Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the Jonathan and Kelly Show.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
Rush.
Speaker 3 (00:05):
One thing that Wall Street, a lot of economist market
in general got wrong early on was that tariffs were
going to call a substantial price level rise, which just
hasn't happened.
Speaker 4 (00:18):
Kelly Nash, the death of the labor market has been
greatly exaggerated based on recent data. And I think that
all in all the inflation numbers they're pretty respectable.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Here and Kelly show, the death of the labor market
has been greatly exaggerated.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
You know, there has been a uh, it's the death
of the illegal labor market. Yes, that is dying quickly.
And I think that it's interesting when you see these
jobs that Americans don't want to do, uh, and the
illegals are shipped out, there's suddenly lines of Americans who
want to do those jobs.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
And we've were told that we had to bring in
these illegal immigrants because Americans don't want to work.
Speaker 2 (01:00):
That seems to have proven itself to be a falsehood.
Speaker 1 (01:03):
We've had a lot of falsehoods that have been proven
to be falsehoods.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
Was that a mistruth or is that an untruth?
Speaker 1 (01:11):
Is that disinformation or misinformation? That's a great question. And
we don't have the panel under the Biden administration's doj
to tell us which one it is.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
What was that lady who was the Broadway actress or whatever,
who was like the head of the misinformation panel or what?
Speaker 1 (01:26):
Yes? Yeah, what was her name?
Speaker 2 (01:28):
What a great video that was? Gosh, that was great.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
Forgotten about her. I miss her so much. I gotta
leave that video up now so I can laugh even
harder at it. All Right, So we did have the
June inflation report, and it was not the It was
not the death of America, and we're not going to
be spiraling into a recession. And we have another Trump
administration announcement coming soon with which country? Indonesia?
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Oh yeah. Trump tweeted out as we record this at
ten o'clock about fifteen minutes ago, that he had a
breakthrough with Indonesia. Great details dealt directly with the president,
the wonderful esteemed President or something like that. In details
to follow. We don't know what he got done with Indonesia.
I know that Apple this morning announced that they're spending
five hundred million dollars to help develop rare earth mine
(02:21):
here in the United States. And again, obviously the rare
Earth is key to the chips that are needed in
order to make AI work. We also had another.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
AI, especially since we turned over an incredible depositive of
them with Joe Biden's Afghanistan, which draw all the China's takeover.
Speaker 2 (02:40):
Well, you know these rare Earth and these these AI investments.
Trump is on his way right now to Pennsylvania and
he says that I'm just reading this from CBS Pittsburgh.
The President will be in Pennsylvania today to unveil a
seventy billion dollar investment in AI as the Trump administration
solidifies the US as the global leader in an artificial intelligence.
(03:03):
And you and I are not people who have brains
that are built to understand all this sort of thing,
but people like Elon Musk, who do have brains that
are built for this sort of thing, says that the
AI war is basically going to be fought and over
in the next basically thirty six.
Speaker 1 (03:22):
Months something like that.
Speaker 2 (03:23):
Next thirty six months decides who is the global leader
in AI, and whoever's the global leader in AI. According
to those guys, they will be the global leader in
all things because even militarily, if you own the AI
sniper position, the high ground. You can accomplish anything you'd
like to accomplish with AI.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
I mean, I can't begin to wrap my brain around
the software of AI, because I can't even start to
wrap my brain around the hardware needed for AI. I
was listening to an interview with a guy. Now I'm
going to pair phrase, so I can't remember who it was,
so I don't have the source. But he said, the
(04:06):
energy demand for the data centers needed to handle AI's
demands would be the equivalent of five Hoover dams just
for the data center.
Speaker 2 (04:25):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
Wow, that is a lot of energy that we're gonna
have to not only figure out how to generate, but
now you got to figure out, well, you're gonna have
to generate it close to the data centers because we
can't we can't transport that through our infrastructure currently.
Speaker 2 (04:41):
Well, not only that, but Elon Musk said, even if
you ten x ten x nuclear power plants on Earth
and they all went to the United States, you just
still don't have enough energy. No, think about that, every
nuclear power plant and on the face of the Earth
(05:02):
times it by ten and then deny the energy to
every other country on Earth and only allow the United
States to have it, you still don't have enough energy.
He says that the key AI is going to solve
the energy problem because AI will be able to crack
the code on how to get solar energy correctly, because
(05:23):
he says, solar energy right now, we all the solar
farms on Earth don't even capture a fraction of one
percent of the energy that's being sent to us. If
you can capture the energy that the solar that the
Sun is sending us, then you can actually run all
this stuff. But as far as energy goes, China is
(05:43):
years ahead of us now in energy because talking about
just the dams, they've got dams that are you know,
five x on the Hoover Dam they've got. They've got
one dam that's slowed the rotation of the Earth, and
they got another one that they say it's almost done
and it's going to be double the size of that one.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
And I don't even know if there's still on pace
of opening a cold plant per week. China is so
far ahead of us and so many different ways is frightening.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
And I saw a video that I'm assuming the Chinese
Minister of whatever propaganda put out in anticipation of our
fourth of July festivities. They too like to celebrate the
Fourth of July, or at least they too like to
have firework shows. But this year they one upped it.
They took a million drones and they put them in
(06:33):
the sky for a coordinated light show. And the video
that I saw, so you're seeing drones absorb about four
miles of airspace and they're flying in ways with the
lights flashing in certain ways to create Chinese flag. Then
it turns into a dragon, then it turns into something else,
(06:55):
and then all million of them landed together and they
were coming down in waves of I think fifty thousand
at a time. It was one of the most unbelievable
things I've ever seen. And then unfortunately for us, it
was like the next day, Pete Hegseth comes out with
that embarrassment of a video where he's like taking a
note from a drone. I don't know if he's all,
(07:15):
we're going to lead the world and drone technology, you
ain't leading it in propaganda, because that looked like something
that me and my kid could have put together.
Speaker 1 (07:23):
Yeah, I know this is gonna be a much smaller scale.
But I was out of town when they had the
drone firework show at Segra Park. Oh really okay, fascinating,
But you can imagine this Kelly described it. You can
imagine being able to create whatever picture you want to
create in the sky. You know it won't be long.
(07:44):
The Chinese will be showing movies in the clouds. Movie
Night at Duko Park will be projected by drones.
Speaker 2 (07:54):
And just speaking of the drone technology, I mean that's
the big problem for the Ukraine right now with Russia.
Russ is able to send in like a thousand drones
at once and that draws the fire or at least
messes up the guided missile systems that they have as
then incomes the missile behind that. But the right now,
(08:18):
the computers don't know what to shoot at because they've
got five hundred or one thousand drones floating around outside
their target system and the thing is confused. So they're
hoping that the Patriot missile systems will be able to
overcome that.
Speaker 1 (08:32):
It's an incredible technological race that people working around the
clock around the globe trying to gain control.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
And what do we use it for? I use it.
I was laughing at They've got Donald Trump AI out
there on the street like a podcaster with his microphone
interviewing JFK talking about how bad it sucks to get
shot in the head. That's what we're using AI for,
all right.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
So today is Tuesday, the fifteenth of July. The state
of South Carolina. We got a couple of big things come. Oh,
Andy Brasher is going to be here beginning tomorrow, so
more Democrat hopeful presidential nominees of Victorian the Palmetto States.
Chuck Todd Done toldya, if I were a young reporter,
look and make my name in political news, I would
(09:19):
immediately move to the state of South Carolina, the epicenter
of it. But now with tracks of Democrats coming through
tomorrow in the upstate and in Columbia, and then Thursday
in the low Country.
Speaker 2 (09:32):
If I was Chuck todd On advising young Democrats on
presidential hopefulness, I would scratch South Carolina from my itinery.
The idea that South Carolina would actually have any input
regarding a Democrat is now gone. It's over. Joe Biden
(09:53):
lost this state when he won the presidency by a lot.
Kamala Harris lost this state by over twenty points. The
Democrats are no longer competitive in most red states. Most
red states are getting redder. A lot of the blue
states are now turning purple, and the purple states are
becoming red. The country is turning its back and rejecting
(10:15):
all Democrats because of the debacle that was the last
four years and the very apparent lies that they were
telling to the US citizenry.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
Well, the upside for Brasher, to my knowledge, is he
doesn't have to backtrack. Cavenusseom's coming into town having to
backtrack everything he said, not only as a governor of
the state, which he still is, but also even trying
to backtrack on the stuff that he had backtracked on
on his podcast. Well, because you got Democrats disappointed because
(10:45):
he wasn't going to double down, But you're trying to
win over independence and hitting some hard red areas to
win over support from the Republicans, the disenfranchised magas.
Speaker 2 (10:59):
All right, So, just on immigration, here's a question that
anybody and a young cub reporter could ask Andy Basheer.
This would be groundbreaking news if he answers it the
right way, mister Basher, Governor Basher, if you were the president,
would you align yourself with the policies of Donald Trump
and deport every illegal in the country. Seventy two percent
(11:23):
of Americans now say that is the right move. If
he says no, I think we need to find a
way to work with families to keep them together. And
they've already done the hard work. Any of that, bs,
you're now disqualified. You have lost an opportunity because you're
trying to win a primary and the primary is a
bunch of insane people.
Speaker 1 (11:44):
Yeah, you can't tap back from your primary position to
get back to somewhat center for the general.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
You know, Elon Musk has floated this idea of a
third party. I really believe that there is hope for
a third party in its former Democrats. That Democrats used
to agree with the Republicans on all the issues. If
you're old enough to remember, go back to the early
two thousands, or the nineteen nineties or the eighties. Everybody
(12:11):
agreed on the same things. The only disagreement was how
do you get to that? They don't agree anymore. They
don't agree that men should not compete against women. They
don't agree that children should not have a say on
sex changes. They don't agree on many many They don't
agree that illegal aliens who have committed violent crimes and
(12:33):
are currently sitting in a prison cell should be deported.
They won't allow Ice to go into the prisons and
get them.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
Yeah, when you take the balance of the magas and
you're going to put up the scale, Okay, all the
Trump policies in this hand and Epstein files in this one. Okay,
suddenly boomp, you're tilted. Will take the policies you take
the Democrats. Okay, Now you've got a problem. You can't
even put that the same scale. They don't even belong
(13:02):
in the same universe. You can't weigh those against each
other because they are mutually exclusive. You can't.
Speaker 2 (13:08):
There is no crossover. And when you look at the
Democrat Party, it's dwindling, right It's getting smaller and smaller
right now. I think they said. When up until recently,
and when I say recently, I mean pre Joe Biden.
Up until recently, it had been consistently the Democrats were
actually bigger than the Republicans. It was usually around thirty
(13:30):
four thirty five percent of Americans identified as Democrats, usually
about twenty nine to thirty two thirty three percent identified
as Republicans. It's currently below twenty percent identify as Democrats.
Now less than twenty percent. You are in the ash
heap of history. If you continue on this path, you're
the Whigs. It's over.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
Yeah, both Republicans and Democrats and the political insiders would
talk about the chasm, that is the independence in between
the two extremes of the Republicans and the Democrat parties.
You take that chasm now and move it over exclusively
to the Democrat party. Make it about thirty miles wider,
about one hundred and fifty miles deeper. You've got a
serious problem in your in your party because of and
(14:15):
it's demonstrated. Ex Kelly pointed out. It is demonstrated even
with the moderate Democrats who will be tracking through the
state of South Carolina. As they continue, I suppose looking
for some hope against hope to tack back across and
end up in a general so they can tack back
to the center. Well, look, you get a hell of
(14:36):
a storm to go through with that vessel.
Speaker 2 (14:39):
Look at Andy Basheer's announcement that when he's coming to
South Carolina. Governor Basher this is according to the Associated Press.
Governor Basher says he's considering a twenty twenty eight bid,
we'll spend two days touring South Carolina. He says it's
important to focus on the black community and how they've
been left behind. You've lost, you have already lost the
(15:01):
presidency there. That message does not resonate with blacks or Latinos,
or whites, or Native Americans or what we used to
call Americans. We don't like to divvy ourselves up by race.
Speaker 1 (15:14):
Hey, you weren't able to pull off your great camouflage
effort to bring in forty million people to be registered
as Democrat voters in an upcoming election. You didn't get
that registration done. You don't have an audience to hear that.
Speaker 2 (15:29):
The other guy who's coming is Rocanna, who I love this.
It's again Associated Press. California Congressman Rocanna will also to
our South Carolina. Rocanna says he's the most closely aligned
with Bernie Sanders. Yes, I am the most Bernie Bro.
I'm trying to steal AOC's position. I'm the most Bernie
Bro out there. Bro, And he says, absolutely, I'm targeting
(15:51):
black voters. The blacks are in South Carolina. I want
I expect all blacks to vote for me. Rocanna. Is
that what you expect if I don't vote for you? Row,
I ain't black. I think I've heard that line before.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
In today's state newspaper, we read a couple of stories
not as well. Let's tell you what We'll start with this.
Last night in Greenville, our Lieutenant Governor Pamela Effitt Evitt
announced that she.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
Hern is it Thursday? She's calling? When is she? If
she's on this week? Isn't she Thursday? Thursday? So we
got her checking in in a couple of days to
tell us about the big, big.
Speaker 1 (16:29):
News she will be running now against at this point
on the Republican side, Alan Wilson and Josh Kimberl. Josh
Kimberl's latest head line was not pleasing. What was that
He's been charged by a former business partner with basically
shell gaming two million dollars out of their business together
to open up something else or use it for something
(16:52):
other than business purposes.
Speaker 2 (16:53):
Do you think this is a politically timed he clad announcement?
Speaker 1 (16:57):
Okay, but it's strange that you will be in business
with someone if you are a sitting member in the
General Assembly that you're not politically aligned with, that will
be a strange that will be an odd couple story
right there, So I much I'm not sure how that's going.
Speaker 2 (17:12):
To shake out.
Speaker 1 (17:13):
And then the other thing was, and we have a
quote from Pamela Ebbott that we can share with you
in just a second. Alligator Alcatraz could be coming to
South Carolina and apparently according to this article, this started
a while back. Let me let see if I find
there was a mention on this week's Meet the Press
(17:35):
with Christy Nome, but the start of the while back
where there was an encouragement from Stephen Miller, we want
every governor in a red state, if you're watching tonight
the pick up the phone called DHS to work with
us to build facilities in your state. And he made
that announcement after the outrage of Alligator Alcatraz that has
(17:55):
yet to be at that point opened in Florida, and
now we know it to be opened because you're seeing
all of the news coverage on the cages that they
have built for these persons that they claim have been
innocently taken off the street.
Speaker 2 (18:09):
Well, it's interesting also if you look at the posting courier,
I didn't realize that the state of Florida has turned
Alligator Alcatraz into basically a tourist destination. They have next
exit Alligator Alcatraz signs on the highways. This is a
fantastic if State of Florida is selling t shirts and
hats and things of that nature to raise extra money.
(18:30):
So the santas Is have it at ball with this. Absolutely,
And so here in South Carolina are we open to
that idea of having some sort of detention facility. Absolutely,
we're open to that because we're a law and order state.
Speaker 1 (18:44):
And because we could use some federal moneies. There's a
lot of money in the Big Beautiful Bill that's now
going to be used thirteen point five billion to compensate
states and localities for expenses related to the direct enforcement
of federal immigration laws and analysis by the National Immigration Lossenter,
says Congress's latest spending plan with roughly quadruple DHS detention
(19:05):
budget with approximately forty five billion in new funding to
detain immigrant adults and families through September thirtieth of twenty
twenty nine.
Speaker 2 (19:17):
So when you start adding forty five and thirteen and
a half, you're adding a lot of billions. And would
Henry McMaster like to get his beak wet, get the
state's bequt. Absolutely, would we have places that suck hardcore
like alligator Alcatraz isn't a swamp. We got plenty of
places that suck hardcore. Sure, that whole Corridor of Shame.
(19:40):
We can't build an alligator there. We don't have to
go down and build it next to Paris Island, where
you already know that was probably an alligator Algecatraz. When
you talk to marines that come out of there because
they know they can't step foot off the island, you're
going to get eaten alive. You could take one of
those abandoned schools in the Corridor of Shame that Barack
Obama wagged his finger at, and you could put some
(20:01):
cages in there, and as what's her face, wi Washerman
Schultz put it out, toilet units which actually have attached
sinks no more than three feet from the toilet. Listen, lady,
if you've ever seen any prison show or movie or anything,
they're all peeing and crapping almost in the sink. That's
(20:24):
just the way it goes. These people are not in
a very hospitable place. We've taken them. I'll give you
that they were staying at the Four Seasons on the
US taxpayer. That was happening. But now we're kicking them out.
They chose to not leave, and so this is your option.
Either get the hell out now, self deport or end
up at the Alligator Alcatraz or some other place while
(20:46):
you get some more due process before we finally kick
you out.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
Yeah, the Trump administration did not commission a engineer, a
plumbing engineer to come with a design for this. These
thinks have been around forever.
Speaker 2 (20:59):
Yeah, and it has air conditioning. I mean people are
saying it's inhumane. It's not inhumane. There is air conditioning whatever.
The stuff that like W. Wasserman Schultz is talking about
is total bs It was already up to code before this,
so I mean they just abandoned it like maybe eighteen
months earlier. So they just had to spruce it up
(21:20):
a little bit, make sure that the barbed wire was
barbed and now we're good to go. Alligators are still hungry,
We're good. Alligator Alcatraz ready for business.
Speaker 1 (21:29):
Here's a quote out of the Posting Courier article you
may have read. Government master is directed state officials to
continue exploring how the Palmento State's unique assets and resources.
So maybe he's thinking about the old Monkey Island are
unique assets and resources.
Speaker 2 (21:46):
They're not there anymore. Right, then we close that down,
we stopped trying to transgenderize. Our monkeys can.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
Be utilized to provide additional and enhanced support in the
weeks and months to come. And then we know because
chrism had introducement Master a while back and actually introduced
him as one of the present President Donald Trump's quote
best friends.
Speaker 2 (22:09):
Is he really? Is he really one of the best friends?
Does he? Has he ever been golfing with him? No,
he's no Lindsay Graham.
Speaker 1 (22:16):
Some in state politicians have already expressed interest. Lieutenant Governor
Pamela Ebbott, now running for governor at twenty twenty six,
Coyly suggested that they support Nome's efforts, suggesting the name
the Palmetto Pen.
Speaker 2 (22:30):
I mean, I appreciate the effort. It's a literation like
alligator alcatraz. I just don't think it really pops I
mean penn pen. Yeah, it doesn't really. I like the
South CAx Sing Sing Sing Sing is probably the most
famous prison of all lot of time. It's right up
there with like rikers. Sure, Alcatraz is the most famous.
But you know, sing sing was this synonymous for going
(22:53):
to jail people. I don't even think people realized after
a while that it was a real jail. I didn't
think it was.
Speaker 1 (22:58):
I thought it was just a movie. Right, it's to
a prison, sing sing? Who would name it? Sing sing?
Speaker 2 (23:03):
That's what they called it? What even inspired that name?
Do you look it up? Sing sing? Why did they
invent the name sing sing?
Speaker 1 (23:09):
What is the origin of the term sing sing in reference?
Speaker 2 (23:12):
Maybe?
Speaker 1 (23:13):
Well, I don't know. He's gonna look it up real
quick using AI technology. During the actual broadcast itself, we
bring it to you live, We're going to go to
AI for a reading.
Speaker 2 (23:22):
Sing Sing it's still open. Sing Sing is a maximum
security prison four men in New York State. It's thirty
miles north of Midtown Manhattan. Blah blah blah blah blah
is originally proposed in eighteen twenty four Sing Sing fifth
Prison opened by the State of New York. I'm trying
to figure out why they call it Sing Sing Da.
(23:44):
And that's named after a small village in Westchester. So
there's a small village in Westchester County.
Speaker 1 (23:50):
Gotcha and it's in sing sing.
Speaker 2 (23:53):
Oh my gosh, it's funny because they actually butchered it.
So the actual name of the town should have been
sink sink. I guess is how you'd pronounce it, s
I n c k s I n c k. It
was a Native American words which meant stone upon stone,
sink sync. Yeah, and then the New Yorkers just said yes,
(24:16):
sing sing claude sing sing it's stone upon a stone.
It's all. You can't get the freakout place. You're never
gonna leave it.
Speaker 1 (24:22):
Bastardized word that is so ultra American. A bastardized word
becomes infamous in the penal Coats colonies.
Speaker 2 (24:31):
I love it.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
So sing sing South coming to South Carolina. According to
Kelly Nash, Lieutenant Governor Pamela Abbott, we should have a contest.
Pamela Evitt likes Palmetto pen.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
What did you call it?
Speaker 1 (24:46):
The South Cack sing sing South CAx sing sing. Okay,
if you have a suggestion for what, we just guarantee
we're gonna get one. We're gonna need a name we go.
You might as well get to the M S C
do O T. Because we're gonna be like Florida. I'm
printing up billboard. It's and signs were in a special
exit exactly gets your photo. Take a selfie in front
of the Selfkax sing sing, It's coming.