All Episodes

October 24, 2025 37 mins

Will Republicans repeal Obamacare? Digital ID is the end of freedom. The proper way to break a 5 day fast. Why don’t we use a water cannon to break up these protests? The best candy bar. 

Follow The Jesse Kelly Show on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheJesseKellyShow

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a magnificent, magnificent Friday, and ask doctor
Jesse Friday. The weekend is here.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
Smile. I cannot wait.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
We have all kinds of things this how we're going
to talk about everything from digital ID to some guys
ending is fast, to using water cannons, on dirty communists,
to Obama and all kinds of things. All that and
more coming up in the final hour of the world
famous Jesse Kelly Show. Now I'm gonna address this one,

(00:46):
Doctor j What are your thoughts on digital ID and
all the mandatory registration craziness that's going on in the
UK and other countries. Do you think similar mandates are
coming to the US?

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Okay, so.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
Now for the let's do the bad news first again.
The bad news first is this Digital ID is the
end of freedom, the end of it. No if and
or butts. The evil people who are trying to implement
this will use this to completely control and destroy your life.

(01:24):
Bill Gates has I don't know how much audio out there,
Chris Fineman, If you can Bill Gates audio talking about
how we can track people, there's World Economic Forum audio
there's it's out there, all right, we'll get it for
you in a minute. Now, that's the bad And there's more.

Speaker 2 (01:41):
There's more.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
It's not just that it's being implemented in the UK.
And it will be used, no question, to crush dissent
in the UK. It'll be used to make it so
patriotic people can't buy groceries if the government hates you.
That's the kind of thing they'll do with it. They
will track you. It's all bad. Every part of it
is bad. There's no part of it it's good. So

(02:04):
that's bad news. Here's some more bad news. Most of
the wealthy, powerful people who have huge influence in Western
civilization want this. Not just political leaders, billionaire types.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
They want this. They look at.

Speaker 1 (02:22):
Things from a control standpoint. Let me address the billionaire
portion of this, because this is a big part of it.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
Billionaires. What makes a billionaire?

Speaker 1 (02:32):
Well that there are different things, but one of the
things that I won't say it's common for all of them,
but it's very, very common. They are control fanatics. Fanatics.
They believe in controlling and managing everything, and as they've
accumulated wealth, they want to control whole populations. Frankly, they

(02:57):
want to control the earth and think they can think
they can do it well. Even if they're not stalin,
they believe they can do it well and they want this.
Here's the Queen of the Netherlands here.

Speaker 3 (03:11):
She is partners to actually help that being. I mean
to grow this And the interesting part of it is
that you know, yes, it is very necessary for financial services,
but not only no, it's also good for school enrollment.
Is also good for health who will actually go to
vaccination or not. It's very good actually to get your subsidies,

(03:33):
you know, from the government.

Speaker 1 (03:36):
It's bad, evil, sick and wrong. And that's the bad news.
And one final bit of bad news. They're implementing it
in countries that people dream of visiting. People traditionally have visited.

(03:57):
College kids go backpack in Europe for a month. That's
a thing people do.

Speaker 2 (04:02):
People.

Speaker 1 (04:02):
I told you about my want to be anniversary trip
where we were wanting to maybe go to Greece for
our twentieth anniversary big celebration. We're not going anymore. People
want to see these places, these famous places around the globe,
and they are destroying them and turning them into communists utopias.
And this is all all bad. Okay, that's all the bad.
Now let me give you the good. I have told

(04:25):
you this before many many times, so let me tell
you again, not America as a whole, but Red America,
the red areas, not just the Red States, the red
parts of blue states. Red America is not only the
last bastion of freedom on planet Earth. It is an

(04:48):
insanely powerful bastion of freedom on planet Earth. You and
all the other Americans who think like you. You are
not a tiny minority that is being run over and smashed. Yes,
we have enemies on all sides, powerful enemies, wealthy, powerful enemies,
and other countries, foreign and domestic, There's no question about it.

(05:11):
But there are millions of us, millions of us. Let
me let me inspire you with something. I find this
to be inspiring. The communists have been trying to infiltrate
and destroy and take over the United States of America
since the early nineteen hundreds. You realize that before World

(05:33):
War One, communists were infiltrating this country, and they have
only ramped up those efforts over time. The United States
of America has been attacked by globalist communists for over
a hundred years, over a century. And yet while they
have had many, many successes, we have not fallen. We

(05:56):
have not fallen because our system and our DNA is
uniquely resistant to these things. Will the United States of
America ever have digital ID? Maybe you don't never say never,
as the old saying goes. Maybe if that day ever comes,

(06:21):
it will be years, decades, and decades away, because Red
America would reject it outright. They would flat out reject
it outright, even even the low Yet Chris said violently,
and he's probably not wrong, And honestly he's probably not

(06:41):
mora really wrong either. That is one of those things
where you can't do it. It can It cannot be
an option for your life or my life. Digital ID
you cannot hand over government. You can't hand to the
government control of you being able to purchase food, go
to school, travel.

Speaker 2 (06:59):
To and fro. You can't.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
You cannot do it because you'll not be free anymore.
You're a slave. You're a slave the second they decide
to flip a switch and make you a slave.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
You can't do it.

Speaker 1 (07:08):
But it wouldn't even get to that point because it
would be rejected viciously in this country. Even if even
if let's say I forbid. Let's say Gavin Newsom wins
the presidency in twenty twenty eight and Democrats do a
clean sweep. But they have sixty votes in the Senate.
You know, they have enough votes in the Senate to
pass any of all they want. They have a big

(07:28):
majority in the House of Representatives, so they have the
federal government.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
Would they want to do it? You bet? Would they
try to do it? Maybe?

Speaker 1 (07:36):
In fact, these dirty communists probably would. You would have
Red states potentially seceding.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
From the Union.

Speaker 1 (07:43):
You would the people inside of those Red states would
demand it. Our system has withstood communist aggression for over
a century. They have made a lot of gains. I'm
not pretending otherwise. It's not like everything they've done is
just bounced off us and we've been fine. Not saying

(08:04):
that our system has withstood it much better than others have.
And that's because of you. I'm not trying to not
trying to patronize you.

Speaker 2 (08:14):
Believe me, it's.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
Because of the right and the rights unique understanding of
freedom and liberty. I've told you this before a long
time ago. I had a conversation one time, since years ago,
with a guy from England and He was not just
from England. He was considered over there a hardcore, hardcore conservative.

(08:38):
He was considered somebody way to the right, whoa look
at this, look at this guy, bloodthirsty. He this hardcore
guy in England, would preach to me till he was
blue in the face about why government run healthcare was
good and necessary. He was a conservative. Where they come from,

(09:02):
you probably do not fully appreciate how far to the
right and how correct you are on things like government,
government's role in its society, the importance of having markets
that are free of government, that should be limited and
out of your life. You understand that better than even.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
Hardcore quote conservatives.

Speaker 1 (09:25):
In European countries, and that, in large part is why
so many of these European countries are falling and falling
so quickly. They didn't have enough of us. They didn't
have enough of you, They didn't have enough of me.
They've had plenty of Chris they didn't have, but they
didn't have enough of us. In all seriousness, we didn't

(09:48):
exist in large enough numbers there. The best they can
gin up in these European countries where they're doing this
are movements to deport people and deporting people is great,
necessary and fine, need to save Western civilization. But if
you even go to the most hardcore righty party in France,
the party that wants to Hey, that deport all the

(10:08):
foreigners sounds good, And then you went down the list
of other issues, they're dirty comies on ninety percent of
that stuff. It's gonna it's Europe will fall to it.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
I believe we will not take heart in that unless
you're European. Then it sucks. Take heart and rough Greens.

Speaker 1 (10:27):
Speaking of hearts, our dogs, their hearts need that nutrition too,
You know that. How would your heart be doing if
you had McDonald's every meal? How would your body feel?
How would your skin look, how would your hair look?
How would your digestive system function with just empty calories?

(10:49):
Delicious but empty calories. That's what we give our dogs
with dog food every meal. Our dogs just die on
us at ten and we look around and wonder, why, Hey,
we never give them nutrition. Your dog needs a supplement.
Roughgreens gets sprinkled on your dog's food. It's the number

(11:11):
one dog supplement in America because a your dog will
love it, but b much more important than how it tastes.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
It's actual nutrition.

Speaker 1 (11:20):
Vitamins and minerals and probiotics and antioxidants, everything your dog needs.
Go get your dog healthy, keep them around another year
or two. Go to Roughgreens dot com. Promo code Jesse
gets you a free Jumpstart trial bag. Or you can
call two one four Roughdog Promo code Jesse.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
We'll be back the Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
It is The Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic Friday,
of course, it asks doctor Jesse Friday. You can email
us Jesse at Jesse Kellyshow dot com, Bronco. I'm completing
a five day regimented fast on Friday. Five days. Hey, Chris,
can you fast? You can't fast from all food for

(12:11):
five days? Right, unless you're like a Buddhist monk or something.
What as long as you're drinking water, you can't. I
know you're not gonna die like I know you can survive,
especially if you have enough fat to eat off of
like Chungus.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
But I don't.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
Anyway, I'm completing a five day regimented fast Friday and
dreaming of my first real meal. Your banter, he said,
It means playful and friendly exchange. I know what banter
means about cheese steaks with your imaginary friend Chris on
Monday has re craving a cheese steak. But is there
another meal you'd recommend? Perhaps a good burrito or chicken

(12:48):
fingers with an obscene amount of sauces. Given you're the
world's foremost food connoisseur, I thought i'd go to the
source and ask doctor Jesse Friday for any suggestions. All right,
so first, it can't be chicken fingers. I am a
chicken finger man. As you know, I have always loved

(13:10):
chicken fingers. I will always love chicken fingers. But they're
not top tier. Chicken fingers are a get you buy meal.
You're at a you're at a high school baseball game.
The concession stand is open, and they have nothing but

(13:30):
cheeseburgers that they'll heat up in the microwave from the
gas station, or chicken fingers. You get a chicken finger.
Hold on what, Chris, Chris said, what about a chicken
finger burrito? Well, we're taking this to a different place.
Let's calm down. Let's slow down, Chris.

Speaker 2 (13:45):
This is serious. This is serious.

Speaker 1 (13:48):
Chicken fingers are fine, They're delicious.

Speaker 2 (13:50):
I love them.

Speaker 1 (13:52):
They're a get you buy meal. You get by with
chicken fingers. It's not top tier after a five days fast,
plus you're a Buddhist. Cheese steak is it's fine. It's
more than fine, it's heavenly. I would suggest the cheese steak,
but if I may, perhaps you should consider Kraft Mac

(14:19):
and cheese with chopped up hot dogs or chopped up
bacon inside of it. I've done this before, sorry, Chris.
You make some bacon, you got to make sure it's crispy.
Crumble it up. When it's done, drop it in your
Kraft Mac. Remember half the milk, double the butter. Drop

(14:41):
it in your Kraft Mac when the Kraft Mac is done.
I know that sounds gluttonous in white trash, but I
am gluttonous in white trash. If you've been starving, that
is top end. Yes, you can use bacon bits, Chris.
I prefer to make things fresh from scratch. Sorry you don't,

(15:01):
so I make my own bacon anyway. Kraft Mac with
bacon bits, or if you can't go that route, maybe
you want to spice it up a little bit. Consider
this Mexican restaurant. Two cheese enchiladas with one chicken enchilada

(15:23):
you'd make sure the chicken enchiladas in the middle, the
cheese ones have it sandwiched like Pete Boodhajeddge in collage.
The cheese enchiladas have sandwiched the chicken enchilada, and that
is top tier food that gives you the appropriate cheese
to chicken ratio. You're in a Mexican restaurant, it's going
to give you chips and caeso options. The one word

(15:47):
of caution, I would stay within a ten minute drive
of your house after a five day fast fast. If
you go ham on a Mexican reshtiltaurant with the enchiladas
and the kso's and god knows what else you're going
to put inside of your body there.

Speaker 2 (16:06):
Your body may may react.

Speaker 1 (16:09):
You may find yourself on the way home saying things
like in the name of a just merciful gun trying
to get there, and it's there's going to be pain.
I'm just warning you now there might be. The cops
have traditionally had the best weapon you can use against
an unruly crowd. They now don't seem to use it.
It's called a water cannon. The guy says, Okay, why

(16:31):
don't we use these things anymore. Remember we talked earlier
in the show about color revolutions, and we've spoken many
times before about how democrats, communists, they viewed street protests
as a critical part of their power.

Speaker 2 (16:48):
So if they have a lot.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
Of political power, they'll still do protests.

Speaker 2 (16:52):
That's part of their thing.

Speaker 1 (16:53):
If they don't, maybe they like right now, they don't
have the House, they don't have the Senate, you don't
have the presidency. They view it as the only political
power they have. No kings are the stupid stuff they do.
So we're gonna fight in the streets. We're gonna be
street ready. They love to talk like this, They love
their street animal protests. But remember they've also been advancing

(17:15):
politically political power for a very long time, occupying state,
local seats, occupying these things when they get there, Remember
what elite communists do, who occupy the halls of power.
They are there to offer, in part, protection to the
street animals when the street animals do street animal things.

(17:36):
How does this translate for water canons, Well, you're right.
Water canons are extremely effective against protests, but they evoke
images of the Civil rights era. Nobody wants to look
at videos of black people being hosed down during civil
rights protests. They've used that kind of feeling, that white
guilt feeling, and they've used the power they have to

(17:57):
dissuade American law enforce from being allowed to use water cannons,
which they one hundred percent should be using. You should
be using gold for your retirement, for your emergency reserves.
I'll put it that way. Let me talk about these
emergency reserves. I don't know where we're going to go
when the bubble is going to pop it, neither do you.

(18:19):
Everybody has a doomsday prediction. It's going to be tomorrow,
It'll be two years from now. Everyone writes a book,
Everyone has a prediction.

Speaker 2 (18:26):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (18:26):
Nobody knows for sure, but we all know one's coming.
How bad would the next one be? I don't know
that either. They tend to get worse as you go on.
Do you have any physical gold or silver in your hands?
Any of it I'm talking about in a safe somewhere
in the house, maybe a safe deposit box at the bank.
Do you have any in your retirement? It's the things

(18:50):
you can touch and feel are all you can rely on.
Get some gold or silver in your hands, go to
gold co and get some. Call them, They'll talk you
through it all eight five five eight one seven Gold
go to If you're an online person, go to Jesse

(19:10):
likesgold dot com. Go and get some.

Speaker 2 (19:14):
We'll be back.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
Truth attitude, Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a fantastic Friday. Let's get back and churn and
burn through the questions as many as we possibly can.

Speaker 2 (19:31):
Jesse.

Speaker 1 (19:32):
Your segment last night about the lack of social development
and kids due to technology touched on something I think
about a lot. I view it as an epidemic of
people simply not being present with each other. Kids, heads
down at parties, not interacting, adult couples out to dinner,
lost in their phone, so on and so forth. In general,

(19:53):
it feels like people were way less engaged with each
other than at any time.

Speaker 2 (19:56):
In human history. But we are, we are, and.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
All mankind has always had to learn how to adapt
to new technology, and many many many times before, not always,
but many times before.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
There is an adjustment period to this. When it comes to.

Speaker 1 (20:20):
The technology of smartphones, think for a moment about how
new this technology is. I'm forty four. There wasn't even
text messaging when I was a child, that was something
that came around. I want to say I was probably
eighteen nineteen. Maybe there wasn't text messaging when I was
a child. I'm not eighty four, I'm forty four. This

(20:42):
is new, being able to have a phone an iPad
in your hand, with access to every video that's ever
been made, every article that's ever been written, any book
that's ever been written. To end this, wonderful things, horrible things,
mind numbing things, and that is something that mankind has

(21:05):
just been introduced to, like yesterday, Chris, what are we talking.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
Twenty years with a smartphone?

Speaker 1 (21:10):
Probably roughly that we'll call it twenty for the sake
of argument, roughly twenty years.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
That sounds like.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
A long time. That's nothing in the course of human history,
all of humanity. They're all now, we're all, myself included,
we're all learning how.

Speaker 2 (21:29):
To deal with it.

Speaker 1 (21:29):
I'll tell you what, I'm not perfect at it. I
either don't think that it's just you. Last night at
the Megan Kelly thing. Did the Megan Kelly Live thing
last night?

Speaker 2 (21:38):
Told you?

Speaker 1 (21:39):
I brought aub and the boys with me. We had
an hour in the green room backstage before it was
time for the show to start and me to come out.

Speaker 2 (21:48):
Things like that.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
And they had a TV in there and some snacks
in there, and we had a good time. We were
laughing things like that. But at one point it got quiet,
and I noticed it after a while.

Speaker 2 (22:03):
Why did it get quiet?

Speaker 1 (22:05):
I'm sitting there in my chair on my phone, looked across,
youngest son on his phone, ob on her phone, oldest
son on his phone. All four of us on the phone. Now,
we're people who try to be focused on that. Put
the phones down and gauge. That's taught.

Speaker 2 (22:26):
We're focused on that.

Speaker 1 (22:27):
Try to be there. We are on our phones, sitting
there at this big important event. Important, but this big
cool event, cool experience, fun, sitting there on our phones,
zoned out email and faks. But whatever you happen to
be doing, Yeah, you snapped two in those moments like
we did. Hey, put our phones down. Everyone, throw your

(22:48):
phone on the table. Put your phones down. But no
other generation in history has had to worry about that
at any other point in human history. Whatever number you
think you want to put on human history, let's call
it five thousand years, ten thousand years of human history.
Whatever number you want to settle on for that. Let's

(23:10):
call it five thousand, five thousand years of human history,
and you are the only generation that has ever had
to deal with holding something in the palm of your
hands that has endless possibilities and you can get sucked
into it and never get out of it. No other

(23:30):
generation in five thousand years has had to deal with that.
Let's give ourselves some grace and still struggling with it.
It's not just young people either. Old people struggle with it.
Middle age struggle with it. Kids struggle with it. You
go into a nursing home of some kind assistant care facility,
go ahead and go on in to one of the

(23:52):
rec rooms or something like that. You know you'll see
eighty year old's faces buried in their phones.

Speaker 2 (23:59):
This is not some thing.

Speaker 1 (24:00):
This is something mankind is still dealing with, all right, Jesse,
One of my favorite things you've opened my eyes to
is the ratchet effect. I think about it a lot,
especially because every time I hear anyone around me complain
about Trump, I tell them he's a Democrat. He's always
been a Democrat. And I can't think of a finer succinct,
he says, Ask Chris, I know it succinct means example

(24:23):
of your masterful description of what's happening.

Speaker 2 (24:26):
Well, I didn't.

Speaker 1 (24:27):
I'm not the one who invented don't think that. I'm
the one who invented the concept of the ratchet effect.
And just to explain what that is before we get
to the Trump portion of that. You know, a ratchet,
it's a tool in case you've never worked with your hands,
It's a tool that you can set it one direction
or the other. But it'll only screw things one way,
only screw them in or only screw them out. It

(24:48):
doesn't turn the other way because you've locked it. It
only turns one way, one way. And there has been
for a very long time on the right a lase
fair when it comes to communists. You can't ever get
aggressive with them. You're not allowed to do this. You're
not allowed to do that. Oh, you don't ever use power.

(25:08):
That's something they would do. And the result of that
has been only a ratchet effect, meaning our entire country,
our government, our culture.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
It only moves.

Speaker 1 (25:19):
Left, only left, only left, only left. Because if one
of the two sides believes in using every ounce of
power they ever get their hands on, and the other
side believes that any use of power is completely wrong,
then society is only going to go in one direction.
That has created a ratchet effect, where government has only

(25:39):
gotten bigger, more pervasive, the debt's only gotten bigger, more pervasive,
the culture has only rotted more and more and more
and more and more. And you look around one day
and soon there are transsexuals pretending to be men in
your society.

Speaker 2 (25:51):
This is weird. It's weird.

Speaker 1 (25:53):
But the right is changing that, slowly changing that, and
slowly pushing back on that. There is a wonderful revival
happening in this country, a wonderful political revival, a wonderful
spiritual revival. Do not at this point in time, do
not get too down. We have so much work to

(26:15):
do now. As for Trump, what Trump? I don't even
know that I would call him a Democrat or really
a Republican. He was always just a business guy who
loved the country. He didn't have doesn't have traditional conservative views,
although he's been in many ways wonderful for our side,

(26:38):
but sometimes his lack of conservative views has burned him
and us too. Why would you sign on for fifteen
days to slow the spread? Remember that was Trump's thing?
Why would you sign on for that because you didn't
have a real basic understanding of why government needs to
be small, of why government shouldn't be intrusive. Trump being
is how being how he is, business guy calling and

(27:00):
the experts say, well, this doctor says this, and that
doctor says that they know what they're talking about. Y lose,
Let's use some common sense. Shut the country down for
fifteen days. So it has burned him in the past
not having that thing. But I've told you before, he's
the beginning, not the end, not the end. Trump has
been huge in helping us start an America First movement

(27:25):
where Americans are prioritized over foreigners, where we are not
ripping up the country and handing it to foreign and
domestic billionaires. We're not doing that anymore. We are not
going to allow our highways to be full of illegals
on drugs, murdering us. We're not going to put a
bunch of Haitians in your small Ohio town anymore. We

(27:46):
are stopping all this. We're getting these people out, and
that's a good thing. But it's only beginning, only beginning.
We cannot sit, we can't set unrealistic goals because all
that does is create disappointment when we don't ever get there.

Speaker 2 (28:03):
Can't you can't.

Speaker 1 (28:06):
You can't think we're gonna deport fifty million people in
four years. You can't look, we're probably not gonna sniff
the twenty Joe Biden got in. I think ten to
fifteen million is probably realistic. Hopefully we need another four
and then another four.

Speaker 2 (28:25):
It's gonna take time. All right.

Speaker 1 (28:29):
Now, let's remember putting our money where our morals are.
That's another way that we have improved. We used to
have this stupid, pathetic attitude that boycotts aren't what we do,
that's what the left does. And we thought we were
so morally superior when we said those things. And then
we sat back and watched while Corporate America only placated

(28:50):
them and never cared about us at all.

Speaker 2 (28:52):
I wonder why, well they voted with their money. You didn't,
I didn't. We're better about that. Now.

Speaker 1 (28:59):
Switch you don't need Verizon AT and T your tea mobile.
Switch to puretalk. Pere Talk is the Patriotic cell phone company.
The patriotic cell phone company that is run by a
Vietnam veteran. When they give back, they give back two veterans.
This is the company that handed out American flags to
veterans at Independence Day. And you'll pay less. Pick up

(29:22):
that phone of yours. You can keep it, don't worry.
You just got to get it switched over to Pure Talk.
Dial pound two five zero and say Jesse Kelly Pound
two five zero, Say Jesse Kelly.

Speaker 2 (29:36):
We'll be back.

Speaker 1 (29:38):
Jesse Kelly returns next. It is the Jesse Kelly Show,
final segment of The Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic Friday.
We shall return on Monday, so do not worry. It's
gonna be medal of honor Monday time. And that is
always a good time, is it not. What else do
we have in store for Monday?

Speaker 2 (30:00):
I don't know. I haven't really thought about it.

Speaker 1 (30:02):
What, Chris, something is going to occur to me over
the weekend. It'll be witty and brilliant. I think we
all need to acknowledge that it'd be witty and brilliant whatever,
although I guess witty and brilliant are kind of the
same thing. Anyway, Jesse, I'm curious what would happen if
we completely got rid of Obamacare and what needs to
happen for that to be possible. We're never going to
completely get rid of Obamacare. We had a chance to

(30:24):
completely get rid of Obamacare. Republicans are a bunch of lying,
useless cowards. And while Obama was president, after he passed Obamacare,
every single one of those useless low tee dirt balls
told us they were going to repeal Obamacare as soon
as we took back the House and took back the
Senate and all those other things. And of course they
voted to repeal Obamacare several times. Then Donald Trump wins

(30:47):
the White House, and Republicans have the House, and they
have the Senate, and Donald Trump has the White House,
and they promptly fail to repeal Obamacare. Now fast forward
all these years. What has happened is we have so many,
so many Americans hooked on these exchanges, hooked on these
healthcare exchanges.

Speaker 2 (31:06):
It's a big deal.

Speaker 1 (31:07):
Now Americans are reliant on Obamacare. So now, now what
you're asking is politicians who are generally gutless losers. Anyway, politicians,
you're asking them to run on taking things away from people.
And maybe you're different than me, maybe you have different
eyes and ears. I can remember very few examples of

(31:30):
any politician ever running on the platform of elect me,
and I'll take away that thing you use, I'll take
away that thing you love. That's not how they get elected.
They get elected by giving people things. I didn't mean
to be cynical and burst your bubble at the end
of a Friday show, But Obamacare is never going away.
It will probably completely collapse the medical system, and who

(31:51):
knows what we'll see from there. Hey, chrome though, menu whisper,
what's your favorite and least favorite candy bar. I'm not
a big candy bar guy. I'm not a big candy guy.
I'm not huge on sweets, and no, I'm not counting
the handfuls of skittles I have here at the office

(32:12):
as sweets. I'm generally not a huge dessert guy. I'm
much more of a salty than sweet. I would eat
for breakfast. I would much rather have bacon and eggs
than waffles and pancakes. That's who I am. I would
if you put the most delicious pie in the world,
and I love pie, especially the good cherry pie. If

(32:34):
you put the most delicious pie in the world in
front of me, right beside a chips and queso, I
would have the chips and Kueso every single time, so
I don't know that I have a least favorite. I
generally don't like the ones that are super nutty, Like
I don't want a bunch of nuts. You nuts oftentimes

(32:56):
tend to destroy a dessert, and I like nuts. I'm
a nut guy. I don't like a bunch of nuts.
And that is in any candy bar what Chris, Chris
said the nut rageous bar. I might make an exception
for a nutrageous bar. A nutrageous bar is pretty good,
but even a Snickers it's okay. I don't I don't

(33:20):
necessarily love it. The peanuts are give them or take.
Does a Reese's peanut buttercup count as a candy bar, Chris,
it doesn't count. Butterfinger and I'll oh, you know what,
I'll give you this one of the all timers. Because
I'm not huge on ice cream. I like it, I'm
not I'm not an idiot. I like it, but I'm

(33:41):
not a huge ice cream guy. I like candy bars,
but I'm not a huge candy bar guy. A Twix
ice cream bar top tier gas station food in the summertime,
it's hot, maybe you've been out working playing whatever. You
walk in the gas station looking for something cool, A
TwixT ice cream bar can almost always be found in

(34:04):
the freezer section top tier. Dear Shadow, since you're the
one with the voice, it may help to remind people
that out there that are used to ordering from the
Amazon and having it at their front door in a day.

Speaker 2 (34:16):
Point.

Speaker 1 (34:16):
Being people don't realize how impatient they are might be
a good point to drive home. I think you see
how American society has become on both sides. Get everyone
to realize this. I love the show, keep on driving,
so on and so forth. I would, I mean, I
would say something, but I'm guilty too.

Speaker 2 (34:34):
You know, you want to know how guilty I am.

Speaker 1 (34:37):
We are. We're in Houston, the Houston area, and so
occasional we order things online. We don't try to make
a habit of it. Again, we try to shop local
as much as possible, but we order things online like
anyone else. It's the same day or the next day here.
It just is at no extra cost because there are
all these distribution centers around here. It's the same day

(34:58):
or next day. We went up to Montana for a
month last summer be with my mom.

Speaker 2 (35:04):
It's a week. You're ordering.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
There aren't big distribution centers up there. You're ordering something
and it's a week. Now, that's not a long time.
For most of my life, if you order something it
takes a week, it takes ten days to get there.
Now after you get used to a day or two,
what next week? Who can even.

Speaker 2 (35:23):
Wait that long? I need it right now.

Speaker 1 (35:25):
It's the instant gratification society where we're all guilty of it,
myself included.

Speaker 2 (35:31):
We're all guilty of it, all.

Speaker 1 (35:33):
Right, Jesse. If we can't get the clappers and Komi's,
why not go after the little guys. They're accomplishes, accomplices
not to flip them, but to hammer them. Next trigger
man will know they don't have a get out of
jail free cart.

Speaker 2 (35:44):
His name is Mike.

Speaker 1 (35:45):
I support arresting pretty much everybody in the government who
commits crimes. That's what I support. I want government people
arrested for the crimes they commit. I also understand that
so many of these quote little guys, guys, they wheezle
out of these things because of either Statute of limitations.

(36:06):
That's a big thing. You're gonna hear that a lot.
The Statute of Limitations ran out miraculously. Justice moves so
slow that by the time you can prosecute these people
up looks like the statute of limitations is up. Looks
like you get off scott free. It doesn't mean we
shouldn't try, but these guys generally slither their way out
of things. I think we should nail them to the

(36:29):
wall if we can to take down the bigger guys.
I support taking down any of them, whether it be
the street level guys, the elite level guys. If these
people have committed crimes with their office, take them down.
All right, we are going to check out it here.
I want you to put your phone down best you
can put your phone down and go enjoy yourself this

(36:51):
weekend Monday, we'll return and all the problems that come
with it.

Speaker 2 (36:55):
Smile. It's weekend time, all right. That's all
Advertise With Us

Host

Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist

It’s 1996 in rural North Carolina, and an oddball crew makes history when they pull off America’s third largest cash heist. But it’s all downhill from there. Join host Johnny Knoxville as he unspools a wild and woolly tale about a group of regular ‘ol folks who risked it all for a chance at a better life. CrimeLess: Hillbilly Heist answers the question: what would you do with 17.3 million dollars? The answer includes diamond rings, mansions, velvet Elvis paintings, plus a run for the border, murder-for-hire-plots, and FBI busts.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.