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July 30, 2025 45 mins

Dive into the political horizon as we explore the pivotal 2026 midterm elections and the high-stakes 2028 presidential race. This episode unpacks emerging trends, key battleground states, and the issues shaping voter sentiment. From shifting demographics to evolving party strategies, we analyze what these elections could mean for America's political landscape. Join expert guests for insights, predictions, and a glimpse into the forces driving the nation's future

I'm Right with Jesse Kelly on The First TV | 7-29-25

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
Did you know it's election season. I know you're probably
scrambling checking your calendar right now. I don't understand. I
thought the midterms weren't until next year. Well, I just
felt the need to have a talk with you tonight,
to do a special where we're going to talk about
many things that we're going to talk about the midterms
and other things. But I feel like we all, myself included,

(00:31):
need this reminder. It's always election season. Always it is
for the Communists. Therefore it has to be for us.
You know, I have a former Communist who watches us
here on I'm Right and listens to the radio show.
They're a bunch, and they email me because I'm always

(00:52):
fascinated by their mentality. Because they are our enemy. We're
trying to defeat them, and so the former ones are
a great source of information on how they think. Here's
how one used to operate when she was a communist.
She would go on her local websites, her city's website,
her county's website, her state's website, and all this is

(01:15):
public information, and she would find out not just each
and every election, the dates and locations, but she would
find out if there was a commission. Maybe there's going
to be a commission for the Fourth of July parade
next year, or maybe there's an open spot on the waterboard.
And she would type up and create for herself a
Microsoft word document.

Speaker 2 (01:37):
With everything laid out just like that.

Speaker 1 (01:40):
And then what she would do is she would disseminate
that to every communist she knew. She'd email it out,
text it out every communist she knew, to ensure that
all the communist animals knew every single election, no matter
how big, no matter how small, and they would be there.

(02:00):
If you look around at our culture, in our government,
and you wonder how the land of the free, with
so many good people and good people just like you,
how in the world could the land of the Free
be occupied by so many communist savages in positions of power. Well,
it's because good people like us, like you and like me,

(02:21):
we ignore critically important choke points of power while the
communist is seizing them. And I realize the communist is
always going to be better at government than you are.
And I am because I don't worship it. You don't
worship it. It's not your God, it's not your religion,
but it is his. So for him typing up a

(02:41):
Microsoft word document and disseminating it to communist savages as.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
An act of worship.

Speaker 1 (02:46):
You don't think like that, and I don't want you to,
but we have to understand the consequences of not being
as active as they are.

Speaker 2 (02:53):
I'll tell you what.

Speaker 1 (02:54):
I'll point something out to you. There's a local library
in Long Island in New York. No, you're not familiar
with the area. I say New York. You're thinking, oh, okay,
a bunch of libs. No, no, no, no, no no.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
This is a red county, the blood red. If you're
in New York and you want to live.

Speaker 1 (03:10):
In a red area, you get your stuff out of
Manhattan and you drive out to Long Island to go
be around people who love God and country. This area,
this county went plus ten for Trump.

Speaker 2 (03:22):
Plus ten. Now look at the local library. Look at it.
How does that happens.

Speaker 1 (03:35):
That's not the library in LA that's not the library
in Manhattan. That's the library in a Republican area. Well,
here's exactly how that happens. You see, the communist the
communists realized that the local library was a choke point
of power, one you never considered one. You never thought about.

(03:56):
You drive by the local library all the time, just
like I do. You don't even look ours is usually
on the left. I don't even glance over. But the
communist understands that that's a place people go. People go
and they acquire information there, books and all kinds of
other things. So if people are getting information there, then

(04:16):
that's a place you can go and seize that information.
You can secure, you can censor what you don't want
them to see, you can put in what you do
want them to see. And that's why blood red areas
all across the country have training drag show freaks inside
of them, because the Communist understood it's more than a
bunch of books.

Speaker 2 (04:37):
It's a choke point of power.

Speaker 1 (04:40):
We have allowed them to do this to us forever
because we don't activate. We aren't active enough. When I
said election season is right now, I meant it. You
have a local election in your area this year. Guarantee you,
wherever you are watching me from this year, there was

(05:02):
something going on in your area.

Speaker 2 (05:04):
Are you going to miss it?

Speaker 1 (05:07):
Maybe it's a school board thing, Maybe it's something with
your city or your county. Maybe it's a state level thing.
Maybe it's a prop a tax, a something. Are you
going to miss it? All this information is available on
your Secretary of State's website. I promise you one thing.
The communist won't miss it. The communist will be there.

(05:27):
The communists will drag his friends there, because the communist
understands it matters primaries. It's another great example, especially primaries
in red states. Why don't we show up? We're comfortable.
That's why I'm here in Texas. Wow, surely we love
God and country. It's a it's a red state. But

(05:50):
I don't have to show up in the primary. I mean,
it's going to be a Republican who ends up winning it.

Speaker 2 (05:55):
Surely, what does it matter?

Speaker 1 (05:58):
Well, that's how you end up with red state senators
who say things like this.

Speaker 3 (06:03):
Hi, I'm Texas Senator John Cornyn. The last year has
proven quite a challenge as we've navigated the impact of
COVID nineteen. But with safe and effective vaccines finally being administered,
there's light at the end of the tunnel. Getting vaccinated
is the fastest way that life can return to normal.
Under the effective leadership of Director Ray, the agency has

(06:25):
remained committed to doing things independently and buy the book
section seven oh two of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.
I've called this the most important law that most people
have never heard of. It's been called the crown jewel
of US intelligence.

Speaker 2 (06:45):
How does Texas end up with a senator like that? Oh,
we don't have time for primaries. The ballgame's on. No,
I'm sure Corny is going to be just fine.

Speaker 1 (06:55):
I saw him run an ad talk about how much
he loved Trump, and so we either don't show or
we show up and vote for the loser who's in there.

Speaker 2 (07:03):
I'm true. That's why Oklahoma has this ginger freak.

Speaker 4 (07:07):
Do you think that whatever you're working on will have
to include a path to citizenship for Dreamers?

Speaker 2 (07:11):
I do.

Speaker 5 (07:12):
I've been pretty outspoken on that for even the last September,
Senator Tillis and I both put out a proposal to
get citizenship for those individuals that are in the doctor
program or were eligible for the doctor program. Because we've
got a group that was in the doctor program, but
we've got a group that never signed up, never went
to the paperwork, for whatever reason they were eligible for it.

(07:32):
We'd like to those individuals to be able to have
access the citizenship as well.

Speaker 2 (07:37):
Oklahoma. Have you ever been to Oklahoma? Spent a lot
of time there.

Speaker 1 (07:42):
Maybe the most blood red god and country state in
the entire United States of America.

Speaker 2 (07:49):
The best people in the world. So when primary.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
Season comes up and that soulis amnesty loving ginger runs
for office.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
Show up. It's safe here. What are you talking about.

Speaker 1 (08:02):
There's no crime, it's no big deal, just the primary,
or even worse, they'll show up.

Speaker 2 (08:07):
Well, I mean I saw he went to church. I
mean I go to church. He showed up in our church,
must be a good man.

Speaker 1 (08:14):
We have got to stop this. We have got to
become activists, local level, state level, national level. Election season
is now, that's how we have to think. Sean Spice
is gonna join us in a moment, talk to us
about the midterms.

Speaker 2 (08:30):
Next.

Speaker 1 (08:37):
Don't you think it's weird that there's a low team
men's clinic on every street corner?

Speaker 2 (08:42):
Now, what's that about? Why is that?

Speaker 1 (08:44):
Well, let me explain the United States of America. We
have synthetic estrogens in our water. This really comes from
birth control and everything. It's in our water. It's in
the water you drink, yes, even your bottled water. You
shower in estrogen The result of this has been a
fifty percent loss in our testosterone in fifty years. In

(09:07):
half a century, we've lost half the testosterone in this country.

Speaker 2 (09:10):
And men know it. Men.

Speaker 1 (09:12):
Maybe you sad, depressed, no energy, getting flabby, can't figure
out what your tea levels are?

Speaker 2 (09:18):
Too low?

Speaker 1 (09:19):
Reverse that with a natural solution, natural herbal supplements from chalk.
Don't go get anitle in your arm, Go try a
male Vitality stack. You want a seventeen point seventy six
percent discount, go to chalk dot com slash jessetv. Let's

(09:46):
talk about the future. What do future elections look like?
Because the midterms are coming. Twenty twenty eight is coming.
And I know we're all enjoying Democrats being down and
out right now, but parties don't stay down and out
for joining me now. Sean Spicer, host of The Sean
Spicer Show, Sean, it makes me extremely nervous how down

(10:08):
and out democrats appear to be. I know that sounds weird,
but I just know you don't stay down forever.

Speaker 2 (10:14):
They look crazy, their approval rating is in the toilet.

Speaker 1 (10:16):
That can seem to let go of the tranny stuff
or the open border stuff.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
But someone's gonna come along and figure it out. Sean True,
I'm with you.

Speaker 6 (10:26):
I get nervous when it's going this well, that's just
I'm one of those people that a lot of people
get excited when things are going well. I'm one of
those people that gets nervous instinctively. It's like the calm
before the storm. And I'm with you. But here's the thing.
I've been doing this thirty years. I know, I don't
look at it. It's a moisturizer that I use that I
think helps overcome a lot of that. But the reality

(10:48):
is is that they don't have candidates right now, they
don't have issues, and you know, the numbers for the
national parties just got released in terms of their fundraising
and it's they're abysmal. So in a normal case in
the past, the d Triple C, the Democratic Congressional Campaign
Committee historically be out raising the NRCC, the National Republican

(11:08):
Congressional Committee, they would be making this huge push. But
you look at from the top of the leadership, the
top of the DNC, Ken Martin, he's just a flat
out disaster. Keem Jeffries is feckless. Their house leader who
most people probably couldn't even identify. The only issue they
have is trying to suddenly claim that they care about

(11:29):
Jeffrey Epstein and the American people at the end of
the day are not going to vote. That's not an issue.
So you know, my view is that I share this
with you. I think that this is if Republicans can
keep delivering for the American people as they have in
the past six months, I think they're going to be
in good shape. And I have said this before, Jesse,
and I'll say it again right now. Despite the historical odds,

(11:52):
I think the way that the American Republicans in the House,
in the Senate and the White House are delivering for
the American people, they will be rewarded and made tan
a majority in the House and the Senate.

Speaker 1 (12:03):
Wow, Okay, I actually want to focus on somebody you
brought up there really quickly, Sean, and that's Sachem Jeffries.
It's not a mystery. I talk to my people about
it all the time. How you rise to leadership positions
in the House or Senate for both parties. You raise
a lot of money. You raise a lot of money,
you hand out that money for favors. You end up
getting voted into leadership positions came Jeffries raised this great money,

(12:24):
but it appears that he just doesn't have the chops.

Speaker 2 (12:29):
That makes sand Sean.

Speaker 1 (12:30):
Every time I see him, I think to myself, Man,
what a drop off from Nancy Pelosi to this boob.

Speaker 6 (12:37):
Yeah, it's funny you brought that out. I mean, he
was Nancy Pelosi's hand picked successor, and there was a
part of me for a while that thought like that.
She and you remember she stayed around kind of like
you know, the babysitter. It was, I was gonna she
was here there to keep an eye on him, to
make sure he did well. I think Nancy Pelosi, when
I was a staffer in the House, she literally there

(12:58):
was no decision who small for her to weigh in on.
There was on the House floor. There are staffers that
are in their respective parties cloak rooms where members hang
out before a vote that helped them get the materials
and the things that they need while they're on the floor.
She literally handpicked the interns for the summer in each
of the in her cloak room. I mean that's the

(13:18):
level of detail. She ruled with an iron fist. Nobody
crossed her regardless of how what you think of her
on policy. She ruled the House with an iron fist
and Hikeem Jeffries is a wallflower. You could literally blow
the guy over, and it's amazing. I think he is,
to be honest with you, a huge disappointment to her.
He doesn't. He lacks the gravitas that anybody, No one

(13:43):
cares what he thinks in her caucus. And that's the
problem is that she is still there lurking in the
background like the babysitter to make sure that he eats
his eats his dinner and completes his homework. They don't
have that power center. And Chuck Schumer on the Senate
side looks so out of touch. And the big question
that looms large for him is will AOC take him

(14:05):
on in a primary, because if she does, she will
beat him handily.

Speaker 2 (14:11):
Will she? No?

Speaker 1 (14:13):
People may say, you don't do that kind of thing,
but AOC has she got there. She took on that
what was his name, Crawford Crawford to do with, took
on that powerful Democrat Crawley, that's right, took him on,
established democrat and bounced him right out.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
That's the kind of thing she'll do yes.

Speaker 6 (14:30):
And that's the problem, though, is that they've gone from
a power center where people will fear to take on
the very power that you describe, people who raise a
ton of money, who basically said, if you touch me,
I will release the hounds on you financially and make
sure that you pay a political price. That was the
way that they had constructed things for the longest time.
Those days are gone. The rank and file members right

(14:50):
now have no problem taking on the elders that those
days of them being in charge are long gone. And
so the problem, and this goes back to what you
brought up at the beginning, is that there's no sense
of fear or power structure. These the inmates are truly
running the asylum in the Democratic Caucus.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
Okay, how did we get there, Sean, Because as you mentioned,
that's rarely the case, right, there's always a young on
both sides. There's always some young passionate upstart but gets
to Washington, d C. Slams into the establishment, gets exasperated,
and gets just bowled over by all the money the
establishment types two. But you're right, it's very clear that
guys like a king Jeffreys and Chuck Schumer fear the

(15:32):
radical base.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
How did that balance the power shift?

Speaker 6 (15:36):
You know, the funny thing is what you're asking should
should and truly be like a course because it was
this attrition of the power that occurred. And I think
part of it was the power base moved away when
the Biden White House took over. It wasn't like the Obamas.
When they took it over, they created Organizing for America,
took the power base away from the party and kind
of built their own thing, and they owned it for

(15:57):
a while, and you had the Podsave America, Bros. And
all these powerful institutions within the system. The problem is
is that that the Biden House of Cards, if you will,
was built on quicksand, because as we have seen more
and more come to light, there was no power center.
It was four or five people behind the curtain like Oz,
making people believe that it was really Joe Biden running

(16:18):
the show when he wasn't. So what happened is when
that House of Cards failed, when everyone realized the quicksand
was what was holding it up, and they realized there
was no power base. I mean, Jesse, there is an interview.
I tweeted it out a little while ago, where Hunter
Biden is going off on this profane interview, going after
all of the people that had been surrounding his father

(16:39):
for years they needed done and the pie David Pluff
and Axel Rod and James Carville, and he's pissed because
what happened was once it was exposed, it was literally
like the Wizard of Oz, when the curtain got pulled
out and people said, we don't have to fear this
guy anymore. They realized that that power base that Nancy
Pelosi had once commanded wasn't what it used to be.
And then you know people like AOC and elin Omar, etc.

(17:04):
What's the Maxwell Frost felt like, why do we have
to sit back and wait our turn? Who's gonna tell
us now? And what happened is is that the folks
that used to be fearful of the people at the
top realized that it's Oz. It's not this big creature.
It's this little, tiny, wimpy person that we don't need
to be fearful of. And that's what happened, is that

(17:24):
just like in the movie or in the play, depending
on where you saw it, when the curtain got pulled
back and people said that's who we're afraid of. Okay,
no way, no more.

Speaker 2 (17:36):
You need to write that book, Sean. Okay.

Speaker 1 (17:38):
So I can't get past this without asking you one
final one about the prediction you just made. You think
Republicans keep the House in the midterms.

Speaker 2 (17:47):
That never happens.

Speaker 4 (17:48):
No.

Speaker 6 (17:48):
In fact, you know who the guy was that ran
at the last time that they held the House. Who
your guest? Two thousand and two, just saying so, I
say that because I know what it takes, and I
know what the condition of candidates has to be. And
right now, the House of Representatives, run by Richard Hudson

(18:11):
and Mike Johnson, etc. Is doing the job that needs
to be taken. They're stemming retirements, they're making sure that
they're people of the right money, that the mechanics that
are needed. Trump is out there trying to get Texas
to add five seats through a mid session redistricting effort.
They're doing all the right things. There are a lot
of people that we're thinking about retiring or running for
another office that they put pressure on to stick around.

(18:33):
That's critical. So I'm just telling you I know enough
about It's like, you know, having a scout come in
and look at a team as they head into the season.
This is a team that has what it takes to
win a championship right now, and so I feel very
good saying it. I think the Senate is easy, Collins.
Tell us, if we can hold the Tillis seat in

(18:55):
North Carolina, the Senate is pretty easy to meet. There's
a strong potential to pick up one to two seats
even if you lost a Maine. But in the House,
I think that right now you're looking potentially. You know,
they have the opportunity to actually pick seats up because
of this play for Texas where they redistrict pick up
three to five seats as long as they don't get greedy.
And that's where I think they got to be careful

(19:15):
and they try to squeeze too much out of Texas.
But if you can pick up three to five seats
and stem your retirement, you hold the House and you
might even pick one or two up.

Speaker 1 (19:26):
I hope you're right. I'm going with that, Sean. I'm
gonna steal your prediction and act like it's mine. Sean Spice, appreciate.

Speaker 6 (19:32):
We better, we better. Too much is out on the line.

Speaker 1 (19:37):
All right, Buck Sexton joins us next. You know, I'll
ever tell you about the time Pure Talk came down
to see me down here in Houston.

Speaker 6 (19:53):
Now.

Speaker 1 (19:53):
I've had a lot of meetings with different advertisers and
partners at the show. I've never had a meeting where
they brought medal of honor recipients pure Talk. In the
veterans community, they're like this when pure Talk does profitable
or non profitable things, I guess I'll say when they.

Speaker 2 (20:13):
When they give back like corporations do. Pure Talk cares.

Speaker 1 (20:17):
About the vets, getting them back on their feet, medical care.
They gave them flags for Independence Day. On top of
providing great service mobile phone service. Pure Talk cares about
the people we care about. You don't need a Rizon,
you don't need a T and T. You don't need
T Mobile. Switch to the cell phone company that actually
cares about this country. You can get a new phone

(20:39):
or keep your phone. They make it easy at pure Talk, Puretalk,
dot Com, Slash, Jesse TV.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
Opinions.

Speaker 7 (20:55):
But Kim him, Kim and everybody around him. I don't
have to be nice. Number one. I agree with Quentin Tarantino.
George Clooney is not an actor. He is a like
I don't know what he is. He's a brand. What
right do you have to step on a man who's
given fifty two years of his life to the service

(21:17):
of this country and decide that you, George Clooney, are
going to take out basically a full page ad in
the New York Times, me and James Carville, who hasn't
run a race in forty years, and David Axelrod, who
had won success in his political life, and that was
Barack Obama. And that was because of Barack Obama, not
because of David Axelrod and David Pluff and all of
these guys in the Podsave America, guys who were junior

(21:40):
speech writers in you know, on Barack Obama's Senate staff,
who's been dining out on the relationship with him for years,
making millions of dollars, The Anita Dunns of the world,
who's made forty fifty million dollars off the Democratic Party.
They're all going to insert their judgment over a man
who has figured out, unlike anybody else, how to get

(22:01):
elected to the United States Senate over seven times. What
influence does Jake Capper have over anything?

Speaker 6 (22:05):
He has the.

Speaker 7 (22:06):
Smallest audience on cable news, and beyond that, I think
that the book is right now on Amazon that he
put out. I mean, his ratings just went after he
put the book out, and you know, they did a
two week infomercial for it. I mean it was such
a money grab, such a disservice to everybody that he
serves with.

Speaker 1 (22:26):
I'm curious about the cussing joining me now, obviously everybody
knows Buck Sexton co host the Clay and Buck Show,
Buck Hunter Biden's problems aside, this is a Democrat thing,
and I know you've noticed it too, and I'm certainly
not Mother Teresa, neither are you. But the cussing, now,

(22:46):
the public cussing, all of them, the F bomb, they'll
just drop F bombs out there all the time.

Speaker 8 (22:52):
Why Well, he's a former crackhead, as you know. And
he actually gives quite a detailed discourse, yes, I know,
detailed discourse on the chemical compounds and the differentiation between
various forms of cocaine. I was more impressed with Hunters acuity.

(23:15):
I was more impressed with Hunter's analytic ability discussing his
drug habit than anything else I've ever.

Speaker 2 (23:20):
Heard him do. So I have to give.

Speaker 8 (23:23):
I also want to say I appreciate you having me
on the show today, Jesse, because I have to make
sure I don't move my head too much or my
hair is going to go off screen. This is a
reminder that despite what the well, they always are yelling
at me on Twitter, get a haircut, you bum, and
stuff like that, and usually I think they're being harsh,
but this time I really do need a haircut. And

(23:45):
this is what happens when you have a home studio
and don't do as much TV as say you do.
So I forget that I kind of look like one
of the lego men or something like. It's like it
comes on like a piece.

Speaker 2 (23:56):
So it's time for a haircut over here. You know what, Buck,
that's uncalled for.

Speaker 1 (24:01):
Everyone knows what you just did, everyone knows how long
we've been friends. It's uncalled for to look at me
in my current debilitated state and point.

Speaker 2 (24:10):
Out how much hair you have. Buck. Do you see
where the hairline is? Buck, it's look at hower back.
It's pretty much it's even with the ears now.

Speaker 8 (24:19):
But see, I get made fun of. People say my
hairline can't be real, and they accuse me of wearing
a wig. So really, who's got it work.

Speaker 1 (24:29):
See you know what, Buck, I don't feel even an
ounce of sympathy for you, not even a tiny, tiny
little bit of sympathy. Okay, take it, go cut your
hippie hair. But back to the task at hand. Anita Dunn.
Glenn Beck famously is the one who kind of exposed
this woman years and years and years ago. But this

(24:49):
woman is like one of those little communist tics that
you can't seem to burn out of government. Interesting that
Hunter Biden brought her name up, isn't it.

Speaker 8 (24:59):
Yeah? I think that, But he is saying things that
are true, right Just because Hunter Biden says it doesn't
mean it's untrue. When he's pointing out that there are
all these people who attached themselves to Barack Obama in
some capacity, and we're supposed to think that they have
some great insight into anything running a campaign, running the country.
What's true, what's not true? I think that, if anything,

(25:22):
you should look at the Biden administration's failures as really
the perpetuation of the Obama cabal. In a lot of ways,
there were people that were not only crossovers, but also,
as we know, there were all these meetings that were
going on at the Obama residence when President dementia, Biden
was having staffers who were actually making decisions about the government.

(25:43):
So all you have to do is get word from
Obama HQ, which, bizarrely, I know it's because he needed
to stay with his daughters as they finished high school.
Sure bizarrely was ten minute car ride from the White House.
First president that I know of to do that. Certainly
in the modern era. Yeah, I think we see that
this was just the Democrat machine. And you have these barnacles,

(26:05):
as you point out, like Anita Dune who who attached
themselves to this siphon off as much as they can
for themselves, and all they do is perpetuate the ruination
of this country with the same communist clap trap that
we've been hearing from them all along. So it's a
sad state of affairs. But like I said, Hunter, Biden's
actually laying down truth about how to make crack at

(26:26):
home what she got into, which I gotta say he
knows what he's talking about. And then beyond that, some
of the Democrats who are held up as the the
you know, the great minds.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
Of the party.

Speaker 8 (26:38):
I mean Nancy Pelosi ruthless. Yes, Nancy Pelosi pushing out
Joe Biden, which he made very clear in the interview,
or that he thinks that's what happened. Nancy Pelosi in
the real world is actually a nimrod.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
I mean, she's an imbecile.

Speaker 8 (26:52):
She just happens to be ruthless and will do anything
for power and money, so that can get you far.
I mean that was true of Pablo Escobar as well.

Speaker 2 (26:59):
He wasn't a genius, Yeah, that's true.

Speaker 1 (27:03):
He was really good at smuggling drugs, though, Buck. I
heard one story that they used to take these ships
and the ships didn't even know it, these big cargo ships,
and they'd fill up pipe with cocaine and they'd attach
it with magnets underneath the ship, and they'd send the
ship into Miami and then the scuba divers beep. They
remote unhooked the magnets, the cocaine drops to the bottom.

(27:24):
The ship just shipped in cocaine and no one even
knew about it. I think that's pretty smart, Buck, I mean,
not that I would recommend it. Don't do that, kids,
but that's pretty smart.

Speaker 2 (27:33):
Yes.

Speaker 8 (27:34):
It also was amazing that he brought hippopotami from Africa
just because he thought they were cool and used them
as like animal, this is true, and brought them into
Colombia because he wanted pet hippopotami and actually they do
quite well there and they had to figure out how
to they're they're dangerous though, and they started breeding and
they created an indigenous hippopotamus population because Pablo Escobar, the

(27:58):
drug kingpin, thought they'd be cool to have in his
like ponds. And then they had to remove them back
to Africa. So you know, the guy was a pioneer
in zoology as well. People just didn't realize it.

Speaker 2 (28:09):
Speaking of the hippopotamus. Is JB.

Speaker 1 (28:11):
Pritzker going to be the Democrat nominee?

Speaker 6 (28:16):
Oh man?

Speaker 2 (28:18):
No?

Speaker 8 (28:18):
Also, can I just say that there are amazing drugs
for this stuff?

Speaker 6 (28:21):
Now?

Speaker 2 (28:21):
Like what is what's his deal?

Speaker 8 (28:23):
It's clearly, I mean deeply he's deeply unhealthy, like he's rich.

Speaker 2 (28:29):
Are you I want to ask JV.

Speaker 8 (28:30):
Pritsker, are you that lazy that you won't take a
shot once a week that will give you back your health,
that will take your A one c down from like
thirty three or something? I mean, are you that unwilling
to change.

Speaker 6 (28:42):
JB.

Speaker 8 (28:43):
Pritzker' it's a fair quote. Like other people, it's expensive.

Speaker 2 (28:46):
I get it.

Speaker 6 (28:47):
He's a billionaire.

Speaker 2 (28:48):
He's a billionaire.

Speaker 8 (28:49):
Uh No, it's it's Gavin Newsom is the scumbag in
chief right now for the Democrats, no question about it.
AOC is positioning herself. I think to be a VP
on that on any ticket, she'd be a you know,
a Democrat who brings that social media sizzle to them.
And you know, there's that part of the party that
would want Wes Moore from Maryland just because you know,
it seems like a normal.

Speaker 2 (29:09):
Guy and like an American.

Speaker 8 (29:11):
That part of the Democrat party doesn't call the shots anymore.
So I think you're going to see some really interesting stuff.
I mean, I think Gretchen Whitmer's gonna get in the mix.
But for me, Hunter Biden, you know, my partner, Clay,
my co host, I should say Clay, he thinks that
Hunter's gonna run. And that's so insane that I can

(29:32):
entirely discount it. It's so crazy that I'm like, is
that he can? I say, definitely not. I don't know,
because Branda Devine said the same thing. But Hunter Biden
is a delusional, a delusional maniac, and that's actually good
among Democrats these days.

Speaker 2 (29:48):
So there you have it.

Speaker 1 (29:49):
Oh it is, and it's easy to see why Gavin
Newsom would want, you know, aoc underneath them.

Speaker 2 (29:54):
Buck. Thank you, my friend. I appreciate it so much.
Come back soon. We'll be bad.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
You know why the bread's good in Europe? We got
stuck in France for two days. It's a long story
over Christmas.

Speaker 2 (30:16):
Time, but all the bread was so good. It was amazing.

Speaker 1 (30:20):
It turns out there's a law requiring it to be
made the same day. It's also good because it's fresh.
Fresh things are better. That's not exactly news.

Speaker 2 (30:31):
You know that.

Speaker 1 (30:31):
I know that. But here's the thing. We don't ever
think about that when it comes to things we buy
in glass bottles, things like olive oil. We know we
want fresh fruit and fresh bread, but we go down.

Speaker 2 (30:44):
The grocery store. I would just grab a botlive olive oil.
All that looks authentic.

Speaker 1 (30:49):
You know some of that stuff is years old. Let
me change your cooking world farm fresh two four six
dot com. You will find olive oil fresh from the
farm there. In fact, they'll send you a thirty nine
dollars bottle of this olive oil.

Speaker 2 (31:08):
All you do is pay a buck to cover the shipping.
Try one bottle. My wife is hooked. You'll always have
some in your house. Farm Fresh two four six dot com.
What about for your values?

Speaker 6 (31:28):
I mean, is eight years old too young?

Speaker 2 (31:31):
Yeah? I mean, look, I.

Speaker 9 (31:34):
Now that I have a nine year old just became nine.
Come on, man, I get it. So those are legit,
you know, it's it's interesting just the issue of age.
I haven't I'm as I and I'm as someone.

Speaker 10 (31:50):
That's been so focused on equality, broadly LGBT rights, particularly
gay marriage. The trans issue for me is also novels.
It's over the last few years, I'm trying to understand
as much as anyone else, the whole pronoun thing. Trying
to understand all of that. Well, you know that was

(32:12):
like the hell, I mean, all that stuff, I get it. This,
all this stuff started to collapse on us. I joked
with Charlie about LATINX.

Speaker 2 (32:20):
You know, it's like he was created in a lab
to be a politician. What did he just say there?
I mean, he's one of the best at that I've
ever seen. Hey, man, I get it, you know, I
just stand a nine year old LGBT. I don't even
know does that work? I guess it does work. He's

(32:40):
governor of California. Joining me now.

Speaker 1 (32:42):
Jennifer Gallardi knows a little something about California, and that's
slick haired freak Avin Newsom. She's a senior policy analyst
with the Heritage Foundation. Jennifer, look, I hate to say
this because it doesn't work on me, and it's certainly
the slick here only makes me jealous, but that that
doesn't work on people, right.

Speaker 9 (33:01):
I I'm sorry.

Speaker 4 (33:03):
I lost it with the sign languaging. So maybe sign
language some people, but Jesse, I don't know.

Speaker 6 (33:13):
I can't this little thing.

Speaker 4 (33:16):
I'm like, is he doing the Trump dances? I literally
am crying because i'd heard that clip, but I didn't
see it in the flesh until just now. And I think,
I think, what's his name? The guy on gray gut
Felt tyrus Or He's like, he's signed languaging with the prostitute,
a death lostitute. So I apologize. I need to gather

(33:37):
my thoughts.

Speaker 2 (33:40):
You know, I go ahead, if you wanted to go ahead, God, No,
go ahead, go ahead, no, you know.

Speaker 4 (33:46):
Every now and then I get some gems on Facebook
from my liberal friends. This is always like my lab right.
I look on Facebook to see I do it daily
just to see what some of my old cohort are saying.
And I'm sad to say it does work on some people,
because there's a response from someone and I'm just reading verbatim.

(34:08):
Love this. If only the rest of the country gave
Newsom a chance. I love him, smart and quick on
his feet. But when I travel to the Midwest or South, damn,
they hate him and hate us.

Speaker 6 (34:20):
They call us evil.

Speaker 4 (34:21):
And someone else said he is effing incredible, the ability
to call out the facts and stats and just state
the truth. I mean, it's they really believe he is
the next coming of Jesus. Like maybe it is the hair.
I don't know. It's weird because they don't ever think
about the policies. I'm like, are they not living in California?

(34:42):
Are they not living under this? Do they not feel
the pressure of the gas prices and the cost of living?
Do they not care that their children are being indoctrinated?
Do they not care that he flip flops on every
single issue. One day he's hanging the gay Pride flag
and the next day he's like, Oh, I don't know. Oh,
it's weird he's doing. I don't know about the whole
pronoun thing. We never used it. He's busting up. I

(35:06):
don't understand. I think they're so buried in their ideological
views that they can't actually see who he is and
how he operates.

Speaker 2 (35:17):
Jen what do the normies think about him?

Speaker 1 (35:20):
I know what you and I think about him, and
I know what your friends whose snort lines of SSRIs
think about him. But I'm talking about the normal human being.
He just comes off to me as very used cars
many but again, rising to the position of governor of
California is no small thing.

Speaker 2 (35:38):
He's selling himself to somebody.

Speaker 4 (35:41):
Yeah again, I think those outside of California see it.
I don't think he has a shot at the presidential
I mean, maybe he'll take the nomination, but I don't
see them as putting him as the front runner, because
I think most people do see beyond his salesman shtick,
his hair, his sign language, and but what's said is

(36:07):
like he's even below I believe I saw the poll.
Kamala Harris, I think she is who most Democrats want
to see in the prime In twenty twenty eight, run
and I'm like, oh my goodness, this is this is
great news for us. What I can't fathom is I've
been listening to podcasts. I guess he's making the rounds
now Ram Emmanuel. I'm like, that's your guy. That's the

(36:30):
guy who's intelligent, who can speak logically, who has maybe
we might agree with the solutions, but he actually has
some solutions, I think. And so they don't want that
though they want socialism, they want Mandami, they want the
crazy extreme, and I think it's working for the younger

(36:51):
demographic of that party, and that's where the momentum is
in that party. The AOC's, the Mondami's, It's gonna be fun.

Speaker 6 (37:03):
I guess.

Speaker 1 (37:05):
Look, I'm I'd be lying if I said Kamala I'm
shocked that Kamala Harris is on top of newsome. But
the setting that aside, let's talk about the trans issue stuff.
This is not popular. It's more than just you know,
men and women's sports. It's not popular to normal people.
It's weird, it's freaky. They don't understand it. It's a loser,

(37:27):
always has been a loser for the Democrat Party. But
are they so trapped in it? They can't get out
of it because they can read pull numbers. As dumb
as they are, they know they're unpopular on this.

Speaker 2 (37:38):
Can they get out?

Speaker 4 (37:40):
I mean again, they should, but they won't. I don't
know why they're sorry. I don't know how to turn
off these notifications. They should, but they won't, and I
don't know why they are so. I think rom Emmanuel
said that the loudest voice is not always the most
important or something, but that's who that's who they attract
or the loud voices. Instead, they're writing articles on how

(38:04):
to be more authentic. I don't know if you saw
the Washington Post article, is that you know the key
to winning twenty twenty six and twenty twenty eight is
to use more cusswords and to fight like Trump and
to be trumpier, right, and more more aggressive and more offensive.
And I'm like, the only reason that works is because
it's Trump and that's who he is, that's his authentic style.

(38:27):
And the other thing is Trump rarely curses, right if ever,
he let off that one f bahum when he was
talking about peace in the Middle East and says they
don't know what the bleep they're doing, which everyone kind
of was like, oh, yeah, that's true. But you know,
they don't get it. They don't understand how to talk
to Middle America because they've never been there. They don't understand,

(38:49):
to your point earlier, that this is a losing issue
for them. They can't get out of their these elitist
bubbles that they've created for themselves. And you know why
they stick to their guns on this, I don't know,
because it's the loudest part of the party, but it's
not going to win them many favors. And and you know,

(39:10):
the other thing I pointed out in a response to
the Washington Post article is that they if you need
to write an article about how to be authentic, you're
not authentic. And they can't do these long form podcasts.
I think we saw knew some kind of fumble with
Sean Ryan. I mean, some people thought he was brilliant,
but I think most people saw like I did, it
was humorous how he was responding. I don't know, he

(39:33):
was all over the place. Because they don't have foundational principles.
They go wherever the wind blows, and like you said,
people see that they go wherever they think they can
get elected, as opposed to standing on principles. So when
they come against hard issues, they kind of have to
flip flop. They're trying to be everything to everybody as
opposed to these are our values, These are founding principles, right.

(39:56):
I mean Conservatives to a certain extent do that. They're
you know, we're all they're all members of politics. They're
all playing the political game. But it's like, we know,
hard work, discipline, freedom, there's kind of some very genuine
foundational principles that they can always fall back on. It
doesn't seem like the Dems have that. They fall back
on identity politics, which changes every week, so they've got

(40:18):
to change every week.

Speaker 2 (40:21):
What about JB.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
Pritzker of Illinois, He fascinates me, you know, governor of Illinois.
He's super fat, which I think makes him more relatable,
especially with America today.

Speaker 2 (40:31):
I think a fat guy from Illinois could be threatening.

Speaker 4 (40:35):
I don't think so. I mean, I think he's on
a true listen, say what you will. Trump'snowmail supermodel, but
there's a certain he was a reality star. Right. There's
something attractive about him to some people, whether it's his
personality or his sense of humor, even as kind of

(40:56):
maybe inappropriate as it is, there's something that the American
people related to. I don't think people, particularly with the
Maha movement as powerful as it is right now and
as many sweeping reforms as we're talking about health. It
was a cornerstone of this past election. I think it's
going to continue to be important. They look at Jav

(41:16):
I don't know. I look at that guy and I'm
just I'm so turned off. I can't even look at him.
So I don't think he's a viable option. But again,
they never cease to amaze me.

Speaker 2 (41:27):
Jesse, tell me about the Maha movement. How are we
doing on all that.

Speaker 4 (41:34):
I think we're doing great. I think we're making strides.
We have to remember that these are incremental changes. You know,
the left will come and say, like, oh, Coke changing
from corn syrup to cane sugar, really that that's a
big win, And I'm like, well, it is kind of
corn zerup is highly processed. We've got huge subsidies going
to corn that make it an abundant kind of food
product that fuels all this junk food. So I think

(41:57):
we're making small wins. I'm really heartened by Marty McCarey
and the FDA's focus on particularly women's health. I think
that's going to be a big issue. And if some
of the liberal women can get out of their ideological bubbles,
they would see that this is like huge, This has
been a huge gap in health is women's issues and

(42:19):
women's studies and HRT hormone replacement therapy and not sweeping
menopause under the rug or infertility. These are all big issues.
I think we might face some trouble in the midterms.
Are these potential liability shields for pesticides, because that's really
where people were strong against in the pharmaceutical realm, And

(42:42):
it's not an outright liability shield like we did with
pharmaceutical companies, but it will make it very hard for
people to bring cases against the companies that produce pesticides.
So it kind of got snuck in in a House
appropriations bill. It hasn't been voted on completely yet. And
then I think they're going to recess today for the summer,

(43:05):
so we'll see. I think some MAHA people are very
upset about that, but these are all the things we're
going to have to navigate through the actual You know,
the winning was kind of easy, the momentum the excitement
make America healthy again. It's such a great tagline. Everybody
wants to be healthier, No one wants to be subject
to food addiction and all these things. This kind of

(43:25):
biomedical security state. But now the hard work comes and
making the policy and really convincing the members of Congress
that this is this needs to be a priority, or
they'll lose a vote.

Speaker 2 (43:40):
I always loved recess and made me think about recess
in school.

Speaker 1 (43:43):
I had so much fun. It was my favorite time. Jennifer,
thank you so much. I appreciate you. All Right, we'll
be back. Election season is now, and it's always now.

(44:11):
That doesn't mean that you have to worship politics.

Speaker 2 (44:13):
When I say that, what does it mean? How about this?
How about this? Once a month you can put a
little reminder on your calendar, a little repeat aminder. Once
a month.

Speaker 1 (44:24):
Go on your Secretary of State's website, your city's website,
your county's website. Figure out where and when the local
elections are. That's very easy, isn't it.

Speaker 2 (44:34):
And then step two send that information to your friends.
Don't let them blow you off either.

Speaker 1 (44:39):
Hey got a school board election, need you to vote
for Jesse Kelly school Board elections on Tuesday.

Speaker 2 (44:45):
I'm going to be reminding everybody you don't have to
be annoying.

Speaker 1 (44:49):
Know when the dates are, tell people what to do,
Tell people when that's how we win. Become an activist.
We'll do it again.

Speaker 2 (45:00):
The Undecoding Top, the fading cot bunding areas of the
Undecoding Top, the fidd
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Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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