Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
The Jesse Kelly Show. Final hour of The Jesse Kelly
Show on what has been an amazing Tuesday, and we're
going to tackle some immigration. Actually, that's really what this
is going to be about. Immigration. What does it mean
to be a citizen new citizen. We're about to discuss that.
We'll talk about the Russia Ukraine disaster that apparently is
(00:26):
never ever, ever, ever ever going to end. We'll do
some more emails, all that, so much more coming up
the final hour of The Jesse Kelly Show. Now, let's
discuss before we get to the stories, the stories about
American kids, especially white kids, getting into higher level universities.
Before we get to the story about the soon to
(00:48):
be mayor of Minneapolis, we think, let's talk about America
and immigration. I mean, this really doesn't even necessarily apply
to America. It really applies every where. What's a country
that I like? Mexico? I actually like Mexico. Now it's
terribly corrupt and I don't want to live there. But
(01:10):
let's pretend for a moment that I did want to
live there, because I do genuinely love. Look, I love
the people, Mexican people. I just love, always loved them.
I love the food, I love the music. They have mountains,
they have beaches. Let's say I decide I want to
move to Mexico, or you know what. You know what,
(01:30):
maybe it's not even a desire thing. Maybe Jewish producer
Chris drags the show down to such a level that
we get taken off the air and I lose my
job and I can't find work here. What if it's
out of necessity. I find a job, a radio job
in Mexico. I'm gonna pack up the family and I'm
(01:55):
gonna move Now, I'm moving to Mexico, maybe out of want,
maybe out of necessity. But me ob the boys, if
we're going to leave America, sell our house, bring as
much stuff as we can, and move to Mexico. Because
(02:18):
Mexico has provided for me a job, opportunity, an opportunity
to feed my family in a way America does not.
Then I would view it as an obligation to a
follow the laws. B follow the customs of wherever I am.
(02:41):
You know, Mexican customs, because it's a different country that
they do things differently than we do. It's not uncommon
for Mexican workers to take a nap in the middle
of the day, broad daylight. Perhaps you've seen this on
a construction site landscapers. They'll just throw a hat over
their head and just go to sleep for a little while.
Different customs right to different people, different customs. I would
(03:05):
view it as an obligation to follow those customs. And
if I've left America and Mexico is going to be
where I live, Mexico is going to be where I retire,
I think it's a requirement of me to do that.
I would feel obligated as a new arrival to their
(03:26):
country to follow their customs and their culture and to
become Mexican in whatever way you can become Mexican. That's
what I would do. I don't think I'm off base
and saying that's what you would do if you were
forced to leave America and you had to go to Poland.
(03:48):
I don't believe that you would probably try to bring
all of America's culture to Poland? Would you? Poland? Provided
the opportunity America didn't, You're going to go be Polish? Now, Okay,
Immigration has to be handled in that way as a nation,
a nation, the nation that has immigrants coming into it
(04:12):
has to handle its immigration in that way. And most
nations have understood this historically. The United States of America
has understood this historically. Yes, we can accept people here. Frankly,
we should accept people here who want to be American.
(04:34):
You're leaving wherever you're leaving for whatever reason. Maybe in
Ireland there's a potato famine and people are dying, and
you don't want to have a potato famine death. You
want a chance at something better. I realize you were
born in Ireland, your family's in Ireland, your heritage is Irish,
and no one's asking you to give that up. But
(04:54):
when you get here, it better be the American flag.
That is primo for you, because this country doesn't have
a potato famine, and this country provided you with an opportunity.
That's how it has always been understood. Same situation with
Italian immigration. I know I'd like to have fun with Italians,
(05:15):
but I actually it's actually because I adore them. But
when Italians came here in mass the exact same thing
was demanded. Yes, bring your pizza recipe. That's fine. I
don't expect you to give that up, but you better
view yourself as an American because you left your country
and you became an American, and that is on the
(05:37):
country that is welcoming the immigrants. You see, you have
to demand that of the people coming into your country.
If you do not, they will simply bring your their
country into your country and set up a new country.
This has happened so many times throughout history. It's in
the freaking Bible. This is how it goes. If the
(06:00):
country accepting the immigrants does not demand assimilation, they will
not assimilate. They will take advantage of all the advantages
of the new country, but they will bring every part
of their old country with them. That has been understood forever.
But because the left is evil and the right is weak,
(06:21):
we have completely lost sight of that. Here in the
United States of America, the left wants to bring in
fifty thousand people from Venezuela because they understand the more
violence that's here, the better it is for them. They
understand the more immigrants that are here, the more Democrats
will get elected. So, like I said, they're just sick,
evil and wrong. But the right, the right can be
(06:41):
talked into this, especially America's feminized church can be talked
into this easily. Well, do you think Jesus would want
those Venezuelans to have to stand. What about Jesus? What
would Jesus do? He would welcome them all and it
was home. Oh no, they can't come into my church.
I'm not going to welcome any into my home. But
some I'm going to. America should take these people. That's
what Jesus would want. The right is feminized, the left
(07:05):
is evil. And so now this is Omar Fata. He's
not Somali, not really. I mean he was born in
the United States of America. According to our laws, he
is an American citizen. This is Omar f Te running
(07:26):
for mayor of Minneapolis standing in front of a bunch
of Somalis in Minneapolis.
Speaker 2 (07:31):
I understand that our some other communities are all connected
to each other here in Minnesota and back home, and
ask for your support.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (07:41):
There's always been a link between our community here as
well as back home, and I'm running to bridge that
gap and unite all of us and represent all of us,
because when we succeed here, we succeed everywhere. And I'm
hoping to do that just like Abreak.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Does that sound like somebody who's running for office to
make Minneapolis better, serve and represent the citizens of Minneapolis.
Or does that sound like somebody whose people are busy
conquering a portion of this country and he's going to
use his position in political office to further their conquest.
(08:23):
Let me play it again just so you can listen.
Does this sound like someone running to be mayor of Minneapolis?
Or does this sound like somebody moving a Somali conquest forward.
Speaker 2 (08:32):
I understand that our some other communities are all connected
to each other here in Minnesota and back home, and
ask for your support. There's always been a link between
our community here as well as back home, and I'm
running to bridge that gap and unite all of us
and represent all of us, because when we succeed here,
(08:53):
we succeed everywhere. And I'm hoping to do that just like.
Speaker 1 (09:00):
That is why the nation must demand assimilation. That is
why immigration must be slow. This is why I don't
care when people say, well, it takes a long time
to be a citizen. This is the greatest country in
the world. It should take a long time. Well it's
really hard. Yeah, good, difficult things are hard. Good. I'm
(09:25):
glad it did well, Jesse. It took me ten years. Good,
I'm glad. Welcome to America. You're now a citizen. You're
not my brother, you're not my sister. I'm glad it
was hard for you to get here. Good, that's a
good thing. Instead, we have allowed people to flock here
en mass, congregate wherever they want to congregate, and they
(09:49):
didn't assimilate. They're not even interested in it. They're no
longer even pretending that's what they're doing. They are conquering
our country through immigration. And that is exactly why, well,
what's part of the reason why. Mark and Dressen gave
a little talk and he was talking about universities here
he was.
Speaker 3 (10:09):
Nobody wants to talk about. But I've started to talk
about the intersection of DEI and immigration that has really
I think worked. I think our perceptions on high stealed
immigration over the last fifty years. You look at like
the foreign enrollment rates of the top universities, which went
from you know, like two or three or four percent
fifty years ago to whatever twenty seven or thirty or
fifty tlenty is over half seventy percent or whatever it is.
And so there's been this massive transformation and who gets educated.
(10:31):
And then there's been this massive transformation of who gets
admitted through through affirmative action and then you know, as
we now know it DEI. And again this goes straight
to the political divide in the country, which is if
your parents of a kid where I grew up, and
you've got a smart kid, and you think you're going
to get them into, you know, a top university in
this country, like you are full in yourself. There is
this really fundamental question which is like what level of
untapped talent exists in this country that a combination of
(10:53):
DEI and immigration.
Speaker 1 (10:54):
We allowed them to flood into this country by the
thousand conquer the country, and now they've taken over our
higher education system. A suicidal, ridiculous immigration policy. Stop all
of it. Now, one more word on this and then
we'll do some emails Tuesday. I remember you can email
(11:15):
the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Allowing people
to immigrate en mass from any nation, congregate, bring their
nation to this nation, and then join forces with the
left to conquer the nation is profoundly evil, and it
is happening in the United States of America. It has
(11:35):
already happened in many ways. In case it makes you
feel better, it probably doesn't it's happening in the UK,
it's happening in Ireland, it's happening in France, it's happening
in Germany. The left wing of all these countries, realizing
that their native citizens, their patriotic citizens, were their enemy,
opened up their borders, imported as many people as humanly possible,
(11:58):
and now the foreigners have forces to destroy the country.
I'm gonna play this cut one more time. This is
criminal that this exists in the United States of America.
Is criminal for higher education. And the reason this gets
me so angry, it's not because I have sons that
are not far from graduating high school. It's doubtful that
(12:20):
either of my children will go to college. I don't
just tell you about trade school. I point my sons
that way. They can if they want, but not just
willy nilly. It'll all be very, very selective, and they're
gonna have to have a purpose either way. I have
friend after friend after friend after friend who has gone
through trying to get their kid into a higher education
(12:43):
and failed. And then they dig through the enrollment at
the higher education and they see that America's higher education
gets handed out to foreigners while American kids get rejected.
I'm gonna play this again, and it's entirely listen to this.
Speaker 3 (12:58):
Nobody wants to talk about. Started to talk about the
intersection of DEI and immigration that has really I think worps,
I think our perceptions on high sealed immigration over the
last fifty years. You look at like the foreign enrollment
rates of the top universities, which went from you know,
like two or three or four percent fifty years ago
to whatever twenty seven or thirty.
Speaker 1 (13:15):
Or fifty tlmenty is over half, right.
Speaker 3 (13:17):
Seventy percent or whatever it is. And so there's been
this massive transformation and who gets educated, and then there's
been this massive transformation of who gets admitted through through
affirmative action, and then you know, as we now know
it DEI, And again this goes straight to the political
divide in the country, which is if your parents of
a kid where I grew up, and you've got a
smart kid, and you think you're going to get them
into you know, a top university in this country, like
you are fooling yourself. There is this really fundamental question
(13:38):
which is like what level of untapped talent exists in
this country that a combination of DEI and immigration have
basically cut out of the loop for the last fifty years,
and how long can we have this you know story
to everybody in the Midwest and the South that says,
you know, sorry, you're you know, because of historical oppression.
Speaker 1 (13:52):
Your kids are sol Harvard renames two more DEI offices
amid ongoing rebrand that's from campus performed Higher education hasn't
even changed their ways. They're having to change some names
or having to shuffle some things around because they've been
made to look bad. But that's criminal, the United States
(14:14):
of America being ripped from the arms of Americans and
handed over to foreigners in collaboration with the American left
or Jesse. You discussed proper bacon cooking methods the day
before Independence Day. I'm on a carnivore diets, eating bacon
and backyard chicken eggs every morning. Naturally, I have to ask,
(14:35):
how does the self proclaimed egg cook his eggs? My
guess is scrambled with American cheese. I assume ob has
to crack them for you though, with all the tiny hands. Okay, one, no,
I make my own eggs from one two scrambled eggs
with American cheese. Absolutely occasionally occasionally, But when I describe myself,
(15:02):
I don't know that I want to use the term
renaissance man, but maybe I do, because I like eggs
in so many different forms. Do you know? I had
deviled eggs last night with hilapinos on them. It were delicious,
scrambled eggs with American cheese, obviously, lots of salt and pepper.
(15:22):
A staple in my house all the time. Breakfast tacos,
you know it. Little Mexican joint close by, they know
me by name by now got my go to Mexican joint.
Guaranteed eggs nests where you cut where you cut a
little hole in a piece of bread, then you drop
the egg in there. And people have different names for it,
toasted yolk or whatnot. We always called them eggs nests,
(15:44):
eggs nests. The best I've told you about eggs like
Dad makes. We use soft boil them and drop them
in a vat of butter and tear up some toast
in there. Yep. All day eggs sandwiches, you know it.
I'll put a fried egg on a cheeseburger. Why do
you make that face that eggs sandwiches? Chris? How can
you know that egg sandwiches it's egg and bread. What
what they are that good? What do you do? Do you?
(16:09):
They're not cheap filler? Your cheap filler, Chris, egg sandwiches
are critically important. Oh my gosh. I live for egg sandwiches.
I eat a I will occasionally eat a hard boiled
egg very much. Not my thing. I don't like when
the yokie gets all hard and chalky like that. That's
kind of nasty. Not a hard boiled thing, just straight
(16:30):
up over easy eggs. Yep, had biscuits and gravy a
couple of days ago, through a couple over easys on
top of that, bad boy. That's about as good as
eaton gets. Right there. I am, in every sense of
the word, a renaissance man, I think. But don't make
that face, Chris. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on
(16:51):
a wonderful, wonderful Tuesday. Member. If you miss any part
of the show, you can download the whole thing on
iheard Spotify iTunes. Let's have a few different hearts talks here.
Very briefly. You've heard of the nuclear news cycle, right
because it's something I made up. I talk about it
on the show The nuclear news cycle for you new
(17:12):
listeners is we live in a much different era than
previous eras where access to information is. It's everywhere now,
everywhere now in the palm of your hands. That means
you know about every scandal everywhere in the world, all
the time. If you care enough, you could be super
informed about everything. One of the results of that is,
(17:33):
not only do you find out about scandals immediately, people
move off of scandals very very quickly. They forget and
they move on. The nuclear news cycle when you get
in trouble, if you ever become a public figure and
you get in trouble, you know what you should do.
Shut up, Just shut up. In twenty four hours, everyone
will forget about it and go away and move on.
(17:55):
If you keep talking about it, keep addressing it, keep apologizing,
keep bringing it up, then it stays in the news
and people don't move on. I call it nuclear because
scandals do burn super hot now, but they're gone super fast.
It'll be a million degrees for a day that everyone
will move on. We'll find something else. I played this
(18:19):
comment earlier from from Trump about Epstein.
Speaker 4 (18:21):
She's given us just a very quick briefing, and in
terms of the credibility of the different things that they've seen.
Speaker 1 (18:29):
And I would say that.
Speaker 4 (18:30):
You know, these files were made up by Komi, they
were made up by Obama, they were made up by
the biting from you know, uh we and we went
through years of that.
Speaker 1 (18:41):
Remember last week and he said, hey, just move on.
Why don't we care about this?
Speaker 3 (18:44):
Move on?
Speaker 1 (18:46):
About an hour ago Trump talked about it. The audio
is a touch rough because he's buy an airplane, but
talked about it again. Here's what he said.
Speaker 3 (18:57):
I know you've people to move on, but I'm curious,
why do you think your supporters in particular have been
so interested in the Epstein story.
Speaker 1 (19:04):
I'm so upset about how it's been handled.
Speaker 4 (19:06):
I don't understand it why they would be so interested.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
He's dead for a.
Speaker 4 (19:11):
Long time, he was ever a big factor in terms
of life. I don't understand what the interest or what
the fascination is. I really don't. And the credible information
has been given. Don't forget. We went through years of
the mullowitch hunt and all of the different things to
steal dot ca, which was all fake. All that information
(19:34):
was faked. But I don't understand why the Jeffrey Epstein
case would be of interest to anybody.
Speaker 1 (19:39):
It's pretty boring stuff.
Speaker 4 (19:41):
It's shorted, but it's boring, and I don't understand why
it keeps going. I think, well, really, only pretty bad people,
including fake news, want to keep something like that.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
Goes but credible information.
Speaker 4 (19:55):
Let them give it anything that's credible, I would say,
let them have it.
Speaker 1 (20:02):
Mister President, that is a terrible answer, and you've said
that now multiple times publicly. I don't understand why anyone cares.
Move on, mister President, please hear me here, because I
know there are people in the White House listening right now.
(20:23):
People care because of what I talked about in the
opening of this show. Because for years and years and
years and years and years, we have watched wealthy, powerful
people get away with everything while normal people have been
smashed and destroyed time and time again. Now we have
a case where we think there are some ties FBI, CIA,
(20:47):
maybe a list, maybe not. I don't know. I don't know. Well,
we have a lot of very powerful people tied to
a criminal who killed himself in some very suspicious sircumstances,
and people want answers, and mister President Donald Trump, part
of the reason you're in the White House is. People
(21:09):
think you will give them justice. They think you will
hold the elites accountable, rightly or wrongly. That's part of
the reason Donald Trump was there. Donald Trump is there,
mister president. You are there because you are the attacker
of the system. We view the system as evil, and
we want you to take a battle axe to it.
(21:32):
Either stop talking about it or find a different answer.
But I don't care. We should just move on. No
one should care. No, I don't even care. Nobody cares
is a horrible thing to say to people who believe
the government covers up crimes. It is a horrible thing
to say. Ah, Democrats made it off. Nobody cares. Nope,
(21:55):
lots of people care, and Democrats made it up as
a ridiculous answer for the Central Intelligent Intelligence Agency allegedly
for fifty years. Come on, that's a terrible answer. Stop please,
And as long as we're along these lines, Trump reportedly
wants Zelensky to go for Russia's throat. Trump is very
(22:19):
frustrated right now, understandably with Vladimir Putin, because Vladimir Putin
doesn't want to stop fighting. Trump promised everyone he would
end the war in a day. I actually respect that
I'm not mad at him for that. He thought he could,
He thought he could sit down negotiate an end to it. Hey,
you give a little, you give a little less. I
like that he wants peace. I like that. I'm not
insulting that at all. I like that. But Vladimir Putin
(22:42):
does not want peace. Vladimir Putin is not losing. Vladimir
Putin is not broke. Vladimir Putin is not politically in danger.
The Russian people are not unhappy. Donald Trump has gone
gotten nowhere with getting him to stop shooting. So now
(23:03):
we're going to go back to the Joe Biden policy
of feeding a bunch of weapons to Ukraine. This never ends,
It never apparently. It doesn't matter who was president, This
never ever ends. Ukraine is not a NATO country. You
(23:26):
can hate that Russia invaded all you want. That's totally fine.
You can hate the Russians, totally fine. Don't care for
them myself, you can. All those things are true. That
doesn't mean it's our problem. That doesn't mean we have
to get involved. And why are we having to have
this conversation now when we elected a new president back
(23:50):
in November. I don't understand and I'm getting frustrated the
foreign policy appears to be the same as it pertains
to Russia Ukraine. I'm frustrated. I'm moving on. I'm doing
some emails, my blood pressures rising, and I'm gonna move on. Dear,
yuppy smoker, it's not a yuppie smoker. Okay, it's a
wood pellets. It's not a yuppi smoker, Chris, it's a
(24:11):
wood pellet smoker. Do you have any Have you had
any Russian dishes? They have Borsche, but theas beats in it,
so nobody likes those. No, I haven't had any Russian dishes. Okay, well, oh,
I take that back. I take that back. I have
had one if you take vodka and kalua and then
(24:35):
a little bit of cream that I don't know if
you know, this is known as a white Russian excellent.
I mean I don't drink them anymore, but back when
I did excellent. So yes, I guess you could say
I do know my way around a little bit of
Russian cuisine. Jesse, my wife and I are expecting our
(24:56):
first child any day now. Any advice for a first
time father you'd want to share? Before my life flips
upside down. His name is Casey. Yes, Casey. Babies are
a woman's job. Now stop, I didn't mean that name.
Mean quit. Let me clarify. You raise your kids how
you think is best. Keep in mind that women will
(25:20):
enjoy the newborn years much more than a father will.
The mother enjoys the newborn years more than a father.
She is made for it to nurture and care for
that child. You will love it. Don't get wrong, You're not.
It's not bad. You will love it, and you hold
him or her or whatever it is. You're gonna love him.
But they just kind of sleep and cry and poop.
(25:42):
They don't really do much. As a father, kids get
cooler every single second they get older. I mean, I
go fishing and shooting gophers with my kids, beaver hunting.
I do cool stuff with my kids like that now.
And the sad part is it works the exact opposite
with women. Bob calls it the longest breakup in history.
(26:06):
As they get order and order and order, they will
slowly separate from mom and kind of glob more onto.
You just be ready for that. It's all perfectly natural. Yes.
The Jesse Kelly Show final segment of the Jesse Kelly
Show on a wild, wild Tuesday. Been kind of a
(26:27):
heavy Tuesday, but it is what it is. So I'm
gonna just kind of lay a couple more heavy things
out there. The first one is this. It was a
headline from the Daily Mail, and the headline his parents
ask male daycare workers not to dress or change their
children's nappies amid alleged sex abuse cases. Okay, so I
(26:52):
understand that we live in an era where we have
to try to pretend there aren't differences between men and women,
that women should be allowed anywhere men should be, and
men should be allowed anywhere women should be. I realize
all that fluffy, idiotic nonsense is really common thinking now.
But parents, please hear me on this. Please. If you
(27:18):
have to drop your kid off at daycare, and many
people do, we had a point in time in our
marriage both of us had work, kid had to go
to daycare, I get it. Believe me, you're not getting
any judgment here. Sometimes that's the way it goes. If
there are males working at the daycare, take your child
out of that daycare and take them to a different one.
(27:43):
There is no male on the planet who has a
strong desire to work around other people's little kids, changing diapers,
changing clothes, unless he is there for bad reasons. And
don't email tell me that your brother is the exception
or something like that. If your brother volunteers to change
(28:06):
the diapers of one year old's, your brother's a weird freak. Okay,
something is weird about it. And even if it's not,
because I'm sure there actually are exceptions, right, I'm sure
there are exceptions. Do you really believe that daycare you
dropped your child off that has the one dude who's
the exception? Is that what you believe? Come on now, please,
that's woman's work. Get serious, No, no man wants to
(28:30):
go work in a daycare. If he's there, he's there
for a bad reason. And do you know what, as
long as I'm making everybody mad that, I'm sure i'll
have all kinds of hate mail after the Trump stuff.
And now this, let me go ahead and add this
little thing in there, which I've said before, but I'll
say it again. If you have a little girl and
she's let's say, into sports, be very careful around the
(28:53):
male coaches, extremely careful, especially if it's a sport like
gymnastics or swimming or something like that. How many dudes
want to coach fourteen year old girls in swimming? You
really think that's a burning passion of a lot of men?
(29:14):
You know, one day I hope to lead the fourteen
year old girls to a championship. That's just what I
want as a dude. Do you really think that are
there guys out there like that? I'm sure that's probably
more the exception than the rule, right, Probably should be
(29:35):
a little wary of the guy who voluntarily puts himself
around fourteen year old girls in bathing suits. That's woman's work.
Let it go, all right, all right now, as long
as we're making everybody mad and stepping on everyone's toes.
Maybe I'm just in a mood. There's a headline out
of France, the French PM proposes cutting national holidays to
(29:57):
cut the debt. You don't care about France, and you
don't care about their national holidays. But I just want
to point out that all these Western nations, including ours,
that have spent themselves into bankruptcy and won't cut a
dime of spending, they're going to continue to come up
with these insane little schemes to try to avoid a
(30:17):
debt crisis instead of just stopping the ridiculous spending. The
United States of America is going to do this stuff too.
If France wants to solve the national debt, it should
really probably solve the spending problem. If America wants to
solve our thirty seven trillion dollar national debt, I know
you can think, well, we just need a better interest
(30:39):
rates here, and we just need it. Maybe we can
grow our way up. Growth is fine, great, Lower interest
rates are great, fine, sign me up for all those.
Unless we significantly cut the spending, nothing changes. But nobody
wants to do that, So instead, all these politicians try
to come up with some way that could kind of
(31:01):
twist themselves in the wood. No, and maybe if we
shaved off a vacation day and then we issued some
special gold bonds with two percent interest. Right, No, you
cannot spend two trillion dollars a year more than you
take in without a debt bomb exploding in your country.
And that debt bomb is coming to Western countries. It is,
(31:22):
it is coming. All right, on that sunny note, let's
do some headlines. And now here's a headlines. Why go
you know that you know the thing headlines we didn't
get to. Israel begins talks with countries that could take
in the Gozens under the Trump plan. I almost forgot.
(31:45):
The plan was to send the Gosens to other countries.
Only the plant. Only the plant is running into a
bit of a snag because nobody wants the Gozens in
their countries. This is making this whole thing quite difficult
for everybody. Several hurt in anti migrant unrest in Spanish town.
We're starting to see these things in the UK, in Ireland,
(32:08):
in Spain. We're seeing similar things here in America, but
because of the election of Trump, they got toned down
a little bit. The people who are citizens are tired
of being assaulted and replaced by people like this.
Speaker 2 (32:23):
I understand that some of the communities are all connected
to each other here in Minnesota and back home.
Speaker 1 (32:30):
And ask for your support.
Speaker 2 (32:33):
Uh, There's always been a link between our community here
as well as back home, and I'm running to bridge
that gap and unite all of us and represent all
of us because when we succeed here, when we succeed everywhere,
and I'm hoping to do that just like.
Speaker 1 (32:50):
Yeah, we're tired of that they were afraid. Mark Cuban
says Kamala campaign didn't trust her to go on bro podcasts.
It's it's almost odd and kind of hilarious to think
back that after four years of having to cover up
for Joe Biden's incompetence, Democrats had to transition and cover
(33:10):
up for domes and competence. It's kind of awesome. Hallelujah,
jubilant Mike Rowe wakes up to see the economy turn
back to dirty jobs. That is one really great thing
that's happening out there. If we have to focus on
the good. We are getting some industry back in the
United States of America. That is not only necessary, it's
wonderful for the next generation. I'll be back tomorrow, hopefully
(33:34):
with some good news. That's all