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May 30, 2025 37 mins

Why does China sink millions into American schools? Should you change careers in your 30? The supreme court is allowing Trump to deport half a million illegals that the Biden administration was protecting. Watching movies with women who don’t pay attention. 

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
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 fantastic Friday. We are going to discuss so many
things this hour. We're going to talk about their Supreme
Court justices versus our Supreme Court justices. I'll get to

(00:32):
that in just a few talk about a COVID reckoning
or lack thereof. Someone's upset about it. Some guy, in fact,
I'm gonna talk to him right now, is thinking about
changing careers. I think this may end up being helpful.
Maybe not all that, and so much more coming up
on the final hour, the second hour. It's not our
final hour. I guess I'll do another one after that

(00:53):
of the Jesse Kelly Show. Dear, Dear, hal Cans. I
like this guy. I'm thirty two years old. I'm considering
a career change. I'd like to go into the trades
because I'd like to work with my hands, and the
current job is lacking in several areas. If Trump's plan succeeds,
we can expect more trade jobs, so on and so forth.

(01:16):
I currently have a full time job and a mortgage,
and based on the research I've done, not many trade
schools offer part time training. In short, am I too
old to go into a trade school? What advice would
you give? I'm giving myself six months to decide. Okay,
so I'm going to say this, and maybe this will

(01:41):
apply to you and your life, and maybe it won't
because people think about this stuff all the time, very
common thing. Should I change careers? I don't like my career.
I'd like to try this? Am I too old? Look
it applies to personal life. I want to get married.
Am I too old to try? Am I too old
for this? Am I? Am I too old to travel?

(02:03):
I've always wanted to I've wanted to see Nepal? Am
I too old? Am I too old? So I should
clarify that my answer that I'm about to give right
now is going to be unbelievably tainted, not just by
my own personal life, but by the last six to

(02:25):
eight months of my personal life. First, you remember, my
dad died. I was about what eight months ago? My
dad died, still hurt. Then not long after that, one
of my aunts died, wonderful woman, saint of a woman.
Now we just got more terrible family news about someone else.

(02:49):
It's it's uh so I've got death on the brain
right end of life on the brain. I've got it
on the brain bad right now. And I'm a Kelly.
I'm forty three years old. The Kelly men do not
live very long. We just do not. On my father's side,

(03:11):
my grandpa didn't sniff sixty. On my dad's side, my
dad died short of seventy. I think yeah, he was
like three weeks short of turning seventy, and he was,
I'm pretty sure, comfortably the oldest of all of his brothers.
All his brothers are gone too. The Kelly men do
not live long. I probably won't see seventy. I would guess.

(03:34):
If I see seventy, that's house money. I no, I
won't see eighty. This won't happen for me. I'm forty three.
That's twenty seven years left, twenty seven years, and I'm
out of here. So that bit, I've had that on
my mind now, I'm not afraid of it. I'm okay

(03:55):
with it, but I just you know, you have these
moments when you think about that, that you think about
your life, what you haven't done, what you have done.
I look at my boys, said, you know, have I
raised them? Right, am, I gonna leave od behind it.
You think about that stuff. I have taken gigantic risks
many times in my life, huge stupid risks, stupid thing.

(04:19):
Joining the Marine Corps was something no one told me
to do. Virtually everyone in my life hated it. But
I thought I was a bit of a dirt ball
of a young man and I wanted to grow up.
And I went down to the recruiting office and I
joined the Marine Corps and almost freaking died. Running for Congress,
same thing, totally crazy. I remember the first time I
called my sister when I told her I was running

(04:40):
for Congress. She about fell out of her chair. She said,
you're not even qualified. I've moved the family across the
country multiple times. I have taken big risks that have
ended in disaster, and then this whole gig ended in
obviously unbelievable success. But I didn't know that was going
to happen. I'm glad I took every one of them.

(05:04):
Because you don't have much time. You're not going to
get a second chance at this life. You're thirty two
years old, You're not eighty two in a wheelchair. If
you dream of a career in the trades, go, chase
it go. Maybe you'll fail. I want to be clear

(05:25):
about that. You might fail terribly. He might go bankrupt.
It might end in disaster. Almost every big risk I've
taken has ended in pretty much disaster, almost every one
of them. At one point I ran completely out of money.
What Chris? What Chris said? That's the problem with big
picture guy. Chris is detailed. Guy. He's stressing out over there.

(05:48):
I get that. I understand that. But when I die,
if I if I have more time, if I know
I'm about to go and I'm laying on my deathbed,
what am I going to wish I did? What am
I going to regret I didn't try? I try to

(06:08):
live my life through that lens. What are you going
to wish you had a shot at. Maybe you're a woman.
Maybe you're listening to me right now, and maybe you're thinking, Hey,
I'm great at baking. I bake really well. Maybe you're
looking for some side money, got a passion for something.

(06:28):
Maybe you've thought about being one of those women that
sells their cookies on Facebook or whatever it is, and
maybe you've talked yourself out of it a thousand different ways. Okay,
why don't you try it? Why don't you try it?
You're gonna die one day. Try it. Go out there

(06:49):
and live every single second and freaking try it. Take
a chance, fail, make mistakes, do it for the fences.
Take it for me. You'll strike out a lot, and
also take it for me. You might wake up one
day and hit a homer. I dropped my job selling

(07:11):
our V's about seven years ago, six and a half
years ago now selling our v's, decided to make a
run at a media career. That doesn't happen. You don't
just get to make that up and invent that. Who
does that? At mid thirties with a mortgage, wife, kids,
two car payments? Who does that? That's stupid, doesn't even
make sense. Here I am talking to the entire country

(07:35):
on a Friday night, because God blessed it the right
people listen for some reason, for some reason, you like
this stuff, and here I am, luckiest guy in the world.
Try it. You might might just find what you're looking for.
Dear tongue Punch and Jr. The tongue Punch was about

(07:56):
the chicken wings whatever Jesse were in trouble. This administration
isn't going to do anything to hold anyone accountable for
the sins of COVID, political persecution and many cover ups.
I feel like if it were to happen, it should
have been done by now. I know you've pointed out
with having a period of a year, I think I'm

(08:18):
ready for that right wing dictator about now. And I
hate that I'm feeling that way about this great USA.
But look at what happened when Lincoln did it just
saying says I can say his name, okay, his name
is Rob Listen. I tried to address a bit of this,
and I'll continue to try to do this from time

(08:38):
to time. At the beginning of the show, I'm not
telling you everything's going to be okay. In fact, I
know it won't be because the Trump administration, if they
were perfect, and no administration is if they were perfect,
in four years, you cannot clean up decades of corruption,
especially when there are systems in place to ensure the

(09:01):
corruption remains in place. It's not humanly possible. I don't
know that we're gonna be okay, but we are doing
right now more good things than I can remember, Republicans
doing more anti communist things than I can remember, Republicans

(09:22):
doing at any other point in my lifetime. I have
never seen this level of anti communism flowing through the
veins of the right. Do we have a bunch of
weak sister gopiers who need to go James Langford? Yes,
of course we do. Of course we do. Do we
have a mountain to climb and we might not get there?

(09:43):
Of course I don't know. But we are trending as
well as I've ever seen. It's not good enough, it's
not fast enough, and all the bad guys will not
be held accountable. Remember we've talked about this before. The book,
the book, Remember the book I've told you to read

(10:03):
many times before about the Reserve Nazi battalion. Remember that book, right,
talked about it many times. There's this Nazi reserve battalion,
and well they went around and they slaughtered a bunch
of Jews, shooting women and children in the head. Ordinary men.

(10:23):
Sorry I didn't say the name of the book, sorry, Chris.
The name of the book is ordinary men, Ordinary men,
one more time, ordinary men. That's not the part of
the book that hits me hardest. The part of the
book that hits me the hardest is spoiler alert at
the end, almost all of them took the uniform off,

(10:44):
went back and lived the rest of their lives as accountants, lawyers,
construction workers, grandpas, fathers, brothers, sisters, and held troy. They
didn't have they weren't on trial. When corruption is so widespread,
getting real justice is almost impossible, and we may not
have it in this lifetime. All right, let's move on.

(11:05):
I want to talk about the Supreme Court quickly before
we get back to these questions. I first want to
talk to you about, while speaking of justice, speaking of
where we are as a country, the fall of the
Roman Republic, when Rome went from being a republic to
being an empire ruled by an emperor. That period of time.

(11:27):
I look at it and I see America. That's exactly
what I see. I see where we are now. It's
amazing how similar the situations are. I'll put it to
you that way. You want to know about it, You
want to know what I'm talking about. Hillsdale will teach
you about that period of time for free for my listeners.
If you go to Hillsdale dot edu slash Jesse, they

(11:51):
are offering more than forty free online courses. Hillsdale doesn't
take all that knowledge and keep it to themselves. They
offer it for free to the people who listen to
this show. Hillsdale dot edu slash Jesse. All right, let's
talk about the Supreme Court. Hang on the Jesse Kelly Show.

(12:15):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a magnificent as
doctor Jesse Friday and I realized there have been some heavy,
heavy topics on the show, so heavy as ten boxes
that you might be moving. So we are probably going
to lighten it up in a couple minutes. But I'm
want to address the Supreme Court thing. The Supreme Court.

(12:40):
I hate that I even have to say these words.
It drives me crazy. The Supreme Court has decided they're
going to allow Trump to deport five hundred thousand Illegals' first,
who are these illegals? Well, remember the Biden administration was run.
I sold this communist demons who hated the United States

(13:02):
of America, and because they hate the country, they tried
to bring in as many people as they possibly could.
One of the ways they did this was this parole program. Essentially,
they not only brought them in, they put up legal
walls that prevented us from deporting them. I mean Democrats

(13:25):
are just evil. The modern democrat is evil, and voting
for Democrats as an act of evil. But we'll set
that aside. It was horrible as evil, was wrong. And
Trump's saying, well, okay, well, these are people, we know
where they are, that we know who they are. I'm
deporting them now, but there are no more protections. You're leaving.
He had to ask the Supreme Court to do it.
It's crazy to me, but the Supreme Court for once

(13:49):
decided the right way, and they said, yeah, sure, sounds good. Okay.
There were only two dissenting votes, and it were the two.
It's the two you already know. Anji Brown, Jackson and
Sonia sat on my or. Here was MSNBC talking about.

Speaker 2 (14:05):
Yeah, it was a seven to two decision. That means
that all the conservative justices and Justice Atlanta Kagan voted
together on this case to allow President Trump to end
these productive protections from more than five hundred thousand individuals
from Cuba, from Haiti, from Nicaragua, and from Venezuela. Justice
Katanji Brown Jackson and Justice Sonia Sotomayor dissented in this opinion.

(14:28):
They said, quote, it undervalues the devastating consequences of allowing
the government to precipitously upend the lives and livelihoods of
nearly half a million non citizens while their legal claims
are pending.

Speaker 1 (14:41):
WHOA. That made me so angry, and not for the
reasons you think. It didn't make me angry because the
filthy communists tried to keep five hundred thousand people here.
It made me angry because Kaitanji Brown Jackson, Sonia sow
To Mayor. They are unapologetically who they are, and I

(15:08):
want that from my side. I do, and people think
I'm crazy for that. I want the courts to be nonpartisan.
I'll grow up. The courts are unbelievably partisan, and they
always have been. The courts are occupied by men and women,
flesh and blood, people with biases, people with desires, and

(15:29):
they all twist and manipulate the law to get their
desired outcome. Sonya sow To Mayor and Katanji Brown Jackson
are committed America hating communists. They hate me and vice versa.
I hate them, they hate the United States of America,

(15:50):
and until the day they retire or die in the
Supreme Court, they will issue every single ruling. They will
do every single thing they can possibly do to the
end of destroying the country. That is their ultimate goal.
Their eyes are fixated on that goal, and they will
always march in that direction. Us we have to flip

(16:14):
a coin. Well, I hope we're using the appropriate they
go argument to John Roberts has to cite the president
have the dread Scott versus Goldfish, And why can't we
get people that are committed. We have Clarence Thomas sam
Alito and a bunch of losers on the Supreme Court.

(16:35):
That's what we have. I look at the committed communists
and I'm jealous. Where's that commitment on our side? Where
is it? We have a whole bunch of well, I'm
not going to go into it. Dear doctor Jesse Sombrero,
if you could relive your life going back to eighteen,
which of these lies would you choose? A single famous

(16:57):
professional bull rider and you're obviously not six eight anymore,
a free, broke world traveler with a YouTube channel, a
history professor that is secretly working, that is secretly a
mercenary working for special clients. Oh gosh. All right, So first,

(17:26):
the person wrote the email, So I'm assuming you are
someplace where they have rodeos. And I realize rodeo is
big thing now, but I grew up in Montana. As
you know, rodeos are everywhere all the time. It's not
just one big national one. There is always a rodeo
going on somewhere. They are a blast, I should point out,

(17:49):
super patriotic. The food's good, the people are wonderful. I
promise no one's gonna rob you or shoot you at
a rodeo. That's just wonderful people, wonderful time. Highly recommend it.
Have you ever seen a bull ride up close? You
can count me out. But those might be the toughest

(18:12):
dudes on the planet, the dudes who ride bulls for
a living. That's insane. I don't have any desire, and
even crazy eighteen year old Jesse probably would not have
had any desire. Now, let's address this history professor slash
slash assassin thing, because I think that's probably where I'm leaning.
Before we get to that, let's talk about gold. Forget

(18:34):
about gold. Let's talk about your retirement and protecting it.
We think about growing our retirement and then we get
to a certain point in life and we hope it's
going to stay there because we need to live off
of it. How sure are you that your retirement is
going to be fine? You saw what Trump put out

(18:54):
there social media this morning about China. No more, mister
nice guy. I don't know what's going to happen in
the markets, and neither do you. What I do know
for a fact, gold, silver, they have value now and
always because they're tangible, hard assets. Get it as part
of your retirement. Let Gold Co work with you and

(19:18):
take care of it for you. Call them eight five
five eight one seven Gold or go to Jesse likesgold
dot com. Don't take chances. Let's address my career as
an assassin. Next, this is the Jesse Kelly Show. It

(19:39):
is the Jesse Kelly Show on a fantastic Friday. Remember,
if you miss any part of the show, you can
download the whole thing ire Spotify, iTunes. Don't forget about
our Memorial Day, specially we did on Monday. That's I'm
glad you're I'm glad you're enjoying it. So Monday Show,
we put a lot of We put more effort into

(20:00):
that show than we do any other show in the
year because it means so much to us. So iHeart
Spotify iTunes. Back to this guy's question before we move
on to the other ask doctor Jesse questions. He asked
me if I wanted to if I could relive my
life of eighteen, if I wanted to be a single
bull rider famous, a free broke world traveler with a

(20:21):
YouTube channel, or a history professor that's secretly a mercenary
working for special clients. I already eliminated the bull rider
because I'm a coward, and that makes me extremely afraid.
I've been to a million rodeos and those bull no no.
So Jewish producer Chris he thinks I'm going to say
history professor working as a mercenary for special clients. We

(20:45):
all know that that's the coolest one. But the second one,
a free broke world traveler with a YouTube channel. It's
appealing to me. And I need to explain why we
all have parents. We all have influences in our lives.

(21:08):
People who raised this. Maybe you were raised by your
grandparents or a mom or a dad or whatever, but
and we all, we all have been I was about
to say warped guided guided by them in certain ways,
in certain directions. Me. I had a father who was

(21:29):
probably the hardest working person I've ever known in my
entire life. And he believed in going to work, you
get your butt to work, you'd be a man. You
pay the bills. Your life isn't about screwing off. Go
pay the bills. And that's how he raised me. I remember,
I've told you before. I brought it up. One time.
We were on vacation or something like that somewhere and

(21:51):
there was I'd never seen a valet driver before. There
was a valet driver at this hotel and it was
a young guy and I actually she mentioned, man, I
should go be a valet because my father had talked
to him. The guy was a valet driver for a
year or two. He was just enjoying himself as a
valet driver as a young man. You know, I'm sure,

(22:12):
chasing women around, enjoying the beach and being a valet driver.
And I said, wow, that sounds great. My father about
came unglued at the very suggestion that I would set
aside all purpose in life and go be a valet
driver for a year. He thought that was the most

(22:33):
ridiculous thing in the world. And so that's always been
my mentality. At fourteen, before I was legally able. I
had a job, and in the summer it was a
full time job. I was working fifty sixty hours a week.
I found a buddy a job with a friend's dad,
paying me under the table because I wanted to go
to work. And that's what men do, that go to
work and you don't screw off and he goes. So

(22:54):
I said all that to let you know that I
am warped, warped, tainted. I am guided, I guess I
should say by that way of thinking, the idea of
being completely unencumbered by any responsibility and you're traveling the
world seeing new sites with a YouTube channel, I could

(23:21):
never do it. I could never do it, but it
fascinates me what Chris. What Chris said, YouTube is the
job you make a lot of money doing that. You know.
My son's tried to tell me this. I guess I'm
so old. I don't understand, but that there are all
these people on YouTube who make a fortune on YouTube
doing YouTube. So I'm not used to I get it,

(23:44):
like it's a revenue stream and everything clicks and subscribers.
I understand the basic concept, but money aside, I don't.
I don't think I could make myself do something like that,
but I want to Does that make sense? Does that
make sense what Chris was? Chris said, yeah, but I

(24:07):
could never. I know, I could never. I know, but
I can look at people who do different things and
I know I could never do it, but I admire it.
I admired I think it's cool. I think that about
people who musicians, traveling musicians. I see these people. We
were at a restaurant the other night. They had a

(24:28):
live band and there wasn't anything big, but they traveled
all over the state, just a little basic country band,
Testa's Country band. And they were all older dudes. They
were all my age, right, forties, fifties. That's what they
did for a living with families. They had wedding wings
on and they traveled all around. I could never do that,

(24:49):
but I admire it. I think it's cool. There. That's
my answer, Dear hal Hans. My issues is. My issue
is when me and my girlfriend watch movies and she's
one of the ones who talked through the movie and
ask questions out loud about what's going to happen later
in the movie, it annoys the crap out of me.
I just want to watch it and listen in peace.

(25:11):
And I just want to say shut up and just
watch woman, but I don't want to hurt her feelings.
Any advice. PS, She's Cuban, okay, remember Latina's in general.
You need to be very careful, all right. You need
to treat them like redheads. It's as if you're holding

(25:35):
a highly explosive jar of nitroglycerin and your hands are
covered in baby oil. That's the kind of dangerous ground
you're on when you're dealing with a Cuban woman. Anyway.
That's how they get you, the same way the redheads too.
They're so hot, they're all dimes. They suck you right in.
But then you figure out if you make her mad,

(25:57):
then you're in serious trouble. You're in physical day now.
You need to tread very carefully here. But allow me
to explain something about women and why they do this,
because ob does the same thing. This is a woman
thing they do. They talk during the movie and you
can be watching the same movie at the same time,
both of you having never seen it before, and they

(26:22):
will ask questions of is this the guy who's gonna
do this? What's this guy gonna say? Did he say this,
and you just want to scream, I'm watching when you watch,
how do I know? But allow me to explain this
in the nicest way possible, because I'm a nice person.
Women are more anxious than men are. They are, It's there,

(26:45):
It's their nature. Women are more anxious than men, are
more unsettled. It's part of why men and women fit
so well together. Men oftentimes me or I'm too settled,
I'm too comfortable. Ob gets frustrated because she tries to
scare me, get a jump scare. She's tried my entire our,
entire marriage to get a jump scare out of me.

(27:07):
She'll hide behind a door and yell and jump and scream.
It has never worked. I've never even flinched. It doesn't
work on me. She thinks it's bizarre that I'm that
laid back. If I so much as touch her on
the back and she doesn't know I'm there, she'll come
out of her clothes to just freak out immediately. Women
are more anxious than men. So when they're watching a

(27:28):
movie and she's asking you question, she has anxiety about
all the things she doesn't know and all the things
that are to come you The dude, you are her
comfort you. That's how she looks at you, a comforting blanket.
If you will, it's always going to be that way,

(27:49):
and they never ever change. Plus, she's Cuban. You be careful, okay,
and definitely don't tell her to shut up. If you
tell her to shut up, you'll never email the show again.
I just want to be clear. If you tell a
Cuban woman to shut up, you've watched your last movie
with her. You maybe watched the last movie of your life.

(28:13):
In fact, your life is probably over. So be extremely careful.
All right, enough of that, Dear Jesse. I was listening
to your program again tonight. You were talking about the
Chinese influences in American universities. I'm a secondary education teacher
in Utah. I wonder why the government and conservative talk
show hosts don't talk about the Chinese influence in secondary schools,

(28:36):
especially the Chinese immersion programs in Utah that bring native
Chinese to teach and influence kids starting in kindergarten. I
do not want my name mentioned. We will discuss this
in What's going On in just a moment. Before we
discuss that, let's talk about America, shall we how do

(28:57):
you support your country? Is it only on Independence Day
July fourth? No, of course not. You're a patriot three
hundred and sixty five days a year, and because you are,
you should support patriotic companies, and you should not support
companies who hate your guts. That's always our goal. We
talk about it. We all fail, myself included. We all fail,

(29:20):
but that should be our goal. There's no reason to
have Verizon AT and T or T Mobile. You don't
need those companies. Pure Talk's on the same network, So
don't think you're going to sacrifice service. You pay less
with Puretalk. If you like your phone, you can keep it,
or they have new ones you want to keep your

(29:40):
phone number, or maybe you're hiding from your Cuban X
you can change it. But you can switch to pure
Talk ten minutes on the phone talking to an American.
You'll be paying less than you'll be supporting a company
that actually loves the United States of America. I'm going
to be hanging with the pure Talk boys a little
bit next week. Excited di'al pound two five zero and

(30:05):
say Jesse Kelly pound two five zero, Say Jesse Kelly,
We'll be back. Jesse Kelly Vaccian. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show on a wonderful Friday. Do not forget. You
can email us Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. And

(30:26):
before I forget, it's not my fault. Next week, I'm
gonna be here for Monday's show and then I ain't
gonna be here anymore. Just next week. It's not fun.
It's worked. Not that I can do about that, So
gear up for that. Now, back to what this lady
was talking about, Chinese influence and secondary schools and Chinese

(30:47):
immersion programs we have. We've had many talks about how
being in a war, being in a fight, it doesn't
take two people making that decision. If only one person
makes that decision, then you're in a fight. If one
person decides they want to go to war with you,
then you're in a war. You don't get a say,

(31:08):
only one side gets to say. That's how it goes.
It sucks. It can be hard to accept, and many
American politicians, many American bureaucrats, have not accepted the fact
that China has declared war on us, and it's such

(31:30):
a cold war, it's such a different kind of a
war that we don't necessarily, we don't always see it,
and we don't know how to fight it. I say
that because they make so many things in China and
we're their number one customer, so they need us, we

(31:50):
need them. And yet China has published papers announcing their
intention to supplant US as the number one country on
the planet. They are not quiet about it, They're not
even a little shy about it. China is trying to
defeat us. China wants to be the number one global power.

(32:14):
They've even put a date on it, twenty fifty. Twenty
fifty is the date. It's a published thing. Go read
it yourself. That's what China wants. But like I said,
it's a weird kind of thing because we're not launching
bombs and missiles at each other. There aren't Chinese divisions
landing on the California shore. They're fighting it in a

(32:35):
completely asymmetrical way, a completely different kind of a way.
For instance, fentanyl, Why do you think Trump has been
so hard on China about fentanyl, focusing on fentanyl. Why
do you think that is? You know that the precursors

(32:55):
the things you need to make fentanil. Fentanil is actually
made in large part in Mexico now, but they're not
making it in Mexico without the ingredients that come from China.
The Mexicans have struck a deal with the Chinese to
get the fentanyl ingredients into Mexico so they can make

(33:18):
it and then ship it into here where Americans are
dying in droves. Now, do you think the Chinese government
that controls virtually every aspect of Chinese society, do you
think they're unaware that ventanyl is it comes from there.
Of course they know, they'll play dumb when they have to,

(33:40):
But not only do they know, they would only allow
it if they wanted it to happen. That's the thing
about a society that controls everything. When something happens there,
you have no other choice but to assume that's what
the government wants. China is drugging out America on purpose,
weakening us, not in not in tangible ways. It's not

(34:04):
a bomb dropping on New York City, but in ways
that brought you out at your very foundation. Another way
they do this is through our education system. They have
found willing partners because so much of our education system
is run by America hating communists. Well, China. That's an

(34:27):
easy sell. It's an easy partner. The Soviet Union did
the same thing. The Soviet Union long ago realized, well,
the Democrat Party, that's that's our end. They'll provide a
way in. They'll keep the door open for us. China
realized the same thing, and they have been slowly but
surely spending a fortune to sink money and sink their ideas,

(34:50):
more specifically, into the into the heads of American students.
As American students are deciding how they see the world,
and China comes with a large checkbook. In case you're
wondering how that gets in, how does that get in?
Let's say you're a public school system. Let's say you're
a university. Well, you always want money. Professors always want

(35:14):
to raise, You always want a fancy new building. You
always want this, You always want that. You always want money.
What if China comes calling, What if they've got a
twenty million dollar check waiting for you. We are going
to write your university a twenty million dollar check, and
you know what, your university needs a Confucius Institute. We

(35:37):
will build the Confucius Institute with our own money. You
can put your students through these classes, we will staff
it or we'll vet the staffers. Don't worry about that.
And ten million a year from now on from China.
That's how much we want your students to learn from
the Confucius Institute. And you take these eighteen nineteen years

(36:00):
old kids, still figuring out who they are, how they
see the world, and you indoctrinate them with the greatness
of communism, the greatness of China. You can't be that
over about it. But you know, if you get enough
American students graduating college think in China's the bee's knees

(36:22):
and that America kind of sucks. This all aids in
your effort to defeat America, which, of course, as we know,
is China's ultimate goal. It becomes this boogeyman that people
don't want to hear about or talk about. Oh gosh,
why do you think China spends so much money with

(36:42):
major American newspapers? Why do you think that is? Why
do you think China spends so much money making movies
that we watch so invested in Hollywood? Hollywood needs its
movies to sell in China in order to make huge
international money. China closely monitors what's in these movies and

(37:06):
if they see something they don't like, they will call
Hollywood and demand Hollywood make changes. Remember that video we
played for you before. You don't have to dig it up,
Chris Worth. At the end of the hour, John Cena
said something about the existence of Taiwan. Took about five minutes.
He was out there with an Internet video apologizing in
Mandarin for what he had said. They buy influence, they

(37:31):
ship poison here. They are at war with us. How
we fight it's another matter, all right. Talk about those
cat fighting, secret service agents and more.
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Host

Jesse Kelly

Jesse Kelly

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