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December 3, 2025 44 mins

The Democrats just ran an information op. Jesse Kelly did not participate in it for good reason. We can't say the same for elected Republicans. Jesse chats with Wade Miller about that, as well as some big immigration plans. How is immigration impacting America and allies abroad? Connor Tomlinson joins Jesse to discuss. Plus, Kay Smythe hill breaks down a surprising story from one of America's universities.I'm Right with Jesse Kelly on The First TV

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Institutional trust. We'll talk about that tonight. We didn't take
part in that communist op and we look good.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Because of it.

Speaker 1 (00:09):
All that and so much more coming up tonight, and
I'm right, let's talk about COVID, shall we? That stuff
stops up by I promise this is a modern day show.
You're not watching some rerun. But before we get to

(00:31):
COVID and the reckoning, we need I think it's important
to discuss something we've talked about before on the show.
But because it's happening to our country, it's happening really
to so many countries right now, we have to discuss it.
We have to we have to know what is going on. First, countries,
all countries, no matter what size, are held up by

(00:52):
their institutions. It's institutions. Institutions that inform people, the train people,
that produce the next generation of this or next generation
of that, all kinds of different institutions, educational institutions and
government institutions, and entertainment institutions and religious institutions. These are
the pillars that hold up a country. But something happens

(01:16):
to all countries over time, really all of them. If
a country lasts long enough, it's almost inevitable.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
The institutions that hold up the.

Speaker 1 (01:25):
Country will be taken over by corrupt, selfish, evil people,
and they will rot out the institution.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
And once the institution.

Speaker 1 (01:36):
Gets rotted out, well again, those are the pillars that
hold up a country. The country will begin to crumble.
As the institutions begin to crumble. Now this becomes magnified
in communist countries because communists have always believed that you
take over these institutions. The communists knows what I just
told you is true. He's always known it. The institutions

(01:58):
hold up the country, so you have to.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
Take them over.

Speaker 1 (02:02):
You conquer these institutions. Now we here in the United
States of America, we don't trust our institutions anymore.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
And look, it's really all of them.

Speaker 1 (02:14):
We're going to talk about COVID and our media institutions,
and government institutions, our medical institutions, but it's really all
of them. And you're starting to see poll numbers, news
stories about this, about the institutional trust that has been lost.
The American people do not believe it. When the FBI

(02:35):
says something, they don't believe it. When CNN says something,
they don't believe it. When the CDC says something, but.

Speaker 2 (02:47):
Why why don't you believe them? Is it you?

Speaker 1 (02:52):
Are you just growing old and cynical like I am,
Of course not, it's not you. Once trust has been violated,
almost impossible to earn it back. Once I lie to you,
It's why we try to never do that on the show.
Once I lie to you, then you don't believe what

(03:16):
I say anymore about anything. I could tell you the
sky is blue, and you'll be skeptical because I've lied
to you, which brings me to COVID.

Speaker 2 (03:27):
You remember, you remember this stuff? Right?

Speaker 3 (03:31):
Here's what I want you and America to know. Those
projections are definitely sobering, but they don't have to be
our reality. If we really do our part stay at
home social distance, then we can flatten our curve even
below those projections.

Speaker 4 (03:48):
Social distancing is absolutely critical, and if you can't social
distance and you're outside, you must wear a mask.

Speaker 5 (03:55):
Other than wearing masks, washing hands, avoid crowds, and social distancing.
What more on a policy level do we in the
United States need to be doing.

Speaker 6 (04:09):
Well?

Speaker 7 (04:09):
What we've got to do is make what you just said, Jake,
uniform and not spotty. Everybody's got to do it. There's
no excuse not to do that right now, because we
know that can turn things around.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
The media, medical professionals, politicians all across the country.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
Social distancing.

Speaker 1 (04:31):
Social distancing wear a mask when you're outside social distancing.

Speaker 2 (04:34):
But let's remember, let's remember the fallout from that.

Speaker 1 (04:39):
Why did your child's school close, Why did your child
forget how to read misgraduation? Had their senior year of
sports canceled? It's because of social distancing, because of the
idea that you should stand six feet away from everybody
in society, as if you can structure a society like that. Ever,

(05:00):
why did they take down the outdoor basketball hoops in
my area?

Speaker 2 (05:08):
Social distancing?

Speaker 1 (05:10):
My governor, Republican Texas Governor Greg Abbott told restaurants to
close that family business of yours.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
Shut it down.

Speaker 1 (05:22):
Why social distancing? Why do you still have those now
slightly faded footprints in the grocery store where you're supposed.

Speaker 2 (05:32):
To stand and then someone else stands up there. Social distancing.

Speaker 1 (05:38):
We completely reordered a society of three hundred million people
because of the idea of social distancing. Wow, how did
they come up with that idea?

Speaker 8 (05:54):
And the six feet is a perfect example of sort of.
The lack of rigor around how CDC made recommendations. Nobody
knows where it came from. Most people assume that the
six feet of distance, the recommendation for keeping six feet
apart comes out of some old studies related to flu,
where droplets don't travel more than six feet. We now
know COVID spreads through aerosols. The initial recommendation that the

(06:16):
CDC brought to the White House, and I talk about
this was ten feet, and a political appointing in a
White House said, we can't recommend ten feet. Nobody can
measure ten feet. Its inoperable. Society will shut down. So
the compromise was around six feet.

Speaker 2 (06:32):
Oh, they made it up. No one even knows where
it came from. Maybe an old study on the flu.

Speaker 1 (06:40):
Your school, your business, your life, you're outdoor basketball? Who
a twenty trillion dollar economy destroyed? And our institutions made
up the reason why? That wasn't the only thing they
made up. Let's drill down for a moment. Believe me,
we're going to get to the modern news. Let's drill
down for a moment on the masks. Remember what they

(07:04):
said about the masks children?

Speaker 4 (07:07):
What about children? Who are between the ages of zero
and twelve, and you know we have to treat them
as unvaccinated. So yes, those children still do have to
wear a mask to protect themselves.

Speaker 9 (07:20):
If the child, which obviously elementary school kids, are not vaccinated,
they should wear a mask. And I be a misguarantee
that most of the schools are going to say you
have to wear a mask.

Speaker 2 (07:31):
Every student wear a mask.

Speaker 10 (07:34):
It's that simple.

Speaker 11 (07:35):
What masks do is mask that transmission.

Speaker 12 (07:39):
So universal masking is going to be very helpful to
keep hate safe.

Speaker 13 (07:46):
We are not doing enough. We have these restrictions in
place for a reason, but I think people may not
be taken as seriously as in schools are closed, but
parents are still getting kids together for play dates that
shouldn't happen.

Speaker 2 (08:03):
That mask never did anything.

Speaker 1 (08:09):
This cloth mask, this stupid paper mask with the holes
out of the side, the ones we all had to wear,
didn't do a single thing. Ever, didn't do a thing,
and our institutions told us we.

Speaker 2 (08:25):
Had to do it otherwise you'll spread the virus.

Speaker 1 (08:28):
Yes, the paper mask does a lot to stop the
microscopic virus, but it wasn't just the distancing. It wasn't
just the masks. You see the vaccine. See the vaccine interesting.
They even called it that. They told many, many, many

(08:49):
lies about it, which would get to in a moment.
But initially they told us that they couldn't trust it.

Speaker 2 (08:55):
You couldn't trust it. It took place under Donald Trump, Donald
Trump's vaccine.

Speaker 1 (08:59):
And then the second it came out, they told you
you really should get it.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
You better get it, you should get it.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
Then they try to tell you you had to get it.
Then they tried to fire you if you didn't get it.
And they insisted it was safe, They insisted it was effective.
They insisted it was safe, they insisted it was effective.
Over and over and over and over and over again,
we had this propaganda.

Speaker 14 (09:18):
The thing that went right was the investment over decades
in the basic and clinical biomedical research that allowed us
to make a vaccine in unprecedented time of less than
a year that turned out to be safe and highly effective.

Speaker 13 (09:34):
They are safe and so effective.

Speaker 5 (09:36):
We know that vaccines are safe and effective.

Speaker 1 (09:39):
That data is so compelling that these vaccines are safe
and effect.

Speaker 11 (09:43):
Vaccination not only prevents you from acquiring severe illness, but
we now know with certainty that it largely prevents transmission.

Speaker 5 (09:55):
My gut feeling is that this vaccines prevent infection on
therefore we'll prevent transmission.

Speaker 8 (09:59):
Vaccine only prevents people from getting sick, it also prevents
transmission of the virus from person to person.

Speaker 4 (10:05):
We're vaccinating so very fast. Our data from the CDCs
today suggests you know that vaccinated people do not carry
the virus, don't get sick, and that it's not just
in the clinical trials, but it's also in real world data.

Speaker 1 (10:23):
FDA just announced ten children that they know of so
far died from it. Remember that children were never in
any kind of danger from COVID nineteen. It was not
at all a disease that affected children, just was not.
And yet the institutions you should be able to trust

(10:46):
repeatedly told you that you had to go get aid
and Jadeen and Braiden injected with something experimental, and it
killed children in this country, killed children. The reason I
wanted to do this little rant before we move on
and talk about so many other things is a huge

(11:08):
reason institutional trust is broken and gone in this country
and I don't see it coming back. Is we have
never had a reckoning for the endless lies told to
the American people, the American people who've been harmed, physically killed,
economies destroyed, personal livelihoods destroyed, education destroyed. We have never

(11:34):
had any kind of a reckoning. Almost every person you've
seen in these videos is wealthy, prosperous, moving on. Many
got promoted, retiring in luxury.

Speaker 2 (11:45):
They all had that golden.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
Parachute after destroying institutional trust and destroying your life. Do
you remember this video from the New York State Department
of Health.

Speaker 12 (11:57):
When I talk to my friends and family, I say, look,
I got vaccinated, and I got my kids vaccinated.

Speaker 10 (12:03):
What more do you need to know?

Speaker 1 (12:05):
Every single member of my family is fully vaccinated and boosted.

Speaker 4 (12:09):
I would never recommend something if I didn't think it
was safe for my own children.

Speaker 12 (12:13):
And my children and were vaccinated as soon as they
could be.

Speaker 4 (12:15):
As the kids in my practice say, I am vaxed
to the max.

Speaker 2 (12:19):
I have three kids, I have vaccinated all of them.

Speaker 8 (12:23):
I would never do anything to my children it wasn't
perfectly safe.

Speaker 1 (12:30):
One of the doctors in that video, I want to
make sure I read this. Just received the prestigious Lifetime
Achievement Award for advocacy on behalf of vulnerable Children. The
institutions you should be able to trust, lied to your face,
destroyed your life, and then gave each other awards for it.

(12:53):
We need a reckoning all that may have made you uncomfortable.
But I am right. We're gonna talk about Republicans and
accountability with Wade Miller next. But I you know what,
if I have to give some sort of a thumbs
up to the covid era. At least it caused so
much distrust with me in the medical industry that I

(13:14):
have sought out natural solutions to prevent me from having
to go to the doctor. That's a big part of
why I take Cowboy colostrum every morning. Cowboy colostrum I
put two scoops a bit in my coffee every morning.
It's I have a chocolate, they have vanilla, they have strawberry.
I get the chocolate. So I essentially have a chocolate
cup of coffee in the morning. But it's not there

(13:35):
for the flavor. Although it is delicious, my gut feels
so much freaking better, and every day, I'm serious, I
think about it every day when I'm having that cup
of coffee, I think to myself, good, maybe this puts
off that necessary doctor's visit for a little while longer,
go to cowboycolostrum dot com and use the code at

(13:57):
Jesse TV.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
We'll be back. Well, I want you to reach back.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
I want you to reach over your shoulder right now
and patch yourself on the back. Because remember that conversation
we had yesterday about how you never ever ever take
part in communist ops because you recognize them for what
they are. I know you didn't, especially after our talk
last night. Congratulations, you are significantly smarter and braver than
most of the elected GOP. Joining me now, Wade Miller's

(14:34):
senior advisor at the Center for Renewing America also United
States Marine. Wade, it was very clearly a communist op. Well,
I guess is a communist op they're running against Pete
haig Seth anyone with two brain cells? And well, I
won't go into what else you have to have to
recognize it. But why can't the GOP recognize it?

Speaker 2 (14:52):
Wade?

Speaker 6 (14:54):
They're just not in a wartime footing in terms of
articulating the fight. I think that they have relied for
far too long on the President and the Vice President
to lead the rhetorical argument against the left, and so
you know, we take out a couple of foreign terrorist
operatives working with cartels who are invariably probably working with

(15:15):
China to destabilize our communities through their operations, and it
doesn't go perfectly according to the way they wanted to go,
and so they just completely started abandoning the fight and
seeding the ground.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
And at the end of the.

Speaker 6 (15:28):
Day, what are we guilty of here? We're you know,
the Secretary of War ordered to strike on a foreign
terrorist target and international waters.

Speaker 2 (15:37):
Big deal.

Speaker 6 (15:38):
Like you know, this used to happen on a daily
basis just a few years ago. For the better part
of fifteen years.

Speaker 1 (15:48):
Wade the strikes themselves. We have fifteen thousand troops in
the Caribbean, we have the Navy down there. Everyone knows
the story. Trump made an announcement on social media that
he's closing the airspace. Looks like Venezuela is going down,
at least the regime is going down. At least that's
how it appears right now. My concern is not the

(16:09):
collapse of the Venezuelan regime. You can list all kinds
of reasons why that would be a good thing. My
concern is how the Trump administration is going to sell
this to the American people, because the American people are
done with foreign policy.

Speaker 2 (16:20):
They just thought.

Speaker 1 (16:21):
They don't care about Ukraine, they don't care about Afghanistan,
they don't care about Israel, they don't care about Venezuela,
they don't really care about Mexico. They care about the
price of burger and it's hard to make them care
about anything else.

Speaker 6 (16:31):
Right now, that's right in the broader, you know, kind
of conception of all of this. We're tired of forever wars,
We're tired of nation building as a nation. And you know,
I think that the realist position here has long been that,
you know, we're okay with military strikes, but they need
to be in the interests of the United States, not
running around chasing people that live in remote mountains on

(16:53):
the other side of the planet for twenty years and
spending three trillion dollars and by the way, not actually
achieving the mission. Still there and still control everything. And
so I think that if they're going to move forward
on this, I think that one of the things that
they need to do is articulate the direct nexus to
the US interests. In other words, we're not isolationists, but
we need a good reason, and in lieu of a

(17:14):
good reason, I think that there should be some restraint here.
And perhaps, and look, this is part of the brilliance
of the Trump administration. Sometimes they flex muscles just to
try to avoid a broader conflict. And maybe that's what
they're doing here, or maybe there's intelligence assessments that would
support this. But I do think that if we're going
to engage in another significant military operation against a foreign nation,

(17:38):
there needs to be some conversation about why that is
necessary and why that isn't our best interest.

Speaker 1 (17:45):
Waite, do you get the impression the Trump administration, I
know you have great sources on this stuff that they
want to go in, that they're afraid to go in,
that they're hesitant to go into.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
What do they.

Speaker 15 (17:58):
Want versus what they're doing right now? It's always tough
to ascertain. But if I have to guess, my guess
is that Trump would like to flex some muscle here
to try to force the regime to voluntarily make some changes.
He does this through tariff policy, he does this through
other means as well. My guess is that they don't

(18:19):
necessarily want to go to war, But my guess is
that they probably have some intelligence reasons, some information about
operations that they're either ongoing or coordinating with, perhaps with China,
ongoing active efforts to destabilize American communities through fentanyl trade,
et cetera.

Speaker 2 (18:37):
And maybe they've had enough.

Speaker 6 (18:39):
Maybe they've said one hundred thousand Americans dying a year
is enough, and we have to put a stop to this.
And maybe that's part of their rationale. But my guess
is they would like this to end through coercion instead
of actual force. But depending on what their objectives are,
if that can't be met through coersion, perhaps they're ready
to use force, but perhaps not. And that's part of

(19:00):
the strategic ambiguity of the Trump administration is we actually
don't really ever, really know what he's willing to do.
And that's a good position to be in if you're
a United States president trying to exert foreign policy influence.

Speaker 2 (19:13):
Yeah it is. Let's switch gears here.

Speaker 1 (19:16):
You know, today everybody's an immigration hawk and the GOP
everyone talks about deportations and things like that. You actually
put up a wonderful social media post with some receipts
when we were bringing in as many Afghans as we
possibly could into the United States of America. It wasn't
every Republican standing against it. Far from it was.

Speaker 2 (19:36):
It weighed no.

Speaker 6 (19:38):
In fact, we were probably in the extreme minority at
the time when we were calling for and we wrote
a couple of papers on this at the time saying
that we shouldn't be bringing anyone here. We should be
resettling these Afghans regionally and in the area of Afghanistan
or as close as we can possibly get them, but
definitely not in the United States. And look, a lot
of guys are on the ground. I served in Iraq

(19:59):
three times, in the in Africa, was never in Afghanistan.
But I've dealt with interpreters, and I've talked to a
lot of Afghan veterans, combat veterans who dealt with interpreters
and other people that worked with the United States government,
and they fall into different categories. But like even in
the rosiest scenario, let's say that they disliked the Taliban
and they wanted to succeed, that doesn't mean that they're

(20:20):
culturally suitable for admittance into the United States. Something like
ninety ninety plus percent of Afghanistan of people who live
in Afghanistans Afghans. They believe in killing apostates. They believe
that people who leave the religion of Islam should be murdered.
They believe that sometimes suicide bombings are justifiable. It's an
absurd amount of the population there that is culturally radicalized.

(20:43):
So just because they weren't part of the Taliban or
al Qaeda or ISIS, doesn't mean that they're not radically
you know, at odds with American culture and values, none
of these people should have been brought here. But we
were morally browbeat. These people stood up for us, fought
for us well, first of all, no, we fought for them.

(21:04):
We went to their country and helped their fighting age
males have a chance potentially at a future. I would
argue that was always going to be a failed mission.
They're not capable of sustaining democracy. But we died and
bled and lost treasure in life helping them. We did
them the favor they owed us to help.

Speaker 2 (21:23):
Us to do that.

Speaker 6 (21:24):
If they really believed in their country and getting rid
of the Taliban, we don't owe them a damn thing.
So I always objected to this browbeating, especially from other veterans,
because they had one interpreter that they created a bond
with and all they talked about was, you know, soccer
or something like that, but they never really got into it,
like do you believe in baca Bazi? Do you believe

(21:44):
in child marriage? They never got into it with these people,
and so we never should have brought any of these
people over here, and we're now reaping, you know, the
rewards of bad policy in the form of people that
are radicalized doing really bad things in our communities.

Speaker 2 (22:01):
Freaking terrible. Wade, Thank you, brother, I appreciate it. Well.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
Do you want to hear from someone who's on the
back end of all this, the mass importation of foreigners
islamis Connor Tomlinson's in the UK and he is. I mean,
my heart breaks for the guy, just like Tommy Robinson
and those guys. They're just watching their country. And we'll
talk to Connor about that in a moment. I want

(22:29):
you to end something. I want you to end the
purchase of gas station chips, grocery store chips.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
You don't need them. I would never have said that
to you, probably a year ago.

Speaker 1 (22:42):
I would have laughed in your face if you told me, well,
there's healthier chip options, because I've tried a few of
those and they're disgusting and I'm not gonna eat anything gross,
but kept here Master chips, Master chips, Master Chips. Okay,
all right, fine, I get a few bags. Actually I
got like four bags. They have a bunch of different flavors.

(23:03):
The best chips I've ever had in my entire life.
That it's just three ingredients you can eat.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
You imagine eating.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
Chips kil free, best chips I've ever had in my
entire life, and you don't feel gross when you're done.
Imagine putting your feet up this Saturday watching college football,
laying waste to an entire bag of chips guil free
sound good, massachips dot com slash jessetv saves your twenty

(23:30):
five percent on your first order. Go try a few bags.

Speaker 2 (23:34):
We'll be back.

Speaker 16 (23:45):
You have lost, You lost. The mistake that you made
is you let us in in the first place. That's
thing with brown people. I'm gonna say this as a
brown person. There's a lot of us, like a lot.
There's like one point two billion in India, there's more
than two hundred million in Pakistana's like hundred seventy million
bundledah those are just the people there. I'm even talking
about the folks who are expats or immigrants. There's a

(24:06):
bunch of us, and we breed. We're a breeding people.
And the problem is is you let us in an
nineteen sixty five There there were a few of us beforehand,
but once you let one of us in, you know
what happens with bron folks. Our grandmother comes, our grandfather comes,
our uncle comes, our aunt comes, our cousin comes, our
second cousin comes, our third cousin comes. Then we have kids,
a bunch of kids. I want you to realize this,
you have lost. Your story is a story filled with misery.

(24:30):
It's filled with bland chicken. It's filled with terrible, terrible
dry meat. Your music sucks all your culture.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
Okay, well, look I'm going to try to use some
modern language because I have two teenage sons and they're
trying to get me up to speed and not sounding
like an old man.

Speaker 2 (24:50):
You know what that's known as.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
That's known as rage bait, right, that's just designed to
get a rise out of you. But there's some truth
in it, and sadly, my friend Connor Tomlinson knows a
bit of the truth of it joining me now the
host of Tomlinson talks on YouTube, which is wonderful by
the way, Connor Tomlinson from across to Pond, Connor rage
bait as it may be, He's not totally wrong, and

(25:13):
you're experiencing it in your country, aren't you.

Speaker 10 (25:17):
Sadly so, Jesse, I mean far from me to agree
with wajahut Ali in the present, but the mistake was
and he's right letting them in the first place, because
as much as this might be hyperbole, it would never
occur to you or me, were we are guessed in
someone else's country, to speak in such terms, in such
derisive terms about the people of that country at whose

(25:41):
expense we are largely living. And make no mistake, wajahart
Ali is living in our expense because he has made
a lucrative career until fairly recently when The New York
Times doesn't want to publish him writing anti white hit
pieces and talking about just how much better Muslims are
than Christians in the United States. So barreling a living
off the back of insulting the identity and faith of

(26:04):
heritage Americans and those of founding stock And I tell
you what the founding fathers would not recognize him as
one of your countrymen.

Speaker 2 (26:11):
And back in.

Speaker 10 (26:11):
Twenty nineteen, he was giving puff piece interviews to Rashida
Talaib in ilhan Omar, saying that it is completely unfounded
to say that Muslims across the world don't like America. Well,
I tell you what, Waja, if I would have gone
back in time and shown you this, turns out Muslims
like yourself probably don't like America all that much by

(26:32):
the sounds of it, especially when again in twenty nineteen
he blamed all people who have said that Islam might
be incompatible with the United States for the christ Church
massacre in New Zealand at the time. So he is
yet again demonstrating his willingness to attribute to collective guilt
and collective derision to white people despite sharing a country
with them. As for the pakistanis that share a country

(26:54):
with me, Jesse. As you've pointed out, the Pakistani rape
gang scandal is ongoing still in Britain. Despite being amplified
back in January, the Labor government still hasn't appointed the
head of the inquiry. That they were dragged kicking and
screaming to committing to five survivors have resigned from the panel,
calling for the Minister in charge, Jess Phillips to resign,

(27:15):
but Kirstarmer has said he retains confidence in Jess Phillips,
despite her spending more time complaining about Elon Musk insulting
her than on the inquiry itself, and advisers on the
inquiry panel talked down to the survivors and told them,
don't blame brown men for the abuse you suffered as
a child, despite the gang's being overwhelmingly family and drug

(27:40):
gang networks of Pakistani men with some other Muslims involved
abusing white, non Muslim girls because explicitly they were white,
because they were not Muslim. The family members of the
predators justified it because they didn't want to be seen
as quote siding with the white enemy. And they blamed
the girls because they dressed immodestly by Muslim standards. And

(28:03):
as one perpetrator said in a transcript has now been
read out in Parliament, they were here to quote f
white girls and f the government. That rhetoric sounds a
hell of a lot like the sentiment that Ali was
displaying there, just in more vindictive, vile and violent fashion
over in my country, Connor.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
President Trump has talked about started talking about something called remigration.

Speaker 2 (28:26):
Can you explain what that is and can.

Speaker 1 (28:29):
It potentially save places like not just America, the UK
which I would really love to see the.

Speaker 2 (28:35):
UK turned around and saved. Can it save us? What
is it?

Speaker 10 (28:41):
Where's would i?

Speaker 2 (28:41):
Jesse?

Speaker 10 (28:42):
And I'm very appreciative of your State Department as well
as President Trump for sounding off on this issue remigration.
If you go to Wikipedia, you would assume that it
is a form of ethnic cleansing by white Europeans of
minorities in their countries. So one would then have to
ask why was it not ethnic cleansing when unwanted immigrants
came into our countries and pushed us out of our
ancestral homelands, including London, which is now minority English. We

(29:05):
don't actually know the share of English people living in London,
But according to Piers more Than, that's all totally fine,
so he can eat his authentic curry. I don't think
the food was worth all the rapes. Remigration simply means,
in its most fair definition, the reversal of mass migration
and unwanted demographic change by returning people. Whether they arrived

(29:27):
illegally or legally who are not wanted in the country
to their nation of origin, and by that process, restoring
sovereignty over the host nation to the indigenous population, reversing
a kind of vindictive ethnic cleansing, the type that our
lee in the previous clip seems to gloat about using

(29:49):
migration to do. He sees migration as a form of
demographic warfare on behalf of his co ethnics. Well, I
don't like losing a war, thank you very much, So
we will opt for remigration to secure the security of
O people instead. And so President Trump has said he
is going to pursue a policy of reverse migration, remigration
for at least nineteen of the countries listed on his

(30:10):
travel ban list stated earlier in the year. I would
think he should add Pakistan and India to that list too,
because they are third world countries. They exert a lot
of ethno narcissistic leverage over your domestic politics with the
H one B issue or mister Ali's presence in your country,
and you can always leverage military aid that has been
restarted to Pakistan after the aid ban after the aid

(30:31):
ban earlier in the year, in order to do that.
But also the State Department has said, and officials have
gone on record and said the end of mass the
era of mass migration must end for Canada, the UK,
the US, Europe, New Zealand and Australia, and they sent
out Communicais to both their embassies and to the heads
of governments in these countries to say, embassies, you need

(30:54):
to start monitoring migrant crime, anti white dei policies, white
flight and cannsider all of these as human rights violations.
But also to the government like kir Starmer, who is
very sore about accusations of two tier justice, you need
to stop unduly penalizing the speech of your native population
whenever they have a negative characterization of immigrant groups brought

(31:16):
into their country at their expense against their wishes, while
allowing immigrants to commit violent crimes to go free. And
that's particularly pertinent at the moment because the State Department
should be aware that our Justice Minister David Lammy, who
has called for reparations against whites in Britain for the
sin of slavery, is about to abolish jury trials. He

(31:38):
is about to remove jury trials in the country that
gave the world, including our wonderful cousins across the pond,
the presumption of innocence, a Blackstone's formulation, and Magna Carta
and common law. This tinpot, anti white racist is running
our government alongside kir Starmer and is about to abolish
the ancient customs and liberties of Englishmen while letting migrant

(32:02):
criminals get off scott free. It is unacceptable, and I'm
very thankful that President Trump and the State Department are
pushing for this in your nation and mine, because it's
sure as hell isn't coming from our government.

Speaker 1 (32:15):
Connor, you hang in there over there, my brother, I've
wishing you the best, as always wonderful. The problems sometimes, look,
I go through the same thing you go through. Sometimes
the problems they seem insurmountable, they're not insurmountable. Remember that.
I have to tell myself that too. Some things take time,

(32:37):
that's all. If you're three hundred pounds and you want
to get to two hundred pounds, it's not an insurmountable problem,
but you're not going to take care of it tonight.

Speaker 2 (32:47):
Take time, all right, keep working on it. Anyway.

Speaker 1 (32:51):
Let's talk to Kay about that, because she fled Britain.
Before we talk to Kay, let me talk to you.

Speaker 2 (32:59):
About the night.

Speaker 1 (32:59):
I was up fairly late. I guess for me, it
was almost ten o'clock.

Speaker 2 (33:06):
It's kind of wired. Wife and I were talking about it.

Speaker 1 (33:09):
It's kind of wired. I don't know why these word
I wasn't gonna be ab asleep. Maybe myself little cup
of hot chocolate though, a little cup of hot chocolate
from Beam. It's called dream powder, and it's not drugs
on hundred percent drug free, but there are natural things
in it that just kind of gets you relaxed and
ready to drift off to sleep.

Speaker 2 (33:31):
I sleep like a little baby.

Speaker 1 (33:33):
When I have it. I had all my eyes. I
think I slept for ten hours last night. You want
to sleep like that? Shopbeam dot com slash Jesse Kelly.

Speaker 2 (33:43):
We'll be back all right.

Speaker 1 (33:54):
We're gonna talk about universities here in a moment, but
before we do that, I want to introduce my friend.
You know we're well on the show, K smythe Hill
writer and social scientists. The reason I wanted to introduce
K first is, Okay, what's a social scientist that sounds
like a lot of hippie gobblygoog It.

Speaker 12 (34:12):
Was actually what I was qualified under on my old visa.
It is kind of a little bit of gobbledygoog, but
I basically analyze groups of people down to the individual.
My personal specialty is trying to mitigate the apocalypse, because
most of the worst apocalypse catastrophes come from people being idiots.
So that's what I study, and I put numbers and

(34:34):
data towards it, so I can say definitively that people
on mass are usually pretty stupid, especially at universities.

Speaker 2 (34:43):
Yeah, I'm glad you brought that up.

Speaker 1 (34:44):
Speaking of stupid idiots who will probably bring about the apocalypse,
let's talk about college educated women, because these young women
go to college and their motherly instincts, which are wonderful,
are preyed upon by evil, filthy communists, and it's twisted
and turned and they turned them into the mother of
the communist revolution. And it's freaking awful what happens to

(35:05):
these young women and then they hate themselves the rest
of their life.

Speaker 2 (35:08):
What happened at the University of Oklahoma, by the way.

Speaker 12 (35:11):
So we had a young woman who submitted a paper,
albeit not the best paper I've ever read, but still
she submitted a term paper for her gender studies bless
her heart, course to her professor. So gender studies is
like part of a psychology major. I guess I don't know. Again,
another reason why university is officially a waste of time

(35:33):
and money these days and very stupid. But she submitted
this term paper to her psych professor. But her psych
professor is transgender and really didn't like the fact that
this young woman sourced a lot of her evidence and
a lot of her claims from the Bible. Now, Jesse,
I could sit here and waffle on all day about

(35:54):
how to write a great academic paper. I've ghost written
many for many American students myself. It's a very easy
thing to do if you know how to read and write.
But this transgender person. Firstly, why is a transgender person
teaching psych Surely you have to have decent psychology to
be able to teach psychology. And if you can't even

(36:15):
understand that you were born a specific type of gender,
probably shouldn't be teaching psychology about it. You might have
a couple of biases there that kind of render you
ineffective in that setting. But yeah, she failed, or this man,
I think it's a man pretending to be a woman.
Is the way that I read it, that this man

(36:36):
pretending to be a woman failed a student because she
sourced from the Bible and just really didn't like that.
So there's now a huge discrimination case going on, and
I hope the student gets everything she deserves for it,
because it's ridiculous and just you know, again bleeds into
that stupid communist indoctrination nightmare apocalypse that goes on in

(36:58):
most of our schools that we just talk around just
utterly stupid.

Speaker 2 (37:02):
It does, it doesn't.

Speaker 1 (37:04):
It's weird that she'd be a psych professor. Shouldn't she
be focusing on the kids who were undecided?

Speaker 2 (37:10):
Anyway? Kay, where are the Christian leaders in all this?
It seems like.

Speaker 1 (37:15):
The LGBTQ demon mob, tranny brigade. They're always happy to
declare that it's an open war and open war with God,
open war with the Bible. And I don't see that
same kind of vigor from the other side.

Speaker 2 (37:30):
Am I missing it? Well?

Speaker 12 (37:32):
I think the other side, like all of us Christians,
we when you don't put yourself as your own God,
it's actually a lot easier to live and be happy.
So Jesse I was part of that liberal, sort of
social stupid, university educated type woman that you were talking

(37:53):
about right at the start of the show. Actually, it
was living in California that made me realize why an
absolute lie that side of the political spectrum is for
myriad reasons, not just because of the way that they
treat women. But it wasn't until I really hold in
on my relationship with christ that I ended up finding

(38:15):
a type of peace that really can't be irked upon
by people who parade around claiming to be, you know,
the opposite gender to the one that they were at birth.
You know, they sort of all fall into the same
category that call us all like Nazis and fascists for
having different opinions to them. It's kind of like a
water off the duck's back effect. And so while I

(38:39):
do think that it is a huge responsibility of Christian
leaders to step up and protect young people from this indoctrination,
we do have a lot of great schools in this
country that do that, you know, GCU, Liberty, all of
these different great universities that are Christian driven. We need
to have it more normalized. And I don't really know

(39:01):
what the answer is to that yet. I just pray
that every single young woman goes through what I went through,
has that sort of like come to light moment, gets
red pilled, finds Christ. And it literally took I think
it took less than like two years from me leaning
into my relationship with Christ, I met my husband. I'm
now in my third trimester, and it is the best

(39:21):
thing I have ever done, so much better than anything
no offense work related that I've ever done, except for
obviously being on Jesse Kelly do.

Speaker 2 (39:32):
Well. Yeah, that's the highlight of your life.

Speaker 1 (39:34):
And for most people who don't realize that the third trimester,
there's only three of them.

Speaker 2 (39:38):
So that's the third one of these.

Speaker 1 (39:40):
Okay, before I let you go, Gavin Newsom, the stories
out that he's swooping up mega donors on the Democrat ticket.
It's kind of common now to look at Gavin Newsom
and think he's got a real shot at being the
Democrat nominee. Now I find him to be repulsive with
the hand talking and the slick back here everything else.

(40:00):
But I'm also not the demographic that may swing one
way or the other next election.

Speaker 2 (40:06):
Do women find this guy appealing?

Speaker 12 (40:10):
I've never met a woman who finds this guy appealing.
I think what Gavin Newsom presumes, like a lot of Democrats,
is that all you have to get or all you
have to be in order to be successful as a
politician in this country on the Democrat liberal side is
to have sort of like a lot of hair, big teeth.

(40:30):
He's very loud, he sits like a girl. He's a
compulsive liar. There are literally bodies lined up on the
street in his state. Women in his state are some
of the most victimized in the country, maybe even the
Western hemisphere because of the policies that this guy has pushed.
So I hope that all of this is just this

(40:51):
sort of sicko small world echo chamber that exists around
Gavin Newsom, because as much as he might not realize it,
he is part of the globalist elite. He's inherited that position.
The only reason that he's sweeping up these donors is
because there is literally no one else on the Democratic

(41:11):
side right now. They're all actually more repulsive than him,
if you can believe it, or just ridiculous and silly,
like who's that one that's trying to get headlines right now,
Corey Booker. No one believes anything that he's going through
right now. But I think with Gavin Newsome, he probably
believes that he has an appeal with women. In reality,

(41:34):
that's not there. And I think if there were any
women who were into it, it's those stupid elder boomers
who don't get affected by the policies he pushed because
they live in their private, gated communities and they're sort
of like the six viewers left watching like MSNBC and
CNN and stuff like that. So you know, like en

(41:55):
mass No, to answer your question, No, he doesn't have
an appeal amongst women. He's repulsive and he hurts women
with his policies. It's that simple.

Speaker 1 (42:06):
For those who don't know. She's talking about Corey Booker
and his beard. Okay, thank you so much. I appreciate you.
Lighten the mood next. All right, it's time to lighten

(42:26):
the mood, and I'm gonna stay calm.

Speaker 2 (42:30):
All right. We've had this conversation before.

Speaker 1 (42:32):
If you've watched this show for a while, you know
we've had this conversation before.

Speaker 2 (42:35):
But there was a story out.

Speaker 1 (42:38):
There was this little video I think it was ABC
News to put it out, and there was a black bear.
Black Bear's standing there a couple of women looking at
the black bear. One young lady kneels down and feeds.

Speaker 2 (42:56):
The black bear.

Speaker 1 (42:58):
So I just need to explain once again, please please
hear me on this, Disney.

Speaker 2 (43:09):
Movies are fake.

Speaker 1 (43:12):
I know, I know that you want to believe that
as soon as we look away, that the animals, the lions,
get together with the zebras and they're talking and they're
doing a little dance number and they're having fun together
and they have these emotional relationship dramas and they're so fun.

(43:34):
And look at how squinty he is. I understand. I
understand that a generation of Disney movies has taught people
that wild animals are in fact human.

Speaker 2 (43:46):
They're they're human just.

Speaker 12 (43:48):
With more fur.

Speaker 2 (43:49):
Look how cute he is.

Speaker 1 (43:51):
The black bear will rip your freaking face off. And
I mean that in every possible way. Black bears will
kill you.

Speaker 2 (44:00):
You like that.

Speaker 1 (44:01):
They are wild, vicious animals with brains the size of
a blueberry.

Speaker 2 (44:08):
All they know. All they know is.

Speaker 1 (44:10):
To eat, sleep, and mate. That's all they know. I promise,
I promise. No matter how much food you give the
black bear, he just doesn't want to struggle with you.

Speaker 2 (44:23):
He's not going to talk to you. I swear he
won't talk to you.

Speaker 1 (44:26):
You can't choreograph a dance routine with him. He's a
wild animal. Please stop approaching wild animals.

Speaker 2 (44:35):
Please, I'm begging you. All right, I'll see them a
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