Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:11):
This is a Jesse Kelly show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Let's have some fun.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
On a Tuesday.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
It is one screwed up my word already. There we
are one week away from election day and I am excited.
I am encouraged about many things. In fact, we're gonna
talk about that in just a moment. Here's what else
we have on tap for tonight on the show. We're
gonna discuss overton windows, negotiating positions. In fact, that's gonna
(00:49):
be kind of an opening on the show. I told
you someone was gonna get fired last week, and last
night they got fired. The old Oracle called it again.
We'll talk about that, We'll talk about the FBI.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
What's happening with all these illegals in Virginia, and somebody's
getting arrested in the UK or going to prison in
the UK, and it actually does apply.
Speaker 1 (01:11):
To all of us. Never thought you'd care about those
dirty Brits?
Speaker 2 (01:15):
Did you?
Speaker 1 (01:16):
All that offensive racist jokes about Puerto Rico? And so
much more coming up tonight on the world famous Jesse
Kelly Show. I actually have to lead with something that
has nothing to do with anything, but I did something
last night. I know what I'm about to say is
going to shock you. So if you're driving, do not
(01:39):
drive off the road. If you're cooking, if you have
a boiling water, hot things, be very very careful. This
is going to be shocking. Okay, if you have a
bad heart, please sit down. Last night I made a mistake.
I know what, Chris. I made a mistake. I teased
(02:02):
something going into a break and then didn't deliver, certainly
the first time that's ever happened on this show. My
focus is just stay focused. I was talking about how
we have to teach our kids to have conversations, and
that I was doing something specific with my sons, and
I told you I was going to tell you about
it in a second. Then we went to break. Completely
(02:23):
lost my train of thought and went somewhere else entirely,
And that's my fault. That's my fault. Look, that's what
happens when you listen to someone every day who is stupid.
I can't do anything about my lack of intelligence. There's
nothing I can do about that. You get what you get.
Don't go a fit. So here's what I do one
day late. Here's what I do with my sons to
(02:45):
try to teach them how to have a conversation. I
was in Montana. We were up there for all the
funeral stuff a couple weeks ago, and we were over
at one of my mom's neighbor's house. They had a
big cook out. Oh, Chris, Cory, you guys would have died, Chris.
They had beef and pork ribs, so you could, you
would have been fine. But anyway, big smoke out, and
(03:06):
they just wanted to have everyone over. Everyone, Hey, let's
come together, let's just enjoy ourselves, have a good night.
But we ended up the guys and women separated, as
often happens at a party because women talk about lame,
boring things, and we didn't want to talk about any
of that stuff. So the dudes ended up separating, and
my sons came over and they were standing there with
(03:27):
the men, and they weren't saying anything. Very normal for
teenage boys. You're not generally confident enough yet to jump
in with the men. But I wanted them to begin
engaging in conversation. So what I told them, and what
I'm going to keep doing to them, something you can
do maybe for your kids, is I told them a
huge part of having a conversation is asking questions of
(03:47):
other people, even if you're not interested. I'm hardly ever interested,
but you have to pretend. That's part of being an adult.
So go over to the table full of women and
don't come back to me until you know something about
someone at that table you didn't know before. Go ask questions,
(04:10):
very simple, very straightforward. I just wanted to pass that
along because it was It was successful. You could tell
they came back. I actually had made them go back twice.
They came back a little more puffed up than they
were before they had done it. Nobody bit them. They
weren't shamed into anything. Bring me back a piece of
(04:32):
information about someone in that group. You got a pony up,
and go do it. I know it sounds crazy. There
I delivered on the t's. Let's move on to other topics,
shall we? Oh? Before I forget, Ali Besstucky is coming
on next hour. She has something I want to talk
I want to talk a lot about. It's something I
do talk a lot about. Toxic empathy. How the communists
(04:53):
use your values against you. She wrote actually a book
about it that's really good, really really good for young
ween me. I'm gonna be I'm gonna push it pretty hard.
And no, I don't get anything from this. It's just
when I read it, it is a It is an
instruction manual for young women on how they take your wonderful, motherly,
empathetic nature and they turn you into a filthy communist.
(05:15):
So anyway, hang on for that. Now, let's discuss something.
Last night I went off about something, as I often
do when it comes to illegal immigration and mass deportation.
I'm not gonna go over everything I said. I was
talking about how we have to harden ourselves. We have
to be prepared because if we are not, then Trump
(05:35):
is going to falter again like he did the first time.
We have to be He has to feel like everyone's
behind him. Otherwise he's gonna falter and then we can't.
We can't, we can't win. Mass deportation must happen. Must happen.
So let's have a discussion about negotiations. Because we got
(05:57):
all kinds of emails about that talk. Jesse, I'll all
for it to pour them all, Jesse. Sounds good. That
was a bunch of them. But we also got a
bunch of emails along these lines, and in fact, this
echoes what I hear and see from many of my
fellow political pundit friends, many politicians on the right. Maybe
even you said it yourself. You just didn't send me
(06:18):
an email. I saw a ton of this. Jesse slowed
down on deporting everyone. Now, not the women and kids. Jesse,
Let's at least start with the criminals. Hold on, let's
start with the criminals. Let's begin with just MS thirteen
trendy Iraguba. That needs to be first. You know what
(06:39):
the Overton window is. We've discussed it before on the
show Overton Window. You can look it up yourself. Overton Window.
What's it really about? What's the essence of the Overton window?
The essence of the Overton window is politicians. We want
them to be leaders. I want them to be leaders.
I'm guilty of this. We want our presidents to be leaders.
(07:02):
We want senators, a congressman, mayors, whatever. We want them
to be leaders. But they are, in general not leaders.
They are followers. They will follow public opinion. This is
not unique to American politicians. In case you're sitting there saying, yeah,
all our guys suck. Politicians throughout history follow public opinion.
(07:24):
Very few leaders. They're followers, and don't think it's as
unique to just people in a constitutional republic or something
where the people get to say in this monarchs. Monarchs
have historically kind of followed public opinion, because even if
you're an all powerful king and you rule and your
(07:45):
word is the law, even if that's the case, if
too many people under your rule dislike what you're doing,
you're not going to be a monarch for very long.
The people in general have the power. The idea behind
an Overton window, it is shifting the public opinion your direction,
(08:10):
and in so doing, if you shift the public opinion
in your direction, if you move that window, picture picture
a timeline. Okay, you know what a timeline looks like,
just a horizontal line going from you know, east to west, left, right,
whatever horizontal line. Now picture a little window, a little square,
(08:30):
and that's the only part of the timeline you can see.
And that's public opinion. What we've done consistently in this
country for as long as I've been alive, what we've
done is we've only moved that window left. Sometimes it's
moved rapidly to the left, sometimes it moves a little
(08:52):
bit to the left, but only left. The Overton window
has never, ever, ever, not one time in my lifetime,
moved to the right in any significant way. In fact,
it's a good spending is actually a great example of this.
Spending is a great example. They're now spending two trillion
(09:13):
dollars a year more than they take in. Janet Yellen
herself is saying, if we don't find a way to
reduce the deficit, we are in deep, deep deep doo
doo as a country. And yet there has never been
ever in my forty three years a spending cut, not
one time. There have been slight reductions in the future,
(09:39):
spending increases. Hey we're spending one hundred thousand this year.
We're gonna spend one hundred and fifty next year. Oh wait,
never mind, we'll spend one hundred and forty. And those
have always been celebrated by the right. Whoo, look at
these spending cuts. Fiscal conservatism, baby, Setting aside your anger
at that, what's that tell you? That window on government spending,
(10:01):
that Overton window along that line left left left only left,
only left at all times. So we have to change that,
don't we? You and I, all of us, to people,
all of us. It's up to all of us. We
must change that. The window of many things, not just
(10:24):
spending many things, has to begin moving right. How do
we do that? What can we do for that? And
we're specifically talking about immigration here, we're all going next,
but this is going to apply to many issues. Well,
let's discuss that next. Get the Cure for rhinos week
(10:44):
days with the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a Tuesday. Reminding you you can email
the show and you should. We adore your emails jesseat
Jesse kellyshow dot com. I actually lied. Some of them
are dumb, but we like a lot of your emails,
and Jewish producer Chris gets them and reads them and
he passes the good ones along to me. If it's
(11:06):
too long, he's not going to pass it along. If
you're complaining about an advertiss too many ads, I'm never
going to see that. I just don't even bother with that.
But most of them are really really wonderful and we
love them. Or you can leave us voicemails eight seven
seven three seven seven four three seven three. Back to
what we were discussing, the Overton window, shifting public opinion
(11:28):
in your direction, it's hard, it's uncomfortable. I need to
get that right out of the gates. I need you
to understand that right out of the gates. There is
no zero. There is no polite, nice way to shift
(11:50):
the Overton window. Why, well, what is the Overton window? Really?
It's what society has decided is acceptable when it comes
to anything. It doesn't matter your issue, spending, taxes, abortion
of immigration, doesn't matter. Society as a whole has decided
these are the parameters, these are the rules. So in
(12:10):
order to shift it, it means you're essentially breaking through
a wall or a fence in one direction or the other.
You maybe you see left wing activism oftentimes and you
think to yourself, that's gross. I hate that. Who would
do that? Why are they doing that? What's a good
example of the climate nutters, the greeny climate nutters who
(12:33):
believe in man made climate change. You me, we look
at them doing things like they'll walk into a museum
and they'll glue their butts to a van Goh painting
or something crazy like that. Or they'll they'll they'll lay
down on a highway and screw up a major highway.
Everyone's lake for work and people on the right. Maybe
you've said this will say why are they doing this?
(12:56):
This doesn't move anyone to their cause. No, oh, I
don't think the people waiting in traffic are going to
look at these people and become climate activists. But there
is a purpose, a very very focused purpose to this
crazy left wing activism. Good point, Chris, abortion activists. This
(13:16):
applies to the LGBTQ air Force people. Why are they
worrying leather chaps and pink boas on the street and
dancing in front of kids. Don't they know it's gross?
Don't they know this turns people off? They are shattering walls,
moving things to the left. It can't be done nicely,
(13:37):
It can't be done comfortably, because you're taking people's value
system and you're breaking it. You're breaking things, and you
and me will have to break things the other direction. No,
please don't put on leather chaps. I beg you, and
please don't break the law. I'm not asking you to
break the law. But shifting public opinion, shifting the window
(14:03):
cannot be done nicely or politely. It's not possible. So
let's go back to our talk about immigration. I went
off last night about mass deportation, I'm very concerned that
they will get to you, that they will play on
your emotions and they'll show crying kids and you will falter.
I'm very concerned that they're going to get to Trump.
(14:24):
Remember they did it to him last time. He had
the wonderful child separation policy at the border. He knew
exactly what needed to be done, he was doing it.
Democrats ran an up at the border, AOC's down there
crying kids in cages, kids in cages. I think that
lasted three weeks. Boom. Trump administration backed off it. Child
separation over. I'm very, very concerned the right will falter.
(14:49):
And please get this. Let's say the numbers fifteen million
in the last three and a half years. Probably short,
but let's say the numbers fifteen million. Let's say, and
this is probably under selling it. Those fifteen million are
all going to have two kids. Obviously, some won't have
(15:10):
any kids, some will have a dozen kids. A lot
of this comes from Latin America, so those are traditionally
bigger families. Let's just say, for the sake of argument,
two kids. Well, I did go to community college, but
I can do the math. That means eighteen years from now,
because of this country's insane, suicidal birthright citizenship laws. Eighteen
(15:31):
years from now, we will have thirty million new naturalized
citizens who will be voting in elections eighteen years from now.
Without mass deportation. Eighteen years from now, Republicans will never
win another national election. And eighteen years is not far away, right,
not far away. We will never win another election without
(15:55):
mass deportation. It's not possible. So back to what we
were just discussing, do you want to stop that? I'm
sure you're saying yes, I want to stop that. I
have sons. I have teenage sons. They have lord willing
a lot longer than eighteen years left on this planet.
(16:19):
In eighteen years, hopefully I'll be a grandpa. I'll bee
at kids t ball games. I don't want to lose
my country in eighteen years, universal democrat rule top to bottom.
They're all communists. Now, can you imagine the horrors these
(16:39):
filthy animals will rain down on this country if they
have no checks on their power. And thirty million new
Democrats in eighteen years, it's not a Maybe it's coming
without mass deportation, but we have to stop it, and
are only opportunity to stop. It is getting Trump elected,
(17:05):
getting a House and Senate, and praying the low TGP
finally has the guts to stand up to public pressure
and get it done. But we, you and me can
lessen that public pressure. Let's discuss how this may be
hard to hear. You're going to need some chalk, You're
(17:28):
going to need testosterone. If we are going to be
the low TGP, then just hand them the keys. Now,
why even wait eighteen years. Let's just get it over with.
We've got to be focused, We've got to be strong.
Get a male vitality stack in your veins, gentlemen, a
male vitality stack. I got this email, Jesse. I just
ordered the male vitality stack after hearing you talk about
(17:50):
it on the radio. I've got to say it was
nice getting a phone call from a company and a
representative speaking clearing English. No doubt chalk. They're hardcore anti communists.
You'll speak to an American on the phone. It probably
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(18:10):
with natural herbal supplements and they will answer questions. You
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(18:32):
more on this.
Speaker 2 (18:33):
Next Fighting for Your Freedom every.
Speaker 1 (18:37):
Day, The Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 2 (18:43):
You're listening to the ourcle love this one. It's a
scream baby, The Jesse Kelly Show.
Speaker 1 (18:50):
It is The Jesse Kelly Show on a Tuesday. Remember,
if you miss any part of the show, you can
download the whole thing on iHeart, on Spotify, on iTunes.
Talking overton windows, mass deportation, illegal immigration enforcement. So we
got a bunch of emails, A bunch of people agreed.
A bunch of people said, let's just start with the criminals.
Don't go too far, start with the criminals. Hey, just
(19:12):
the men. Start with the criminals. So let's just do this.
Let's talk about a business deal. I have started Jesse
Kelly's Ice Machines. It's a wonderful, lucrative company. I didn't
actually start it. Remember this is just an analogy, but
Jesse Kelly's Ice Machines. Because there are so many millions
(19:36):
and millions, probably billions of people who want to be
like me and own a countertop ice machine with unlimited
ice and it's gotten to a point where I'm tired
of it. I'm ready to sell the company. It's too
many headaches, and there's another business that wants to absorb it.
(19:57):
We'll call this business Chris In. Chris Inc. Understandably does
not want to pay me anything for it, looking for
a bargain basement deal. They don't want to pay me
anything for it. But I have decided before I walk
into a negotiation with Chris Inc. That I have to
get a million dollars for Jesse's ice makers. A million
(20:21):
dollars is what I need. I know. Look, we all
know Chris Inc. Is going to offer fifty cents. I
need a million dollars. Now, let me ask you something.
When I walk into that negotiation, do I sit down
at the table and say I need a million dollars?
Is that my starting position? If that's what I need
(20:42):
to get, Is that what I start with? Well, No,
anyone who knows anything about negotiation knows that's insane. If
I know Chris is going to try to get the
price down, and we all know Chris is going to
try to get the price down, I don't walk in
asking for a million dollars. If that's what I need,
(21:02):
I walk in asking for five million dollars, knowing that
Chris is going to counter with something way, way, way
less than that. Now, let's go back to our discussion
about immigration. If you wrote me one of these emails
or left a voicemail, or said something to me Jesse,
(21:22):
let's not sound bad. Let's just start with the men.
Let's just start with the criminals. Do you understand that
you are undercutting your own negotiation position before we've even
won the election. That's why the Overton window only shifts
to the left. Things exactly like that. No, that's not
(21:46):
how you shift the Overton window. How do you shift
the Overton window on immigration? You don't do it sounding nice.
You don't do it appealing to what the population wants
to hear. That doesn't shift public opinion on anything. You
take the hardest, right, most extreme position on the issue,
(22:07):
understanding that it will get watered down somewhat, but in
the end, maybe, just maybe, fingers crossed, things will move
in your direction. So you don't start out saying, he
let's just start with the men. You don't start out
with that. You start out with this deport everyone, men,
(22:30):
women and children. I want swat teams running into the schools,
scooping up everybody who doesn't have legal immigration papers. And
I want to mote at the border. I want a
hundred foot wall. I want a minefield and machine gun nets,
and I want people turned away at gunpoint. You can
(22:50):
sit there and recoil in horror and say, Jesse, that's
not who we are. Jesse gets too far, and maybe
you're even correct about that. But guess what. I have
staked out a negotiating position that is good, that is right,
even if I don't get my mote, if I don't
(23:12):
get my swat teams in schools, if I don't get
my mind field. In the end, if I take the
extreme position, maybe, just maybe I will break down that
wall and for the first time in my forty three
years of existence, that Overton window will move my way.
(23:39):
That's how we have to politic and it's not up
to me. It's up to all of us. It is
up to you and me and your neighbor, and it's
up to all of us. And remember, politicians will follow us.
(24:01):
They will follow us. I had people emailing in saying, Jesse,
Trump's not gonna do it. He's a cave last time
Trump's gonna cave. He's not gonna do it. And maybe
you're right, and you know we'll be here screaming if
that happens. But I promise you, cross my heart and
hope to die. Trump will cave if we do if
(24:23):
public opinion is well, I mean, I know, if we
don't want to look harsh, we can't. What about the
next election we have, the midterms? We can we can't
look mean. If that's what public opinion starts to be.
On the GOP, Trump will falter. I promise you he will.
If the public, all of us remain strong, maybe just
(24:45):
maybe he will remain strong. They will follow us. That's
a huge part of the Overton window understanding that politicians
are followers and they will follow the people. Will we
remain strong? If you're already giving up your negotiating position, well, Chris,
(25:09):
inc is going to underpay you for those ice makers.
I promise you that. What Chris, how do you know
I wasn't even talking about you. Maybe it was maybe
it was a different Chris. Why do you always personalize
these things? It's not it's not on you. Let's get
to some voicemails. Shall we just one or two of them?
Speaker 3 (25:27):
Jay Steele got a question for you on a very
serious subject. Was wondering if you ever found stones to
go out and buy those thermal optics and night vision
you were talking about. I was blessed with the set
of twin Grandson's anti Communists by the way, who bought
me a hog hunt College Station, Texas where we went
(25:49):
on a night vision thermal hunt. Tell you, brother, you
see a seven sixty two round on an AR fifteen
frame coming out and hitting one of them? Now you're looking,
it's a thing, good beauty.
Speaker 1 (26:02):
First of all, don't act like I haven't been hogging.
I was in the Marine Corps. That's one. Two. No,
I did not. I did not buy the mvgs. Yet,
don't say why, Chris, you know exactly why, Like four
thousand dollars. They're an astronomical matter. And here's my problem.
(26:24):
Here's here's my problem. I you know, I'm not some
super ninja specops, the one of these guys at all
the I'm nothing. I was a four year grunt Marine,
proud of that. But I'm not some super stud I'm
not I'm not Buka, right, I'm not Clay Martin, that's
not that. But I am friends with so many of
these guys, Seals and Green Berets and Air Force pjs
(26:47):
and all these guys. Here's my problem. They all have
the best of the best, and that's what I want.
I don't want bottom barrel mvgs. I realize you can
get mbgs for less than four thousand dollars or three
thousand dollars. I realize that, but I see they have
(27:09):
and maybe it's peer pressure. Maybe I don't know what
it is. I don't want to show up at a.
Speaker 2 (27:15):
Shoot and have the crappiest nfgs there. At the same time, I.
Speaker 1 (27:22):
Don't I can't bring myself to spend four thousand dollars
on something. Chris right, of course, Chris is with me.
Everyone knew Chris would be with me. I can't bring
myself to drop that kind of money on something. And
I know I should. I know I should. That is
so much money. Oh and another thing, And you're gonna
say I'm making excuses. James, my oldest is about to
(27:45):
turn sixteen.
Speaker 2 (27:46):
He turned sixteen.
Speaker 1 (27:47):
When's his birthday? November seventh. I'm gonna have to start
working on a car for him of some kind. What, Chris,
what you can save money by buying a kid? Did
you sec suggest I put together my own envgs? Chris, Okay,
I'm not ten years old putting together legos. I wouldn't
(28:10):
know what I was doing anyway, No, Chris, no, no,
See this is never mind. I shouldn't even brought it
up in front of Chris. Never mind. We're moving on.
Let's get back to talk about some other things. Someone
got fired at CNN. I told you it was coming.
I'll tell you why and just the moment. But first
I I want to discuss I tell you a lot
about rough greens. I want to talk about naturopathic doctor
(28:33):
Dennis Black for a moment. I had dinner with him
last week, and just I want to speak to the
about the man for a moment. He was really, really
wonderful to me. And I don't mean if he bought
me a steak. That's not what I'm saying. And I'm
not just talking about the rough greens and how wonderful
it is for your dog and now they have it
for cats, and you know it's the way to get
(28:54):
your dog and cat to live longer. But about the
passing of my father. He was really really great about that,
and he didn't have to do that. You know, I'm
a radio host, right, he didn't have to do that.
He has been through a lot in his life too,
which you can imagine, helicopter pilot and green beret. He's
seen some things. He was really wonderful to me, and
I appreciate that. I love. I really appreciate this company
(29:16):
so and it'll make your dog healthier and live longer.
Go put it on your dog's food. You'll see a
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We'll be back The Jesse Kelly Show on air and
(29:37):
online at Jesse kellyshow dot com. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a Tuesday. Before I get to me
being right about something, you know, everyone's mean to me.
Your mean about my hair and my massive hands. The
wife is mean. And you know how I can fi
(30:00):
in you. I should never have done this that. My
knee gets stiff now whenever I lift, whenever I fly,
it's not I'm not in pain. Whenever I go on
a ruck, it just gets super super stiff, and they
have these compression knee sleeves out there that help with
(30:21):
blood flow and things like that as you get older.
And I made the terrible mistake of confiding in you
that I got some knee sleeves. I also made the
mistake of telling my wife, and then I thought to myself,
you know what, I bet she's forgotten about it. So
I'll just try to get them off the front porch
(30:42):
because I had them delivered. I'll try to get them
off the front porch before she sees them. I'm on
a phone call today. It was a work call. It
is a big bunch of suit stuff. It was all
good stuff. Don't worry, but I'm on a work call today.
I lost track of tracking the package. Ding dong, there's
(31:02):
a ring at the door bell and I'm on a call.
I'm on speakerphone. And who do you think rounds the
corner with a big, old fat smirk on her face,
But Aubrey. She walked right up to me on that
work call. She didn't even have to say a word.
I was on a call, smirking and smiling as she
(31:23):
handed me my knee sleeves. And you know what, that's
not very nice. It's not very nice at all. Now.
What is nice is the fact that I I'm an oracle.
You see. Let's let's walk down memory lane, shall we.
We'll just do this, We'll do this chronologically. I told
you the story I think it was last week. I
(31:44):
told you the story about getting hired briefly at HLN.
It was a CNN knockoff kind of thing. I don't
even know if it's still around. And they told me
they were gonna fly me up there. They flew me
up there to debate some dirty COMI and I beat
the living crap out of him on the air, and
the producer pulled me aside after he said, that's amazing.
We want you on here permanent, permanently. Oh my gosh,
(32:05):
it was so funny and great about all that crap,
and then ghosted me. Never heard it from him again,
and I found out later on it was because I
did so well. The communist silos himself, the world of
make believe. We talk about it all the time, silos
himself in a world of make believe, and good guests
(32:27):
on communist networks break down those walls, good guests for us,
for our side, and therefore they don't last long. And
maybe you remember last week, Possibly you do remember when
I said this about my friend Ryan Gerdusky. I love
watching Ryan Gerdusky's star rise. I'm not surprised in the
least that I'm about one hundred percent sure he's going
(32:48):
to get fired from being on these CNN panels if
he keeps abusing all these crazy libs the way he's been.
That was Jesse the Oracle, Kelly, don't shake your head, Chris.
Last week week. Ryan was on one of these eight
thousand person panels on CNN last night, and he was
debating this piece of trash Meddi Hassan and Mehdi Hassan
(33:10):
had just gotten done, of course, calling you a Nazi,
me a Nazi, everyone's a Nazi, everyone who votes for
Trump Nazi, Nazi, Nazi, which is like the worst thing
you can say to someone. And Ryan Gerdsky fires back
a little jab here It was, you.
Speaker 2 (33:24):
Don't want to be called Nazis?
Speaker 1 (33:25):
Stop table and people no by me.
Speaker 2 (33:32):
I never called you.
Speaker 4 (33:33):
I mean, I'm not saying her saying.
Speaker 2 (33:34):
I'm a sward of the Palestinians.
Speaker 4 (33:36):
I'm used to it.
Speaker 1 (33:36):
Well, I hope your paper doesn't go off The thing
is is that.
Speaker 2 (33:41):
I hope your paper doesn't go off. That was very good.
Speaker 1 (33:44):
It's back and forth. You're a Nazi, Well, I hope
your paper doesn't go off.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
Well.
Speaker 1 (33:50):
Abby Philip, who was the host of that show, came
back after the commercial break.
Speaker 4 (33:56):
Back here and before we get started, I want to
just address what happened in the segment. First, I want
to apologize to Meddi Hassan for what was said at
this table. It was completely unacceptable. When we get this
discussion started, you'll see that Ryan is not at the table.
There is a line that was crossed there and it's
not acceptable to me. It's not acceptable to us at
(34:17):
this network. We want discussion, we want people who disagree
with each other to talk to each other. But when
you cross the line of a complete lack of civility,
that is not going to happen here on this shows.
Speaker 1 (34:31):
And they announced later on CNN announced Ryan Gardusky will
no longer be invited back on the network. Just remember
when the oracle speeds. I love watching Ryan Gerdusky's star rise.
I'm not surprised in the least that I'm about one
hundred percent sure he's going to get fired from being
on these CNN panels. If he keeps abusing all these
(34:52):
crazy libs the way he's been, you can take it
to the bank. What Chris. That is the burden, Chris,
and you'll never know. That's the burden of being a journalist.
Speaker 2 (35:06):
It's journalist Jesse.
Speaker 1 (35:07):
There's just no one better.
Speaker 2 (35:09):
We love Jesse. He's the best.
Speaker 1 (35:10):
Jesse. Please kiss my baby, Yesie, Jesse.
Speaker 2 (35:14):
Jesse.
Speaker 1 (35:15):
Jesse, Jesse, Hey, Oracle. I live in East Tennessee. I've
been voting for forty years. Today I voted early for
the first time. I'm writing to let you know this
was the first time I saw a more accurate reputation
representation of our population. That was a lot of big
words nailed it, young and old, black and white. Plus
the mood of the crowd was more upbeat and joyful
(35:38):
than I've ever seen at a polling location. That's how
you know they weren't communists. For the last few years,
the news has made me depressed and worried about my
grandkid's future. But after seeing these people today, I feel
that maybe we will wake up in time to turn
things around. God bless you and your family. I hear
this story so much at polling locations at places where
(35:59):
people are voting early. One, there are lots of them. Two.
People are happy, motivated, hopeful, joyful. There's a lot to
feel good about right now. We can take a step back,
and we do and talk about the huge problems we
have and the huge problems that are still to come.
(36:21):
But I'm really feeling like there might be an awakening
happening in this country. And I know you don't have
to email me all the problem. It's a potential problem.
I get it. I'm feeling hopeful. Also, I'm preparing, though,
because things might continue to go bad. They might, So
make your preparations. Like we've talked about a lot. Make
(36:44):
sure you have ammunition, make sure you have it, ability
to acquire clean water. Do not forget about the food. Please,
I tell you about my Patriots Supply all the time.
Please go to my Patriots Supply. Prepare with Jesse dot com.
They have emergency food kits four week emergency food kits
fifty dollars off right now. Prepare with Jesse dot com.
(37:05):
What are they for? One? Don't touch it, well, you
can touch it, but don't eat it. Set it aside,
don't brag about it online don't tell your friends, don't
tell your neighbors. It's emergency, nonperishable food. It lasts up
to twenty five years. Whatever may come, you will be
able to eat. We're talking two thousand calories a day.
(37:27):
They've been doing this a long time. Go look at
their reviews. They have those reviews for a reason. It
ships fast, it ships free, and they're fifty bucks off
at Prepare with Jesse dot com. All right, all right,
we'll talk a little bit more about democrats siloing themselves,
isolating themselves. It's biting them badly in the butt. Next,