Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
These cities. The Jesse Kelly Show, Final hour of The.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Jesse Kelly Show on a magnificent Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (00:08):
So we're going to I'm gonna do kind of an
extended version, if you will not not from me about
something we've talked about a lot about how they weaponize
young women, how communists weaponize young women. They take their
wonderful nature and they twist it and manipulate it and
(00:29):
turn them into the most vicious, violent communist foot soldiers.
That that we're gonna do right away. We'll talk about
lowering prices in your life. We'll deal with some emails, smartphones,
all that. More is still to come. But first, before
we go any further these there's a couple long audio
(00:49):
hits here. I may stop them, I may not, but
I wanted to set this up first. First. You remember
what you and I have talked about many times before
about young women. You have you have all these all
these polls that are it's staggering the percentage of young
single women who turn communists, and then you find out
(01:12):
they are the most committed, vicious, violent communists on the planet,
and they and they stay that way as they get older,
even if they end up happen, happening to have families.
They are diagnosed at over sixty percent or almost sixty,
right around sixty percent with mental illness, diagnosed with mental illness, miserable, anxiety, ridden, angry, bitter, vicious.
(01:34):
But we're watching our young women be destroyed by communism
in this country. But what's wild is this is not
unique to us here. Every communist movement has had young
women in the vanguard of its most vicious, violent foot soldiers.
Polepot love them, love the men. Cambodia thought they were invaluable.
(01:59):
But how can that be when a woman is motherly
and kind, and a woman will see a wounded rat
on the side of the road and feel some sort
of sympathy for it.
Speaker 3 (02:15):
Can we rescue it?
Speaker 1 (02:17):
How could you go from that to being the most vicious,
violent creature on the planet. Well, it's actually not as
difficult as you think. You take the wonderful nature and
you don't have to turn it around and do a
one eighty with it, not right away. You take the
wonderful nature and you just give it a little bit
(02:39):
of an off ramp, so it's still kind of moving
in the right direction, but you off ramped it. You see,
you just diverted it a little, and then you can
divert it a little more, and then a little more,
and soon you've done a one eighty. You take that
wonderful young woman with her hind heart, with her motherly heart,
(03:04):
and with enough off ramps, with enough social conditioning, you
turn her into the mother of the communist revolution. Now,
what's wonderful about a mother? In always the humans? Chris
just brought up a bear? A bear is a great example.
Do you know the vast majority of bear attacks are mothers.
(03:30):
You know, I've told my sons when we're in Montana,
the most dangerous kind of bear you can see is
a bear cub. You know why because where there's a cub,
mom is nearby. And if mom even thinks there's a
chance you're going to harm her baby, she's going to
(03:51):
kill you or die trying. She will. That's what a
mother will do. Human mothers operate this way too. They'll
kill for their kids, they'll die for their kids. Well,
what if I can take that wonderful nature and I
can make you the mother of my revolution? We've talked
about this so. Nicole Shanahan, she was the running mate
(04:14):
of RFK junior. Remember he was running in the Democrat
primary and then he left and ran as an independent.
I actually had a chance to meet and talk to
Nicole when we did this big event with Tucker Carlson
down here in Houston, when I was the guest. She
was kind of the opener for the whole thing, so
I got a chance to spend some time with her backstage.
Just a lovely, kind human being, you can tell a
(04:34):
kind human being, former LIB. And this is an extremely
wealthy Silicon Valley woman, former LIB who kind of woke
up and she gave this long interview, and so it's
very long. I don't know if I'll stop it. I might,
but you've heard it from me. That's me. Though I'm
a barbarian. I want you to listen to Nicole, and
(04:56):
I want you to decide right now that you're going
to be very very careful with your baby girl, and they.
Speaker 4 (05:01):
Find themselves like I would find myself. That was my
self worth was my philanthropic work, and I really believed
in it. I really believe that I was giving black
communities a chance to rise up out of oppression. I
really believe that I was helping indigenous communities rise up
out of oppression. And now that I look back and
(05:22):
see how all those grants are performing, you know, because
my version of successes, those communities are actually uplifted.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
Yeah, not just more money pumped into them.
Speaker 4 (05:32):
Not just more money. No, the problems of the community
have gotten worse. Crime in the community has gotten worse,
mental health in the Native community, the Indigenous community has
gotten worse. They will even say the Indigenous community will
even say that their biggest supporters in Congress have been Republicans,
but yet they continue to vote Democrat. Yeah, I mean
(05:55):
that is that is this, It's like the whole model
is broken, the whole model makes everybody worse off, and
now we're contending with the freaking great reset that we're
now realizing is the terrible idea.
Speaker 1 (06:12):
Yeah yeah, and that.
Speaker 4 (06:14):
Many of our climate changes use our geoengineering issues. Yeah, well,
which is like at the end of the day, they
always go to that, they're like, but climate change, and
then yeah, that really is the end all be all,
Like you have to let us do this because of
climate change. Yeah, social justice and climate change. It always
boils down to those two things, and it gets progressive
(06:35):
women one hundred percent of the time.
Speaker 1 (06:37):
It does, It does, soue.
Speaker 4 (06:41):
But I don't think many of the tech mafia wives
realize is that they were used.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
Just the heads up, just heads up, the tech mafia wives.
I want to explain what she's describing. You probably already
figured out in the big tech world, the Silicon Valley world,
all those billions going into all this online stuff, all
this tech stuff. Well, those guys eventually get married, sometimes
to Russian and Chinese honeypots, but that's another story. But
those guys eventually get married, and so what do you have.
(07:10):
You have a bunch of wives who are absurdly wealthy,
and they get together, and they hang out together, and
they do things together. But we go back to what
we were discussing before about how these women they have
become mothers of the communist revolution, and when they go
out for drinks at Red Lobster on Friday night, they
don't just discuss how the neighbor needs to cut his grass.
(07:32):
You see, they are now the mothers of the communist revolution,
and they are there to push the communist revolution forward,
to help it forward, to help it succeed as mothers do.
When she says the tech mafia wives, because it's a
real vicious, tight knit group. That's what she's talking about.
Speaker 4 (07:49):
But I don't think many of the tech mafia wives
realize is that they were used to set the groundwork
for what was called like the Reset, what it's called
generally as like the Reset by the Klaus Schwabs, like
the Great Reset, the Great Reset.
Speaker 2 (08:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (08:07):
They I mean they openly talk about this Great Reset. Yeah.
So the tech wive mafias, I believe, were kind of
being conscripted in many ways and their money, especially as
being conscripted in to set the groundwork for the Great Reset. Yeah,
specifically through a network of non NGO advisors, relationship with Hollywood,
(08:38):
relationship with Davos and their own companies. So if you
look at like who's on these boards, who hangs out
with each other, how these culture, how the culture of
tech wealth works, like Silicon Valley tech wealth in that
small group of people responsible for a huge amount of
money and a huge amount of envy and NGO activity
(09:01):
across the United States. It's a really small group of people,
and it's a really small group of people making these decisions, yeah,
and then completely blind to everything else that's going on
and how their groundwork is being used to then enable
(09:22):
these other policies, these great reset policies.
Speaker 1 (09:27):
What is this great reset? Who is this Klaus Schwab, Well,
he's the head of the World Economic Forum. Do you
want to hear with the tech mafia wives or what
they're pushing forward with their husband's money? Oh hey, Klaus,
why don't you tell us?
Speaker 2 (09:43):
So?
Speaker 3 (09:43):
World Economic Form is now very much engaged into this
initiative of shaping a great reset for the postco or
not era steps we are undertaking to have business leaders
accepting to report on esgese. I think we should use
(10:04):
social contact as an expression of the transition of one
world to another.
Speaker 5 (10:10):
Word.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
I think it's a key narative which we should have
is to move from a society which is built on
production and consumption to a society which is built on
caring and sharing.
Speaker 1 (10:27):
Caring and sharing sounds so lovely, doesn't it? And it
works on the right demographic. Be careful with your baby, girl.
Speaker 2 (10:38):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (10:43):
You can email us Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. No, Chris,
this is a good idea. Listen to me. So Jewish
producer Chris and I were talking during the break, and
you know he's one of these nerds, one of these
mechanic type nerds. He has some sort of an idea
on how to make the gas engine more efficient? Is
(11:03):
that it, Chris, I'm not even joking. He reached out
to Toyota and they never responded. I told him right
before we got back from break, he needs to make
some sort of Hiroshima joke. Now listen, I know you
think that's crass and it's low class, and that may be,
(11:24):
but it's called an icebreaker, man. It's called an icebreaker.
You break through the ice with a fairly benign insalt.
It's been years, it's been decades. I bet they're over
it by now. You break the ice, you make one
(11:45):
small adam bomb joke. Maybe they reach out in anger
and then you're all, hey, did you see my gasolene email?
I'm telling you this works? What what I'll You want
me to do it? You know I'll do it. Why
wouldn't I do it? You know all, I'll do it.
I'll do it. You're on the air. It doesn't matter
(12:05):
to me. I'll do it. But I'm not the one
with gasoline ideas, Chris, because I'm not a huge nerd
and that would never even occur to me to make
improvements to the gasoline engine. My gasoline engine does everything
I needed to do. I put gas in it, and
it gets me too and from the office. That's all
I need from it. Ever, what I could get ten
(12:29):
percent more miles per gallon? Chris, with all due respect,
do you really think that you have come up with
the solution the Japanese have not already come up with
These people were working smartphones in like the fifties or something.
(12:49):
I don't know exactly when they were all on that,
but you know, everybody, by the way, I just want
to tell everybody this. You know how everybody, myself included,
has a smartphone. Now here's the deal. When we were
in Japan and the Marines, this would have been oh
two two one to o two somewhere somewhere in there.
(13:12):
I think it was one two thousand and one. Remember
remember when you got your first cell phone back in
two thousand and one, I'll just call it two thousand
and one. When we would hop on the train and
go into Tokyo, every single Japanese person on the train,
and I mean every one of them was sitting there
(13:33):
with some big smartphone in their hands that had the keyboard.
Remember the ones that had the actual physical keyboards on it.
Only that was a that was an advanced thing. Every
one of them had these things. Chris, So, with all
due respect, do you think that you have come up
with some revolutionary concept that will get me ten percent
more gallons or miles per gallon than the Japanese? Buddy?
(14:00):
Come on, we all know that's not Look, why don't
you stick with your particular area, Chris, Gold and silver,
Maybe medicine, the legal profession. I'm not trying to be rude.
I'm just no, I'm not being rude. I'm just saying,
let's understand our strengths. Okay, let's understand our strengths, Jesse.
(14:23):
As US Attorney General, Pam Bondi does a disservice to
blondes by proving that blonde jokes can be true. It's
not a disservice to blonds. I warned for everybody a
long time ago, and people from Florida knew this before
I knew this, that Pam Bondi is establishment GOP. That's
(14:48):
what she always was. Be always be very careful. And
everybody's guilty of this, be careful of projecting your wants
and needs onto anyone else, let alone a politician, even
a politician who maybe says the right things from time
to time. They that's how they get elected. That's how
(15:13):
they're trained. They're trained to know what you like, to
know what you want, and then they say it and
then you believe them. When Trump got elected again and
he started putting into place all these reformers and all
the horrible stuff that had been done to him, you know,
they tried to kill him and tried to throw him
(15:35):
in prison and things like that. We watched his attorney
general pick, well, his first one got defeated, Matt Gates.
Then he picked Pam Bondy, and most likely you're fairly
you were at least fairly unfamiliar with Pambondy. But hey,
Trump's picking all these reformers. Trump has been shot and
(15:57):
framed and surely done old. Trump's attorney general pick is
going to be this fire breathing anti communist who's going
to take all these bad actors in DC and throw
them into prison. Well that's your thoughts and my thoughts,
by the way, those are our desires, yours in mind.
(16:22):
That doesn't mean, that's who she is. Do you think
at sixty years old it's how old she is? Do
you think it's sixty years old? She woke up one
morning and decided to be a fire breathing anti communist
after a lifetime of being fairly establishment. She is what
(16:43):
she is. And this is why I've encouraged the Trump
administration and I will continue to encourage them to use
zip recruiter. It's time to find somebody what, Chris, It's
time to find somebody new. And when you're hiring somebody
new that there is no better place to go than
(17:03):
zip recruiter. There's a reason, mister Trump, mister President, there's
a reason zip recruiter is the hiring site employers prefer
the most because they have stacks and stacks of qualified
candidates waiting for you to get in there and post
your job. Four out of five employers who post on
(17:23):
ZipRecruiter get somebody good. The first day you're frustrated because
you can't find that one you're looking for, that permanent
worker or that temp worker for the Christmas season. You
haven't tried ZipRecruiter yet, and you can try it for
free at ZipRecruiter dot com slash Jesse. That's ZipRecruiter dot
(17:47):
com slash Jesse, try it for free? All right, all right, yeah,
talk briefly and the fact. Speaking of this, we're gonna
start talk briefly about smartphones. Next is Jesse Kelly Show
on a Tuesday. Remember, if you missed a single second
of it, you have to download it on iHeart, Spotify,
(18:08):
I t in the name of a Just Merciful Gun.
How smartphones expose your kids to predators and why Congress
must step in. Well, I'm gonna step I'm gonna set
aside the Congress stepping in part. I'm just gonna do
a little PSA, just a little PSA, will do some
emails and some other stuff, taxes and other things. Remember
(18:31):
that all of us, not just children, but children too,
all of us in this era, we have to deal
with a problem no other human in the history of
the world has had to deal with. You are able
to hold something in your hands that gives you access
(18:54):
to everything, absolutely everything, the best, the worst, everything. This
is not something human beings were built to deal with.
No other person is that that weird. No other generation
(19:16):
in the history of the world has encountered that problem,
And I know they've all had their own issues. No
generation has had to deal with the problem of it's
not just access to everything, it's access to everything in
my hand. It would be bad enough if it was
just let's say, a home computer, not even a laptop.
(19:38):
It's just at my home, it's on a desk somewhere.
That would be something. But it's in my pocket. I'm
holding mine in my hands right now, just I don't
know why. As an example to for anybody who's watching,
it's for effect. It's in your hands now. For a
(20:00):
a grown adult, that's a lot. That's probably too much
to deal with. For a kid man, that's asking too
much of them. This is not me telling you take
away your kids' phones. It's not that it's not that
(20:20):
my kids have phones. I'm not going to be a
huge hypocrite here, I'm not. But just understand that and
take precautions. Please. Children, I mean, adults aren't able to
handle this kind of information overload. Children have no chance,
no chance whatsoever, unless you help them. And that's the thing.
(20:45):
Unless you're planning on going off the grid and moving
to the mountains, we are going to have to learn
how to deal with it together. And your children are
going to have to learn to deal with it. If
AI is coming, that the technology is not about to
get dumber. The technology is about to get unbelievably smart.
(21:07):
I think I already maybe told you this, if not
tell you right now, So AI stuff. I've been learning
more and more about AI stuff, not because I care
about it. I choose to not embrace AI at all,
but because I know it's coming, and I know it's
going to be something that affects your life and probably
affects my life, and so I feel an obligation to
(21:29):
learn more about it. There's already AI technology out there.
It already exists. Get this, wrap your mind around this
that will if you allow it access, it will search
through your emails and your text messages. And let's say,
(21:50):
let's say I was texting ob earlier. Hey, you want
to go out and have date night tonight. Let's go
out to dinner. I'll take you out to dinner, leave
the boys at home, and she texts me back, yeah,
let's do it. So on and so forth. The AI
technology already exists that can learn our habits, read our
(22:12):
emails and text messages, and after reading the text, exchange
between my wife and I reaches out to our favorite
restaurant and makes a dinner reservation for us that already
exists today. Where is that ten years from now? I
(22:34):
don't know. And if you're asking if it worries me,
it does. But anyway, that's not the point. The point
is we are we cannot shield our children from technology
and from the technological age. There are people who believe,
and I don't know that I necessarily believe this, but
there are people who believe this, that we are living
(22:58):
in the final day where man is the main driver
on the planet, that robots technology AI will essentially take
over leading rules in so many things and do much
of the physical labor. And I know, Chris, I don't believe.
I don't necessarily go I won't go that far either,
(23:20):
But there are super smart people who believe that wherever
we're going, and I don't know, and you don't know,
nobody probably knows, because it's very hard to predict these things.
Wherever we're going, technology isn't going away. So I'm not
telling you to move to the mountains into a log
cabin and get a windmill and go poop in the outhouse.
(23:41):
I'm not telling you that, but just be careful, okay,
with yourself and your children. Speaking of pooping in the outhouse.
I tell you what we're going through on our block.
I just got a text from MOB thirty seconds ago.
I got a text from MOB the water pressure. I'm
(24:03):
sure someone busted a water line or something. The water
pressure's gone from our block. There's no water pressure. And
she texted me I have the blue She said, hey,
make sure you talk to me before using the bathroom
when you get home. And I said, well, did you
have a rough one or something like that. She didn't
find that that funny, but she said, no, idiot, that
(24:24):
there's no water pressure. Anyway. I texted her back, well,
what if I have to use the bathroom? And you
know what? She texted me back, go at work? As
if I can just program myself to go whenever. What
if I need to take a shower, what if?
Speaker 2 (24:44):
See?
Speaker 1 (24:44):
This is what it was like, Chris. This is exactly
what it was like for Christopher Columbus and the explorers.
What are you rolling your eyes for? This is what
it was like. What Chris? You know what? That's a
good point, Chris. This is worse than Columbus. He could
poop in the water. I'm sure sure he had some
sort of a system rigged up where he would hang
his butt over the ocean and pooped out on all
(25:05):
the sharks that used to follow all those ships. Well,
I don't have an ocean. I don't have any kind
of a contraption. You know what I do have, though,
the neighbor's yard. Listen to me, No, listen, Chris. Remember
this is the neighbor that doesn't mow his lawn, and
my lawn has mowed all the time. Is there a
(25:28):
better revenge? Think of what? What? You know what? That's
a good point. The lawn would be more fertilized. Crap
I didn't even think about that, all right, just on
his sidewalk. Then forget about the lawn on his sidewalk.
Problem solved, Problem solved. And if he has any problem
with that, he can text a friend. Let me tell you, Jesse.
(25:50):
As much as the murder of your child's goldfish was
brutal and heartless, it may have been the more humane
act as a small child. My family and I went
on vacation over a week with no contingency to feed
my goldfish. We went to Montana and saw buffalo and bear.
Upon return, we found my beloved fish in an advanced
state of decomposition. His little body crumbled as we removed
(26:14):
it from the watery death chamber. Your son's fish likely
flopped around for an hour or so in the PVC
drained system in your house. My fish would have slowly
died of starvation in his solitary bull in the august heat.
You're still a terrible person, But I too have goldfish
blood on my hands. His name is Dave. I had
(26:36):
no other choice. I'm not going to pay to have
somebody come into the house and feed the freaking fish
that the kid didn't care about. What, Chris, Why didn't
I take the bowl to the neighbor's house. I didn't
think of it. I chose the only path I could
(26:58):
think of, Chris. Okay, look, there may be pictures still
of old buttery. The fish pictures that you can have
digitized with Legacy Box is the what That's the whole
point of Legacy Box. Legacy Box will take these home movies.
You have those VHS tapes that are sitting in a
box that are being destroyed by the heat and humidity
(27:19):
in the cold as we speak, the home pictures. I'm
talking about the hard copy pictures, not the stuff on
your phone. Legacy Box is the company, the Tennessee company
that digitizes that stuff for you. Right now, it's their
cyber Week event. Sixty five percent off, sixty five percent off. Obviously,
(27:46):
supplies are limited, the timeframe is limited. Get these memories digitized, man,
they are. There's nothing more precious that having my dad's
pictures on my phone forever. Legacybox dot com slash Jesse
legacybox dot com slash Jesse. We'll be back, Jesse Kelly.
Speaker 3 (28:12):
Hi.
Speaker 1 (28:13):
The Jesse Kelly Show. Final segment of a Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 2 (28:17):
You can email us Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Also,
I'm pretty sure the state of California should be sued
into bankruptcy.
Speaker 1 (28:26):
You see this, These stories keep happening.
Speaker 6 (28:29):
It's an A legal migrant truck driver from India is
charged with negligent homicide after allegedly killing two people in
a crash in Bend, Oregon last week. Ice has lodged
a detainer for his arrest. They say he entered the
US legally and was released back into the country under
President Biden, and he obtained a commercial driver's license from California.
Speaker 1 (28:52):
The largest, richest, most powerful state in the United States
of America, provides sanctuary and commercial drivers' licenses to illegals
who don't even know the laws of the road. They
then get in these gigantic weapons and get out on
the highway with your children and kill Americans. Have you
(29:16):
let me ask you something, how many foreign countries have
you been to? Have you ever been on the roads
of a foreign country. I'm not talking about Canada, that
doesn't count really a foreign country. It's horrifying the way
people drive. And I'm an aggressive, fast driver, and I
(29:41):
don't get car nervous or car sick, and I am
mortified at how foreign countries drive. No rules of the road, no, no,
none of that stuff. Well, they come over here because
Democrats bring them to the country illegally, and then Blue
states have these people drivers' licenses for big rigs and
(30:04):
they go out on the highway and kill your loved ones,
your family members. Tell me why California shouldn't be sued
into oblivion. And I know we're not going to get
this from the Trump administration. And that's not an insult again,
because he's step one in the thousand step anti communist process.
(30:27):
I get this, but how does a single federal dollar
still flow to states that allow this kind of nonsense?
How is that humanly possible? You could almost look at
that as an act of insurrection by a state to
(30:49):
provide commercial drivers' licenses to illegals who don't know the
laws of the road, don't care about the laws of
the road, and this is while they're providing them welfare.
Speaker 5 (30:59):
With your But twenty one states, including California, New York,
and Minnesota, the Blue States, continued to say no.
Speaker 1 (31:08):
So as of.
Speaker 5 (31:09):
Next week, we have begun and we'll begin to stop
moving federal funds into those states until they comply and
they tell us and allow us to partner with them
to root out this fraud and to protect the American taxpayer.
Speaker 1 (31:23):
But of course we know who the Blue states, what
the Democrat states, We know who they're interested in protecting.
It's not you. You're the problem, you see, you're the patriot.
You're what holds them back. Who are they protecting, Well,
they're constituents. Kelsey and ready.
Speaker 7 (31:40):
A judge sentenced the Minneapolis man in those cases back
in May that he got credit for time served. So
he never went to prison. It was all part of
a pair of plea deals. This is the man we're
talking about. His name is ab De Mahat Billy Muhammad,
but prosecutors say the twenty eight year old uses the
names Kareem and Altesto on Snapchat, and that is where
investigators say he met his latest victim, as well as
(32:03):
his two previous ones. Prosecutors say he picked up his
most recent victim in man Cato back in September and
drove her to a hotel near the Mall of America,
where he took her phone, told her she wasn't leaving,
raped her, and held her against her will for days.
That's according to prosecutors. Investigators used DNA to identify Mohammed
as the suspect. His profile was already in the database
(32:26):
from previous cases involving sexual assaults in Minneapolis in twenty
seventeen and another one in twenty twenty four.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
Brought to this country by Democrats, given legal protection by democrats,
given your money by democrats. Freaking evil man. Now, before
I go to headlines, I didn't get to. I wanted
to let you know something. It's hard to find inflation
relief out there. I get that. I'm not going to
(32:56):
be labor the point that I've made many times before.
Consider that the prices in red states are much lower.
It's not just better legal protection. It's not just a
better form of government. Tax is lower, regulations, lower fees,
lower if you, if you, if you, if you can
(33:16):
do it with your job, with your family, if it's
possible for you, and you're looking to have your money
go a little further, consider a red state, right. You know,
you know what gas is here? Two dollars and thirty
cents a gallon. Thanks for that tidbit, Chris. Yeah, no,
I drove by the last night, Chris. It was two
twenty nine, two twenty nine a gallon. There's something to
(33:38):
think about. And now here's a headline, why you know,
you know the thing headlines We didn't get to you.
Democrat Chris van Holland breathes life into years old hoax
in the aftermath of National Guard shooting. This is the
hoax where they said Trump called our troops suckers and losers.
(34:00):
Remember that Democrats live in a world of make believe.
That make believe. It's carefully created and maintained for them
by the American media, the university system, and Democrat politicians.
It's why it's almost completely pointless to have an argument
with your liberal ant Peggy, because liberal AMT Peggy is
one hundred percent certain of so many things that are
(34:23):
not true at all. It would be like arguing with
your dog. Peru presidential hopeful escapes gun attack unscathed. There
are parts of the world where politicians are routinely assassinated,
and I am afraid that we are approaching that way
really really quickly, really really quickly. We all remember what
(34:43):
happened last election. Employees say Harris chose Walls despite repeated
fraud warnings in Minnesota. Why would Kamala Harris be worried
about the fraud warnings of Tim Walls and what's going
on in his state when she knew for a fact
the main stream media would cover up those warnings of
fraud and do whatever they had to do to ensure
(35:06):
Tim Walls got into the White House with Dome so
they could continue the communist destruction of America. Bernie Sanders
and Zorron Mamdani joined Starbucks Barista strike. I gotta be
honest with you. Starbucks has long been one of these
lefty lib garbage comedy companies. So watching the communists from
within have this huge internal revolt about unionization and making
(35:30):
life miserable for them, it's just endlessly hilarious to me.
I hope it goes on forever. I think it's wonderful now.
I will be back again tomorrow. Let's hope we're not
at war with Venezuela by the time we get back here.
All right, that's all