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May 15, 2025 36 mins

Trump’s middle east tour and the wins he's bringing home for Americans. Daniel Turner on the Chinese kill switches in the solar panels that our grid relies on. Why is Gavin Newsome giving these weird speeches about California’s homeless population. Jesse’s ad for JD Vance’s presidential campaign. 

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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. We're gonna talk about Chinese putting spy devices
in our solar panels this hour, probably with Daniel Turner.
About a half hour from now, we're gonna talk about
some of this Trump stuff from today's overseas, the closing
all this deal stuff. We're gonna talk about communists sticking

(00:33):
their nose in everything, all that emails, so much more
coming up on another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show.
All right, let's let's get to the Trump stuff. So
Trump has been on this huge tour across the Middle East.
We've talked about it the past couple of days. What
he's doing is actually quite significant, and it's significant in

(00:56):
this way. He is very publicly letting them know, letting
us know too, that there are going to be changes
now to America's foreign policy, that we are no longer
going to get involved everywhere all the time. He said repeatedly,
you handle your own affairs. And because he's Trump, he's

(01:21):
also closing out business deals along the way. He's well,
here was where are you? Who are you from BBC News?

Speaker 2 (01:29):
I'm not disappointed?

Speaker 3 (01:30):
What would I be doing?

Speaker 4 (01:31):
We just took in four trillion dollars. And he says
that you disappointed about a delegation. I know nothing about
a delegation. I haven't even checked. Look, nothing's going to
happen until Putin and I get together.

Speaker 5 (01:42):
Okay.

Speaker 4 (01:43):
And obviously he wasn't going to go. He was going
to go, but he thought I was going to go.
He wasn't going if I wasn't there. And I don't
believe anything's going to happen with you, alank it or
not until he and I get together. But we're going
to have to get it sold because too many people
are dying.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
Trump's still talking about Russia brokeer in peace here, he
was here.

Speaker 2 (02:02):
I want to thank the media. The media, I have
to say, has been very fair. They've been very fair.
They've been terrific. Actually, I was watching some of our
normally and they would not say good things. But they're
having a hard time saying bad because this is a
record tour. There's never been a tour that will raise
it could be a total of three and a half
four trillion dollars. This just in this four or five days.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
Trump signs one point two trillion dollar economic deal with Katar.
Remember a lot of these Middle Eastern countries. It can
be tempting, especially if you haven't traveled much. And that's
no insult if you haven't traveled much, but if all
you get is movies and things like that, it could

(02:46):
be tempting to think of Middle Eastern countries or Muslim
countries as rundown dumps. You know, everything, everything is horrible
and mud huts and stuff like that. Some of these
countries are flush with cash, flush with cash. Trump went
over there to strike deals. Bring it in. This turns
into American jobs. This turns into America's boom. It's a

(03:11):
good thing. He was talking about Biden.

Speaker 4 (03:13):
I shook more hands than any human being he's capable of.

Speaker 3 (03:17):
You're doing.

Speaker 1 (03:18):
That was a long deal, and they were.

Speaker 4 (03:20):
Big people, but they were starving for love because our
country didn't give them love. They gave him a fist bump,
remember the fist bump in Saudi Arabia. He travels all
the way to Saudi Arabia in that case, and he
gives them a fist bump.

Speaker 5 (03:35):
That's not what they want.

Speaker 4 (03:35):
They don't want to fish.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
I wanted to. I wanted to focus on that because
he's talking about Joe Biden. He's making fun of Joe
Biden correctly, because today today is a one year anniversary,
a hilarious one year anniversary. May fifteenth, and twenty twenty four,

(03:58):
we were we were treated with this video from Joe Biden.

Speaker 6 (04:02):
Donald Trump lost two debates to me in twenty twenty.
Since then he hadn't shown up for debate. Now he's
acting like he wants to debate me again. We'll make
my day, pal. I'll even do it twice. So let's
pick the dates. Donald, I hear you're free on Wednesdays.

Speaker 1 (04:16):
He even made sure he threw in at the end
of the highly edited video. He threw in a little
shot at Donald Trump because his scumbag communist allies were
currently prosecuting Donald Trump. Now that is hilarious a year later,
because a year later, we are still finding out just

(04:39):
how deep the cover up went. And I'll get to
the cover up stuff in a moment, But it really
did matter that our president wasn't functional. This isn't even
know the all praise Trump thing. This is the kind
of stuff the American president has to do as the
top executive in the United States of America. There are

(05:01):
times when you have to get on a plane, you
have to schedule a gigantic multi country tour, and you,
not your staffer, not your chief of staff, not the
vice president, not the Secretary of State, not some other
random person. You, you personally have to go meet with heads
of state. You have to sit down with these people,

(05:25):
sharpen your pencil and start inking deals for the American people.
And it's something that can't really be outsourced. For four years,
we sent that poor cadaver overseas. What do you think
just think about this moment. I thought about it when

(05:46):
I read the article about Trump getting a one point
two trillion dollar deal from Qatar. What do you think
they thought about us when Joe Biden got in that room?
Because they had to put Joe Biden in that room.
You can't hide him, you can't keep him from the room.
He's got to go meet the guy. You've got to
sit down. I've got to try to hammer out ada.

(06:07):
What do you think would through their mind? What Chris
Chris said. Maybe they had him doped up, but you
can't that's not how the drugs work. You see, when
you're trying to get somebody amped up for a debate
if you will. You know what, I'll use this example
because this will be relatable to probably everyone. You've had

(06:30):
a night where you didn't sleep right, a night where
you didn't sleep, and you had to perform in some
way the next day, in some way. May maybe it
was at school, maybe it was at work, but you
had something important the next day and you didn't sleep
the night before. Now, maybe they not sleeping was your fault.
Maybe you went out with your buddies and it was

(06:50):
too many beers. Maybe you just couldn't turn your brain off,
too much caffeine. Whatever, But you had a night where
you didn't sleep, and so the next day you had
to perform. What did you do when you had to perform?
You knew it. You couldn't afford to be tired, You
couldn't afford to be yawning and drowsy. To what did
you do? You reached for caffeine energy of some kind,

(07:12):
didn't you You got a five hour energy or a
red bull, or maybe you're more old school and you
had nineteen cups of coffee. Now, let me ask you something.
Did those nineteen cups of coffee? Did they make you
feel rested? No, that's not what it does. It gets

(07:32):
your heart rate going, snap, you awake a little bit,
but you're not you all of a sudden, when you
go from tired to heavenly, heavenly to heavily caffeinated. That's
not how it works at all. The same thing applies
to people who are going through whatever Joe Biden has seeniality, dementia,

(07:55):
whatever he happens to have, same thing is true of them.
If you have to roll him out on a debate
stage one night and you need him to rehearse some
talking points you've gone over over and over and over again. Well,
in that case, sure, get the right doctors in there,
get the right cocktail in his veins, and he'll bug eyed,

(08:16):
scream at the camera with the talking points he's memorized.
But that's not what you're doing. If you're sitting around
the negotiating table working things out, you have to be
able to think. You have to be able to counter points.
They're going to bring up points that you didn't rehearse for.
You have to be functional. And we four years without

(08:43):
somebody who was functional, and now we're treated to this crap.
This was Jake Sullivan, former National Security Advisor. What happened
in that debate was a shock to me. I think
was a shock to everybody. And I've made that point before.
Just finally, do you think in retrospect, given everything that's
happened and everything we've talked about today, it was a
mistake for President Biden to try to run again.

Speaker 7 (09:05):
One of the things about being National Security Advisor is.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
He wasn't shocked. He knew. Representative Roe Kanna was asked
about it.

Speaker 7 (09:13):
Were you telling the truth back then?

Speaker 5 (09:17):
I was.

Speaker 8 (09:18):
I have met him a few times at public events,
and he was. But of course I didn't have the
full picture. I mean, I met him maybe two times
on rope lines and at public events. And I do
think it's important that, given what has come out, that
we take accountability.

Speaker 5 (09:33):
Obviously he should not have run. We should be clear
to say that obviously there should have been an open primary.

Speaker 8 (09:40):
And I don't think that's very difficult that a Democrats
should just be straight up that he should not have run.

Speaker 5 (09:46):
Now that we know all of the.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
Hey, let's let bygones be bygones. I met him two times,
and boy, he seems super sharp when I met him. Yeah, yeah, buddy,
I'm sure this guy was really knocking your socks off
with his WI with the COVID.

Speaker 9 (10:01):
I excuse me, with dealing with everything we have to
do with Look if we finally beat Medicare.

Speaker 1 (10:14):
Yeah, I'm sure. I'm sure. It was just tough to
keep up with him. All right, quit, Let's uh, Let's
do a couple of emails, shall we? Next? Truth Attitude,
Jesse Kelly.

Speaker 10 (10:31):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Thursday.

Speaker 1 (10:36):
Do not forget. You can email your ask doctor Jesse
questions for tomorrow Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. I
think we're gonna have Daniel Turner ten minutes from now.
We might have some cell phone problems with Daniel, but
I think we're gonna get him on to talk about
the Chinese spide devices we're finding in solar panels, what's
going on there, and we'll discuss more about this judge

(10:58):
who got arrested and and other things. Let's first get
to some of these emails, because I told you I'm
going to clear some out. A subject to this one
is I feel like I'm drowning, Jesse. I have an
eighteen month old son at home. He's the best thing
that ever happened to me. I also work a job
on commissions. I've been trying to be all in on both,
but it's actually negatively affecting both. I know you worked

(11:22):
a commission job. How did you do it where you
were able to do everything you did at work but
still feel like you're not missing out on important things
with your son. I know it's a passing season of life,
but it's a tough one. It says his name is Chris,
So this is really for everybody, men and women who
are working and missing things as well. Now I did,

(11:50):
I very much know what this is like. When I
worked construction, I was always traveling. Construction jobs they're never
in your hometown. The ones we add rarely I should
say never is a strong way to put it. Rarely
are there. You're traveling for them. And then when I
started selling our vs it was close to my house.

(12:11):
But when you're selling our v's, you have to work
when everyone else is off and when the kids have
their stuff, Meaning on Saturday. Saturday's your biggest sale day
by a mile, by a mile. If you were really good,
you could just work Saturday and make a living because

(12:34):
that's when everyone goes RV shopping Saturday and Sunday. It's
the weekend. I'm off work. I'm gonna go RV shopping. Well,
when do kids have their soccer games? Sorry that we're
an American? When do kids have their baseball games? Football games,
track meets, swim meets? When? When is that stuff normally Saturday?

(12:54):
Working late? If it happened to be more times than
I can count. What if the kids have something after school?
What if they have one of their school band things
or something like that after school and it's at six
o'clock at night. Okay, what if I'm dealing with the
buyer trying to sell them an RV or in the

(13:15):
middle of selling them an RV, I'm trying to feed
my family. I'm sorry, I can't come. I have to
stay and I have to ink this deal or the
mortgage doesn't get paid. And it was always, i won't
say a source of stress, but it was always something

(13:36):
that did get to you when you let it get
to you. But let me ease your stress or maybe
attempt to ease your pain a little bit with this.
If you feel like you're missing out on this or
missing out on that, there is no such thing as
being able to go all in on everything. That's not
humanly possible because there's only so much time, there's only

(13:58):
so much energy. And if you attempt to go all
in on everything, or all in even on one thing,
you will sacrifice something else. You will you want to
be the greatest basketball player ever, like Michael Jordan. Michael
Jordan had a terrible home life because all you wanted

(14:20):
to do was practice and play basketball, so you're never home.
Terrible home life. One, give yourself some grace. Two. My
father was gone a lot because my father did construction too,
and he was always out of town. We would go
a week with him. During the week, oftentimes we would
not see him. He would leave town. He'd be three,

(14:42):
four or five hours away, somewhere in Montana or Idaho
or something like that on a construction project. And you
just you want dad to come home so you can
see your dad. Did I miss him? Yeah? Did I
want him home every single night so I can talk
to him? Of course, But you're also teaching your children
the value of hard work and dedication, and you shouldn't

(15:06):
discount that. Bob used to tell me that when I
had to miss a t ball game, when I had
to miss some concert at school because I was selling,
she would talk to the boys and let them know,
Dad's working for us. He's working so we can eat,
so we can pay the bills. She wanted them to

(15:30):
know I wasn't. Look, I'm not at the bar and
I'm not having a good time. Dad is working so
we can have a living. And there is a valuable
lesson in that too. We love our kids so much
that we want to be there for everything, the first step,
every concert, every game. But that's not how life works,

(15:51):
and it's never worked like that. Ever, it doesn't work
that way unless you're filthy rich and then you could
just sit around well, I mean filthy rich and retired.
I should note, unless you're filthy rich and retired and
you can just spend every waking moment with the kids.
That's not how life works. Everybody makes sacrifices, and everybody

(16:11):
has always had to make sacrifices. That's how it goes.
You feel like you're drowning because you're putting too much
pressure on yourself. You feel like you have to be
the perfect dad or the perfect mom, and my baby,
I missed this and now I messed them up. I
miss this. I'm never gonna get that time back. That's
freaking life. That's the way it goes. I mean, this job,

(16:36):
this job, greatest job in the world. It's not even
really a job, so it's certainly not a complaint. But
what is it. Six to nine Eastern time is when
the show's on, So that's five to eight my time
because I'm in Central Time. I miss things in the
evening when those boys get home from school, I'm not there.
Family dinners. Most nights, I'm not there. That's the way

(16:59):
it goes. Bill's got to get paid. Give yourself some grace.
Your kids will be fine. You're not running out on them.
You're not a dirtball father. Get the work done. You'll
be fine, all right. And remember to take your relief factor.
That's also critically important. If you want to make sure
you're not in too much pain to play with the kids, well,

(17:21):
you need to start taking one hundred percent drug free supplement.
You see, relief factor will remove the pain from your life,
the pain that nags at you, that elbow that hurts
all the time, the shoulder that hurts all the time.
What don't you do now that you used to enjoy,
but you don't do it because it hurts. You want

(17:43):
that back in your life. Should get that back in
your life. Relief Factor works. It was developed by doctors.
Bit it is one hundred percent drug free. And the
longer you take it, I should note, the better it works,
builds up in your system. Try it, just try it.
If it doesn't work in three weeks, don't ever order

(18:04):
it again. Three weeks of it. It's nineteen dollars and
ninety five cents. Go to Relief Factor dot com or
call one eight hundred the number four Relief Daniel Turner
maybe if he has cell service? Next, what Chris, we
can make jokes? It's fine, we get that right. The
Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 10 (18:25):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show and a fantastic Thursday.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
Reminding you that Tomorrow has asked doctor Jesse Friday needed
to get your questions emailed in now to Jesse at
Jesse Kellyshow dot com. So this is from Reuter's rogue
communication devices found in Chinese solar power inverters. Well, that
sounds really bad. I wonder what Daniel Turner has to

(18:53):
say about this. Joining me now our friend you know
him well? Power the Future's own Daniel Turner, Hey, Daniel,
I thought these Chinese, these these chicoms were on the
up and up. Are they putting spy devices and things?

Speaker 3 (19:06):
No, no, no, And Jesse, that's just the weather balloon
flying over. He don't be nervous about it. You know,
it's not surprising. You know, we have given China hundreds
of billions of dollars for all of the wind in
solar you see, especially across the plains of Texas. They
make all that crap, They make the components in that crap.

(19:29):
Who was possibly surprised that they would use it to
spy on Americans, to listen to Americans, to create a
product that's known to be inferior, and risk the grid.
So it's not remotely surprising that they're finding Chinese doing
dirty deeds, because that's what the Chinese do. You know,
they're not our friend in any way. I think the

(19:51):
President has played a very good game of diplomacy, he
compliments Chairman g He knows there's a dance of diplomacy
and the Communists like to have their egos stroked. But
he's also stopped the purchase of hundreds of billions of
dollars of crappy wind and solar, and the Chinese are
livid and their economy is in free fall. So we're

(20:13):
headed in our right direction. But there's a lot of
Chinese listening devices. Heck, I think I'm probably using one
right now because they are not our.

Speaker 1 (20:22):
Friend, Daniel, I've had this question emailed into the show
a bunch of times, and it's a very good question.
We talk about these solar panels and wind garbage and
all this stuff, and we're always buying the stuff from China.
Why is it all made in China?

Speaker 3 (20:39):
Most reason why is because it is very carbon intensive.
I don't want to say it's dirty, because I think
dirty is a is a bad word. But when you
make solar panels, the actual what they would call a glass,
it's not glass. It's a form of crystal crystalline quartzite.
When you make that, you have to take a whole

(21:00):
bunch of courts, and you've got to hammer it and
smash it into billions of little pieces, and you've got
to heat it what's a tremendous amount of coal around
twenty two hundred degrees to get its liquid form that
you can pour it into a frame, and there's byproduct,
and there's smoke that comes out of the air. Right,
if we did that in America, the EPA would make

(21:21):
it absolutely impossible because they would have so many costs,
they would have so many environmental regulations and health regulations,
and you know, you probably don't have enough women working
on the assembly line, so you got to get fined
for that. And so they make it so difficult that
they just make it in China. Because in China you
can use seven year old girls and you don't have

(21:41):
to give them safety goggles. And if you pour some
crap into the groundwater, there's no EPA to find you. Right,
there's no Greta Thunberg. There's going to protest and talk
about it. So they make the things in China to
bypass the very environmental regulations that they demand in America.
But they call it green. Right, that's the thing that

(22:03):
pisses me off the most. Jesse, we care so much
about the environment. We're not going to do this here
in America. We're going to do it ten times worse
with slave labor in China, and we're going to call
it green, or as we see in the tariffs, we're
not going to make this product here. We're not going
to make furniture here. We're going to use slave labor
in China where we only have to pay them a

(22:23):
dollar a day, and we're going to call that, you know,
free trade. We just care about free trade.

Speaker 1 (22:29):
No, you don't.

Speaker 3 (22:30):
You want to use slave labor because you don't have
to pay them. So they hide behind whether it's environmentalism
or free trade. Corporatists hide behind those things to do
the things that they would never get away with in America.
And that's why it has to stop.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
Daniel Trump is on this Middle Eastern tour, Saudi Arabia, Qatar,
all this stuff, and it it leads us as we
look at all these palaces and one point to dollar
commitment from Katar is all this oil money? Are these places?
Are they just so oil rich they have more money

(23:08):
and they know what to do with.

Speaker 3 (23:10):
Yes, in the simplest terms, yes. And the main reason
why is because most of their drillers are not rough
necks like you find in in Texas who are making
two hundred and fifty grand and have a wife and
kids and a couple of Ford f three fifties. Right.
Most of them are Filipino or Indian day laborers that

(23:32):
they pay pennies on the dollar, and they don't care
if they if they chop a handoff in the process.
So oil in Saudi Arabia can be profitable around fifteen
ten dollars a barrel. Oil in America is not right
because you've got to pay your your workforce, you've got
to have compliance laws, you've got to have lawyers because

(23:55):
you're getting sued by green groups every five minutes. So
the Katar, the Saudis, they make money so much more
quickly than we do because again, we have a good
I don't want to get rid of our ethics rules,
don't get me wrong. I just wish we would force
them to use the same ethics rules. So that's one
of the main reasons why. And you know they also

(24:18):
don't play a lot of the silly environmental groups games
that we do, so they don't have a lot of debt.
That's why they build ski resorts indoors. You know, they
have indoor ski resorts in UAE, So they have the
world's largest building. That's why they have more money that
they know what to do with. So if they want
to invest it back in America, I'm thrilled. I think

(24:40):
it's my hunch, Jesse. I think a lot of this
tour of investing in America is even those companies know
their future is in question. Right. The days of ninety
dollars on oil are not going to ever come back,
god willing under President Trump. And they need to diverse
their economies, right, they need to do When you have

(25:03):
a company a country like UAE or the Saudiast where
ninety percent of your GDP is from oil and gas,
that's pretty risky. Texas gets a lot of oil and gas,
it's not ninety percent, it's probably not even thirty percent.
That's how diverse Texas's economy is. But those petro states
have a really difficult future unless they diversify. And I

(25:25):
think that's what they're trying to do.

Speaker 1 (25:27):
Is oil and gas on the way I shouldn't say
on the way out because it's obviously not on the
way out. But has the next thing gotten here and
we just haven't embraced it yet? Or is oil and gas?
I mean it changed everything when the world started embracing that.
Is the next thing here? Or have we not found
it yet?

Speaker 3 (25:47):
No? I think the next thing is just going to
require especially gas in a different way. And the next
thing is artificial intelligence and artificial intelligence programming robots right
to do micro surgery, so that you can get Grandma's
cataract removed in four and a half minutes and you
don't even have to pay doctors. And it's going to

(26:07):
be almost free because you don't have to pay a
doctor eight hundred thousand dollars a year to be a
cataract surgeon when the machine, an AI, can do it
more efficiently, more carefully, more precisely for free, and they
can do it twenty four hours a day, seven days
a week, and they don't want to go to Hawaii
because their wife wants a vacation, right, So that is
the next thing. But that's going to require boatloads of

(26:31):
oil and gas, especially natural gas to power the electricity.
And that's why there was so much AI investment in
that Middle East tour with President Trump. They're investing in
AI because they have the natural gas to power AI
data centers. I don't want that to happen, though, Jesse,
I don't trust those countries. I know you spent a

(26:52):
lot of time over there when I was at the
Bush State Department. I spent a lot of time over there.
I don't like those countries. I don't like their culture,
I don't like their values. I don't want the Saudis.
I understand the dance of diplomacy. I don't look at
the Saudis or UAE as companies at countries I want
to be close to. I don't want to be their enemy,

(27:13):
but I don't want to be their friend. So I
understand the dance of diplomacy. But they're not my favorite
countries in the world to do business with.

Speaker 1 (27:22):
Yeah, I get that, Daniel, as always my brother, Thank
you so much outstanding. Come back join us soon, Chris.
I really want to take a tour of one of
those Saudi palaces. Why are you rolling your eyes? You
don't want to see it. I know I want to

(27:43):
use the scooters. We could all go, Well, maybe not you,
but Corey and I can go. You probably would be
best if you stayed home for religious reasons. Anyway, we'll
call you on our Pure Talk votes, We'll even FaceTime you.
We'll be all, hey, Chris, we're in this sweet palace
eating shrimp. What are you doing back in Houston? While

(28:05):
you're shaking your head? And we know the calls will
go through because Pure Talk's on the same five G
network as the big guys. You see, don't think when
you switch to pure Talk that you're going, of course,
with the more patriotic company. But we're gonna drop calls
now my service is gonna suck now no, no, no no,
your service remains. My service got better because I had

(28:28):
T Mobile before and I used to not be able
to make phone calls in my living room. Now no problem,
Thank you pure Talk. Switch. Pick up your phone dial
pound two five zero and say, Jesse Kelly, it's time
to save money. It's time to switch cell phone service
to Pure Talk. You can keep your phone, get a

(28:49):
new phone. They make it easy. You switch during the break.
They make it easy. Go talk to an American pound
two five zero, say Jesse Kelly. We'll be back. Miss something.
There's a podcast. Get it on demand wherever podcasts are found,
The Jesse Kelly Show. It is The Jesse Kelly Show

(29:11):
on a fantastic Thursday Memory. You can download the whole
thing on iHeart, Spotify iTunes. Before I get to the emails,
I do want to play this thing that Gavin Newsom said,
and we'll get to your jumping out of a playing
question here in a second, Chris, But Gavin Newsom always
always keep keep this in mind. Gavin Newsom, governor of California,

(29:35):
is running for president in twenty twenty eight. All right,
and Gavin Newsom, the relentless ambitious political animal that he is,
looks at every single thing through that lens. Now, maybe
that seemed like an obvious point, but allow me to
elaborate a little bit more. Everything is looked through that lens. Meaning,

(30:02):
let's say, Gavenue, how many times do you think Gavin
Newsom has to speak publicly as governor of California. He's
the governor of the richest, most powerful state in the country.
He has to speak a lot on camera. Maybe it's
an interview, maybe it's a speech, whatever it is, Gavin
Newsom sits down every single time, and you know what

(30:23):
he thinks of. Wouldn't this be exhausting? Can I make
this a campaign ad for me for twenty twenty eight
or are Republicans if I win the primary? Are Republicans
going to be able to use this as an anti
Newsome campaign ad in twenty twenty eight. That's how these

(30:46):
people think. Every single thing, every moment, every speech, every photograph.
It's all designed, all of it to manipulate the public
into allowing them to be the next president. He went
off on some nutball rant today and I gave you

(31:07):
that background. To give you this background, Gavin Newsom has
a problem, a big problem. Now he looks the part
speaks well, it's going to raise gigantic quantities of money.
He is going to be a formidable force in running
for president. What may very well hurt him is that

(31:30):
California is a disaster. It's a disaster in large part
because of him. But you know it's California has gone
blue up all the way up and down. It's not
like it's all on him. But when you have Democrats
running things, things will break. Things will slowly but surely
break and die. And Gavin Newsom has to do he

(31:54):
has to do this almost it really is an impossible
juggling act, and that he has to point out the
failures and try to fix the failures, because you can't
have the most beautiful, powerful state in the Union destroyed
and run on that. So he asked the point of
things like hate crime, Hey, we need to get this

(32:14):
crime down. But he has to balance that with the
savages who make up the Democrat party base, who want
more crime, and so he ends up on bizarre rants
like this.

Speaker 7 (32:26):
I'm not interested. I'm just not as a taxpayer, not
just governing. I'm not interested in funding failure anymore.

Speaker 6 (32:31):
I'm not.

Speaker 7 (32:32):
I won't time to do your job. People are dying
on their watch, dine on their watch. How do people
get reelected? Look at these encampments. They're disgrace. They've been
there years and years and years and years. I've heard
that same rhetoric for years. People are dying, kids are
being born overdoses.

Speaker 1 (32:53):
He's talking about the homeless encampments. Why give that weird
little rant speech. Well, let me let me lay this
out for you. Presidential campaigns are now billion dollar affairs.
I think how wild that is. Billion dollars for what
is essentially a temporary business, a temporary startup that will

(33:18):
technically go away after you get elected. Call it a
six month business, I guess it'd be more fair to
call it a year, year and a half long business.
But you will raise and spend a billion dollars to
run for president of the United States of America. Let's
hypothetically say it's the year twenty twenty six, and yep,

(33:42):
I know that's next year and the presidential campaigns are
starting up. Let's say we end twenty twenty six and
Gavin Newsom is the Democrat nominee and maybe jd Vance
who probably the likely nominee. Jd Vance is the Republican nominee.
Many ads do you think jd Vance will run in Michigan, Wisconsin,

(34:07):
in Pennsylvania, the critical swing states? How many ads do
you think jd Vance will run? Showing the insane homeless
encampments in California? Have you ever seen these encampments? It's
it's a city, essentially, it's a city of tents and
drugs and crime and insanity in there everywhere, now everywhere,

(34:32):
because the scumbag commies they elect in California just allow them,
in fact, they encourage them to be there. How many
times do you think you're going to if you live
in Pennsylvania, Michigan or Wisconsin, how many times do you
think you're going to turn on the television and see
some scary commercial with the scary.

Speaker 11 (34:51):
Music, Don't don't doom. This is what Gavin Newsom's California
looks like. Drugs everywhere, homeless, everywhere. Do you want that
in your Pennsylvania town? Gavin Newsom does elect jd Vance?

Speaker 1 (35:08):
You know, Chris, write it down, Chris, you know what,
go ahead, We're doing that. It's the ultimate long call.
I swear my life. I'm gonna be the most obnoxious
person in the world when the day that ad comes out.
What Chris will Chris said, He'll just send it to
jd Vance's people. You know, a good call. But you know,
I'm right. That's how politics works. And as weirdly diabolical

(35:32):
as it is. Before Gavin Newsom gave this speech, he
had the exact same thought I just vocalized on the radio.
He's driving through Cali. He's looking at all these homeless encampments,
and he's not thinking about the people, or the town,
or the crime, or the kids, or any of the
other crap he's pretending to care about. He's looking around

(35:54):
at this dystopian nightmare that has become Californian's urban centers,
and he's saying to himself, this is gonna get me
crushed in Michigan. This is going to get me crushed.
So he has to start putting stuff like this on camera.

Speaker 7 (36:11):
I'm not interested I'm just not as a taxpayer, not
just governed. I'm not interested in funding failure anymore. I'm not.
I won't time to do your job. People are dying
on their watch, dine on their watch. How do people
get re elected? Look at these encampments. They are disgrace.
They've been there years and years and years and years.
I've heard that same rhetoric for years. People are dying,

(36:34):
kids are being born overdoses.

Speaker 1 (36:38):
This is all about running for president in twenty twenty eight.
All right, we're going to talk about that communist judge
who helped the illegal escape Communists springing communism everywhere and
more dress codes even next
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Jesse Kelly

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