Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a wonderful Wednesday. Did America screw up when we failed
to conquer half the world during World War Two? Yes?
I will tackle that subject in just a few moments,
(00:33):
But first I need to discuss something about this Minnesota assassination.
You know, Minnesota State ret Melissa Hortman. Guy shows up
at her house. Fifty seven year old man mask on,
pretending to be a police officer, murders her, murders her husband. Okay,
(00:55):
all right, I got this email, Oracle Supreme. I feel
like I fell victim to the Bongino twenty four hour Rule,
X and Fox were claiming the Minnesota shooter of that
poor woman, Melissa Hortman was shot by a radicalized Democrat.
They posted No King's pictures in the guy's car. Say
(01:15):
he was appointed by Walls, Say he was bad about
Hortman's illegals, so on and so forth. The next day,
I hear the left is spinning that the right is
making up all these things, that he's actually a Republican.
I don't know what's real anymore. Let the Oracle set
us straight. Was this due to radical left communist or
a radical right wing wacko? His name is John. Okay,
(01:41):
we have this headline too from the Blaze phone associated
with the accused assassin's home traveled to Dubai, Nepal, India
and Turkey. Okay, all right, let's digest something here, and
it's not about this particular story which you've I mean,
(02:03):
I don't mean to insult you, but I've emotionally moved on,
haven't you. I only have so much emotional outrage in
my body every day. I still feel terrible for the families.
It's not that it's not a big deal, but you've
emotionally moved moved on. I've emotionally moved on. So let's
discuss this. It'll help us digest future things. You know how,
(02:26):
I've been talking a lot about discernment late lately, a
lot discerning information, sifting through information, because today there was
an outrageous story, and tomorrow there'll be an outrageous story.
And guess what, the next day there'll be an outrageous
(02:46):
story and you're not gonna believe this. The next day
after that, an outrageous story, over and over and over
and over and over again, and for people. All people
don't think you're unique, same way, everybody's same way. It's
hard to know what do we believe? What do we
go with. Let's focus on this story. What was this guy?
(03:09):
We know Tim Walls appointed him to a board, but
that may mean something, that may mean nothing. Me allow
me to explain. Here's something for you. Yes, there's a
chance that Tim Walls and this guy were pen pals
from high school and the guy wanted a gig and
Tim Walls called him up and said, hey, crazy assassin guy,
(03:31):
I'd like you on a board. There's a chance that happened.
There is there's also a chance that Tim Walls never
met this guy or even heard of him. That Tim
Walls has a staffer whose brother's uncles brother's uncle's nephew
wanted this guy to have a job on a board
and they gave it to him. Well, there are pictures.
(03:53):
They have pictures. Okay, do you have any idea. Look,
I'm a dumb radio host. You have any idea how
many pictures I take with people every single time I travel,
every time i'm out and about every single time. Hey,
you want to take a selfie? You want to. Can
we take a selfie together? And by the way, that's
totally cool, It's really cool. It's no bother at all.
(04:14):
I'm not complaining. I'm not complaining at all. But you
could be a freaking serial killer. I'm not gonna turn
you down. I'm just a normal dude. You want to
take picture, you want to talk, let's talk. I don't care.
I'm not gonna Hey, hey, Chris, run a background check
on this guy before we put a picture on his Instagram.
You can get a picture with anybody. What's that mean?
Doesn't mean anything? So there confusion. You mentioned the no
(04:38):
Kings material in his car? Did you look at that picture?
Have you looked at it? Go look at it again,
just while we're talking here. I'm sure you can do
an internet search. Go look at the picture from the
guy's car. It's a stack of papers, all of them
(05:00):
seemed to say, at least from what I can tell,
no Kings in big magic marker, no other marks whatsoever.
How'd that get there? He put it there? Do you
know that? You sure no one else? Did you sure
a dirty cop didn't put that there? Are you sure
(05:22):
Democrat operative Republican operative didn't put that there. I don't know. Oh,
but he traveled to dud what was it, Dubai, Nepal, India,
and Turkey. Okay, if you picked up my cell phone
and tracked everywhere I've been in the last what three years,
(05:43):
you will find that I was in Turkey, I was
in Paris, I was in Israel, I was in but
people travel. Maybe he was overseas being recruited by a
foreign intelligence organization. Maybe he just loved to go on
vacations by Disney. I have no earthy and you don't
(06:06):
know either. My point in this little talk is not
about this particular case, because I don't know and we
may never know. And Jewish producer Chris brought up this
particular point. We are anxious in cases like this to
automatically assign a motive that fits in our box. When
(06:26):
I see a deranged, violent assassin in this country, the
odds are that's going to be a Communist, because the
Communists commit ninety nine point nine percent of the acts
of political violence in the country. Plus I don't like
Democrats anyway, so it's easy for me to say that.
But maybe he wasn't. Maybe he was just nuts. That's
the point. Chris made. There are those people too. You
(06:47):
know that story about Gabrielle Giffrid's getting shot in the head.
Remember I was her Republican opponent three weeks I lost
to her three weeks before. That guy showed up, shot
a bunch of people, killed people, and shot Gabrielle Gifford's
in the head. And I remember this because post assassination attempt,
(07:10):
of course, all the Communists tried to come down on
me like they always do. I mean, look, they all
got together and pulled the Chuck Schumer on me.
Speaker 2 (07:16):
Increase in violence, The threats of violence against members didn't
happen by accident. It happened because of the coarseness of
the debate. But beyond that, the kind of rhetoric that
we hear some in the hard right use, which at
least some people think gives them a permission structure to
do very evil things.
Speaker 1 (07:37):
They pulled the same thing on me. Jesse had events
where people shot guns. He was always talking about how
horrible gifference was. But I was actually curious about that too,
did you know that. I don't think I've ever told
anybody this. I was curious, and to be honest, I
was a little worried because when you go kill a
(07:58):
bunch of people, and it was the person I just
lost to in a very heated congressional race, all right,
I was worried they were gonna find a Jesse Kelly
bumper sticker on the man's car. I was worried. I thought, Look,
there could have been a picture of me with him
at an event. You know how many people you take
pictures with when you're running for office. What if there's
(08:19):
a picture of me having my arm around him. What
if we sat down at a big table and at
a beard egg. I was nervous too, Man, what if
we are linked? What if he did do it? They
went digging through all the guy's stuff. He was just crazy.
He wasn't even a Democrat, he wasn't even a Republican.
He was a nutjob. If you tried to sift through
(08:43):
all the weird crap and whatever it was journal manifesto,
I could never sort through it all. But if you
read through the stuff, he seems like a crazy guy
who wanted to get famous by doing something wild. To
be honest, after we got undigesting all the stuff we read,
(09:04):
I think God saved my life. I think that would
have been me that day. I think he was going
to go kill whoever the most famous local politician was,
and that could have been me standing in a grocery
store parking lot. Now, granted, everyone on my team was armed,
so that guy would have never got arrested. He would
have been dead very shortly after. But you're not generally
(09:26):
gonna stop some nutball who walks up and puts one
in your head. He probably would have got me. How
would I know, come up right behind you and never
know what happened? Sometimes people were just crazy. What happened
in Minnesota?
Speaker 3 (09:42):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (09:42):
How about this? I don't know and you don't know,
And whenever the next outrage will be War four and
domestic who knows. We have to be discerning, Calm down
when these glories happen. Calm down and sift through the information.
(10:06):
We have to be sifters, and we have to be
extra sifty. Haha, how about that word, what Chris? We
have to be extra sifty when we are getting information
we want, we like, when we are getting confirmation information,
be extra calm and sift. All right, let's talk about Schumer,
(10:29):
shall we? And AOC? How do they keep getting elected?
Let's talk about feeling good. I'm not even talking about
physically right now, gentlemen, let me talk to you for
a moment. Do you get depressed randomly? I'm not talking
about your sad when you watch Old Yeller or when
(10:50):
your football team loses. I mean randomly. Maybe you're driving
home from work, sitting around, get sad, really really down
and you really can't put your finger on it. Have
you got your testosterone checked? Lo ti, you'll do that
to you. One thing you don't see coming when you
(11:11):
start taking a male vitality stack from chalk natural herbal supplements.
One thing you don't see coming is what a great
mood you're in. You just feel good because your mind
needs it. You do it, and do it naturally. You
are ninety days away from feeling good again. Call or
(11:32):
text them five zero chalk three thousand. That's three. That's
ch zero Q. By the way, five zero chalk three thousand.
We'll be back. Miss something. There's a podcast, Get it
on demand wherever podcasts are found, The Jesse Kelly Show.
(11:52):
It is The Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Wednesday.
Don't forget. You can email this Jesse at Jesse kellyshow
dot com back to this China thing, because Scott Bissent
sat down with Miranda Devine on her podcast. Here's what
he said.
Speaker 4 (12:10):
Do you think that we're going to get to a
point that Donald Trump is said he wants where China
opens up to America.
Speaker 5 (12:18):
Well, on the whether that'll open up, we'll see. I
believe that Chinese were feeling more pain. Their system takes
pain better, but I believe it was probably very painful
for them.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
Because I wanted to play that part because I just
wanted to remind you of what had happened and what
Scott Bissent and Donald Trump are still feeling, the sting
of we forget about this and we're lost in all
the war? Would they wrong? Talk tonight and all that,
But there are other things at play that have a
(12:53):
lot more to do with us. Remember when the tariffs
first came down on China from the Trump a minute,
Remember what happened here, not only to the stock market,
to Donald Trump's poll numbers. Right now, Donald Trump's approval
continues to climb, climb, climb, climb, climb, And unless you
(13:14):
remember that little blip in the radar, you may think
it was high The entire time. But there was one
moment in Trump's presidency so far, his second presidency so far,
there was one moment where his popularity dipped where he
was not popular, and that one moment was when he
(13:35):
slapped China with those tariffs. China responded and the stock
market dipped. That's what Scott Descent is talking about.
Speaker 4 (13:45):
Do you think that we're going to get to a
point that Donald Trump said he wants where China opens
up to America.
Speaker 5 (13:52):
Well, on the whether that'll open up, we'll see. I
believe that Chinese were feeling more pain, that their system
takes pain better.
Speaker 1 (14:03):
But what's he talking about their system takes pain better. Well,
they have a dictatorship, one party rule, dictatorship, and their
people just in their DNA. It's not that this is
Chinese people. They're not American, they're not born American. Their
(14:24):
people are more likely to accept abuses to their freedom,
to accept restrictions, to accept things their government tells them.
It's just a different culture, different part of the world.
In America, our DNA, for understandable reasons is don't tell
me what to do. Nobody gets to tell me what
(14:44):
to do. But I want you to remember what Scott
Beissent just said. And I want you to remember that
little dip in the stock market, and I want you
to remember these things going forward. For this reason. American politicians,
all of them, even once who can't run for reelection,
they are always mindful of getting cross with the American people,
(15:09):
getting too cross with the American people, and what it
will mean for their power and the power of their
political party. And none of them will push that too far.
This wasn't this wasn't even a criticism of anyone. It's
an acknowledgment of reality. In China, if your Chinese stock
(15:31):
market takes it in for two or three weeks, you
can survive, because, look, you know the system they have
in place. The Trump administration had big dreams of yanking
a lot of Chinese business and putting it back here
on American soil. Good dreams, I might point out, that's
what we should all want. But the Trump administration ran
(15:53):
headfirst into that ugly, ugly woman we know as reality,
and reality is the American people will not tolerate gigantic
amounts of economic pain. You can be popular, popular, popular, popular, popular,
months of popularity. You are mister popular. You're practically me
(16:17):
an event what Chris? And eventually people wake up one day,
they open up their merrill lynch do they even still exist?
They open up their marrow lynch four oh one k
and figure out they lost fifty thousand dollars yesterday and
your popularity is gone. It's a struggle, a constant struggle. Oh,
(16:41):
that probably would be a good time to mention. Are
you paying attention to the news. You know already that
Trump met with his military aids. You know that. Look again,
I'm not going to sift through it because we don't
do breaking news here, but possibly as we speak and
bombs are dropping from the sky. Do you know what
(17:03):
the stock market's going to look like when it opens
up again on Friday? It doesn't open up tomorrow because
of Juneteenth, but you know what it's going to look
like on Friday when it opens up. You have twenty
four hours to call gold Co. Now would be a
great time to call gold Co and make sure the
(17:24):
bottom doesn't drop out again. They'll send you a free kid.
Let them take care of your retirement eight five five
eight one seven gold or do it online. Jesse likes
gold dot com. All right, listen to what he says.
Speaker 4 (17:44):
Do you think that we're going to get to a
point that Donald Trump is said he wants where China
opens up to America.
Speaker 5 (17:52):
Well, on the whether they'll open up, we'll see. I
believe that Chinese were feeling more pain. Their system takes
pain better.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
But I believe he said their system because he wasn't
trying to be condescending, but what he meant was the
Chinese people will take more abuses on behalf of their government.
The American people will not. There is a chance we
wake up to a rocky market on Friday. Either way,
it's do some emails. Jesse, Please explain how Schumer and
(18:27):
AOC keep getting elected. New Yorkers are sick of the
immigrant baggage. Well, New Yorkers are sick of the immigrant baggage.
I'll put it to you this way, because I hear this.
I get these emails from places like New York, from
places like California, Oregon. You sent me a lot of
(18:50):
these from Oregon. Washington. We have a lot of Washington State.
We have a lot of listeners in Washington State who
emails something similar. Jesse. Everyone I talk to is sick
of all these illegals. Jesse, everyone I talk to sick
of the COVID stuff. Jesse, I don't understand how do
Democrats keep getting elected when everyone I talk to is
(19:11):
sick of filling the blanks. So let's talk about that next.
Is he smarter than everyone who knows? Does he think so? Yeah?
The Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a wonderful, wonderful Wednesday. Remember, if you missed any
(19:33):
part of the show, you can download at iHeart, Spotify iTunes.
I'm going to get to my US Navy talk in
World War Two in a moment, but I just wanted
to touch on this because she asked, how does Chuck
Schumer keep getting elected? How's AOC keep getting elected? New
Yorkers are sick of the immigrant baggage? Okay, let me
ask you a simple question, very simple. How many people
(19:56):
do you know, or you yourself? How many people do
you know have said something to you at some point
in their lives about wanting to lose weight or get
in shape? How many people? I mean everyone said that.
I've said it to you multiple times. Everyone said that.
(20:17):
Everyone's gotten a little frumpy from time to time, looked
in the mirror, and said, oh my gosh, I'm cupcakeing
over my boxers. This is terrible. I'vet everyone. Okay, now,
now you have that number, at least a rough number.
All right, how many did it? How many? Yeah, it's Susie.
I'll tell you what. I put on my dress last night,
(20:39):
and it used to fit so well, but now I'm
bursting out of the thing, and not in a good way.
I bet I'm embarrassed. I got and then she started
eating better, working out, got herself right. How many actually
did it? A small percentage. You don't have to find
a number. It's a small percentage. It is human nature
(21:02):
to complain about things yet not do anything about it.
It feels good to complain in fat. Complaining makes you
feel like you're doing something about it. When you complain, hey,
i'm too fat, in a way, in the way the
human mind works, you feel like I started to tackle
(21:24):
the problem, after all, I told Susie about it. Today,
Blue state democrats are all this way, all of them.
You mentioned New York, So let's talk about New Yorkers, because,
as you know, I'm in love with the place, always
have been love wr and I have a bunch of
friends who live there all the time, and they're always
(21:45):
complaining about New York City. I like it more than
they do. New Yorkers are generally like this. Though. They're
complaining about the trash, they're complaining about, Well, it was Deblasio.
Now they're complaining of They're already preemptively complaining about Cuomo.
They're complaining about this, They're complaining about that. They're complaining
about every Eric Adams, they're complaining about the city council.
(22:07):
They're complaining about. Oh and by the way, I don't
care if you any of this offends you. It's true
and everyone knows. This is how people talk. They complain
about every single ethnic group by name. And these are
all my friends, and they're from all the ethnic groups. Ah, Jesse,
it's these freaking Puerto Ricans. Yeah, well you can't the
Italian screwed up that part of town. Yeah, well, you
(22:29):
can't believe how bad it is in the black neighborhoods.
It's constant. Okay, what are you doing about it? Oh? Nothing?
Who you gonna vote for? Well, I don't know, whatever, Democrat.
It's human nature. It's why I've told you a million times.
(22:50):
It'll hopefully make a dentth in some of them. Those
magical words you say to your Democrat voting friends whenever
they're complaining about whatever. You voted for this, those magical
four little words. Especially Democrats, they love, absolutely adore washing
(23:14):
their hands of the way they vote. They will vote Democrat.
They do this in California all the time. Democrat up
and down the ballot and then the next breath. I
can't believe the taxes in the state. I can't believe
how expensive it is. It's crazy, how dirty it's gotten
in this town. It used to be so nice. You
know what you say to him, you voted for this.
(23:37):
I love Chicago. Chicago's the best. What a great history
in this city, great shopping sector. Oh my gosh, this
crime's out of control. Jesus's crazy here, It's nuts. Hey,
who'd you vote for? Oh, Brandon Johnson, you voted for this.
The Democrat voter in the blue state is made may
(24:00):
be the most skilled person in human history at walking
away from accountability for their own actions. And that's exactly
why they descend like a freaking plague of locusts on
red states all the time and show up and start
voting Democrat again. Ah, yeah, I destroyed California. I voted
(24:22):
Democrat for forty years. We can't afford to live there now.
My wife just got robbed at gunpoint and that's why
we're here in Montana. Oh hey, what Democrat am I
going to vote for? Now? They're famous for it. It's
amazing to watch. Now I need to talk about something
and it's really, really, really important, So I need your
attention for a second. I want to talk about our
(24:46):
fleet at the end of World War Two, our Navy fleet.
What is this in relation to nothing whatsoever? It was
just a thought I had today. Okay, if you have
to know, I have already begun my research on the
Kamikazes of the Pacific War, because I promised you that
would be the next one, and so that has begun. No,
(25:08):
you're not getting it Monday. Don't get your hopes up.
But because that has begun, I'm once again digging through
all these different books I have and things. Hear me out,
and you may you may have to set aside your
morality for this for a moment. Just hear me out.
(25:30):
Post World War Two, the United States Navy was maybe
the most jaw dropping military force in the history of mankind.
We had spent so much time, and more importantly, we
had spent so much money building up this fleet of
(25:52):
every kind of ship, of the most modern ships, that
it wasn't just that we had the best ships, which
we did. We had better radar than everyone. We had
better this. We had. Better that we had the best ships,
we had the most of them. All right with me?
What can you do when you completely control the sea
(26:14):
and the air. You can either conquer anywhere you want,
or at least destroy almost anywhere you want. And you
definitely can cut off any kind of a water based country.
Doesn't just have to be an island, but any country
that relies on the ocean to get their supplies in
(26:35):
and out, you can cut them off. In fact, the
greatest argument against dropping the atom bombs on Japan, for
those people who disagree with such a thing, the greatest
argument against it was we were already starving them to death.
They were going to have a rebellion themselves because we
were sinking all the ships coming in. Our navy was
so incredible they couldn't get anything in. And that was
(26:57):
before we were fully committed. We could have just surround
that whole place and watched them starve until they gave up. Now,
setting that aside, here's my question. How much of the
world could we and should we have conquered with that
(27:18):
naval force post World War Two? Think of all the countries,
think of how many places? And I know, look, I said,
set aside your morality because I realized when I say taken,
we're talking about bombing and starving and murdering people. And
I don't think that we want that, we wish we
would have done that. But just think about this. You
(27:39):
have the most jaw dropping military force, at least one
of them, in the history of mankind. That would be
the United States Navy at the end of World War Two.
There is no other country on the planet that can
even really hurt you significantly on the ocean, not even
the UK. By then, we would have swept them right
off the ocean. They weren't even in our league. Nobody was,
nobody he was. What could we have taken for ourselves?
(28:06):
Let me put it this way. Who could have stopped
us from taking fifty countries? You could have taken anything
you wanted, and physically nobody can stop you. And because
you owned the navy, because you own the ocean. I mean,
(28:27):
and with that comes the air, because we had a
bunch of air based whatever you get it. We own
the ocean, We own the air. You don't even have
to worry about your supply chains being messed up. What
if every single country on the planet sanctioned us, it
wouldn't have mattered. We would have owned all the materials.
You can just take everything and you can't do anything
(28:52):
about it. I bring this up because how many other
times in human history can you find where a cun
tree had access to that and did not use it
to expand themselves. I guess that's to our credit that
we didn't use it to go conquer the planet. It's
probably to our credit. I don't wish we did it.
(29:14):
But that's an interesting mental experiment, is it, isn't it
who could have stopped us? The only thing militarily we
probably couldn't have done if the end of World War
two was invade the Soviet Union, because that's virtually impossible,
and the Red Army was honestly amazing by the end
of World War two. But besides that land invasion, we
could have taken anything we wanted. Think about that. It's
(29:39):
not important obviously, I was lying about that. But it's fascinating,
isn't it. Anyway, Let's get back to emails politics next,
what Chris, we can make jokes. It's fine, we get
that right, The Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Wednesday. I have no
(29:59):
idea I chose to go down that navy rabbit hole
with you. But these are the things that cross Mike,
extremely messed up, low functioning mind. When I start reading
books and analyzing things, I think about this because, uh,
the Roman army, the Roman army was famous for this.
(30:21):
They would have a territory and then there would be
somebody on their border, usually a barbarian tribe, the Gauls
or someone like that, and the Romans would have this
huge army and they would convince themselves, hey, that they
have a big army too. Isn't that a threat to us?
(30:42):
And we have this sweet army, why don't we just
go take it? And they would go take it. And
then once they got that, there'd be another border and
then they'd look at their army and say, well, I mean,
we can just take it if we want to take it,
shouldn't we take it. Why wouldn't we take it? It
isn't it safe for to? And they just kept taking
whatever was it. Historically, when you have the most powerful
(31:06):
military force, nobody can stop.
Speaker 3 (31:11):
You.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
Go intil you're stopped. You could argue maybe the greatest
thing America ever did was not conquering the known world.
At the end of nineteen forty five, has any country
and I realize you're slimming this down because of the
(31:31):
way navies work now, but has another country in the
history of the world ever ever completely owned the seas. Ever,
we had a navy that could sweep any other navy
in the world, and other navies combined, by the way,
several navies combined, sweep them right off the ocean like
(31:52):
they're gone, boom gone. What Chris, Chris said, you could
take a region. Then you're short on manpower. But see,
that's the thing about the navy. Let's call this, uh,
let's call it Australia. We'll use Australia for an example.
I know they were an ally World War two. Is
to stay with me, let's say we want Australia. Good,
(32:13):
I Mike, And what Chris? That was good? You can't
do that anyway, Let's say we wanted Australia something crazy
like ninety five percent of Australia's population is on the coast.
You wouldn't even need a large landforce. Honestly, just the
Marine Corps would probably be enough. You blockade Australia, bomb
(32:33):
them the Smithereens. You take Australia. Okay, how large of
a force do you need to keep Australia when remember
you have the ocean. You control the ocean. Who's going
to come? How are you going to lose Australia when
(32:55):
you control the ocean. This is what doomed the Japanese. Well,
part of what doing the Japanese in the war. As
our navy got bigger and bigger and better during the war,
we didn't even have to take every island like they
had a huge island. This is famous. You nerds will
know this already. Ruball, you can look up Rutbaul. It
was a Japanese It was essentially a Pacific fortress where
(33:18):
they had all they had so many troops and supplies
and everything stationed there. And we actually agonized over it.
Do we take Rubaal? We kind of have to take
Rubaal and then we figured out, wait a minute, why
do we have to take Rubaul. We'll just sweep them
off the sea and let Ruball sit there and just
essentially wither away. Who can do anything about it? Put
(33:42):
all your troops on Ruball. That's fine, You're never gonna
see them again because we own it all. Whatever. This
is stupid. I don't know why I got on something stupid.
I want to talk about something more fun.
Speaker 6 (33:52):
American's favorable views of the Democratic Party brand are at
a record low, just twenty nine percent. That's compared to
thirty six percent for Republicans. It is the lowest ever
recorded for Democrats and CNN polling going back more than
thirty years, as you can see the party's numbers dropping
a staggering twenty points in just four years.
Speaker 1 (34:13):
See a ANSR sug that's wild. It's almost like these
people don't have the pulse of the American polity.
Speaker 3 (34:20):
I think when we win the majority in the House,
you're going to see enough Democrats make it a priority
for ice enforcement that they are no longer faceless. It
looks too much like some eighteen hundred's bank robber, or
you know, some KGB officer in Russia, you know, pulling
protesters off the streets, and that part it really bothers
(34:43):
people that that's how they're conducting it. And so show
us your face is going to be a part of
I think, you know, a democratic enforcement policy in.
Speaker 1 (34:53):
The future, stripping ice agents of their face facial protection.
That wasn't popular with Middle America. Let's check in with
Kathy Huckel. Hey, Kathy, why's the Democratic Party unpopular?
Speaker 7 (35:07):
Walking out of this courthouse? Taken away from their families.
They don't have the attention, they don't have the lawyers,
and that's why the state of New York is providing
fifty million dollars to cover legal services for people or
find themselves in this situation.
Speaker 1 (35:28):
They're taking fifty million dollars in taxpayer money and paying illegals,
paying their lawyers. That's what's happening the Democrat Party. They
hand it over every ounce of political credibility they had
to the mass importation of foreign barbarians, and now their
(35:51):
intention is to sell out every last bit of it
to keep all those people here. And every day they
wake up and see themselves cratering in the polls, and
they don't seem to be able to turn around. It's amazing.
All right, let's talk about gen Z rejecting them, Social
Security Trust Fund running out of money? What did what
(36:13):
did woo Be Goldberg say about Iran versus America? All
that plus some rough Greens talk and rough Greens has
never been more necessary in the Kelly household than it
is right now. You see, we're doing something at the moment.
What are we doing? Well, we have too many bags,
(36:33):
like like we've we've got all this clutter, this luggage
clutter over the years because we only buy them one
piece at a time because luggage is expensive. Well, now
ab has pulled out all these bags and she's figuring
out what do we need, what actually looks good together?
What should we get rid of? Fred thinks we're going somewhere,
(36:53):
and his anxiety level is he's practically a liberal woman
at this point in time, and this would when he'd
be having major digestive issues. I can't cure the anxiety
that at least we're not having to clean up after
Fred every single meal. Thank you, Rough Greens. I owe
you for that. Sprinkle some on your dog's food. Vitamins, minerals,
(37:14):
digestive enzymes, call them for a free jumpstart trial bag
eight three three three three my dog or roughgreens dot
com slash Jesse, We'll be back.