Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:05):
Okay, so let's have an uncomfortable talk here really quickly.
We've talked about many, many, many things before on the show,
and there's one thing we've talked about many times before,
and that's that there is a small and getting smaller,
a small cabal of Red state GOP senators that are
(00:29):
preventing so many amazing things. The second we start slamming
the door shut on communism, a Red state GOP senator
will stick his foot in that door, so we can't
ever quite get there. And so our challenge, your challenge
in my challenge, and it is going to be a
mountain to climb, is going to be getting these guys out,
(00:52):
finally getting these guys out of office. And let's be honest,
it's very very very difficult to primary in defeat an
established GOP senator when it when it when it comes
to these guys, they're going to raise so much money.
They're all of the swamp, so they're gonna have a
they're gonna have one hundred percent name m D and
whatever state they're in, they're going to raise a gargantuane
(01:13):
amount of money and it's just going to be difficult.
They're gonna have a huge amount of control by the
way over the GOP in that state, the state GOP,
they're just gonna they have so many inroads. It's hard.
It's really really hard to get rid of one of
these guys. And we'll do it, don't get me wrong.
But it's gonna take us years. It won't be next
(01:34):
election cycle. Years as we slowly but surely work and
raise money, and work and raise money and find good
candidates and come close and lose. It's going to take years,
which brings us to Donald Trump. And I understand that
we always have to take the good with the bad,
(01:55):
and that Donald Trump is doing really an outstanding job
in his second term as president. We have to be
fair about that, doing an outstanding job. But like all
human beings, he is imperfect. But imperfect actually doesn't describe
how unbelievably bad he is at endorsing within the party
(02:17):
Lindsey Graham. This this in case you forgot who Lindsey
Graham is. This Lindsy Gram.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
So this bill would allow judges to take guns away
from a guy like this before it's too late.
Speaker 1 (02:29):
My bill with.
Speaker 2 (02:29):
Blimenthal the grant program for red flag laws, I think
we've got in a really good spot with a White House.
But that's just part of the package. If the Committee
decided to say injuries by one hundred million dollars your budget,
could you spend it wisely? I can assure you that
any money that this committee thinks good, I promise it'll
(02:52):
be good.
Speaker 1 (02:52):
Man.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
I believe you parting the people who went into the
capital and beat up a police officer violently, I think
was some mistake because it seems to suggest that's an
okay thing to do. This idea give up on Ukraine
makes the world safer. If you pull the plug on
Ukraine because you don't have enough capability, there goes time
walk for you and your people.
Speaker 3 (03:14):
You're the ally I've been hoping for all my life.
Now what American has died defending Ukraine. You've taken our
weapons and you've kicked there, and I'm very proud to
have you as our ally.
Speaker 1 (03:29):
Lindsey Graham has been there sticking his foot in that
door for a very long time. Donald Trump just came
out and announced his first in person fundraiser in twenty
twenty six. Who's it for? Lindsey Graham? And this is
(03:51):
the frustration, the swamp, the deep State. They kneecapped Donald
Trump every chance they can. Every time they get a
moment to kneecap Donald Trump, they do so. When Lindsey
Graham was there on camera getting to second base with
Christopher Ray. That was while Christopher Ray was working to
(04:13):
undermine Donald Trump the right every chance he got. The
deep state is after Donald Trump. And Donald Trump knows this,
and Donald Trump is frustrated with this. He yells about
it all the time, but then turns around and endorses it,
endorses the people who fill it, endorses the people who
(04:35):
protect it. My frustration is the mountain we have to climb.
Whether whether Trump's involved or not, it is a very
very hard thing to primary a senator. So that mountain
we have to climbs already brutal, it's cold, tie Donald
Trump makes it ten times higher when he continues to
endorse the people he should be opposing. It makes your
(04:58):
life harder. It makes my life harder. We have red
state senators we can remove. We can get rid of
John Cornyn, we can get rid of Lindsay Graham, we
can get rid of James Langford. We can get rid
of these red states, John Thune, These red state GOP
senators can be removed if he at least just gets
(05:19):
out of the way. But please stop working against us.
Stop working against yourself. When Donald Trump endorses Lindsey Graham,
he works against himself. And that's a fact. All right.
Remember what we found out recently. Remember what we found
out about Verizon recently. You know the FBI when it
(05:42):
was illegally going after American citizens, hunting them down like
the evil secret state police agency it is. The FBI
went to Verizon and said, hey, can I have those
phone records? I want to know who they talked to.
I want to know the duration of the call. Shoot,
I want you to tell me where they were. You
know what Verizon said, Absolutely, they're Republicans. Here you go.
(06:02):
Do you pay Verizon for that? Switch to pure Talk.
Pure Talk is the patriotic mobile company. You can keep
your phone or get a new one. They have new ones.
Keep your phone number. You'll deal with Americans. You'll deal
with a company that actually loves freedom and loves this
country and cares about your values. We have to stop
(06:23):
funding these gigantic, evil mobile companies. That's just the worst.
Go to pure talk dot com slash jessetv make the
switch today. Let's talk about deportation, Let's talk about foreigners.
(06:51):
Let's look, this is going to come to New York
City and what's about to happen to New York City
with the election of this ma'am Donnie guy. So before
where we get to Mandanni in New York City specifically,
I need to explain a couple of things to you.
First of all, you how you think about government, what
you want government to do and be, And none of
(07:11):
us are exactly alike. You and I may differ on
this issue or that issue, taxes or the border, or
abortion or something like that. But if I were to
tell you that there was this candidate running for office,
and this candidate aligned with you on all of your issues,
no matter what your issues are, every one of them,
taxes and spending, it everything. They aligned with you on
(07:33):
every single thing, would you vote for that person? Probably
rolling your eyes, that's obvious, right, the answer is yes.
But why I didn't. I didn't tell you what they
look like. I didn't tell you what their skin color was,
didn't tell you their religion, didn't even tell you their
sex male female. I didn't tell you any of that.
(07:57):
But you just said you would vote for that person.
You know why, because you think about politics in the
correct way for you. Government itself, obviously something that should
be kept at bay, should be kept restrained. But government itself,
it's not there to reflect your tribe, whatever that tribe
(08:18):
may be. It's there to do the things you want done,
to carry your values into Washington, d c. And get
those things done. Now, this may sound like an obvious point,
but that brings me to so many peoples from all
over the world and how differently they look at politics
(08:41):
than you do. This is a central part of what
we're about to talk about when it comes to what's
about to happen in New York City and what's happened
in many parts of the United States of America. First,
many peoples around the globe, of various nations, religious, many
many peoples around the globe, they vote transactionally and tribally,
(09:03):
the two teams. Remember this. You have to remember this
because it's much much different than most people like you vote.
They vote transactionally and or tribally. Let's focus on transactionally. First.
They don't have this foundation, this DNA that you have
about government, and government should be limited and people should
be free and that that don't that's not their history
(09:24):
of where they came from. That's not what their family
has always known. When you're selecting somebody to lead you politically,
it's purely transactional. What are you going to give us?
What's your plan? What are you going to give us?
Is it gonna be money, it's going to be food,
or you're going to pave the roads specifically, it's not
(09:44):
like they're against pork spending or something like that. That's
what they demand. What are you going to give me?
Transactionally and tribally, very very foreign concept to most people
in the United States, to America, certainly most people on
the right. I shouldn't say most people in the country,
most people on the right. This is very foreign to us.
(10:07):
For me, it would honestly never ever cross my mind
to I'm really tall, to choose the tall candidate, what
do I care? It would never cross my mind to
choose the bald candidate. It would never cross my mind
to choose the white candidate. I'm obviously white. I would
(10:29):
never look at the field and be like, oh, oh
he's black, and na he's the Mexican, he's Asian, ooh,
the white guy. Just it's not how I vote. Tell
me how they align with me on the issues, and
that's how I'll choose. But for so many people's around
the globe, so many that's how they vote, the issues issues.
(10:52):
You kidding me. I'm a Muslim, where's the Muslim. I'm
a Mexican. Where's a Mexican. I'm black? Where's the black guy?
I'm from Zimbabwe, where's the zimbabwe guy. I'm from Somalia,
where's the Somali guy? That's how so many people vote
now and have historically always voted. It brings us to
(11:12):
New York City, our most important city, the most important
city in the world. Frankly, New York City is about
to elect a communist. It's going to happen, this Mandanna guy,
an open Islamist, an open communist. And people, even people
who've never visited New York City, who don't live in
New York City. You probably don't live in New York City.
(11:34):
They're just sickened by the whole thing. How could this happen?
Why would they do this? But there's something we already know,
an amazing thing, a sad thing. American born New Yorkers
have completely rejected Mandanni. He is getting slaughtered in the
pools by American born New Yorkers. If you were born
(11:56):
in the United States of America and you live in
New York City, you completely reject then no interest at all, Nope,
doesn't want him to be my mayor. But foreign born
New Yorkers, those tribal peoples, they love him. He is
their overwhelming favorite. And so this is the point where
the right doesn't understand what we're dealing with, because this
(12:18):
is the point where we will start to explain why
ma'm Donnie's ideas are bad. But you can't give out
free bus fairs. This is gonna happen. You can't just
open Rikers Island. This is gonna happen. You can't do this.
This won't work. That won't work. If he does this,
this will be the result. But emails will be talking
(12:38):
to the wall. You're talking to people who vote tri
believe they don't vote the way you vote. It's transactional
and it's tribal. Did you know over a million Muslims
now live in New York City. I believe the number
is one point five million. Why do you think, ma'am
(13:00):
Donnie tells these nine to eleven stories all the time.
Speaker 4 (13:04):
I want to use this moment to speak to the
Muslims of New York City. H I want to speak
to the memory of my aunt who stopped taking the
subway after September eleventh because she did not feel safe
(13:27):
in her head.
Speaker 1 (13:28):
Jama. First of all, that's fake, and now he's already
had to come out and try to explain it. He
made that thing up, the whole thing his aunt. His
aunt wasn't even in New York City. His aunt wasn't
wearing a hid job. He just made the whole thing up.
So that, of course bakes a question, why would you
make up that story? That's how you get elected in
(13:50):
New York City. Now there are legions and legions of
Muslims in New York City. That's how they want their
mayor to think talk an act. The story being made
up couldn't possibly matter less. That was a story where
ma'am Donnie was throwing up the signals saying, hey, I'm
(14:11):
part of your tribe. I'm part of your tribe. Vote
for me. You can scream at these foreigners till you're
blue in the face about what will work won't work.
You can scream at them all day long. They don't
vote like you vote, they don't think like you think.
And this is why the United States of America has
(14:33):
got to be so much more careful with who we
bring here, and now we have to be so much
more aggressive with who we've brought here. Do you understand
To truly save the United States of America, it's not
just going to be deporting murders and rapists. That's an
obvious first step. We are going to have to deport
fifty million people. We are going to have to denaturalize
(14:55):
people who we've allowed to become citizens and deport them
as well. I'm going to play you something. You've probably
probably seen it already, but this man, Donnie Scumbag, who's
about to be mayor of New York City the video
I'm about to play you was his father. But before
we play it, I want you to understand something. He
got to the United States of America in nineteen sixty three.
(15:17):
He became a communist street activist. In nineteen sixty five,
we brought him here from some dump and he promptly
began to start destroying the United States of America. Now
that's all bad enough, but he's been allowed to do
this in the open for sixty years. A foreigner we
(15:39):
pluck out of a dump, bring here, allow him not
only to reside here, he's a professor at one of
our most prestigious universities, and he has chosen to tear
this country down for sixty years without that much fear
of being denaturalized, deported, and sent back to the dump
(15:59):
where he came from. What kind of a country allows
foreigners to come here and tear the place down for
sixty years without ever sending him home. As you watched
this video and the anger wells up inside of you,
do please reserve a lot of that anger for the
politicians who allow this crap.
Speaker 5 (16:20):
America is the genesis of what we call settler colonialism,
and the American model was exported all around the world.
Abraham Lincoln generalized the solution of reservations. They herded American
Indians into separate territories for the Nazis. For the Nazis,
(16:48):
this was the inspiration. Hitler realized two things. One that
genocide was doable. It is possible to do genocide. That's
what Hitler realized. Second thing Hitler realized is that you
(17:09):
don't have to have a common citizenship, you can differentiate
between people. The Nuremberg laws were patterned after American laws anyway.
The US put Indians in reservations. The US invented the mudel.
Speaker 1 (17:31):
Sixty years. It's not like he was passing notes in
some underground communist cell. Sixty years, standing in front of classrooms,
sitting up on stage, on camera with a microphone in
his hand, taking a steaming dump all over the country
(17:53):
that brought him here. This is why New York City
is no longer America. By Chicago, Los Angeles. So many
of our formerly wonderful urban centers are no longer America,
And people ask how can we save them? Because we
can't go on forever with hostile foreign city states operating
(18:14):
within our borders. How can we save them? We have
to deport people, lots and lots and lots of people.
It's time to send a message to everybody. If we
allow you to come here, you be on your best behavior,
or you will go back. All that may have made
(18:37):
you uncomfortable, but I am right. Your stomach. There's something
I've noticed as I've gotten older. Maybe you've noticed it
as well. Your stomach doesn't always react the way it
used to react when you were a kid, when I
was a kid. I don't know if there's anything I
couldn't eat. My stomach can feel fine. What differences? It's
(18:58):
my stomach. It does just fine. But then you hit
thirty five, forty and forty four down every now and
then something freaking hurts. Maybe that was too many alapanios.
You need some Cowboy colostrum in your life and make
your stomach feel better. Just makes your stomach function better.
My sister's the one who told me about Cowboy colostrum
(19:19):
and started putting a couple of scoops up it in
my coffee every morning. Man, do I feel so much
better now? So much better, no matter what stomach functions like.
I'm twenty again. Try it. I used the chocolate I
put it in my coffee, but they have several flavors.
Go to Cowboycolostrum dot com use the promo code Jesse TV.
Speaker 6 (19:49):
You know, Republicans used to believe that not prosecuting criminals
led to more crime. The answer here is take the
politics out of the decision and in this case, proceed
with the prosecution, and do the same for anybody else
who does anything even remotely like it. Just read the
indictment and ask yourself, if the government can prove what
(20:09):
they allege here, shouldn't this man go to jail. A
simple fact he had the documents for any reason or
no reason should subject him to prosecution.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
John Bolton is in some very serious trouble. Joining me now,
Miranda Divine, host of the wonderful pod Forced One podcast
of course New York Post. All right, Miranda, how much
trouble was John Bolton? Actually? And I know I'm biased.
I want to see him go to prison, but I
also don't want to blow smoke. Is he in bad trouble?
Speaker 7 (20:38):
Hi, Jesse? I think he is. I mean, what we've
seen so far in the indictment is also just evidence
that's out there is that he kept classified information and
he was emailing it to two members of his family.
(20:59):
And this was at a time when he was being
hacked by the Iranians and when he was being questioned
by law enforcement or intelligence people about what the Iranians
might have hacked into. Apparently he didn't mention that he'd
been using this classified information and emailing it in an
(21:24):
insecure manner. So that's pretty serious. And you know, judging
by his own metrics of justice. He should go to
jail for a very long time. I mean, I'm sorry
to sort of say that, because John Bolton previously until
he mean, he was always a neo con and a warmonger,
(21:48):
but he was on the Republican side, and really until
he joined Donald Trump and was an abject failure and
then became a never Trumper. I would never have wanted
to say such a thing. But now he's proved himself
to be really Trump deranged, and that really, I guess
(22:10):
has nothing to do with his guilt or otherwise, But
the fact is it sort of mutes any sympathy I
might have for him.
Speaker 1 (22:21):
Brandon, can you help me? Can you help us? Everybody
understand why do these people do this? This seems to
be so unbelievably common with these people who have access
to national security secrets. They not only take them home,
they share them that they are emailing them. What do
they get out of this? Why are they doing this?
Speaker 7 (22:43):
Well, to be fair, I think that there is an
argument that the government has overclassified material and so maybe
some of this stuff isn't really vital to national security.
But there's also just an hour rogance with people like
John Bolton, and like Joe Biden is another one who
(23:06):
you know, he would have been pinned for illegally maintaining
classified material, removing it from where it should have been,
way back to his senate days, And the only reason
he got off scot free was because the special counsel
said that no jury would find him guilty because he's
(23:27):
an elderly They would see him as an elderly man
with a poor memory. And so I think there's arrogance,
and I also think there's ulterior motives that classified information
is worth a lot of money, it's worth trading for.
And so in John Bolton's case, he was writing a
(23:47):
book he wanted to, I guess, use that information to
refresh his memory. And in Joe Biden's case, he also
was having a ghost writer to write his book, and
he famously on hate said to the ghost rutter, I
think I've got that classified material right here. And also
(24:08):
there's no proof of this, but since he was in
bed and his family was making lots of money from
the Chinese and other Russians, Ukrainians, various the various characters
around the world, any classified information would be very worthwhile
to America's adversaries.
Speaker 1 (24:30):
And speaking of Joe Biden, what's this Joe Biden's CIA
cover up story, because it sure sounds like a really
really big.
Speaker 7 (24:38):
Deal, which one.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
Ah that it's so sad that you even have to
ask that clarifying question. So dirty, so corrupt, I mean,
pick your government agency. We have to decide which particular
scander we're talking about was covering up for Joe Biden. I'm,
of course talking about the most recent one where it
looks like sounds like Joe Biden ordered the Central Intelligence
(25:05):
Agency to drop looking into him. Yeah.
Speaker 7 (25:09):
Well, I mean this was an ongoing motive of his
vice presidency and it's I wrote a whole book about it.
It was the CIA, the FBI in this case. He
wanted this information about the Ukrainians had been talking about
(25:31):
how Joe Biden was coming into Kiev and lecturing them
about corruption, saying corruption is a cancer. When his own
son was on the board of Barisma, and there was
a you know, a spy or a source that the
CIA was informed by that there was a lot of
(25:53):
consternation in Ukraine that they were angry about this, that
the people close to the then president Poroshenko, Petro Poroshenko
didn't like the fact that Joe Biden was jetting into
town telling them what to do about corruption and not
helping them at all. And then basically it was the
(26:14):
Vice President's office, his national security advisor, who said, we
now have an email that shows that he said, oh,
please redact that from the President's daily brief So it
never went into circulation like it should have, and therefore
America's national security interests were harmed because there are lots
(26:35):
of people who were doing business with Ukraine from the
government at that time, who should have been aware of
these negative feelings from Poroshenko and his inner circle towards
Joe Biden. I mean, it seems obvious now it should
have really been obvious to them at the time, but
to censer that is shocking. But there's lots of glimpses
(27:01):
into the CIA covering up for Joe Biden. In one example,
more recently, the IRS whistleblowers, then IRS investigators Gary Shapley
and Joe Ziegler wanted to interview Hunter Biden's sugar brother,
Kevin Morris, the Hollywood lawyer who funded him to the
(27:21):
tune of at least seven million dollars, paying off his
tax bills and funding his lavish lifestyle in California. So
they wanted to interview Kevin Morris, obviously he was a
material person, and they were told by prosecutors that Langley
CIA headquarters had summoned the prosecutors and said, hands off
(27:44):
Kevin Morris, you can't even question him. So it's a
big mystery about Joe Biden and why his family's influence
peddling was being protected, encouraged, maybe even certainly covered up
by the CIA, the FBI, the State Department, you name it.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
Oranda, talk to me about Hunter Biden's shrink because you
just sat down with him on Powd Force one. That
had to be frightening. Honestly, I was gonna say fascinating.
I had to be horrifying.
Speaker 7 (28:21):
Look, Keith Ablow, Doctor Keith Ablow is very interesting man.
He was Hunter Biden's former shrink. As you say, he's look,
he's ethical. So he's not discussing with us the secrets
of the shrink couch. But he certainly was able to
sort of diagnose and talk about the things that we
(28:44):
know publicly about Hunter Biden, and so without divulging secrets,
and you know, it does go back to what I've
always thought, I mean, with some sympathy towards Hunter Biden,
that his mother and little sister, baby sister were killed
in a car crash where he and his older brother
Bo were in the back seat. He was only two
(29:06):
and his brother was three, and that was a very
traumatic moment for him to be stuck in that car,
and then he was recovering in hospital, he and his
brother for many months after that, and Joe Biden famously
got sworn in as a senator by their bedside, which
(29:27):
was a very heartrending photograph to go all around the world.
But if you zoom back a bit, you wonder, why
does the father bring the world's media into his son's
hospital room. They've just lost their mother, they're bandaged and
won and he could have done it out in the corridor,
(29:47):
but he has all these photographers and small rooms crammed in,
journalists crammed into this room, completely unnecessary, and that sort
of set the tune for his sort of father of
the Year routine that he did from then on. And
I think he was not a good father, and certainly
(30:09):
not to Hunter, and a lot of Hunter's problems I
think come from that because there's a real love hate relationship.
And it was interesting what doctor Ablow said about Hunters
abandoning all these laptops around the time that his father
was announcing that he was running for president yet again
in April of twenty nineteen. Within weeks of that date,
(30:33):
Hunter Biden had abandoned famously the laptop that we ended
up looking into from Delaware that was dropped off Hunter
dropped off at the laptop repair shop around the corner
from his house in Wilmington. And then but there was
another laptop that not many people know about that around
(30:54):
the same time Hunter abandoned at the Newburyport, Massachusetts home
or guest house of doctor Keith Ablow. Hunter was up
there doing a sort of a drug detox thing with
ketamine unusual therapy, and that's where those famous photographs come from,
where Hunter is sort of squatting in this sort of
(31:17):
sensory deprivation chamber supposedly to get off drugs, but he's
smoking crack and drinking vodka. And so anyway, that was
doctor Keith Ablow's place, and Hunter left his laptop behind,
and doctor Ablow called him repeatedly and texted him and
said come and get your stuff, and it was not
just the laptop but a whole lot of very expensive
(31:39):
clothing and other personal effects, and Hunter just never never
picked it up and never answered. So Keith Ablow sort
of surmises from a psychiatric point of view that, yes,
that could be kind of a Freudian situation where Hunter
(31:59):
kind of wanted to jettison. Well, my theory was that
he wanted to actually damage his father's candidacy because he
didn't want his father putting the whole family through that again.
But Keith Ableau said also to basically jeddison his past.
He never really wanted to be part of his father's
(32:19):
political life, and so this was a sort of a
symbolic or psychological way of just getting rid of his
entire life and starting afresh. And as we know, Hunter
did start afresh. He went to California, he met his
now wife, got married within a few weeks, and became
an artist.
Speaker 1 (32:42):
Miranda, thank you, ma'am. All Right, the starting Frost thing,
I shouldn't say it's a big deal. It is. It's
(33:02):
the biggest deal in the world. But is it big enough? Meaning?
Is are people going to be going to prison for this?
Because they have to we can't have a secret police
agency operating like this inside the country. Joining me, now,
somebody who was most definitely targeted by this whole thing,
Great Senator from the state of Tennessee, Senator Marshall Blackburn. Senator,
you were one of the people in the crosshairs of
(33:24):
the Federal Bureau of Investigation for the dastardly crime of
talking to Donald Trump. Could you break this down for
us in more detail? What happened?
Speaker 8 (33:33):
You got it, Jesse? I will. And as you say,
it is a big deal, and it's bigger than Watergate,
and it's far more expansive than Watergate. And as we
go through this, I think the American people are going
to see it. We're actually going to do a press
conference this afternoon. Here is what we do know. Jack
Smith was named the special counsel after a memo was
(33:58):
written by Chris Then, the director of the FBI, saying,
we think there could possibly have been some kind of
conversation between some conservative members and President Donald Trump, and
it all centers around the twenty twenty election. So what
(34:19):
we want to do is do some investigating to see
if there could possibly maybe might have been some kind
of activity. So they on April fourth of twenty two.
You have this memo written by Chris Ray, and the
next day Lisa Monico, the Deputy Attorney General at the time,
(34:40):
to Merrick Garland, the Attorney General. Lisa Monico says, I'm
signing off on this. U should too, And Merrick Garland
signs off. So then Jack Smith is appointed as the
special counsel and he starts his fishing expedition. And what
they did was despy on eight US Senate. The commonality
(35:01):
there is where all Republicans who support President Trump and
had valid questions about the twenty twenty election. It was
a total phishing expedition. There is no predicate for them
doing this. They went to a judge, they got a subpoena.
They go to our wireless carriers now.
Speaker 1 (35:20):
AT and T.
Speaker 8 (35:22):
Moved to Quash and they challenged the subpoena and Jacksmith's
people back down. Verizon, my carrier, did not, and therefore
they turned over the records of every call I either
made or received, who the call was, from, the duration
of the phone the call, the number of the phone,
(35:45):
and the physical location where I was standing when I
either made or received that phone call. It is an
invasion in a violation of my First Amendment and Fourth
Amendment rights, the Speech and Debate claus the Separation of Powers,
and also the Stored Communication Act.
Speaker 1 (36:08):
Senator, Obviously, we want to live in a country where
everybody's treated equally under the law and whatnot. But also
I'm understanding that you have a bit more of an
important job than I do to do this to United
States Senator. It's so brazen. This has to be criminal, right,
And I don't want to sound naive because I understand
(36:28):
you said a judge signed off on it. But we
are supposed to live in a system where this kind
of thing can't happen, even if you have a scumbag
in charge of the FBI or Lisa Monico doing the
things Lisa Monico has always done. There should be laws
that stop this. Why weren't there that stop this?
Speaker 8 (36:45):
And it is a violation, and yes, it is a criminal,
and that is why my colleagues and I have written
to the current ag Pambondi and have asked for a
referral of Jack Smith to the Office of Professional Conduct
at the DOJ. It is also when cash Bettel didn't
(37:07):
waste any time. He fired every single one of these
staff attorneys and staff members that were part of that
CR fifteen unit that worked with Jack Smith. And it's
also why I've written the DC bar with a letter
of complaint about Jack Smith. He should be disbarred and
(37:29):
he should be prosecuted to the full extent of the law,
along with every member of his team that carried this out.
And we know that they have also spied on over
one hundred conservative organizations. And here's the thing. If they're
(37:50):
going to do this to eight sitting US senators, senators,
and it is unlawful to do this, then what are
they going to do to conservatives all across this country
that do not share their opinion? Or if you have
some FBI field office that has somebody in it that
(38:10):
doesn't like a member of somebody in their community, or
a member of their church, or the family of somebody
that's in an elected office, think about the power that
they have to just really wreck people's lives. We need
(38:30):
one tier of justice, Lady, justice is blindfolded. It should
be equal access, equal treatment, equal justice. And the Democrats
carried out weaponization of the DOJ and the FBI. They
carried it out against us, and we are going to
(38:52):
get to the bottom of it.
Speaker 7 (38:53):
So we end this.
Speaker 8 (38:55):
No one, no Democrat, Republican, independent, Green Party, whatever, no
one should be subject to this kind of treatment.
Speaker 1 (39:06):
What about Christopher Ray? You can't use the Federal Bureau
of Investigation as your little plaything to help Democrats out
and attack Republicans. That is, honestly that that is a crime.
In my opinion, that is worse than murder. That is
maybe the worst crime in the United States you can
commit because of the power that comes with the position.
When does Christopher Ray go behind bars?
Speaker 8 (39:26):
Well, and he is someone that we will bring forward
in our hearings, and we've got a meeting as to
how we Judiciary Committee are going to move forward on this,
if we're going to compel people or end up subpoena
wing people to come before us and have them under oath.
But the fact that he's the one that wrote the
(39:47):
memo that got Arctic Frost started. He wrote the memo
and the language in it, and it is on my
social media Marshall Blackburn, and it's also on our Blackburn
dot send it dot gov website. People can pull it up,
they can look at it and read and just see
(40:08):
how nebulous. A lot of this language is and how
wide ranging he wrote it so that you could scoop
up people and then go scrape information and try to
get a subpoena and get their phone records and then
try to track everybody they were talking to and how
(40:29):
long they were on the phone with that individual. And
if they call person A and talk to them, then
did they call person B? And then did did they
call person A back? Or did they bring in person C?
And they I mean and where I was physically located
and I was I get home? This is just one
(40:52):
of those things you say, how could something have been
this invasive and this intrusive and they think they're going
to get by with it, And you know what, had
Kamala Harris won the election, we would never know how
weaponized the Department of Justice and the FBI was not
(41:13):
only under Joe Biden but under Barack Obama.
Speaker 1 (41:19):
Senator shifting gears away from this, did someone try to
kill you?
Speaker 8 (41:25):
Well, yes, we have someone who has is on house
arrest at this point. That really is about all I
can say about it because it's gone to a grain jury.
Speaker 1 (41:40):
Okay, all right, then I'm not going to ask you
to ruin that whole thing. Let's shift gears to this shutdown.
I don't see how it ends. The Democrats know it
has to end, but their base is going to freak
out on them if they end the freaking thing. It
seems like they're stuck.
Speaker 9 (42:00):
Ruck.
Speaker 8 (42:00):
Schumer had planned this shutdown for months. That's why it's
the Schumer shutdown. Basically, the Democrats decided to go on
strike and closed down the federal government. It's like they're
fill of bustering moving forward on appropriations bills, even though
they're saying they're shutting down the government because they want
(42:20):
to get some things done on healthcare. Well, as you know, Jesse,
you can't talk about what is going to be covered
by federal appropriations unless you are working on the appropriations bills.
So they shut down the government because they say they
want to work on healthcare, but you can't do it
because the government is shut down. So the whole thing
(42:42):
is ridiculous. And now we're up against the deadline with
snap benefits. They run out on Saturday, November first. People
are going to swipe those EBT cards and there will
be nothing there. So in Tennessee, we've been talking to
a lot of the food banks, and elected officials and
(43:02):
people that are involved churches are doing food drives for
some of the food banks, and we know that people
are stepping up to fill the gap. We've got about
seven hundred thousand families across the state that are receiving
their Snap and Wick benefits.
Speaker 1 (43:25):
Senator, thank you as always, ma'am. Stay safe out there.
Speaker 6 (43:39):
All.
Speaker 1 (43:39):
It's time to light the mood. I was on Megan
Kelly's live tour last week and to say I was
wonderful putting it mildly.
Speaker 9 (43:49):
Please tell us who big Chungus is?
Speaker 1 (43:54):
Okay, all right, so I'm sure you saw the video.
Everybody here has probably seen the video of the stupid
No Kings protests, and everyone saw that gigantic monster of
a woman making fun of Charlie Kirk's assassination, doing this
and that and this and that thing just just just
you know, sticking her fingers in her fat rolls and
being terrible about the whole thing. They are fighting a
(44:16):
communist revolution. It's not an accident. They're doing it. It's
not an accident. They're going after kids. They decided long
ago they couldn't use the workers because American workers were
buying large, happy and prosperous. So they had to find
a different group of malcontents. And now it's every feminist
in a subaru. Their souls are broken, they're angry, they're bitter.
That radiates from them and they spread it everywhere and
(44:37):
it feels ugly. So yeah, so even ones that are
kind of hot, like AOC, you get around her and
you think, oh, that's gross. I would rather not. We
woke up one day and wait, they're taking Andremima off
the pancakes. And there are more and there are more
lesbians in the kids movies than the WNBA game. We
have to think beyond that and realize we are dealing
with an enemy, and that sucks that you have to
(45:00):
to deal with an enemy. I wish you didn't have to.
I wish I didn't have to. I don't want to
have enemies here. That's not who I am. I don't
want to I want to eat. I want to eat
red lobster. That's what I want to do. I want
to enjoy. I don't want to eat red lobster. But
that's not the life we've been given. We have enemies here.
We have to acknowledge their enemies and act as if
their enemies. Isn't he so great?
Speaker 9 (45:21):
Can I tell you? Like the show is doing really well.
The Megan Kelly Show is doing really well. It's because
of guys like that. Honestly, we have just the best
guess And while I'd love to say it's all me,
it's not all me. It's because I get like guys
like that to talk to me and they're so interesting.
Speaker 8 (45:36):
Right.
Speaker 9 (45:37):
Isn't your life just better for knowing Jesse Kelly?
Speaker 1 (45:39):
It just is? I agree, Let's suitable