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August 14, 2024 37 mins

The Minneapolis call to prayer. Catching up with emails. The glory of garlic bread. Why is everything so expensive now? The difference between knowing cost of living is up and knowing WHY the cost of living is up. Why doesn’t Biden just pardon who he wants now. You can’t play defense against the communist.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Final hour of the Jesse Kelly Show. On
a Wednesday, a humpday. You're on the home stretch. The
week is almost over, and here's what's on tap four tonight.
Well on tap four, this final hour. I promised you

(00:33):
I was going to get to a ton of emails,
and I'm actually going to do that in a minute.
I just want to just repeat myself again here. We
all can be guilty before I get the emails. We
all can be guilty, you and me. We can be
guilty of losing sight of big things that are wrecking

(00:54):
people because we're insiders, meaning you're a political I'm a
political person. So we pay attention to the minutia. Not
that these things are unimportant. But this congressman, this senator
is this bill they're passing, this spending thing. We pay
attention to all kinds of little things. But the big

(01:17):
story right now in the United States of America for
normal people, for American citizens, is they're watching their way
of life evaporate in front of them. They're scared, they're angry.
Look this stuff is bad.

Speaker 2 (01:33):
Long term interest rates that really embody already a significant
expectations of a recession, that the FAD might cut a lot.
I think, given spending, given both parties, what they want
to do, given needs for defense and other things, populism,
I don't see long term real interest rates coming down

(01:54):
from here.

Speaker 1 (01:54):
They might even go up. I want to touch on
what he said there at the end, though before I
get to the emails. I know I'm going to get
to them, but I'm going to touch on what he
said at the end. Despite populism, to listen.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
To this long term interest rates that really embody already
a significant expectations of a recession, that the FED might
cut a lot. I think, given spending, given both parties,
what they want to do, given needs for defense and other.

Speaker 1 (02:24):
Things, given both parties what they want to do, given
defense and other things. What's he saying there? Well, as
Americans suffer as they watch consumer prices rise to the
highest in the United States history, as people cut back
on everything in their lives, eating, out, eating, period, housing, cars,

(02:50):
you name it. As the American people watch their way
of life disappear, neither political party has shown any indication
of the spending that's destroying your life, because well, they
have things they want to do. Oh, sure, they know
inflation's bad. They know government is costing inflation, they causing

(03:11):
they know government is causing inflation. They know all these things,
of course, But look, we have things we want to do.
If you're a Democrat and you get elected, well you
know that you have to hand out a couple trillion
dollars to your green solar panel weirdo freak people. You
understand that you have to cut large government checks with

(03:34):
taxpayer money to pay back those donors who funded your campaign.
So yes, they know you're suffering from inflation, but they're
not gonna They're not gonna cut spending. Don't be ridiculous,
and don't think for a second I'm going to let
Republicans off the whole here too, because Republicans do this
stuff all the time too. Trillion dollar bill after trillion

(03:57):
dollar bill. Wow, I mean, yeah, I know inflation's bad,
but we need to do blank, fill in the blank
whatever that happens to be. Well, yeah it's bad, but
well it's bad, but we need to And the truth
is whether people will pay attention. Don't pay attention. Everyone
is watching their way of life disappear, and they just

(04:19):
flat out come out and say it lots of the time. Well,
I mean it's bad, but we have needs. We have
to keep spending. Whew, man, it's you're getting bad Jesse, Hey, cheeseburger, maestro.
What do you think about early voting. I like the
idea because if something happens on election day, you can't vote.
You got your vote in. But I'm worried about the

(04:41):
state I live in always votes for the Democrat. I'm
wondering if I vote too early and they have time
to change my voter delete this. Look. I have voted
early in my life. I voted early by mail in
my life, so I'm not going to be a hypocritic
act like that's something I would never do. But for
the most part, I vote in person DA unless I'm

(05:02):
not going to be here for election day. Now, unless
there's something that's going to keep me from election day,
I vote in person. Day of that said, you vote,
however the heck you can get your vote in. Yes,
all voting should be by paper. There should be no
computers involved. It should all be the exact same day,
by paper, same day. Yes, that can be counted. It's

(05:25):
done all over the world. You can have the results
the same day. You don't need a computer system anyway.
That's how it should be. But since it's not that,
just make sure you vote. If you might be out
of town on election day, get your butt out there
and make sure you vote. I mean, look, do you
want more of this?

Speaker 3 (05:42):
You spend a lot of time with Chin paying those
They tape everything we say. I spent over eighty hours
of them alone, over seventeen thousand miles in China.

Speaker 1 (05:54):
None of that happened though, None of that happened at all.
It's never had happened. We elected a cadaver because of
twenty twenty and everything that happened there. Hey men, you whisper.
My wife and I have been trying to frequent small,
local mom and pop restaurants for our weekly dates. By way,
I will pause on this. We are trying to do

(06:16):
this as much as possible ourselves. No, we're not perfect.
It's still red lobster now and then and stuff like that.
I still like what I like. But if it's family breakfast,
if we're gonna maybe go out to brunch after church
or something like that, we try to do mom and
pop as often as possible. Anyway, he says. We recently
went to one that offered a French dip with a zeus,

(06:36):
but it was made with garlic cheesebread. Oh gosh, best
French dip ever. My fifteen year old daughter and I've
been listening to listening to you for about a year now.
She's growing up to be a strong anti communist. How
about that from my puretalk phone. So let the bar eat.
And that's from Charles and Abby. Charles and Abby nailed

(06:59):
that one. I've long, long been a proponent of making
garlic bread for whatever hot sandwich you're making. I tell
you that. Why are you shaking your head? Chris? Do
you have something against garlic bread? Garlic bread is the
best thing on the planet. It is, It's better. Look,
you know, I'm gonna say something right now, and I

(07:20):
know it's gonna be controversial. I know I'm gonna catch
heat for it, but I'm just gonna lay it out there.
Garlic bread is superior to almost every other kind of
food there is. And this is what I mean, garlic bread.
I was just about to tell the story about how
my wife makes she slow cooks these meatballs in the crockpot,

(07:44):
and then we'll have meatball subs, or you can have
them however you want them. Sometimes the boys just like
to eat them regular because they're weird. But I, of
course make a meatball sub. What do I make? I
make garlic bread, and I make a meatball sub with
garlic bread on it. You know I've made garlic bread
for my cheeseburgers before. Did you know you ready for this?

(08:06):
You can mock me all you want, don't mock it
till you try it. Do you know that the best
side with chicken wings is garlic bread? What are you
laughing at, Chris? I know I've been saying it. You
have to tell people or they don't know the truth. Chris.
If you don't lead people, if you don't lead the

(08:28):
horse to water, he dies of dehydration. I'm not sure
if that's how that story goes, but that's how I
feel like it goes. You will die if you don't
start eating garlic bread with your chicken wings. Listen, that
garlic bread. You soop up the buffalo wings sauce and
the blue cheese or ranch whatever you have, all that stuff.
You know how at the end it's all kind of
mixed and it's a big mess. And it's everywhere. You

(08:50):
take the garlic bread and you sop that up. Garlic
bread is the superior food on the planet, so of
course it would make a French dip better if you
know that. Since April twenty twenty three, Minneapolis has been
the first major city in the US to change the
Nori's ordinance. Nora'sorid, why can't I talk the noise ordinance
to allow Muslim calls to prayer? I did know that,

(09:14):
she says, Walls was all for it. She also says,
of course, my liberal Stanford graduate daughter, who teaches climate
change and a progressive California college, thinks this is great.
All this poor woman. Since I disagree with her, she
threatens not to visit me her eighty year old mother
in Colorado. I should be so lucky that she stays home,

(09:36):
and she asked me not to use her name, so
of course I won't. But that is so sad. But
I'm I'm just gonna say what I've told you a
bunch and I'm going to reinforce this, and I'm gonna
move on because I'm want to do a bunch of
other emails and other things. Be very very careful where

(09:57):
you send your children to college, and I have to
single out parents of daughters. Careful doesn't describe what you
need to be when it comes to where you send
your baby girl. Young women are much much, much more
susceptible to the communists social contagion than men. And I

(10:22):
have so many listeners to this show who lost their
daughters at college, some who lost their sons, but not
that many. But I have numerous people who have emailed
in heartbroken because they sent their baby girl or off
to school. You gotta go to college, and they really
don't see her anymore and don't care to. So be

(10:42):
careful with your baby girl. All right, all right, let's
get back to some emails. Let's do this because obviously
this stuff's not gone.

Speaker 2 (10:52):
Interest rates that really embody already a significant expectations of
a recession that the fad might cut a lot. I think,
given spending, given both parties what they want to do,
given needs for defense and other things populism, I don't
see long term real interest rates coming down from here.

Speaker 1 (11:13):
They might even go up. The dollar is not going
to stop doing what it's doing. The economies on shaky ground.
It's time to put your money into hard assets. What
do I do with my money? Jesse? What do I do?
I don't hard assets, things you can touch and feel.
Real estate done for you. Real estate. What they do

(11:35):
is they help normal people start to acquire properties. They'll
find you the best properties in the best markets. They'll
handle the financing, the closing, they handle the rental process,
they handle everything you. All you have to do is
get a hold of them and let them help you.
It's for normal people, done for you. Jesse dot com.

(11:58):
We'll be back, Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly
Show on a Wednesday. Remember you can email the show
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. I can't stop thinking
about garlicbread now since we talked about it, I can't
stop thinking about it. And I remember, and everyone makes
fun of me, and I love that I've now passed

(12:19):
this on to my kids. The superior garlic bread, the
superior garlic bread on the planet is Hamburger buns. Yes,
they are Chris the the perfect It's the perfect amount
of softness. That's what my mom used to make us
when we were a kid. Now, granted, who's because we
didn't have any money, but we would have leftover Hamburger buns,
a little bit of butter, little bit of garlic powder

(12:42):
on there, Oh my gosh. And now to this day,
my sons will request garlic bread. In fact, if I
get look, I don't want to rub any wealth in
anyone's face, especially in a down economy, but every now
and then I will purchase the pre made garlic bread
in the grocery store that comes in the foil bag.

(13:03):
On a special occasion, I'll bring that home. My boys
are furious every time they look, and they think, Dad, is,
why can't we have the hamburger bonds. That garlic bread's lousy?
What Chris? Chris said, apples and oranges? What's better? Garlic better? Bacon?
Garlic bed? Garlic bread is I'm not even kidding. And

(13:25):
I love bacon. I had bacon again this morning. Garlic
bread is superior, especially when it comes to sides. Garlic
bed is superior to every other side, and it's far superior.
Number two I don't even know what it would be.
I don't even know. I don't even know what number two.
It doesn't matter what number two would because there's only one.
Dear Jesse, what state do you believe has the large

(13:46):
few idiots. What state do you believe has the largest
percentage of dimes? I'm here in Arizona, and I believe
that we are a dark horse standard state with the
highest percentage of dimes. California has a lot of men
that try to identify as dimes, so I don't believe
they have a chance to claim the title. Thank you,
all right, So let's have let's have a frank conversation

(14:09):
about dimes in percentages, all right. So there's a rating system,
a certain kind of rating system where men very inappropriately,
very rudely, they rate women's looks. And this system. Don't worry,
it's not crude or anything like that, but this is

(14:31):
the system. Someone is. They're given a state and then
a number, a state and then a number. So the
highest number and highest state you can usually get would
be you say, some dime is a California ten. That
means she's a ten in a state where there's a

(14:54):
lot of beautiful women. If she's a floor to ten,
that's saying a lot, all right. And then there's look
I'm just making about make it about me. There's there's
a Montana seven. What does that mean? It means she
looks great in Montana. She's very put a ring on
her finger in your town, compared to everything around her

(15:18):
looks pretty dang good. You put her in Orlando, it's
going down a little bit. It's all based on two things,
population and weather. See. The thing is, I've really noticed

(15:39):
this since I moved to Texas. I remember I moved.
I lived in California when I was in the Marines,
when we weren't deployed, I moved from So I've been
in Montana to California to Arizona. Now I live in Texas.
It's so freaking hot here that people don't wear very
much clothing here. And I'm not saying this in any
way that's inappropriate, although it can turn out that way.
But look, there are they. I don't advertise it. There

(16:01):
are days when you're looking at me here on the simulcast,
you know how you can see the upper part of
my body. There are days I come in here in
shorts and flip flops. My wife is mortified. Quitch shaking
your head, Chris. It's one hundred and ninety degrees here
and you just don't wear much clothing. It's so freaking hot. Well,
the women don't either, even if they're not trying to
be inappropriate. Well, what happens if you start wearing less clothing?

(16:21):
You start getting self conscious about the fact that you're
cupcaking over your waistband. So you start working out more,
you eat a little better. It's based on size of
the population and temperature. The answer to your question, I
believe the answer to your question is yes, Arizona would
be on that short list. I'm probably gonna push back
on you on California a little bit. There's a lot

(16:41):
of there's a lot of dimes in California, but Arizona. Look,
that's where I met my wife. I walked into Tucson
fresh out of the Marine Corps. I was like a
kid in a candy store. What, Chris, she's not from Canada, Chris,
will you stop saying that. She says that too, just
to get a rise out of me. She was born
in America. Okay, she was an American citizen. Her family

(17:03):
moved to Canada for a while so her dad could
do work, and that's where she did the Canadian gymnastics
national gymnastics team and Olympic trials and all that other stuff.
She's a dag gone American I will not be accused
of marrying some thirty foreigner five day work week question mark,
serious question. What a jerk do you have to that's

(17:24):
not very nice? Do you have to bend over to
pet your designer dog. I'm only six or five with
little hands, so I had to get a dane to
draw attention away from the things I compensate for. Does
Fred exert some dominance of you? Okay, I do not
have tiny hands. This rumor has got to be put
to bed now. I have big hands. And it's not
a designer dog. It's a golden doodle. That's a golden retrieval.

(17:47):
It's not a designer dog, Chris. It's a golden doodle
in a poodle mix. Okay. We had to get that
because it was hypo allergenic, and my oldest son has
one of those pet hair allergy things. We had a
reason for it. Otherwise we were I just wouldn't got
a rescue or something. What, Chris, Just because it was
bread that way doesn't mean it's designed to be that way,

(18:09):
because all freaking dogs are bread that way. Pit Bulls
are bread to fight, you know, bloodhounds are are bread
to hunt. There's a bloodhound, a designer dog. Sorry, Chris
gets me upset. We're gonna move back and talk about politics,
and we're gonna talk about how inflation is even hitting
the government and some other things. Before we get to that,
I want to talk to you about your t levels,

(18:32):
your health, your basic health. I am doing the best
I can, not doing too bad so far. I just
turned forty three on July twentieth. I'm trying to make
this the healthiest year of my life. And I know
you know. Look, I just had a ten minute conversation
about garlic bread. You know I eat bad. I'm trying
to eat better. I'm trying to work out more, and

(18:55):
I am more focused on chalk choq than I have
been in a long time. Herbal supplements are part of
me getting healthy, and I feel it. I feel so
much better when I drink a chocolate powder in the morning.
I feel it. Look, I've been taking a male Vitality
stack for a shoot over two years now. I don't

(19:16):
even feel like the same person anymore. Chalk natural herbal
supplements and you have questions, most people do. They'll talk
to you. They're not just taking orders. You can text them,
you can call them, five zero chalk. That's choq five
zero chalk three thousand. Go see what they have. Whoever

(19:37):
you are, wherever you're at, they have something for you.
Five zero chalk three thousand. Will be back. This is
a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show.
On a Wednesday. I can't stop laughing about CNN practically
begging the Harrison campaign to do a presser.

Speaker 2 (19:57):
Would it kill you guys to have a press conference?

Speaker 1 (19:59):
Why? And she had a press conference.

Speaker 3 (20:02):
Listen to the Vice President and Governor Walls have been
busy crisscrossing.

Speaker 1 (20:06):
I love how they're out there talking about Well, it's
a two step pros.

Speaker 4 (20:10):
You want a tea track process. One that make sure
that everyone, every American, every voter understands Vice President's agenda,
Harris's agenda, but also one that understands and make sure
that every American understands.

Speaker 1 (20:23):
So you remember all that green infrastructure, which is a
bunch of commie climate googly gook. But you remember that
whole electric vehicle, green New Deal stuff that Joe Biden,
Kamala Harris did well. The Financial Times did a dig
into it. Forty percent of the spending plans are on

(20:45):
hold because of demand decline in electric vehicles, they're not
selling people don't want them, and because of inflation. And
I need to explain what that means, what a big
deal that is. See, when these huge bills get passed
through Congress, they're large, and they're complicated, and the numbers

(21:06):
are so big that they blow us away. But so
let's just talk about let's make it small. Well, it's
small for a government project. Let's make it ten million dollars.
There's a ten million dollar pipeline project. We'll make this
about what I used to do. It's the federal government
wants to put in a ten million dollar water line
at some federal facility. Okay, so they passed this huge

(21:28):
handout to all their government friends. How this works trillion dollars?
Of course, some Republicans will help them pass it, and
they pass the Inflation and Reduction Act because they have
to lie about every single thing. And in that Inflation
Reduction Act, some congressman, some senator finagled a ten million
dollar allocation to a pipeline project, of course in his district. Yeah,

(21:52):
we'll make it about Texas. Let's say it's in my
district around Houston. Texas. He well, we definitely need a
new water line here, and so they allocate ten million
dollars to this. And of course, because we live in
a country that is now founded somehow on anti white racism,
I'm not sure how much that got flipped. The job
cannot go to a white guy, or in the very

(22:12):
least they'll they'll they'll put their finger on the scale
enough so it can't just pause on that. One of
my good buddies is Latino. He gets government contracts. He says,
the only reason he gets him is because he's Latino.
He's officially a minority owned business. He's allowed to put
in a higher bid than the white guy next to

(22:32):
him and still get the job. That's that's your taxpayer
money that funds this racism in this country anyway. So
the ten million dollars goes to the pipeline project. Now,
the ten million dollars was supposed to pay for the
entire project. You have to pay for the pipe, you
have to pay for the downtime at the plant, you
have to pay Obviously the contract or whatever his bid is,
ten million dollars total should have paid for it. Well,

(22:55):
remember this was just a couple of years ago when
this thing passed August twenty twenty two. Well, now it's
time to do the project, and ten million dollars doesn't
cover it anymore. Now the cost of everything has gone
up so much that you allocated ten million dollars for

(23:19):
a project that now costs twenty million dollars and the
money's gone. I know, the spending, the government spending stuff
and the connection to inflation. I know it's boring. I
know it's probably boring radio. I know I talk about
it too much. It's just not an issue people care about.
I'm just trying to drive it home to you that

(23:41):
every dime the government now spends is borrowed. And when
the government continues to borrow money the way they're borrowing
and print the way they're printing, that's why your life.
That's why your standard of living is going down. It's
why your grocery bills are expensive. It's why your power
bill is expensive. It's why new cars cost ten thousand

(24:04):
dollars more now than they cost just a few years ago.
Your life is more expensive. You canceled that vacation because
of government spending. Your mom is moving back in with
you because of government spending. It is that disconnect that
people aren't getting. That's the reason I emphasized this over
and over and over again, because it's like we talked

(24:26):
about last night. Remember I did that stupid analogy. Well,
it was a story about my buddy. It's a frying pan,
frying bacon, pulled the bacon out of the pan, goes
back in the house, left a frying pan on. There's
all of a sudden, an oil fire in the house. Well,
everyone can see there's an oil fire. Smart people, stupid people,
old people, young people, men, women, black, white, Indian, Muslim, Christian.

(24:49):
Everybody can walk in the house and look and say,
there's a fire. The difference is who knows what to
do next? Who knows why is there a fire? And
what do we do about it next? Do we pour
water on it, which will make it worse, or do
we get the fire extinguisher or baking soda and make
it better? Right now, everyone Republican, Democrat, independent, far right,

(25:12):
far left, middle, everybody knows the costs of everything are high.
The problem is a tiny, tiny, tiny percentage of Americans
understand why the costs are so high. They know they're high.
Everyone knows they're high. What do we do about it?
What caused it? What do we do about it? That's

(25:35):
what we have to work on the people who understand
the why. All right, let's get back to emails. Dear brother,
anti communist fighter? What is former Vice President Biden waiting for?
He isn't running for office anymore. He's still the president.
He put it in quotes, Why has he not pardoned Hunter?
In every other Democrat comedy tool said his name is Patrick? Oh,

(26:00):
I like this ps. I'm so proud of my son.
I don't know if I'm allowed to say his name.
I probably can, but he's a staff sergeant in the army.
I don't want to say his name. I don't want
to get him in trouble. Staff sergeant in the army.
This weekend marks his thirteenth year in the army. How
about that? I bet you are proud. That's freaking cool.
All right. So why hasn't Joe Biden pardoned Hunter or

(26:21):
anybody like that yet? Well, presidents usually do that on
the way out the door, and they do it on
the way out the door for a reason. They pardon
their friends. They pardon friends of their friends. They pardon
friends and relatives of their donors. The presidential pardon thing,

(26:42):
it's oftentimes not some wow, let's finally get a redemption
case this guy was wrongfully accused. The presidential pardon thing
Republican and Democrat, not just one party that does this.
It's really kind of gross, to be honest with you.
The president uses the power of the pardon to pardon
people in ways that will benefit his donors or benefit

(27:03):
his party. But it's never a popular thing because of
who they pardon. It's never popular. The crowd never looks
at the list of pardons and says, yeah, nice. There
will always be a guy or two in there where
there's been a campaign he was wrong for the accused.
There's always a guy or two in there where a
few people will cheer. But usually you look at a

(27:24):
list of presidential parts and you say, what the I
can't so Joe Biden. He was not allowed to run
again because he was hurting the ticket. He's also not
allowed to do things as president now that will hurt
the ticket. He's not allowed to do anything that could

(27:48):
potentially harm Dome in her presidential campaign. That's why he's
out there giving just stupid speeches that mean nothing.

Speaker 3 (27:56):
Im mobilizing a whole country effort to cut American cancer
doesn't have by twenty twenty, twenty five years.

Speaker 1 (28:04):
He's been trying to talking about curing cancer for four
years now, and look at that. Obviously is not something
he's trying to do. That's not something they're actually doing.
But it's so benign. It's just such a lame, weird
applause line, like world peace, Like what does that even mean?
It's a lame, weird applause line. That's all Joe was
allowed to do. Now he's allowed to do that and

(28:25):
occasionally mumble out another lie and then start randomly shouting.

Speaker 3 (28:29):
I spent a lot of time with Shiji Ping, and
I was they tape everything we say. I spent over
eighty hours of them alone, over seventeen thousand miles in China,
and he ran Tibet near Tibet, and he asked me,
can I define America for him? And that's the true story.
I said yes, in one word, possibilities. We believe anything

(28:53):
is possible in America. Anything we set our mind to
is possible. We are the land of possibilities. That's who
we are. Name me at time, Name me at time.

Speaker 1 (29:05):
I'm gonna miss Joe Biden. I'm gonna miss the mumbling
and the stumbling and the shouting and the lying he
was entertaining while we lasted. Anyway, let's talk about caring
for fallen first responders, caring for their families, I should say,
because they're not coming home again. When your dad, when

(29:25):
your mom wakes up, straps it on and goes and
deals with the filth in society every day. You understand
that dad, mom might not come home. They might, and
it happens way too often in this country. But who
takes care of those families? Who does anything for those families?
Tunnel to Towers does? Tunnel to Towers They pay off

(29:49):
the mortgages of these fallen first responder families. Remember Jonathan Dillar,
that NYPD cop who just got ambushed wife, Oh kid,
it's just so freaking sad. Well, Tunnel to Towers stepped
in immediately and paid off the mortgage for that family.
That's where your eleven dollars a month goes eleven dollars
a month. Tumber two t dot org, t twot dot org.

(30:14):
We'll be back. Truth Attitude, Jesse Kelly. It is the
Jesse Kelly Show. Final segment of The Jesse Kelly Show
on a Wednesday. We will be back to do it
again tomorrow. So email your love, hate, death threats, ask
doctor Jesse, questions in too, Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.

(30:37):
All right, I promise you even more emails, So let's
get him done here. Jesse, can you explain Project twenty
twenty five? Is Trump in favor of this? Who is
backing this? Is this a real objective or just a
scare tactic? All right, so let me explain. We've kind
of done this before, but I realize a lot gets
lost in the ether. So Project twenty twenty five. It's

(31:01):
not one group who put this together. There are a
ton of think tanks, good think tanks like the Heritage
Foundation who helped put this together. A lot of them
are former Trump staffers. They come from all different walks
of life on the right. What it is, yes, it's
there's some policy platforms to it, but for the most part,

(31:25):
what it is is the belief that personnel's policy. Have
you ever heard of that before? Personnel's policy. You can
have the best ideas in the world. If you hire
a bunch of morons and lazy people, then it doesn't matter,
you're not gonna be able to implement them. Part of
the problem, but a huge part of Trump's first four
years that held him back, that held his agenda back,

(31:47):
was they hired a bunch of complete utter morons and scumbags,
and he was always getting kneecapped from within his own administration.
So what they did was they cobbled together a data base,
a database that grows to this day, and essentially it's
for you, it's for me. You can go online Project
twenty twenty five and you can put in your resume,

(32:10):
and what they're building is a database of good people.
So any Republican administration, it's not the Trump one. Any
Republican administration can go when they fire a bunch of
government employees, which they should do if they want to
replace them, which they shouldn't do. But if they want
to replace them, they can go and pick a government

(32:32):
employee from a vetted database. Project twenty twenty five is
a vetted database of personnel. Now, as far as the
Trump campaign goes, Project twenty twenty five also does have
a bunch of policy positions, and it's all stuff you
would like. Honestly, it's everything you would like. Everything necessary
to save the country. The communists grabbed it and started

(32:56):
using it to attack Trump, Trump's Project twenty twenty five,
Trump Project twenty twenty five. So Trump, the Trump campaign,
playing defense, has scrambled and said repeatedly, now that's not us,
we don't know anything about it. No screw Project twenty
twenty five. Trump has blasted it publicly, trying to shield

(33:17):
himself from those communist lives, and of course that doesn't work.
That didn't dissuade the communists at all. They still say
it's Trump's Project twenty twenty five. He can say that
till he's blue in the face. It doesn't work. You
can't play defense against communists because they don't care about
the truth. But they continue to label him with that.
It has nothing to do with Trump. It was done
completely separately from Trump. It's an online database of smart,

(33:41):
capable people so the next administration, whatever one that is,
so the next administration can hire people who are decent
and not losers. Tall One couple questions for you. First
is what happened to you saying opfu skate, bring it back.
I do need to bring back that big word. Chris. Well,
here's what happened. I wanted to keep saying it, and

(34:03):
then Chris told me I should stop saying it. So
all keep saying it. What Chris, they'll believe that. Anyway,
I'm gonna start saying it again. Now we're just gonna
ignore it. Chris, Hey, Jesse from the land of still
open red lobsters, I'm asking you to bring clarity. Uh, well,
you know what, let's just do headlines. I don't like that.
And now here's a headline. You know the thing, headlines

(34:28):
we didn't get to. Home Depot issues a warning about
the economy. Home Depot is actually not alone in this.
A lot of major corporations you've heard of, all them,
Home Depot, McDonald's, they're issuing warnings. And these are probably
the scariest warnings because these are these companies, these major companies.

(34:49):
They have whole divisions tracking the daily spending, the weekly spending,
what spending, where are the profit margins. All this stuff
has done at a very very high level in this
fortune five hundred America. And if they're seeing alarming downward
trends in people coming in buying woodscrews, that's a big deal.

(35:10):
When McDonald's came in you know how we have Carol
Roth on all the time. That's our resident economist. One
of the most alarmed I've ever seen Carol Roth is
when McDonald's came out and said people are not coming
to McDonald's the way they were just a few years ago.
Because when people stopped buying cheap basics like McDonald's, that's

(35:30):
a bad sign for where people are. So it's that's
a bad sign. Report. US auto insurance rates shot up
by fifteen percent in the first half of twenty twenty four. Well,
of course they would. It's not like I'm about to
have a sixteen year old with a driver's license, soho,
I'm gonna have to ensure course insurance costs went up.
Tim Wallace pushed a seventy percent gas tax hike and
then called for a federal gas tax pause. He's the

(35:52):
perfect communist. He says whatever suits him on any given day.
One day he was fighting in Iraq, the other day
fighting in Afghanistan. One day he wants a seventy percent
tax on your gas. The next day he wants to
eliminate it. You can say and do anything when everything's
for the cause of the revolution. Kansas, Idaho and Missouri
resumed challenge of abortion pill after the Supreme Court's dismissal.

(36:18):
That's a good thing, this abortion pill thing is. It's
something a lot of people don't want to talk about
because it's so terrible. Half the abortion's happening in the
United States of America now happen in people's homes. The
saying is, the new abortion clinic is the teenage girls
bathroom at home. You take a couple different pills, it's
not just one, and then you essentially kill the baby,

(36:40):
and you have your dead baby in the toilet at home.
This is something that I don't mean to be too graphic,
but that is what happens, and it's happening a lot,
and it's done just by teleconference. You just have a
little quick teleconference. They're mailing it to your door. Really
really frightening, really evil stuff. Bank of America reversus recession
call well, but warns a very negative consumer spending risk.

(37:03):
Everyone keeps warning about this. The people aren't spending, the
people aren't spending. Well, here's a reality for you. Before
we check out. We'll be back to do it again tomorrow.
We used to have an economy that was based on manufacturing.
It was a manufacturing economy. Now about seventy percent, roughly
seventy percent of our economy is based on consumer spending.

(37:25):
We need people spending money. We need the American citizen
buying things. If the American citizen stops buying things, and
right now they're slowing down. If they stop buying things,
we in trouble. All right, we'll be back do it
again tomorrow. That's all
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