All Episodes

September 29, 2025 37 mins

They are not soft on crime, they are pro crime. Alvin Bragg didn’t accidentally botch a case that let criminals walk. Existing entirely online. Ramping up the rhetoric. 

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. Final hour of The Jesse Kelly Show on
a wondrous, wondrous Monday. We're gonna talk more about them
using power and how things are slowly turning around here.
Apparently gen Z finds the real world daunting dearborn residents. Yeah,

(00:34):
that Muslim called a prayer is not landing will all
that emails so much more coming up in the final
hour of the Jesse Kelly Show. So I'm not gonna
spend a lot of time on this, but I know
there have been eight million controversies between when this incident
happened and now. And maybe you didn't even hear about
this incident when this incident happened, but allow me to

(00:57):
set it up for you. And man, there was a
pro life activist there. A woman gets angry that she's
being pro life, and she sucker punches the pro lifer.
This is not a story I heard about secondhand. There's

(01:20):
video of it. I cannot stress that this entire encounter.
You can go watch it on video if you'd like
to know where The woman who has been accused of
second degree assault. Her name is Brianna Jay Rivers, Brianna
Jay Rivers. Just look that up. You can go look

(01:41):
at the video of this animal sucker punching a pro
life activist. It's on videotape. Okay now, headline is New
York City woman who sucker punched pro life activist won't
be prosecuted as Manhattan DA Brag. That'd be Alvin Bragg.

(02:04):
As Bragg's office admits to botching the case. That's from
the New York Post. They didn't watch the case. They
didn't botch the case. They're not soft on crime. They

(02:24):
didn't trip and fall and lose the files they needed
and screw this up. Everything for a communist is looked
at friends versus enemies, and he only holds whatever power
he holds to reward his friends and punish his enemies.
A pro life activist is the enemy of a communist

(02:47):
DA like Alvin Bragg. Somebody who would assault this activist
is looked at as a friend of communist DA Alvin Bragg,
and Alvin Bragg views his role as DA in part
to protect the animal who's punching his enemy. That's why
they do what they do. I'm going to play something
for you. This is his daughter Logan was murdered and

(03:14):
it was freaking horrible, and he gave some testimony. I
want you to listen to this, and I want you
to please understand, if you don't already, they're not soft
on crime. They want these things to happen. That's why
they do what they do.

Speaker 2 (03:31):
I tell you this story. Think about your kids. Think
about your child coming home from a night out with
their friends, laying down, going to sleep, feeling somebody come
in the room and wake them and drag her out
of bed, naked, forced on her knees with their hands

(03:53):
over her head, begging for her life, begging for or
her hero. Her father me, that couldn't be there. She
was five foot three, she weighed one hundred and fifteen pounds.
Bang dead.

Speaker 1 (04:17):
Gone. Who did this to this young man's well, this
man's daughter. Who did it? Why was this person out
on the streets?

Speaker 2 (04:28):
Why because Alexander Devonte Dickey, who was arrested thirty nine
god times twenty five felonies, was on the street. How
about that? How good are we doing for our family?

(04:48):
How good are you doing for your kids? He should
have been in jail for over one hundred and forty
years for all the crimes he committed. You know how
much time he's spent in prison, a little over six
hundred days in ten years. He's only thirty years old.
He was committing two point sixty five crimes a year

(05:09):
since he was fifteen years old. But nobody could figure
out that he couldn't be rehabilitated. Well, you'd have to
put him in prison to see if he could be rehabilitated.
Isn't that the idea of prison.

Speaker 1 (05:25):
Democrats release these animals on purpose. Democrats release these animals
on purpose because they want them to drag your daughter
out of bed and shoot them in the head of
the middle of the night. And good people still have
such a hard time grasping that it's on purpose. You

(05:46):
tell a Democrat that they should lock this guy up,
you might as well be telling a grizzly bear standing
in a river not to eat the salmon that's swimming by.
It would never even occur to them to lie the
animal up because they want him hurting people. We are
dealing with evil, and they assume these positions of power

(06:09):
as DA's and as judges so they can let these
people out to ravage your mom, your wife, your husband,
your son, your daughter. That is why they do what
they do. Good people struggle to accept that level of evil.
They are not naive, they are not soft on crime.

(06:31):
These things are done on purpose. I'm going to play
it one more time for you, the first one. I'm
going to play it one more time because I want
you to hear the pain in his voice, and I
want you to know that Democrats do this on purpose.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
When I tell you this story, think about your kids.
Think about your child coming home from the night out
with their friends, laying down, going to sleep, feeling somebody
come in the room and wake them and drag her
out of bed, naked, forced on her knees, with her

(07:06):
hands over her head, begging for her life, begging for
her hero. Her father me, that couldn't be there. She
was five foot three, she weighed one hundred and fifteen pounds, bang.

Speaker 1 (07:28):
Dead, gone, heartbreaking. Isn't it awful? But that's what we're
up against. That's what we're up against. And I got
this email, Jesse. I took your advice and I traded
Governor Murphy, that'd be Phil Murphy of New Jersey for
Governor DeSantis. I couldn't be happier. His name is Steve

(07:52):
So he moved from New Jersey to Florida. And the
reason I read that is, if possible, if possible, get yourself,
in your family out of these blue areas, because they're
not sorry, and they're not stopping. Your blue area is

(08:15):
going to keep putting as many animals on the street
as fast as they can possibly put them on the street.
They are not dissuaded by that father's heartbreak. They're not
dissuaded by bad headlines. They're not even dissuaded by the
unpopularity of the Democrat Party, which on the issue of

(08:36):
crime is now twenty percent behind Republicans. You can point
all these things out to them, and they're still not sorry,
because they're communists, because they're demonic, because they are trying
to destroy They are fighting a revolution, a revolution they

(08:56):
look at as bigger than any daughter, a bigger than
any son, any family, any cost. Remember anti humans, which
is what communists are, as Sultsanitsen called them the enemies
of humanity, anti for an anti human, there's no such

(09:17):
thing as human tragedy. It would be like you being
or you saying there's a mosquito tragedy. Have you ever
been sad about the death of mosquitoes. No, you haven't.
Their life means nothing to you. In fact, you despise them.
That's how communists think about people. If someone has to die,

(09:39):
even on their own side. By the way, if anyone
has to die in service to the revolution, well that's
just the cost of doing business. Someone has to die.
I guess that's what we're up against. Let's changed the
subject a little bit here, talk about something maybe a
little bit later, maybe not, who do a couple of emails.

(10:00):
We'll also talk about the younger generation in the real world.
Apparently they're kind of done with all this online dating stuff,
but they find the real world to be a little
uh intimidating, if you will discuss that in the moment.
Speaking of the younger generation, let me ask you something,

(10:21):
is you Are your grandchildren going to know what your
grandpa looked like? Are they going to know what you
sound like? Do you have home movies? Oh, VHS tapes
or Super eight film or something like that. Do you
have pictures, I'm talking hard copy pictures on the wall,

(10:43):
in a box, in a baby album, a wedding album.
Please don't lose those memories with time. Don't lose them
to an attic, to a flood, to a fire. Don't
lose that. I would have loved to have more memories
of my grandparents, but Legacy Box wasn't around back then.

(11:04):
Legacy Box is around now, and they will digitize all
your things, and they will digitize it with care. I
entrusted Legacy Box with things that have very deep meaning
to me, very deep meaning, and they cared for it.
They will hand digitize it and send it back to you.
Take advantage. Legacybox dot com slash Jesse. This is an

(11:30):
opportunity to preserve your memories forever. Legacybox dot com, slash Jesse.
We'll be back fighting for your freedom every day. The
Jesse Kelly Show. It is The Jesse Kelly Show on

(11:50):
a Monday. Member. You can download the whole thing if
you missed a single solitary second Jesse at Jesse kellyshow
dot com. So I have a question when describing jalapenos?
Do you ever shorten it to japs? Chris says he does, Corey,

(12:12):
do you ever shorten it to japs? Corey doesn't. Okay,
So maybe it's a regional thing. I have always for
as long as I can remember called them japs.

Speaker 2 (12:22):
They need some.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
I get pepperoni and jalapenos on a pizza, we always
call them japs. Did you get japs on there? If
I'm getting a cheese steak, I like kalipinos in it,
I said, add japs. This has been something I always understood.
I just ordered something on Saturday in front of OB
and I requested japs and she was mortified. She said,

(12:48):
you can't say that, And I said, I don't understand
why you can't say that, because it's a fit. What
Chris what? Oh you'll type it, you won't say it.
Maybe that's where I went wrong as I actually said it.
Look the cashier got what I was saying. Everyone got
everyone got what I was saying. Anyway, But let's get

(13:09):
back to the topic at hand. Gen Z is over
dating apps, but the real world feels even more daunting.
That's from the psychologically the psychological posts or something like that.
My only point I'm bringing up the clickbait article was this,
human beings for all of human history have had have

(13:33):
had to grow based on real world experiences. I'm talking
about flesh and blood experiences. Whatever your culture is, you'll
have different experiences but as you have those experiences, you
will grow. And people love these statistics and articles talking

(13:54):
about younger generations now and how how late they get
married and how late they're having kids, and how late
they're owning a home and how late they're how And
the question is always what's wrong? What's wrong? What are
they doing wrong? What happened in society?

Speaker 2 (14:09):
What this?

Speaker 1 (14:09):
And there's Obviously these answers are all very complicated. I
understand that, but part, a huge part of our problem
now is the younger generations. They have been given an
obstacle that no other generation in the history of mankind
has had to deal with. And that's very rare because
normally human beings, we all kind of go through the

(14:31):
same things at any period of time. The technology changes,
but it's always the same stuff. Young people today have
grown up in a world where you can exist for
long periods of time without actually physically interacting with people.

(14:51):
Because of social media, because of the internet, because of
your phone, because of your computer. You can have a
friend circle. And I'm not I'm not bad marking your
online friend circle. I know it's real, I get it.
I'm not insulting it. But you can have virtually everyone
in your friends circle online. You date now online, from

(15:14):
what I understand, is a little past my time. But
you date online, and I'm not insulting any of that,
But what's happening is you are missing out on experiences
that will bring you further along in life by not

(15:35):
physically experiencing them. And I know why. It's why you
might not want to do that for a variety of reasons.
One online is easy, and online is you don't have
that feeling, that fear of humiliation. I know for dudes,
and I know women go through this too. For men,

(15:57):
being rejected by a woman, No you can't have my number,
No I won't go out with you. That's a very real,
very deep fear. And when women don't fully realize women
have fears. Men don't realize too. But for a dude,
it's it hurts your soul, it tears you down. And
I'm not saying don't say no. Ladies, go ahead, But

(16:19):
for a dude, that's a fear. You want to approach
that girl in class, you want to ask for her number,
that pretty girl at the park. Do you walk up
ask to take her to Red Lobster? What if she
says no, So you can avoid all that pain, you
can avoid any fear of that buye hanging out online? Well,
maybe I'll tell her she's pretty on there. She says no, whatever,

(16:42):
the leader or something like that or whatever. I don't
understand how all that online stuff works. But the result
of that is younger generations are behind older generations with
critical life experiences. You need to advance yourself down the timeline,

(17:03):
if that makes sense. And this is really a message
if you're young, if you're younger, I'm not saying get
off social media. I'm not saying delete the internet. But
I am telling you you have to physically get out there.
You have to. Ladies, gotta get yourself dolled up. Go
out to a local Republican meeting. You might just meet

(17:25):
a guy and you might not fellas that pretty girl
at the park. I know it's scary. I was a
young man once myself. I know it's intimidating. Now, granted
I would talk to everybody that didn't care, but I
know it's intimidating. Go up and talk to her. You
need to. What if she says no, brother, it's good

(17:47):
for you to hear no. It's good. These things help
you grow, Otherwise you'll find yourself thirty forty in the
real world will be daunting. The real world will be
scary because you're twenty thirty years behind where your parents were.
They were experiencing this in the fifth grade. Now you're
experiencing it as a middle aged person. Get out there

(18:09):
and talk to people. All right, talk a little bit
more about dearborn. We'll talk about entertainment emails. I'm going
to talk to you about finding a replacement for the
bad employee you have at work. I want to tell
you there is a solution out there, and it's not
just a replacement for the bad employee. Are you Are

(18:30):
you expanding? Maybe going into the holiday season you want
to add some people, and maybe you're already stressing. Am
I going to get a dirt ball? How long is
it gonna find? Is it going to be after Christmas
before I get that person I need? Let Zip Recruiter
get them, get you the help you need now. Zip
Recruiter is number one? Why are they number one? They

(18:53):
save you time. That's what this is all about. Time.
You'll find a good employee eventually, but you don't have
two years, you don't have six months. You need somebody. Now,
let Zip recruiter sift through all the gunk and put
the best people in front of you now, and you
can try it free. You don't have to take my
word for it. ZipRecruiter dot com, slash Jesse. Let you

(19:17):
try it for free. ZipRecruiter dot com, slash Jesse. We'll
be back. Missed out, catch up Jesse kellyshow dot com.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic Monday.
I know, I know that you've already noticed the shirt

(19:40):
that I'm wearing. It's a camouflage shirt. In case you're
just listening to the show, it's a camouflage shirt. And
maybe you're wondering why I would wear a camouflage T shirt. Well,
you know, I recently went hogg hunting. As I explained,
hogg hunting from the helicopter, and I put camo paint

(20:03):
all over my face to hunt hogs from the helicopter.
My sons begged me not to, but I did. The
crew of the helicopter or hog hunting crew informed me
many times that it wasn't necessary, but I did it
anyway because I believe in being tactical and blending in

(20:24):
I consider myself a camouflage expert, and I wore this
today so you had an example of what it looks
like to blend in to your surroundings. I didn't wear
this for me. I didn't wear it just because it's
the most comfortable T shirt I own. I wore it

(20:46):
so you could see what it looks like. What Chris,
What Chris is questioning the camouflage pattern I have on
part of camouflage. Chris, you can say this, this camouflage
pattern doesn't work with the foliage around here. Part of
it is zigging when you should be zagging. All wear

(21:09):
desert camouflage in the deep woods. If I'm if I'm
in the deep woods, all wear all white Arctic camouflage
throws people off. They don't know what they're looking at.
This is all. This is part of the spy game, Chris,
that you've never understood. I'm trying to explain it to you,
and you refuse to see the light. Corporate America is

(21:32):
seeing the light. Headline. This is from Axios. Corporate boards
hire white men at the fastest rate in years amid
Trump's dei purge. Now let's clarify this is from Axios,
a filthy communist company. And it's not that they're hiring
white men at the fastest rate in years, although I

(21:54):
guess that's kind of true. People forget how un believably
racist and bigoted this society became at the peak of
the cultural Marxist movement in this country a few years ago.
It's not only that corporate America would brag about not

(22:16):
hiring white people. And remember past for a second. Every
single time you see any institution brag about how diverse
they're getting and how diverse they intend to be, that
is an organization that is bragging about discriminating against white men,
because diversity always excludes white men. It's an anti white

(22:39):
men thing. It's a priority on women or this minority
group or that minority group, white men. It's open bigotry
against white men. This campaign reached a fever pitch in
recent years, and it got to the point they were
printing articles bragging about the fact act that over ninety

(23:02):
percent of corporate jobs in this country went to non
white men. They weren't apologizing for it. They were bragging,
look at all the whities we ran out of the workforce.
Now what's happening, Well, it has nothing to do or
precious little to do with Donald Trump. What it has
to do with is two things. There are two things

(23:23):
that are happening that are changing this vicious racism. First, culturally,
culture is more powerful than the president, than laws, than
anything else. Culturally, America is slowly waking up and realizing
how sick and evil indiscriminatory this stuff is. And corporations,
because cultures reversing itself, corporations are finally feeling more comfortable

(23:46):
hiring whitey That's one and two. Corporations. They're experiencing the
fruits of their labor, meaning oeriencing what happens when you
discriminate against any group of people when you are hiring.

(24:07):
If you artificially reduce the number of people in your
employee pool, your company will get worse because you just
tossed qualified people out before you even gave them a chance.
So if you decide, as a company large or small,
that you're not hiring this group or not hiring that group,

(24:30):
your company is going to falter. Your company is going
to fall. And it gets worse than that. This corporate
racism against white men thing it actually prioritizes oftentimes hiring
the dumbest human being, because the people handling the hiring
process are often discussing cultural Marxist comedies themselves, who will

(24:54):
actually seek out the most filthy comedy they can find
and put them in your And you're sitting there patting
yourself on the back because you get yourself a good
ESG score. But the truth is you just made yourself,
your company, and your employees poorer in the long run.
Hire the most qualified person. I don't care if they're

(25:15):
all white. Hire the most qualified people now in all ways, Jesse,
remember you can email us Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
Are you a one meat pellet smoker man? Or what
all we ever hear about is brisket, brisket, brisket? Are
you able to smoke anything else? Not?

Speaker 2 (25:39):
Really?

Speaker 1 (25:40):
I can make cheeseburgers. I actually do do a decent chicken.
But I'm really ashamed to say what I'm about to
say here. My boys are chicken freaks. Chicken freaks. They
love chicken. They do not like it smoked. I know, Chris,
I'm so disappointed in them. I've threatened to give them

(26:02):
up for adoption. They do not like it smoked. I
don't understand why I love it smoked. I can smoke
a chicken, but they don't like it. So I don't
want to spend the money on buying a whole chicken
if I'm going to be the only one eating the chicken. Also,

(26:23):
I'm scared to do ribs. I have done ribs twice,
and I have ruined ribs twice. One time I ruined
them so much, Chris, you better cover your ears, buddy,
because this is gonna hurt you. It's gonna hurt you.
I ruined a batch of ribs so badly we had
to take the entire rack and throw it in the

(26:45):
trash can. Unsalvageable, absolutely unsalagable. We couldn't even we couldn't
even justify picking it up and throwing it in like
a soup or something. That's how bad it was. What Chris,
what Chris said. You couldn't scrape off all the black, buddy.
It was charcoal. There was nothing, there was nothing left.

(27:06):
I want to be able to do ribs because I
like a rib. I really like a good rib. And
you know what I really like. Although I'm sure they're
super expensive, I like those huge beef ribs. I don't
know if you've ever heard lots of people have had
baby back ribs, but in Texas. In another places, but
in Texas, if you find a really choice spot, you

(27:26):
can get beef ribs. They're like the size of your forearm,
and even Chris can eat them, and they are unbelievably good.
But do you have any idea how much they cost?
I don't want to risk ruining rip. I can't make them.
I would love to. What Chris you said, You're not

(27:47):
barbecuing them. You're putting them in an easy bake oven,
which one is rude, but two with ribs, though sometimes
it falls off the bone, which I actually don't like.
I want it soft and juicy, but I want to
be able to I want it on the bone. I
want it on the bone so I can have bites
of meat off the bone. That's part of the joy
of the rib. I don't want meat much. I don't

(28:10):
want to spend the one because I don't know how
I'm doing what I'm doing.

Speaker 2 (28:12):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (28:13):
I like brisket because it's fool proof, especially when you're
cooking the temperature you throw it on there, you go,
get it off when it's done. It's almost as easy
as switching to Pure Talk. What you will only take
you ten minutes. You have you have ten minutes to
stop supporting all this commy garbage. Right ten minutes switch
to peer talk. Verizon hate you AT and T hates you,

(28:38):
T Mobile hates you. Do I need to remind you
what these companies do for pride month do I need
to remind you that every single ugly thing you see
them doing, they do with your money. But then there's
this wonderful country company run by a Vietnam veteran. He
understands camouflage too, he fought for this country two to

(29:00):
in Vietnam. Pure Talk gives back to veterans. Pure Talk
charges you way less. My bull got cut in half.
And it's ten minutes on the phone speaking to an American,
which gosh, nobody does that anymore. It's always beat beep
somewhere dial pound two five zero and say Jesse Kelly.

(29:20):
Switch during the break. Come back with your same phone
and same phone number, but a new company Pound two
five zero, say Jesse Kelly. We'll be back, miss toast.
Catch up Jesse Kellyshow dot com. It is the Jesse

(29:41):
Kelly Show. Final segment of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a Monday, but we will return tomorrow and the Crappiest
Country in the World tournament returns tomorrow. India takes on Somalia.
Don't forget you, let your voice be heard. You get
to vote on the show's Twitter page. Just look up

(30:02):
Jesse Cally's show. Go cast your vote. Chris, what is
the vote looking like right now? I needed to go
look it up as it was really all right? I look,
I just found out who someone has a strong lead.
I'm not telling you. I want you to go vote
in an unbiased fashion one of the two countries tomorrow.

(30:26):
As of that. Look, we have twenty four hours. As
we find out in twenty twenty a lot can change
in the final minutes of an election. But let your
voice be heard. Go decide who's the winner goes onto
the finals? Right, Chris, Oh, this is the semifinals. The
winner takes on the winner of Haiti in North Korea.

(30:47):
All right, so our final four is Haiti, North Korea
and India Somalia. It's going to be a war. Gonna
be a war? What Chris? What also? These people they
they continue to justify the violence against you out in
the open. This is Ciana.

Speaker 3 (31:06):
Yeah, I'm pretty tired of conservatives gaslighting about the current
political environment and Donald Trump's rhetoric when all of this
escalation can be traced back to his entrance into American politics.
His claim to fame was saying that Obama.

Speaker 1 (31:20):
All of it can be traced back to Trump's entrance
into American politics. Really, why is that? Because the second
Donald Trump entered the scene. The communists have been running
violent operations in this country as a big revolution slash
protest movement. And this is what they do, and it's

(31:40):
part of the reason they do it. You get elected,
they start acting like animals, and then they say, don't
you want it to stop? Why'd you get elected? He's
not the first one who has said something like this before.
This is part of how communists hold a society hostage.
You better choose us, you better we elect us. We're

(32:01):
about to go crazy. We're about to start reckoning things,
hurting people, killing people. Over and over and over again,
they say the same thing because that's what they're thinking.
NBC's Law and Order SVU, I guess that's a TV
show portrays ICE agents as the villains protecting rapists and
arresting NYPD officers. This goes back to what we were discussing.

(32:26):
Communists use power. No matter what they use power, they
believe in using power, even if that power is just
writing a TV show. If you're a communist right now,
you know mass deportation is a threat to your revolution,
and so you don't just sit down and try to
write a good TV show. You sit down and try
to do something that will aid, something that will protect

(32:48):
the revolution. Now, let's talk about New York City for
a moment, because Ma'm Donnie is out here talking about
what these free buses are going to cost.

Speaker 2 (32:57):
Really, people who ask me questions about is it possible
to make buses fasten free, I say the costs would
be about six seven hundred million dollars, which is less
than Andrew Kolmo gave to Elon Musk one year in
tax breaks at nine hundred and fifty nine million.

Speaker 1 (33:11):
You can scream at these people all you want that
it's not going to work, that's not going to work,
or that's too expensive. That's how they've been fighting against
this free bus thing. Well that's too expensive. He doesn't
care if it works, he doesn't care if it's expensive.
In fact, if you could hook him up to a
lie detector, he would tell you right now. He knows

(33:34):
it's not going to work. He knows it's going to
bankrupt the place. That's what they want. They're just destroyers.
In the end, they're just destroyers. One more before we
get the headlines I didn't get to and maybe an
abail real quick. Dearborn residents clash with city council over

(33:55):
Mosque's early morning call to prayer. I know this is
going to be of little comfort to the people of Dearborn, Michigan.
But once you get to the place where your town
has a Muslim call to prayer several times a day,

(34:15):
it's over the time to stop. That is, before you
mass import foreign cultures, before you mass import them. This
is part of what the UK is going through right now.
UK citizens patriots are angry, disgusted, but the people are

(34:37):
already there. It would require possibly an actual civil war
to fix the problem. You've got to mind the imports,
or you can quickly find yourself in a bad situation.

Speaker 2 (34:50):
And now here's a headline, you know the thing. Headlines
we didn't get to.

Speaker 1 (34:59):
Trump peers to strong arm net and Yahoo toward a
Gaza deal. This is This is very similar to the
Ukraine Russia thing. When it comes to Trump and he
knows this, I'm not saying anything he doesn't know. He
sees it differently than they see it. Israel sees this
as an opportunity to permanently remove a hostile terrorist actor

(35:20):
on their borders. Trump wants it to go away, wants
the killing the stop. Thinks it's looking bad. They're just done.
They're at cross purposes. First cousin marriages has benefits, says
the NHS guidance despite birth defect risk. This is from
the UK. I wonder why, given the uh changes in

(35:43):
the UK demographics. I wonder why the government would all
of a sudden start being promoted promoters of first cousin marriage.
Huh boy, I could almost put two and two together.
Who needs that? Trump goes all in tariffs up to
one hundred percent on foreign drugs, heavy trucks, and home goods.

(36:06):
This will This is great if it works, and if
it doesn't, it's a disaster for the Trump administration and
for JD Vance In twenty twenty eight. Trump's very popular
on many things right now and will remain so unless,
of course, life gets completely unaffordable for normal people, and
then the Communists may come back to taking power. Tariff stuff.
Something to keep your eyes on. Republicans urge Democrats to

(36:28):
agree to a short term bill to keep the US
government open. I still remain convinced that Republicans are going
to cave on something to keep the government open when
all I want is the government to close so I
can finally be free. Please let this happen, Mike Johnson,
don't screw the whole thing up again.

Speaker 2 (36:46):
Now.

Speaker 1 (36:46):
You you should know that we're coming back tomorrow, and
I'm so excited for our crappiest country in the world
tournament that I don't know if I'm going to be
able to hold out to the second hour. So you're
better tuned in the whole time, that's all
Advertise With Us

Host

Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.