Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a spectacular Thursday, about to defend the entire United States
of America because, for hopefully the final time, I'm going
to address this stabbing thing that is all anybody wants
to talk about. Once we get done with that, we
(00:32):
will discuss the birthplace, citizenship stuff, that Supreme Court. We'll
do some emails, do some other things on the world
famous Jesse Kelly Show. Now, as you know, I've brought
up this story once or twice, Max, but I think
it's sad and it's awful, so I haven't wanted to
talk about it. But it's all anyone can discuss right now,
(00:55):
and I feel obligated to vent out my final thoughts.
And here's what they are. You already know. Track Meet Frisco, Texas.
Black kid from a different school goes and sits in
the wrong tent, gets in a confrontation with the white
kid from the Frisco school. The black kid pulls out
a knife, stabs him to death. He dies in his
(01:16):
twin brother's arms. It's like the worst freaking saddest thing
in the history of mankind. It's awfull. I hate it.
You already know this, You already know that in response
to it, that there have been all these online legal
defense funds set up for the one who allegedly did
the stabbing, and that now it's high six figures. And
you already know, and you already know. You turn on
(01:39):
the television set every single day and there's this guy,
Minister Dominique Alexander, representing, of course, the family of the
one who did the stabbing, saying a bunch of things
like this and.
Speaker 2 (01:51):
That is your constitutional right.
Speaker 3 (01:56):
It's people out here reminding us of the black struggle
in America.
Speaker 1 (02:02):
Okay, so this is probably going to offend virtually every
single person listening. I'm going to explain what we're looking
at here. Let's address the white side of it, because
this has devolved into a racial thing, a purely racial thing,
(02:23):
and I understand completely why from the white side of it.
Here's the white point of view. Really, it's really just
an honest point of view. But here's a white side
of it. A lot of people in this country, they
believe that the black community in this country is not
only violent, they believe that the black community in this country.
(02:48):
They believe they're violence has been covered up not only
by the American media, but by the various law enforcement agencies,
including the FBI. They believe that black people attack white
people and an extremely high number, especially compared to the
other races. And the people who believe everything I just
(03:10):
said are one hundred percent correct. Don't worry. If you're
cheering right now, you're about to get offending some I'm
probably going to offend everyone when I say this. The
people who believe that are one hundred percent correct. Black
crime in this country is covered up by the media
because we have a collective white guilt society. It is
covered up by law enforcement to the degree they will
even stop tracking certain races and things like that when
(03:32):
it comes to crime in an ongoing effort to protect
the reputation of the black community. Now, I need to
stress this particular portion of it. It's not every black person.
The urban black community in the United States of America
is a disaster and the culture is awful in every way.
(03:55):
I'm not covering up that at all. But that's not
every black person. I know, black cowboys, black marines, black
that's not every every black person. Isn't rotting in some
urban hell hole that's high on crime. That's not what
I'm saying. But that whole rap ghetto, urban black community
(04:16):
thing that celebrates all the most despicable behavior you can
find is indefensively bad, violent, and horrible for everyone, Black people,
white people, the entire country. So there is an inordinate
amount of crime committed by the black community because of
the crime centers in the urban areas, and a lot
(04:40):
of people will make it about white people right now.
A lot of people are sick of it, and they're
sick of the fact that it's being covered up. They
don't like it. No one wants to talk about it. Now,
maybe you're cheering, you're about to scream at me. Here's
the other side of it, and this part Huntum sent
true too. From the black side of it. We are
(05:01):
not We are not that far removed from a period
of time in this country where black black people were
treated as second class citizens. We are not far removed
from that. Now you may think, well, that's no excuse.
Stay with me, Stay with me here. I'm talking about
a generational connection. And here's what I mean. If you
(05:25):
are a twenty year old black person in America, today,
have you experienced systemic racism? No, you haven't, you freaking liar,
But your grandma probably did, and you talked to her,
and your mom maybe did. Maybe your dad did, and
you talked to him and for him, for her, it
was very real. And they're going to share those experiences
(05:47):
with you. This is what happened to us. This is
how they used to treat us. This is what they
did to us. Now when you combine that with this,
and this is what we've discussed before. Anytime there is
a minority, and a minority in America almost always means
non white. But remember that's not what minority actually means.
(06:07):
It means your group of people, whatever it is. You're
not in the majority. Anytime there is a minority population
anywhere in a country and a tribe in prison, wherever
it is, they will feel threatened and they will shield
up and turtle up with each other as a form
(06:27):
of protection by being the minority, by being in the minority,
we have to live together, work together, support each other
because we have to be protected as the minority. I
brought up that pool that just came out the other
day that showed black people by a mile. It wasn't
even close. Are more likely to identify with their race
(06:50):
than Hispanics or Asians, or whites or anyone else. Why
thirteen percent of the population historically haven't been treated well. Therefore,
what that has created after generations is a community that
will guard itself, protect itself, and that's how it manifests.
Now Here is a huge problem with that portion of it.
(07:14):
That's understandable. By the way, it's completely understandable. A huge
problem with that is once you turn into that, once
you turtle up out of protection. Once you turtle up,
inevitably you will find yourself defending something awful. You'll find
yourself either supporting or being quiet about instead of speaking
(07:38):
out against your quote leaders who are speaking out on
your behalf and your whole community will look terrible because
of the people that go out and represent you and
you don't want to speak out against them. For instance,
this minister Dominique, Alexander, this makes everybody look bad. It
(08:00):
does when you raise six figures and then you hire
somebody like this, It just it makes you look really bad.
Speaker 2 (08:10):
And that is your constitutional right.
Speaker 1 (08:13):
So everyone from the outside looking in, what do they say?
Here we go again defending another criminal. Oh look, another
murderer getting defended, raising a bunch of money. Let out
on Joe. Oh look, another black guy about to get
off scott free. But from the other side, if you're
in the black community, no matter what your age is,
(08:36):
and you were raised to believe or maybe you actually
experienced oppression because of your skin color, what do you
see with this whole thing? You look and you think, oh, look,
the white people want to throw another black guy in prison,
even if he did it. Screw you. You're not throwing
another black guy in prison. Remember we had that woman.
(08:57):
Chris will probably find it. You don't have to find it,
by the way, if you can't, chrisp But there was
an older black woman who was part of the Rodney
or part of the OJ Simpson jury, and she admitted
years later that they let oj Simpson off in response
to the cops who beat Rodney King getting off. Now
(09:20):
you can say those cases are unrelated and you're right,
and you can say what she did was wrong or unjust,
and you would be right about that. All that stuff
is true.
Speaker 3 (09:28):
But for her.
Speaker 1 (09:31):
Perfectly justified. No, no, no, no, no, you just let
off the cops who beat this black guy almost to death.
You let them off because they're cops. Black people are
oppressed anyway, and now you want to throw OJ Simpson
in prison for killing his wife. I don't care if
he did kill his wife, not geltake very very tempting,
very tempting. So I don't think I'm gonna speak about
(09:54):
this again. I'm gonna try not to. Maybe I will
when the trial comes up. But but I hate how
this thing has immediately devolved into an all out race war.
Immediately the black people feel like they have to defend
the black guy who kills them, but immediately the white
(10:15):
people feel like, wait a minute, this is once again
a black criminal doing black crime things. And I just
find the whole thing to be awful. And look, there
are obviously going to be racial aspects to it, but
like I said before, I see two seventeen year olds
whose lives are over. The white kid's already dead, the
black kid's life is over over, And look, to be honest,
(10:36):
that's maybe the best case scenario. If it's proved that
he did it and he gets convicted, his life is over.
We might be looking at more riots because of all
this crap, and then that'll make the racial divide even worse.
I find the whole thing to be awful. I'm sure
I offended everybody. And remember, if I offended you, no
matter what your color is, I don't give a crap.
All right, all right, we are actually going to talk
(10:59):
to Brandon Derby, not next, but we're going to talk
to Darby about a couple border things about ten minutes
from now. Try to do some more emails. I am
walking away from this story, and Lord Willing, I'm never
going to return. You should walk away from Verizon AT
and T Mobile and you should never return either either.
You know that twenty five bucks a month can get
(11:23):
you unlimited talk text in five gigs of data. When
I tell you to switch to Pure Talk, I always
talk about their values, how they hire Americans, how they
don't take your money and dump on your country. I
always talk about these things, but let's just make it
about money. Twenty five bucks a month, that's nothing. Oh
(11:45):
and by the way, when you dial pound two five
zero and say Jesse Kelly, that'll save you in additional
fifty percent off of your first month. That's that's almost
getting your cell service for free. At this point in time,
Pure Talk will take care of you. You don't have to
switch your phone. You don't have to switch your number.
They make it easy. Just pick up your phone and
(12:07):
dial Pound two five zero and say Jesse Kelly switch
to Puretalk. We'll be back. This is a Jesse Kelly Show.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday, reminding
you that tomorrow is an Ask Doctor Jesse Friday, and
(12:27):
you need to get your questions emailed in right now.
Ask me anything Jesse at jessekellyshow dot com. We have
Brandon Darby gonna give us a little border cartel update
about ten minutes from now. I am aware, I've got
your emails. I'm aware about the shooting that took place
(12:48):
at Florida State earlier today. I'm aware. If you are
a new listener to the show, you may not be
aware that I don't do mass shooting radio. I don't. Yes,
I heard what the reporter asked Trump in the White House.
In case you missed it, Here's how it went. And
this is actually exhibit A for why I don't do
mass shooting radio. Here she was.
Speaker 4 (13:08):
There are now.
Speaker 2 (13:09):
Two deceased following that shooting at Florida State University. Going
in amid that, is there any changes that you want
to see too gun legislation, anything you see broken with.
Speaker 3 (13:19):
Gun lawsn't hear?
Speaker 5 (13:19):
Well, I'm going to have to look.
Speaker 4 (13:20):
I'm a big advocate of the Second Amendment.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
I have been from the beginning. Yeah, let's by the
way Trump answered it, grade did? Trump didfine? It. It's
not really about him, my point and all this, it's
about her. Whenever there's a terrible tragedy, because communists have
no soul, they immediately see it as an opportunity. That
brain dead communist she saw two dead people on Florida
(13:43):
State's campus, and she didn't think about their parents. She
didn't think about the tragedy. She immediately thought, Wow, this
is an opportunity. Sweet, I'll ask Trump about it. I
don't do it. I won't do it. What I want
you to do, if you want to dwell on that
shooting is pray for those four families. Imagine sending your
child off to college and your child gets gunned down
(14:05):
one day on college campus. I don't need to know
anything else. I'm not going to talk about anything else.
It's awful, it's sad. Families need your prayer right now.
Families today got the worst phone call they've ever gotten
in their lives. The phone call every single parent lays
awake at night now and then dreading as nightmares about
(14:28):
parents got those phone calls today. It's an awful, awful thing.
And what we need is prayer, Come together, pray. Jesse,
when does caring crossover into communism? Well, look, communists understand
your values sometimes better than you do, to be honest
(14:49):
with you, because they can look at your values dispassionately.
They don't share them, and they don't have any desire
to share them, but they can look at you and
figure out what makes this person tick, what doesn't make
this person tick? Look, even when they're trying to, even
when they're trying the best they can about this MS
(15:10):
thirteen guy they keep trying to bring back. Listen to
CNN on this, I.
Speaker 5 (15:13):
Think there's absolutely enough here to send this guy somewhere else.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
One.
Speaker 5 (15:17):
He's already broken the law.
Speaker 3 (15:18):
We've already established that.
Speaker 2 (15:19):
Now you do have evidence suggesting that he was a
member or is a member of MS thirteen.
Speaker 5 (15:23):
He's also a serial abuser.
Speaker 1 (15:24):
This is not the type.
Speaker 5 (15:25):
Of individual I don't think any one of us would
want in our country.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
He should be deported.
Speaker 2 (15:29):
We can't make it about Kilmar like that's just one
person's case. We're talking about that is But I guess
if we look at the macro and not the micro
and just look at the process of because he's not
the only person there, there were other They indiscriminately rounded
up people and deported them.
Speaker 1 (15:46):
When you're trying to bring back a scumbag into America,
you have to tell lies about that. So you can't
you understand it looks bad. If we focus on him,
it looks bad. Is criminal history looks bad. So now
it's got to be about well, all of us, do
you want to get rounded up? That's the new thing.
Speaker 4 (16:03):
Do not disappear people in the United States. Because here's
the thing. If they can disappear the stir of Brego Garcia,
then they can disappear you. It's about disappearing people, but
it's also about a band court orders.
Speaker 1 (16:18):
The communist wants him back here. They want the criminals here.
We already explain why. They also understand that you don't
you don't want a criminal back here. You don't want
this guy back here. In fact, the American people, they're
completely thrilled about what Trump's doing the court.
Speaker 5 (16:34):
All undocumented immigrants, voters favoring the government trying to deport
all eleven million of them. Back in twenty sixteen, just
thirty eight percent of voters wanted the government that to
try to the court all eleven million undocumented immigrants.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
Compared to where we are.
Speaker 5 (16:49):
In twenty twenty five, fifty six percent. The majority the
American people have come a long way on this issue.
Speaker 1 (16:57):
So it's not working. What do you do if you're
a communist you want this guy back and you want
all the others to stay, what do you do? You
have to figure out a way to lie about it
and to use your values against you, Your values that
care about government intrusion, your values that you don't want
(17:17):
the government to round people up. So then you make
it broader. When it benefits them to make it specific,
they will make it specific. When it benefits them to
make it broad, they will make it broad. But they
will always seek out a way to use your values
for their purposes as far as caring goes. That was
the question. That's how they've always sold communism, always, and
(17:43):
even if they can't win you over, even if they
can't get you a communist membership, card. They can at
least kind of tamp down your resistance. Are you saying
you don't like immigrants immediately you're on the de Wow,
I never said that. I mean my grandfather immigrated here. Imediately,
you're playing defense. This is how they do it. They
(18:04):
do it repeatedly, they learn it. It is a tactic
that has learned. Remember these communist tactics that your liberal
and Peggy learns, they're learned, learned. These people are professional revolutionaries.
Remember when they got that the founder, one of the
founders of Black Lives Matter on camera, Remember when she
talked about being a Marxist. Did she just say I'm
(18:27):
a Marxist? No, we are what we are trained Marxists.
This stuff is learned there is. It's like professional schools,
only they're actually the schools we pay for most of
the time. Anyway, let's talk to Darby about the cartels.
Next the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly
(18:50):
Show on a Thursday. And I don't know. I don't
know whether to even ask Chris whether Darby didn't pick
his song or did Chris thinks? Did you think you
picked a bad song there, Chris? Because I think that
song is fantastic. I'm not even ashamed about it. Joining
me now Cartel chronicles Brightbart's very own Brandon Darby Brannan,
have you picked that? Well done? If not well done anyway.
Speaker 3 (19:13):
Well, what I did was I picked the person who
picked it, and I get some credit.
Speaker 1 (19:20):
Okay, Brandon. The border is quiet at least it's not
in the news, right We're all chasing a brand new
shiny object every day. That's this this court case and
this stabbing or this horrible thing. Why am I not
hearing more about the border?
Speaker 3 (19:34):
Well, there's not as much going on on the border.
I mean, apprehensions are down over ninety percent from where
they were a year ago. You know, I think that
agents feeling powered to do their job. Most you know,
federal law enforcement agents along the border and across the
country are feeling empowered to go after cartels and to
(19:57):
more aggressively go after China. So, if you know, there's
there's not as much going on now on the Mexico side,
there's a lot going on. But even then, there's a
lot of good news as well. There's some bad news,
but there's a lot of good news.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
Okay, speaking of the bad news, I wanted to ask
you about the mass graves. I know that's a little dark,
but I want people to understand how dark it is
down there. What what what mass graves?
Speaker 3 (20:26):
Well, there's well, I'm just gonna bluntly say this, there's
mass graves found all of the time in Mexico, including
you know, close to our border where cartels kill people.
We had a story come out today on bright Bark
Texas about, you know, the forced conscription of ordinary people
(20:47):
that the Gulf Cartel Reinosa faction was forcing to help them,
forcing like like almost like what's going on in Ukraine
or something, you know, and maybe Russia. I don't know
because not a lot of news from there, but uh,
there's this forced conscriptions, conscription, forcing people to be soldiers
for them, and a lot of that is because we
(21:08):
just we've just really damaged, uh, you know, their economic
model by not allowing migrants to the border. Remember, this
faction of the Gulf Cartel was making as much or
more from migrants smuggling as they were from drugs. Well
Trump takes office and they can't do that anymore, and
so they're they're a little bit desperate, you know, they're
(21:28):
they're declared a foreign terrorist organization. Politicians who would typically
take their money are afraid to take their money right now,
even more afraid of that than they are afraid of
US Treasury and us UH, the US government than they
are the cartel. So over the local cartels, so these
guys are having a hard time.
Speaker 1 (21:47):
Now.
Speaker 3 (21:48):
There are other tartels that we're not really going after
in Mexico as protecting, like CJ ANDNG you know El Mincho.
But as far as along the Texas border, the Trump
administration is given these guys.
Speaker 1 (22:01):
Hell, who's in the mass graves?
Speaker 3 (22:05):
Well, that's the thing that depends. So sometimes you know
the mass grave that was found over a decade ago
in Allende and Koela just south of Del Rio, Texas
and Eagle Pass, Texas. Really those were just ordinary citizens
who happened to have the last name of some guy
who earned government witness and so loseetas decided the cartel
(22:31):
that's head headquartered in Nuevo Laredo immediately across you know,
the border from Larido, Texas, that cartel decided just to
go in that region and kill every person with that
last name. You know, the mass graves that were found
in Tamalipus under you know, the McCallen to Brownsville area
(22:51):
south of there, there were mass graves found of migrants
who the you know, golf cartel agreed to smuggle. And
then those guys, I don't know, maybe they got busy
or wanted to go see a movie, or a friend
asked them to come to a party, so they just
left the people and in a railroad part and they died,
and and and the people a storage container and then
(23:15):
the people, uh, you know, they hey get rid of
the bodies, and so they master it. They bury him there.
But the majority of the time that I've seen, the
mass graves are not you know, if somebody is a
cartel player, they don't mind hanging their head or hanging
their body from an overpass. The mass graves are often
(23:36):
meant to hide what they did. And usually that's people
who you know, quote unquote didn't deserve it, right, people
who were not part of that life. So it's a
heinous situation. You know, I think that people people lose
sight of just how many people, you know, since two thousand,
you know, five or two thousand and six or so,
(23:56):
how many people have been killed in this cartel war.
You know.
Speaker 1 (24:01):
Why then what happened in two thousand and five, two
thousand and six, Well, you know, a.
Speaker 3 (24:06):
Lot of the number of the cartels began to fight
each other. And it's really a complex, pretty complex situation.
But basically, to make a long story short, you know,
a partel in Mexico decided that they needed to diversify
and break up in order to you know, in order
(24:27):
to protect themselves and not just get you know, the
entire cartel you know, destroyed in one swoop. So they divided,
you know, the territories amongst family and amongst others, a
lot of the territories, and then those territories began to
fight for began to fight for control along our border.
You know. After two thousand and one, you know, the
(24:51):
US government began to sort of secure the border, did
a half measure. Well, those areas that got more secured,
nobody really wanted. But those areas that weren't secure yet
people wanted and they said, well, how come you know,
it's not my fault that George Bush and that these
you know, terrorists attacked the US on nine to eleven.
It's not my fault. The US built a wall, right here.
(25:13):
How come, you know, you have territory that doesn't have
a wall, why don't I get to use that too?
And they began to fight each other, and so, you know,
this this has been a pretty hectic thing. The Gulf
cartel had, you know, hired a large army of elite fighters,
many of whom were trained in the United States, who
were you know, pops, et cetera allies. They hired this army,
(25:38):
and the army decided that they wanted to be their
own cartel, and they became Litseetus. Right. So it's been
just a very tragic situation, you know. And then for
the next you know, maybe decade, roughly a lot of territories,
even along our border, were under the direct control, uh.
And then that began to change. People began to get
(25:58):
frustrated with it, you know, people began to get frustrated
with Kohela. So, uh, you know, Kohela started a police
force called called Los Gatees, and lostattest violated every human
rights standard possible because they had no other choice if
they wanted to kill los Etta's and they began to
(26:19):
kill all the Zettas and so then the Zettas didn't
have a strangle hold on Kohela any longer, you know,
south of Eagle Pass and Do Rio. But then Lost
Thattes started becoming a cartel. You know, it's just a
giant mess.
Speaker 1 (26:33):
Brandon, Where did they go from here? Let's let's assume
that I honestly, I don't want to assume anything, but
let's assume these Trump policies on the border, cracking down
on the border, securing things, going after money. Let's assume
these remained in place for a while. These organizations aren't
going to take up knitting, you know, they're not going
to open mechanic shops. Where do you go from here?
Speaker 3 (26:55):
Well, it's interesting that you bring that up. So I
oftentimes when I've talked to you about it several times
about how we're moving the head of the golf cartel,
you know, turned it into many factions that we're all
fighting each other, right, and it increased the violence temporarily,
(27:16):
and that that poses some unique challenges to the United States,
not only the law enforcement, but to the to the
US population as a whole. However, what the golf cartel
really doesn't have anymore because they've been decapitated so many times,
you know, they got decapitated, and then several grew in
its place, and then those groups got decapitated. Well, now
(27:40):
there's so many disparate groups, and yes they're violent, but
they're more akin to gangs, and none of them have
any real national power any longer, any real national control
over the Mexican central government. Well, the same could be
true said about lozettos, can be true about a lot
(28:01):
of cartels, and right now a lot of that can
be said over the Sinaloa cartel. They have a lot
of state power, but they've been decapitated now they've broken
in the factions. However, the most ruthless cartel in Mexico,
the largest, most ruthless, most responsible for fentanel, is called
CJNG from Jalisco, and the Mexican government is protecting that cartel.
(28:22):
They're not going after that cartel. That cartel boss Elmentcho
is known and we've reported on it, Mexican news outlets
that he's reported on it, which is pretty wild, but
is known to have very direct ties with the Secretary
of Defense for Mexico, the current Secretary of Defense. So
it's that level of corruption, it's that level of power,
(28:44):
and he is being allowed to skate while Mexico has
convinced the United States to focus on the Sinaloa cartel
and to focus on the Zetas and to focus on
the Gulf cartel while they protect the main cartel, which
then only allows that main cartel to get bigger because
the US and Mexico are wiping out of his competition.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
Wow, sounds like it's working out well for them. Brandon,
you are the best, Brandon Darby, go read all this
stuff at Breitbart. Thank you, my friend. As always, it's
always interesting. I don't know why we love that stuff.
It's crazy. It's just crazy. Mexico's right there, right there.
You know what else is crazy? Not having gold or
silver having it as part of your retirement. I mean,
(29:28):
I'm not telling you to acquire gold bars like like
Bob Menendez. It wouldn't hurt to have some physical gold.
I'm a big believer in that gold or silver coins
because I think we all know what's happening with the debt.
But if you don't have any in your retirement by now,
you're just nuts. Who do you trust to do that?
Speaker 3 (29:46):
Though?
Speaker 1 (29:48):
Well, gold Code didn't get an A plus rating from
the Better Business Bureau By being scam artists. They've won
numerous awards, over six thousand and five star reviews. We
are talking white glove service. I don't know how to
get gold or silver in your retirement, and you probably
don't either, but gold cod does protect the retirement you
(30:10):
worked for. You want to qualify for bonus silver, maybe
up to fifteen grand of bonus silver eight five point
five eight one seven gold or go to Jesse likesgold
dot com. We'll be back. The Jesse Kelly Show I
(30:30):
Like It returns next. It is the Jesse Kellyshell on
an incredible Thursday. Do not forget that Tomorrow's and ask
doctor Jesse Friday and you did to get your questions
emailed in right now to Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
The Supreme Court is going to hear arguments over the
injunctions on Trump's bid to end birthright citizenship. And this
(30:55):
is obviously a very cut and dry thing for anybody
who's saying and completely twisted it's bonkers that you just
have to sneak into America illegally have your baby here
and that baby's a citizen. It's not only insane in suicidal,
(31:16):
it's not constitutional, and this is one of those things
that the legal scholars will try to talk over your
head with this, but everyone knows. Everyone knows, that's not
what the fourteenth Amendment was about. Everyone knows why the
Fourteenth Amendment came to be. It was about the freed slaves.
Everyone knows these things. But through years and years and
(31:36):
years of communist infiltration into the legal system and GOP weakness,
we now have a system where the United States of America,
they'll let some illegal skip across the border from Mexico
have a kid right on the border on the American side,
and that kid gets a Social Security number in citizenship,
(31:59):
and the Union States of America. It's just the most disgusting,
suicidal thing in the world. My point with the Supreme
Court thing is it doesn't matter how they rule. Now
I'll take that back, It matters how they rule. We
want them to rule in our favor, but I will
not be swayed one way or the other if the
(32:20):
Supreme Court rules against us. What I just laid out
is crystal clear to every single person. It's clear to you,
it's clear to them too. They just try to find
different ways to jump through these legal hoops. To justify
this or justify that that we all know what they're
trying to justify. In the end, they're trying to justify
(32:41):
the mass importation of foreigners. And you know why we've
talked about it a million times. You know exactly why
I had mentioned a little bit earlier, a couple segments ago,
about how when something specific aids their revolution, they'll make
it about that specific thing, and when the specific thing
doesn't aid their revolution, they'll make it broad. So if
(33:04):
you happen to lie in as an MS thirteen gang
member and the public figures out that he's a wife
beating piece of trash, then well it could happen to anyone,
like Elizabeth Warre.
Speaker 4 (33:14):
We do not disappear people in the United States, because
here's the thing. If they can disappear Astro Abrego Garcia,
then they can disappear you. It's about disappearing people, but
it's also about a band court orders.
Speaker 1 (33:31):
Well, it's not about him, it's about anybody could happen
to you, and they do this, of course, with all
the violence from the left. Governor Shapiro, that would be
Pennsylvania Governor Shapiro. He refuses to discuss pro Palestinian motive
for the attack. Now, Paul is for a moment and
think about this. How much do you love your family?
(33:56):
Think about waking up in the middle of the night,
your home is full of smoke, there's a raging inferno
in your home. You actually managed to get everyone to safety. Gosh,
your heart would be pounding no matter what. After you've
gotten them to safety, you're approached by the police and
(34:17):
you're informed that this wasn't some electrical fire. It's not
that someone left a stove on. Grandma didn't put her
cigarette out on the couch. This was actually an arsonist
who tried to fire bomb your family to death. And
he did it because you're a Jew. So why did it?
The dude was one of these socialist communists America hating scumbags,
(34:41):
but he really really hates the Jews. He did it
because you're a Jew. And you get up and because
you know you have to play footsie with the most vile,
disgusting parts of the Democrat Party. You don't even make
a strong statement about it. Remember that mealy mouthed statement
(35:02):
he gave the other day. Well, look, I mean, violence
is wrong no matter which side. We're not going to
focus on the sides. Remember what I just said. When
it's when specifics make them look bad, they make it broad.
When broad makes it look bad, they make it about specifics.
Old Governor Shapiro most had his entire family burned to
death by a communist activist, and even that won't prompt
(35:26):
him to speak out against the revolution. Wow, isn't it?
These people? Man, they're wild. I'm telling you what. Anyway,
he was Ben Rhodes, remember Ben Rhodes, former aid to Obama?
Speaker 6 (35:37):
And I think the thing we have to be watching
is that they're using these autocratic powers in this kind
of fake state of war to justify deporting people like
this there.
Speaker 1 (35:45):
Then it could be American citizens.
Speaker 6 (35:47):
Then it could be I don't know, canceling elections, whatever
they want to do.
Speaker 1 (35:51):
See see how see their new strategy MS thirteen wasn't landing.
People weren't feeling sympathy. Obviously the new thing has been
put out by the hive mind. New messaging is put
out there. Well, it's not about him, it's about you.
They might even cancel elections. What if they just show
(36:11):
up and round you. They could round up any of us.
You'd never know who might get rounded up. Next. Everything
built on a lie at all times, and always seeking
out the right.
Speaker 5 (36:23):
Line we are Reverence for the truth might become might
have become a bit of a distraction that is preventing
us from finding consensus and getting important things done.
Speaker 1 (36:33):
Let's make fun of Bernie Sanders, who flies on private
jets next