Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Why do communists kill so many people? We'll talk about
that tonight. John Carey is going to be featured and
that and others. Liz Collin's going to join us talking
about the Daniel Penny acquittal.
Speaker 2 (00:12):
Rick Chauvin needs a new attorney.
Speaker 1 (00:15):
Josh Hammer's going to join us talk about what the
Democrats are doing to subvert Donald Trump. Already all that
and more coming up. I'm right, these people are insane communists,
that is, they're insane, and you've probably said things like
(00:38):
this before. But before we get to John Carey, Taylor Lorenz,
let's understand the why, because it really is amazing. When
you look back at the history of communism, it's not
not that long, and in the frame of things we're
dealing with one hundred years a little more. I get that,
But one hundred years really of communists establishing power in
(01:00):
different places. So how have they killed so many people?
It's bizarre. It's hard to find any other ideology religion,
however you want to describe it, that has managed to
massacre that many people. And the answer is relatively simple
if you're just willing to accept something that's simple, straightforward,
(01:24):
fairly obvious. Actually, you see Alexander Sultan. It's in A
great Russian writer and former prisoner in the Gulag system
in the Soviet Union called communists the enemies of humanity.
That's one way to put it, but it doesn't necessarily
explain everything. What they are at their core is anti humans,
(01:48):
anti humanity. How could you have you ever asked yourself
this when you look at something terrible they're doing the border,
it's making about the border. How could they just let
in all these murderers and rapists. Well, let me ask you,
why don't you want murderers and rapists here? I realize
that answer seems obvious. Well, because they're gonna murder and
(02:09):
rape people. But you see, that's where it is. You
see what you just did. They're gonna murder in rape people.
And you have a heart for people, even people you've
never met, and I'm glad you do. But the communists doesn't.
It doesn't have that. Whatever that is inside of you,
he doesn't possess it. It's not inside of him. He
(02:31):
is a revolutionary fighting a revolution against the current system, against.
Speaker 2 (02:36):
Everything that is.
Speaker 1 (02:38):
And when you combine that revolutionary spirit with no care
whatsoever for human beings, Boo what can't you do to
other humans? If humans don't matter, If you are not
a unique, god breathed soul who has your own characteristics,
(02:59):
the things you're to accomplish on this earth, loves, hates, friends,
family members. If you're none of those things, none of
the things that make you a human being, If you're
just an ant, well why.
Speaker 2 (03:11):
Couldn't I kill you?
Speaker 1 (03:13):
How many ants would you kill? How many ants would
it take for you to kill if you were walking
around just stomping on ants? How many ants would it
take before you felt bad? It's kind of a ridiculous question,
because you never feel bad. Their aunts never feel anything
at all. That's how the communist feels about all humanity,
(03:35):
all human beings. It's why they were called enemies of humanity.
It's why I and many others have called them anti humans.
Speaker 2 (03:43):
It really, at their core comes down to that.
Speaker 1 (03:47):
John Kerry came out, yes it was in a video,
and he was talking about I'm gonna make this clear
what he's about to say in this video. The things
he's proposing in this video will not kill thousands, It
would not kill millions. What John Carey describes right here
would kill billions.
Speaker 3 (04:09):
There's really no polite way to put it. The climate
crisis is killing people.
Speaker 4 (04:16):
It is knowingly wittingly allowing people to die and infecting
them with disease and providing them with air that kills
people because we're not willing to take the.
Speaker 3 (04:29):
Steps necessary to do what we know we need to do.
And every year now, millions of people around this planet
are dying because fossil fuel and methane emissions called greenhouse
gas pollution. Those methane emissions and CO two emissions and
nitrous oxide and other emissions are escaping into the atmosphere,
(04:51):
being fed by the way in which we continue to
choose to fuel our vehicles, propel our vehicles, heat our homes,
rite our factories, and so forth.
Speaker 1 (05:06):
So no vehicles, no more being able to move to
and fro, no warmth in your home factories, the factories
have to go. What John Carey is describing is taking
all of the advancement we've experienced in the past couple
(05:27):
hundred years of human history, taking that life expectancy up
to unprecedented levels comfort, access to medical care, school, capital, food,
all kinds of things. What John Carey is talking about
is eliminating all those things which would undoubtedly eliminate a
large portion.
Speaker 2 (05:48):
Of the population of the planet. He will sit.
Speaker 1 (05:52):
There on camera with a straight face and discuss the
steps that need to be taken to, of course save
us from climate change. But those steps would kill billions
of people.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
With a b billions, it.
Speaker 1 (06:08):
Would wipe out the majority of the population of the planet. Starvation, misery,
death like you can't possibly imagine. And so how could
he be like this because he knows that as big
of a gigantic boob as John Carrey is, he does
know that you start talking about removing fossil fuels, I
(06:30):
hate that term.
Speaker 2 (06:30):
That's a commy term.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
But fossil fuels talk about eliminating factories. It doesn't take
a genius to follow that line down and figure out, Wow,
billions of people will die. So why does he say
it because he doesn't care billions of people? Would you
cry over billions of ants? Along these same lines that
United Healthcare CEO head of an insurance company, health insurance company.
(06:55):
I realize health insurance companies are never going to be
on anybody's favorites lists.
Speaker 2 (07:00):
Oh, I got all that.
Speaker 1 (07:00):
But United Healthcare CEO father father, husband, father executed on
a street on sidewalk in New York City. And what
I'm about to play for you is not some kind
of a one off. We have seen incident after incident,
quote after quote after quote. This young lady's name is
(07:21):
Taylor Lorenz. She talked about feeling joy when she found
out this married man, father of two was executed, and
then of course try to deny it.
Speaker 5 (07:31):
I do believe in the sanctity of life, and I
think that's why I felt, along with so many other
Americans joy. Unfortunately, you know, because it seriously I mean execution,
maybe not joy, but certainly not No, certainly not empathy.
Speaker 6 (07:48):
Because again footage, how can this make you joyful?
Speaker 1 (07:52):
This guy's a husband, a father, and he's being young
down in the middle of Manhattan.
Speaker 2 (07:57):
Why did that make you joyful?
Speaker 5 (07:58):
The Americans that be murdered, So are tens So are
the tens of thousands of Americans, innocent Americans who died
because greedy health insurance executives like this one push policies
of denying care to the most vulnerable people.
Speaker 2 (08:13):
So they'll be killed these healthcare executives. Would that make
you even more joyful?
Speaker 5 (08:18):
No, that would not want And I think because yours
because it does.
Speaker 6 (08:25):
It wouldn't fix You need to find the whole thing hilarious.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
Just being honest.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
You can hate that vile little demon all you.
Speaker 2 (08:33):
Want, just being honest.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
That's how they feel when you don't place any value
in human life, when their aunts to you, oh you
can kill them all, and of course they all. You
heard John Kerry do it in the video. Well, of
course it's always justified. Well, we have to do this,
I have to kill billions. I have no choice for that,
young lady Taylor Lorenz, Well, of course, I.
Speaker 2 (08:55):
Mean I felt joy.
Speaker 1 (08:56):
After all, he was responsible for so much, so of
course was happy that he died.
Speaker 2 (09:01):
They always have an excuse. There's always a reason why.
Speaker 1 (09:04):
They have no other choice but to be vile little monsters.
And don't think this was some kind of a one off.
This has gone mainstream, the left wing celebration of the
execution of a CEO because people are unhappy with health insurance.
Jimmy Kimmel on his comedy show talked about it.
Speaker 7 (09:23):
So many women and so many men are going nuts
over how good looking this killer is. And there's a
huge wave of horny washing.
Speaker 8 (09:33):
Over us right now.
Speaker 7 (09:35):
These are screen grabs of actual exchanges between our members
of our staff and.
Speaker 6 (09:40):
Their friends, relatives.
Speaker 8 (09:41):
Whatever.
Speaker 2 (09:42):
Veronica says, I need him.
Speaker 7 (09:44):
So bad, No, like so bad, so so bad. Okay,
so I would visit him in prison and bake him cookies.
Maybe perhaps more, but I haven't thought that far ahead.
And it's not just women. This is from the husband
of one of our staffers. Did you see the assassin? Yes,
I'm so upset, Like, excuse me, lol, I'm about to
(10:06):
be a jail house bride because damn Shorty is so fline.
I'm dead or willing to be texting all my friends
in New York that I hope they get called to
jury duty. God, I want to do jury duty so bad.
Speaker 2 (10:26):
They can't help themselves. Anti humans, it's who they are. Death,
death of.
Speaker 1 (10:33):
Human beings simply means nothing to them.
Speaker 2 (10:37):
It's just a means to an end.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
Another another ant to stomp on in the cause of
the revolution. It's very, very sick, and it's important to
remember all the wins we've had election wins. Culturally it's
going our way. It's really important to remember we share
a country with millions and millions and millions of sick
communists freaks who think like that they're called democrats.
Speaker 2 (11:03):
People look out. All that may have.
Speaker 1 (11:05):
Made you uncomfortable, but I am right now speaking of
filthy communists. You know, you know you pay them for
your cell service, right if you have AT and T,
you pay communists, if you have T Mobile, if you
have veris in. These companies are wretched companies. And I
don't even I'm not even asking for you to take
(11:27):
my word for it.
Speaker 2 (11:28):
Go look up any one of those companies.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
Go look up your cell phone company in DEI ESG,
Black Lives Matter, Tell me what you see. You pay
for that, but you don't have to. You can switch
to Pure Talks Cake. It's just a quick phone call.
You switch to Pure Talk, They'll have you hooked up
with same phone, same phone number, or new phone, new number.
(11:51):
You'll save a fortune. And Pure Talk loves you. They
hire Americans, that's how much they love this country. It's
time to switch. Tis the c'son puretalk dot com slash JESSETV.
Speaker 2 (12:05):
We'll be back.
Speaker 9 (12:11):
He was just threatening to kill people. Who's threatening to
go to jail forever, go to jail for the rest
of his life. And now where I'm on the ground
with him, I'm on my back in a very vulnerable position.
Speaker 2 (12:26):
If I just would have let go.
Speaker 9 (12:28):
Now he turns, Why is that a vulnerable position, Well,
he could if I just let him go, I'm on
my back now, he can just turn around and start
doing what he said to me.
Speaker 2 (12:40):
So killing, killing, hurting.
Speaker 9 (12:42):
I mean, I'm not a confrontational person. I don't really
extend myself. I think this type of thing is very uncomfortable.
All this attention in linelight is very uncomfortable, and I
would prefer without it. I didn't want any type of
attention or praise, and I still don't. The guilt I
(13:06):
would have felt if someone did get hurt, if he
did do what he was threatening to do, I would
never be able to live with myself.
Speaker 2 (13:17):
And I'll take a million.
Speaker 9 (13:21):
Court appearances and people calling me names and people hating
me just to keep one of those people from getting
hurt or killed.
Speaker 1 (13:35):
There are still men out there, rest assure joining me now,
Liz Colin, journalists with Alpha News, one of the good
ones out there, Liz, Okay, Obviously, it's a great thing
that Daniel Penny is a free man. It's a great
thing that men like that still exist to protect women
and children in the society. But Daniel Penny has hardly
made whole having been put through a public trial. I'm
(13:56):
sure he'll need security at some point now because of
the animals.
Speaker 2 (13:59):
In the streets that are going to be after him.
That's not justice.
Speaker 1 (14:02):
Just an aquittal was not justice.
Speaker 10 (14:05):
Yeah, we heard some of that messaging yesterday, right calling
for vigilanteism in the wake of all of this property damage.
Speaker 11 (14:14):
Perhaps you know things that that.
Speaker 10 (14:16):
Would be worse, but you really saw, you know, in
this case, the manipulation that was happening with different people,
their stories had changed by the time they took the
stan and the medical examiner being one of them, and
really so many similarities to things that we've tried to
uncover and expose over here at Alpha News for years
(14:36):
when it comes to the four officers that took the
fall for George Floyd's death, Derek Chauvin of course in particular.
But you do kind of think that perhaps this is
a new day that a lot of this can be
exposed and people can accept that the truth for what
it is and really see how this justice system has
(14:56):
been weaponized against so many.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
Liz, obviously you were all over that Derek Chauvin trial
I understand he's getting a new attorney.
Speaker 2 (15:06):
I'm pretty sure I know where this is going.
Speaker 1 (15:07):
But if you wouldn't mind speak to some of those
similarities you see, because I saw him too. It was
laid out crystal clear how evil, legitimate, legitimate systems have become.
Speaker 2 (15:18):
In this country in certain places.
Speaker 10 (15:21):
Yeah, the latest developments with Derek Chauvin, we actually just
had a recent conversation with him from prison. Keep in mind,
he was stabbed twenty two times about a year ago
now by a former FBI informant who had just a
couple of years left in his prison sentence.
Speaker 11 (15:36):
But he has a new attorney now.
Speaker 10 (15:38):
It's a fifteen page petition that so far has been
filed with the court, basically talking a lot about this
medical evidence, and I think that's where the similarities happen
with Daniel Penny. Keep in mind that you have no
strangulation marks on George Floyd, no asphyxiation, and there's these
meetings that are happening behind the scenes, and the days
that followed George Floyd's death, the medical examiner that at
(16:01):
first homicide. The word homicide doesn't even appear on George
Floyd's death certificate. On the actual autopsy itself. And in fact,
there's some information now about a paraganglioma tumor that George
Floyd had that can be fatal in many cases that
doctor Baker decided at the time not to test. Even
(16:22):
though some medical experts came forward at the time and
said this needs to be tested, this can lead to death.
Doctor Baker brushed it off and did not do that.
And these medical professionals tried to get that information, even
to Judge Peter Cahill at the time, and that was ignored.
These are things that Chauvin himself was not even aware
of until about twenty twenty three, according to this latest filing.
(16:46):
And we've uncovered many conversations that took place, doctor Baker saying, well,
what happens, you know, if if my findings don't line
up with the public narrative, this is the kind of
case that ends careers, you know, really talking about that
pressure he was under in this case. So I think
so much more of that will come out, and I
think pretty soon here in Minnesota.
Speaker 1 (17:09):
Liz, I realize you're not a trial attorney, so I'm
asking your opinion on something, but just given what I know,
lots of it from you. Derek Chauvan surely is not
only going to get out of prison. Someone's going to
stroke that man a fairly large check, I would assume, right.
Speaker 10 (17:26):
You know, the thing is people think, you know, Trump
will will be in office again, he can just be pardoned. Well,
this is a pretty complex legal matter because we have
a state sentence and a federal sentence that are wrapped
into this. So President Trump would really only have so
much power here. His new attorney seems to think that
asking for a new trial is perhaps the best route here.
(17:48):
Many people agree that Derek Chauvin did not get a
fair trial in the end. This is a jury that
was not sequestered. This takes place in Hennepin County, you know,
where buildings had burned and people had died in day
of riding, the worst riding in history. So how could
someone like that stand to get a fair trial. Also,
George Floyd's family awarded twenty seven million dollars during jury
(18:11):
deliberations in Derek Chauvin's trial, something that I think people
forget about as well. This just this immense pressure that's
taking place right there.
Speaker 2 (18:22):
Twenty seven million dollars for those dirt balls. Tell me
about Minnesota.
Speaker 1 (18:26):
Now, what's happened to Minnesota?
Speaker 10 (18:30):
Yeah, so that's the reason we went ahead with the
documentary The Fall of Minneapolis.
Speaker 11 (18:35):
I mean it's called that for a reason.
Speaker 10 (18:37):
Pretty sad what has transpired here, a police department depleted,
skyrocketing crime that that continues. And we also have a
new sequel to the Fall of Minneapolis that I hope
people will watch. Something we did not want to do either,
but these dots, it seems reporters don't connect.
Speaker 11 (18:55):
So this is called Minnesota versus We the People.
Speaker 10 (18:59):
You can actually find it on Alpha neewslphanews dot org
or also the Fall of Minneapolis dot com. You can
watch it for free. But it's about a fifty minute documentary. Jesse,
we've had five first responders murdered die in the line
of duty in a thirteen month time period in Minnesota,
and of course it is connected to the lies that
(19:19):
took place beginning in May of twenty twenty. How's it connected, Liz, Well,
it's this this danger, this lies and the law fair that.
You know, police officers, especially in Minnesota have been the
front lines and you know we're receiving here in this
state the good guys becoming the bad guys. And you know,
(19:42):
our corporate media has helped to push this dangerous narrative
from the very beginning that's not backed up by fact,
and ultimately, you know, people are paying the price for
these politics in this state.
Speaker 1 (19:57):
Liz, what what kind of a blowback has there been
against all this evil? We've seen places like even California,
I realize it's blue.
Speaker 2 (20:08):
It got redder. In New York even though it's still blue,
it got redder.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
There's very clearly some sort of an appetite even in
blue places to push back against all this defund the
police stupid stuff. Are you seeing that in Minnesota or
is Minnesota just freaking gone?
Speaker 10 (20:27):
Yeah, we saw a lot of that pushback actually, in fact,
which is included in this new documentary, there's a Minnesota
state trooper, Ryan Landrigan is his name, charged with murder
yet again in a high profile incident. But finally you
have community members showing up to the courthouse. They're wearing
t shirts and support of Ryan. Members of law enforcement, retired, current.
(20:51):
You know, he basically followed his training that the night
that a man was shot and killed on the highway.
But yet they're trying to, you know, put him behind
bars for life for following that training, basically saving his
partner's life. It's a case that I hope people will
watch again in Minnesota versus we the people.
Speaker 11 (21:11):
But you saw the people rise up in that situation, and.
Speaker 10 (21:13):
You had murder charges against this day trooper dropped, and
I think there is a connection.
Speaker 11 (21:19):
People. Their eyes have been opened and they are pushing back.
Speaker 2 (21:24):
Good Minnesota versus we the people.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
I hope people go watch that. Liz, thank you so much.
I appreciate it. All right, I'm going to talk to
you about waking up in the morning. You should see
me when I wake up in the morning. Not that
I want you to do that, but you should see me.
I wake up and I feel good. Every day I
wake up, I start smiling, and it's because I get
(21:46):
a good night's sleep, and when I feel like I'm
not going to because I do the.
Speaker 2 (21:50):
Same things you do.
Speaker 1 (21:51):
If you're kind of I don't know, dragging a little
bit in the afternoon, you grab a cup of coffee,
maybe the stresses of the day, worried about staying up
at night. Why don't you try dream powder. Let's try
one bag of it. It's hot chocolate, only it puts
you to sleep. It's from Beam, you see. I have
the cinnamon chocolate, but they have a peppermint, white Boca
(22:14):
and all these other the brownie batter. They have all
these great flavors. It's the best cup of hot chocolate
you ever have in your life. But it's got natural
things that natural things melatonin and stuff like that. And
you just sip on a cup of hot chocolate. That's
what I do right before bed, and I just kind
of zonk out. But when I wake up, I don't
have that grogginess.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
Oh my gosh. I feel good every single morning. I
feel good. You want to feel good every morning, ready
to take on the day.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
Go to shotbeam dot com slash Jesse Kelly. It'll save
you a pile of money. Just try one bag. You'll
never look back. We'll be back.
Speaker 12 (22:54):
He said to me when I left his office.
Speaker 13 (22:55):
When he chose me.
Speaker 12 (22:58):
Was well, besides what he said about being a war fighter,
we can get into that was you're gonna need to
be tough. You're gonna need to be tough. But he
paused again as I was walking away and said, but
you're the man for this moment. I chose you because
you're the guy that's gonna put the war fighters first.
We haven't had that. We need a guy that's kicked
(23:18):
down doors and understands the consequences of war and why
US deterring war, fighting it and winning it is important.
He gets it and we can get into the policy
of all of that. But ultimately he reiterated the same
thing this morning. Hy Pete, I got your back.
Speaker 14 (23:34):
It's a fight.
Speaker 12 (23:35):
They're coming after you get after it.
Speaker 1 (23:40):
Pete's out there doing his level best to get through,
and we got to get him through. It's really really important.
We do not sure it's going to work. I hope
it is. Joining me now my friend Josh Hammer, Host
of America on Trial. Josh, it's very obvious. The GOP
said it. They want to be the one to pick
Donald Trump's cabinet. They blasted Matt Gates out of the
(24:02):
sky in about thirty five seconds.
Speaker 2 (24:04):
They're trying for hag Seth.
Speaker 1 (24:05):
Now, as soon as they're done with him, it'll be RFK,
Then it'll be tall Se and soon Mitch mcconnaugh wol
have chosen everything that is the plan.
Speaker 14 (24:12):
Correct, Jesse. I think that Pete hag Seth has the
votes to get confirmed. I think that Pete hag Seth
is going to get confirmed. And more to the point,
I think it is absolutely crucial that he get confirmed
first and foremost because of the reason that you just said,
Matt Gates already Withdrew basically in the blank of an eye.
I mean, has Donald Trump learned any of the lessons
from the last time around or not? I mean, you
(24:33):
and I both know, Jesse that one of the biggest
problems from Donald Trump's first term was that he was
constantly thwarted left and right from people within his administration,
from people outside of his administration, from the deep state,
from the shallow state, from the Congress to the activist
K Street. You know, what are you going to get
in there on January twentieth? Are you going to resume
the awful office, sit down on that resolute desk, and
(24:55):
are you going to demonstrate that you are actually in
command of your own agenda? Or are you going to
these people derail your agenda before you have even started.
Even more to the points, are you gonna let them
derail your agenda with the most slimeball, gutter.
Speaker 6 (25:09):
Politics in all the politics?
Speaker 14 (25:11):
This is just Brett Cavanaugh two point oh wor they're
trying to do to Pete heg sat This NBC News
article from a week ago, with all these anonymous, unsourced allegations.
They won't even go on the record to say that
Pete Hegseth allegedly had a drinking palm. This rape allegation,
which is completely implausible. The woman didn't even report it
to the police until like four days later. Anyone who's
ever worked in that field knows that an actual, real
(25:32):
rape victim basically goes immediately to the police there. So
I'm not buying it. And you know, people like Jonny Ernz.
Jony Urns has already said that she's planning to support
Pete heegsays she phrased that in a very kind of lawyerly,
very clever fashion.
Speaker 11 (25:46):
There.
Speaker 14 (25:46):
Maybe at Markowski or Collins goes wildly there, But I
think that Pete Hegseth is getting confirmed, Jesse.
Speaker 6 (25:51):
And it is so so.
Speaker 14 (25:53):
Important for Donald Trump's term two imperative that he gets
all of his major picks, especially as you said, in
light of the Matt Gates withdrawal.
Speaker 6 (26:00):
He's got to get these Secretary of Defense.
Speaker 14 (26:01):
Nominee there and on the merits is really briefly on
Pete hegg Seth. You know, look, he's fought in those
post nine to eleven wars just like you. He's a
war fighter just like you are there. He's someone who's
in touch with these sentiments of America's young warriors. The
number one issue from my perspective, the number one issue
that America's military currently faces double digit recruitment shortfalls among
(26:22):
the Army, Navy, and Air Force, all three branches from
multiple years in a row. You need a young warfighter,
a telligenic person who can get in there inspire morale
and patriotism of the young people. Pete Hegseth could be
that guy. Hat Jesse, you could be that guy too.
But Pete Hegsath the one who's confirms. I hope that
he gets confirmed.
Speaker 1 (26:41):
No, I think Pete haig Seth is a little bit
more qualified than I am, but just a little bit
more of an education than I do. Okay, Josh, in
your own words, take your time. Why would the Senate
want to stop it?
Speaker 10 (26:55):
Right?
Speaker 1 (26:55):
You see this national mandate big election Democrats didn't gain
in a single county. Very clearly the American people want
whatever it is Donald Trump is selling. So why doesn't
the Senate?
Speaker 14 (27:10):
Look the Senate is a swampy place, for lack of
a better description. I mean, it's not the House. The
House and the Senate are very very different institutional bodies.
The houses where you have people like Marjorie Taylor Green,
where you have people formerly like Matt Gates. I guess
he's no longer hitting Congressman Lauren Boger people like that.
I mean, you get bomb throwers in the House. That's
just not how the US Senate works. You know, even
(27:33):
a lot of people who get to the Senate as
bomb throwers. You know, as time goes on, I'm not
saying that they sell out or anything there, but but
you start to become at least kind of optically rhetorically
more of a team player. I'm thinking he frankly, people
like Ted Cruise, you and I are both huge fans
of you know. You know, Ted Cruz has not sold
out on anyway. He's still a rock grib conservative. But
even now you see him there and he's willing to
kind of sponsor some interesting bipars in the legislation there.
(27:55):
He's becoming more of a biparsan statesman, which is not
necessarily a bad thing there, But there's some about the Senate.
I think it's a smaller body there. You're there for
longer terms, you spend more time there on the floor
kind of chumming it up there. It just operates in
the fundamentally different way. And senators take their nomination, advice
and consent power I think, very very seriously, and to
(28:15):
be clear, they should do that for good reason, because
it's one of the most formidable powers that the Constitution
invests in US senators when it comes to judicial nominies,
when it comes to cabinet picks there, when it comes
to treaties. I mean, these are the things that senators
have that congressmen in the House do not necessarily have there.
So they're not wrong for taking that power seriously, But
they also have to read the political tea leaves here.
(28:36):
And that's the point that you're making, and this is
the important point, is that Donald Trump actually in basically
all these states that I'm aware of, he actually ran
ahead of these swing state Republican senators there. Basically Donald
Trump's cottails. You know, that's the reason that we're going
to have is Senator McCormick from Pennsylvania or a Senator
Moreno from Ohio. Places like that. You know, they're not
(28:56):
even in the senayees. I'm not calling those guys out
or anything like that. But the point is that Donald
Trump really was the one who who won this election,
and he won it largely for the Republican Party, not
the other way around.
Speaker 6 (29:08):
There.
Speaker 14 (29:09):
Again, from my perspective, that entitles him to a massive,
a massive presumption that he should be afford of the
cabinet picks that he wants in office come January twentieth. There,
if there's someone who's you know, if he's like murdered
his wife or something, God forbid, I mean, if there's
something like truly five alarm fire like that in the background,
then sure, I mean at that point, you know, let's
go ahead and do a deep dive and vote that
(29:30):
nominee down there. But at this particular point, you know,
Pete Haigseth, I mean, give you a.
Speaker 2 (29:34):
Birth, Josh.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
Why is the bipartisanship in the Senate.
Speaker 2 (29:41):
Why is it always one way?
Speaker 1 (29:43):
It really is maddening when you look at it, you
look at Lloyd Austin.
Speaker 2 (29:46):
I think it was ninety votes. I forget.
Speaker 1 (29:47):
I think that's right, but I mean it's it's just
viewed as being a very bipartisan thing. And you and
I both know that if Pete gets through, and I
hope you're correct about that, then every single swinging Democrat
is going to vote again. But we can't go on
like this where we have to be bipartisan and they
never do.
Speaker 2 (30:05):
You can't hold together a country in this way.
Speaker 6 (30:08):
No, you definitely can't. You know.
Speaker 14 (30:10):
Look, I mean I go back to the Katanji Brown
Jackson Supreme Court nomination in twenty twenty two. I mean,
when is the last time that you've had like more
than maybe one like a Joe Manchin, like a Democrat
center vote for a Republican Supreme Court nominee.
Speaker 6 (30:25):
I couldn't even tell you.
Speaker 14 (30:26):
But but Katanji Brown Jackson there, I mean, you know,
there's there's always these institutionalist Republicans that are out there saying, oh,
the president is you know, is a courted the responsibility
or he has the ability to choose the Supreme Court
who he wants to there you know, once upon a
time Republicans actually did show some spointe in this regard Jess.
It was actually during the twenty sixteen presidential campaign. That
(30:47):
was when Anthony and Scalia passed away in his sleep
in February twenty sixteen. Obama nominates Merrick Garland and miss
McConnell and Chuck Grassley from their Senate majority leader and
sen Judiciary Chairman perche actually do a tremendous public service
by fighting to keep that seat open. So Republicans can
actually play hardball on these nominees when they want to.
It's just a question of when they want to. The
(31:08):
problem with Jesse is you and I both know at
kind of a broader, more fundamental level, is that too
many people on the right do not view this as
a war. People on the left view this as a
life or death proposition. The political arena, the Senate, the
Supreme Court, the Cabinet, they live for this. Now, look,
we on the right, you know, we have our houses
of worship, We have other things that we live for.
Speaker 6 (31:30):
We have our families.
Speaker 14 (31:30):
They're not really the party of families that are really
having children frankly for the most part there but I mean,
we have other things to live for. But we still
have to care and we still have to do all
we can to not do this stupid Kumbai Ya John Lennon,
imagine check yeah, I mean, what world do we think
we live in there? I mean, the year is twenty
twenty four. You know this is not nineteen eighty four,
(31:51):
nineteen seventy six anymore. There's a fundamentally different Democratic Party.
They're trying to pat the Supreme Court, They're trying to
add Puerto Rico in Washington, DC is dates. They're fundamental
trying to tear down everything that this country is founded
on and predicated upon.
Speaker 6 (32:03):
And we have a duty to stop.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
Josh, what are they gonna do to sabotage Trump?
Speaker 14 (32:12):
Well, look, I think the Pete Hegseth operation is actually
part of it. I mean, I think what you're what
you're seeing now is frankly just a preview of what
could possibly come, which again kind of gets just to
the broader imperative of what you and I were just discussing,
which is that you have to nip this thing in
the bud right now. You got you gotta fix this
during the transition period. You cannot let this become a
(32:34):
sign of what could come in the first few months,
god forbid, the first year or two of the Trump administration. There,
you can't let these people once they smell blood, there's
gonna keep on coming. They're gonna they're gonna keep on
coming there. I mean, look at what some of the
major blue state Democratic governors are saying. Gavin Newsom is
presiding over a special legislative session at out in California,
which is so called Trump proof the state of California.
Speaker 6 (32:54):
JB.
Speaker 14 (32:54):
Pritzker in Illinois and Phil Murphy in New Jersey saying
very similar things there. Pritzker and Illa nois if Memory
Service basically said you want to come to my people,
you got to come right through me. I mean, that
sounds very threatening there. Look, they're going to try all
they can to create large scale so called sanctuary jurisdictions
where they're not going to allow their state law enforcement,
(33:14):
their local law enforcement to assist with ICE in various
other immigration related federal bodies in order to deport criminal
aliens and things like that. You know, Fortunately, there's actually
a very simple thing that the Trump administration and the
Republican Congress can do in response to that if they
actually want to there, which is that you can basically
just defund each and every one of these states unless
(33:35):
they go along with your plans to deport criminal aliens.
That's perfectly constitutional. There's actually a late nineteen eighties US
Supreme Court case called South Dakota versus Dole that basically
stands with a proposition that Congress can indeed defund the
states when when the policy goal is related to what
the strings attached jar to the policy. So you absolutely
can defund California, for instance, when it comes to immigration
(33:55):
if they will not help ICE support all these criminal
aliens there. So there's a lot of things that Trump
and the Congress can do in order to fight back there.
But I have no doubt that you're gonna start seeing
some You're gonna start seeing Jesse some brand new love
for federalism, you know, which is a federalism love of convenience.
You might say, these people don't they don't love federalism
very much. Frankly, you know, you know when Barack Obama
(34:16):
or Joe Binner president, it's only when Don Trump's in charge.
Speaker 2 (34:19):
I suppose. Yeah, I'm a big federalism fan myself. Josh,
thank you, my brother.
Speaker 6 (34:24):
I appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (34:26):
All right, let's talk about saving a life really quick
before we move on. Babies matter, and they can't speak
for themselves, and they can't fight for themselves.
Speaker 2 (34:39):
And if a mother.
Speaker 1 (34:40):
Wants to kill her baby in her womb in this country,
it's very easy for her.
Speaker 8 (34:45):
To do it.
Speaker 2 (34:46):
So how do we fight back against that?
Speaker 1 (34:48):
When when it's a phone called quick teleconference and then
a pill that comes in the mail, how do you
fight back against that?
Speaker 2 (34:54):
Ultrasound?
Speaker 1 (34:56):
It is our greatest tool because when that young lady
it's a free ultrasound from Preborn, once she hears that heartbeat,
she will choose life. She does almost every single time.
Did you know that? Almost every time I sit down? Heartbeat,
it just the baby becomes a baby for her. So
provide her with that ultrasound. It's Christmas season, good time
(35:17):
to save a life. You know, babies are fairly important.
Preborn dot com slash jesse. Remember this is tax deductible
preborn dot com slash jesse. Twenty eight bucks buys the ultrasound.
You can give them as much as you want. They're
out there saving two hundred lives every day.
Speaker 2 (35:36):
We'll be back.
Speaker 15 (35:43):
What happens January twenty First, where do you start?
Speaker 16 (35:47):
Well, there's three rails. We'll start the first day a
Number one, we're going to secure the board. Number two,
we're going to run the deportation operation. And number three,
I'll look at these three hundred thousand kids. We'll find
them too. Trump's been clear we're going to prioritize public
safety threats and national security threats first because they posed
the most danger to the station. So day one we're
going to be looking for these public safety threats, arresting them, titainingum,
(36:08):
and deporting them. And if these sanctuary city mayors don't
want help, they get the hell all the way. Can
we're coming. We're doing that.
Speaker 15 (36:15):
You say that the left media has it backwards, Brandon,
You is the bad guy?
Speaker 2 (36:20):
How are you the bad guy?
Speaker 16 (36:23):
You know, I grew up in a family full of costs.
My grandfather's a cop, My dad was a cop. And
we're in the situation now with the left things. Those
who enforced laws are the bad guys, those who broke
a lot of victims. Well, we're going to change that
after January twentieth.
Speaker 1 (36:39):
It's wild how much common sense is getting back in style.
Joining me now, John Phillips, host of The Wonderful John
Phillips Show.
Speaker 2 (36:46):
John doesn't it feel.
Speaker 1 (36:48):
Doesn't it feel like maybe, maybe, just maybe we reached
peak COMMI in this country and that things are breaking
our way right now more than just Trump.
Speaker 2 (36:58):
Just don't you feel it? Everywhere? Am I crazy? I
think you're right?
Speaker 15 (37:03):
I mean, look what just happened in New York City
last week where the Dems tried to flip the script
on both of those two incidents that generated so much
national attention, where Penny was supposed to be the villain,
the vigilanti who wanted to just go out and kill
people at will. Of course we know that's not true.
The opposite is true. He was a good samaritan who
(37:25):
tried to help and save people who were trapped on
a subway cart with a crazy person who was threatening
them with physical violence and death. And the jury got
it right. Even in deep blue New York City, the
same people that elected Alvin Bragg to be the district attorney,
they got it right. You go on social media, you
see many people like Taylor Lorenz who are santi. Find
(37:49):
the shooter, the alleged shooter of the healthcare executive. Well,
guess what, someone of the McDonald's dropped a dime. He
was arrested. And that guy is going to be going
to prison for a while long time. It's almost as
if there is this wave of sanity that's just coming
back to the country ever since the election took place,
and it's like, Okay, we're recalibrating now, we're left is
(38:12):
really left, right is really right, up is really up,
and down is really down and you're not crazy.
Speaker 1 (38:19):
New York Times, of all publications, has an article out
today alleging the Kamala Harris campaign had some racial discrimination
problems and it is wild to see the knives that
are out for Dome post election loss.
Speaker 2 (38:34):
What's going on here?
Speaker 3 (38:36):
Oh?
Speaker 15 (38:36):
Yes, Well, this is something we've known for quite some time,
which is any tool that they use against Republicans at
some point they use on themselves. Because if that's what
you know, that's what you know. And if you don't
like the result or you don't get your way, and
a weapon that has been successful for you in the
past at moving things in your direction is calling people race.
(39:00):
And you worked for Kamala Harris and you didn't get
what you thought you deserved, or you didn't get the
outcome of the election that you had hoped for, well
then why not just call them racist? Why not just
throw those charges that you would throw at a Republican
without hesitation against.
Speaker 6 (39:16):
Your own boss.
Speaker 15 (39:17):
And now Kamala is getting a little bit of a
taste of her own medicine. I mean, don't forget she's
the one that did this to Joe Biden back in
the twenty twenty Democratic primary when they were on stage
and she went after him on bussing and practically called
the man, David Duke, well, guess what, it's your turn
in the barrel, lady.
Speaker 8 (39:38):
John.
Speaker 1 (39:39):
Obviously is she and I have spoken about many times before,
this is an extremely nakedly ambitious woman.
Speaker 2 (39:45):
Pardon the pum there.
Speaker 1 (39:46):
She's not going to take a loss for president and
just go back to the sidelines and raise her non kids.
She's going to figure out some other way to try
to rise to something.
Speaker 2 (39:57):
As at.
Speaker 1 (39:58):
Another run of the presidency is to make a run
at the governor.
Speaker 2 (40:01):
Is she gonna win governor? Well, it's been done before.
Speaker 15 (40:05):
I mean go back and look at different vice presidents
or vice presidential candidates.
Speaker 2 (40:10):
When they're out of the limelight.
Speaker 15 (40:12):
They typically find some office that they think is winnable
and they run. But what's funny is they find ways
to lose in places they have no business losing in.
I mean, you think about what happened in the nineteen
sixty presidential election when Dick Nixon lost because the Democrats
cheated and stuff ballots in Illinois and Chicago. He came
(40:32):
back to California, which was then a red state, ran
for governor and lost. That's what gave us that you
won't have Dick Nixon to kick around any more.
Speaker 2 (40:41):
Speech. We saw it with Walter Mondale.
Speaker 15 (40:44):
Walter Mondale ran for the US Senate in Minnesota after
Paul Wellstone his airplane crashed and the Democrats needed a
candidate at the last minute, and guess what happened. He
lost to a Republican. That was the last time a
Republican won a US Senate seat in Minnesota. Geraldine Ferraro
ran for the US Senate twice in New York, never
made it out of the primary. Sarah Palin ran for
(41:06):
a House seat in Alaska. She managed to lose in
a state that Republicans reliably win. If Kamala Harris comes
back to California and runs for governor, that could really
be the final chapter in her political biography. She could
lose here, and I would love to see that happen.
Speaker 1 (41:26):
Do you get the sense, because look, this is me
on the outside looking in, I'm not part of the
Democrat Party, but I wouldn't be shocked, John, I wouldn't
be shocked if.
Speaker 2 (41:34):
She went down in a primary.
Speaker 1 (41:35):
I feel like there's a lot of Democrat anger towards
Kamala Harris. Losing obviously is the big one.
Speaker 2 (41:42):
Even though they won't admit it.
Speaker 1 (41:43):
Blowing one point five billion dollars being handed the nomination,
She's hardly the bell of the ball with the Democrat base.
Could you see her just let out losing a primary?
Speaker 2 (41:53):
Yeah? I could.
Speaker 15 (41:55):
And you're going to have a lot of candidates in
that race, including candidates with a lot of money, and
she's going to need Democratic donors to kick in. And
I remember reading one report saying that Democratic donors would
only help her retire her campaign debt if she agreed
not to run next time. So that kind of gives
you an idea as to where they are on her
(42:17):
future prospects. Well, if you're not independently wealthy, and the
people who typically fund Democratic campaigns won't fund you, then
how do you beat a billionaire candidate? Which we're going
to have in that race. Landy can Ilacus the Lieutenant governor.
How do you beat someone like that? And the answer
is it gets a lot harder and Kamala is no
(42:39):
shoe in.
Speaker 1 (42:41):
Wow, that may have been the last we see a dome. John,
Thank you, my brother. As always, you're the best. All right,
it's time for some light in the mood. It is
the Christmas season, after all. You ready for some Christmas spirit?
Hang on, all right, it is time to lighten the mood.
(43:09):
And before we get to this, I want to remind
you that you can subscribe to my YouTube channel if
you like.
Speaker 2 (43:16):
It looks free.
Speaker 1 (43:17):
If you like funny little shorts and little goofy things
we do, go subscribe to the YouTube channel YouTube dot
com slash at Jesse Kelly DC, or just take your
little phone and scan that little thing there. Subscribe to it.
That stuff will pop up and you can enjoy yourself.
Now on to lighten the mood. It is to Christmas season,
(43:38):
and I'll be honest, I've been a little delayed this year.
Normally about the first of December. I'm in there, but
I'm starting to get in the Christmas spirit pretty heavy.
When I see cars like this makes me want to
do it to.
Speaker 8 (43:51):
Mine, starting up and.
Speaker 13 (44:04):
Up and cocky and copy copy copy and copy paper
copy copy.
Speaker 2 (44:18):
That's awesome. I'll see it about h