Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You know your house smells, don't get mad. Don't get mad.
My house smells too. I'm not I'm not indicting you.
I'm sure you keep a clean home, but just time
means you're going to acquire smells. Whether those are cooking
smells that get in your paint, your carpet, maybe their
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(00:20):
just living create smells. I didn't realize that my home
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my air smells so clean. I now owned three of them.
(00:42):
I'm not making that up. This thing has absolutely changed
me on top of what it's done from my allergies.
Go get one, get two you like me, and get three.
Go to Eden Pure deals dot com. Make sure you
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code Jesse. This is the Jesse Kelly show. Yes, that
(01:21):
is a little disheartening, Chris, Oh, I'm sorry. Were you
guys here too. Chris and I were talking for the show.
He cleaned out his car this weekend. We'll get to
that in a little while, super super important, But first,
let me ask you a question you personally. If I
(01:45):
were to tell you that tonight at ten o five
p m. Eastern time, I was going to crawl through
your bedroom window to harm you and your family. Ten
(02:07):
o five Eastern time, I'm crawling through, no cops involved
or anything. Do you think you could stop me? Probably? Right?
I mean I would certainly help, So my word, if
you can't, you really need to spruce up your home security.
I just told you everything, right. If I were to
(02:30):
tell you sometime between ten oh five and ten thirty,
I was going to crawl through that bedroom window, do
you think you could stop me? Of course, Now, if
I were to tell you at some time between ten
oh five pm Eastern time tonight and forty years from now,
(02:56):
I was going to crawl through your bedroom window and
come for you and your family, do you think you
could still stop me? Changes everything, right? Changes everything. Look,
I'm certainly no supercommando like these people we have on
but I can handle myself. I'm reasonably sure I'd be
(03:17):
just fine in most situations where if I can get
awake in time, you're gonna have a real bad day
in my house. But I don't know if i'd be
able to stop. You think about what that involves. Okay, well,
all right, well I can't watch the window all the time.
I guess I can have the wife watch it some
(03:38):
of the time, but she's even She's got to sleep too,
or we'll be zombed. You see what it does. We
had the anniversary of D Day this weekend, and I'll
be honest, I geeked out on all of it this
weekend for a couple of reasons. One, I've always found
(03:59):
it to be. Every part of it. I found it
all to be very, very fascinating. Even the dorky details
that you would roll your eyes at, I find to
be totally fascinating. We'll get into some of those in
a little while. That's part of it. And another part
of it is this, As you know very well, I
don't have the burden of feelings. Really I don't. I
(04:24):
don't have to deal with real human emotions. I'm a sociopath.
Believe me. It's better to be like you are than
like I am. But there are advantages to being an
unfeeling robot. I just don't I don't get up, but
don't get down. However, sometimes there goes something wrong with
(04:47):
my wiring as a robot, and I get a little
bombed down. Now you've never heard me say that really
like that before, nor are you gonna hear me say
it very much. But I will tell you. I had
a moment this weekend, a bad moment protest all this
other stuff, and then everything went wrong with church on Sunday.
(05:09):
I'll explain that in a little while. And I actually
was really really bummed out. And I thought to myself,
you know now what I say really bummed out. I
was kind of like, oh, that sucks, and then I
moved right along. But still for me, that's legitimately bummed out.
I'm not sitting there crying. So I thought to myself,
you know, it's the anniversary of D Day. Instead of
(05:33):
worrying about all this crap, why not dig into the
greatest people ever in this gigantic mission in it was
a welcome, welcome distraction. I know. That's why a lot
of you enjoy the show the way I do the
show when it comes to history stuff, because it is
for a while before we get to the news and
(05:54):
everything else. It's nice to just get away. It's my escape.
Told Chris before I came here, or right before the
show started, I said, I've got to be honest, never
been happier to be before them, be in front of
the microphone. So when it comes to that invasion, there's
(06:15):
so much that goes into it, But let us begin
at the beginning of it. Remember how much you and
I've talked about this before, how much American opposition there
was to going to war in England. Now there are
two big things that come into play there, going to
(06:37):
war in England, going to war in France, going to
war in Germany, going to war anywhere overseas. Two things
coming to play there. One America's founding, America's philosophy. It
is so hard for us to understand today. You can't
understand it until until someone beats into beats it into
(07:00):
your skull. That whether you agree or disagree with how
we conduct our foreign policy today, I think it's insane.
But you may agree with it. Whether you agree or disagree,
understand that it is one hundred and eighty degrees opposite
of what we were founded on and what we did
for most of United States history leading up to World
(07:22):
War One. During World War One, you remember we've talked
to endlessly about World War One, the mass carnage, millions, millions,
people dying by the millions, and US opposition to the
war was in the ninety seven to ninety eight percent range. Wow, okay, man,
(07:42):
that sucks. We'll say a prayer for him. Oh us,
go no, why would we go? What wouldn't even occur
to Americans to get involved? Ninety seven ninety eight percent.
You couldn't go take a public policy poll right now
and get a ninety seven percent agreement in the public
(08:03):
that the sky is blue. And yet at one point
in time, and imagine imagine America being that unified in
something ninety seven percent of the people like, oh man,
that war looks like it sucks. Oh well, let me
know how cos I'm going back to work. It's a
whole lot or not my problem again. You may hate
(08:23):
that foreign policy. I love it. But whether you hate
it or love it, it's not important to what I'm
talking about. The truth is that is the foreign policy
we were founded on. They were very specific. God go
read George Washington's farewell. Address specifics in there. Stay out
of Europe's wars, mind your own business. We are blessed,
(08:45):
two big oceans, great geography. We're gonna trade with everyone.
Not my problem. Pre World War One, since the founding,
that was how America did business. Now you get into
World War One, and what did we see in World
War One? Carnage, carnage, and not only carnage pictures. Think
(09:14):
how much pictures really started to come into play about
this time. Now they're not HD pictures, you're not taking
cell phone videos, but the public is starting to see
things that they haven't seen before, ugly things. And then
they're seeing these casualty numbers. And now now these casualty
(09:35):
numbers include Americans. And so you've finished World War One,
you have all that carnage. You had a war many
people leading up to it didn't want to get involved
in anyway. And then what happened after all that, between
all that and World War two, great depression. That was
(10:00):
a long, long, long way of saying. Before the Japanese
attacked Pearl Harbor, you have to get this, this is important.
Americans had no interest, zero in getting involved in World
War two and getting involved in what was then just
(10:20):
a European war. Oh, Germany invaded France. Hitler kind of
looks like a psycho. Oh that sucks. Anyway, I'm going
back to work. How do y'all see at dinner? Hang on,
(10:53):
Jesse Kelly, you care about the safety of yourself and
your family, right, that's human nature. You do, I do.
We we look out for that stuff. So what if
I were to tell you do you have a massive,
massive hole in your security? Would you be interested in
what that is? It's your internet, man, And look, don't
(11:15):
feel bad because I went through the exact same thing.
When I found out I did not realize everything my
family does online at the house is perfectly visible to
my internet provider. I had no idea that was a thing.
But that's a thing. Unless you have Express VPN. There's
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(11:37):
spouse does, everything your kids do. That's creepy and that's
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(12:20):
Interesting thing about American opposition until getting involved in World
War Two. Kind of interesting when you consider what we're
looking at now. American leadership, specifically FDR really really wanted
(12:41):
to get involved in World War Two. The American people
did not. The American leadership did. The rest of this history.
Now we come up with a brand new concept paratroopers.
They actually went out and checked out how smoke jumpers
(13:05):
would do things, trying to form some kind of a
plan to form paratroopers. And again, it's easy for you
and I to do this, and I'm so guilty of it.
When you look or watch or read about, or listen
to something about history, and you watch something enough times
or learn about it enough times, it just seems like
(13:26):
second nature to you, and you kind of put it
in your mind at second nature to them. I've seen
and read a million things on paratroopers on D Day
and other places during World War Two, a million things,
and it just it's just nothing. It's just nothing. I
(13:46):
pay the proper amount of respect to you by now, Well, yeah,
they stand up and they hook up, and they jump
out and they parachute in. There were never, at any
point in the history of mankind paratroopers before this because
there weren't planes to jump out up. The first airplane
(14:07):
usage really and war at all was World War One,
and they were crappy planes for the most part, dropping
little hand bombs out the side. Shoot one guy, some
crazy Russian. I think I'm pretty sure it's the first
aerial casualty in World War One. Some crazy Russian just
took his plane and flat out randon into the next
guys and killed them both on purpose. Well, not exactly
(14:30):
the most advanced warfare in the beginning. So people come
up with a plane, and then people figure out I'd
love to see the experimental the hell how exactly they
work this out. It's something we need to look into.
They figured out at some point, if you place a
large canopy above you, you can jump out of a
(14:51):
plane in the middle of the sky and float down.
That in and of itself is crazy enough. Right If
I were to tell you to go do that at
two thousand feet right now, that's a little nerve wracking, right,
it's a little nerve wracking, maybe even if you're some
skydiving freak, well weird, Okay, Now, I'd like you to
(15:11):
do it with bombs and machine gun fire going off
all around you in the middle of the night, trying
specifically to kill you. It's wild. Now understand it had
never happened before. Isn't that crazy? What goes through your mind?
(15:33):
But leading up to it, we had an issue. Hitler
owned Europe, and Hitler owned Europe in anticipation that somebody
some day would try to come back and take Europe
from him. And so he did what leaders do. He
did what conquerors do. He started to fortify his positions.
(15:58):
And when I say four to five, have you ever
seen a pill box? Do you have any idea? How
intricate and just rock solid these things are. Man. Picture
picture you being on top of a mountain, on top
(16:19):
of a hill, just a large hill, no cover enough,
no nothing, You on top of a hill, me at
the bottom of the hill, and me having to charge
up and get you. Who has every advantage there? It's you.
I mean, you're attacking up Hill's brutal. Now what if
I left you on top of the hill. I'll be
(16:39):
at the bottom of the hill, and I not only
give you the top of the hill, I give you
a year in concrete and engineers to prepare for me
charging up the hill. Here's some barbed wires. It's it's
beyond belief the things they could do. Plus these are Germans.
These are efficient people, extremely efficient people. This is a
(17:03):
long way to say man. When they called it Fortress Europe,
they meant fortress Europe. I'm not going to go into
every bit of it right now, but go look at
the things Hitler did to make sure you could not
come into Europe. He knew it was coming, which brings
us to men like General Patton. Now why would it
(17:26):
lead us to men like General Patton. Well, here's why. Patton,
you see, had been kicking the crap out of Germans
in Africa for some time. Patton was I love this. This.
This is one of my favorite little tidbits in history,
one of my favorites. The Germans, as you know, are
(17:47):
as I just said, are extremely efficient. And this is
not totally unusual for modern armies. But of course the
Germans basically a patent at this where they would rate
and give grades to generals there opposing generals, not just
there as opposing generals. They want to know, it mattered
a lot. Oh, we've got General what's his face? Here?
General what's his face? Is really really good in the defense. Oh,
(18:10):
we've got General General General John Doe back here. Well,
we know he's actually really bad at logistics. They may
he may have some exposed supply lines. I bet we
could get at him. You know, We're like they have
these ratings. They had ratings for attacking generals. Who do
you think was their number one rated attacking general in
(18:33):
all of the Allies? Oh yeah, General George Patton. It's
not just about the movies. General Patton was a beast,
and the Germans knew he was a beast. Now, Patton
got himself in a little trouble, probably not totally up
to speed on the whole PTSD thing. Was told by
(18:58):
a guy that he was struggling with some stuff, and
Patton didn't necessarily see it the same way. It's a
long way of saying Patton just slept the crep out
of this car. That didn't take kind of of that.
And of course that story gets back to the press. Now.
(19:23):
We like to imagine that times were much much different
back then, and don't get me wrong, they were different. However,
some things don't necessarily change, and the American media being
a little too cozy with the wrong side at all
(19:44):
times is pretty much a consistent thing throughout the history
of the country. General William to comes to Sherman from
the Civil War famously said he regards them as spies,
the eight of them. He said. If I hang them,
all the be dispatches from hell by noon. Ha ha. Yeah,
it's not it's is. This is not new the crappy press,
(20:08):
and the press got ahold of Pattens slapping the daylights
out of somebody, all kinds of national outrage. You can't
do this, boom Pattens in trouble. Well, what are you
supposed to do If you're leading an army, you're leading
an invasion, and you have your number one attacking general,
(20:31):
even according to the enemy, and he gets in major
trouble like this, you can't really take him off the battlefield.
You can't leave him on the battlefield. You can't take
him off. And they had mister George Patton fulfill a
different role. And what Patten's role was is we need
to make sure Hitler does not know where we are
(20:54):
going to invade. They knew it was going to come
from the north. There was going to come from England somewhere.
Germans knew it was. They just didn't know where, and
Patton launches this great, great operation where they built fake buildings,
they built fake people, they built inflatable tanks. There's one
(21:15):
hilarious story out there about a bull in a field
charging one of the tanks and English farmers watching it,
and he's waiting for the bull to die when he
hits the tank, and instead the tank just punctures like
a balloon hang. Prior to D Day, we set up
(22:07):
a massive, massive cover operations so Hitler would have no
idea where it was actually taking place. Now you've seen
the D Day movies. You've seen Saving Private Rive and
Saving Private Ryan. Undoubtedly, if you listen to my show,
the chances that you've seen Saving Private Ryan are probably
(22:29):
above ninety five percent. Chris, have you actually seen it?
I knew it? What is wrong with you? Honestly? I
want you to answer me this question. What is wrong
with you? How is that humanly possible? You haven't seen
that movie? Is that all you watch? Or mel Brooks movies?
(22:50):
I'm tired, you know, it's just it's Monday morning. I'm
already I'm exhausted. Now I'm exhausted. I was fine, like
twenty minutes ago. Either way, beside Hid's Chris, the producer
of the show. Virtually everybody else has seen saving Private Ryan.
So you know about the the ramp drops and the
(23:11):
beach and the pill boxes and the hills and everything.
Like we talked about earlier. We don't talk enough about
the parrottroopers. Man. Now here's what had happened. Hitler needs
his crack troops, needs his best troops in other parts
of the war. Everything in life, everything you do, I do,
(23:37):
personal life, business life, everything your state does, nation does,
army does. Everything is a give and take. That is life.
Nobody has everything they want all the time. It's just
not something that exists. And battle is no different. Large
scale wars are no different. You are Hitler, you have
(23:59):
a law, a lot of different things going on. Armies
are complicated things. It's easy because we want to simplify
everything down. We want to look at every single German
was looked exactly like this, thought exactly like this, and
they all could fight the exact same way. They just
(24:20):
they basically made them all in an assembly line. That's
an easy way to think about things, especially when it
comes to the enemy, because it depersonalizes them and it
makes life easier. But is your military that way? No,
and neither was theirs. Our military is full of like
the baddest of the bad dudes at the tip of
(24:42):
the spear, like b K and Terry Shapherd, and all
these green berets we bring on all the way down
to some tub of goose stapling papers somewhere for two
years so he could get half his college paid for,
or something like that. And if that sounds disrespectful, I
don't care about your feeling. I'm telling you. They're all
(25:02):
not the same, and all the German army was not
the same at this time either, and so Hitler has
been criticized extensively for this. I still argue, actually I
argue on Hitler's behalf. I still argue though he had
a good point when he put most of his older
guys borderline too old. He put his older guys up
(25:29):
there in the Normandy area, up there to defend against
the invasion. They weren't useless troops, not at all. They
were still fine troops. They were far from his tip
of the spear troops. And people yell about that, that idiot,
how could it? Well, he had a lot to defend,
and you can't have elite troops everywhere. There aren't enough
(25:50):
elite people across the country. Any country, you're just aren't enough.
So he had great defenses, set up average troops along
the beaches, and what he did have was behind it.
He had reserves. Now, they were far behind it. When
(26:11):
I say behind it, I don't mean there were fifty
yards behind the pill box ready for the call up
coach as soon as somebody else gets shot. I mean
a long ways behind. He had reserves, and there are
a couple of reasons for that. One, you don't want
your reserves to get taken out when the front line
gets taken out. Two, your reserves are back behind the
(26:33):
line of ways because they need to be flexible enough
to take a direct path to whichever part of the
front they're needed on. Reserves are one of those things
that the generals have not always known about. The Romans
were great at this. They started to come around, don't
put everybody on the line. Leave some people back so
(26:56):
they can fit because you don't know which part of
the line's going to break, and they can run up
and fill in the gaps. So you keep your reserves behind. Now,
Hitler had some excellent reserves behind he had some SS units.
Those were some of his best units. He had some
really good guys behind, which leads us to the paratroopers.
(27:20):
What's the most scared you've ever been in your life?
Imagine this twenty four hours sequence. If you're a paratrooper.
You load onto your plane in England, you take off,
(27:41):
it gets dark, really dark. It's really loud on the plane.
There's nobody to talk to. Contrary to what you see
in the movies, these planes are way, way, way too
loud unless you have a headset and a radio on
which they did not have. You're not turning to your
buddy to hey, man, how's your sister, How she's good?
(28:04):
How's the wife? No, it's are you God? Yeah? God?
And that's that. It's that shouting in somebody's ear. So
you're with your buddies, but you feel alone. It's loud.
You know you're invading Europe, and by now you know
(28:26):
you've seen enough news clips, you've seen enough things out
there to know these are not These are not some
crappy third world army guys somewhere. These are elite troops.
Some of the finest troops in the world. Were the
German troops during World War Two. Definitely in World War One,
(28:48):
but during World War Two you're not dropping down into
a safe place. And then before you get there, you
start to hear it low at first, sounds like explosions
in the distance, and now they're getting louder and louder
and louder. And now you're looking around and you have
(29:11):
tracer around, streaking through the sky, and before you know it,
one of the planes in your formation. All of a sudden,
you get a light, like a feeling of light outside
the window, and you look outside the window and a plane.
You don't know who's on it, You don't know whether
your buddies are on it or not. But a plane
(29:31):
bursts into flames and begins to crash down with all
the people in your unit on it, and then the
flax starts really really getting heavy flak is that's the
best way to describe this. An in air grenade Picture
me throwing a grenade in the middle of the air
and it blowing up in the air. Only obviously nobody
(29:54):
was throwing it. They were shot up there. But now
those are going off all around you. One blows out
a window, your buddy across the aisles sitting behind, and
all of a sudden he's got glass in his ear
and it's pouring down his neck. And they tell you
it's time to jump, and everybody jumps, and it comes
(30:14):
your turn, and you stand in that door and you're
looking at more door from Lord of the Rings. What
else would you how else would you describe it? Trace
arounds streaking across the sky, screaming explosions, and you jump
into that in your parachute deploys. Oh, but it's not
(30:36):
done yet. You're parachuting down. You have other people around you.
You can hardly make out most of them, because remember
this is dark. You can make out your buddy who's
parachuting down close enough to you, you can make out
(30:58):
his screams because a journyman also made him out while
he was floating down and shot him in the air.
And he's now wounded, bleeding and dying as he floats
to the ground. Are you scared yet? It gets worse?
He slept like a baby all weekend long. I'm not
(31:41):
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(32:27):
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on at him only side of me Jesse Kelly. Don't
listening to the Jesse Kelly Show. You finally hit the ground,
(33:15):
get rid of your shoot, you manage to land in
some tall grass, and you have something they've given you.
They called it cricket, and what it is is those
of you who've seen the show Band of Brothers who
actually know what I'm talking about. It's a great HBO
miniseries if you've never seen it, a true one about
(33:38):
one of these great paratrooper units from World War Two.
It's called a cricket. It's just a clicker. This the
wheel little thing fits in the palm of your hand
and it just click. I just made That's not the
sound it makes, Chris, What Chris? I wonder if I
can make it with this thing? It goes? Do you
hear that? That? Did that come across on the radio? Chris?
Shut up? Whatever? All right? If you hear somebody, because remember,
(34:05):
you're landing at night, people, You are landing at night.
You're landing in hostile enemy held territory at night. You
are not landing with your buddies. Because it's wind, it's chaos.
People are dead, planes have gone down. You land. You
(34:27):
have a clicker. You click. If you hear someone, they're
supposed to click back twice if they hear you click.
Click now. Some of the guys I read said that
it was supposed to be one click, one click. But
I can't again, I can't ever seem to get straight
information on it. You land in this field, you do
(34:49):
not land beside anybody. You were in tall grass. There
are still enough flares and things going off that things
are silhouetted briefly and then go away. You know there's activity,
gunfire all around you. You land in this tall grass,
You lay down, getting your bearings, and you hear footsteps.
(35:11):
Sounds like two men coming. They're walking right towards you.
You almost guarantee to yourself, this has got to be
your buddies landed with you looking for you. You pull
out your clicker. When they're about seventy five feet away.
You give them a click, and there's nothing back. Now
(35:39):
they keep walking closer, and you're thinking to yourself, Okay,
I'll give them another one. Maybe they just didn't hear
the first time. And you give them a click, and
now the footsteps stop when you give them a click,
but there's no click back, and now you can hardly
hear them. Now it sounds like they're sneaking up on
(36:05):
your position. What is your heart doing in that moment?
Can you imagine laying in that field in France with
two Germans sneaking their way towards you to kill you.
(36:26):
This particular tale, I will tell you. This young man lived,
and he lived because he was a stud, and he
pulled a pin on a grenade and landed a grenade
right in between both Germans and killed him both of
the grenade before he scampered off. Actually lived through the war.
(36:48):
But back to the beginning, back to what we were
talking about about the invasion, about all the abstractions. Why
couldn't Hitler hold Europe from the Allied invasion? There are
a lot of different reasons, but what's the main one.
Because you can't hold back an opposing force if you
(37:15):
have to defend too much ground, if you have to
defend too much ground, you can lose everything because you
tried to defend too much ground. Remember the very beginning
of the show, how I'm showing up at your house
at ten o five pm tonight through this one specific window,
(37:38):
and you can stop me. But if I extend that
out to forty years from now, what chance do you have?
Not much? Not much, Maybe you get lucky one day.
It's all about how much you have to defend. And
I was giving them a lot of thought this weekend.
I had a real, real rough Sunday, which I'll go
(38:02):
over again, and I'll go over here in a few
But that's been the greatest accomplishment of the leftists if
you look at right versus left in this country as
political battle, which I do, and I frankly think you're naive.
If you don't, I think you're just telling yourself lies.
(38:23):
And you look at all the gains the leftists have made,
and you look at what they're doing right now, this
insanity right now, Look at all the gains they've made.
(38:44):
They made us defend everything, They made us defend everything.
And because they made us defend everything, we lost a lot,
didn't we? Maybe all of it? Now not The majority
(39:07):
of the people take cart not bringing you down. The
majority of the people still think like you. But what
do I mean by everything? I'll explain you are going
(39:37):
to have something go wrong with your car. No, I
am not wishing it on you. I hope that day
is years away from now, but we both know they
only make two kinds of cars, right, Ones who have
had problems and ones who will well, look, it's gonna
come again. And when that day comes, do you want
to get slammed with a massive car repair bill or
(39:57):
would you like a solution to that problem? Well there
is one. It's called protect my Car. If you have
a car, truck, or suv made from nineteen ninety nine
or higher, there's a chance you could stop paying for
car repairs. I'm talking engine transmission, roadside assistance, towing, car rental,
oil changes more. But you have to find out if
(40:19):
you qualify first style star Star one two four four.
That's star Star one two four four. Stop stop waiting
for that next car build to come, be proactive about it,
get protect my car. Star Star one two four four.
(40:49):
If the leftists head decided way way way back when
that they were only going to attack Hollywood, the media,
or not even the media, just Hollywood. Where you know
what we're gonna do. We are going to go. We're
gonna buy up every movie studio we can, the ones
(41:12):
we can't. We're gonna make sure all the actors, directors,
producers all think like us, support our cause, push our cause.
But you know what, we're just gonna stick with the
media or with Hollywood. They would have failed because we
would have seen it and we would have fought it off.
(41:33):
The genius of what they did was they took over
so much that, like Hitler, you don't know where they're
going to come from next. And frankly, it's too taxing
to try to do the math on all the places
they might come from. Next on all the places they're
going to take because they have it all. They manage
(41:56):
to take over the entire culture and rooting a part
that it's critically important to me, and one I just
lost yesterday. So if I sound a little salty today,
oh I'm salty. Hang on. Jesse Kelly returns next. This
(42:47):
is a Jesse Kelly show. They don't get anything anything
in a society and say to themselves, ah, well leave
(43:07):
that alone, whereas we and this can be good and bad.
We look at virtually everything I know I do and
think not my business. That's not my business. Let me
ask you a very very uncomfortable question, and I say
(43:29):
it's uncomfortable because the answer to it, it's not great.
This is what we've seen over the past few months. Well,
let's just go with the past week or so. We'll
start there. We had that cop and that horrible video
(43:51):
kill George Floyd in Minneapolis. You've seen the video by now.
It's an awful video. Odd's murder. I don't care who
you are. I'm never going to defend that cop. And
I'm not the guy who jumps and trash his cops.
Every time there's a bad video, because there's always too
short and there's no context. That video was plenty long enough.
It was really bad. It was really bad. No excuse.
Whether he's a murderer or a scumbag or a bad
(44:12):
cop don't I don't know, but there's no excuse for them.
We saw that take place, and then what if we
had for an entire week protests, riots, looting, burning, insanity
still going on as we speak. We have headlines here
(44:33):
which I'll get to, in a few of major major
US cities making policy changes because of these rioters. We
have videotape which I won't show you because it's radio
and playing the audio of it wouldn't do any good.
We have videotape of police chiefs laying down on their faces,
(44:55):
prostrating themselves before the rioters. We have white churches ordering
telling their people who go to their churches to kneel
before black people and beg forgiveness before God. We have
cities who are openly announcing they're not going to prosecute rioters.
(45:20):
Saint Louis just flat out turned all of theirs loose
right off the bat. We have United States senators, even
some like Republicans Rubio Romney voicing vocal support for everything
we're seeing right now because they mobilized and they made
(45:45):
sure they were heard across the spectrum. You and I
can and should speak out against looting, rioting, killing. We've
lost seventeen people already during these things, dead gone. We
should speak out against that. But look at the results
(46:11):
they're getting results immediately now, set that aside. That's what
we saw the left do, and don't tell me this
argument it's a bad equality buddy again. Go to the
official Black Lives Matter website. Read their mission statement. It
is it is verbatim a Tommy leftist college professor's mission statement.
(46:38):
It is a leftist group that has risen because they
figured out a new way to brand leftism. Like every
other leftist group out there, feminism, it's that's not that
to do with feminism. They crap on women more than
anybody else out there. It's a leftist group, They're all,
this is just another leftist group. Look at what the
leftists have done with just a week. Now, set that aside,
(47:02):
and rewind a little bit. The federal government, state governments,
local governments. At the outbreak of the coronavirus chose to
lock down the United States of America. Let's even give
you the first two weeks. Let's say you're not like me,
(47:24):
you were still uncertain. You wanted to give them two weeks,
all right, So we're post two weeks. They have chosen
to destroy American small businesses, wipe out fifty million jobs.
They pointed their finger at the America's middle class and
gave it the middle finger. They slaughtered your businesses across
(47:49):
the nation, your restaurants across the nation. And what do
we do up? A little pieceful protests in Michigan. Couple
surfers get arrested for walking on the beach in California, Chris,
(48:10):
is there anything else I'm missing? I mean, there may
have been a couple of little things here and there,
a couple of little peaceful protests standing on the city
hall steps. One of our protests. We lined up in
vehicles to be safe and drove by the Capitol building,
honking on the horn. And what did we get for
(48:30):
all that? Laughed at nothing? They didn't cave. Ever, they
didn't cave until it was so absurdly safe in this
country and the economy we was in total ruin. And
then they got together and thought, all right, well, all right, well,
I guess we'll start opening back up because the left
(48:55):
plays offense. We don't even know how to play offense.
We had better figure out how to stick with whatever
values you have while playing offense, or we are going
to lose the United States of America because we are
already hanging by a thread. They have taken over vast,
(49:20):
vast walls of this society. I'm horrified at what I
see right now. I'm horrified at how they've been able to,
at the snap of their fingers, mobilize everyone and everything
at all times. They've even gotten to Republicans. These are
(49:43):
my headlines. I'll get into them more in a little bit.
CNN teams up with Sesame Street with anti racism town
Hall Target pledges ten million dollars for social groups commits
to help with rebuilding efforts. Do you remember the very
first night of the riots in many applas, in case
you don't allow me to refresh your memory, it was
(50:04):
a Target store that got looted and pillaged. It looked
like the aftermath of a battle had nothing to do
with George Floyd, had nothing to do with some policy
disagreements it was a bunch of scumbags looting target and
you know what targets? Response is where I gonna help
you rebuild Elmer Fudd and Yosemite Sam will not use
(50:26):
guns in a Looney Tunes reboot. Oh I'm not done.
Another headline. UCSP professor uses religion class to teach about
the error of American exceptionalism. We do all these things
and more have in common. They are everywhere, and they
(50:47):
are constantly advancing, and you know where else they freaking advanced.
And if I sound upset about it, it's because I
am upset about it my own church. Do you know
I lost my church yesterday forever. I had warned you
(51:10):
Friday that I got an email from our pastor talking
about he was going to attend to what white people
need to know. PANEL wrote him a message, a very
kind message, but told him I think that's misguided. I
think that causes more division than anything else. He wrote
(51:30):
me back, whatever, some blowoff. I think listening or healing
starts with listening. So I crossed my fingers because he
said he was going to do a racism sermon on Sunday.
I crossed my fingers and thought, please, Lord, let this
not be what I think it's going to be. Please
(51:51):
let it not be what I think it's going to be.
And I understand this and need to clarify. We have
been in this church for years since we moved down here,
and love it and love him. Hang on. There's an
(52:25):
extra piece of mind that comes with going to bed
at night and knowing you're going to be able to
go to sleep. I'm not sure how to put it
any better than that. You know what it's like. I'm
sure you know what it's like when you're going to sleep,
or you're you're heading off to bed and you're thinking
to yourself, Oh, man, I hope I can sleep tonight.
(52:45):
I didn't sleep last night. Gosh if I don't sleep
again tonight, I'm gonna be a message. You know you
can stop that, Ryan, Get an EBB Sleep. Spend the money,
get an EBB Sleep. Look, it's not even like there's
a big risk here. You can try it risk free
for sixty days. Sixty Who does that? Somebody who's very,
very very confident you're going to enjoy the results. And
(53:06):
EBB Sleep calms those racing thoughts down and gives you
hours and hours and hours of great sleep every time
good at triebb dot com slash Jesse that's try ebb
dot com. Slash Jesse used their promo code Jesse at
checkout for twenty five bucks off the Jesse Kelly Show
(53:27):
on air and online at Jesse Kelly Show dot Com.
(53:50):
Been in this church for years. This is not something
I do lightly. I am always on the lookout because
I know about the infection. I've heard about it in
America's churches, some of these insane churches out here. Mine
has been rock solid, good to go pastor has been
(54:15):
squared away, church has been squared away. You know why
I'm angry today because they got to him too, and
I lost my church. If I were to play you,
and I'm will not, I'm not going to blast the
man personally. If I were to play you portions of
(54:39):
that sermon yesterday, you would think it was a sociology
professor from some San Francisco Technical college. Jesus was all
about social justice. I have to address my white privilege.
(54:59):
It was awful, man, it was awful. Turn it off,
didn't let the kids listen to it. Now, I can
never and will never darken the door of that church
with my family again, and it made me sit back
(55:20):
and think. Because I don't cry on my cheerios, it
did just make me sit back and think to myself, Man,
they are good. They are really really good. And I
know that sounds crazy, and that doesn't mean I hate
them less than you hate them. But dude, they even
(55:43):
got to my pastor. You can talk about the numbers
being on our side, and they are, and that is encouraging,
and that is a good thing. We have the numbers.
The numbers are on our side. It's a good thing. However, oftentimes,
when it comes to these kind of political revolutions, it's
(56:05):
not how many are on your side, it's who is
on your side. You remember we talked a bit about
Nazi Germany this morning. Do you remember what the blitzkrieg
actually is? You remember it? I've told you before we've
had this talk. Don't do that surface level stuff. It's
(56:26):
just really fast. It's just lightning war. It's just really fast. Yeah,
but they're moving fast to something specifically. Are they just
driving fast across the highway for funzies to see how
fast the panthers can move. No, you're heading to something specific.
(56:47):
You're heading to a specific destination a blitzkrieg with how
the Nazis did it is really going after two specific things,
the communications and the supply lines of a nation, of
an army of a country, and they do that for
(57:07):
specific reasons. I've made this comparison on the radio before.
I'll make it again because it makes it extremely easy
to understand. If you woke up one morning and you
turned on the television set and it was all a
bunch of Mexican officials, Mexican government guys, Mexican army guys,
(57:28):
they were on every single channel explaining to you that
Mexico is now in control of the United States of America,
and you thought, wow, that's really weird. I think I'll
open up my cell phone and go online and I'll
check out what all the internet sites had to say.
And every Internet site you go to has filtered to
a couple of Mexican sites saying we are in control
of the United States of America. Stay in your homes,
(57:51):
will be by to give you instructions. You'd be weirded out,
but still you'd think, Okay, maybe this is an elaborate prank.
I'm gonna take a drive and figure things out. Besides
if we really have to stay in our homes, I
should go get some supplies anyway, right, Maso, get some
food and water. So you hop in your car, you
turn on the radio. All the radio is the same
(58:12):
thing controlled by the Mexican government telling you the Mexican
armies in control of the country. You drive into your
grocery store and you drive up to a Mexican Army
checkpoint because the grocery store is controlled by them too.
What would you think in that exact moment, Oh, the
Mexican Army really did come take over the United States
(58:34):
of America. Because when you control the communications and when
you control the supply lines, what you do is not
only do you wreck their army, you not only do
you wreck their ability to resist. You convince the citizenry
very early on, oh well we lost. You're charging to
(58:54):
a specific place. And what I'm telling you is it
doesn't matter that most of the numbers think like you
and I. The point is when they've seized all of
the Democratic Party, every major US city, virtually the entirety
of the American media, all of Hollywood, they've really seized
(59:19):
the pillars of society, haven't they. Where can you go
to escape it nowhere, nowhere. They got to my pastor
(59:43):
in a Texas suburb. People, I'm not in New York City.
They got to my pastor and a Texas suburb. Sounding
like your common Leninist college professor. We have. The Minneapolis
(01:00:03):
City Council announced they have a veto proof push to
disband the Minneapolis Police Department. That's not me making something up.
If you don't believe me, you can go online turn
(01:00:25):
on the news. A major US city, major US city
has announced its intention to eliminate its police department. Oh
and Bill Deblasio sounds like he wants to follow suit.
Bill Deblasio, you may know, is the mayor of New
(01:00:47):
York City. You see, it's not just how many you have,
it's who you have. We are seeing this ramp up
and move at lightning speeds now because they've taken it all.
(01:01:07):
They somehow, some way, have even gotten into the church.
How weak and pathetic do you have to be as
a church to allow in, to invite in the very
people who will openly state they want your destruction. That
(01:01:33):
is like being a rabbi at a synagogue and allowing
a member of isis to go ahead and handle your
youth program. What is wrong with you? What is wrong
with you people? Not you specifically, but I'm clearly talking
to my pastor now. I am disgusted. We let them
(01:01:56):
take Sesame Street, We let them take all elephants, the education.
We have major major stars in the Hollywood world, in
the United States of America volunteering six figure sums to
bail out people who are burning down US cities. We
(01:02:17):
let them take it all. We have got to figure
out how to start taking it back. And here's the
thing about this, I'm not sure there are comfortable ways
to do that. You know them, right, I'm not sure
(01:02:45):
there are comfortable ways to do that. I'm not sure
if you and I sat down, grab a couple of
butt heavies, figure out how to take this back. I'm
not sure we like what that battle plan looks like.
(01:03:35):
I have an exciting new announcement for you, not so
exciting for the people who hate both of us. From
now until I get kicked off the air, Michael Malice
will be a regular at this time every Monday, by
demand of the audience. Michael, as you all know, comes
(01:03:58):
on this show and see things a little different. And
I love that he's the host of Your Welcome and
the author of Dear Reader. Michael. You and I Swatz
couple text this weekend about I'm in the ultimate as
bummed out as Jesse ever gets phased. Now, that's not
that bad, but it's I'm as bummed out and pessimistic
as it gets. You were optimistic. Why, oh, I'm giddy.
(01:04:21):
I think I know you can laugh, but I mean,
I'll tell you in thirty seconds. And I think even
if you want to agree with my perspective, at least
appreciate it, which is, we are seeing the source of
pretty much all evil in this country, meaning what is
referred to as the cathedral, which is the corporate press
said by the university system under full blown attack. This
(01:04:43):
attack is asymmetric because it is an attack on their
credibility and cloud from their own You had the New
York Times print and op ed by a sitting senator,
and what Senator Tom Cotton from Arkansas said was something
that everyone in America thought about, if these things get
(01:05:05):
too bad, do we send in the military. This is
something no one has not even considered for a second.
I mean, at what point, at some point that's inevitable
The New York Times, which had printed op eds talking
about the defense of pedophilia, which had printed an op
ed called this is the title what we the Taliban
launch flipped out, had staff members refused to come into
(01:05:29):
work that had a virtual walkout, and they fired the
editor who ran that OpEd, which shows you what the
New York Times perceived their role to be. These corporate
journalists who are the enemy of the people, which is
the moderate position, genuinely believe they are in a position
to tell this country when they should and shouldn't listen
(01:05:50):
to a sitting senator who is saying things that no
one in America hasn't thought themselves of the previous two weeks.
And trust is asymmetric, because if I tell you one
lie and a thousand truths, you are going to regard
me as a liar, especially if my job is ostensibly
to be telling you truths. Once they are thrown overboard,
(01:06:14):
we can have honesty and some sort of semblance of
discourse in this country, as opposed to articles which will
tell you that listening front page articles that listening to
Ben Shapiro is the shortcut to becoming a Nazi. Yes,
but here's my argument back your way in what universe
do you think that that will be the final straw
(01:06:38):
to break the American media when they commit offenses like
that on a daily basis, and they are still sadly
very influential. Michael, they are, dude. I'm not saying they're influential.
I'm saying, first of all, they're going their side. People
who are blue pilled and who take the corporate press
that bays value will continue doubling down, and the sooner
(01:07:00):
the mask drops at the healthier days for everyone, because
change is marginal. It doesn't happen overnight. It's going to
be some people Monday, some people Tuesday, something Wednesday. Just
over the weekend, we saw Jamal Hill on CNN saying
explicitly that journalism is an activist occupation. When you have
them telling you to your faith, we are activists that
(01:07:22):
our job is to influence the control politics. It gets
harder and harder for people to sit there and take
them at face value. And I'm going to point out
one more thing. There is a lie that conservatives tell
that journalism used to be honest and decent and now
they've gotten so bad. And oh my goodness, these conservatives
(01:07:43):
are also old enough to remember the nineteen eighty Reagan campaign,
And you cannot sit here and tell me that they
treated Reagan with any semblance of decency and fairness. That
was forty years ago. So they've been and what about Goldwater?
If they've been at this at least since nineteen eighty,
you can no longer pretend that this is something that
is a recent phenomenon. Yes, but how do we I
(01:08:07):
guess I've been asking this question conceptually this morning. I
hear you. I realize that this is good, that the
public is waking up. How do we take it back?
Because culturally, as far as the pillars of society go,
I feel like we've lost them all in not gaining
ground now. Granted I'm a bit melancholy because of the
whole losing my church thing this weekend, but I don't
(01:08:31):
see us gaining background anywhere, or I don't see a
good solution for how we gain background. Well, sure you have.
This is the nightmare scenario for the evangelical wing of progressivism,
meaning the wing which has this vision of controlling the
entire world with their faith. When you have things like
Rush Limbaugh going on the Breakfast Club, Charlomagne, the God's Show.
(01:08:54):
When you have conservatives with a straight face being like, Okay,
this police brutality is a situation, let's talk about it.
I can see where some of these activists are coming
from and drawing distinctions between activists and looters and rioters.
This is a very healthy phenomenon because it used to
(01:09:15):
be you would have to go through the media in
order to have these conversations. Now, thanks to social media,
different groups can interact directly. And it's sure it's a
slow process, but the fact that these most evil of
people are being short circuited out of the discussion and
thereby losing their power and monopoly over the conversation is
(01:09:38):
an important, healthy step towards saving this country. Man. That
actually does make me feel a lot better. You think
this is social media driven, that social media is a
good thing. It sounds like social media is phenomenal because
what we're seeing right now, we saw this during the rioting.
CNN had people behind them, things weren't fire, telling you
(01:10:01):
it's a peaceful protest. So if their lies and their
chicanery is called out in real time, it's like having
a narrator on someone who wants to be the cultural narrator,
and it becomes harder and harder. We have now millions
of cameras, more than we had during the eighties because
everyone has one on their phone. When you have you
(01:10:24):
may have seen this clip. This was in a Minnesota
I believe the cameraman wasn't wearing a mask and he
was chiding the reporter with chiding everyone on the street
for not wearing a mask. And you had an average
citizen walk up film it, put it on Twitter and
the pictures were up on Twitter before the news hit
the news story. It used to be that we had
four cameras in this country, the four networks. Now we
(01:10:46):
have hundreds of millions. They cannot get away with their
crap anymore. At a government level, what changes on a
cultural level? Okay, at a cultural level, but we're disbanding
police departments. Oh isn't that great? Absolutely so I wish
(01:11:07):
we were. It's amazing the first time that there's a
government department that's under consideration being cut. Conservatives show the
true colors and they lose their minds. I think I'm
in favor of defunding everything. What we need is more
armed citizens. What we need is more community watch groups
and what we need is less having a single payer
security system for the same reasons we shouldn't be for
(01:11:29):
single payer healthcare. I'm all for that. See, I'm all
for that. My question to you is what does that
look like when it comes to crime and punishment, because
you can't have neighborhood watch lynch mobs. What does it
look like? As I agree, I want every single person
armed to the teeth, and that's the best security in
the world. I'd be very curious to hear what positions
(01:11:49):
they're going to put forward because right now that Minneapolis,
for example, they're talking about defunding the police, and they're
doing a lot of double talk about you know, giving
hugs to people and so on and so forth. I
don't know they would have that look like. I know
what I would have that look like. And I think
it's very important for conservatives. This is a huge opportunity
to provide and people who are write a center to
(01:12:10):
provide market based alternatives to having government unions be in
charge of keeping your family secure and safe. Do you
think we're going to see people wake up to unions
or is that still a long one is off? I
don't think the unions are anywhere near as bad as
the universities. I mean, that is the real villains in
the situation. The universities are the ones who teach young
(01:12:31):
people to be in the shock troops for the progressive militia.
Unions are neither here nor there. Sure, it's just about
wages and so and not getting people fired. We can
wrap our head and around that. But in terms of
promoting war, in terms of promoting hatred, in terms of
promoting racial hatred, there's no one who comes close to
the universities. I mean, think about how often do unions
(01:12:53):
start talking about but no, this is this is why
we bring them on every Monday. Now, people, Michaels, where
can people hear your show? We've only got about fifteen seconds.
It's on YouTube, baby, go watch his stuff. I told
you the guy makes you think, appreciate you. Michael, Michael Balance,
We got a lot more people hang on, Jesse Kelly.
(01:13:21):
I don't leave my doors unlocked at night. I don't
turn the outside lights off, I set my alarm. I
do a variety of other things. And you know why
I don't I do these things. It's not because I
enjoy it. I don't get some special pleasure in setting
the alarm and turning on the lights, running up my
electrical bill. I do it because protection of myself and
(01:13:42):
my family is part of my job. It's part of
my obligation in life. So why would I go to
all that trouble and then have unsecured internet? You know,
if you don't have Express VPN, your internet service provider
can see everything you and your children do online. Yes,
even with that private browser, everything you do they can
(01:14:03):
see unless you have Express VPN. Stop exposing yourself and
your family to that kind of risk. Go to Express
vpn dot com slash jesse. That's Express vpn dot com
slash jesse. Use the promo code Jesse at checkout, get
yourself twenty five bucks off. CNN teams up with Sesame
(01:14:41):
Street for anti racism town Hall. CNN and Sesame Street
aired a sixty minute special today to address racism in
the niche in the recent nationwide protests. I'm gonna tell
y'all something. It's pretty brutally honest, but it's true. My
(01:15:03):
boys are nine and eleven. My boys go to school.
This is the Houston area. Suburbs, Houston doesn't matter. It's
an extremely diverse area, and I mean extremely diverse because
of all the oil money, all the medical stuff down
here there. I mean it is packed full of everything.
(01:15:25):
People like to think of Texas as white. It's absurdly wrong. One.
We have an overwhelming amount of Latinos in this state
because of our state's history. Remember we were fighting over
Texas for a long time. Mexican culture is part of
Texas culture, which is part of why our food is
so much better than your food. It just is. I
ate Texamax three times this weekend, and every time we
(01:15:48):
sat around thinking, oh my gosh, you just can't get
this some other places. But it's more than just Latinos,
especially in this area. There are black people all over
the place. There are a ton of Indians from I
mean people from India, Asians all over. It's just it's
extremely diverse. And my boys, I'm not going to do
(01:16:09):
this thing where you stand up and my boys are
color blind. But my boys have friends of all races.
One of my son's best buddies is black. It's just
they have friends of all races. And to be honest,
we've never talked about it. It's not anything that's ever
(01:16:31):
come up. Ever. Treat everyone the way you want to
be treated, live your life, protect your buddies, watch it.
It's just the concept of that skin color thing has
never come up. We just never brought it up, and
they never thought about it. They never thought about it.
People look different, people were different. It's just not it
(01:16:51):
was never important to them. And to me, that's how
I always wanted it to be. It's not a color
blow thing. You can clearly see he's black. It's a
it's just not important thing. And you know what by
eleven year old said to me the other day, we
(01:17:12):
had left the news on, which we never do, had
left the news on for a little while, came back
and he's at that age where he's consuming everything, and
you could tell he was really confused and really uncomfortable
and really concerned, and he said to me, Dad, are
we against black people? Man? I almost fell over. I
(01:17:39):
almost fell over. I could not believe that, just just
fifteen minutes of news and now my son goes from
not caring about any of that. Are we are we
against black? What? There is a sickness out there when
(01:18:01):
it comes to how we talk about race, and no
it's not just white people. There is a sickness out
there with how this decide, with how this society discusses race,
it is awful to watch. We're not healing any divisions.
We are creating lots of them, creating lots of them.
(01:18:24):
And by the way, fy I pulled my boys aside.
You do what you do. I pulled my boys aside,
and I said, look, we're not against black people. We're
not four black people. We're not against white people. We're
not four white people. We're not against or for anybody
(01:18:45):
of any color. That's ridiculous. You weigh the heart of
yourself and whoever you're dealing with, period, you deal with individuals. You,
as a white person, are not responsible for anything good
or bad anyone else has ever done who shares your
skin color. Neither are black people. Treat everybody the way
(01:19:08):
you want to be treated. Forget about this skin color stuff.
It doesn't matter. All that matters is the heart. And
we left it at that. But if that's what my
boys are seeing, and that's what my boys are saying,
and I happen to be there to catch it, what's
happening out there out in all the other American households.
(01:19:31):
Parents aren't catching, parents aren't correcting this society has a disease,
and the disease is not racism. Oh, don't get me wrong,
there's racism. I'm not going to sit here and do
that stupid thing people try to say there's no racism.
I know there's racism because they're always. Since man's incept,
(01:19:53):
since since the beginning of societies, there have been prejudice,
and there is prejudice and will always be prejudice. That
is the nature of man. That is so I'm not
saying that. What I am saying is this, we have
(01:20:15):
lost the plot. When it comes to talking about it
and this job and this whole thing, it looks like
a gigantic fleecing to me. It looks like a gigantic
shakedown to me. And no, I don't have to support it,
(01:20:35):
because guess what, I wasn't racist before all this. So
I don't have anything to apologize for as an individual,
and neither do you unless you are. Let's all do better.
(01:21:40):
What does it look like without any police, you know what.
Let's hang on to that for a moment, allow us
to move on briefly. Chris, bag up all this stuff.
They're not even prosecuting the writers, so on and so forth,
allow us to move on, Chris, and let's talk about me.
(01:22:03):
You see, Chris brought up last week and I remember
this weekend. I forgot to address it why we were
given penicillin shots. And Chris asked if it was for
nefarious reasons. It was not for nefarious reasons. They were
really worried about that. And in just a second, I'll
(01:22:26):
tell you just how worried about that they are. Don't worry,
I'll keep it PG. Hang on the Jesse Kelly Show.
(01:23:17):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. All right. Before we
get to our penicillin story, we cannot forget it as Monday,
and it's medal of honor Monday, and maybe more than
any Monday we've ever done, this is in Monday where
(01:23:40):
I personally need to be reminded of the people who
have fought for this nation, who have come before us,
people who are the reason we're here, the amazing people
in our society. So allow us to go to mister
Charles Coolidge, Chris US Army born in Signal Mountain, Tennessee.
(01:24:02):
You ever been to Tennessee? Chris? Oh, that surprised to me.
I didn't think you've done anything in your life. Leading
a section of heavy machine guns supported by one platoon
of Company K, he took a position near Hills six
twenty three. By the way, he was born in nineteen
twenty one, so you can probably do the math on
which bore this is a World War two. Anyway, back
(01:24:23):
to the beginning. Leading a section of heavy machine guns
supported by one platoon of Company K, he took a
position near Hill six twenty three, east of Belmont, Sir Batant, France,
on the twenty fourth of October nineteen forty four, with
the vision of covering the right flank of the third
Italian and supporting its action. Tech Sergeant Coolidge went forward
(01:24:46):
with a sergeant of Company K to reconnoiter positions for
coordinating the fires from the light and heavy machine guns.
They ran into an enemy force in the woods, estimating
to be an infantry company, Coolidge at empty. Coolidge, attempting
to bluff the Germans by a show of assurance and boldness,
called upon them to surrender, whereupon opening whereupon the enemy
(01:25:09):
opened fire. With his carving Coolidge wounded two of them.
There being no officer present with the force, Coolidge at
once assumed command many of the men's were replacements recently arrived,
and this was their first experience under fire. Sergeant Coolidge,
unmindful of the enemy fire delivered at closed range, walked
(01:25:34):
along the position, calming and encouraging his men directing their fire.
The attack was thrown back through the twenty fifth of October.
The twenty sixth of October, the enemy launched repeated attacks
against the position of this combat group, but each was
repulsed due to Coolidge's able leadership. On the twenty seventh
of October, German infantry supported by two tanks, made a
(01:25:57):
determined attack in the position. The area was swept by
enemy's small arms fire, a machine gun, and tank fire.
Coolidge armed himself with a bazooka in advanced within twenty
five yards of the tank. His bazuka failed to function
and he threw it aside. Securing all the hand grenades
he could carry, he crawled forward and inflected heavy casualties
(01:26:20):
on the advancing enemy. Finally, it became apparent the enemy
and greatly superior force supported by tanks, would overrun the position. Coolidge,
displaying great coolness and courage, directed and conducted an orderly withdrawal,
being himself the last to leave the position. As a
result of Coolidge's heroic and superior leadership, the mission of
(01:26:42):
this combat group was accomplished through four days of continuous
fighting against numerically superior enemy troops in rain and cold
and amidst dense woods. I was doing some talking online
about the day troops and supporting social media and such,
(01:27:02):
or supporting these guys and remembering them, and somebody said
something to the effect of, I wish we still had
men like that today. You need to understand, Yes, the
percentages have gone down. Period. The percentages of men like
that have gone down because we as a society have
(01:27:26):
taught our younger generations to hate this country. Now we've
taught them a different set of values. I mean, I
watched one documentary one time a guy had joined up
and in his town during the war, there were three
different suicides from young men. And do you know why
they committed suicide? Because for one reason or another, they
(01:27:49):
weren't allowed to sign up and go off and fight.
That's different. So, yes, the percentages are different. I'm not
going to pretend otherwise. But don't fool yourself into thinking
men like that are all gone. It's not sexy, it's
not some worldwide war. It's not going to be written
(01:28:12):
in the history books the way World War two is,
nor should it. But those young men fighting in the
mountains of Afghanistan, fighting in Iraq, especially when it was
super superheated, were every bit the warriors of this guy.
They were men like that still exist out there, and
(01:28:35):
that is one of the few things that and Michael
Malice's burn it all down strategy that are giving me hope.
Now back to this penicillan thing. I told a story
last week about getting a penicillan shot in boot camp,
which I didn't have to get. Chris said that was
them trying to inoculate us against anything anything we would
(01:28:55):
acquire while out on town enjoying ourselves. Let me be clear,
I don't think that was why it could be, but
you know what they did do because they were genuinely
worried about Now they're not worried about you individually. I'm
not crying in my cheerios about it. But you're a
number in the Marine Corps. You just are. Come in,
(01:29:16):
We'll get you trained up, move along. That's the nature
of service in any armed service. That's not me whining
about it. They didn't treat me like an individual. You're
not an individual, idiot, Go sit out and shut up.
Don't talk again. So this wasn't about them caring about
our individual well being. They were always worried about the
(01:29:37):
readiness of the force. You don't think much about it.
I mean you think about it sometimes when when I
tell you these combat stories, but you don't think about it.
Just because you have a hundred men in your infantry
company does not mean you always have a hundred men
in your infantry company. You always have somebody sick, you
always have somebody injured, and that makes a big, big
(01:29:59):
b difference if those numbers start to climb, the great
the great balance you're always trying to strike if you're
if you're in charge of saying, infantry company, how do
we train really, really really hard hard enough to break
a few people? Otherwise the training isn't good enough, but
not hard enough that we break so many people so
(01:30:20):
that our readiness isn't could you have to try to
figure that out. It's everything. Everything in life is a
balancing act. And part of that balancing act was they
did not want us to go out into town mingle
with the locals and come back with certain conditions or
(01:30:42):
diseases that would hurt our readiness. That was a big deal. Now.
They really really worried about that when we went overseas,
because you know the reputation. Everybody's seen the Vietnam movies.
I don't need to go into it in case your
kiddos are listening. It's just once you go overseas to
a third world company country can get even dirtier out there.
(01:31:05):
Now they're really worried. And here's what they would do.
And to be honest, I've applied this, not this specific lesson,
but this kind of lesson to my parenting. They would
bring in everybody into a gigantic movie theater room and
they would sit everybody down and they would show on
(01:31:27):
the movie theater screen pictures pictures of various stages of disease.
You can tell somebody all day long, don't do this,
(01:31:48):
don't do that, don't do this, don't do that. You
can even sometimes tell them what will happen to them
if they do this. Don't touch the stove or you're
going to burn your finger. Don't touch the stove or
you're gonna burn your finger. I would suggest, within reason,
(01:32:14):
as part of your parenting, part of your leadership, and
whatever form that takes, you show somebody. Don't touch the
stove you're going to burn your finger. You want to
know what a bad burn looks like. Here's a picture
of it. Do you want your hand to look like that? Remarkably,
remarkably effective. Hang on, I'm not done. Feeling a little stocky.
(01:33:02):
Follow like and subscribe on social at Jesse Kelly DC.
I love security, and I have to admit I was
a little bit embarrassed the first time somebody sat me
down and explain to me this massive gap in my
own security in my life. I was very embarrassed, to
be honest with you, I didn't realize how vulnerable I
(01:33:25):
was and my family was online. The truth is that
are people out there who can take tiny bits of
your personal information and do incredibly damaging things to them.
This is an entire new criminal enterprise. And now get this.
On top of all that, your internet service provider can
see everything you do online, everything you do, everything your
(01:33:49):
family does when you're home. Do you think that's a
big deal. It is a very, very very big deal.
Go get Express VPN and take away that problem. Go
to Express VN dot com slash jesse that's Express VPN
dot com slash Jesse get three months free. I have
(01:34:26):
applied those lessons to my parenting. Now again, let me
stress not that specific lesson, because, by the grace of God,
my boys are nine and eleven. I hope I don't
have to address that quite yet. Yes, we've started to
have some uncomfortable talks, those talks you don't want to have,
but I don't have to worry about them. Give me
(01:34:49):
a grandson just yet. But in this part I would
encourage you to do because I find it to be
very very effective when you're warning your children about things.
Don't warn them about something and then make it nice
(01:35:09):
and blow it off. Honey. Don't talk to strangers, okay, Mom?
Why not? Oh it's okay. Just there are some bad
people out there. Do you know what I said to
my sons when we had that talk. Sons, If somebody
drives up alongside you on the sidewalk and holds the
(01:35:33):
cutest puppy you've ever seen in your life out the
window and asks if you want to competit, are you
going to do it? And they can tell they're not
supposed to do right, so' like no, I said, that's right.
And do you know what's going to happen if you
do no? What that guy is going to grab you
and he's gonna throw you in the trunk of his car,
and he's going to drive you to his house somewhere,
(01:35:56):
and he's gonna drag you down to a dark basement
and chop you up into little pieces and hurt you
really bad. Now that may sound really, really harsh. Do
you think my sons were paying attention? Do you think
that will leave an impression on them that will keep
them away from that car? Yeah? When I show my
(01:36:22):
children how to handle weapons, you handle yours how you
want to. I am a big, big believer in satisfying
the curiosity of young boys, of young men. Weapons are
because they're men. I don't care how much how much
against them you are. Weapons are fascinating to men. That's
(01:36:45):
part of our biology as the protectors of any society.
I guarantee you, two thousand years ago, the young boys
were fascinated with the swords and the bows and arrows.
It is a fascination a deadly weapon. God gave you that.
You were born that way, and young men are fascinated
(01:37:08):
with guns Therefore, if you're worried about your children hurting
themselves or someone else with the guns you have in
your home, don't hide them. But you can hide them too,
but show them. My kids know, without a shadow of
(01:37:28):
a doubt, I've told them their whole lives, and we
did it again the other day. If at any time,
any time at all, you want to hold one of
my weapons, the answer is yes, one of the time.
It will never be no. We will stop everything we
are doing. We are going to satisfy that curiosity, immediately
(01:37:49):
taking away that forbidden danger appeal of it. And not
only that, it gives me an opportunity to show you
how to handle one properly. Do not point a weapon
at anything you don't intend to shoot, finger straight and
off the trigger. And remember those hard lessons I gave
(01:38:12):
about the kidnapping. I roll those on in with the
guns too. My son's names are James and Luke. Luke.
I'm about to hand this to you. Are you going
to point this at your brother or me? No? Do
you know what's going to happen if you do, and
he's waiting for me to explain, You're going to blow
(01:38:33):
your brother's face off and You're gonna watch him die
and live the rest of your life knowing you killed
your brother. Does that sound harsh? Yep? Does my child
act really carefully around firearms? One hundred percent. So let
(01:38:58):
me be frank. As long as I'm going off because
I'm upset about my pastor, as long as I'm going
off on American churches and pastors and things like that,
So let me explain this to you. I know we
have pastors who listen. I'm certainly not anybody qualified to
give any pastor advice on anything when it comes to
(01:39:18):
the church or Christ or forgiveness or anything else. That
is very much an area where I fail all the time.
But I can give you advice on this. You understand
that if the leftists ever, really, really, really really take over,
you understand the history of the world says you're going
(01:39:41):
to be the first one stood up against the wall
and shot in the back of the head. Right, You
might want to think about that long and hard before
you start bending the knee to the leftist mobs. You
might want to think about that law and hard. I
(01:40:01):
don't need my church or want my church to be
political in any way. If you stand up in front
of your church and push leftist theology. You get what's
coming to you. They are openly hostile to you. Many
(01:40:23):
of them will flat out say they want your elimination.
Don't be the agent of your own destruction. Man, use
your head, all right, Chris Well, this is uncomfortable. German
report blasts shut down. Somebody put together a big report
(01:40:47):
prepared by experts. Here are some of the key passages.
Let me know, ladies and gentlemen, if any of this
sounds familiar to you. The dangerousness of COVID nineteen was overestimated.
Probably at no point did the danger posed by the
new virus go beyond the normal level. People who die
(01:41:09):
from corona are essentially those who would statistically die this
year because they've reached the end of their lives and
their weakened bodies can no longer cope with any random,
everyday stress. Worldwide, within a quarter of a year, there
is no more than two hundred and fifty thousand deaths
from COVID nineteen compared to the one point five million
(01:41:30):
during the influenza wave of the two seventeen two eighteen.
The danger is obviously no greater than many other virus viruses,
there is no evidence that this is a false alarm.
More people were dying because of the state imposed coronavirus
measures than they are being killed by the virus. Part
(01:41:59):
of my frustration in the past few months I realized
it been a little bit more upset than usual is
I've been screaming these things at the beginning of these things,
and everybody yelled at me, almost to a man on
our own side, yelled at me when I was against
(01:42:20):
these lockdowns, screaming at me to shut up. I'm a
grandma killer, I'm gonna have millions are gonna die. And
then a few months later, reports like this can start
churning out and I don't hear from anybody, and now
everybody's going along, going along, and WHOA, what a big scam?
(01:42:42):
Hold on, Jack, Where were you when it was tough?
Where were you when it was lonely out here, when
my phone was blowing up every single day? Where were you?
I'll tell you where you were? You were the one
yelling at me. Leadership is a funny thing. Leadership is
(01:43:08):
a funny thing. There are lots of things to it,
but one thing that is an absolute fact about leadership.
You can't do it from behind. We have because this
is human nature. I guess very very few leaders. Millions
(01:43:29):
are gonna die. Everyone's gonna die. And people look around
and think, well, that's what everyone's saying. I better say
it too. Show me the one who's going to say
the uncomfortable things when it matters, and that's the one
I'll actually follow. Got to trieb dot com slash jesse
(01:43:58):
right now, let's try i ebb dot com slash jesse
right now. I don't have a better way to put it.
It's time for you to start experiencing what I now
get to experience every night, and that is a great
night's sleep. I know what you're going through going through.
I know what it's like when you lay down and
you can't sleep and you're thinking about the day ahead
(01:44:19):
and the day you're gonna have, and okay, that's that's
that's all right, all right, we'll get some sleeper, and
then soon you can't sleep. Then you're worried about not
being able to sleep, which only means you're pushing back
to sleep. You're gonna get further and further and further,
and that worry piles on, and that worry piles on
and sooner or later. It's two am, and you know
you're gonna be a mess the next day. You can
stop that cycle with an EBB sleep. Go to tryeb
(01:44:43):
dot com slash jesse. That's try ebb dot com slash jesse.
Use to promo code Jesse at checkout. Get yourself twenty
five bucks off. Go get an EBB sleep. Well, everything sucks, Chris,
(01:45:16):
I'm just kidding. I'm freaking awesome, but I mean everyone
else and our next guest, Amanda Prestigiacomo of The Daily Wire, Amanda,
let me ask you something. Would you ever go skydiving?
Are you one of these daredevil people? Oh? No, no,
I'm I'm painfully boring. I would never do that. I
(01:45:37):
would never even think about doing that. No, Okay, even
if you had one of like those tandem jump things
where you're strapped between some dude's legs and then he
does all the work. Quit Chris, when you're strapped the
tandem jump thing. Um that sounded a little I don't know,
you know. Um No, I'm really scared of hips, Like
(01:45:57):
I'm a total baby, so I would that sounds terrible. No,
I've never wanted to. Okay, now that leads me to
this question, could I pay you to do I'm not
offering to pay you, but if I could pay you
to do it, how much money would it take to
have you do it and do it by yourself? Um,
(01:46:19):
like three hundred thousand, Probably three hundred grand, Yeah, it's yeah,
Like anything under one hundred grand I wouldn't even think about.
But probably like three hundred grand. Man, that is real.
Fear of heights? Now are you that way in a
plane when you fly? Oh? Yeah? And I have to
fly all the time for work, and I am I'm
(01:46:40):
a terrible fire and it doesn't get any better. Like
I have to fly from New York I Los Angeles
constantly and I am constantly paranoid. It's really it's really bad.
The poor flight attendants. I'm like, is this normal? Like, yeah,
I'm down. So you're one of those people that's I
had a girl one time on a flight. We were
flying in a Denver and it was really really bad
(01:47:02):
winter storm. She dug claw marks into my forearm. I'm
not even kidding. I couldn't get her hand off. It
was like a bald eagle had a hold of me.
Because she was dying in the seat beside me. Oh
oh yeah, that's right. I mean one of the ladies
gave me her email. We still talk because I was
such a rack. Yet it's so sad, all right, I
(01:47:27):
just wanted you to admit something really embarrassing. Let us
move on to politics here. Um, it's the country fracturing.
I don't want to be the thing is, I don't
want to come behind the microphone and act like it's
the end of the world, because I just rarely believe that.
But it seems like we're really pretty much done with
(01:47:48):
each other, aren't we. I mean, it seems that way.
The left is so radical, and it seems they pushed,
you know, they shifted overton windows so much that you know,
anybody who's actually on the right, anybody who's you know,
loves America, doesn't think America's this evil nation. M is
just so far away from the mainstream left. UM. I
(01:48:12):
think that we're going to see, hopefully, is that sort
of with these calls to defund the police. Um, once
we start seeing how much of a you know, how
much of a hoax, basically the pandemic nonsense was. Um.
I think hopefully that will I don't want to say
radicalized to change people's views red pill. Then perhaps that yeah,
(01:48:34):
this is this is bad. Um. You know, putting a
putting a black square and Instagram post might feel well
and good, but you're supporting some really radical things. And
once that hits the fan, people are gonna wake up
and say, yeah, I'm not voting to defund the police force.
It's not going to happen. Um. So they might publicly
post their little black square, but when they go to vote,
(01:48:54):
I think it'll be a silent majority that just is
not allowed to speak up. Um. So like we had Trump,
that was clearly a silent majority. All the polling was off,
we did we didn't know Trump was gonna win. He
was gonna lose, right, and he came through, So that
that might happen and we might just elect these people
out because of that. Hopefully that's my hope. We're seeing
(01:49:16):
that same kind of polling again. A man, it and
it's really really bad right now now Novembers, it might
as well be a million miles away. Who knows if
Joe Biden's even gonna be able to talk by then.
But it's really bad. Why is it really bad? Are
the polls all crap again. Is it too much chaos
in the past few months. They're blaming Trump? Why is
it so bad? Yeah? I think I think a little
(01:49:38):
bit of bolts. So the pandemic stuff, the lockdown stuff
is definitely kind of confusing. The polls. I think we
have to wait a little bit see what happened there,
because you know this is far away. Again. I I
have difficulty trusting polling, especially when it comes to Trump.
People aren't gonn admit they're going to vote for him.
(01:50:00):
It's just we saw that in twenty sixteen. It's only
gotten worse. It's not like Trump is more acceptable. Um,
it's hard to see that. You know, this polling is
is Ato's any anywhere and you're accurate when it wasn't
in twenty sixteen. M I don't. I don't fully trust it. Um.
(01:50:20):
And I think twenty six I mean twenty twenty. I hope,
I hope some of the silent majority stuff is true.
I hope what I'm saying is correct, because people are
not on board for this radical stuff. You know, they
might post their back flex where and you know, virtue
signal and what have you, but they're not on board
with the radical stuff. And I hope twenty twenty we
see that a man, have we lost the churches in America? Too?
(01:50:45):
And if so, how have we? I told the story earlier.
I don't know if you were listening. I'm sure you were.
Everyone else in the country is, but I lost mine
yesterday pastor went full white privilege social judge and it
says this is not exactly one of these woke churches.
It was obviously one we've been in for years, never
any indication of that, and absolutely lost their minds. Are
they all gone? Yeah? I mean that. I mean you
(01:51:09):
hit the nail on the head. So churches, faith, church
leaders and our education system, those two institutions, Conservatives better
wake up and start you know, holding our church is
strong and infiltrating the education system because it's out those two.
We see that college campuses has has moved to the mainstream.
So we need to we need to get those back.
(01:51:29):
It's incredibly sad to see what's happening to churches. Um,
you know, I'm Catholic, so I've I've seen some stuff
I do not like. Um, you know, I'm glad we're
still strong on something like abortion, but um, it's it's
dangerous it's dangerous. We lose all space. We have more nihilism,
we have more relative truth than Yeah, this country will
(01:51:52):
be done. Do you find it speaking of racism? Do
you find it difficult to go through your daily life
being in Italian? Uh? No, No, it's no where. You
love Italians. This is a thing. You have such a
soft spot for Italian You have me on your show
Love Us. This is I know, I know this. You
(01:52:14):
can probably love Italian food. This is you know, like
a fetish. All right, Amanda, What makes you're from that area?
What makes a great chicken wing? What separates a great
one from a bad one? See, I don't I don't
know what everyone else is doing wrong. So I've just
(01:52:34):
had sort of like upstate New York chicken wings, like
from Buffalo Rochester and they're fantastic. And then I've gone
elsewhere and had chicken wings and they're just really really bad.
And I haven't ten pointed why. I think I might
be like crispy or something I don't notice. Or is
it the sauce? Is this the chicken problem or a
sauce problem. It's the way it's the way they're cooked. Perhaps, um,
(01:52:55):
because I think the sauce. Anybody can kind of get right,
Maybe it's the chicken and it's they're cooked, because anyone
can can make a sauce, you know, a wing sauce.
So I would have to say or cooking skills, thumbs off,
sums off. I don't know. Is there an Italian version
of a chicken wing? Or have you guys not figured
that out yet? Um? We have chicken cutlets, so those
(01:53:17):
are like fried chicken. It's like, well, it's like that's
kind of like fried chicken. Okay, So the answer is no,
So there's no answer. So you guys have you guys
have no buffalo wing whatsoever? All right, Amanda, And this
is way outside of the election, but I'm curious this.
I'm starting to pull all my friends. Do you think
Donald Trump wins reelection? Um? I cautiously optimistic. Yes, Um,
(01:53:46):
I know he's straight up on the lockdown. But I
think the Black Lives Matter stuff is going way too far.
They're so radical it's gonna been backfire. All right, Amanda
Press the giacobo who wants three hundred thousand dollars to
jump out of a plane, go read her stuff on
the Daily Wire. Appreciate you thank you so much later,
(01:54:07):
do you want to jump out of it? Let me
ask first, Chris, do you want to jump out of it? Play?
You don't want to jump out of You're not a
height sky? Are you scared of flying? Because those are
two different things. Like I don't love heights. The Marine
Corps beat it out of me, but I'm not scared
of flying at all. It just doesn't worry me. You
don't like flying either, What a baby? All right, We're
gonna get some answers here and play you some Malcolm X.
(01:54:30):
Hang on a second. You're never completely ready to adopt
a team. For late nights writing English papers are your
(01:54:51):
teen's music taste for dinners where they talk more on
their phone than with you. For the first time they
call your mom. You're never completely ready to adopt a team,
and you can't imagine the reward. To learn more about
adopting a team, visit adopt us kids dot org, brought
to you by the US Department of Health and Human Services,
(01:55:12):
adopt Us Kids and the ad Council. Part time job,
full time hustle, all time Shiro to all of us.
You nurture, we listen, you teach, we thrive. You lift
us spirits. But we've got a laid down the truth.
It's time for you, our Shiro, to stretch for the stars.
Start saving more for retirement now so you can feel
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prepared and live your life to the fullest. Get free
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retirement dot org slash Shiro. A message brought to you
by AARP and the AD Council. I have good news,
(01:55:55):
ladies and gentlemen. You're ready. I know I don't want
to normally spring something like this on ye at the
end of the show, but you ready. There is a
new federal program out there and this is its goal,
the elimination of poverty and racial injustice. Now listen, listen, Chris, listen.
(01:56:16):
We are talking new major spending programs that are going
to address education, medical care, urban problems, rural poverty, and transportation.
They are going to throw a bunch of money at
this problem and come up with all these programs and
(01:56:38):
they are going to revitalize the black community in America. Oh,
that's right, that's not new that passed in nineteen sixty five.
There is no federal program that is going to help
(01:56:59):
any body in this country. They're going to screw all
of us all the time. All that did was make
everything worse everything. I am floored at the repeated, repeated
(01:57:20):
failures of Democrats at every level to bridge the racial
disparity gap, and yet they continue to act as if
they're the ones who will bridge the racial disparity gap.
Allow me to clarify again, as I've said a thousand
times on the show, every one of these cities, every
(01:57:43):
single one of these cities that's burning, riots, looting, protests,
every one of these cities is run and has been
run by Democrat politicians and acting Democrat policies in some
cases for decades. If you have an issue with your
(01:58:05):
Democrat run city, take it up with the idiot Democrats
in your city. And yet people will go to the
polls time and time and time and time again and
continue to vote for the same thing time and time
and time again. It floors me, absolutely floors me, and
(01:58:30):
the balls on these Democrats. They're taking a knee, all
these democrats, Pelosi and all these idiot Democrats are taking
a knee in Congress today trying to pass a federal
sweeping police reform bill. Oh that'll work out well, We
definitely need more federal control of law enforcement. That's what's
(01:58:51):
really been missing in this country. My word. And you
know what worries me, Chris, the compromise. It'll be terrible.
Remember that's what Republicans do every single time. Democrats are
smart enough, I need forty trillion dollars when there should
(01:59:14):
be spending cuts, and Republicans will be all, wait, that's outrageous.
Forty trillion. We can't. All right, we'll give you ten trillion,
and Democrats are all all right, we compromise. We're not
happy about it, but we're compromise. Meanwhile, the guy preaching
spending cuts is sitting there thinking, wait what, and Republicans
will stand up behind the microphone, look at us cutting spending.
(01:59:38):
I'm salty today, Chris. It's that church thing. Has to
be salty, man, it has to be salty. I hate it.
I'm mad about it. I'm extremely, extremely angry about it.
And this is why I'm angry. I don't like the
feeling that the isolation I've found for myself is being invaded.
(02:00:03):
And you know whose fault that is. That's my fault,
because there is Look, I'm the one who tells you
all all the time, leftists don't look at any place
where they're not and think to themselves, I will leave
that alone. And so what did I do? I did
the same thing so many of you have done. I
moved to Texas on purpose. You realize I packed up
(02:00:28):
my family, quit my job, and moved to Texas with
no job here. I moved to Texas just so I
could live in Texas. That's how much I loved the
values here because I've done some work here, lived all
over the place. I came to Texas on purpose, and
then I did what so many of you have done.
(02:00:48):
Once I got to a place where I could afford it,
I moved out to the suburbs. Why I like those
values more. I want to safer, more armed community of
people who share my socioeconomic status. That's what I want
(02:01:09):
one day. I don't know if I'll ever move in
like one of those fancy mansion neighborhoods, but I might.
Why more safety, more isolation, more security. Now I probably
would go the more property route. I'd buy more property
because I prefer quiet. You could have your big fancy house.
All I needs my recliner and a sweet TV in
a bed. That's quite literally all I use in the house,
(02:01:32):
the old lady uses the kitchen. You know. It is
what Chris. But that's why I moved to where I move.
I moved there on purpose. When we moved down here,
I went church shopping on purpose looking for that right
fit and I found it, and the leftists infected it
(02:01:53):
and ruined it. And now I'm salty about it, and
I shouldn't be, because the truth is this the most
naive way of thinking out there is this thinking that
they won't come for me. There's this last little thing
they won't come for and I allowed myself to get there.
(02:02:15):
And the truth is this, They're coming for it all.
(02:02:50):
If you miss any part of the Jesse Kelly Show,
the entire thing is available on iHeart, Google, Spotify. It's
available on iTunes. Go ahead and hammer the subscribe button
on iTunes. It will automatically drop to your phone every day.
Leave a five star review, talk about how handsome I
(02:03:12):
am in the comments. Please, that's Quinn. It what. It's
critically important for the show. It's critically important for the show.
We have a really cool show plan for you tomorrow,
cool history stuff. We've got really good stuff. We've got
our world news with b K thing, and you're gonna
(02:03:34):
want to tune into the beginning of today's show if
you missed it as well. If I was a little
salty today, I don't want to say I'm sorry, because
I'm not sorry, but I'm mad about the church thing
takes me off. I will miss it. However, that kind
of social justice warrior crap is not going to be
(02:03:57):
something my family ever consumes. Ever, that's all. This is
(02:04:36):
a Jesse Kelly show. On The Jordan Harbinger Show, you'll
hear amazing stories from people that have lived them, from
spies to CEOs, even an undercover agent who infiltrated the
Gambino crime family. You're about to hear a preview of
The Jordan Harbinger Show with Jack Garcia, who did just that.
My career was twenty four out of twenty six years
(02:04:57):
was solely dedicated working on the cover. I walk in.
I'm in the bar. How there's a bar mate? Dare
good looking young lady? See serving me? Joke? Hey, what
would you like? I used to leave my frank was
give me a kettle, one martini, three olives, class of
water on the side. I finished the drink. The guys
come in. I'm gonna go go in my pocket, take
out the big water of money heam. I give her
(02:05:19):
one hundred hours. If you're with the MOB, I say, hey, Jordan,
you're on record with us. That means we protect you.
Nobody could shake you down. We could shake you down,
so you're on record with us. For more on how
Jack became so trusted in the highest levels of the
Gambino organization, check out episode three ninety two of The
Jordan Harbinger Show.