Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
John Carey farted on television. We'll talk about that tonight.
We'll talk about what they're doing over there at this
climate conference, a little debate preview for tomorrow local elections matter,
all that's coming up.
Speaker 2 (00:13):
I'm right, he needs our meeting right now.
Speaker 1 (00:25):
Do you know that they're meeting over there in Dubai
a place built by oil, with oil money anyway, and
in this big events called COP twenty eight. We're gonna
bring Mark Morano on tomorrow to talk more about it.
He's actually there at COP twenty eight, so that'll be interesting.
But before we get to John Carrey and what they're
doing over there and why they're doing it, do you
(00:47):
know that fifty percent of children born used to die
right here in America? Did you know that back in
the sixteen seventeen to reach you the founding of the nation,
all that that it was just the norm. Half your
kids would die. It's half the reason families would have
(01:08):
so many children. You'd have six, seven, eight, nine children.
You knew half of your children would die. It's crazy, right,
Why would I bring that up? What's this have to
do with climate?
Speaker 2 (01:17):
Do you know?
Speaker 1 (01:19):
You know one of the main reasons that doesn't happen anymore.
A child death is thankfully very rare. Now do you
know one of the reasons energy? Do you know that
cheap abundant energy is not one of the things. It
is the thing that pulled the world out of the
(01:41):
darkness and into this modern era. We don't think about
it as much, and why would we write.
Speaker 2 (01:48):
But I want you to stop for a moment. I
want you to stop for.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
A moment and look around you right now, wherever you are,
whether you're sitting there watching on your iPad at an airport,
whether you're watching at home on your TV, however you're watching,
I'm right tonight. I want you to just try to
take your eyes off me, as hard as that may be,
for a moment, and look around the room right now,
Look where you're at. Every single thing in your room,
with the exception of your family, was brought to you
(02:13):
by cheap abundant energy. It's the reason we the normal
person a normal person. You if you're in a one
bedroom apartment right now, you live a life that is
actually superior to Kings of old. All the spices you
could ever want sitting there in your little spice covered
(02:35):
lights that come on with just a frip. Oh, I'm
a little hot. I think I'll make it cooler in here.
Let me walk up to the thermostat and just turn
it down a little. Oo is it cold? Let me
turn up the heat. We don't properly think about this.
We don't think about it often enough. Cheap, abundant energy
(02:57):
is what built the planet. You know, now, now that
you're thinking about that, here was John Carrey at top
twenty eight.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
I'm going to be transitioning out of coal. There shouldn't
be any more coal fired power plants permitted anywhere in
the world. That's how you can do something for help.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
A couple things on that. That's well north of twenty
percent of the energy you use coal fired plants. That's one.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
Two shouldn't be.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
Permitted. Excuse me, shouldn't be permitted. The way these people
see themselves, they really do see themselves as kings and queens.
Who the hell is John Carey to permit me to
do anything?
Speaker 3 (03:49):
Or you?
Speaker 1 (03:50):
Who is John Carey? Shouldn't be permitted. But let's go
back to what we were just talking about there. This
will be painted by most people on the right as ah,
look at this again, Look at this nutball. Ah, this
would be too expensive. Oh, this wouldn't even work very well.
When how it should be presented is that's John Carey
(04:11):
calling for genocide. You understand that that's what the man
made climate change movement is, right, You understand that it's
not only a genocidal movement, it is, by orders of magnitude,
the most genocidal movement in the history of mankind.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
Ah, Jesse, that's crazy.
Speaker 1 (04:33):
What about Hitler? What about Mao? These people on camera
announce their intention to reduce the Earth's population by billions
with a b that is so much more murderous than Hitler, Mao, Stalin,
(04:54):
Genghis Khan, all of them rolled up into one.
Speaker 2 (04:57):
By orders of magnitude.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
This is the most evil, genocidal movement in the history
of the world. The movement has decided that you are
poisonous and bad for the planet, and what's best for
the planet is if you would die. The entire movement
is based on that the air you're breathing out, that carbon,
(05:21):
they think that's poison you. Having access to all that cheap,
abundant energy, they believe it's holding the planet back, and
so they're going to try to present it to you
as being, of course for the greater good that you
just allow these people to kill billions. Here's John Carey
setting it up.
Speaker 3 (05:42):
The scientists are saying, this moment is alarming, it's without precedent.
It is terrifying, some have said, and others will say,
we are in uncharted territory.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
Yeah, uncharted territory. Now, now this is the moment where
I'm supposed to point out to you all the climate
predictions that have turned out to be wrong. I mean,
after all, John Carey's made many of these predictions himself.
Speaker 4 (06:14):
I wish he were really up to state of the
art with respect to the science undoable climate change.
Speaker 2 (06:24):
You have sea ice which.
Speaker 4 (06:26):
Is melting at a rate that the Arctic Ocean now
increasingly is exposed. In five years, scientists predict we will
have the first ice free Arctic summer.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
Ice free in the Arctic. Yeah, it didn't work out
that way anyway, Let's not do that, though, Well, why
do we do that?
Speaker 2 (06:49):
It's not what it's about.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
Their predictions are not about coming true. It's not that
they actually predict these things, not John Carey, not the scientists.
It's not that all of these predictions are simply trying
to scare you and justify their genocide. When Hillary Clinton
gets up and talks about all these increased climate deaths,
(07:14):
she has a purpose for this. Her purpose is to
justify the coming death camps for you.
Speaker 5 (07:23):
We are seeing and beginning to pay attention and to
count and record the deaths that are related to climate
and by far the biggest killer is extreme heat. We
don't have that kind of number yet from Africa, Asia,
Latin America, but we know and estimate that we probably
(07:44):
could measure about five hundred thousand deaths, and the majority
of those are women and girls and particularly pregnant women.
Speaker 1 (07:54):
Notice how that she had to throw that in at
the end. She could tell you could see it another
five hundred death yes, and then she was thinking, wait,
that's not scary enough. Ah, mostly women and children and
pregnant women. But she knows what she's doing. What's she doing.
She's making plans. You justify the coming genocide against your
(08:17):
political enemies by saying it's for the greater good. This
is what every tyrant in history has ever done. Now,
what does John Carrey get out of this? What does
Hillary Clinton get out of this? Because let's be clear,
remember always remember this, there are two different kinds of communists,
two two different divisions, if you will, elite communists scum,
(08:39):
street communists scum.
Speaker 2 (08:41):
There are differences between them.
Speaker 1 (08:42):
They work together, right, the elite communists scum. They need
the street communists scum to rape and murder and loot
and vandalize and tear society apart. The elite communists scum
will then provide them legal protections. You see that with
the FBI and judges all over the place now, So
they work hand in hand. But there is a huge
difference between them. The difference is the street communist scum
(09:03):
they actually believe, like like this guy, this this protester,
you can hate him and yeah he use an evil
piece of trash.
Speaker 2 (09:12):
He actually believes.
Speaker 1 (09:14):
What up?
Speaker 6 (09:16):
The spring is Polonia, this spring is painted, the spring
is poison. This is a climate invergen say this is
a climate crisis. There will be no opera on a
dat planet. So art there is no anything on a
planet that is dying.
Speaker 7 (09:36):
We must and bustle duds ruscil.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
Planet.
Speaker 2 (10:02):
Sorry, now those people believe the elite.
Speaker 1 (10:05):
Communists COUM do not believe John Ky. Look we pointed
out all the time, but it's really lame pointing out hypocrisy.
John Carrey flu is private jet over there, and he's
worried about climate change. John Carrey doesn't ever think about
climate change, never crosses his mind.
Speaker 2 (10:19):
He doesn't believe in it at all. What is it
to John Carrey?
Speaker 1 (10:23):
Then? John Carrey understands that this means money power. Notice
how they're always announcing Biden administration just announced another one.
All these billions going here for climate change and more
billions going there. Well, where's all that money going. It's
going to all their friends and business partners. They're all
putting it in one big pot of money. This is
all money they blood suck off of you and me
(10:44):
the taxpayer. And in the end, the John Carey's of
the world, the Joe Biden's of the world, the Bill
Gates Is of the world. They get richer and they
get more powerful. It's about money and power for them.
But they continue to stoke the flames and make these
horrific predictions. Oh my gosh, no more artikais in two minutes.
What does that do? That motivates the street communists? Coum
(11:06):
the vandalized rape, murder, cause chaos. In the end, you're
here in the middle. I'm here in the middle sandwich
between the elite communists com and the street communists come.
The elites get the power, what do the streets get?
Speaker 3 (11:23):
Well?
Speaker 1 (11:23):
Sadly, in the end, they just get shot in the face.
They think they're fighting for a good cause, but they'll
actually be the first ones taken out and shot, as
the Soviet Union did many many many times before. As
MAO did. They take their most loyal foot soldiers and
they take them out, and they shoot them, and they
fill them in a ditch because what did they say?
They know too much? Oh, that may have made you uncomfortable,
(11:45):
but I am right something else that may very well
make you uncomfortable. The IRS makes me uncomfortable. They're professionals,
professionals that steal our money. Are you behind in your taxes?
Did you miss some? You miss a year, two miss
(12:07):
ten years? You know that the IRS they're gonna come
for you, right. They didn't hire eighty seven thousand new
IRS agents to sit and sharpen their pencils. They hire
them so they can come for normal people. So get
a professional to fight back. Tax Network USA. This is
what they do. They take on the IRS on behalf
(12:28):
of normal people. They will get you out of a jam.
Don't fight it by yourself. Fight with the pros, all right.
And when you go to tax NETWORKUSA dot com, slash
Jesse gets you a discount as well. So go and
go now we'll be back. What's their goal, the American
(12:55):
communist what is their goal? We've talked about it many, many,
many times. That is, in the end, their overarching goal.
You see it everywhere, I know you do. You see
it when the FBI sends their swat teams after pro lifers.
You see it when they try to have you fired
for not taking a poisonous shot. You see it everywhere.
(13:16):
What do you see?
Speaker 2 (13:18):
The goal is to turn you into an enemy.
Speaker 1 (13:22):
Of the state, not make you a political opponent, not
make you someone they disagree with.
Speaker 2 (13:28):
They want you to be an official law breaking.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
Enemy of the state. And they have They focus everything
on doing that. But why what do they get out
of that? What do they get out of making you
me an enemy of the state. Well, they get to
turn the state's guns on you. That's the real benefit
for them. They want to turn the guns of the state,
(13:54):
the law, the FBI, the military on you.
Speaker 2 (13:59):
You oh, Jesse, that's crazy.
Speaker 1 (14:01):
That could never happen. Please stop saying things like that
to me. Stop saying things like that to me.
Speaker 2 (14:07):
That can't happen.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
Here, open a freaking history book. It happens everywhere these
kind of people take over. It should be something you
assume is going to happen. The crazy thing right now
would be if it did not happen. Not according to me,
According to the history books, that is what they want.
Speaker 2 (14:28):
They want to turn you.
Speaker 1 (14:29):
Into an enemy of the state so they can send
the FBI to murder you and kick in your door.
They want to turn you into a new enemy of
the state so they can then send the United States
military against their domestic enemies. Ah, Jesse, they would never
do that. Why do you think. Why do you think
they pushed the vaccines so hard on the United States military?
(14:53):
Why do you think they did that? Who would refuse
such a thing their political enemies? What happened to their
political enemies in the military when they refuse such a thing,
they were removed, They were kicked out of the military.
No longer have that uniform that come that authority. They're
being replaced, replaced by who. Actually, let's talk about that.
(15:17):
By who who's doing the replacing, who's filling up the
ranks of the FBI, who's filling up the ranks of
the military.
Speaker 2 (15:22):
Well, let's be clear about this, They're not choosy.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
What they need is an FBI a military full of
people who will follow orders to attack you. There is
a huge thing the right misses about the military and
things like that they're destroying a military. They're not destroying
the military. They're building a military, building a military. Why
(15:50):
are they building a military for what purpose? Jesse, to
take on.
Speaker 2 (15:55):
The enemies of the state. Don't believe me.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
Here's the great senator piece of trash from Illinois Dick Durbin.
Speaker 8 (16:05):
What troubles me about the debate now about the southern
border is it is one half of the immigration equation.
Presiding Officer, my colleague from the state of Illinois has
legislation which addresses one aspect to that Herbelle, and I
hope I describe it accurately. Says that if you're an
undocumented person in this country, and you can pass the
(16:26):
physical and the required test background test the like, you
can serve in our military, and if you do it honorably,
we will make you citizens of the United States.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
That platoon full of Marines, you think they might refuse
that order to fire on you?
Speaker 9 (16:45):
Right?
Speaker 2 (16:47):
What if you replace that.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
Platoon full of American born Marines with a bunch of
illegals who are going to be given citizenship as long
as they honor their oath, as long as they follow orders,
you think they'll fire on you and your family. I've
got news for you again, open up a history book.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
They will.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
Why do you think they're doing it? They ran out
the patriots and now it's time to bring in the illegals.
What do you think? Why do you think the FBI
was recently caught recruiting at Pride events? These Pride events
are despicable, demonic, really really gross. I mean, they're just
the most disgusting, perverted things you've ever seen in your life.
(17:30):
Why would the Federal Bureau of Investigation look at an
event like that and say to themselves, hmm, there's some
good recruits for us in there.
Speaker 2 (17:37):
Why do you think they would do that?
Speaker 1 (17:39):
Well?
Speaker 2 (17:40):
Do I need to remind you that the FBI they've.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
Already been knocking on the doors of priests and choir directors.
We already have the memo from the Richmond Field Office
with the FBI announcing their intention to infiltrate your church.
That was one memo that we have courtesy of a
whistle lower from one Field office. What does that mean?
Speaker 2 (18:02):
That means they're already in your church or coming for
your church they are. Don't be naive.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
Now, what kind of an FBI agent would be motivated
to attack somebody's faith, to attack somebody's church, the kind
you just recruited at a Pride event. They're not destroying
the military, they're not destroying the FBI, they're not destroying
the CIA, NSA, any of those things.
Speaker 2 (18:30):
Not in their minds.
Speaker 1 (18:31):
They're building one building when the Pentagon has a diversity director,
did you know that building one building one that will
unquestionably follow orders.
Speaker 2 (18:45):
What orders are those?
Speaker 1 (18:47):
Well, the orders they are going to give them to crush.
Speaker 2 (18:51):
The enemies of the state.
Speaker 1 (18:54):
Now that may make you uncomfortable, but listen to Christopher
Wray and tell me if this is a man building
an FBI.
Speaker 10 (19:03):
But I can tell you that we don't investigate people
for their exercise, and they're constantly protected consomership, protected religious expression.
That particular intelligence product is something as soon.
Speaker 7 (19:14):
As I saw it, I was aghast I had it withdrawn.
Speaker 11 (19:17):
Well you were a gas I was, really And what
have you done about it? Did you fire the people
who wrote it?
Speaker 1 (19:22):
No?
Speaker 11 (19:22):
I had Have you fired anybody involved in it?
Speaker 2 (19:25):
Senator?
Speaker 11 (19:25):
If you will give me a chance to hance, that's
a yes or no, it's not hard. Have you fired
anyone involved in the writing of that outrageous memo about which, frankly,
you've repeatedly misled the public?
Speaker 2 (19:35):
Yes or no?
Speaker 10 (19:36):
The individuals involved you fired just a minute were not
found to have engaged in any intentional or bad faith conduct.
Speaker 1 (19:49):
Of course, he didn't fire a person. You can't fire
somebody who's doing exactly what you pay them to do.
Just remember that, all right, A moving on, We have
more to discuss, wonderful things to discuss, though. Before we
get to those, I just discuss something bad. Isn't it
sad when our dogs die?
Speaker 2 (20:11):
I hate it, freedom worse.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
I've buried many a dog, and I would like to
push that day off as far away as possible for
our current dog, Fred. That's why we take Fred for walks.
That's why we give Fred roughgreens with every single meal.
Fred used to have ear infections all the time. He
used to have digestive problems all the time. He doesn't
ever have either of those things. Why we started pouring
(20:36):
rough greens on his food. Now he gets an all
natural nutritional supplement that actually has vitamins, minerals, probiotics, omega oils.
There's none of that in your dog's food. Dog food
is brown because it's dead. There's no nutrition in it.
Pour rough greens on your dog's food.
Speaker 2 (20:52):
And he will live longer.
Speaker 1 (20:54):
How incredible is that? Free bags, free jumpstart trialbags. Call
them eight three three three three my dog, or go
to roughgreens dot com slash Jesse We'll be back.
Speaker 8 (21:15):
You know what the recruiting numbers are at the Army
and the Navy and the Air Force. They can't reach
their quotas. Each month. They can't find enough people to
join our military forces. And there are those who are
undocumented who want the chance to serve and risk their
lives for this country. Should we give them the chance?
I think we should.
Speaker 1 (21:38):
Yes, Yes, I'm sure that platoon full of illegals they're
going to refuse to fire on you and your family
because of the oath they just took to the Constitution
that they wiped their butt with as soon as.
Speaker 2 (21:49):
They crossed the border. Joining me. Now, my friend Ryan Gradowsky.
Speaker 1 (21:53):
Of the great seventeen seventy six project pack, the one
that's winning school board races. Brian, you heard that loser
and you made it. You took a shot at him.
About the French Foreign Legion.
Speaker 4 (22:03):
I loved it.
Speaker 1 (22:04):
I cracked up, but sadly it probably went over everybody's head.
What are you talking about the French Foreign Legion.
Speaker 2 (22:10):
I thought they were super successful, right.
Speaker 12 (22:13):
Yeah, the French fore and legion was the French because
when they had an empire, used to hire Africans to
patrol Africa, and it didn't always turn out great because
oftimes the Africans would then just turn on their French
generals in the line of combat and instead of shooting
on their brother men other brothers in Algeria and in
(22:34):
other parts of Africa. He did never work out too well,
and neither did the Roman Empire when their entire military
was controlled by foreigners towards the end of the empire,
and time and time and time again, the countries that
have sat there and exported their military defense to those
who were not citizens failed miserably. Maybe the question should
be do we need in the United States and twenty
(22:57):
twenty three? Do we need a million person standing army?
Do we need to be patrolling the entire globe? Do
we need entanglion alliances? Do we need troops in parts
of this world that no one knows why they're there
or why they're there for decades on end? Do we
need troops in both Italy and Germany as if World
War two is going to start over again?
Speaker 13 (23:17):
These are questions worth asking.
Speaker 12 (23:18):
And does anyone else in the world ever have to
pay for the contributions of the United States military, which
is costing us upwards of a trillion dollars a year
in military spending. Maybe those are the questions we should
be answering weather than saying there's just no more young,
mostly white guys from the Midwest.
Speaker 13 (23:37):
Wouldn't the meat grinder anymore?
Speaker 7 (23:38):
This is a problem.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
It is a problem ran And actually, let's talk about
this problem.
Speaker 2 (23:45):
How did this happen?
Speaker 1 (23:46):
Because most people educated in America's government school system do
not understand that this country was founded on staying out
of other people's business. George Washington's famous Farewell address talked
about it. Up until World War War One, Every American
like ninety eight percent of the country. Just assume we
don't get involved in other people's business. Now we're everywhere.
(24:07):
That's one hundred years ago, Ryan, What changed in one
hundred years.
Speaker 12 (24:11):
Well, in the aftermath of World War Two, we had
the Cold War, obviously, and then after the Cold War
there was restructurant over the obligations of the American nation.
Speaker 13 (24:23):
It was George H. W. Bush's New Global Order that
we would promote liberalism all over the world, George W.
Speaker 12 (24:29):
Bush is son, so that we would make the world
free for democracy. That was the war we were fighting for,
which is an impossible war, an impossible fight, and something
you cannot possibly ever win. And this ongoing military expenditure
was sit there and reorganize the entire globe has been.
Speaker 13 (24:46):
An utter failure for thirty years.
Speaker 12 (24:48):
If anything, we've seen fewer democracies functioning across the entire world.
We've had a rise of authoritarian leaders, even in places
like Turkey where there where we had somewhat of a
democracy beforehand, and basically unit party states like in India
and somewhat in Pakistan. This is the way the world's
(25:10):
been moving, and we kind of don't have an ability
is that they are and change it. And I think
that a lot of people sit they're in wonder what
were the last thirty years in Afghanistan and Iraq? For
Why should I risk my life and limb and mental
health status for a country that one doesn't respect veterans
all that much? And two for a country that, for
a lot of people feels like they are under assault domestically.
Speaker 1 (25:35):
Yeah, it feels like they're under assault domestically because they
friggin are speaking of which, here's Alejandro mayork Is announcing
his intention to get about thirty million people the right
to vote in this country.
Speaker 14 (25:47):
The answer is quite clear and quite straightforward, and we've
been waiting for it for about thirty years, and that
is to fix a system that everyone agrees is fundamentally broken,
and we need congressional action both for the lawful pathways
that really need to be more robust in statute and
(26:09):
for the twelve million people who are here in the
United States who have been contributing so fundamentally to our
country as well being.
Speaker 2 (26:17):
I really hate how he talks, but that's another matter entirely.
Speaker 1 (26:20):
Ran I was thinking about this after that nutball was
stabbing a bunch of people in Ireland, and then they
cracked down on the people who got mad about it.
I was thinking out woud it is that not just America,
all the Western governments just decided to flood their countries
with Third World hordes and then crack down on their
own people for caring about it. And this was universal
practically across the West. It's amazing how this thing happened, and.
Speaker 12 (26:44):
It's amazing to see the countries that it didn't happen
in the Western countries opposed it, like Denmark. Denmark, you know,
Bernie Sanders' favorite country, has super secure borders.
Speaker 13 (26:55):
They cracked them on welfare.
Speaker 12 (26:56):
They break up minority ghettos all the time in Denmark,
and they have no qualms about it because the idea
of their nationalism, their idea of their identity, is not
something up for a debate really in that country. But look,
here's the thing about immigration that no one seems to understand.
They keep asking for this congressional action. Ninety five percent
(27:16):
of all of our problems with immigration residing exclusively on
the executive branch. The executive branches. Almost every law that
you possibly would need to fix the immigration problem at
the snap of a finger, the executive branch in declaire
in Mexico a third safe country, which would end all
migration from other countries who shop for a country to
(27:38):
Claia Asylomon. The executive branch can solely withhold anyone that
they want, any person, choosing, any person they deem not
that benefit the United States from entering this country. If
that meant all Redheads, if that meant all Asians, if
that meant all Europeans, if that's not a college degree,
anybody they can deem it.
Speaker 13 (27:56):
It's the executive branch that is failing.
Speaker 12 (27:59):
There's some things the Congress can do, but most of
the things that we need to get done immigration are
solely in the hands of the presidency.
Speaker 13 (28:06):
It has always been that way. The president really doesn't.
Speaker 12 (28:09):
Need Congress from much when it comes to immigration. It
is Joe Biden's failing on this policy solely.
Speaker 1 (28:16):
Okay, So if you get a president like the one
we have now that wants to flood the country with
the illegals, to water down and destroy this place, you're
pretty much screwed. Do I have that right?
Speaker 12 (28:27):
Yes, you are one hundred percent. The president could instantly
declare or remain in Mexico. The president can use the
military to build the border wall the Mexico. The president
can sit there and attack people who are are bringing
asylum seekers, not NGO's but human smugglers. Can instantly declare
them to be domestic terrorists or international terrorists. There's tons
(28:48):
of things the president could do without the use of Congress,
and they choose to do nothing because this is by design.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
Okay, you know what, there's enough ugly out there. Talk
about something wonderful, Ryan, everyone's looking well. The people who
are looking at twenty twenty four with clear eyes understand
what's coming and how ugly it's going to be.
Speaker 2 (29:09):
But they don't focus on school boards. They focus on
one big.
Speaker 1 (29:12):
Race at Oh, it's going to be lost, but we're
going to win a bunch of school board races in
twenty twenty four if we focus, aren't we right?
Speaker 12 (29:20):
Yes, March starts off. The kickoff in Missouri. March starts off.
School boards are in Missouri in March. If by May
they reach Texas, we're your home state, and in August
they're in Florida.
Speaker 13 (29:31):
There are twenty thousand.
Speaker 12 (29:32):
School boards up for elections next year, most not not most,
but half of them are not during the presidential election,
so half of them are throughout the entire year, the
other half are during the presidential election, and many of
them are nonpartisans. There's very there's very easily ways a
conservative can sit there and get elected in a more
(29:54):
liberallet area or a swing area if they can't paign
on the right things that they speak for the right people,
and if they can't paign and work hard, I think
that's totally possible. I think that we could really reform
public education in real way.
Speaker 1 (30:05):
Yeah, really, I just wish there was an organization out
there who could help people do these things.
Speaker 2 (30:10):
Is there an organization like that right?
Speaker 1 (30:13):
Why?
Speaker 13 (30:13):
Yes, there is.
Speaker 12 (30:14):
I founded the seventeen seventy six Project Pack. We are
doing a major relaunch in the new year. We're doing
a major expansion in the new year to work on
performing state laws, which will announce on your show when
it comes up, and we are really pushing going. We
went over one hundred school board elections this year, which
doesn't seem like much, but it's probably about two hundred
and fifty thousand kids who live now in conservative school
(30:35):
board districts, and we are just getting started.
Speaker 13 (30:39):
There's a lot of there's a lot more effort to do.
And you know I'm the pack.
Speaker 12 (30:44):
Support from support from average people in this pack for
everyday people means the world and it's what keeps us
going and it's what funds. I think we spent over
a million dollars this year now on school board elections,
and like I said, we're just getting.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
Started seventeen seventy six Project Pack. I stand behind this
organization one hundred percent, one hundred school board racist. Do
you have any idea how many children's lives now and
in the future that changed. Go support them, Ryan, my brother,
I appreciate you. Come back anytime. Always love that. All right, Now, Well,
(31:18):
there's a debate coming up tomorrow night, one of these
Nicky Hayley, Ronda Santis, Vived, Veved, and Chris Christy debates
does it matter? What does matter? We're gonna start voting zoo.
But let's talk to Sean Spicer about these things, and
just a moment before we get to that, let's do this.
You know you're not stuck in your time share. They've
(31:41):
lied to you these times. Your companies do this all
the time. Don't feel like you're some kind of exclusive
case you're just the one who got sucked. They do
this to everyone, that's what they do. You go in,
you buy it, You think, hey, when I'm done with it,
I can be done with it. And then they let
you know, sorry, it's yours forever. Pay your annual fees,
pay your special assessments, and so people walk away, shoulders slump,
(32:03):
oh ding, and I have it forever. You don't have
it forever. Lone star transfer is there to get you out.
Ninety nine percent of the time they're successful getting people
legally and permanently out. Give him a call, all right,
eight four four three one zero two six four six,
your one phone call away from being free of your
(32:27):
time share call. We'll be back, all right. There's a
debate tomorrow night, another one of these Republican primary debates.
No Trump, of course, but you got Chris Christy and
Vivek and Nikki Hayley and Ronda Santis. I wonder what
(32:49):
Sean thinks of all this. He always has the best
analysis on this stuff. Joining me now, Sean Spicer The
Great Sean Spicer Show, which is now at seven pm
New Time seven pm Eastern Time, Monday through Friday. Right
here on the first Sean Okay one. Obviously no Trump,
so the big boys not in the room. But I
don't think these debates are useless. The viewership is up
(33:12):
on these things. Five million people watch DeSantis take on Newsome,
so that's something.
Speaker 2 (33:17):
What do we get out of these things?
Speaker 7 (33:20):
I'm entertainment to some degree. I mean, to your point,
Trump's not here.
Speaker 9 (33:25):
They're all significantly far behind in the polls, both in
terms of the national ones, but most importantly in Iowa
and New Hampshire, South Carolina. I think this is gonna
there's a good chance this could be the last one
that we see for a while, at least the sanctioned ones.
So look as far as what you get, I think
you get some entertainment, but it's not changing the field.
(33:47):
No one's moving up or down based on it. I'm
here in Tuscaloosa. I think it's an interesting dynamic. I'm
glad that they're doing it. I feel like it makes
sense to go through the process to preserve this. And
I'll tell you why, Jesse, just real quick. It's I
worked really hard in twenty sixteen, for the first time
ever in the history of either party to wrestle away
(34:08):
from the left wing media the ability to control the
primary debates. And if VIX goes back to allowing the
media to dictate when our candidates debate, and trust me,
they're going to come back to no conservative moderators twenty
five debates, which is what it was in twenty twelve.
That's not good for our candidates. So I think maintaining
(34:31):
and preserving the process does serve.
Speaker 7 (34:33):
A long term value that needs to be maintained.
Speaker 9 (34:38):
Because when I got over to the RNC, the literally
these guys. One night we debated on a Saturday, and
then we had another debate on a Sunday. The two
most valuable things in any campaign are time and money,
and debates are sucks of both.
Speaker 1 (34:53):
Yeah, no, they really are. Chris Christie's out there. Obviously
he's only in the race to attack Trump, has only
been in the to attack Trump. But here he was
saying this, how about this.
Speaker 11 (35:04):
He's going to go on trial the day before Super Tuesday.
I believe he's going to be convicted in that January
sixth trial in Washington, d C.
Speaker 2 (35:11):
He's going to be convicted.
Speaker 1 (35:12):
Imagine this.
Speaker 2 (35:12):
If he's our nominee, he won't be able to vote
for himself.
Speaker 13 (35:15):
But he can be president.
Speaker 2 (35:17):
Yes, Okay.
Speaker 1 (35:20):
People can hate Chris Christy and hate that all they want.
I don't care for the man one iota myself. He's
not necessarily wrong about that, Sean. Donald Trump, if we
are a corrector, if the polls are correct, he is
the nominee.
Speaker 2 (35:32):
He's going to be a convicted fellow by the time election.
Speaker 1 (35:35):
Day rolls around. There's no other way around it. Unjust
as it may be, where does that put us?
Speaker 7 (35:41):
Well, I think you heard Neil Cabuta say it in
the clip.
Speaker 9 (35:44):
The American people, in particular primary voters, decided that with
all the information that they have, and they know about this,
I mean, he's been indicted four times.
Speaker 7 (35:53):
It's not like you literally they have.
Speaker 9 (35:55):
To be unck not to know that, and they still
have accepted Donald Trump as a person to be the nominee. Furthermore,
when asked in the battleground states in the national polls,
when it comes to a general election, they're choosing him
over Joe Biden. So at the end of the day,
the process is such that people are deciding with the baggage,
with all the things they know, Donald Trump is still
(36:15):
the one that they want in the party.
Speaker 7 (36:17):
And then as a president to leave this country forward.
Speaker 9 (36:20):
The people have spoken, and I think people can you know,
Chris Christy can get upset all he wants, but Nilkovoda's
point is still the same.
Speaker 7 (36:27):
He can serve as president. I don't agree.
Speaker 9 (36:30):
I think that their process might be such that some
of these will have gotten into potentially a conviction, but
I guarantee you he's going to be appealing all of them.
And so look, the process will work itself out, but
so will the will of the American people. And right now,
the will of the American people, both in the primary
process in the general, is such that they want Donald
(36:51):
Trump to be the next president.
Speaker 1 (36:54):
Yeah, well, you know, I guess we'll see in Iowa
if he is that far ahead, shot on, if the
polls are to be believed and he is really that
far ahead, and Iowa comes down and Donald Trump boat
races everyone else in the race, do you think that
clears the field? I know, Jamie Diamonds of the World
of line up behind Nicki Haley. I know Rodnes Santas
(37:16):
has a very serious, very serious presidential campaign going. Do
they all wake up if that happens in Iowa and say, hey,
I'm done it's not worth it.
Speaker 7 (37:24):
You know you're asking the right question, because here's what
this all comes down to. Iowa.
Speaker 9 (37:28):
You know, in real estate they say location, location, location.
For this political cycle, it's all Iowa, Iowa, Iowa.
Speaker 7 (37:34):
Here's the deal.
Speaker 9 (37:34):
There are forty delegates at stake in Iowa on January fifteenth,
on that Monday.
Speaker 7 (37:38):
The thing that makes.
Speaker 9 (37:39):
Iowa very unique is it when you vote in a primary,
you go to your school or fire station wherever you
cast your ballot and you walk out. In the Iowa caucuses,
we're talking two three hours that you publicly have to
stand in a VFW, a fire station, a school, a
government building and go through an iterative process over the
course of hours to announce your support for a particular candidate.
(38:03):
So it is truly an organizational effort like no other.
So just being able to say that you want Donald
Trump and raise your hand in a poll or answer
a poll, or show up in this it's going to
be a very different thing. And I will tell you
having been in Iowa, the ground game of President Trump
is leaps and bounds ahead of where it was in
twenty fifteen. But Ron Desanta should not be taken lightly
(38:25):
in terms of the number of people that their super
pack has gotten assigned caucus commitment cards.
Speaker 7 (38:30):
Does that mean anything?
Speaker 9 (38:31):
No, But if he can get those people to show up,
you're talking about a universe of about two hundred thousand
people that will be voting in the Iowa caucuses. And
I say that because these things have a history of
people from behind going forward.
Speaker 7 (38:45):
And I think the Trump campaign, for my conversations.
Speaker 9 (38:47):
With them, fully understands and the importance of the ground
game in Iowa, and they're ready for it. But I
just they understand everything's at stake. If DeSantis can score
a victory there, this race goes on. But if Trump
pulls out a strong win in Iowa, he will then
roll through Iowa, excuse me, New Hampshire, Nevada, and South
Carolina and it's over.
Speaker 7 (39:08):
But Iowa is the key to everything.
Speaker 1 (39:10):
Right now, Sean, how does that look if if DeSantis
does flolod off? Because I've heard the exact same things
you've heard that Thesantus's ground game is second to none,
that he's just these these he.
Speaker 2 (39:22):
Might shock some people if he does.
Speaker 1 (39:25):
If he does, does the campaign limp on? Does that
launch him up to be a neck and neck with
Donald Trump, what do we think and I and Iowa
win is a must for him, But what does it do?
Does it keep him on life support or does it
put him in even does.
Speaker 2 (39:39):
He draw even with Trump in the primary?
Speaker 7 (39:42):
So that's the million dollar question. I'll flip it first.
Speaker 9 (39:44):
If he loses in Iowa by more than ten points,
he's over game out, He's out. I think haling with
if he can score a victory, I think that changes
the dynamic. The donors then line up behind him. You've
heard the media narrative in the past week and a half.
Nikki Nicki Haley, Nicki Haley.
Speaker 7 (40:01):
If DeSantis can pull out a win or a close.
Speaker 9 (40:04):
Second, and I mean a really close second in Iowa,
I think the donors and the media then switched back
over to DeSantis, and then I think the question is
can he can he will you be a one trip
wonder or can he pull something out in New Hampshire
or South Carolina. South Carolina's going to be a lot
bigger of a challenge because Nicki Haley is the favorite
daughter there. But I think what I will say is
(40:26):
that it's going to change the dynamic, meaning that's when
things are going to get mixed.
Speaker 1 (40:30):
Up real quick.
Speaker 7 (40:30):
Just Trump shuffle the deck and try to maybe get
rid of some folks that he had.
Speaker 9 (40:34):
But you think about the last three winners, Ted Cruz,
Mike Huckabee, Rick Santorum.
Speaker 7 (40:38):
Those folks were not doing particularly well early on, but
they also weren't.
Speaker 9 (40:42):
Facing a guy like Donald Trump, who had been a
two time nominee, who had such an instrumental lead. So
it's one thing to go from four percent to twenty,
which is what a lot of those guys did.
Speaker 2 (40:51):
Yeah, John my Man, I appreciate it.
Speaker 1 (40:54):
It is the Sean Spicer Show every single week night,
seven pm now Eastern Time on the first TV. We're
not done yet. We have more Democrats. They have a
poop problem. Well, you know what, just hang on, you'll
see what I'm talking about in just a moment.
Speaker 2 (41:12):
Before we get to that, let's do this.
Speaker 1 (41:16):
America has a problem, a testosterone problem. It's bad. How
bad is it? America's testosterone levels have been cut in
half in the last fifty years, cut in half. That
is it's going to end the society. Look, vote, don't
vote unless we fix that problem. Society ends. We won't
(41:38):
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Speaker 2 (42:17):
All right, we'll be back.
Speaker 1 (42:27):
All right, It is time to lighten the mood, even
though this is probably gonna be a little bit more
serious than we usually do for lighten the mood. Because
here's the truth. America has a gut health problem. And
I was not really aware of this until I started
getting super into politics and started doing.
Speaker 2 (42:47):
This kind of media for a living.
Speaker 1 (42:49):
I was not aware of how bad the digestive issues
are in America, specifically with the Democrat Party, and gut
health is really really important. If you, I don't know,
show up at a climate conference and you fart, that's
not good.
Speaker 3 (43:10):
I find myself getting more and more militant because I
do not understand how adults who are in position of
responsibility can be avoiding responsibility for taking away those things
that are killing people on a daily basis. And the
reality is that those things that are killing people on
a daily basis, and the reality.
Speaker 1 (43:32):
Is that that wasn't a one off either. Maybe you're
thinking that was just John Carey Joe Biden. Do you
remember when Joe Biden met with the Pope. Joe Biden
met with the Pope, and the media kind of buried
the story. Joe Biden met with the Pope and then
pooped his pants. He pooped his pants in front of
the Pope. And look, it's not just the Joe Biden
(43:53):
John Carey problem. Democrats have a gut health issue. Uncontradicted.
Speaker 11 (44:00):
The President used taxpayer dollars to ask the Ukrainians to
help them cheat an election.
Speaker 3 (44:04):
Work on this subject not part of this package, but
part of preserving our democracy.
Speaker 1 (44:12):
But that I'm pleased to yield to the distinguished chairwoman.
Speaker 14 (44:15):
And as I'm walking to the press room, well, I
think I got to know pass little gas here.
Speaker 1 (44:20):
So I'm walking by myself. Who's going to know?
Speaker 14 (44:23):
Only a little something extra came out your pants?
Speaker 1 (44:27):
I pooped my.
Speaker 6 (44:27):
Pants, and we'll still believe that he cared enough about
his wife to pay the That was gas, that hyperble be.
Speaker 13 (44:37):
Made in America.
Speaker 1 (44:38):
A lot of that has to do with this industry.
I'll see them