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June 15, 2023 34 mins

People who have dealt with depression understand that it's all about taking it one day at a time. They think your children are theirs. Why should I care about a law if its only enforced by one side? I will care about Trump's alleged crimes when Hillary and Biden are finally prosecuted. Terrible taste in music. 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show. It's
one of those days where I don't want the show
to end, which I guess is good because there's still
two hours left. That was a weird time to say that.
If I had to do that over again, I wouldn't
say that now, but it's too late anyway. Anyway, it is.

(00:33):
We have a little bit, a little bit of down
news that I'm gonna get to here in a few
and we'll get back to the ask doctor Jesse questions.
I do have to answer the question that was asked
last hour that I kind of lost my train of
thought and forgot to answer. The guy asked, would I
ever consider teaming up with another radio host? If so,
who would I consider? You know that old stupid saying

(00:58):
never say never. It's a really stupid saying, But at
the same time it's very true because you really shouldn't
say never. If you ask me right now, do I
want a co host? I would say no. Do I
ever see myself with a co host? I would say no.
And that's no indictment on anyone else. I just don't

(01:20):
know that with my scatter brained thought, and how I'll
just go off on random tangents, and how I don't
plan the show out and for all I know we're
gonna be talking about history in two minutes. I haven't
thought of it. I don't know. Something may pop it
in my head. I may tell a personal story, you know,
I love those. I mean, how do I do that
with a co host? How do I do that?

Speaker 2 (01:41):
You know?

Speaker 1 (01:41):
I don't even like to have guests. I don't hardly
ever have guests. I don't hardly ever take calls. I
just kind of like to sit down and kind of talk.
I don't know that my style would work with a
co host. I don't think that it would. That said,
I am good friends with many people in this business,
and I think it would be a good show. I

(02:03):
would think I would think this show would be too
different than what we do. Chris, what do you think?
Don't you think it would be too different? I think
it would be different. Yeah, I agree, Chris said it
would be way too different. I agree. I don't. I
don't think it would work for what I like to do.
That's nothing against anyone else, and that's not a compliment
to myself, even though I love doing that, but that's

(02:24):
not I don't think it would work. I don't think
it would work, all right. I was going to try
to keep it mostly light today, but there are some
heavy things out there I do I do want to address,
and some heavy things will be in the ask doctor
Jesse questions, which we'll get to here, back to here
in a few but I do want I want to
get to this really quickly because this is something that's
always been near to my heart, always will be nearer

(02:47):
to my heart. Headline is youth young adults are dying
from suicide and homicide at the highest rates in decades.
The CDC report says, all right, so I want to
do a couple of things here. Let's let's set the
homicides thing apart. Let's let's deal with the suicide thing.

(03:11):
I guess one of the reasons this is so near
to me is I've had this happen in my life before. No, not,
it's nothing super close, so you don't have to worry
about me. But people you know that will commit suicide,
and I've seen the aftermath of it, and I'll tell
you every time it's happened with someone, I know every time.

(03:36):
And I don't know if this is common, but at
least it has been in my life. It's been such
a shock to everyone, including me. It's someone I can
think of right now, and I'm not going to name it.
For all I know the family listens to the show.
But she was a beautiful young woman with a wonderful
husband and wonderful children. It wasn't that we knew her.

(03:59):
We knew the family, and she was always smiling, always happy.
And they say, people, you know, they wear this stuff
on the inside, right, So I get that now. I
understand that I do. And the kids were young, they
were all under ten, and took her life one day,

(04:19):
and I know from things that were left behind. Again,
I'm not going to go into any details. I don't
want to violate anybody's privacy that she thought that it
was best for them, for her, She got to a
place that she did that terrible thing out of honestly love.
That's what it sounded like, It's better for them if

(04:43):
I'm gone, And obviously it wasn't. It was horrible for them,
horrible for him, horrible for the kids, just horrible. It's
always horrible, and I'm not anybody's life coach or self
help coach or anything like that. But I will simply
say this, whether you are an adult, maybe you're older,

(05:03):
maybe you're middle aged, or whether you are a kid,
listen to the sound of my voice right now. If
there is any voice inside of you that tells you
the world will be better off, your family will be
better off, your husband, your wife, your parents, your friends,

(05:24):
that they'll be better off if you're gone, that is
a voice from the devil. It is a lie. You
are put here on this planet by God. You were
put here on purpose by God. And people ask me sometimes,
am I worried about people trying to hurt me or

(05:46):
people trying to kill me and stuff like that. People
have tried to kill me before in Iraq and I'm
still walking. Do you know why because I'm so tough.
I'm not. It's because God wasn't done with me here yet.
God will take me home, whether that's today, I mean
I could die on the highway after the show, or
whether that's fifty years from now. He will take me

(06:07):
home when he's good and ready, when he's done with me.
And anything in my mind that tells me I should
try to get ahead of that decision is a lie
from the pit of hell. That doesn't mean depression is
not real. Obviously it is real. And these things, these
suicidal thoughts and things like that. People go through these things.

(06:30):
Sometimes it's chemical or spiritual, whatever the case may be.
You reach out and get some help. It doesn't have
to beat a family or friends, because oftentimes I know
enough about this to know oftentimes those are the people
you feel like you can't talk to. Those are the
people you feel like you can't reach out to, So
reach out to a stranger. There are hotlines all over

(06:50):
the place. Quick Internet search you will find a hotline
with the sympathetic voice of your a veteran. Veterans obviously
struggle with this a tone. It's hard to come back
from that life and adjust. It's hard, and sometimes the
guys find it to be impossible. But it's not impossible.
Whether you're a veteran, whether you're a kid, an adult,
whatever your whatever the case may be, don't check out. Okay,

(07:15):
you're here for a reason. The world's not done with
you yet. Stick around. And as far as young people goes,
just to parents, remember this. There's a million things we
could talk about, right now, we're not going to go
into from you know, social media, and kids get kids
get in all this online bullying stuff, especially these young girls.

(07:39):
Girl women are terrible to each other anyway, especially when
they get online now and she's so beautiful and she's
so mean to me, and I'm fat and I'm ugly.
That's all lie, that's all lie. Dimes, You're all dimes.
You're all fine, just the way you are. Get them
off social media and make sure kids have a purpose
and challenges. Half the reason people, especially young adults, when

(08:03):
you dig into it, when they when they get two
down and stuff like that, they're just purposeless. There's nothing
there's leave me. School's not a purpose, parents, schools not
a purpose. School sucks. I'm not saying it's not important kids,
but school sucks. That's not a reason. That's not a challenge.
They need challenges, they need something. We tell kids today

(08:27):
that nothing matters and nothing nothing's important, and everything sucks
and the world's coming to an end. And we pour
all this crap into the heads of kids today and
they get down understandably. And plus it's so stressful when
you're young anyway. I remember what it was like when
I was a teenager. I was about the size of
a toothpick. Not a great god like I am now, Chris,

(08:49):
but I was about the size of a toothpick. And
when you're young, at least for a boy, I can
only speak from a boy's angle. You don't even know
how to talk to girls. And that's all you want
to do at some point in time is to girls.
Oh my goodness, look at all these times. Well, they'll
never even look at me. That kind of sucks. And
you and your friends could be harsh, and that it
can be stressful enough being a kid, and that was

(09:10):
pre social media era. Give them a purpose, give them
a job, give them a challenge, give them something you're
not made to just aimlessly float, all right, that's unhealthy, unhealthy,
Speaking of unhealthy, Chris, if you wouldn't mind cut eight,

(09:30):
I think it's an important cut. Even though it's corendiversity higher.
It's not as if she says a bunch of useful things.
But I think this is useful for you and me
to remember what we're up against them. Remember a strategy
these people use. Cut eight.

Speaker 3 (09:45):
Go the parents out there who have daughters. Let's say
in high school, for example, we're worried that their daughter
may have to compete against a person born male and
there could be directly in physical athletic competition, and worry
about their daughter's safety.

Speaker 4 (10:00):
So look, I'm what you're alluding to is basically saying
that transgender kids are dangerous. It sounds like that's what
you're saying. Well, you're saying, you're saying that their safety
is at risk. Yeah, but you're you're you're laying out
a broad kind of broad example or explanation of what

(10:22):
could potentially happening a broad a broad example. Explain that
is dangerous. That is a dangerous thing to say that,
essentially transgender kids we're talking about are dangerous.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
That's a dangerous thing to say. It's a dangerous thing
to say. What she's saying? What's she doing there? We'll
discuss it in a second half The.

Speaker 5 (10:45):
Jesse Kelly Show I Like It returns next.

Speaker 1 (10:50):
It is The Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday and
ask Doctor Jesse Thursday, which I will get back to
here in just a few I want to address something. Remember,
you can email the show your love, your hate, your
death threats. You're ask doctor Jesse questions. You can email
those into Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Chris, if

(11:12):
you wouldn't mind, I want you to play it again.
It's cut number eight. The reporters asking about these tranny athletes,
these dudes who pretend to be chicks and then they
join female sports and dominate the women. And let's do
keep in mind this has gotten several women hurt. I

(11:33):
can think, off the top of my head, I remember
a volleyball player who got a ball spiked off her
face concussion by a dude pretending to be a chick.
I remember, Ugh, I don't even want to think about it.
There was an mma fight. Dude pretending to be a
chick cracked some chick skull. It's ugly out there. It's
really There's a rugby player. I can picture this dude

(11:54):
off the top of my head, just swinging around the
rugby court or field, and he's he's three times the
size of the next chick on the field. He's not
even a dude. He's a big dude. This is dude
is big. And so the reporter asks a question that's
very reasonable, and listen to how corin Diversity Hire answers

(12:17):
this question.

Speaker 3 (12:18):
The parents out there who have daughters. Let's say in
high school, for example, were worried that their daughter may
have to compete against a person born male and then
and there could be directly in physically athletic competition, and
where about their daughter's safety.

Speaker 4 (12:32):
So look, I'm what you're alluding to is basically saying
that transgender kids are dangerous. It sounds like that's what
you're saying. Well, you're saying, you're saying that their safety
is at risk. Yeah, but you're you're you're laying out
a broad kind of broad example or explanation of what

(12:54):
could potentially happening. A broad a broad example explained. That
is dangerous. That is a danger thing to say that
essentially transgender kids we're talking about are dangerous.

Speaker 1 (13:07):
Understand that the communist has a tactic that he uses
all the time, all the time, and this is part
of the overall strategy to turn you into an enemy
of the state. As you know you listen to the show.
That's the goal of everything you see. You see it
in the FBI and essay, you see it in the government,
you see it in the media, you see it in

(13:28):
the education system. The goal is, the overarching goal is
to turn any opposition to communism into being illegal against
the law. It's against the law for you to oppose me.
I want your guns, no, that should be that's dangerous.
I want your car, No, that's dangerous. I want to

(13:53):
close the border. That is dangerous. That's the goal is.
This is why they use dangerous all the time. The
goal is to criminalize what you believe. And the reason
that's the goal is if they criminalize what you believe,
then they can send the state power against you, to

(14:17):
hurt you, to arrest you, to kill you, to take
things from you you love. Did you know there's a
bill in California, we talked about it a little bit
that will allow the state to take your children out
of your home, away from you. They will kidnap the
state will kidnap your children in California if you don't

(14:39):
agree that your son is now a woman, or if
you don't agree that your daughter is now a son,
if you stand up for what everyone can see. The
state has determined is determining still in the process, that
that is dangerous. And the second they determine that you're
a dangerous lawbreaker, well then the cops come. Sorry, sir,

(15:04):
it's our understanding that you don't want your son to
cut his penis off and pretend he's a woman. Step back, sir,
or we're gonna have to hurt you. Your son is
ours now. Your son belongs to the state. This is
why they want to seize your children. Chris, get cut
thirty ready, they want to take your children. And I

(15:25):
need you to hear me now, and I need you
to hear me very well. I'm gonna let this whole
cut play. If you're in a blue state, they intend
to take your children from you, that makes you say, fine,
I get it. It should they intend to take your
children from you. Cut thirty, Chris, go.

Speaker 6 (15:45):
The state needs to be the ultimate guaranteur of a
child's well being. There's just no alternative to that. The
reason parent child relationships exist is because the state confers
legal parenthood on people through its paternity and maternity laws.
That's the state that is empowering parents to do anything
with children, to take them home, to have custody, and

(16:07):
to make any kind of decisions about that.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
That's not some no namer. That man teaches law. He's
a law professor. Did you know that he's a law professor?
And did you hear the part at the very beginning, Chris,
I want you to play it again for me, at
the very beginning. Did you hear what he said? The
part that you should take to heart because this is

(16:31):
what they believe, and the part that should frighten you
if you're sitting in a blue state. Chris again, cut
thirty go.

Speaker 6 (16:38):
The state needs to be the ultimate guaranteur of a
child's well being. There's just no alternative to that. The
reason parent child relationships exist is because the state confers
legal parenthood.

Speaker 1 (16:51):
That's the reason the parent childhood relationship exists, is the
state confers it. Remember, it's not just that they want
your children, it's that they think your children already belong
to them. To them, they're loaning out their kids to you.

(17:15):
Get out and get out soon. You hear me? All
right enough, Let's get back to ask doctor Jesse question
and women's crappy taste in music. Hang on, it is
the Jesse Kelly Show. Reminding you the iHeartRadio app can
be downloaded for free, and if you miss any part
of the show, they podcast the whole thing on iHeart, Google,

(17:36):
Spotify and iTunes on iTunes. Don't forget to leave a
five star rating in a review talking about how handsome
I am. Now, I want to play something for you
real quick. First, before we get back to the ask
doctor Jesse questions, Chris cut eleven. Just these people, these

(17:58):
swamp creatures, I guess is probably the best way to
call them. Lots of people use that term. It's really
a great way to put it. Bill Barr just I
cannot believe this was Trump's attorney general, Go Chris.

Speaker 5 (18:08):
But it quickly became clear that what the government was
really worried about were these classified and very sensitive documents.
I was shocked by the degree of sensitivity of these
documents and how many there were, frankly, and so the
government's agenda was to get those protect those documents, and
get them out, and I think it was perfectly appropriate

(18:28):
to do that. It was the right thing to do.
And I think the counts under the Espionage Act that
he willfully retained those documents or solid counts. Now, I
do think we have to wait and see what the
defense says and what proves to be true. But I
do think that even half what Andy McCarthy said, which is,

(18:49):
if even half of it is true, then he's toast.
I mean it's a pretty it's a very detailed indictment,
and it's very, very damning. And this idea of presenting
Trump as a victim here, a victim of a witch hunt,
is ridiculous. Yes, he's been a victim in the past. Yes,
his adversaries have obsessively pursued him with phony claims, and

(19:12):
I've been at his side defending against them when he
is a victim. But this is much different. He's not
a victim here. He was totally wrong that he had
the right to have those documents. Those documents are among
the most sensitive secrets that the country has. They have
to be in the custody of the archivist. He had
no right to maintain them and retain them, and he

(19:36):
kept them in a way at maur Lago that anyone
who really cares about national security, their stomach would turn
at it.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
Okay, I've used this example before, but I'm going to
use it again because people were having a hard time.
A lot of the low tgopers on the right, like
Bill Barr, are having a really hard time with the
very simple concept. I had somebody else tell me this morning.
It's the reason I brought this up, Jesse, And this

(20:07):
was a Republican. I was talking to elected Republican. By
the way, Jesse Trump did commit these crimes. Don't you
understand Trump did commit these crimes. He did have these documents,
and you know what I told him, I said, yeah, okay,
I know, and he said, what do you mean, you know,

(20:28):
doesn't that matter to you? And what I told him
he was a congressman, by the way, but I told
him was no, doesn't matter to me at all. And
you could tell he was just flabbergasted. And I don't
understand why so many people were having a hard time
with this concept at all. If if there's a guy,

(20:48):
there's a kid, you know what, there's a fourteen year old.
If I'm a cop and my job as a cop,
my job is to look out for a seven to
eleven and there's a fourteen year old kid, And then
there's my son, James. And James walks into seven eleven
steals a candy bar, and he comes out and I

(21:11):
see him steal the candy bar, and I say, ah, James,
all right, that anyway you can go. And the next
day James shows up, walks in, steals a slurpy that's
a sound of Slurpy makes Chris and I say, oh, James,
you're crazy. Anyway you can go, And James walks in
the next day and he steals one of those beef
and cheese sticks which are delicious, and I say, James,

(21:32):
what are you doing? That's crazy. And then the next
day after that, the fourteen year old who's not James
walks into the seven eleven and steals a candy bar
and walks out. I can't arrest him, I can't stop him.
I have to let him go because the law is
either for everybody or it's for nobody. If you want

(21:56):
me to care about Donald Trump allegedly having documents he
wasn't allowed to have, I will care. Do you know
what I promise you, I give you my word. I
will care that Donald Trump had these documents. I will
I will care as soon as Hillary Clinton is behind bars.

(22:17):
Hillary Clinton had an illegal email server in her private
home with classified documents on it that any foreign intelligence
agency could easily hack into an access and they may
have we don't know. For all we know China has
all the secrets from Hillary's computer, Russia all the secrets

(22:39):
from Hillary's computer, Israel, all the secrets from Hillary's computer.
By the way, quick side note, Israel spies on all
their friends and enemies is just kind of a national policy.
As soon as Hillary Clinton is behind bars, I will
care about Donald Trump because the law. What's that, Chris.
That's a good point, Chris. She's selling merchandise about it.

(23:01):
Hillary Clinton is bragging about the illegal things she did
and got away with. And Joe Biden got elected, and
the first thing Joe Biden's FBI did was scrub all
the They destroyed the evidence of Hillary Clinton's crimes. And
so now fast forward to today. You expect me to
do this republican thing where I'm handwringing all. I mean,

(23:23):
I guess, by the letter of the law, he did
break he did break the law. I don't care that
he broke the law. It means nothing to me because
I want a decent, just nation, and you cannot have
a decent, just nation where only Republicans are under the
law and Democrats are not. It's not that I'm denying

(23:46):
anything Trump allegedly did. I don't know. Maybe he did,
maybe he didn't, I don't know. I don't care. The
law is for everyone, or the law is for no one.
Chris cut sixteen. If you wouldn't mind, Chuck Grassley go.

Speaker 2 (24:03):
The ten twenty three produced to the House committees that
the foreign national who allegedly bribed Joe and Hunter Biden
allegedly has audio recordings of his conversation with them seventeen
such recordings. According to the ten twenty three, the foreign

(24:26):
national possesses fifteen audio recordings of phone calls between him
and Hunter Biden. The ten twenty three also indicates that
then Vice President Joe Biden may have been involved in
berugement employing Hunter Biden. Based on the facts known to
the Congress and the public, it's clear that the Justice

(24:50):
Department the FBI haven't nearly had the same laser focus
on the Biden family. What is Attorney Weiss doing with
respect to these alleged Joe and Hunter Biden recordings that
are apparently relevant to the high stakes bribery scheme. Getting

(25:14):
a fall and complete ten twenty three is critical for
the American people and no one understand the true nature
of the document and to hold the Justice Department and
the FBI accountable.

Speaker 1 (25:29):
Okay, I'm going to ignore the low t gop phrasing
like I did before. It's clear they don't have the
same focus on Biden. Is it they don't have the
same focus, Chuck, they're covering it up anyway. Setting that aside,
I don't want to get distracted here. When Joe Biden
and Hillary Clinton are sharing a cell a minute, they

(25:52):
couldn't share a cell because there are men and women.
That would be weird. When Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton
are both in federal prison for the crimes they have committed,
I give you my word, communists and low tgo appears,
every one of you who listen to the show, all
you communists and low tgo peers. This is honestly cross
my heart and hope to die. Chris. Write this down. Actually,
in case this day ever comes, which it never will,

(26:15):
when Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden are behind bars for
the crimes they have committed, I will call for the arrest, trial,
and detention of Donald Trump. I swear on my life
I will until that day comes. I don't care about
Donald Trump's crimes. I don't because the law is for everyone,
or the law is for nobody, period. End of story.

(26:37):
All right, talk about women and their music. Next, miss something.
There's a podcast, Get it on demand wherever podcasts are
found The Jesse Kelly Show. It is The Jesse Kelly
Show on a Thursday. In case you're wondering why I'm
going to be gone tomorrow. It's more book stuff, but

(26:59):
it's not a book tour thing. It's a long story.
There's nothing I could do about it, but I will
be back on Monday. That's why we're doing ass Doctor
Jesse Thursday. Now, I say that, and I know that
a day without me is like a day without water.
Really or no, that's not even drastic enough. It's like
a day without air. Can you survive? Probably not? But

(27:23):
for those of you who are still here, I will
be back on Monday. All right, There's nothing I can
do about that. Chris, are you gonna be able to
survive without me tomorrow? What are you even gonna do
with your life? You think you'll be fine? I don't know.
I don't think you will. I guess we'll find out.
Jesse historical Oracle and showed show Dog Showgun I've been

(27:45):
Oh by the way, that reminds me. We pull into
the book tour stop in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania last night on
My Life. On My Life, there's a restaurant that shares
the parking lot with the bookstore place called Showgun. Dying,
I was absolutely dying. I should have went in and
saw if they saw if they sold t shirts Historical
Oracle and show Dog Showgun. I've been seeing an amazing

(28:09):
dime for a couple of years. She cooks like an angel,
keeps a clean house, ran her own commercial fishing boat
in Alaska for a decade, knows how to process fish
and meat in delicious locks and jerky and sausage, and
keeps a garden. This woman sounds awesome. She lights up
her room when she walks in. Everyone loves her. She
listens to the worst music. She's a bit older than twenty,

(28:33):
but listens to what those clueless airheads like. Why do
dimes listen to terrible music? His name is Larry, her
name is Raya. All right, Larry, let's talk about Raya.
And if I can make Raya feel better because she's
probably listening Raya. I needed to hear me. I needed

(28:54):
to get just lean in, Raya. It's just you and
I talking. Ray Are you ready? It's not your fault?
All right, It's not your fault that your taste in
music is garbage. It's not this is a woman thing.
My wife is the same way, exact same way. My

(29:15):
playlist classic rock, I've even got. I've got classical music.
I've got everything from fifties to eighties to the Metallica
to Irish drinking songs, you name it, I've got it
on there. Her playlist it's teeny bop or crap and

(29:35):
Ed Sheeran, and it's really really bad. And there is
a reason for this, there is. I like music. You
might even say I love music, but I listen to
music to match and improve my mood. Right, So that's

(29:57):
I use music. If I've had a if I've had
a great day at work. Let's say we sat down,
we did the show and it just felt good, and
me and Chris we just know would meet Chris and Michael.
We know we killed it. We had a great show.
People enjoyed it. We had a blast. I will sometimes
just be in the best mood on the way home, saying, yeah,
that was a good show. That made people's day better.

(30:19):
That was a good show. I'll turn on some jams
on the way home, some pepped up rock jams. Absolutely, baby,
let's start it. I can't get to smile off my face.
Women though, women, at least my wife, she feels music.

(30:39):
I love music, it's much deeper than that for her.
She feels music, and honestly it makes her much more
in tune with things. But she will do things like
and I know this is common because I hear this
from other women. If she's sad, she will listen to

(30:59):
sad muses. I know, right, Chris, your wife too, same thing. Yeah,
see Chris's wife too. And I'll try to challenge her
on it, and I'll say, why are you doing that?
You're sad, shouldn't you listen to something that brings you up?
You know that there would never be an occasion, ever,

(31:20):
under any circumstances where I would turn on a sad song.
I listened to music to make me feel better or
improve my mood. But she will listen to a sad
song and just have a good cry. Not that she's
a big crier, and it's because music is deeper for her.
They feel it, and there's nothing wrong with that. But

(31:43):
there is something to discuss, ladies. It's just look, just
you and me talking. It's just rude, just rude, Jesse.
I'm just telling you, feelings are stupid. Do you understand that,
you know what? That may have been too harsh. It's
not that feelings are stupid. It's that when you make
decisions with your feelings, they're almost always bad decisions. And

(32:06):
that's why women's music is wretched, beyond awful, because they
choose the kind of music to listen to based on
their feelings. Almost all decisions should be made coldly cold,
no emotion, just cold, calculating, no emotion whatsoever, whether you're

(32:27):
doing your books or listening to music, and that that's
the situation ladies are in. They feel it. It's deeper
for them. They can't help it, though that doesn't do
any good. I don't know that I've ever known a
woman that had good tasted music ever. Jesse at Jesse
kellyshow dot com that segment will be wildly popular with
the ladies. Chris, I would gear up the old email machine, buddy,

(32:50):
because they're going to be hammering the keyboard. Dear, very tall,
world famous author. I'm listening to you right now on
how we can fix this country. Any thoughts on the
foreign money influence the Sorows family into our state ag races?
How can we stop that? I love your show and

(33:11):
your book, and her name is Kim, and Kim is
probably no longer listening to the show based off the
wildly insulting segment I just did on women and their
choices in music. But assuming Kim and everyone else is
still listening, Okay, how do we do this? Why do
we get this foreign money influence out? How do we
get you know, the forget foreign money? How do we

(33:33):
get Soros money out? And the fact that the question
even has to be asked, not that it's a bad question,
it's a very very good question, but the fact that
the question even has to be asked is a little
bit I don't want to say disheartening, that's a little
too heavy. It's very reflective of why we are where

(33:55):
we are, of how we got ourselves into such a
pickle as a country, how do we get to how
do we get to this place? With this question as
an amazing example of it, and we will dig into
that and sorrows, money and foreign influence next
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Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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