Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show Cities, The Jesse Kelly Show.
Another hour of The Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday.
As we near the end of the week, I'll chop
away at some emails. At some point in time this hour,
we're going to talk just briefly hear about the kloydmet
(00:31):
stuff and the money that has come behind that, dealing
with mental health struggles.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
America's cities are in trouble.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Before I get to any of that, I'm sorry, I
just have to Grandma Vodka was out there today given
a spreed, and we some of us.
Speaker 3 (00:45):
On the immigration issue, had traveled to the Northern Triangle
a few years ago, and what we found there is
one of the reasons people were migrating to the United
States is what has been mentioned, and that is they
had to drought. The people wouldn't farm, so they didn't
have a job and they didn't have the food that
farming would produce. Hence they were coming to United say so,
(01:06):
this is again as a congressman. The congressman mentioned a
migration issue, which is an economics show. So this is
again economic as congress Wan and Caster said, it is
not only a moral issue, but it is an affordability
issue as well. Shut up.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
So this climate change gobbly gook stuff, which it's not real. Remember,
man is not changing the climate of the planet. Man
cannot change the climate of the planet. The planet is
alive itself. You realize that. Did you know that things
(01:54):
like oil spills? Everyone knows an extra on Valdeas or
these big oil spills, And of course the oil spills
are always all over the news, and you know exactly
what image you're going to see when there's an oil spill.
Speaker 2 (02:09):
It's going to be a helpless looking bird with oil
all over it.
Speaker 1 (02:14):
Oh my gosh, the pelicans, the ocean, it's gonna die.
Did you know that the ocean cleans itself after an
oil spill? Do you know that?
Speaker 2 (02:25):
Well?
Speaker 1 (02:25):
I don't tell you that, though. Why don't they tell
you that? Why don't they tell you about all the
wonders of the planet and the things the world is
capable of doing. Why don't they tell you that oil
is renewable? Did you know that? Did you think there
was just some big static pool of oil underneath the ground,
(02:48):
underneath the ground and the ocean and on land, and
once that pool's empty, it's all gone. Did you know
that oil replenishes? Why don't they tell you that? Here's
a headline for ye. Climate scientists claim the Gulf Stream
could be near collapse. Oh man, predicting a new ice age.
(03:10):
Why all this fear mongering? Why? Well, with so many
things in life, or as with so many things in life,
it's simply about power and money, that's all. Let's focus
on the money aspect of it. There is a number
I don't want to know. There are a lot of
(03:31):
numbers like this, but there is a number I don't
want to know. And here's that number. I'm sure someone
will calculate it one day and it will be devastating
how much money has been transferred from the private citizen
into other people's hands in the name of climate change.
(03:55):
You don't want to know what that number is. Neither
do I. It's an un real amount. The game is
quite simple. You get the government. The government wants money,
they want your money, and really they want power, which
we'll get to. How do you facilitate that, Well, you
need a scary boogeyman. Every country throughout history has always
(04:18):
needed a boogeyman you can hold up in front of
the people and tell the people. You see this person,
This is the enemy. This is the source of all
your problems. This is that this, it's always beneficial for
the government to give the people a boogeyman. Well, you
get up and you give the people the boogeyman of
climate change. After all, no one wants to burn to
(04:38):
death that because the sun is cooking me. No one
wants to live through another ice age. You can probably
picture me with ice hanging off of my beard. Whoo,
that sounds scary. I don't want to live through that.
But how do I make the people believe that? Well,
here's the game, and here's exactly how it works. I
bloodsuck large quantities of money from the American tax I
(05:00):
then hand that money out to various scientific with the
biggest airfingers quote in the world, scientific organizations and universities.
And I go to a place like Harvard. Of course,
everyone will respect Harvard when they say it. And I say, hey, Harvard,
I got fifty million dollars for you here. This is
(05:21):
a grant. And you know what I need from you.
I need you to do a study for me on
just how harmful SUVs are to the planet. Now you
think Harvard knows what that study needs to show. In
the end, Harvard is well aware that they need to
(05:44):
show that that suv is killing all of us. It's
going to bring about the ice age. And then of
course Harvard comes out and it'll make headlines like this
one in the New York Post. Although this one wasn't Harvard.
This was the Oh I love this the Institute of
Osheanology of the Chinese Academic Studies of the University of California,
(06:06):
San Diego. Wow, that's impressive. Surely that's a bunch of
smart people. They're just scientists, right. No, they were all
paid with your money. After they get paid with your money,
the government is able to cite Harvard. Hey, look what
Harvard said, it's your suv. You know what we need.
(06:27):
We need a big bill. Oh, we need to take
a lot more of your money. And here's what we're
gonna do with it. We're going to smash the oil
and gas industry. We're gonna wreck the auto industry in
this country. And we're gonna take your money and we're
gonna send that money over to China so we can
import more solar panels. Now, will some of that solar
(06:50):
panel money end up back in our campaign coffers. Of
course it is, and is China building coal plants every
fifteen minutes, of course they all. But let's let bygones
be bygones. Shall we we have to save Mother Gaya
or whatever. These weird, godless hippie freaks decide they're going
to worship today, and that's the game. Money and of
(07:13):
course power. Back to the boogeyman thing, back to the
government thing. If I've used this analogy, but I'll use
it again, Well, I've used it from the victim standpoint.
If you're a woman with your child, you're alone, you're
in a boat, and the ocean is calm, and a
group of rough looking gentlemen pull up beside you in
a big boat and they say, I been little lady.
(07:36):
You're going to say no. But if the waves are
getting high and you're afraid you're not going to make
it in your little boat, that same group of men
can pull up beside you and say get in, and
you're gonna say, crap, I gotta risk it. Can't die
out here. I've made you afraid enough. From the perspective
(07:57):
of the rough men, if I want that little lady
top in my boat. I need to make her afraid. Now,
all this global warming garbage probably doesn't really affect you,
and I'm happy about that. I'm happy you've seen through
the lives. We've talked about this enough. But you know
what's insanely sad how much it affects young communists. It
(08:22):
over and over and over again. The polls show it,
young Democrats, young communists, They legitimately don't want to have
families because of a completely invented concept that man is
changing the climate. These are not victimless lies. It brings
(08:43):
the politicians a lot of power, brings the business interests
a lot of money. He of course helps China get
a big leg up on the United States of America
as our ability to produce power has gone way way down,
theirs has gone way way way up. I said, they're building,
so they're building solar manufacturing well at the same time
(09:05):
building coal plants. Gosh, you will most have to admire
the hustle. So it's not victimless. People are getting power,
people are getting money. But this this is real.
Speaker 4 (09:16):
Voices of Americans and how climate change is affecting their feelings.
Leslie Davenport is a climate psychology therapist. She teaches at
the California Institute of Integral Studies and is author of
Emotional Resiliency in the Era of Climate Change Leslie. When
does healthy concern about the planet, about climate change become
(09:37):
this sort of climate anxiety?
Speaker 5 (09:39):
Well, from the emerging field of climate psychology, one thing
that's really important to understand is we view distress, upset, sadness, grief,
anger about climate change to be a really reasonable, even
healthy reaction.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
Wish producer Chris made a good point while she was
playing that they just made up an entire field. It's
like the Dei stuff. How many universities businesses out there
have an inclusiveness director and that's not just one person.
That person has a job and they have an entire
department just made up out of nowhere, of nothing, a
(10:24):
huge scam that hurts people. And that's the kind of
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dot Com. We'll do some emails next. Jesse Kelly returns next.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful, wonderful Thursday.
Let's do some emails, shall we? Hey, Marine Jesse, I've
been listening to your show for a while, enjoying your
take on liberals. Is President Trump losing his magabase by
(11:54):
saying things like American workers are not talented? Please let
us know your thoughts. No, No, he's not losing is well.
It depends on how we describe this let's explain something.
Let's talk about any political coalition, but we'll make it
about Donald Trump, since that was your question. Political coalitions
(12:16):
are funny things. They're odd things. I should say they're
odd because some parts of your coalition are You can't
move them, they will never ever move. Other parts of
the coalition are there for a short time. You'll lose
them eventually for one reason or another other. It's just
(12:40):
it gets very confusing. So let's make it about me.
We'll make this about me for a moment. In radio,
I do not have an important job like Trump does.
I admit that I do a radio show. It's not important.
But there are people. Maybe this is you who love
the show. You've gotten to know me, You enjoy it.
(13:02):
Maybe I make you laugh. But whatever the reason is,
you love the show. Now if tonight and tomorrow night,
for two straight nights, I come rolling out with bizarre takes,
opinions that almost seem from the left, maybe I start
(13:23):
cussing on the air, saying perverted things in front of
your kids. I have a certain percentage of people. Let's
say there are one hundred people listening. I know there
are a lot more than that, but let's say, there
are one hundred people listening. Ten people are so hardcore
they're going to let it go, brush it off even
(13:44):
if they don't love it, No big deal. I'm sure Jesse,
maybe he's got a chemical and balance. Hopefully he'll just
work it out. Another ten, twenty people, they're a little
uncomfortable with it. I hope he doesn't keep this up.
I've already been on the fence about him. I'm not
quite sure. I better knock that stuff off by Monday
(14:05):
or I'll lose them. But then there are another let's
call it forty fifty maybe half. Maybe this is you.
You have a lot of different options. You have a
lot of different shows you like, you want to hear
things that you want to hear in your You don't
have some kind of personal affinity for me or the show,
(14:27):
and I better deliver for you every night, every segment,
or you're going to turn it off and go listen
to some bum like Klay Travis and Buck Sexton. Now
I'm curious, did you get what I'm saying. That's how
a coalition works. And by the way, none of those
people are wrong. You have your own priorities in life.
Trump is president of the United States of America. Everybody
(14:50):
who's ever been elected president has built a coalition. Except
for Joe Biden. We know how he got elected. But
Trump built a coalition. It takes a coalition of peace,
and all kinds of different people are part of the
coalition that elected Donald Trump in twenty twenty four. Maybe
you are a hardcore cultural conservative, as I would probably
(15:13):
consider myself, and you were disgusted by all the endless
COMMI filth out there. Maybe that was what drove you
to the polls. Maybe you're purely an economic person, dollars
and cents jobs. You were horrified by inflation, by what
the Democrats had done with the economy, and that's why
you went. Maybe you're a health freak. Look, Ob, she's
(15:37):
not super into politics. She likes Trump, she doesn't love him.
But Ob was all about it when he started enlisting
guys like RFK to talk about the poison that's in
the food, because you know her, she's a super health
freak like that that MAHA make America healthy agains stuff.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
That took Ob.
Speaker 1 (15:57):
From like to love real quick. Oh, she was all in.
She was always going to vote for Trump. She really
votes for whoever I tell her to, but she was
all in. She practically wore a Maga hat around town.
That got her all in. Maybe you're an immigration hawk.
Maybe that's your thing. That's very very very much me
has been for a long time. Maybe you don't even
care about the Maha stuff. I really don't. I want
(16:19):
people to be healthier, but I'm meeting a Totino's pizza
tonight when I get off work. I don't care about that.
You tell me you're going to create the largest deportation
force in history. Okay, you just tell me where to
sign brother a large and there are more than that,
a large coalition of people. After you get elected, though,
(16:42):
after the promises are done and the rallies are done
and all that stuff is done, after you get elected,
inevitably the coalition will shrink. Maybe it'll be shrink shrunk
by a lot, Maybe it will be shrunk by a
li as different parts of the coalition get I was
(17:05):
going to say disenfranchised, but that's such a college word. Disappointed. Hey,
he didn't do enough Maha stuff. He didn't deport enough people,
he didn't do enough of that. Inevitably the coalition is
going to shrink, maybe a little, maybe a lot. I
don't think that Trump's hardcore fans and maybe this is
(17:25):
you are out on him because of one bad interview
with Laura Ingram and a couple lines that I'm sure,
if he's being honest, he wishes he could take back. No, no, no,
we don't have the talent. Yeah, go ahead, go ahead, Chris,
if you have.
Speaker 6 (17:37):
Yet h one b VISA thing will not be a
big priority for your administration because if you want to
raise wages for American workers, you can't flood the country
with tens of thousands or hundreds.
Speaker 7 (17:48):
And also, do have to bring in talent when we
got of talent.
Speaker 4 (17:54):
We don't have to people you don't.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
I'm sure if he had an honest moment with you,
he would tell you yeah. I probably wouldn't have answered
it that way. Did that shave? Some people offer the
MAGA coalition? I'm sure. Is it drastic the end of
the world. No, get the economy turned around. Continue to
deport millions of people. It'll all be forgotten. It's one interview, shrunk,
(18:17):
It didn't destroy it. Eh. Preborn is out there to
shrink the number of abortions in the country and hopefully
eliminate them. Now, that's a lofty goal. I know, you
know that's a lofty goal. How do you do that
when so many women want one? How do you do
(18:39):
that when our culture is one of abortion. Well, you
have to introduce that woman to her baby. How does
Preborn save two hundred lives a day? How is that possible?
They make an introduction. They take a woman who's about
to abort her baby, and they give her a free ultrasound.
(19:04):
When she hears that heartbeat, it's now her baby. It's alive,
and she wants to protect it and nurture it and
raise it. It's not a clump of sales anymore. Help
Preborn give that woman that ultrasound and save that life.
Twenty eight bucks buys the ultrasound. Go to preborn dot
(19:28):
com slash Jesse sponsored by Preborn. We'll be back. This
is the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse Kelly
Show on a wonderful Thursday, reminding you that tomorrow's ask
doctor Jesse Friday, and you need to get your questions
(19:49):
emailed in right now to Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Chris,
where's this silo? Just a heads up? Jewish producer Chris
was doing some important research for the show. In the break,
he found another Cold War missile silo underground bunker for sale.
You know how badly? Remember when we found those ones
(20:10):
in Kansas, Chris, they were like six hundred thousand dollars,
so we were a little short on the money. But
I want a World War two silo or World War
two a Cold War silo? So bad?
Speaker 5 (20:20):
What?
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Chris? Where where? It's in North Dakota almost in Canada.
Why did you say it like that? What's wrong with
North Dakota. You'll you'll have to You'll have to wear
a coat, Chris. I promise it'll be fine. We'll be
warm in the well. Wait a minute, you're not coming.
I'll be warm in the underground bunker. You can what
what is this where we're I'm gonna have my secret club.
(20:44):
I can't tell you that, but yes, yes, Jesse, I
was not that interested in politics until I found your
show a few years ago. I'm so much more informed.
Love your spin on things. I've been doing some serious
praying about running for my local school board. One thing
holding me back is my thin skin. I take everything
(21:06):
to heart, and I worry too much about what people
think of me. I've heard it can be truly vicious
on a personal level, and that scares me. Can you
give me advice since you literally haha, she says, don't
seem to care if people like you or hate you,
she asked me. She asked that I don't use her name,
and I won't of course. All right, So this is
(21:30):
something that people struggle with for obvious reasons. I understand
that I'm a bit more of a natural jerk. Don't
roll your eyes, Chris, and definitely don't agree. I don't
care really what people think or say to me, and
that does help me in ways. It does hurt me
(21:52):
in ways as well. I have no doubt about that.
It does. But most people are not that way. Dudes
are more likely to be that way for women. That's
a hard struggle. That's a hard slog. I actually told
you about ab in her women's group? Was it yesterday
where the lady started bad mouthing Charlie Kirk And the
(22:14):
lady was black and started saying, well, you said a
bunch of terrible racist things about people like me, which
is just flat out wrong. And I thought to myself,
should I tell Bob confront her, and so AB and I.
We discussed it, and she just didn't want to make
it uncomfortable. She didn't want to ruin the group. She
(22:35):
didn't want to make it uncomfortable. That's more her way.
Me I probably would have asked some probing questions that
led to a very uncomfortable conversation. Now, I can't change
the way you are, and there's nothing wrong with the
way you are, but I think it's important for all people, men, women,
(22:58):
all people to make a distinction. This is what's so important.
You cannot walk around worried about what everyone thinks about you.
You can only worry what people you respect think about you.
(23:19):
People you care about, people in your life you respect
and care about, their opinion of you probably should matter
to you on some level. If the person who has
loved you, your your your husband, your wife, your mom,
a sister comes to you and says, hey, I think
(23:40):
you're really screwing this up whatever. This may be something
in your personal life, business life, and I think maybe
you should work on it. Well, that's something you probably
should take the heart. Okay, I've examined yourself, pray about it.
Maybe I should, But not your enemies so if if
(24:00):
I can maybe help, maybe this won't help it. Let
me explain, there is good and evil in the world.
There is good and evil. We have to start there
and acknowledge that there are wonderful godly forces and there
are evil demonic forces at work in this world. There are.
We have to figure out what we're dealing with, and
(24:23):
we have to make sure we don't concern ourselves with
the opinions of the demonic forces. In fact, if we
can just get to the basics of good and evil,
we should actually seek out the disapproval of demonic forces.
People think I don't care what people say and think
(24:46):
about me. Again, to some extent, that is true. It's
actually worse or better than that, depending on how you
look at it. I want communists to hate me. I
love it because I know how sick demonic these people are.
I know the forces that drive them are the forces
of evil. And so when we get all these horrible
(25:08):
emails and people tell me I'm the spawn of Satan
and all this other stuff, I hope you die, and
it not really doesn't bother me. I love it. I
love it because I find it to be reassuring that
I'm on the right side of things. As I've told
you before, When when I finally die, whether it's tonight
(25:30):
or fifty years from now, when I finally kick off
and all the communists go online and say the worst things,
and they put up a bunch of TikTok videos celebrating
guys finding dead. He's burning in out whatever, do not fret,
do not be down, do not be angry. I'm telling
you right now, this is me telling you right now,
(25:52):
that's what I want. I want them to be thrilled
that I'm dead and gone. Don't argue with them. Sit
back when you see it, and smile. Chris just said
he'll spread my ashes over their party. Yes, that's perfect, Chris.
I'll set aside some money. We all know you're not
gonna pay for it. I'll get one of those cross
(26:13):
get one of those crop duster planes for you, and
you just go just drop it right on top of
them and smile, just knowing that that's what I want.
So that's the kind of mentality that may be hard
for you. But if you can divide society like that,
good and evil, then it makes the disapproval of evil
(26:34):
so much easier to take. If that woman who's stuck. Because,
by the way, politics is vicious, and I'm not going
to sugarcoat that for you. Running for local politics can
in a lot of ways be worse than running for
some national thing. When I was running for Congress, yeah,
and look at it's hard for a mother to turn
on the television set and see a commercial with my
(26:55):
face on it of my Democrat opponent calling me the Antichrist.
That wasn't fun. But it's not that personal either, is it.
At least I didn't personalize it. Mom may not have
loved it, but not mc neil. I didn't care. It's
different when you're running for city council, when you're running
for school board and you're seeing your opponent at the
(27:17):
carpool line. It's different when one of their hardcore supporters
stops you when you're picking up burger in the grocery
store and tells you you are a worthless piece of crap.
Now you're uncomfortable, Now you're nervous, now you're looking around.
It's different. You have to go into it with the
(27:38):
mentality that you are taking on evil because that's what
we actually are doing. We want what's best for our communities,
for our states and for our country. And we understand
that there are evil forces attacking our communities in our
states and our country, and those evil forces are not
going to welcome us with open arms when we try
(27:58):
to take their power alday, They're going to react viciously,
absolutely viciously. Remember when I got that dirty commi freak
fired from being the grand marshal of a parade here
in Texas, got that dirty commy freak fired. The email
inbox was have death threats pouring in. We're gonna come
kill you this and that it was wonderful, absolutely wonderful.
(28:23):
Why we got rid of evil and evil? Didn't like it?
Learn to accept it? All right, Let's talk about this
Japanese PM. This lady is a piece of work. We'll
talk a little bit more about Americans and their mental
health struggles. Let's talk about your mental health. Let's talk
about chalk. Maybe you do struggle a lot with depression,
(28:48):
with anxiety. I'm not just saying this because I love them.
You should give chalk a try. Natural herbal supplements from
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(29:10):
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(29:32):
look back at who you were three months ago and go, oh, wow,
he was down, wasn't he? C Choq. Now's the time.
It's black Friday time. Chuck dot Com slash Jesse Chuck
dot com slash Jesse. We'll be back Jesse Kelly Vaccian.
(29:56):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderfull Thursday.
Let's dig back into things before we get back into
this story about the Japanese PM or the emails. I
haven't figured out the angle right now of Michelle Obama,
and the angle I'm talking about is this. You can
(30:16):
see pr campaigns once you've learned to notice them. They're
not hard to notice and there's generally an understandable reason
behind them. So when someone out of the blue, there's
a bunch of video on them, you see them on
social media. Wait, he's on this show this day and
that show that day. Okay, that guy's probably running for office.
(30:38):
That guy has a new movie coming out. That guy
has a book. He just wrote a book, and now
he wants to advertise the book, so he's on a campaign.
I'm going to do ten different podcasts. I'm gonna do that.
I haven't figured out totally what's behind this recent Michelle
Obama campaign. I can make a guess. My guess would
(31:01):
be she craves the limelight. She misses it. That's my guess.
She very clearly loved being first Lady. She loved all
the fame that came with it. She has loved all
the money that came after it. And once you're done,
it's like show business. Right, once you're done, everyone forgets
(31:24):
about you in five minutes. Just do no matter what
industry you're in. If you're in a public industry, you
can convince yourself all you want that people will remember
me forever. But them won't. People forget, They move on,
They find the next thing. That's the way it goes.
He'll be that way when I retire one day, Oh no, oh,
I would know. You'll forget. You move on, You move
(31:46):
on to the next guy, and That's fine, totally fine.
I get the feeling. Michelle Obama has a hard time
moving on and being without it, just being a mom,
just being a wife. The problem for Michelle Obama is
she was always a pretty detestable human being. She always
(32:08):
was full of bitterness and hate, nothing but malice for
her country. You remember when Barack Obama was running for
office and she said repeatedly that this was the first
time she's ever been proud of her country, and she
got all kinds of heat for it. She didn't realize
what she said the first time she said it. She
was just being honest. Ah, I've always hated this stupid place.
(32:31):
Now that Barack might be president, I guess, I guess
it's not that bad. It's just a nasty race communist hag.
The problem for her is that hasn't changed. She just
has continued to walk down that path of bitterness. And
everything has to be a grievance, Everything has to be
some sort of offense, some sort of I've been true,
(32:54):
someone has been treading on me. Just this stuff is
so exhausting.
Speaker 7 (32:59):
And we have to start educating people about all kinds
of beauty. Yes, and our beauty is so powerful and
so unique that it is that it is worthy of
a conversation, and it's worthy of demanding the respect that
we're old for who we are and what we offer
(33:20):
to the world. Absolutely, absolutely, she's.
Speaker 1 (33:24):
Talking about black female beauty. What what? Why do you
have to make demands? Why do you have to have
a conversation. Is there some way of thinking out there
that black women aren't beautiful? I've never encountered this thinking
at all. Some people love Black women, some people don't.
(33:44):
I realize that some people like white women, Asian women,
Latina women. I get that that you may not be
everyone's flavor, but that's not a stereotype that exists. But
that doesn't matter, you see, because everything has to be
some sort of grievance, some sort of offense. So just
(34:05):
mortified by this and mortified by that, and I've been
oppressed and this is really really ugly when it comes
to the race communists. Oprah has done this her entire career.
Oprah is a billionaire, Oprah is world famous, and to
this day, Oprah will make public statements on occasion that
(34:25):
make her sound like a victim of some kind, that
make her sound like she's been oppressed in some way.
Lebron James has done this. Lebron James created a hate crime,
a hate hoax for himself. So said there was racist
spray paint on his garage or something like that. By
the time the cops showed up, they're like, oh, well
someone sprayed someone painted over it already, so it's gone.
(34:47):
What what is this? I don't know. It's awful, it's
unhealthy for everybody. It's certainly unhealthy for the country. But
it doesn't matter. Well, fame, power does not matter. It's endless.
This grievance politics. Jesse listening to him tonight, and I
totally disagree that Republicans will lose the House. He's talking
(35:08):
about me listening to him, but it got to me,
I totally disagree that Republicans will lose the House in
twenty twenty six. If people are dumb enough to vote
for Democrats after the previous administration, knowing what they want
for the country, then the country's done anyway. I'm not
saying that we should just sit back and accept that
we're going to lose the House in twenty twenty six.
(35:30):
I'm going off of a couple things that are that
have us swimming against the ocean. Those couple things are
one we do not. We don't have the same level
of motivation the communists do because the Communists feel like
they're out of power. When Joe Biden had the White
House for four years and they were tearing the country
(35:53):
you love apart, you didn't need me to sit here
and motivate you to call a friend and go vote.
I have to say that to you. I know I did.
It's just because it's my thing. But I didn't never
have to tell you that you were going to vote anyway.
You were coming for it. I didn't have to tell
you that you were out of power. You were watching
the things you want destroyed. You were watching the things
(36:16):
you hate succeed, and you marched to the polls. That's
why the president, the sitting president, whatever party he's in,
generally loses power in the House in the midterms. The
House of Representatives is up for reelection every two years.
(36:36):
The mid term elections are the first opportunity the country
has to go out and vote for or against the
current president. And the current president, no matter who he is,
no matter what he's done, has not, and frankly cannot
solve all of the problems that the country has encountered
(36:57):
in two years. So the people, the norm not you,
but the normies. Hey all, my problems aren't fixed. I
voted to make everything better. Everything is not better. So
maybe the normies sit at home, the communists will crawl
through broken glass to vote. We maybe were more complacent,
Maybe the coalition has shrunk a little. I wasn't saying
(37:19):
that to be disheartening at all. It was just more
of kind of a historical trend. All right, we'll talk
about this Japanese PM and mental health struggles, finding some
other things next hour. Hang on,