Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Final hour of The Jesse Kelly Show on
a Wonderful Friday. We're going to talk about everything from
the United States Marines, to trade jobs, to the economy,
to how to make sure your town says Merry Christmas
(00:32):
instead of Happy Holidays. All that and more coming up
in the final hour of the world famous Jesse Kelly's Show.
I do have to tell you, though, I got a
personal situation here and it's not good. And this is
what it's like when you're not twenty four anymore. You're
forty four. So let me just lay it out for you.
I have until Sunday afternoon when ob gets back to
(00:56):
fix my back. Here's what happened. I was a couple
months ago. I was lifting weights. Obviously not a huge weightlifting,
but it's what I enjoyed. So just nice and light,
nothing majorly heavy. I lift weights, I live weights, and
I walk. That's really what I do. I'm lifting weights.
(01:17):
All of a sudden, my right forearm feels like it's
it feels like it's on fire underneath the skin. Okay,
so I heard something that big deal. It wasn't the
end of the world. Tendonitis? All right, What did I do?
I had to take it easy for it took a
month for this freaking thing to heal a month. For
(01:37):
a month, I could not do any pulling exercises, no pulling,
and I couldn't really pick up any dumbells. It was
all just pushing. I could only push. So could not
lift for my back for a month, solid month. Ob
always tells me that I act as if if I'm
(02:00):
younger than I am, and she says, if you don't,
if you keep pushing it hard, you're gonna hurt yourself,
You're gonna hurt yourself. Be careful. Finally, my tendinitis went
away yesterday and I could lift my back. I may
have gotten a little over exuberant, maybe put a little
(02:22):
too much weight on there, maybe pushed it a little
bit too hard. Back is wrecked, absolutely wrecked. What Chris, So,
I took a month off and then tried to max out.
I wouldn't say max out, I wouldn't put it that way.
It was I tried to do what I had been
(02:45):
doing a month ago. I'll put it that way. Oh,
I was not ready. Back is wrecked. And if I
do not heal it by Sunday afternoon when ob gets back,
I'm going to have to hear I told you so
I know I'm going to have to hear it. I
have forty eight hours basically, what Chris just fake like
(03:09):
I'm not hurt. Uh, that's gonna be tough. I can't
turn in certain directions. And now I'm at this thing
where i'm if I stand up or sit down or whatnot,
I'm doing the thing. It's involuntary too, but it's kind
of that someone's sticking a knife in between your shoulder blades.
(03:32):
Feel not great, It's not great, not great, Jesse. I
was thinking about that classic line from War in the
Pacific cigarettes are for women and children, and it got
me thinking this. The Marines say that that comes from
the with the old breed. The Marines back then, didn't
they believe in smoking cigars? It was just a bunch
(03:53):
of ruffians. When did the US Marines became known as
the hardcore rougher around the edges men that we think of.
Did it start in World War One? Or is it
older than that? It's older than that. Remember what prompted
the creation of the United States Marines? The Marines just
(04:16):
celebrated our two hundred and fiftieth birthday. The Marines were
created because they needed somebody on naval ships who could
fight hand to hand and on land. Do you know
why they call Marines leathernecks? Have you ever heard that
term leathernecks? Oh? Leathernck lee? Do you know where that
term came from? The Marines used to wear leather. I
(04:41):
want to call it a strap, like a thick strap
around their neck because they sword fought and they didn't
want to be slashed on the neck where all the
valuable arteries. They wore leather on their necks because there
were sword fighting on naval ships. And here's the thing
about being hardcore. You can just decide you're going to
(05:03):
be and then operate that way and you will eventually
turn out that way. The Marines decided they wanted to
be hardcore, and because of the job they had, they
kind of had to be hardcore, and so to this
day they're proud of it. When I joined the Marines,
and I know you probably remember these, but the recruiting
(05:27):
posters and the recruiters and things like that, well, here's
a good example. We just had an air force recruiter
show up at my kids school. My kid was talking
to him. God forbid, he might actually join, but my kid,
my kid was talking to the Air Force recruiter, and
my kid talked about what they talked about, and the
Air Force recruiter, understandably not at all insulting him, was
(05:47):
explaining all the different opportunities, all the different opportunities he
could get, not just in the Air Force, but post
Air Force. Hey, you want to do aircraft mechanic when
you graduate, where when you get out of the Air
Force you can make that. It was all about job opportunities,
better yourself, and there's nothing wrong with that. That's awesome, right,
very very very awesome. The Marine Corps recruiter said, Oh, no,
(06:10):
it's gonna suck. No, you're going to be hot, a lot, cold,
a lot, miserable, tired, sweaty. I promise it's going to
be brutal, but you'll be proud. And for young men,
a lot of young men, especially rebellious types as I was,
(06:30):
that's an appealing message. That's exactly what I wanted to hear.
I didn't even walk into any other recruiting office. I'm like, yes,
that's what I want and I want it to suck.
I absolutely want to be miserable. It was about testing
yourself seeing if you could do it. They just have
always been that way. Hey, Jesse, he's talking about Trump
in the H one B visas. Jesse, you missed an
(06:54):
interview with the Secretary of the Treasury. He explained it
better than President Trump. If it's so, it will work
the way the secretary said, they will bring eligible H
one B visa workers to train Americans in the workforce
and then leave at a determined time. Okay, yeah, that
doesn't work like that. Let me explain that may be
(07:17):
what they want. No, No, we're going to bring in
twenty thousand, thirty thousand, and fifty thousand people from China
and India and they're just going to train American workers
and then their visas will expire and they will go
back home. Understand that a large percentage of the people
(07:37):
in the United States illegally are what is known as
visa overstays. It doesn't work the way we think it works. Okay,
we picture in our head. Okay, you handed this person
of visa and it expires one year from now, and
then one year when the visa's done, that person goes
(07:58):
immediately down to the airport with a plane ticket and
hops on a plane and leaves. No that person is here.
That person very likely has established themselves in some way here.
Maybe they have a job. Well, you know what, their
employer probably isn't going to in a year say, hey
a boo, show me your visa. Is a visa up.
(08:20):
They just spend a year training this person work at
so the employer's not uniquely incentivized to get rid of
that person at all. The employer wants them here. Maybe
that person has a place to stay. Maybe they're renting
an apartment. We'll make it about an apartment. Do you
think the landlord is anxious to lose that monthly rent?
You think that, hey a boo, visa's up. I expect
(08:42):
you out by tomorrow. I don't want another rent check
from you. The kids are in school. You get a
visa just because it expires. Doesn't mean you are cut
off from anything in this country. Doesn't mean you are
automatically hunted down and shut to the airport. People come
here on temporary visas all the time, and they never leave.
(09:07):
There are stories of people twenty thirty years past their
visa expiration, still here, still working, still paying rent. Now
they have eighty seven kids, their kids have kids, and
of course they're all American citizens. Because of our insane
immigration policy. It's a bad, bad, bad thing. You can
tell them it expires whenever you want, But telling someone
(09:31):
and it expires does not physically remove them from the
country at all. They get here, they don't leave. And remember,
we always have to understand that we're dealing with so
many hostile forces known as democrats inside of the country,
where these blue areas have decided that they are going
to be places that protect people here illegally. It's so
(09:53):
bonkers that we've accepted this is the way it is.
California is our richest, most powerful state, and they will
tell you to they're blue in the face, that they're
gonna protect illgals. So you get a bunch of visa overstays.
Where are they gonna go if they're even a little
bit worried about being deported, They're gonna hop on the
one oh one and over to California they go. It
(10:16):
doesn't work that way. Just because they say we'll train
them and then they'll leave. That doesn't work. It's never worked,
all right, getting involved in your town, in your community.
Why does that matter? Hang on, he doesn't care if
you believe him, But he's right. Jesse Kelly. It is
(10:39):
the Jesse Kelly Show on a magnificent Friday. Remember we
are live here. You can still email us Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com. Jesse. I moved from California to
Texas almost four years ago. Best decision we ever made
kept the family together. Neighboring town here has signs in
social media post telling everyone about their holiday events coming up,
(11:03):
the holiday parade, the holiday tree lighting. My town where
I live started putting up their signs Christmas Market, Christmas Parade,
Christmas tree lighting. My question is, besides this little public
high five, what can I do to encourage my town
to stay strong in the face of leftist pressure that
made our neighboring town cave. I have told you this
(11:28):
story before, but I know we have a bunch of
new listeners, so I'm just gonna say I'm going to
tell you this story again just as a little heads
up about how so many of these things work and
how so many of these things happen. There was a
town in my area that was going to have an
Independence Day parade, like so many towns do. Being the
(11:48):
grand marshal of a parade is a position of honor.
And the grand marshal of my blood red town's Independence
Day parade was a militant anti gun lesbian, a militant
anti gun communist lesbian. She was going to be the
grand marshal of the parade. I found out about this
(12:11):
because people in this town started blowing up my email
and I knew a couple guys, so they were texting
me and they said, Jesse, can you help? Can you help? What? So?
I decided to help, and I decided to do what
I could to make sure this person was not the
grand marshal of this town's parade. And in so doing,
(12:32):
I and others started digging into how in the world
can this even happen? How does this happen in a
town it's like ninety three percent Republican? How do we
end up with that? What the how? So started call
blowing up the phones at city hall, the city hall,
(12:52):
the city council. People all wash their hands of it.
Wasn't us, wasn't us. We didn't make this call? Okay,
who did check with the parks department? You got to
call the parks department. Have you ever called your city's
parks department? Are you involved in the parks department? Of
course you're not. The phones of parks department start blowing up.
(13:14):
We're all call on the phone. Who did this? Remove this?
How did this happen? Well, we didn't specifically do this.
We had had a committee. We came up with the committee,
and the committee is the one who decided on the
Grand Marshal. Okay, how does one get on the committee?
(13:35):
Where was this committee? We put an announcement out on
the city's website that we were forming a committee for
the Independence Day parade, and people showed up. It was
a volunteer thing, unpaid, temporary. People showed up, got on
the committee, and the committee decided on the Grand Marshal.
(13:56):
Long story short is they're a militant lesbian leading a
grand marshal leading a parade. Why is your town eliminating
the word Christmas and going with happy Holidays? Because communists
sees choke holds of power. Politics is something you do
(14:18):
because you feel it's important, right, That's why you're into it.
You feel like it's important, and you do it because
you have to I've told you before, I love my job,
love my job. If we could snap our fingers overnight
and right all the wrongs in this country, I would
never talk about politics again. I would do a history
(14:38):
show every single day. That's what I really truly love
is history and food. That's what I love to discuss.
I do politics because I feel like I have to,
just like you, That is not how the communist does it.
The communist is out there seeking out these chokeholds of
power so they can force their agen to down your throat.
(15:01):
They're not interested in what you want, They're not interested
in what is popular. They are interested in moving the
revolution forward. And because of this, they're on your town's website,
and they know about the upcoming committee for the Independence
Day parade next year, and they're all going to be
lined up around the block to get on that committee.
While You're sitting at home watching the game and I'm
(15:24):
smoking a brisket, and we are completely clueless as to
what's going on. And we find out next July first
that it's a militant lesbian and by then we're looking
around saying, what how, what this can But it was
already done by the way that lady ended up getting removed.
We raised such a fuss that she did not end
up being the Grand Marshal. But you understand that was
(15:47):
the example of how it works. Have you ever been
to your town larger, small, red or blue? Have you
ever been to the website? Have you ever looked at
the announcements, the schedule of events. Have you ever not
trying to make you feel guilty, have you ever attended
(16:09):
a single meeting of your town, the ones that are
open to the public. Hey, Chris, Chris got involved in
local politics. He sits on something I'm not going to discuss,
but Chris got involved. Hey, Chris, how many citizens show
up to these meetings? None? Nobody shows up. You'll get
(16:31):
they're open to the public. You get five people in there,
and it's five communists because they were on the town's website,
and they're gonna show up. And if there's a vote
for something, if there's a committee for something, if there's
a commission for something, that vile little communist hates you,
hates your values, hates that the town's blood red. And
you know what they're gonna get off on. They're gonna
(16:52):
get off on getting on that committee and doing a
drag queen's show for kids in the middle of your
blood red city park when you look around and wonder
how did this happen? Because they got involved and we
were clueless. Get involved your community, your community, not all
presidential stuff. And make sure you switch your cell phone
(17:13):
to pure talk. That's important. Stop funding corporations who hate
your freaking guts. This is something we have finally finally
woken up on on the right. It took far too long,
but we finally realized that our money, there is power there,
There is power in our money and forever. We just
set this out. We just let corporate America do whatever
(17:35):
it wanted, and we constantly told them over and over
again they could spit in our faces and we will
never fight back no more. Verizon hates your guts, so
does AT and T and T Mobile. Go look at
their quote charitable giving. Look what they do with the
money you send them putrid stuff pure talk. They're getting
(17:56):
rescue dogs. One they're rescuing them. Two they're giving them
to guys who struggle with PTSD. I love this freaking company, man,
and save you a bunch of money. You can switch
during the break dial pound two five zero and say
Jesse Kelly pound two five zero, say Jesse Kelly, We'll
(18:18):
be back. Is he smarter than everyone who knows? Does
he think so? Yeah? The Jesse Kelly Show, It is
the Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic Friday, churning through
all these questions. Here, Before I get back to the questions,
(18:41):
remember that the Communist world of make believe it is created.
They create a world of make believe that the Democrat
in your life lives in your Liberal Peggy is angry
and bitter and fearful and chewing on xanax all day
long because she lives in a world that is not real,
that is created for her by Democrat politicians and their
(19:02):
people in the media. And they understand that if she
is ever calm, happy, if she can ever see the truth,
that they may lose her. So they keep her in
this perpetual state of misery. This is a United States Center.
Listen to this.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
You know, I'll be honest with you. I am not
in this sense what a fool any of us would
be to be planning to run in an election that
may not happen. And I'm serious about that. Like all
of our energy right now, all of our energy has
to be on this project of saving our democracy. None
(19:41):
of us should presume that there's going to be again
a free and fair election where any Democrat has a
shot to win in twenty twenty.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
Gavin, they all say it. Gavin Newsom's probably the leading
Democrat right now, has said it multiple times. We've played
it for you on the show. Trump isn't going to leave.
There isn't even going to be an election. They all
know that's ridiculous, in an outright lie. But they also
need your liberal aunt Peggy afraid. They need her miserable.
(20:11):
They need her believing gigantic lie after gigantic lie, because
it keeps her stupid, it keeps her loyal, It keeps
her exactly where they want her. Jesse, I like the
secret club idea. It wouldn't be a headquarters or a clubhouse.
I think layer would be more appropriate. Would there be
secret handshake? I really like the idea of a layer.
(20:33):
I like it that it's a layer, and I like
the idea of it being a nuclear bunker of some
kind of nuclear silo. We are going to need a
million dollars, so we get we're gonna need a donor.
We need a wealthy benefactor. Chris, You've got to know somebody.
We've got what you can share of some of the
family gold or whatever it may be. We need a
(20:55):
wealthy benefactor because we have to purchase our nuclear bunker. What. No,
you're not allowed in. I need you to help me
raise funds. Though, no, you're still not allowed in. I
can't change that. A secret handshake will happen again. I'm
just not comfortable telling you what it's going to be yet, Jesse.
I got to fly down to Austin. I got to
(21:17):
fly down to Austin, Texas last week. You're right about
the food down there, It's just amazing. Now I'm back home,
I'm getting hungry for more brisket. Can you remind me
of the temperature and length of time you cook it.
I am a bit of a pitmaster with my pellet smoker.
(21:37):
I cook my brisket at two hundred degrees. I have
never overcooked it because it's not really possible, well at
least that I've seen so far, to overcook it at
two hundred degrees. I have talked to a guy one time,
though I've never done this before. I talked to a
guy one time, who cooked his for seventy two hours.
(22:00):
I've never done that. I mean, I'm sure it's delicious.
I can't so I can't say. But I have done
mine for thirteen fourteen hours. In my opinion, that wasn't
the best one I ever did. I've done them for
eighteen hours. That might have been the best one the
last time. I did it for twenty four hours, but
at two hundred degrees. Just make sure it's low. At
(22:22):
two hundred degrees. If you have it done, if you
bought yourself a good brisket, it's not going to go bad.
It's not gonna go bad. And I'm just joking, obviously
about being a pitmaster. I don't know the first thing
about any of this stuff. But a brisket with some
fat on it, maybe you're gonna have to have some
fat on it, because that's going to be all your
juice and flavor that drips through there. A brisket with
(22:43):
some fat on it, unless you're roasting the friggin thing
at three hundred degrees or something like that, you're not
going to overcook it. Low and slow, just keep the
pellets coming. Jesse. The three amendments ratified at the beginning
of the twentieth century. Sixteen, seventeen and nineteen clearly changed
the direction of the USA. If you could repeal one,
(23:03):
which one would it be? And why all the nineteenth
what Chris, But I know I'm right. Letting women vote
has been a total disaster for the United States of America.
And that's been Everyone knows it's true. Women listening know
it's true. It's been a total disaster for the country.
(23:23):
Politics became more emotional, so much as soon as we
started allowing women to vote, we started mixing the most
poisonous thing in the world into our politics. And that's
something called empathy. Now, you can't deport people, you can't
cut off anyone's entitlement. You can't do this. You can't
(23:45):
do that because it would be what mean, it has
been a disaster for the country. It was a much
better country when we only allowed property owning males to
vote in elections. And I should notote for any woman
who's freaking out right now and typing me up in email.
By the way, you're welcome to email me all your hates.
Totally fine, Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Totally fine.
(24:09):
Your hate is more than welcome here. It should be
noted that votes were family votes back in the day.
Contrary to what your idiot social studies teacher taught you
in school. Women were never these horribly oppressed minorities without
any rights in the United States of America. That is
not a world that actually existed at all from our
(24:30):
very first days. Our Christian founders of this country, the
pilgrims who got here, were tight knit families. The women
adored their men, the men adored their wives. They were
not walking around in chains getting slapped around all day long.
That world never existed in the United States of America
at all, and we had a much better country for it. Now,
(24:53):
the seventeenth has been terrible too. It's you could make
a good argument for the seventeenth in case you don't know,
that seventeenth Amendment was the one that made senators United
States senators. It made them elected by the people of
their state. Now they can be confusing, why is that
a bad thing? Well, previously senators were selected by the
(25:18):
state legislatures of the individual states. So Texas's senators it
wouldn't be up for some popular vote. The legislature would
choose the senator. The result of that was senators didn't
become these these Washington DC swamp figures as easily. They
(25:39):
were much more representatives of the state from which they came.
So you would have a member of the House of Representatives.
His job is to represent the people of his district.
Today that's five hundred thousand, six hundred thousand, depending on
the district. His job is to be their representative in
Washington DC. Ideally, your senator, my senator should work really
(26:04):
on behalf of your state at all times. But as
soon as we diverted from that, now they became swamp creatures.
And the United States Senate is where so many things
go to die. And I'm sorry, I'm still extremely upset
about them throwing in a carve out for themselves in
the latest cr The United States Senate did this, and
(26:27):
I've been told that it was Mandy Graham. Surprise, surprise,
the United States Senate did this. They threw in this
provision that allowed them to sue the FBI when the
FBI spied on them. But they didn't ever put a
carve out in for you. When the FBI was hunting
down all those January six ers, they didn't even mention
(26:48):
a carve out. Didn't even mention giving those people the
options to sue when Donald Trump was getting raided and
arrested and everything else. No carve out for Donald Trump.
But the second the senators, the second of senator had
his phone tapped, the second the FBI started looking at
his text messages, he immediately starts to write it into
law that allows him to get rich off of suing
(27:11):
the FBI. You scumbags. You're supposed to work for us,
You're supposed to at least pretend to care about us
over there lining your own freaking pockets. Never even occurred
to one of you dirt balls to give us a
car about man, I'm still chapped about the whole thing.
I bet you it was Lindsay Graham too. That's such
(27:32):
a Lindsay Graham thing to do. Now let me talk
to you about preborn saving a life. Now that I'm
all now that i'm all heated, I need to focus
on something wonderful. Picture this picture, this, this young woman
scared and confused. It's pregnant. She's decided, I'm gonna abort
this baby. I don't want it, I'm gonna abort it.
(27:53):
I'm gonna kill my baby. Instead, Preborn reaches out to
her and says, hey, you want to come in for
an ultrasound? No charge, no charge. She lays down, gets
her ultrasound. Picture the look on her face when she
hears that heartbeat. You know that they choose life almost
every time when you give them an ultrasound. The heart
(28:16):
is beating and she's a mom and she knows it.
What is that moment like? That's what Preborn does every
single day. You have saved thousands of lives by giving
to Preborn. It's tax deductible. It's the end of the year.
You're gonna want that soon. Give him a grand if
(28:36):
you got it. Give them twenty eight bucks pays for
the ultrasound. Give them five bucks, give them fifty grand.
I give it goes to Babies. Preborn dot com slash
Jesse Preborn dot com slash Jesse sponsored by Preborn. We'll
be back. Jesse Kelly returns next. It is that Jesse
(28:59):
Kelly Show. Final segment of The Jesse Kelly Show, cruising
into a weekend. Yes, I am still childless and wifeless.
I am a single bachelor, which means I have well
forty eight more hours till ab and the kids get
back to eat Totino's party pizzas. I am gonna go
to waffle House tomorrow morning, Chris. I'm gonna get up
(29:21):
and I'm gonna go down to waffle House, and I'm
just gonna do all the what what? What? Why not? Tonight?
You bring up a very good point. You know what
people don't know about waffle House. They're cheeseburgers are delicious.
Nobody knows about waffle House cheeseburgers. Obviously, nothing fancy. It's
(29:42):
waffle House cheeseburger. Make sure you get some of the
waffle House mayo. It's Chipotle mayo, but they don't call
it that. It's waffle house. What, Chris, what? Yeah, it
doesn't matter what it's called. You're exactly right. The name
is not important. Just get some of it. You're gonna
need some extra napkins that there's gonna be some grease there.
Feel free to add some bacon on it, you know what, Chris,
(30:04):
I might go tonight. I actually, right now, I just
talk myself into it. I have forty eight more hours
to treat my body like a garbage disposal before ob
comes home and says, what did you eat while I
was gone, and I'll be all grapes and salads and stuff.
I ate so many grapes. Oh, that reminds me, crap,
we have grapes in the fridge. I need to put
(30:25):
a reminder on my phone to throw some away before
she gets home. If she shows well, listen, if she
shows up and they're all still there, she's gonna know what,
does she listen to the show? Sometimes there's been trouble
before when she's when I've had these little rants, and
she'll be in the car with the kids taking them
(30:45):
to practice. The way I see it, right now, she's
out of town with her family. She's not listening right now?
Right what, Chris. She's not with her handler, Chris. She's
not a honeypot Okay, at least I don't think. But
maybe her handler's a big fan of the show too,
which I wouldn't blame him. I certainly wouldn't blame him
at all. Do you hear what Ja d Vance said? Privately?
Speaker 3 (31:07):
We were having conversations all the time, and frankly, privately
the Democrats would recognize the position of their far left
was crazy. But they all feel a little bit like
they're being held hostage by their far left. You said
it very well, Chuck Schumer. This probably ended his career,
and he was the person who was fighting more than
anybody to keep the government shut down.
Speaker 1 (31:28):
So the far Democrats senator per Puck News, by the way,
this is their breaking Democrat Senator Chuck Schumer isn't expected
to seek reelection in twenty twenty eight. Chuck Schumer ends
his career. Now, this can be very good and it
(31:50):
can be very bad. So I'll tell you a thought
I had before we try to knock out another email
or two and go. So I'll tell you a thought
I had. I thought about not even having this conversation
with you because it's Friday. But give it to you.
The old, more moderate Democrats are being run out of
their party or they're just having to succumb and pretend
(32:11):
to be communists, like Chuck Schumer. That's what he's been doing,
but pretending to be a communist. So what does this mean.
This means the Democrat Party is going to turn more
and more evil, more and more communists. That can be
hugely great or hugely terrifying and terrible. And you know
(32:34):
what will determine it. If the Democrat Party continues to
become communist, there is a chance they will pull completely
away from normal Americans and that they will have a
very difficult time winning national elections. There's a chance their
swing to the left costs them large amounts of political power.
(32:59):
But here is my fear, Just gonna give it to you.
There are really only two major political parties, Democrats and Republicans. People,
especially the normies, they want choices. They like to have
a choice. They don't want to feel like they're bound
to one party or the other. And people many times
(33:22):
will vote against a particular party because they're angry about
something like right now the economy. People are mad at Republicans.
They're blaming Republicans. So does the Democrat Party shifting to
the left. Does it really put them on the outs
with Americans or does it have the effect of dragging
(33:47):
more of America to the left when Americans get angry
at Republicans and choose to take it out on them
at the voting booth. It's a concern, a serious concern.
Let's pray it puts the middle in the wilderness. By
the way, this is you know, you know what it
(34:08):
is right now, it's tunnel to Towers's Season of hope.
Did you know that this is the time of year
Tunnel to Towers steps up and they're giving people smart homes.
These these catastrophically injured veterans or first responders, building them
smart homes so they can live a more independent life,
(34:29):
paying off mortgages for widows and orphans. The holiday season, Thanksgiving, Christmas, Hanakah, Chris.
The holiday season is brutal for people who have lost someone,
especially when you lose someone unexpectedly. This is actually the
hardest time of year. Tunneled to Towers is out there
(34:49):
making it a little bit better. And they do this
with your eleven dollars a month. T the number two
T dot org is where you go to give T
two T dot org. All right, eleven bucks a month,
let's do it. And now here's a headline, but go
you know, you know the thing emails. We didn't get
(35:12):
to Jesse before the government shut down. There was a
lot of big talk coming from the right about using
it as their rare window to doze, to cut unnecessary government. Bloke,
has anything at all happened in that regards, No, not really.
Little snippet here and a little snippet there bunch of
idle threats. Frankly, I'm disappointed, Jesse. Why did you choose
(35:34):
to run for US representative in Arizona instead of running
for city or county office or even state legislature. Welcome
back from your long weekend. Because I thought I was
going to go to Washington, DC and stop Barack Obama
from destroying the country. I had these grand plans. I
wasn't interested in fixing the city council. I wanted to,
(35:55):
of course, save the whole country, which I know is
ridiculous and naive, but that's why I wanted to Jesse.
So you got invited to an exclusive of Oh, this
is about that event. I got invited the Radio Hall
of Fame and then the private VIP party afterwards. I
was not going for me. Someone I knew my boss
was getting into the Hall of Fame. The guy says,
so you got invited to an exclusive event dressed like
(36:17):
a hobo. I wasn't dressed like a hobo. I just
didn't have a suit on like everyone else. Went out
to an elitist dinner with your elitist friends, so you
didn't have to eat with the peasants. I went to
I wouldn't got a steak with Clay, got invited to
an even more elitist after party, decided it wasn't elitist
enough for you, and pieced out after a few minutes
without telling anyone. Must be good to be king. This
(36:40):
is very similar to what OB said when OB found
out about what I wore, that I didn't eat at
the banquet, and that I irish goodbye to everybody at
the event. Afterwards, I got a lot of the you know,
you're not in charge of everything and you can't just
do whatever you want to do. I got a lot
of that from Ob, but I feel like she's that's wrong.
(37:01):
I feel like I am in charge of everything and
I can do what I want to do, especially when
you irish goodbye and don't tell it everybody you're leaving.
Go enjoy your weekend, put your phone down. I'll see
you Monday. That's all.