Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from Woor.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Jesse Kelly Show, another hour of The Jesse Kelly Show
and a magnificent Wednesday having a blast. We have a
bit of good news here, kind of in a way,
talk about something Marco Rubio said. OURFK Junior is even
making fun of the media now, which is hilarious. All
that emails so much more coming up on another hour
(00:25):
of The Jesse Kelly Show. First, let's begin here and
let me just get this out of the way first.
I know, I know that you're gonna say that's not
near enough. That's the exact same thing I'm saying, but
it's a start. The headline is this FBI reassigns agents
(00:49):
from iconic photo of them kneeling during the George Floyd protest. Now,
let's just recap what happened about George Floyd. I'm not
going to insult your intelligence. What you may have missed
or what you may maybe forgot is well, let's talk
about the FBI. It is very common, especially if you're older,
(01:15):
more my age and older. I would argue if someone
was to do a word association thing, some one of
those weird psychiatrist things, FBI agent, what is the first
image that pops into your head. I will tell you
the first image that pops into my head. Even with
my complete and utter disdain of the cheka member, I'm
the one who wants to eliminate the organization entirely. You say,
(01:38):
FBI agent, I picture a fit dude in sunglasses, wearing
one of those one of those blue FBI jackets with
the yellow FBI letters in the back. Some a cop.
You picture a cop. That's that's what you picture. Okay,
but eh, not so much, Chris. Grab that John Sullivan
(01:59):
audio from yesterday of that fruity dude who's running for
Congress as the former FBI guy. That's actually perfect. To
make my point here. If you look up the picture
FBI agents kneeling George Floyd, it's not just the kneeling
that will anger you. You look at this picture and
(02:22):
it's a bunch of cat ladies, some fat, some not,
but it's a bunch of communist tags. When you think
about the FBI, you probably get the wrong image in
your head of some crime fighter with the blue jacket
on their Truth is, the people who work at the
(02:42):
FBI now are the same people who work at Disney
pushing communism everywhere they go, nasty, bitter communist women clawing
their way up through the men by the way, clawing
their way up through positions of power, destroying every thing
they possibly can on behalf of the revolution. So when
(03:04):
I say things like the FBI Intelligence Division, do you
even know what they are? What they do? Most people don't.
Not really aware of it, nor do I expect you
to be. Don't feel dumb. Maybe maybe you think there's
some Jason Bourne types in there. Allow me to introduce
to you one who worked there for seventeen years and
(03:26):
he's now running for Congress. Who's working inside of the FBI.
And why how could they find agents who wanted to
infiltrate your church to label you a domestic terrorist? Well,
this is how.
Speaker 3 (03:41):
We're up against some serious threats right now, from skyrocketing
costs to Trump and billionaires corrupting our government. And I
can't just sit on the sidelines and watch because for
seventeen years I was an FBI intelligence analyst working in
secret to keep us safe from global threats, and the
insurrectionist stormed our capital. But now that the threat is
(04:02):
coming from inside the White House, I had to leave
the FBI and step forward so I can finally tell
you who I am. Hi, I'm John. No, I can
say that now, I'm John Sullivan. I'm a dad, a husband,
a public servant, and a cancer survivor.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
Yeah, I'm ready. That's just stup. That's stup. Remember when
I told you about Lynda Fagen, the communist who was
the head of the Coast Guard. And remember when we
had that talk that we think it's maybe just the
head of this department or that department, but there are
(04:38):
little fagins everywhere in the government. They're everywhere because the
Communists put them there on purpose. Thirty five thousand employees
at the FBI, how many do you think are fagins?
Just like John Sullivan is a lot. We have a
secret state police agency full of fagins who want to
(04:59):
destroy your life, and they'll believe their right to destroy
your life. How how could they come up with a
plan to infiltrate your church. That's an unbelievably evil, secret
state police thing to do. Well, you recruit enough Wagins,
you'll get people who want to destroy your church. That's
how it works. Now. That brings me to this, the
(05:23):
reassignment of the people in this picture. This is just
a start. It's not near enough. But what it does
show you is there is currently a focused effort inside
the FBI by Dan Bongino, buy cash, patail to root
(05:44):
out the problem. Now, I'm not absolutely not, this is me.
I'm not going to sit here and tell you they've
done enough, because they haven't, and they wouldn't tell you
that either. And I'm not going to tell you they're
going to succeed. I don't know that. I don't have
any idea, and I'm friends with Dan. I don't know.
I know Dan wants to succeed. I don't know whether
(06:07):
they can. I don't believe personally that they can. I
just laid it out for you again. I think I've
told you that before. I do not believe the secret
State Police Agency can be fixed in any way. I
think the only way to save the country is completely eliminated,
zero out its budget, fire every single employee top to bottom,
and demo the building to the ground. But it's something,
(06:30):
and it shows you, hopefully in a little way, that
someone's trying something. Isn't enough, of course, Look we still
have all these guys, the Steve friends, the garrett o'boyles,
all these we still have all these whistleblowers who need
to be brought back and made whole and paid and
like all kinds of like, I know, I know about
all the things that still need to happen. I do,
(06:51):
I know. But it's something. It's something. Watch an RFK
junior dunk on Anderson Cooper is something.
Speaker 4 (06:58):
Oh, you know, Anderson Cooper is gets some salary of
something like twenty million dollars a year, but probably seventy
five percent of that is coming indirectly through pharmaceutical companies.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
Oh, that's whose boss is.
Speaker 4 (07:13):
And that's why he's reporting to it. And that's why
during COVID you saw, you know, the all of these
news channels completely on board, shaming people who didn't go
along with the government orthodoxies and and drumming up fear
about COVID, you know, printing the deaths on the chirons
every day and the number of cases, et cetera. And
(07:34):
it was and fortifying an orthodoxy that just so happens
to create huge profits for their advertisers, the food companies
or the other great advertisers. So the serial brands, et cetera.
They have tremendous power over the media. And that's one
of the reasons I think that I get such blowback.
Speaker 2 (07:54):
He's not wrong. You know what's crazy about that applies
to a lot of media stations, a lot a lot
of the media. And beyond that, how many media organizations
in this country directly or indirectly get money from China
(08:15):
more than you can imagine, infiltraded, extremely infiltrated and paid off.
All right, let's do some emails. Hey, Jesse, just want
to say, simplify from a radio operator, second Battalion, third Marines,
how about that field radio operator? Heard your comments about
HR department. Oh, by the way, quick pause on that
(08:38):
these radio guys. That thing is freaking heavy. I'll tell
you that much. It's heavy. So when you see somebody
who carried a radio around the Marine Corps, give him
your respect. That thing is heavy. Anyway, I heard your
comments about HR departments, and that is one hundred percent
the truth. I reached out to our department for opportunities
for growth within my company, and all I got sent
(08:58):
is a page full of Dee lessons. It's a giant
company worldwide. I don't want to say the name the
HR department again. Want to warn you if you work
for a company. Maybe it's your company. If you have
an HR department. If you have one, it is almost
(09:21):
undoubtedly destroying your company and you don't know it because
it is almost undoubtedly the place where the Communists have
wormed their way into. I bet you money. I bet
you money. You have a bunch of communists, single women
who work in your HR department. They seek it out
like moths to a flame, because that's where they can
(09:42):
go and seize a chokehold of power and proceed to
use that chokehold to disseminate Communism throughout your company. Oh,
I'd love to give you that ten percent promotion. Sorry,
but I see you didn't finish your why white people
Are Evil seminar that I sent out last week. H
are human resources is the bane of your existence in
(10:05):
this country and you may not even realize it. I
bet she loves abortion too. They love abortion. That's why
I love preborn. I love to fight these people, and
the best way to fight these people is simply with
the truth. You don't have to yell and scream at anyone.
You don't have to arrest anybody, these mothers who want
(10:25):
to kill their babies. You just have to show them
that they're mothers. They don't know. They're surrounded by evil.
They're surrounded by pressure and lies. You better kill it,
you better get rid of it. There are women listening
right now who've had abortions, who know exactly what I'm
talking about. Nothing but pressure, nothing but lies. It's a
clump of seals. You never know it's gone, it's gonna.
(10:47):
But that young mother needs an ultrasound because when she
hears that heartbeat, she will choose life almost every time.
And Preborn does it. Preborn gives them free ultrasounds and
they do it with your help. Two hundred lives a day,
over sixty thousand lives saved last year by you, and
(11:08):
Preborn lives walking the planet because of what you did.
And it's tax deductible. You can give them as much
as you want. You can give them fifty grand. It's
tax deductible. Amazing. Save a life and write it off
on your taxes. Preborn dot com slash Jesse, preborn dot
com slash Jesse spotsor by preborn. I'll be back, what, Chris,
(11:30):
we can make jokes. It's fine, we get that right.
The Jesse, Kelly.
Speaker 1 (11:34):
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Speaker 2 (11:45):
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Speaker 2 (13:00):
Genesis of What is the Jesse Kelly Show on a
fantastic Wednesday. Remember you can email us Jesse at Jesse
kellyshow dot com. You can download the podcast. iHeart Spotify iTunes.
You know we haven't heard in forever.
Speaker 5 (13:19):
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Speaker 2 (13:48):
From a better time in America. Hey, Jesse, I lost
my dad in November. I found myself in need of
a laugh. In February, I was listening to your show
while drinking water. You were talking about that Eunick Lindsey Graham,
and then transitioned into an ad for rough greens. While
I was drinking, you said, I bet Lindsay Graham's dog
doesn't get nutrition except maybe from peanut butter. I forgot,
(14:13):
I said that as I started to laugh, half the
water went into my airway and the other half I
spewed into my lap. As I sat there laughing, coughing
and sputtering and with tears streaming down my face, I
couldn't help but wonder if this is what it was
like to be waterboarded. Anyway, Thanks for the laugh. I
needed it. We all need it from time to time. Man,
(14:34):
And I am sorry about your dad. I still think
about mine every day, Dear professor. I'm sure Dan Bongino
was hard at work fixing the cheka, but I figured
we would have seen an interviewer two. So, being such
good friends, what's up? Can you give us an update? Okay?
So I've had a couple of these emails before because
people know Dan and I are friends, and day one
(14:58):
and update, and I've had a bunch of people say, well,
why don't you have Dan on so he can you
can interview him and he can talk to us. Okay,
So I trust you, and I hope at this point
in time you trust me, even if sometimes you don't
like me or disagree with me. I hope you know
that I'm giving it to you. That's straight. You get it.
(15:19):
I sit in the car with you, I cook with you.
You know who I am. So this is me giving
it to you straight. And I'm just gonna lay this
out for you, okay. Dan Bongino is the Deputy Director
of the FBI. Dan Bongino is very, very aware of
all the problems. He hasn't forgotten. He spoke about those
problems on the radio his podcast a million times. Even
(15:43):
if you don't know Dan or don't like him, he did.
He talked about all the problems. And so Dan Bongino
has a lot of work to do. But the kind
of work Dan Bongino has to do, it's not the
kind of work that he can do or should do,
even publicly. The things Dan Bongino needs to do, it
(16:08):
doesn't help him to come to an interview on the show.
Dan would come on, I'm sure if I asked, I'm
not going to ask because you're not going to learn
anything new. You'll get to hear his voice. You get
to hear he and I laugh and joke a little bit,
maybe a little tidbit here or there, but publicly he
(16:29):
can't do what he has to do. It doesn't aid him,
you or me. I understand why you ask the question,
and I'm not faulting you at all to ask the question.
You want to know. You want to be told, Hey,
we are currently doing this, this, and this, and the
plan is after we do this, we're gonna go after this,
and once we're done with that, we're gonna do that,
(16:50):
and we're gonna clean out this, and in order to
clean out this, we're gonna do that. You want to know.
I want to know, but I don't ask because I
know that I can't be told and probably shouldn't be told.
Do I know some things, not necessarily from Dan, but
from other sources. I have, Yes, But I can't tell you.
(17:13):
I tell you everything I'm allowed to tell you. Okay,
every single thing. Neither of us know, Neither of us
are gonna the proof is simply going to be in
the pudding. There are things I would say you should
watch out for that'll be clues if we're look it
is what? What is the day today, it's April thirtieth,
April thirtieth, twenty twenty five. If it's April of twenty
(17:37):
twenty six, and we're not talking about real clean out
at the FBI arrests, two pending indictments, things like that.
If a year from now we're still just doing this.
Hey we reassigned this and we move this around, then
you'll know it can't be done. I can't tell you
(17:59):
that they're going to succeed, as I told you before,
I frankly don't think they will. And I hate to
say that about my friend, but I owe you honesty,
and I'll give it to you. I do not believe
the Secret State Police Agency will allow itself to be reformed.
It's too powerful, It has too much blackmail information on
critical people that are going to be needed to reform it.
(18:20):
It just they've always worked to protect themselves from reform,
as every secret's police agency. Does you ever seen that movie?
Hilarious movie and wonderful The Death of Stalin? You ever
seen that movie? And when Baria, the horrible, evil secret
police boss, when he finally gets busted, when they come
at him, what does he say, I've got files on you.
(18:43):
I've got files on you. I have files on all
of you. But don't think that was just a movie.
That's how secret police agencies operate. Anybody who may hurt them,
start a file, get some damaging information on them in
order to protect yourself. The FBI doesn't have damaging files.
Do you remember Ken Buck practically getting to second base
(19:05):
with the FBI when everyone else is trying to defund them?
Why do you think he did that and then promptly retired?
Why do you think he did that? Fie on him
is probably an inch thick. This is what it is.
I don't know that they will succeed. I know they
can't tell us everything every step of the way, no
matter how much you want, no matter how much I want.
All right, let's talk about Democrats. It's wonderful the Democrats
(19:28):
civil war. Before we talk about that, let me talk
to you about getting a brand new phone. I love
getting new phones. I only do it once every four
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The last time we looked at phones, there were thousand dollars.
That's what they were charging for phone. One thousand dollars
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I want to be clear, this is easy. They make
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We'll be back partie. More and more people were noticing,
more and more people are talking about it. I can't
take my eyes off of it. Here's a couple headlines.
CNN's Van Jones says Democrats have nothing other than outrage
against Trump and Musk. Let's let's focus on that for
(21:00):
a moment. Remember that conversation we had. It wasn't long ago.
Earlier in this show about how bitterness destruction it can
be all you see to where you don't necessarily you
don't follow anything to its logical conclusion. You just destroy.
(21:22):
So I get home and I'm angry, and I yell
at the dog, and I go to the kitchen and
I start grabbing the plates and I start throwing the
plates on the ground and shattering all the plates in
the kitchen. I'm so angry, I'm so bitter, I'm so
consumed by whatever has angered me, probably Chris, that I
go to the kitchen and I shatter all the plates.
(21:42):
In that moment, am I thinking, well what am I
going to eat off of when ob gets finished with dinner? No,
because I have gotten myself mentally in a place where
I want to break some plates, and it's a heavy
place to be, as heavy as ten boxes.
Speaker 1 (21:59):
That you might be more.
Speaker 2 (22:02):
Democrats in this country. As we discussed earlier, communists are
herd animals who are programmable. Programmable, they will love what
they are told to love. They will hate what they
are told to hate. They don't. It's not just that
they haven't thought through these things or follow them to
their logical conclusion. They don't want to. They don't want
(22:25):
to have to bother with that. Just tell me who
the enemy is, Tell me who I'm supposed to hate,
Tell me I'm supposed to love. Tell me what I'm
supposed to destroy. Okay, so I'm supposed to worship George Floyd,
and I definitely have to buy an electric car because
all the other cars are destroying the earth. All right,
I bought an electric car. Oh crap. Five minutes later
I found out it's a Tesla. I got said, better
(22:47):
key my own car, because now I'm told to hate
that car. You can't follow You can't follow it logically
because you think logically and they don't when it comes
to Donald Trump. Now think about this for a moment,
George Floyd. You remember that. It's a great example how
much the left got whipped into a frenzy over George Floyd.
(23:10):
George Floyd, is George Floyd, That George Floyd, statues, George Floyd, memorials,
George Floyd. George Floyd. Now that was over somebody they
had been introduced to overnight. Overnight, they were introduced to it,
they saw the video, and then boom, the system, through programming, programming,
programming turned that guy into a saint and your liberal
(23:32):
and Peggy talked about how much she loved him. Now
think about that and how quickly that happened for her.
Think about how much hate they have poured on Donald
Trump since twenty fifteen. Twenty fifteen, Donald Trump declares he's
going to run for president, and Chris dignes up. If
(23:54):
you don't mind, he gives that first speech. I still
remember it now, this is ten years ago, now a
decade of it. He gives a speech saying that Mexico
isn't sending their best, They're sending drugs and they're sending crime.
I'm paraphrasing, but that's what he said. Mexico isn't sending
their best, They're sending the drugs, they're sending crime. Now,
(24:16):
that wasn't groundbreaking even back then for normal people. That's
how you talk with your friends. People know that that
drugs and crime and bad things are coming across the border.
Everybody knows that. That's the basic. But what he did
was he violated an unspoken rule in politics. In Democrat politics,
(24:38):
you have to speak about illegals in only the most
loving terms at all times. But almost the same thing
on the Republican side. I mean, you can be against
illegal immigration, but at the same time you have to
finish that sentence with but we are a nation of immigrants,
and you have to do the same thing. Politicians never
never came out and said, well, they're setting rapists and
(25:02):
drugs and murderers across the border. That wasn't something that
was said. Trump says it. Immediately the system, as we've
talked about their commitment to mass importation of foreigners, Immediately
the system freaked out, freaked out. Oh here, he was, Yeah,
go ahead and go ahead, play Chris.
Speaker 7 (25:20):
When Mexico sends his people, they're not sending their best.
Speaker 2 (25:25):
They're not sending you. They're not sending you.
Speaker 7 (25:29):
They're sending people that have lots of problems, and they're
bringing those problems with us. They're bringing drugs, they're bringing crime,
they're rapists, and some I assume are good people.
Speaker 2 (25:45):
That's not a crazy way to talk, but it was
for a politician. And what happened is not only he
said it, but immediately overnight he was popular for saying it.
People forget now because we're ten years removed from it,
or maybe you're even too young to remember. Overnight, Trump
(26:07):
went from somebody who was known. Everyone knew who Donald
Trump was, TV show and billionaire guy. Everyone knew that
he went from that to being the most popular Republican
by a mile on that Republican ticket. Remember it was
this huge field, Rick Santorum, all these people. Overnight he
said those words, and the people loved it. The system
(26:28):
freaked and they've been freaking ever since. And for ten years,
your liberal aunt Peggy has been told over and over
and over again that Trump is the source of all
the problems, that Trump is a Nazi, and Trump's a racist,
and Trump is evil, and Trump is this, and Trump
is that, so much so that she does not even
(26:51):
live in anything close to the real world. Now, well,
Democrats do that very well, and of course motivates their
base and gets people to the polls. The problem is,
after too much time, after so much time, it's become
all they are. It's become who they are, and they're
(27:15):
not anything else. What Van Jones said is completely correct.
Normy's out there. What's the Democrat Party selling you? Oh?
I know, the Republican Party has problems and I could
point to all those two Maybe you're unhappy with this
or unhappy with that, or maybe you're mad about the tariffs.
I know, we could sit and debate all these Republican
(27:35):
priorities and spending and things like that. But what is
the Democrat Party selling you? Well, they don't have anything
to sell because they've based their entire worldview for ten
years on one man. That one man has given their
people focus, it's given their people motivation. But now they
(27:55):
find themselves as a party without anything to sell. Oh
there's something that they could sell, which, of course brings
us to Tim Walls. You see Tim Walls. He sat
in front of a group of people. He was speaking
at Harvard, and politicians do this sometimes when they get comfortable,
(28:18):
when they're in comfortable environments, they come out and they
say things that are a little too honest. This happens
to all of us. You see Republicans get burned by this.
When they're in a primary or they're having a town
hall room full of friendly people, they'll say something that
comes back to haunt them. Tim Walls came out, was
(28:38):
talking about his place on the Kamala Harris ticket and
why he was there.
Speaker 6 (28:42):
But I also was on the ticket quite honestly, you know,
because I could code talk to white guys watching football
fixing their truck doing that that I could put them
at ease. I was the permission structure to say, look,
you can do this and vote for this.
Speaker 2 (28:57):
Oh, I have so much to say. Did you know
that I, one time in my life, one time in
my life, pandered to a group of people. I still
feel disgusted by it. You want to hear that story
because we're going to talk about politicians and pandering and
(29:18):
what Tim Walls said. I'll tell you my little story
and then we'll talk about Tim Walls next. John Hennedy.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Wednesday.
You can send us an email Jesse at Jesse kellyshow
dot com. So before we get back to Tim Walls
(29:39):
and why his pandering is so bad and why it
doesn't land, well, let me tell you a little story
about my one off on political pandering. All right now,
I understand that pandering, it's part of politics. Republicans do it,
(30:00):
Democrats do. I get that. I get that politicians going
someplace they wouldn't normally go and pretending they want to
be there, wearing something they wouldn't normally wear, and pretending
like it's their normal thing. Because there's no ability like relatability.
People pander because it works. Now, I will tell you this.
(30:23):
You know, I ran for Congress twice. I had this thing.
And my thing when I was running for Congress was
because I was so young, I was in my twenties.
I wanted to look older and more mature, and I
believe that you should dress for the job you want,
(30:45):
and so I always wore either a suit or some
paired down version of a suit. You can go look
at old pictures of me running for Congress. I am
either in a suit and tie, or I have lost
the time, or maybe if it's really hot because it
was Tucson, maybe I lost a jacket too, but I
wrote up my sleeves. But I'm in some I'm at
(31:07):
some stage of wearing a full suit in every picture
you will ever see of me running for Congress, because
I believed in it all the way. That's what I
believed you should dress like when you were running for Congress.
And I'm not judging you. If you don't dress that way,
your random. For me, That's what I believed at the time. Okay,
there was one time, one time that I changed because
(31:30):
my team knew, I don't change. This is what I wear,
this is why I wear it, don't ask me to change.
There was a bunch of ranchers, cattle ranchers, and they
would do a livestock auction. That's part of ranching. That's
part of ranch life, and you're probably not familiar with it,
but that's part of ranch life. You're always buying, selling
things like that. And they had this amazing, little amazing
(31:54):
it's probably gone now, this amazing little breakfast place called
the Cattleman's Cafe. All these ranchers are go in there
and we'd need pour gravy all over everything, and we
need everything, and we'd go. You know. Anyway, I got
an opportunity to go to this when I was running
for Congress to speak, and one of my guys said, Hey, Jesse,
what if you lose lose the dress shoes? Wear cowboy
(32:18):
boots this time. Now, I owned cowboy boots and I
owned them back then. I wear cowboy boots mainly because
I don't know fashion, and yes I do. I mean
I could ride a horse and do things like that,
but that's not why I wear them. It's more of
a fashion thing. One time. I agreed. I said, okay,
(32:40):
go into the cattleman's cafe. I'll wear cowboy boots. Now,
that's all it was. I just wore cowboy boots. I
didn't show up and pretend I was a cattle rancher
or something like that. When we left, I felt so
dirty and dishonest. I told my whole team, I will
never do that ever again. Don't ever ask me again.
That's how much I despise Pandora. It feels dishonest, it
(33:02):
feels not genuine, and I despise that. And I'm a
terrible person, and I despise that. Okay, but no one
called me out on it there, and nobody ever would.
Why Well, one because I like the people who were there,
who I was talking to. Ranchers are my kind of people. Two,
(33:25):
my boots have scuffs on them, the souls are worn down.
It was obviously they're my boots, right. I didn't run
down to the store and pick up a pair of
boots and throw them on and go there there. My
boots is something I wore, so it wasn't completely dishonest.
That's the only reason I wasn't called on it. That's
the only reason no one ever really knew about it.
Tim Walls says something here, and I don't think he
(33:49):
gets it. I don't think the Democrat party gets it
at all. I'm gonna play what he said again at
Harvard about why he was picked for the Kamala Harris ticket,
and to be fair, he's honest about why he was picked.
You and I I discussed this at the time. Hey,
why would you pick Tim Wall?
Speaker 6 (34:03):
I also was on the ticket quite honestly, you know,
because I could code talk to white guys watching football
fixing their truck doing that that I could put them
at ease. I was the permission structure to say, look,
you can do this and vote for this.
Speaker 2 (34:18):
But it didn't work. And why doesn't it work? Well,
there's a limit to how much you can pander, you see.
I I can throw on a pair of cowboy boots
and go down to the Cattleman Cafe because I own
a pair of cowboy boots, and I eat it places
like the Cattleman Cafe. The reason Democrats were not successful
(34:40):
pandering to dudes by rolling out Tim Walls, calling him
a football coach and having him do TV commercials working
on his pickup truck. The reason that doesn't work for
today's Democrat Party is not actually the fault of Tim Walls.
It's because every dude with two brain cells to rub
(35:02):
together understands they are completely despised by the Democrat Party.
The Democrat Party despises men of every single color. Men
are the most likely to stand against them, to vote
against them, to be against them. If you want to
be accepted in Democrat circles at all, you have to
(35:23):
prostrate yourself and essentially declare that women are almighty and
over you, and you're worthless and stupid. That's why Joe
Biden constantly did that. I'm just so dumb. Hey, Jill,
I can't wipe my pooper. Come help me out. That's
why he loved to do that routine, because that's the
only way to be accepted in Democrat circles. And dudes,
(35:45):
real men find that disgusting. You heard me ran about
it a million times. I hated it. I realized it
was supposed to be some sale to make him look
really relatable. I'm too dumb to find the stage without
my wife, Jill. I thought it made me want a
freaking vomit. And dudes, all men, even the Normanies. It's
(36:07):
not just you. All men know that the modern day
Democrat Party hates them, has nothing but complete disdain for
who they are, what they want, what they believe, and
especially white dudes. If you're a white dude and you
are voting Democrat today, you're a sucker, a complete sucker.
(36:31):
They'll openly declare their hatred for you.
Speaker 1 (36:34):
This has been a podcast from wor