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May 31, 2023 37 mins

Jesse Kelly is a nationally syndicated radio host, TV host, and now author of "The Anti-Communist Manifesto." Jesse joins Tudor to discuss the ongoing issues in society including - America's relationship with China, your kids and the transgender movement, Big Business' embrace of a Woke ideology, & much more.  The Tudor Dixon Podcast is part of the Clay Travis & Buck Sexton Podcast Network - new episodes debut every Monday, Wednesday, & Friday. For more information visit TudorDixonPodcast.com

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to the Tutor Dixon Podcast in the Clay
and Book Podcast Network.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Welcome to the Tutor Dixon Podcast. I'm Tutor Dixon, and
I'm so glad you're joining me for this episode. My
guest today is someone you may know. He's a guy
who's well known for his humility. I was honored to
once work with him and be in his presence, and
I'm just thrilled that he agreed to take the time
out of his busy schedule to join me today. Welcome

(00:29):
Jesse Kelly. He's the host of a nationally syndicated radio show.
It's also his name, of course, because what else would
it be? The Jesse Kelly Show. And then you have
a television show too, which I love because it's just
I'm right, because of that humility.

Speaker 1 (00:46):
Well, I'm honored on your behalf today, Tutor, that I
get to come be here with you. I know what
an honor it is for you to sit down with
your hero once again, and so it's my pleasure to
do that for you.

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Really, that's right, that's right, I mean, I do. I
think I did call you my idol at one point,
which I don't regret it.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
Well, that's that's certainly nothing that I would take and
use to my advantage. And lord that over your head.
I'm not that kind of person.

Speaker 2 (01:12):
You know, an right, No, I know, no, very humble
and so humble that I loved your little dedication in
your new book. I'm excited because you have a new
book out. It is it's going on sale next week.
But I actually I am like, really blessed to have
gotten a copy early. It's the Anti Communist Manifesto. And

(01:35):
at the end, you think yourself, yeah, well, I.

Speaker 1 (01:38):
Not only thanked myself at the end, at the very beginning,
I dedicated it to myself. And then the reviews on
the back. You know how they always have reviews from
other the other authors. Wow, this is the best. I
wrote all the reviews myself as well. So this is
a book that really it's about me now. It's look,
they wanted me to write a book for a long time.

(02:00):
I hate writing. I don't consider myself a writer. I
know people enjoy what I write, which I find weird
because I really hate writing. But I really hate communism
and it's all over the place in America. So I
thought I would write the book on the ties between
communism and all the stuff you see today, all the
climate change stuff and the LGBTQ stuff. It all ties directly,

(02:21):
but it's all just communism in the end. So I
wrote a book about it.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
There are some things in the book that I actually
had not really deeply thought about, and I don't like
admitting that you've deeply thought about something more than me.
But I did find this stuff interesting, so I wanted
to bring it up because one of the things that
you said in there is stop sending money to your
alma mater, and that was something that I think. You know,

(02:46):
we went to college at a time. I went to
college at a time when college was not like this.
I don't remember having any of this stuff go on.
I wasn't told to think a certain way. I just
went to class, and in my mind, because it was
like that when I went there, it's probably still like that.
And I know it's not that. I mean, I have

(03:06):
friends that are younger that have graduated from the University
of Kentucky, and now they have much more liberal views
than I had coming out of the university. So it's
interesting because I really hadn't thought about it that way.
But you're pretty serious about that well, this is.

Speaker 1 (03:24):
Part of the challenge we faced Tutor for everybody. I'm
going through this the same way everyone else is facing.
That we live in an entirely different place now than
the one we have lived in before. Look. I brought
up the alma mater stuff because we went through it
at my house. My wife went to the University of Arizona.
She was a gymnast there and we were I mean,

(03:44):
not a bunch, but we were sending money. She always
thought that was important to continue to support the university
and support the athletic program and things like that, because
there's that real, you know, kinship there with your university.
It's your alma monor. You still have the T shirts,
you chair for the team on Saturday. It's a normal
American thing to do. But we started noticing all the
Black Lives Matter stuff coming out of University of Arizona,

(04:07):
all this endless filth, and we eventually realized, we're funding this.
This is our money they're using to fund all the
things we're supposedly against. And that's one of the things
that's hard to wake people up and realize how much
of your money is being used to fund the things
you hate. It's not just that there are things you
hate everywhere. Your money is being used for it at

(04:28):
your university with the products you buy, not to mention
the things your own government is doing. And it's something
we have to be a lot more diligent about not
funding the people who hate us.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
And I think it's something that we're torn. It tears
us up because when you think about your university, I
mean even when I think about Michigan State. This happened recently.
I had one of my friends say I was going
to give something to Michigan State, and I decided not
to because of some of these woke ideologies that they're
pushing at the university. But on the flip side of that,

(04:58):
they're doing great agricultures search. They're doing a great job
of bringing up new people to farm, and I think,
how do we not lose that and still lose the other.
But I do agree with you that if you cut
them off, eventually they have to say, Okay, we're going
to stop. We need our support. We need that support
from our graduates and the people that have been successful

(05:21):
from the university. So I believe that that is the answer.
It's just going to be interesting to see, because I
mean I've even been saying, don't send your kids to
these universities. Send your kids to values based schools, or
put them into trades. I mean, there are other options,
and it feels like there's not because I think people think, well,
you have to have a degree from one of these

(05:42):
big universities, so people know that they know the name
the minute you say it. But it really you don't.
You don't need that.

Speaker 1 (05:49):
Yeah, and it's an older way, and I'm not saying
that insultingly. It's an older way of thinking that we
have to get rid of. We do because that's how
I grew up too, to to say, same way you
did it, or got to go to college. What you
got to go to college. You got to go to college,
you get a good job. Why do we still think
like this? Why do we still think we have to

(06:10):
send our children to communist training camps. I dedicate a chapter,
as you know, in the Anti Communist Manifesto to talking
about universities. And when I lay out in there what
they're teaching at these universities and the difference the disparity
between the communists on these campuses and normal people, it
is staggering it's like taking your child and throwing them

(06:30):
in the gorilla enclosure in the zoo. And yet we
have this old way of thinking that, well, that's what
you gotta do to get a good job. That's not
true at all. That's not true at all. It's really
dangerous to throw your kid into that environment.

Speaker 2 (06:42):
I would argue we have been just in the past
few years, I think a lot of parents have said, oh,
I don't really like the K through twelve environment. We've
had some really weird things happening in K through twelve,
which I would argue started when we were kids and
we didn't really notice. It was slow moving, this push
to get some of this radical stuff into communist stuff

(07:03):
into K through twelve. But when we spoke to a
woman who had actually left communist China, she said, it's
the young people that China went after, and they would
turn their parents in over wrong think. I mean, this
was like their motive was to get it to the
young people, not the old people. They're stuck in their ways.
Get it to the young people. So why do we
have parents who are so focused on K through twelve.

(07:26):
They're home schooling, they're going through the private school, they're
spending money to send their kids to school, get them
out of public schools, running for school board, and then
they send them to a university that is going to
be the place where they're actually going to change. Because
I would argue that K through twelve, your kids are
still at home with you, you still have a major influence
over their life. All of that changes the minute they

(07:47):
go to university.

Speaker 1 (07:49):
Oh it does. And I'll tell you this, while we
have to wake people up, I don't know you do
this all the time. I do the best I can
to do this all the time, wake people up. I
do sympathize and that it's like we all woke up
one day and the world is totally different. And just
because everyone isn't caught up to that reality doesn't make
them a bad person, just makes them a little bit naive.

(08:11):
I mean, you have to now look up movies before
you take your child to the newest movie to make
sure there's not going to be a couple of lesbians
making out right at the beginning. That's something that you
have to do. Now. You can't leave the TV on
if you're watching the game and leave the room because
you'll come back and God only knows what your child
will have seen during the commercial break where everything is political.

(08:34):
Now you can't do anything without having this stuff blasted
into your face. That's a sea change. It was not
like that. I'm only forty one. I realized that's not young.
But it was not like this. When I was a child.
You could turn on TV, or you can turn on
ABC on Friday night, and it was family television. It's
family matters, it's full house, it's normal stuff, and the
commercials would be cheesy Coca Cola commercials and a bud

(08:57):
Light ad with actual chicks who are hot. But now
those days are gone.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
No I know. I think about the shows that we're
on and I can't think of an equivalent to like
a family ties or a growing Pains. I can't think
of what that would be. And it's just everything's changed
because the family doesn't sit down to watch shows together anymore,
because everything's streaming and every kid is in their room alone.
And it just happened quickly. And I think because it's
so much different than our childhood, it's really our generation

(09:25):
of parents are in a very unique position where you
have to push to bring the family together. Whereas I
think our families were a little bit, it was a
little bit easier. Everybody went to the family room. If
you're going to watch TV all together. There was no
device you could stream in your room, and there was
no sneaking off. There was you know, your parents could
pick up the other phone and tell you to get

(09:46):
off if they wanted you to get off. And we
have to be really mindful of what kids are doing today.
And I think that a lot of parents are still
figuring that out. I mean, in case certain cases, I'm
still figuring that out, and we have conversations about it
at our house all the time. But they don't know
how I grew up and I didn't grow up the
way they grew up. And so there's this weird disconnect

(10:08):
with families with parents and kids right now, and it's strange.
It's a big learning curve.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
It is a learning curve. And look, I'm learning too.
I'm sure I'm screwing my kids up. But yeah, we
have to do the same thing. We have to make
everybody put their devices down and make them talk. Is
something that our parents didn't have to be purposeful about.
But I have to teach my kids. At least I
tend to make a priority on teaching them how to
have a conversation. Now you were you learned that when

(10:35):
we were growing up because we were more social because
people were just around other people more. But you need
to sit down and you need to ask people about
their day, and that's them questions and things like that.
These are like basics that parents aren't equipped to teach
their children because parents weren't tak We just learned it
through life, and now they're not learning this stuff through life.
It's a very there's different society.

Speaker 2 (10:55):
There's been a difference that I've seen in households of
boys and households of girls. So you are an all
boy household. I am an all girl household, so you
probably don't have so much of this going on. But
I've talked about this before on the podcast. So my
girls are still, of course chatty, so they want to
be social full the time. They're on the somewhat like me.

(11:17):
They're on the phone all the time, but the phone
is different now because it's FaceTime and they're so other
people are broadcast into my house and they'll just walk
they'll just walk by you. They don't care if you're
in the bathroom. I'm like, do not broadcast me into
other people's homes. I love that you want to talk
to your friends, and it's great that you can see them,
but I don't need them to see me.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
Yeah, this is something that we've had to learn with
our sons too, not as much with the phones. They
don't like the FaceTime. Boys don't like to talk on
the phones. They don't have as much to say as women.
But the boys will play these video games. Now we
monitor how much we let them play, but they'll play
video games now. Well, when I was a kid, if
we played video games, you would get in the same
room with your boys and you know, beat your buddy

(11:59):
up and play and Madden or something like that. It
was a social thing, you and your buddies to get
together and have some kind of tournaments. It's raining out.
Now they put on their headphones and they're playing with
their friends online. In this online connected world. We'll all
barge in and tell them, hey, you got to go
clean up dog poop. Why I just told all their
friends that too, exactly.

Speaker 2 (12:21):
I know. It's very awkward. We're learning. I think that
that's one of the coolest parts about being able to
communicate though this way, is that because we're all learning together,
we as parents can kind of come to this space
and be a little vulnerable and be like, did you
anticipate that happening? No, I had no idea that was
going to happen. So it's a safe space to talk
about that, which is good. Let's take a quick commercial break.

(12:43):
We'll continue next on a Tutor Dixon podcast. I want
to get back to your book because there's a lot
in this book that is very important for people to understand,
and something that we've been fighting here in Michigan is
the support for Chinese companies, and you talk about it
from this perspective of universities and companies, because I think

(13:07):
that's something people don't really understand is that some of
our universities have ties with China too, which is incredibly dangerous.

Speaker 1 (13:14):
Deep ties with China. And in fact, we have these
Confucius Institutes at universities around the nation which are open.
It's wide out in the open Chinese propaganda that they're
there to condition American students to be pro China. That's
what they're there for, to be pro communists China. It's

(13:35):
really really ugly, and the funding that goes back and
forth between the Chinese and Chinese companies and America American universities.
It's really really dark China. Is this something disheartening that
I learned years ago. I was talking to one of
these Intel guys. You know what we're known as in
China with the Chinese Communist Party, Americans are known as

(13:56):
being cheap, easy to bribe. I'm not talking about you
or you or people watching. I'm talking about our elected officials,
our university professors, our CEOs. You see this all over
the place with sports like the NBA, how they cater
to China. It just doesn't take much to buy off
to bribe an American to screw over his own country

(14:19):
on behalf of China. I've thought that was really sad
and disheartening, but something to keep in mind. Every time
you look at these these companies and corporations, these universities,
every time they seem to sell us down the river,
it's because there's no patriotism inside of them at all.
So of course you take some Chinese money. Why wouldn't
you if you don't love America, of course you would.
And there's a lot of that going on.

Speaker 2 (14:41):
But China has had a huge influence in our country
with that. So I think about the difference. I mean,
if we take TikTok for example, if you look at
the difference between TikTok and China, where it is all learned.
You know, learn your skill, learn it well, and respect
your country. Be thankful you're here. This is you know
you You are very lucky to be a Chinese person

(15:03):
in the United States. They are just filling kids' brains
with the United States.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
Is bad.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
You should be ashamed of yourself. You should change your gender.
You shouldn't you shouldn't try to learn anything. You should
do you should all become influencers. I mean, it really is.
China has created this and they are taking advantage of it,
and we have not been fighting back.

Speaker 1 (15:25):
But it's brilliant, honestly what they did too. And that's sad.
I hate to give my enemy credit, but it is brilliant.
They have a very Chinese, a very Eastern way of
viewing warfare, and this is part of the problem. China
is very open about their plans to usurp the United
States of America. They have a date twenty fifty, they
have a date in time. They want to knock us

(15:46):
off of number one in the world. China is at
war with us, and we don't act like we're at
war with them. And part of that Eastern way to
view warfare is information warfare conditioning a society. On top
of everything else, you mentioned that they push into our
young people's minds on TikTok, which is truly a poisonous app.
They tell young people to be fat. That's all over

(16:08):
the place. You have these hugely obese people telling everyone
how healthy it is and how happy I am. That's
part of what they do. China even produces the fen
and know the drug cartels traffic into the country that's
killing one hundred thousand Americans a year. The people talk about,
you know, jokingly, China is going to invade China. What
if China invades. China is never going to invade and

(16:30):
doesn't have to. They're breaking this country apart from the inside.
Why would you risk a single soldier when TikTok and
McDonald's are doing it for you.

Speaker 2 (16:38):
But eventually they will have the opportunity to just take over.
They're buying up farms, they're buying up land, They're putting
companies in I mean in Michigan, we have this company
coming in too. Actually we have cattle that is supposedly
connected to Ford, which Governor Youngkin said, absolutely, no way,
I don't want this in Virginia. It should not be
in the United States. Jobs should not be better looking

(17:00):
the national security. And yet Gretchen Whitmer said, come on in,
bring them to Michigan. We have another one that is
coming to Michigan in the center of the state, not
near any manufacturing whatsoever, supposedly making electric vehicle batteries. These
are two companies with strong ties to the Chinese Communist Party.
We don't know. I mean, you talked about politicians being

(17:20):
able to be bought. We know that obviously Joe Biden
is getting money from all different adversaries and has been
for years, and obviously has very nice homes and his
children are very well supported. I mean, this could potentially
be the situation in Michigan as well. What do you
do when you have a politician who is inviting these
even when the community is just outraged. The community is

(17:44):
just beside themselves out there and they're protesting this. But
we're giving the one of the corporations about two billion.
The other one we'll get seven hundred and fifteen million
of our taxpayer dollars to come and take our land.

Speaker 1 (17:57):
Well, of course that's what happens. I talk about this
a lot, that all of our leaders, now, all of
our cultural leaders, And this certainly applies to some hag
like Gretchen Whitmer, even though she's kind of hot. This
applies to them that they all share the same three characteristics,
and they do. This is not just our politicians. This
is our business leaders. Our cultural leaders are entertainers. The

(18:19):
cultural leaders in this country now, they all share the
same three characteristics. One, there's no love of country. Many
of them hate the country, but most of them are
honestly just indifferent about it. So when the people you
know watching this, when they put their hand over their heart,
they seen the national anthem and you get a little
misty as you look at the flag, those feelings don't
stir inside of the people who lead this country, So

(18:40):
that kills it. You're never mindful of America. They have
no connection to how normal people live. They've never worked
an hourly job, they've never needed time and a half
to make the bills move. They've so they don't know
how normal people live. In three, they view themselves as
kings and queens, not servants, not governors, not presidents, not CEOs,
not singers. They believe they are kings and queens and

(19:02):
they're meant to rule over us. And they have such
disdain for every part of us, our freedoms, our freedom
of speech, and freedom of guns and freedom whatever you drive.
It just that they have such disdain for that. The
kings and queens wish that they could decide all these
things for us. It's a bad place to be as
a country, for sure.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
When they want to control, they want to control through dbanking,
they want to control what businesses do. They also want
to control what citizens do. And you talk a lot
about common sense gun law and that there is no
such thing as common sense gun law. This is something
again in Michigan. We're passing gun laws that are supposed
to stop all these terrible things from happening. None of

(19:42):
them would have stopped anything that we've seen in Michigan.
I mean, we saw the shooting at the high school
at Oxford. These laws that they're passing would have nothing
to do. They would have done nothing in that case.
The same with the Michigan State shooting. We are ignoring
the fact that Lancing is the seventeenth most violent city
in the entire Higher country. This man wandered on to campus,

(20:02):
but these types of shootings are happening a few blocks
away all the time because you're in the seventeenth most
violent city. Because we have prosecutors that don't want to
put people in jail for crimes. There should be no
consequences for the bad things that you're doing, but then
they're suddenly going to put gun laws in that they
will hold up those gun laws when it comes to

(20:23):
the person who will never do anything, but the people
who actually should be prosecuted for crimes, they won't take
them to jail. What the heck.

Speaker 1 (20:31):
Well, this is another thing we have a hard time
accepting on the right because we have a value system.
Well you have a value system, as you know, Tutor,
I do not, But most people watching this have a
value system. And because we have values, we project those
values onto other people. We think that we share the
same basic values as human beings. But we have no

(20:54):
shared values with the communists at all. And this is
why the right loses on the issues of guns, on
issues like guns and many other issues all the time,
because they project their values onto them in the wake
of a horrible shooting, any kind of school shooting, something
like that. You your heart's broken, right, even me, I
don't even have a heart, And I'm thinking about the
kids and the parents and the moms and the brothers

(21:16):
and the sisters, and how sadness is and oh man,
they must have been so scared, and immediately your heart
is broken. You think the communists shares that value with you.
But what people do not understand is the American Left,
the American communists, it's not just that they don't care.
They're happy they want these things to occur. That when
these things occur, because they're anti humans, they don't care

(21:38):
about other people. They understand these things are just an
opportunity to gain more money, to gain more power, to
strip their political opponents of weapons so that they will
one day be able to hurt you the way they
desire to hurt you. I need to remind people of
something when it comes to common sense gun laws. You know,
these people do want to hurt you, right, they really do.
They want the freedom to hurt you. You remember the

(22:00):
poll that came out where they surveyed Democrats during COVID,
and the things democrats were saying these are just normal.
Democrats were saying should be done to people who weren't
vaccinated or didn't vaccinate their children overwhelming majorities to imprison people,
send them to quarantine camps, take your child away from you.
But we don't think like that. We want to think

(22:22):
it's just a friendly neighborhood Democrat. No, that's a communist
who would hurt you without a moment of hesitation if
you could, so your common sense been logic, can walk all.

Speaker 2 (22:31):
Those people over. I mean, that's the thing I don't
get because how has there been so much power? And
I do believe that Republicans have done this wrong for
the past several elections, and I think we had an
anomaly in twenty sixteen and everybody thought we could win
elections through you know, big concerts and showmanship. But that's

(22:52):
not true. They are getting to the people who typically
do not watch the news. They don't see, well, there
could be side effects from this vaccine. They're not actually
hearing that because it's been shut down. There's control over
social media. And then the Democrats get this message out
on the ground. They go to these people and they
say this person is threatening your life and your child's

(23:15):
life by being irresponsible and it's meaningful to them. How
do you combat that, Well, we need to do the same.

Speaker 1 (23:22):
That's why I call them communists, and that's why I
say we need more guns, not fewer. And this is
why you're right well about what they do, tutor. Mindset
is important. Your mindset leads to performance in all things,
whatever you do, your family, your work, whatever you do.
If I come into work and I have a mindset
that I'm going to work for ten minutes today and

(23:42):
I'm just going to kind of load for ten minutes,
and then I'm going to go home, and then I
show up at work and I've got three hours worth
of work to do, I'm not going to perform well
because my mindset was in a bad place. Now, Democrats,
when they talk to their voters, when they go speak
to people, what do they say about everyone on the right,
every single Democrat. This applies to professors, entertain there's politicians,
all of them, every entity on the left. What do

(24:03):
they say, Look at that Nazi white supremacist who wants
to kill you. Look at the Nazi white supremacist who
wants to end democracy. Look at the Nazi white supremacist terrorists.
What's that doing. That's putting their people in the right mindset.
Their people have developed the mindset that they're in a
flesh and blood war for the future of this country
against Nazis. And what does the right say every time

(24:24):
our merely mouth low TGOPI, well, we just kind of
have a difference of opinion. But I think we can
come together. We should come together with you, let's compromise
with these guys. We put our people in this mindset
that we're just in a game of cribbage with the
friendly neighborhood democrat, and their people are prepping for battle.
That's why they win cultural wars and we do not.

(24:45):
We don't speak boldly.

Speaker 2 (24:47):
So you say embrace cancel culture. That's something that they've
put out there. You say, get rid of political correctness,
just full on go after this. And we've seen cancel
culture in our way. I guess I would say with
bud light, with what we're seeing with Target right now.
And I had somebody over the weekend say to me,
women are never going to stop shopping at Target, and

(25:08):
I would say I would I would say that men
have been much better at this based on Bud Light,
because I mean, bud Light has truly tanked. But when
do when do women start standing up? Because obviously it's
easy to go shop at Target, it's easy to ignore
men in women's sports. It's easy to just sit back

(25:28):
and go I don't want to get involved. But if
women don't get involved, where are we?

Speaker 1 (25:33):
Well, they have to get involved. I think they're starting
to get involved, Tutor. This is going to be, honestly
the issue. This will be a source of frustration for you, me,
everyone watching us right now. You're of the hyper informed.
You understand what the cultural war issues. You understand what's
going on. You're that one percent tip of the sphere
cultural warrior. The rest of society is always going to

(25:56):
lag way behind you, and it's going to be very
frustrating to constantly look back and try to drag them
along and catch them up. Oh, women will come around.
They're coming around. Men are starting to come around. It's
not like men have been great at this either. Are
they going to do it enough in time? Probably not.
I mean the truth is, if women you hear all

(26:17):
this talk about women's sports, if women genuinely want to
protect women's sports, we will start seeing mass boycotts. Everyone
was complaining when that dude was helicoptering across the pool
for pen this year, not one single boycott, not one
event where the women wouldn't go into the pool. And
you can say, well, they were scared, they were scared
of cancel culture. And I understand all that. I get that,

(26:40):
But okay, then don't complain about women's sports. That's all.
It's all there. It's do it unless you stop them.
They're not going to stop. So you can be scared
or you can fight back. You can't do both.

Speaker 2 (26:49):
These people. On the other side, the propaganda is strong,
they certainly have. Everywhere you look, there is something saying
you have to be careful, you have to to treat
these folks with kid gloves. They should be able to
be doing the same things you are. There is no
reality in the fact that, of course men are going
to beat women. Of course, there is a reason we

(27:10):
have men and women's sports as it is. And you're
never gonna tell me, well, this guy identifies as a girl,
so he's gonna swim like a girl. He identifies as
a girl, so he's gonna run like a girl. He's
gonna bike like a girl. That's it's just not true.
And I think that we do as women. Our nature
is not combative in general, and our nature, I mean,

(27:31):
unless you're talking to women on women. You know, women
can be very nasty to women. But we don't want
to be out there competing with men like this. It's
not comfortable. It's an uncomfortable position. And I think that
in your book, you're making it pretty clear that we're
gonna have to be uncomfortable for a while.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
We do, we do, and I really do feel bad
about that. And I look at my kids, tutor, and
I feel bad about that, and I've talked to them
about it. They're great about this, but they understand that
they're going to grow up in country where everything is
going to be a battle. Everything is going to be political.
That's the way it is. They already see it all
around them now. And for kids and adults, that sucks.

(28:11):
Every freaking thing has to be a struggle. I really,
I can't just go shop at Target. I can't. I
can't drink the bud light, I can't. I can't do
these things. Why can't I just be left alone? But
you can't be left alone. You're dealing with communists who
are trying to burn it all to the ground. It's
the bottom line. These people are religious. They are religious
zelots trying to burn it all down. The option to

(28:32):
just be left alone is not there. They're not going
to let you do that at all. That's simply won't happen.

Speaker 2 (28:37):
Let's take a quick commercial break. We'll continue next on
a Tutor Dixon podcast. I think the Target situation has
been so shocking because here the CEO comes out and says,
we think this is great, this is for families. In fact,
we've been supporting Glisten for more than ten years and
we've put more than two million dollars in this organization.

(29:00):
This organization that was a partnership with the Obama administration
that changed the Title nine rules, that put boys in
your daughter's locker room, that was promoting boys in girls sports,
that is now pushing books like Gender Queer into the classroom.
And this is when we spend money at Target. They're
spending money on this. For a lot of moms were going, oh,

(29:23):
that stinks, I can't really go there anymore.

Speaker 1 (29:27):
Yeah, I actually think that the trans stuff for kids.
I think that this may maybe I'm just wishful thinking here.
I think it may be creating a cultural shift for
the first time really in my lifetime back towards the right.
The Communist is very good at many many things because
he's a religious zealot and he has no moral foundation,

(29:47):
so you can accomplish a lot when you do that,
but he's never been very good at controlling himself. For instance,
most people never really cared about the gay stuff very much,
mainly because it was you were doing you do, is
do what you do, and people didn't care that much.
And they really didn't actually care about the trans stuff
that much. It was weird and Okay, he's kind of

(30:09):
a weird freak, and I don't want to be around him.
I'm not going to stress about it. And they didn't
care about that. But the Communists couldn't control himself, and
he had to go after the kids because, as you
pointed out in the beginning, the Communist has always known,
whether it's the Soviet Union or America today, the children
are where it's at. That's where you recruit the next
generation of foot soldiers. The Communists couldn't help himself. He
couldn't help himself. He looked at all these kids. But

(30:31):
we have all these piece of trash, white liberal woman
teachers who are the most evil, vile scum on the planet,
and they view your children as belonging to them, and
they just couldn't stop themselves. They had to tell your
kindergartener to chop his penis off, and that was That's
one of those things that's waking up normal Americans. When
dad wakes up one day and walks into Target and

(30:51):
sees their pushing chest binders on his thirteen year old daughter, Well,
normal dad is going to wake up. It's I think
this trans movement in a weird way, might save americ But.

Speaker 2 (31:01):
I think that the thing we have to remember here
is that when we talk about the gay community, that
was always an adult community. And you're right, we always said,
you know what, Okay, that's what you want to do
with your life. This is America. And even the trans
community had always been an adult community. The thing that
I think that we have not been great at communicating

(31:23):
is hands off my kids, hands off all kids, because
this idea of chopping body parts off, I mean, I
think we weren't ready for that either, because we couldn't
imagine that moving so quickly.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
Well, we've forever The biggest mistake the right has made.
We talked about mindset earlier. The right has always thought
democrats were bad. When democrats in this country, I'm not
talking to JFK now, are actually evil. You're dealing with
demonic forces, and people don't want to talk like that.
But if you consider somebody bad, someone's bad, well bad

(31:56):
may wake up one day and decide that's enough. Right, Okay,
so we got the l G and the B and
the t's and they you know what, guys, that's probably
far enough. I've had enough. But evil never wakes up
one day. Demons never wake up and say I think
we've gone too far. Hey, I think we should hold up.
I think we should stop here. Evil just keeps going
down and down and down without and the trans kid thing.

(32:18):
This isn't even the end. People are so freaked out
by it and they think, wow, we've lost our mind.
But then you explain to people, oh no, no, no, no, no,
it gets worse from here. It will be it will
be open pedophilia, it'll be yeah, it's it's there's They're
gonna keep adding letters. This this demon this demonic force
doesn't stop until good stops it.

Speaker 2 (32:39):
But again, we got much today gay community, because I
would think that the gay community would be one of
the communities that would say this is not who we are.

Speaker 1 (32:48):
Well, they're gonna have to choose a side, it's the
bottom line. They're gonna have to choose on the right
or the left, and many will remain silent in that fight,
and they're gonna end up getting gobbled up by a
bunch of anti gay laws that are going to come
along with all of this. Because right now what's happened
is the LGBTQ community. They're just another finger on the

(33:08):
communist fist. Remember it's all just communism. They're all working together.
It's all about power and destruction. But the LGBTQ community specifically,
they're there now to break up the American family because
communists cannot have strong family units, and they're there to
attack the main opponent of Democrats, the church, the American church.
That's why the FBI will use all this hate laws

(33:30):
and things like that to infiltrate, already infiltrating churches across
the United States of America. That's the reason the FBI
is going to send a SWAT team to your church's
door and arrest your pastor one day. And when you
say that people they think you're being over the top
or that's too far. I would argue, you've never read
a history book in your life. If you think that's
over the top or too far or can't happen, that's

(33:51):
where we're going.

Speaker 2 (33:52):
Well, this is how we got to this point, and
I think that's what people need to understand that most
of what is happening with these young people who are
young people went through a very dark time with COVID.
It was the perfect time to prey on them with
you don't know your identity, let's change your identity. And
that was done through these apps that are coming from China.
These are coming from the communists themselves, going into your

(34:15):
child's bedroom, sitting next to them while you're not there,
when you are not watching the family TV. Like we
talked about in the beginning of this podcast. That is
who's CosIng up next to your daughter or your son
and saying, I know what you like, just listen to me.
This will be good for you. You'll enjoy it.

Speaker 1 (34:30):
That's how they operate. They always again, we project our
values onto others. If I see a parent, a set
of parents out with their child, and the child's acting up,
are doing something I don't like. I may dislike it,
but I would never in a million years say anything.
It's not my child, it's not my problem, it's not
my business. But the communist doesn't think like that at all.

(34:52):
The communist sees your child and things I need that child.
I've got to break that child away from his parents.
That child belongs to me. Now, we're not dealing with
people who share our values, and until people understand that
will never win.

Speaker 2 (35:03):
I just think you have to think of that image
of your kid alone in their room, and it terrifies
me because I have a teenager who likes to sneak
away and go up and be by, be away from
the sisters, be away from us. And you just have
to think about that image of someone sitting cozying up
next to her. They may be on the phone, but
imagine somebody sitting next to your child and saying, I

(35:25):
know it's good for you. I know how to take
care of you. Your parent just like any groomer, Just
like any groomer says, your parents don't get it, but
I get it. I'll give this to you. I'll give
you something that you could never have. It's a dark
place we need, we need more. Jesse Kelly's out there
fighting for us. I really do. I love what you
do because you are definitely not politically correct. You just

(35:47):
say what you feel, and it really you say what
so many people are unwilling to say. So I thank
you for that. I thank you for coming on today,
and I want you to tell people the Anti Communist Manifesto.
Where can they get it when it comes out?

Speaker 1 (35:59):
You can go to Jesse kellybook dot com and get
the Anti Communist Manifesto. All the information is there to
get it ordered today. The information on the book tours there.
If you want to sign copy, there's a link for
a signed copy there. It's all at Jesse kellybook dot com.
You were the best tutor. I appreciate you well and I.

Speaker 2 (36:18):
Want I want the people listening to know. I mean
it is a fun read as it's very serious. I
think that's the best way to put it. It's very serious,
but it's light because it's fun to get through and
you're learning so much. And I really am impressed with
what you were able to put together here because you
are putting so many topics into one book. And you
can learn so much without feeling bogged down. It's easy

(36:41):
to read. It's it is. Like I said, it's fun
to get through, but it's very serious. So I recommend
it to anybody who's out there listening. Get the book,
read it, share it with your friends, and make sure
you keep fighting. So thank you for being on with
us today, Jesse, thank you to be good, and thank
you all for joining me on the Tutor de Ck
and podcasts. As always, for this episode and others, go

(37:02):
to tutordixonpodcast dot com. You can subscribe right there, or
go to the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you
get your podcasts and join us the next time on
the Tutor Dixon Podcast. Have an awesome day.

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