
is Eric. Look. Both have happened throughout history and throughout
the history of the country. When I was in and

(19:52):
I believe this is still very much the case today.
It wasn't like that at all. There was no continuation whatsoever.
In fact, you wouldn't continue to forget the leaders in
drill instructors. You really never ended up in the fleet,
in the actual Marine corps with the guys you were
in boot camp with. You went to boot camp and
you had a boot camp platoon, and you had drill instructors,

(20:16):
and they were there to abuse you and turn you
into a marine. Once you graduate boot camp, you will
then leave and you will never see those drill instructors
probably again. You will leave, and if you're in the Infantry,
Like I was, you have to go to the School
of Infantry next. And when you show up at the
School of Infantry, you may I mean, you could run

(20:37):
into a guy or two you knew from boot camp
who will be there with you. But that's very rare.
Totally new guys, totally new instructors, totally new skill set.
And then when you're done with SOI School of Infantry,
then you go to the fleet where you get your
actual unit, and once again, your buddies are not coming

(20:58):
with you for the most part, and your instructors are
not coming with you for the most part. They have
nothing to do with the leadership you'll get at your command.
That said, in older days, they did do it differently,
and there are many advantages and disadvantages to doing it
that way. There's a lot to be said for continuing

(21:19):
with the guys who were leading. There's a lot to
be said for that, and there's also a lot to
be said for guys who specialize in teaching in boot
camp and doing certain things. You know, we talked about
World War Two lots, and you know, we've talked endlessly
about how you can really view the war through two
different time periods. As far as the Pacific version of it,

(21:40):
same thing in Europe, but as far as the Pacific version.
End of nineteen forty one and then nineteen forty two,
certainly the first part of forty two, that was Japan's.
They dominated us. They were kicking us around. That was
Pearl Harbor. They had better pilots, better planes. Their navy

(22:01):
was beating up on our navy. They were taking over,
they were taking things from the British, taking things from us.
That was Japan. And then boom, and by the end
of nineteen forty two, things had turned and Japan did
nothing but lose the rest of the war. Don't get
me wrong, there was all kinds of bloody misery still left,

(22:21):
but they would lose battle after battle after battle after battle.
And one of the ways we really really kicked the
crap out of Japan was in the air. We really
dominated them in the air, which is weird because in
the beginning they were so good in the air. What happened, well,
they had a different philosophy with how to handle that
than we did, and ours was very clearly superior in Japan.

(22:46):
If you have some super stud pilot and let's say
he goes out there and he shoots down a couple
of Americans, and you got an ace on your hands.
The Japanese believed, well, yeah, good leave him there, send
him out again, go shoot some more Americans. But the
problem is nobody's terminator. No one's indestructible. Even the best
pilots you send them out there enough times are gonna

(23:07):
die eventually, outnumbered playing plain malfunction didn't never know what's
gonna go wrong. He's gonna die. And then you just
took your best pilot and you lost him. America realized
that our best pilots could be force multipliers, meaning if
I take some stud like, uh, what's that movie? Didn't

(23:29):
they just make a movie called Midway. I watched that.
I don't remember. I think it was called Midway. It
was an average movie. He's certainly worth watching, very much
worth watching, and I believe as family friendly so you
can watch with your kids. But it gave you some
accurate things about Midway. And you watch these hero pilots
at Midway, and there were some stud pilots at Midway.
Those guys are so crazy brave. Well, the Midway pilots,

(23:53):
they didn't all go on and stay pilots in the
fleet out there shooting down Japanese. Some did, but those
super studs, we'd send them back to the States. Why
it's not that we didn't want them shooting down Japanese.
We understood. If you take some stud with air experience,
he knows what he's doing, you can just keep sending
him out there, or you can send him back to

(24:13):
America to be an instructor to teach the next generation
how to do what he did. So you take your
stud pilot and you turn him into fifty pilots because
you didn't leave him out there to die. You rotated
him back to America, and he's back here making studs
of other pilots. And some of those guys because they

(24:34):
were just beasts. Those guys are awesome. Some of those
guys would volunteer to go back. They're all right, I've
been an instructor for a while. Can I go back
to combat, like I'm ready to go kill some more Japs.
That's all those guys where they were awesome. Deer crayon eater.
I'm sick and tired of hearing about the college campus protesters. Yeah,
me too. What I want to know is where are
all the parents of these kids. Parents should be pulling

(24:55):
him out of there by their ears. Do parents not
care anymore? No, a lot of parents do not care.
People who have good parents do not understand that that
is the ultimate privilege in life. You know, we always
talk about people born into privilege. He's privileged, they're privileged,
they're born with a leg up. Here's the God's honest

(25:17):
truth in this day and age. If you have two
parents who are still together and they love you, you have
the ultimate leg up on everyone else in life. Doesn't
matter your race, doesn't matter, your religion. If you have
a nuclear family that is intact, that loves you and

(25:41):
raises you, and they'll make mistakes, believe me, parents do,
I certainly do. But if you have that, you have
been given an advantage over ninety eighty ninety percent of
the population. And people who have that, oftentimes do not
realize how rare that is and how uniquely privileged that is.

(26:04):
When you see some guy, you see it all the
time on internet videos and whatnot, and you'll see some
guy stacked in like an animal, or you know the
college protests. So those are the great thing to bring
up right now, all this misery, and there your pepper
spray and protest and screaming and yelling and all these
other crazy things. How many of those kids grew up

(26:26):
with a mother and a father in the home who
cared for them. Probably not very many, Probably not very many.
There are people out there who have never been given
the guidance you've been given. If that's what you come from,
and if you've overcome that, the lack of that meaning

(26:47):
meaning if you're listening to the sound of my voice
right now, and dad left, mom left, they got divorced,
they got and that's common. Honestly, that's probably the most
common thing. And if you overcame that and became a
good person, maybe even a good parent yourself, you should
be very proud of yourself. Is that as difficult to
overcome that? And many simply don't. Where are the parents?

(27:08):
They don't exist? Jesse, I completely agree with you about
the possibility of vps, Tim Scott, Tulsa Gabbart, so on
and so forth. What do you think about Sarah Huckabee Sanders.
She's not the most conservative person, but not bad. In addition,
she knows how to work with Trump as governor. She
knows how to be chief executive. I don't understand why
she's not the frontrunner. Yeah. I like Sarah Huckabye Sanders

(27:29):
a lot. She was certainly the best of Trump's press secretary.
She was dynamite at that job. But remember, we need
great governors too. We don't just need all of our
good people to assemble to be Trump's all star team
for four years. Yeah, we want great people around Trump,
There's no question about that. We need great governors, we

(27:50):
need great mayors, we need great people in the state
House and state legislature. Be careful promoting all these people
from these critically important positions just to go for Trump
for four years, that's not always a benefit. What is
always a benefit is switching to pure talk. When you
switch to pure talk, Oh, by the way, Chris, Yes,
that's right. That's why I support Tim Scott for VP

(28:12):
because he's useless no matter where he is, so you
might as well go be useless as VP. It's not
like Trump's gonna ask him anything. Just be useless. It's
that's really his specialty. At and T is useless, Verizon's
useless T mobiles useless. Pure Talk's awesome because pure talk
shares our values to the point where they hire Americans

(28:35):
who speak English. I know, I sound like a mean
old man when I talk like that. I'm so sick
of getting a hold of customer service and I have
to top the deep deep who doesn't understand English, and
I have to repeat myself nine thousand times. I can't
take it anymore. Can I just have an American on
the Dagon phone? I can when I switch to Pure
Talk and I save money and I have the same

(28:56):
five G service. Pick up your phone dial pound two
five zero and say Jesse Kelly pound two five zero,
Say Jesse Kelly. We'll be back. This is the Jesse
Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show. On a Friday,
final segment on an ass doctor Jesse Friday. But don't worry,

(29:19):
we will be back next week. Medal of Honor Mondays
coming and that's gonna be good. We have a bunch
of e emails I need to try to get through
as best I can. Hear. Jesse happy he signed a
three year contract. Congrats, you're one of the few truth
tellers on the air who tells it like it is.
What are your thoughts on a Convention of the States. Okay,

(29:40):
let's talk about Convention of the States really quickly. First,
if I thought that was a possibility, I would be
inclined to support such a thing. However, however, here's the
problem with things like a Convention of the States or
or you know, we need to ban this or ban that.
What do we always talk about? What's the problem? Do

(30:03):
we have a politician problem? Now we have a people problem.
It is the people themselves of the country who are broken.
They are demoralized, listless, lost, Many of them hate the place.
A Convention of the States sounds good, and in the
end probably would be good, but it doesn't actually solve

(30:27):
the problem. It's yet another band aid. It's yet another
attempt to treat the symptom instead of the disease. What
can save this country is the people returning back to
what we were before. People who love the country, people
who believe in the law, who believe in limited government,

(30:51):
who believe in things like border security, sound money, family,
the nuclear family, maybe the most important aspect. People who retire,
turn to God, people who you can roll your eyes
at any of these things, but that's how we fix
the country. Without that, you could have a Convention of
the States. Every other day and have this knew this,

(31:11):
and this knew that. A new constitution, a new amendment,
and new this. None of that will do any good
unless the people themselves are fixed. Remember what John Adams said.
Would remember what he said about this country the way
they had it set out with a limited government. He said,
this is made for a moral people, and it's completely

(31:32):
inadequate to govern any any other kind. I've made people
mad before when I've said this, but when I say it,
you should know that I mean it, and I believe
it to be true. We deserve a dictator. I don't
want one. I hope we never get one. I'm not
cheering for that. But when you're this lost as a people,
you deserve to have a king step in and just

(31:55):
rule over you. That's what we deserve. We are not
worthy right now of freedom. Now we can change that
and become worthy of freedom, but right now we're not
worthy of it. So all the laws, all the conventions,
all the amendments, all the things in the world, it
won't help us if the people are broken. It's like
the Constitution. No people think I hate it, and I

(32:15):
don't know where people get that. I love it. I
have loved it my whole life. I love the Constitution.
What I've said is it doesn't exist as the law anymore,
and when you act like it does, you sound ridiculous.
It stops existing as the law, it stops existing as
something that can protect you, as soon as the people
in power stop acknowledging it at all. None of these

(32:38):
people have any use for the Constitution. They hate it.
They try to destroy it. So it goes from being
the supreme law of the land, where your freedoms are
written into law. It goes from that to being a
piece of paper. It's not any more powerful than it's
next email. It's nothing. It's nothing tangible. It's not tangible

(32:58):
like gold and silver are. The reason I talked to
you about hard assets is because these things are not
figments of anyone's imagination, and they're not subject to the
whims of the people who are wrecking us. They're not.
Do you hear what Terry Haynes said about Janet Yellen?

Speaker 2 (33:16):
This Friday speech is being touted as the economics of
democracy and meant to sound like an echo of the
threats to democracy that the Biden campaign.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
Is going on all about.

Speaker 2 (33:32):
Whatever else do you think of a senior United States
policy official. They shouldn't be sent out there to mimic
campaign points because that doesn't create that doesn't create confidence
in policy, and doesn't create confidence in the administration.

Speaker 1 (33:50):
I think, make sure you're buying things these people can't destroy.
Call Oxford Gold Group and get some delivered to your house.
Get it in your retirement. Eight three three nine nine
five Gold. All right, eight three three nine nine five Gold.
And now he's a headline by go you know, you
know the thing emails We didn't get to Hello Burger Master.

(34:17):
If communists never willingly give up power, why did Gorbachev
seemingly allow the Soviet Union to collapse? Well, remember the
dirty Kamis who began the Soviet Union. They weren't They
were all dead by the time Gorbachev and his people
came around. I'm not saying Gorbachev wasn't a kami, but
he wasn't Vladimir Lenin, he wasn't Joseph Stalin. He was

(34:40):
a guy trying to manage an empire that was collapsing
all around him. And because communism doesn't work, here was
just nothing he could do to save it. Countries were
breaking off the Chernobyl disaster did as much to end
the Soviet Union as anything else, because internationally everyone found

(35:01):
out what the Soviets had worked so hard to keep
quiet that it was a broken, corrupt country. That was
an unmitigated disaster. So, I mean, Gorbachev wasn't Vladimir Lenin.
He was head of the Soviet Union, no question about that.
But I would argue this is probably not a committed communist.
He was a man just trying to get by. Hey, Jesse,

(35:22):
I have two questions. Why do people say leader of
the free world. I didn't think the whole world is free.
I never did understand that. And two, why do people
like Soros in the other What do people like Soros
and the other comedis get in return for the money
they throw at creating chaos? Okay, leader of the free
world thing, it's he's talking about the free world. You know,
A bunch of the world went comie, a bunch of

(35:43):
the world tried to remain free democracies, Western civilization, whatever
you want to call it, and we were always kind
of the protectors of those. We're talking Cold War era
stuff and World War two. Now what do Soros in
them get? I read something fascinating about Soros recently. You
know how I talk about the three characteristics all these
people have in common. You remember what they are? Three

(36:04):
things all of our leaders have in common now no
love of country, no connection to the real world, and
they view themselves as kings and queens. Soros, you can
go read this. I'll actually pull the article. I'll try
to find it from Monday. But Sorrows has spoken about
himself and he referred himself as viewing himself as a

(36:26):
god more than kings and queens. It's hard for normal
people like you and me to understand the kind of
mentality these people have, but they really do think they
are above all of us. They view honestly. Picture the
picture the most over the top king you can possibly

(36:49):
imagine the guy from three hundred who walks around in
or gets carried around in his throne carried and his
big gold throne carried by a bunch of servants. You
can laugh and roll your eyes, man, And that's how
these people see themselves. And you and me, we're just
the stupid peasants who are in the way. What do
they get out of this? Well, George Soros wants to

(37:11):
see if he can burn down a country he hates.
He's doing the best he can do. Now we are
out of time. We will do it again on Monday.
You can email me Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
Enjoy your weekend, put your phone down, enjoy your family.
That's all
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Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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