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October 23, 2024 45 mins

(Full Show) We may very well be in the fall of western civilization and there's one big reason why that may be. Jesse Kelly reveals that reason and how the people behind it will reap what they sow. Allie Beth Stuckey joins Jesse with reaction and to talk about her new book: Toxic Empathy. Jesse also prepares for the 2024 election by talking about promising new data from Seth Keshel out of swing states. Plus, a conversation about illegal immigration and what it means for the country with The Federalist's Adam Johnston.

I'm Right with Jesse Kelly on The First TV | 10-22-24

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Are communist women going to end Western civilization.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
We'll talk about that tonight.

Speaker 1 (00:06):
We'll talk about how Kamala is doing on the campaign trail,
why they're campaigning in that way. We have such a
huge show for you tonight, and I'm right okay, before

(00:27):
we get into politics and the West and communism and
we have a great show tonight, Ali bes stucky and
things like that, we have to do something that we
have to do a lot on this show. We have
to honor the fallen. We honor the fallen in training
as well, not just combat, in training for.

Speaker 2 (00:48):
You new viewers, and I know we have a lot
of them, you should know. I have a special place
in my heart for those.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
Who die in military training because they never get the
glory of the ones in combat. You know, there's always
kind of this stigma attached to it. Ooh, that kind
of sucks. It was training. They're every bit as brave
as the ones who die in combat. Military training has
to be dangerous, otherwise you don't have a very good military.

(01:15):
It has to be life threatening. That's how it has
to go. And so when people do training exercises, things
happen in training, things happen in peacetime, and they give
their lives in service to this country. They are heroes
as well, and their names deserve to be heard, and
then their names deserve to be remembered. We lost too
naval aviators this last weekend Washington State. Last week I

(01:40):
was training exercise and we wanted to give out their
names here because it's been finally released. Lieutenant Commander Lindsay
Miley Evans and Lieutenant Serena Doug Wilman.

Speaker 2 (01:51):
Both of them were thirty one years old.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
They lost their lives, gave their lives in service to
this country, and it's actually I was about to say
it's funny, there's nothing funny about it, but it's ironic.

Speaker 2 (02:03):
I guess you should say. Last week when I was
in Montana.

Speaker 1 (02:07):
For my father's funeral services and things like that, there
was an aviator there. I'm not going to say which branch,
we don't have to get into that, but there was
an aviator there, someone who does exactly what these ladies do,
and he was discussing with me. We had some time
to break bread their training and the things they have
to do for training, things that are crazy.

Speaker 2 (02:30):
I'm not even I'm.

Speaker 1 (02:30):
Not a nervous flyer or anything like that, things that
just maybe sit there. Just listening to them describe the
kind of training that have to do made me go,
oh gosh, it's a very dangerous profession, and it has
to be a very dangerous profession. And we respect these ladies,
respect their service, respect their sacrifice. Please say a prayer
for their families. Okay, all right, now let's shift gears

(02:54):
to politics. It's been a fascinating campaign. Watch the two
different campaigns, the Harris campaign versus the Trump campaign. It's
been fascinating one Trump, how open Trump is and this
can burn him too. Remember has Trump? You either kind

(03:16):
of love him or hate him? Most people do.

Speaker 2 (03:18):
I'm not really like that.

Speaker 1 (03:19):
I don't feel that way about any politicians. But most
people love Donald Trump or they really really despise Donald
Trump because he has such a strong personality. He's so
unapologetic about who he is what he believes.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
So there's that.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
But Donald Trump is doing everything I have never ever seen.
In fact, there has never been a Republican presidential campaign
that has operated the way the Trump campaign has operated.
Meaning he's going on podcasts and things.

Speaker 2 (03:50):
That I've never heard of.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
But ones my sons have heard of kind of these
younger podcasts, not even necessarily political podcasts.

Speaker 2 (03:59):
You name it. Donald Trump is doing it.

Speaker 1 (04:01):
Remember he showed up in a completely hostile environment to
the Association of Black Journalists. He's showing up in barbershops
in the Bronx. Donald Trump, to his credit, is bearing
his soul and laying it all out there, reaching everyone
he possibly can. Then there's Kamala Harricks and this kind

(04:23):
of leads me to our conversation for tonight, which is
much much bigger than the Kamala Harris campaign. It's about
you in me, in who we share a country with.
Let's use this as an example. I want you to
picture something. I want you to picture. You're walking through

(04:44):
an asylum. You know where they keep crazy people, people
who are having mental health issues. We used to just
call them crazy people. But I want you to picture
an asylum. And you're walking down the asylum and you
have all these people are yelling and screaming. It's an asylum,
it's the way things are. And you look through the window.
You walk up to one of the cells, one of
the holding places, and you look through the window and

(05:06):
there's a man in there. He's in a padded room,
and he's in there talking about the most insane things
in the world. He's claiming he can fly, he's claiming
he is Jesus reincarnated. He is claiming that the color
green is poisonous. And you're sitting there saying to yourself

(05:27):
as you watch him, that guy's insane. Why he has
created a reality in his mind out of nothing.

Speaker 2 (05:38):
He lives in a world of make believes.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
So you have this guy pictured right, you'm pictured in
your head. Here's the reality of life for you and
me right now, in the year of our Lord twenty
twenty four. We share a country with a lot of people,
not one man in a padded cell, with a lot
of people who reside in a world that is just

(06:04):
as unreal as that made up guy in the padded cell.
The American Democrat resides in a world not of biased
not it's shaded to the left, entirely of make believe.
The average American Democrat believes Donald Trump told them to
inject bleached during COVID. It's on camera, doesn't matter that

(06:25):
it's on camera.

Speaker 2 (06:26):
That's not what he said.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
The average American Democrat believes that the average American Democrat
believes Donald Trump colluded with Russia. The average American Democrat
believes Donald Trump called Nazis very fine people.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
These are a couple small examples.

Speaker 1 (06:43):
The average American Democrat believes George Floyd was killed by
Derek Chauvin in Minneapolis. They believe these things. They believe
them all the way, and I could go down the list.
They believe things that are simply factually wrong.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
They live in a world of make believe. But why, well,
here's why.

Speaker 1 (07:03):
Remember, the American communist is a herd animal. This is
a mistake people on the right make. Maybe you have
made this mistake. I certainly have made this mistake in
the past of believing that everyone wants.

Speaker 2 (07:15):
To be free.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
Freedom is great. Surely this is something everyone wants. That's
a complete line. Lots of people want it, You want it,
I want it. A lot of people don't want.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
To be free. They want to be taken care of.
They want to be part of a herd.

Speaker 1 (07:33):
They enjoy the safety of the herd. They want to
be told where to go, what to think, what to eat,
what to drive. But there are a lot of people
who are built that way. We call these people democrats.
And once you become part of that herd. You can
be led in any direction the shepherd wants to take you,

(07:54):
and you're happy to be led in that direction because
at least.

Speaker 2 (07:57):
You have the safety of the herd.

Speaker 1 (08:00):
Democrats understand because of their control of the media and
their control of the education system and their control of
the entertainment industry, they understand that they can build the
world of make believe around their voters. They do it
all the time. Kamala Harris did a town hall. Now,
the idea behind a town hall is you as a candidate,

(08:25):
maybe you're already in office of some kind, maybe you're
running for office of some kind. I've done town halls
back when I was running for Congress.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
The idea is.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
People are allowed to show up, people like you, people
like me, normal civilians are allowed to show up, and
they are because we live in a representative republic. They're
allowed to ask questions. That's the whole idea behind a
town hall. Normal people allowed to ask questions of the
candidate on stage. Somebody showed up at a Kamala Harris

(08:53):
town hall thinking that was going to be the idea
yesterday and no, no, no, you see, you don't understand
it was in a town hall.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
They're building a world of make believe.

Speaker 1 (09:05):
You're not.

Speaker 3 (09:06):
Unfortunately, we have some pre determined questions, and I hopefully
I'll be able to ask some of the questions that
might be in your head.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
I hope so hek we asked some questions.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
Oh no, no, no, no, no, no, no no.

Speaker 2 (09:22):
Did you think this was a real town hall?

Speaker 4 (09:24):
No?

Speaker 1 (09:24):
No, We've predetermined some questions. We must keep you in
this facade. I've explained it this way before a movie set.
You ever seen a movie set or a TV set?
I saw it one time. I saw a daytime filming
of the old TV show King of Queens, and I've
never seen something like that for but it was fascinating.
You sit up in the stands and you look down

(09:45):
in this house, the living room where they were, It's
just a couple of fake walls, a couple of fake couches,
a couple fake windows. There's nothing there. You're in a
movie set. That's the world the average American Democrat lives in.
Kamala Harris's campaign is now so controlled. Her staff first
are calling on reporters for her.

Speaker 2 (10:04):
We're going to call you.

Speaker 1 (10:05):
The BP him, Madam Vice President do you think that
Republican voters and specific women voters will be more likely
to vote for you because of the fall of Roe. Now,
let's talk about that. The fall of Roe. You see,
this is the one area. And look, you can ask

(10:28):
Kamala Harris about immigration, ask her about the economy, and
she will give you some crazy words salad answer, doing
it the best she can to fill of us there
long enough so she doesn't have to answer the question
because she doesn't know about the issue, and she knows
her answer on the issues dreadful and something people will hate.
But you get this woman revved up on abortion, and
she can go.

Speaker 5 (10:48):
On the issue of the freedom of a woman to
make decisions about her own body is on the ballot.
The American people vote for freedom, regardless of the party
with which the registered to vote.

Speaker 1 (11:01):
Very comfortable answering that, And that leads me to a
separate conversation. You know, I understand that women, young single women.
I should know this generally doesn't apply to married women
women as they get older, but young single women are

(11:21):
more susceptible to societal pressures than any other group married men,
single men, they just simply are.

Speaker 2 (11:28):
Women are more anxious.

Speaker 1 (11:30):
Souls more worried about being accepted in social situations. That's
just the way we are, It's the way God made us.
But the issue is the Communist has understood that for
the longest time, and he has used that for the
longest time. And here's the truth. There are a lot
of a lot of women in this country who are

(11:51):
single issue voters.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
They vote for abortion.

Speaker 1 (11:55):
It doesn't matter if the borders open, inflation's bad, World
War III. It does matter that a Venezuelan gang just
raped and murdered a woman in the apartment next door.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
There are a lot of.

Speaker 1 (12:06):
Women in this country who are single issue abortion voters,
and Democrats know it. I remember when I moved to
Virginia for a year when I was in politics. Virginia
was a very much a swing state back then, so
I got all the election commercials you could handle in
almost every one of them.

Speaker 2 (12:25):
This is back in the Obama era.

Speaker 1 (12:27):
Was about abortion, abortion, abortion, We'll give you abortion, all the.

Speaker 2 (12:30):
Abortion you want. This is an issue that is a
winner for Democrats.

Speaker 1 (12:34):
It's why they drag up actresses like Julia Luis Dreyfus
for ads like this.

Speaker 3 (12:39):
Okay, let's cut to the chase. Donald Trump and his
merry band of yes men are obsessed with what we
women do with our bodies. They want to reach into
our doctor's offices and our bedrooms to control our access
to birth control and IVF and of course abortion, even
though they wouldn't know if they had to crawl out

(13:01):
of one for a second time. I don't know about you,
but I'd really like to get the government out of
my faste.

Speaker 1 (13:12):
Lovely. Don't roll your eyes though. Look you can hate that,
and I do, but don't roll your eyes. The truth
is there are legions, in legions of women in this
country and in frankly in the West who are more
than willing to burn down all of Western civilization as

(13:35):
long as they're allowed to continue murdering their babies. We
see it in poll after poll after poll. There's a
reason they run ads. There's a reason Kamala Harris talks
that way. Is the reason they drag up actresses to
talk that way. Owen Shroyer, who I'm a fan of,
went to a college campus recently, and don't think this
is just a couple random college kids. This is the

(13:55):
polling shows. This is how young women vote in this country.

Speaker 6 (14:00):
What do you like best about her plan for America well,
productive rights for women, their starters.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
And why do you like hers? I just like what
she stands for.

Speaker 7 (14:10):
I like her as a person. She has personality, she's nice,
and she believes that.

Speaker 2 (14:14):
Majory finish that writes. What views of comments do you
like here? Paul like abortion?

Speaker 1 (14:20):
Paul?

Speaker 2 (14:21):
Is abortion any other issues that.

Speaker 1 (14:24):
Are key for you?

Speaker 2 (14:26):
Not?

Speaker 6 (14:26):
Really?

Speaker 2 (14:27):
Just abortion is the main issue.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
Yeah, So allow me to speak to the communists who
hate watch this show and everyone else gets it. But
allow me to speak to the communists who hate watched
this show for a moment. You communist ladies who maybe
maybe vote that way. I know you love abortion. I
got it, obviously. I disagree with you. I got it.

(14:51):
I understand. I understand you've been getting conditioned to love it.

Speaker 2 (14:55):
I get that at all. But you better hear me here.

Speaker 1 (15:00):
You really, really really don't understand what it's going to
be like for you if Western civilization falls. I know
it sounds so nice, but do you understand what happens
to women in particular when civilized societies crumble. Maybe put
away the TikTok videos for just an hour. Pick up

(15:24):
any book about a civilized society in the past that
has crumbled and how it goes for women. Maybe consider
that next time you walk in a voting booth and
vote for Democrats so you can slaughter your baby to
get drunk at spring break. Well, that may have made
you uncomfortable, but.

Speaker 2 (15:46):
I am right.

Speaker 1 (15:46):
We will talk to Ali Bethstucky about this next She
has a lot to say about it. In along those lines.
Allow me to talk to you about an organization. I
love them so much. They do God's work. They walk
into the lions. Then Preborn has pro life clinics, not

(16:08):
just in comfortable places. They don't do that in the
highest abortion areas of the country Buffalo, New York. Places
like that where abortion is done by the dozen. Preborn
sets up their clinics there and they offer these young
women hope. They offer them free ultrasounds. If a woman
gets an ultrasound, she chooses life almost every time, care

(16:30):
if she needs it, if she needs substance abuse helper,
or she needs to get away from an abusive spouse.
That Preborn is there being the hands and feet saving
these lives. And when you support preborn, that's what you do.
And by the way, it's tax deductible. That ultrasound costs
twenty eight dollars if you'd like to buy one for
a young lady, but you can give them twenty eight thousand.

(16:51):
I don't care what you give them. It's all tax deductible.
Preborn dot com slash Jesse, please consider saving a life tonight.

Speaker 2 (17:00):
All right, we'll be back.

Speaker 4 (17:10):
My daughter's twenty two and a half is a feminist,
incredibly strong, and has really just inspired me in so
many ways.

Speaker 2 (17:20):
I love her.

Speaker 8 (17:20):
I'm the proud dad of Ella over here.

Speaker 9 (17:24):
My vote for Kamala is an investment in my daughter's future.

Speaker 2 (17:28):
I agree. I'm right there with you.

Speaker 8 (17:29):
When the Dobbs decision came out two plus years ago,
I heard from Kamala right away, and then the next
person was Ella. She texted me right away, essentially saying,
we need to fight. This is not just an issue
for women. This is an issue for men and families.
And this is one of the many, many reasons why
we've got to elect Kama's president.

Speaker 6 (17:49):
Never in my lifetime did I think that we would
be having to fight for this and the fight for
our own bodies. And I think it's really important for
the men to step up and show that they actually
support us and they're willing to put things on the
line to help us.

Speaker 2 (18:05):
Fight for our own bodies.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
Joining me now, my friend Ali Best Stucky, author of
a book that It's really Boy. It nails at what
has happened to the West. One of the reasons that
has happened to the West called toxic empathy. How progressives
exploit Christian compassion. Ali, it blows me away. It sickens me.
I know you're not exactly thrilled about it yourself, but
the truth is half this country loves abortion enough to

(18:31):
burn it down so they can continue having them. And
people have a hard time understanding why.

Speaker 7 (18:40):
Yep.

Speaker 10 (18:40):
Absolutely, And when you hear these celebrities say why they're
voting for Kamala Herries, whether it's Steph Curry or Taylor
Swift or Jennifer Lawrence or Ben Stiller, their number one
reason is always abortion, not the economy, not that they
think that she's the adult in the room who's going
to help, you know, bring us back on track when

(19:01):
it comes to foreign policy or whatever.

Speaker 7 (19:03):
It is literally the slaughter of unborn children.

Speaker 10 (19:05):
And when you tear away their euphemisms which they always use,
you see what they're talking about. They're talking about poisoning
and dismembering babies. That's what they want to fight for.
That's what Kamala Harris is most animated about. That's what
she worships, That's what Tim Walls loves. You see that
in the debates, that's when they become most animated. And
it's really important for us to just get rid of

(19:28):
the propaganda for a second and talk about what they're
really celebrating.

Speaker 2 (19:33):
Yeah, it is.

Speaker 1 (19:34):
And I actually had an email to my show last night.
Guy was trying to understand why they love why they
love it so much, And you put it a lot
more eloquently than I do, and I'll hand you the floor,
but I just I tried to explain that we're dealing
with evil forces. We're dealing with demons, We're dealing with
the devil himself, and in every demonic society and history,

(19:57):
we're not unique. Child sacrifice has been the central part
of it that the Phoenicians, the as techs, more societies
than we can name. You sacrifice your most pure, your
most innocent, for whatever your selfish desires have to be.
If you're an Aztech, you want the rain to fall
on the crops that year. If you're an American young lady,

(20:17):
you want to be able to go get hammered into
Juana on spring break. And that's simply what evil societies do.

Speaker 7 (20:23):
Yep, you put it so perfectly.

Speaker 10 (20:25):
There's always been practical reasons for child sacrifice. There was,
you know, as you just mentioned that as Techs believed
that sacrificing their children would give them good weather to them.
That wasn't just spiritual, that was just a pragmatic choice
that I give to God this this God will give
me something in return. Well, today we don't have normal paganism.

(20:46):
We kind of have a neopaganism. We've exchanged the God
of scripture for the God of self. And the God
of Self is relentlessly demanding. It wants to meet its
own needs and fulfill its own wants no matter what.
That's why you hear this language of bodily autonomy.

Speaker 7 (21:03):
It wants control at whatever.

Speaker 10 (21:05):
Cost, even when the cost is the blood of unborn children.
Children get in the way of people's selfishness.

Speaker 7 (21:14):
That's actually what makes them awesome. That's what makes parenting amazing.

Speaker 10 (21:18):
That's why families make societies flourish. But if you worship yourself,
and you worship self gratification and children are an obstacle
to that. You can see why someone would fight tooth
and nail to ensure that they can keep aboarding their children.

Speaker 1 (21:37):
Allie, in your book you talk about misplaced motherhood. I
love that term, misplaced motherhood.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
What are you talking about?

Speaker 7 (21:46):
Yes, I think that accounts for.

Speaker 10 (21:49):
The reason why many women at least have joined the
social justice movement. And I really started to see this
the most in the summer of twenty twenty when a
lot of or fast seeing Christians that I know probably
would consider themselves conservative. They were echoing riots are the
voice of the unheard, and I really need to check
my white privilege. I'm going to raise my white son

(22:11):
as an anti racist, and I thought, where in the
world is coming from. And then they would talk about
helping the least of these, helping the most vulnerable, and
what they meant by that was black Americans or illegal immigrants,
or a woman who is pregnant and needs an abortion.

Speaker 7 (22:28):
And what I think is that is just channeling.

Speaker 10 (22:30):
Our natural motherhood instincts into poisted up victims. And a
lot of women now they have chosen their pats and
plants over children, and when that doesn't fulfill, they look
for other ways to channel their natural nurturing, and social
justice causes gives them a very convenient and posh and

(22:53):
sophisticated and lazy way to do that. So I think
that's at least part of why so many women are
drawn to these social justice left wing causes.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
Alim As you well know, I'm very rude, in a
barbarian and a terrible person, So I put things in
ways that offend people. I realize that even when I
don't intend to do so. But I do talk a
lot about how young women, especially young single women, not
as much for married women and older women, but young
single women are so much more susceptible than everyone else

(23:27):
to societal pressures. And I know this goes back to
a lot of what you were just saying, social acceptance.

Speaker 2 (23:33):
It's just women are more built that way.

Speaker 1 (23:35):
When we walk into a party, it's my wife who's
more likely to say please, don't embarrass me, whereas I'll
say something crazy. It's the way it is, and that
eats young women alive. And the dirty communists know that
and they exploit that all the time.

Speaker 10 (23:51):
Yeah, you know, women love relationships. We are just more relational.
We don't really compartmentalize things. Everything kind of runs together.
That's one of the beautiful parts of women. That's why
motherlessness is so rare throughout history, because it is so
counterintuitive and counterinstinctual for mothers to abandon their kids. That

(24:13):
bond there is just so strong. We are very loyal
creatures in a lot of ways. Of course, him speaking generally,
and we are very empathetic people. It's not hard for
most women to put ourselves in the shoes of other
people and to think from their perspective and to see
what they see. That can be a good thing, That
could lead us to selflessness, that could lead us to love,

(24:34):
to carrying someone's burden. But it can also lead us
to stupidity, it can lead us to evil. There are
many examples of that, and these are the examples that
I give in my book in each chapter. But one example,
of course is the whole trans phenomenon. If you have
so much empathy for the man who says that he
is stuck in the wrong body, and he leads with

(24:55):
you to support him going into a women's bathroom, because
only then he will finally be liberated and feel good
and feel happy. Then your empathy could lead you to
supporting a policy that violates the rights of women and girls.

Speaker 7 (25:09):
That's what empathy does. It has the.

Speaker 10 (25:10):
Power to blind you to reality and morality. It has
the power to bid you to ignore the person on
the other side of the moral equation. That is true
when it comes to abortion. It's true when it comes
to gender. It's true when it comes to the definition
of marriage, something a lot of conservatives don't want to
talk about. It's true when it comes to illegal immigration.
It's true when it comes to justice or social justice.

(25:32):
And in all of these areas we see Christian compassion
exploited for really terrible means, and the policies that we
end up supporting in the name of love and tolerance
actually end up hurting the very people a lot of
so called progressive Christians say they're trying.

Speaker 1 (25:46):
To help, No doubt, Allie, how much of this do
you lay at the feet of men? I lay most
of it at the feet of men. It is our
job to lead. And if this society is run by
a bunch of hags, it's the fault of men.

Speaker 2 (25:59):
But that's me speaking.

Speaker 10 (26:01):
What do you say, Yeah, you know, a lot of
people say that this toxic empathy is the result of
the feminization of our culture, which I don't disagree with.
But gosh, I see this probably most prominently in the church,
and that means that it's a lot of male pastors
that have bought into this, that are too afraid of
offending their congregants, and so they will echo the mottos

(26:23):
of the world, thinking that they can be nicer than God,
thinking that they can outcompassion God by disagreeing with what
his word says about these things. And so yeah, I mean,
of course everything rises and falls on leadership, and of
course men have a role to play in all of this,
and as do women.

Speaker 2 (26:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (26:45):
Now that's when I lost my Unich pastor and my
Eunich church back when George Floyd left Ali.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
Yeah, you're the best. We'll talk again soon.

Speaker 1 (26:52):
I appreciate it, all right, Speaking which gentlemen, you need
to get your t levels up. Have you ever looked
around and thought to yourself, I'm really scared what if
women think. I mean, you need to get your tea
levels up. But let's set that aside. Are you tired
a lot, gentlemen? Are you having trouble focusing more like

(27:15):
you didn't have that problem?

Speaker 2 (27:17):
Are you down a lot?

Speaker 1 (27:21):
You get depressed, unexpl inexplicably. Sometimes you have low testostero.
It is not your fault. You drink estrogen. It's in
the water, it's in the plastics. We freaking shower in it.
It's a societal wide problem. We have to fight back
against it naturally. That's what chalk is about. Fighting back naturally.

(27:44):
Twenty percent increase in your tea levels in ninety days
by taking natural herbal supplements. Stop sticking needles in your arm,
Stop ignoring the problem. You want to feel twenty years younger.

Speaker 2 (27:57):
Dig into it, and it's Choctober given out freebies. Chalk
dot com. Its not just for men either.

Speaker 1 (28:03):
There are endless natural herbal supplements men, women, you name it.
Chalk dot com slash jessetv is where you go, save
a pile of money, take advantage of Choctober.

Speaker 2 (28:15):
We'll be back, Okay.

Speaker 1 (28:25):
Election day is when, well, no, it's not coming. Election
day is here because early voting is here. Every day's
election day now, today, tomorrow, every day.

Speaker 2 (28:35):
How are we doing? I want to know, are we
gonna win? I don't know.

Speaker 1 (28:38):
Let's talk to Seth about it. Look, he's former army.
We'll try to get the best we can out from
joining me. Now, Seth Keshel not only former army Afghanistan,
he's an election analytics expert.

Speaker 2 (28:50):
Okay, Seth, early voting.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
I realize there's a bunch of states, a bunch of
swing states that matter a lot.

Speaker 2 (28:56):
Nevada, Georgia. What's happening? Are we winning? Are we lose? Soon?
Should I start crying? Now?

Speaker 4 (29:03):
You know, we all lived through the safest and most
secure election of all time in twenty twenty, so I
think it's pretty normal for people to have some trauma
wounds from that election. And the GOP has been bigger
about getting out the early vote and competing with the
mail vote. Now, I've got my opinions about the whole thing,
but right now the numbers look horrible if you are

(29:23):
a Kamala Harris supporter. And one of the bigger tells
right now is Florida in person early voting. Yesterday, when
it started, Democrats had a seven point turnout edge from
the mail in voting, and it's now R plus four
and getting worse. And I'm watching Duval County in Florida
because it's a perfect mirror for the state of Georgia.
They move right, they move left together, and it's really
not looking good for her in Georgia either. Turnout in

(29:45):
Core Atlanta, Fulton, Decab Clayton Counties is way down. The
electorate in Georgia is much wier there than it was
in twenty twenty, and same in North Carolina. And we
can go all the way across the map. You mentioned Nevada.
Republicans are leading turnout their mail plus early voting in Nevada.
So I don't know that anything is looking up for her.

Speaker 2 (30:05):
Okay, do you do? You know why? What is?

Speaker 1 (30:09):
Obviously I don't need, I don't need any excuse to
despise Kamala Harris.

Speaker 2 (30:13):
You and I could talk about this all day long.

Speaker 1 (30:15):
But why aren't the voters turning out? Democrats always turn out,
They turn out in meetingless local elections. To their credit,
they turn out and off year elections. Why are they
not turning out this year? Or is it that we
are turning out in such huge numbers.

Speaker 4 (30:29):
It's a bit of a mixed bag.

Speaker 2 (30:30):
You know.

Speaker 4 (30:31):
They amped up their turnout artificially with twenty twenty, loosening
the laws making sure that everybody had a mail in ballot.
In fact, if the hurricane that struck western North Carolina
would have hit Philadelphia, they'd be dropping off ballots in
the apartments with drones. So the turnout issue for them
is going to be down. They don't have the sugar
high from twenty twenty, but they're missing a key chunk
of their coalition. The Democrats that are turning out are

(30:53):
the white, old white liberals, and you can find them
in suburban areas and suburban house dishers. I've seen the
numbers out here in Arizona. But the core Obama coalition,
the minority working class, they are not coming out, especially
the men. It's evident in places like Atlanta or places
that register voters by party, where everything is trended much
more Republican in the early vote, and of course the
GOP always wins election day voting. And as the clock

(31:17):
ticks by, you see behavioral things that I pick up on,
like Tim Wallas is going to campaign in Kentucky, Harris
is going down to Houston, and these are not focused
on battleground states. So I'm curious, especially given the fact
that the La Times WI will endorse a presidential candidate,
if they're beginning the process of throwing in the towel.

Speaker 1 (31:35):
Okay, so walk me through that, because this is not
the first time I've heard this that it almost seems
as if they're abandoning her.

Speaker 2 (31:43):
Is this about protecting down ballot?

Speaker 1 (31:46):
Because I have heard from my sources Panic and various
Democrats senatorial campaigns that they think they are going to
possibly lose their races because of her.

Speaker 2 (31:55):
Is that what this is about?

Speaker 4 (31:57):
You can see that in the russ Felt state. Most appropriately,
You've got Bob Casey running for Senate in Pennsylvania who's
now running ads talking about all the Trump policies that
he supported. His polling is neck and neck. Now, I
don't really do polling. I do voter registration trends and
behavioral trends. But in Michigan you have Slotkin running for
Senate there against Mike Rodgers, who put out on an

(32:18):
internal leak that they're polling has Hairris several points underwater,
and she's running apart from her and Tammy Baldwin, and
Wisconsin is doing the same in her Senate race, trying
to distance and not campaign with Harris. So clearly, given
the fact that She's probably never held a hammer, a rancher,
warn a hard hat in her life. She's not somebody
that's bringing up the working class coalition in those states

(32:39):
that she needs to win. Her only path is to
hold all three of Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Wisconsin.

Speaker 1 (32:44):
At this point, Okay, can she I don't want to
get over confident.

Speaker 2 (32:49):
I don't want to get cocky.

Speaker 1 (32:50):
I know the problem she's having with men and minorities
and others.

Speaker 2 (32:54):
Does she have a past to victory right now?

Speaker 4 (32:59):
Right now, the Democrat edge with mail in ballot returns
is trending down to where it looks like they're only
going to be up about twenty points on election day
with the mail returns. It was over forty points in
twenty twenty when an Irish Catholic named scrant and Joe
from northeastern Pennsylvania barely squeaked out Pennsylvania with what I
would call it quasi election going on. So I don't

(33:20):
think Pennsylvania looks good for her. And not only that,
I think Pennsylvania looks like twenty sixteen Ohio. All sixty
three out of sixty seven counties in Pennsylvania are on
a Republican trajectory and voter registration since twenty twenty, and
the four that aren't are on a Republican trajectory. Here
in the last month, Philadelphia County looks like it's probably
going to give her a margin of sixty thousand less

(33:41):
or so than they're used to based on registration numbers
and voter roll purges alone. So Pennsylvania has all the
makings of a low grade red state, working class red state.

Speaker 2 (33:50):
Michigan's going to be tough.

Speaker 4 (33:52):
They have the cheap machine really fired up there with
eighty three percent of the population registered to vote when
only seventy seven percent of any population is over.

Speaker 2 (34:00):
The age of eighteen.

Speaker 4 (34:02):
That's been out in the news here lately with Jocelyn
Benson trying to get ahead of that, going after Elon
Musk and Wisconsin pairs up with Iowa. Iowa's now in
R plus ten state when it was R plus one
and twenty twenty. They've never been more than nine point
eight percent apart since nineteen fifty six. So Trump looks
like he's getting in the process of flipping Wisconsin in
the same way he did Iowa in twenty sixteen.

Speaker 1 (34:25):
Seth, I'm cutting you off because I'm so I'm so
happy right now, I don't want to talk anymore.

Speaker 2 (34:30):
Thank you, Seth. Come back soon. I appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
Brother, I'm getting my hopes up. Don't get your hopes up.
We have work to do, but.

Speaker 2 (34:42):
It looks like it might be a really big year.
Might be. I don't know. Look, I don't know. We'll
see when the time comes.

Speaker 1 (34:51):
Look, pick up the phone and call somebody and tell
him to get to the polls and tell them to
bring a friend to the polls. Act like we're ten
points behind. And you know that call is going to
go through because I know you already switched to pure Talk, right,
you know, the patriotic cell phone company.

Speaker 2 (35:07):
You don't still.

Speaker 1 (35:08):
Pay Verizon at and T and T Mobile every month.
One you're paying them too much. I switched from T Mobile.
My bill got cut in half.

Speaker 2 (35:15):
Two.

Speaker 1 (35:16):
The CEO of Puretalk fought for this country in Vietnam.
They hire Americans in customer service. When you talk to
them at pure Talk, they speak English and they understand it.
And they're on the same five G network. So do
your electioneering on your pure Talk phone, all right, and
switch save a bunch of money.

Speaker 2 (35:35):
Puretalk dot com slash JESSETV. You can keep your phone,
you can keep your numbers trouble free. All right, we'll
be back. Okay, let's have a talk, a heavy talk.

Speaker 1 (35:54):
We'll get to add him in a moment, because he
has a lot to say about this. But about the
two things that and it's look, these things and nations.

Speaker 2 (36:03):
You really can't.

Speaker 1 (36:05):
You can't do either of these things en mass and
continue having a country debt. In immigration, you cannot. It's
not that you can't have debt, of course you can
have debt. It's not you can't have people immigrate. Of
course you can have people immigrate. But when those things
happen in mass and they become uncontrolled your nation, well
the clock is ticking in the United States of America.

(36:27):
You may think I may think I have a good
idea of how many people we have imported into this country.
But Adam Johnston, to his credit, broke it down. He's
a contributor to the Federalist He broke it down in
more detail, and the numbers are staggering. Sad I don't
know what you want me to say, but it ain't
good joining me now. Adam Johnston with the Federalists He's

(36:48):
also founder of the website Conquest Theory. Adam, you are
the one who broke down the numbers. I did not
break down the numbers. You're the one who did the research.
Talk to me, what do we have here?

Speaker 9 (37:00):
Well, Jesse, the essence of the thread and the peace
that I had in the Federalists was basically, the levels
of illegal and legal immigration that are currently in the country,
both actually now as well as projected in the future,
is a disaster for our country unless it's severely restricted,

(37:21):
and not only restricted, but reversed, because if we don't
do both of those things, this could and the nation
as we know it and currently understand it. And the
numbers are pretty staggering. I mean, today, the total born
foreign population immigrant population, this is both legal and illegal
in the country is approximately fifty one point six million people,

(37:44):
which represents around fifteen point six percent of the population,
which is the highest in history. Approximately sixteen point eight
million of those are illegal immigrants. And what's really staggering,
if those aren't bad enough, is that in less than
four years of the Harris Biden administration, they've imported essentially

(38:05):
seven million immigrants, both legal and illegal, and of that number,
we're talking about ICE recently justsent just release some data
talking about the criminal aspect of this. So they were
talking about how four hundred and twenty five thousand non
citizens are convicted criminals and two hundred and twenty two

(38:27):
thousand are non citizens are pending criminal charges, and these
are not being detained. These are on what's called the
non detained docket, which means they are essentially released into
the country awaiting whatever trial they're supposed to show up to,
or deportation proceedings or whatnot. And approximately thirteen thousand of

(38:47):
those are illegal immigrants that have already been convicted of homicide,
with eighteen hundred that are pending homicide charges and sixteen
thousand that have been convicted of sexual assault. So Malahiris
basically say you have to quote unquote you know, fix
our current immigration system. But what they really mean by

(39:09):
that is they need to They're trying to expand the
ask the avenues for citizenship because that accomplishes fixing the
broken immigration system by expanding opportunities for legal citizenship, which
gets them a reliable voting block because who wouldn't want
to vote for the party that granted you the opportunity

(39:30):
to become an American citizen and then subsequently, and this
probably is not talked as much as it should, but
the GOP also benefits from this because you know, traditionally
GOP has been the party of big business, not the
Democrats aren't. But this also allows them to have their
steady influx of cheap labor. And those two things alone

(39:51):
basically define our immigration system, where if you're talking about
seven million immigrants coming into the country in four years,
and you project that out with another Harris administration, that
essentially would mean the end of the nation as we
know it and currently understand it.

Speaker 1 (40:09):
And I want you to explain that concept. This is
something I've gone into before, but I want people to
have a different perspective on it. Why is it nation ending?
I mean, sure, it's not good to have a few
extra robberies and a few extra murders and rapes mixed
in there, but why is it.

Speaker 2 (40:23):
In the nation? That doesn't make sense?

Speaker 9 (40:26):
Yeah, Well, you know, traditionally nations are bound together by
communities which shared history, culture, values, things of that nature.
And when you bring in a huge influx of people
that are that do not share that already established culture,

(40:47):
that brings with it essentially it diminishes it what the
nation was, and it essentially diminishes what the nation was
and changes what it will be in the future. There's
something called them. I've seen this online. I've actually wrote
about it too. It's called the multicultural iceberg. And that's

(41:07):
something that America is actually sailing right into right now.
And the leftists like to point out where, you know, multiculturalism,
diversity is the strength of nations, and they cite things like, oh,
the diversity of food and language, not language, literature, music,
things of that nature. But these are really only surface

(41:27):
level aspects of multiculturalism. Below the surface are things like
how do you raise your children, what are your view
of a family, what are the gender roles, things of
that nature, and those things inevitably clash with the current
host nations culture to the point where you start to
now have enclaves of different cultures within local communities, and

(41:53):
that in US that breaks down the social fabric of
a nation as well from on a local standpoint, and
then you project that out over the course of years
or decades, those local enclaves now become you know, nationwide,
and that essentially then diminishes what it means to be
a cohesive nation.

Speaker 2 (42:12):
Yeah, yeah, think that is said.

Speaker 1 (42:13):
Okay, I want to make sure I get to this
piece in your substect which was great, by the way,
how the left weaponizes misinformation to silence the right and
shape public opinion.

Speaker 2 (42:25):
Adam I opened up the show tonight actually talking.

Speaker 1 (42:27):
About the world of make believe the average American Democrat
lives in. It's almost like it's a movie set. They
genuinely believe things that are simply.

Speaker 2 (42:36):
Not real, a lot of things. But you wrote the piece, please. Yeah.

Speaker 9 (42:43):
So in terms of misinformation and disinformation, a lot of
times mostly the left will talk about that and basically
anything that undermines their current narrative is misinformation or disinformation.
John Kerry and Hillary Kinton Clinton both were talking. Carrie
was talking about the world at the World Economic Forum,

(43:04):
talking about how the First Amendment is a real big
impediment for them kind of getting a hold on misinformation
and disinformation. Hillary Clinton was talking about how they want
to repeal Section two thirty or maybe even criminally charge
people for what they would call disinformation, which is essentially
is any information that they didn't like.

Speaker 2 (43:22):
And we have to.

Speaker 9 (43:22):
Remember too that back during the Hunter Biden laptop scandal
that was called disinformation. They were also talking about the
origins of the COVID lab leak that was disinformation. Both
those instances turned out to be true and they were
not disinformation. But what those two things did was they
undermined a narrative. And the narrative is something that's very

(43:44):
important in order to keep the regimes hold on power together,
and that's why they really want to attack disinformation and
misinformation in that sense. Actually, there was just a story
today that Matt Matt Taibi broke talking about how I'm
looking at my notes here the Center for Countering Digital Hate,

(44:04):
the founder of that was there was leaked documents talking
about how their main mission and their founder is actually
advising the Harris campaign, and their main mission is to
kill Musk's Twitter. And the essence of that is that
Musk's Twitter is essentially the as close to a neutral
platform as we have right now because everything else is

(44:25):
essentially under control of the leftist Democrat machine and they
really can't even just have one crack in their narrative machine.
And that's why they really have to attack Musk, and
that's why they want to take down Twitter by going
after their advertisers.

Speaker 1 (44:41):
Adam, you're doing great work. Please keep it up. I
appreciate you. All Right, we have light in the mood.
We need to light in the mood, don't we next?
All right, it's time to lighten the mood. And well,

(45:04):
stay on your toes out there when you're on the road.

Speaker 9 (45:22):
Look at radio.

Speaker 1 (45:27):
These delivery drivers, man, they just live a life of adventure.

Speaker 2 (45:31):
Dodge and things. People's front door.

Speaker 1 (45:34):
Be safe out there. It's the holiday season, fellas. Be
safe when you're on the road. Let's see them all
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Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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