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November 14, 2024 43 mins

(Full Show) The Senate Republicans have chosen John Thune as their next leader, shutting down a challenge from swamp outsider Rick Scott. Jesse Kelly gives his thoughts on this and gets reaction from Senator Tommy Tuberville, who supported Scott. This comes as Donald Trump has made his best cabinet pick to date. Jesse reveals which pick that is. Plus, insight into Trump's new CIA director with Kevin Shipp and analysis of Trump's border appointments with Dan Lyman.

I'm Right with Jesse Kelly on The First TV - 11/13/24

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
The new Secretary of Defense pick is amazing. We'll talk
about that tonight. Yes, we have a new Senate Majority leader.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
We'll discuss that.

Speaker 1 (00:10):
Coach Tommy Tuberville is here, all kinds of Senate analysis.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
There's so much coming up tonight.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
And I'm right, John Thune's probably going to be our
next Senate Minority or majority leader.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
That was maybe back in February.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
I told you this was coming, and the day has
finally arrived. They had their vote today Senate Majority leader.
The new one is John Thune. I have heard all
of your concerns about John Thune. You should know that
I share your concerns about John Thune. When people dig
through and look at old video like this, we get concerned.

Speaker 3 (01:00):
In my state, they use them to shoot parade dogs
and other types of environments. And so I think that
there are legitimate reasons why people would want to have them,
And I think the challenge you have already is that
there are literally millions of them available in this country.

Speaker 4 (01:15):
They want reform and increased accountability. They want to make
sure that we are holding our law enforcement officers to
the highest standards, and they want their fellow Americans to
feel confident that what happened to George Floyd, Breonna Taylor
and too many others will not happen to their loved ones.
But at President, members of Congress have been listening. I

(01:36):
have been listening today. I'm proud to rise and support
a Senator Scott's policing reform bill, which I'm co sponsoring.
Donald Trump is the Republican nominee. Would you support him? Well,
I'm hoping we end to have other options.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
Okay, So he's weak. That's really what all that stuff is.
He's weak.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
It's too weak to defend your guy, too weak to
defend against the false narratives of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor.

Speaker 2 (02:06):
He's weak.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
Just remember, because I don't want to talk about this,
I want to talk about something wonderful. Just remember this,
all that maga energy you saw during last election where
people got off their butts and got involved.

Speaker 2 (02:19):
Remember you won that election.

Speaker 1 (02:21):
People started voting, knocking on doors, dragging friends to the pulls,
making phone calls.

Speaker 2 (02:26):
People became activists, and that.

Speaker 1 (02:28):
Maga energy rose Donald Trump lifted him back into the
White House for a second term. If you're angry about
being stuck with people like John Thune, be angry at
the GOP primary voter in Red states who will rise
up off the couch every four years and crawl across

(02:50):
the mile of broken glass to vote and work for
Donald Trump to get him elected. And then when it
comes time for a GOP primary, he sits at home.
I stayed safe, I worried about it. Or even worse,
he shows up and votes for the same loser who's
been in office screwing him over for six straight years.

(03:10):
Let's start getting more involved in primaries so we're not
stuck with people like John Thune. Now let's move on
and talk about something incredible. And this is going to
take me a minute because I need to walk you
through something first. What we're discussing here is Pete haig Seth.
Pete haig Seth is an infantry soldier. Pete haig Seth

(03:33):
led men in combat Iraq in Afghanistan two Broadze stars.
Pete haig Seth is a wonderful human being. He's somebody
I know personally. I will tell you, wonderful human being
with a heart for veterans, with a heart for changing
our military for the better. But before we get to
Pete and why this was such an incredible pick. I

(03:53):
want to talk to you about this. Here's what has
happened in the United States military. It's taken time. Happened
just in the last year, but over a long period
of time, the United States military became its own industry.
It stopped being this weapon of the United States of

(04:14):
America made only to defend the United States of America
and its people, and it started being a business, the
business of being in the military. All these generals and
amerals kept rising up through the ranks, and they'd get
all of our other friends as generals and amerals, and
soon you get the swampy filth of the defense contractor industry,

(04:36):
the Pentagon, And what eventually you have is a military
that is.

Speaker 2 (04:42):
Big, slow, stupid, woke, and gross.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
A military where generals will routinely leave the army and
go sit on the board of Raytheon and make a
couple million a year. A military that is corrupt and
the sk using and doesn't win wars, and not only
doesn't win any wars, doesn't.

Speaker 2 (05:05):
Hold anyone accountable.

Speaker 1 (05:06):
When they lose wars, people will say, why was nobody
held accountable for Afghanistan. The reason nobody was held accountable
for Afghanistan is the people who run the United States
military now don't give a crap about twenty years of
military failure that ended in embarrassing disgrace because they're there
with their general stars or with that raytheon paycheck, and.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
Everything worked out fine for them.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
It was twenty years of profit and promotion for these people.
What we have in our military academies, in our military
officer corps, the Flag officer Corps, the high up officers
is so rotted and broken beyond belief. It's staggering to me.
And what else is the men on the ground, the

(05:51):
real people who matter, the men and women on the ground,
especially the men on the front lines. Remember the infantry units,
Army Marine Corps, infantry.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
These high end units.

Speaker 1 (06:03):
These guys who really shoot downrange and get shot at downrange.
They are they're feeling disgusted with this military. The numbers
we have right now, you know, only sixty two percent
of veterans say they would recommend young people to serve.
That's down about twenty percent in just a couple of years.

(06:24):
It's free falling. I personally, I don't know a single
global war on terror veteran friend of mine, not one
Most of my friends are older now, obviously like me.

Speaker 2 (06:36):
Married kids.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
I don't know one that is encouraging his children to join.
Almost every one of them are telling their children they're
not allowed to join the men and women on the ground.
They are disgusted by this military leadership, by the calmi
nature of our military, by the bloated federal bureaucracy, by

(06:57):
the fact generals and admirals never get in trouble, yet
the men on the ground go to prison. Our military
is a disaster, and it's a disaster the American people
will find out about in horrible ways if things don't change.
And when I say horrible ways, i'm talking about we
wake up one day and combat has started with China

(07:19):
and we're losing. Did you ever think those days would come?
Those days are coming. Our military is a disaster waiting
to happen. It just hasn't happened yet. And so I
have said for the longest time, for the longest time,
that what we need, we need to fire every single
officer above a certain rank, every single one of them.

(07:39):
They can come back if they are vetted by a
board of people who are vetting these officers. Most of
them don't need to come back. These generals and admirals,
we need to go in. We need to clean all
the commie filth, all the DEI filth out of the military. No,
we don't need women in combat units. No we don't
have black quotas in gay quotas for the officer corps.

Speaker 2 (08:01):
No, no, no more of that.

Speaker 1 (08:03):
The best of the best only need apply the hardest
of the hard. We need a military, as I said before,
that it is full of type amen who desire war.
That's what we need. That's exactly what we need. How
are we going to get a military like that? How
are we going to get a military that cares about
people on the ground where you have to think differently.

(08:25):
What I love about Peak Pete haig Seth, the pick
of Pete hagg Seth is actually not because I personally
know him. That's just a nice little bonus. What I
love about the military pick of Pete haig Seth is
he's exactly exactly the kind of solution that can solve
the problems I just laid out. He's not separate from
those icky men and women on the ground. He has

(08:48):
led men in combat, been shot at and shot back,
been decorated, for valor. He not only knows the men
on the ground, he was an officer and he's close
enough to that Flag officer corps to understand the weakness
and stupidity and ineptitude and what it means, what their
weakness means for the men on the ground. He understands

(09:10):
what it means to feel a sense of betrayal from
the Pentagon as you go give your body and your
blood and your friends for this country and you come
back to find out the United States military is run
by a bunch of Putria bureaucrats and politicians and generals.
But I repeat myself, he is a man who has

(09:31):
spoken out often about cleaning out this military.

Speaker 2 (09:34):
In fact, you know why Pete got out of military.
He came on the show and maybe remember, and he
talked about it.

Speaker 5 (09:43):
I was dubbed an extremists by my National Guard unit
following the twenty twenty riots, and when we were going
to go guard the inauguration. That's why I got out.
So it's personal for me, it's personal for you. Everybody's
seen something, whether it's facting mandates, whether it's a first
getting promoted in whatever slot, whether it's training being diverted

(10:03):
to some nonsense instead of I don't know, gunnery tables
like all that, everybody's seen.

Speaker 6 (10:08):
An aspect of it.

Speaker 5 (10:09):
We got to fix it, or.

Speaker 2 (10:11):
Where do we turn.

Speaker 1 (10:14):
He's a man who understands exactly what needs to be done,
a completely different generation, a completely different way of thinking
this military. I'm sorry for being a little crass. I
know there are kids watching, but the military truly does
need an enema. There's a bunch of crap in there
that needs cleaned out. And maybe, just maybe with an

(10:36):
out of the box pick like Pete Hegseth, maybe just
maybe that enema has arrived. I you know, like I said,
I'm more than happy to criticize Donald Trump loudly when
I disagree with him. I am not a Pom Palm waiver.
I am not a Trump loyalist. I am loyal only
to my country. Donald Trump's picks thus far have been

(10:59):
out standing. All perfect, of course, not nobody is, but
the picks have been outstanding.

Speaker 2 (11:05):
And when I saw.

Speaker 1 (11:06):
This pick come down last night, I practically stood up
and cheered. I am so happy that maybe we are
going to change the direction of this country and hopefully
the United States military. And I'll tell you something else.
This phone has been melting with friends of mine over.

Speaker 2 (11:27):
The past few days who have been.

Speaker 1 (11:29):
Texting me about how hopeful they are, and military friends
of mine how hopeful they are. In the last twelve
hours twenty four hours, I should say, since Pete hag
Seth news came down, almost every single currently serving friend
and family member of mine has texted me and said, Jesse,
I'm excited, Jesse.

Speaker 2 (11:48):
I might stay in now. Jesse.

Speaker 1 (11:50):
This is amazing. The men on the ground are happy,
and so should you be. A new way forward, a
new way of thinking. Let's change things done. Donald Trump,
all that may have made you uncomfortable, but I am
right now. We have a huge show for you. We
have the coach, Senator Tommy Tubberville. He's gonna talk to

(12:11):
us about that disastrous Senate leadership vote. Where are we
going to go from here? All that and so much more.
Before we get to that, let's get to this. It's
good to get you a good night's sleep. There's nothing
better than when you wake up in the morning and
you know as soon as you know, right away, right
as soon as those eyes open up, you know, oh

(12:33):
that was a good night's sleep.

Speaker 2 (12:34):
I'm gonna feel good today, and you know vice versa.
You know, oh no, today is gonna suck.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
But if you could have that good feeling every day
with bean, with dream powder from being you can dream powder.
It's natural. It's a couple of hot chocolate. You sip
on a little cup of hot chocolate before bed. Only
it's got melatonin and things like that in it. You
just kind of drift off to this wonderful sleep, and
then when you wake up up, instead of feeling groggy

(13:01):
and heavy and miserable, you just feel ready to go
up to forty percent off shopbeam dot com slash Jesse Kelly, we'll.

Speaker 2 (13:12):
Be back.

Speaker 7 (13:21):
All right.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
Like I said in the beginning, you win some, you lose.
Some didn't go the way I wanted it to go.
Now we figure out exactly what happened, why it happened
that way, what things are going to look like going
forward from here, and to do so, figured we want
to bring one of the people on who's one of
the good people in the Senate and had the courage
to at least publicly announce who he was supporting, which

(13:44):
was Rick Scott of course, joining me now the coach
Senator from the Great State of Alabama coach Tommy Tabarville.

Speaker 2 (13:50):
Okay coach. For those of us.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
Who've never been part of some exclusive, fancy Senate meeting,
it sounds awesome. To be honest with you, What happened?
Where did this take place? What did it look like?
Normal people don't know.

Speaker 2 (14:02):
What you fancy senators do behind closed doors.

Speaker 8 (14:06):
Well, this vote Jesse happened in the Capitol, in the
old Senate room that was the very first one years
and years ago. The acoustics are not as good as
you would like. But at the end of the day,
there were some long speeches, some nominations from certain people

(14:27):
pushing their candidate, and there were some good talks that
a little boring at the end. To be honest, we
had got long after about four hours, but we only
had two positions. We only had we only had the
leader in the Conference chair. Tom Cotton won the Conference chair.
He's going to be very good at that. I like Tom.

Speaker 6 (14:45):
He's all in disappointed that my.

Speaker 8 (14:52):
Person I voted for, Rick Scott did not win the
Leader of the Senate for twenty nineteen covers. He only
got thirty teen votes. As you see there, John Corn
got fifteen. John twenty three. So it was pretty much
over after that because you only had to have twenty
seven votes and Thune was close. And you know, the
reason I voted for Rick Scott and tried to get

(15:15):
to other people to vote for him was because he
is an American first, all the way he believes in MAGA.

Speaker 6 (15:22):
He's a Donald Trump guy. He was right along with me.

Speaker 8 (15:25):
I was the first one to come out for President Trump,
and I think Rick was close behind.

Speaker 6 (15:30):
They're good friends, they communicate well.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
And Rick.

Speaker 8 (15:45):
Politician, you know, he was a John Thune one, and
he's gonna have to prove that he can work with
President Trump. Uh, he'll have to do everything he possibly can.
But it's uh, it's over now. We can go on
with it and start trying to put America first again.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
Okay, let's go on with it.

Speaker 1 (16:01):
Let's focus on, well, what I think is the good
the best part of this. First, you mentioned Tom Cotton,
Republican Conference Chair. What kind of power is that for
people who don't understand the workings of the Senate.

Speaker 2 (16:13):
What does that mean?

Speaker 1 (16:14):
And I understand Tom Cotton is obviously going to be
much more pro military and try to get all the
woke crap cleaned out of that place, which I know
you are passionate about as well.

Speaker 2 (16:23):
What else What does it mean for the to have
Tom in that role?

Speaker 8 (16:28):
Well, Tom is the conference chairs basically somebody that runs
our caucus meetings, stands up and puts the agenda.

Speaker 6 (16:37):
There's really no.

Speaker 8 (16:38):
Power to it. It's just a position where you work
basically for the leader. But it is not an appointed position.
It's elected position. So I'm very good at that. He's
he's structured, as you said, he's been military before.

Speaker 6 (16:51):
He works very hard. I work very hard with him
on an Armed Services committee.

Speaker 8 (16:55):
But conference chair is pretty much a position where you
just try to everybody together at one time, explain, to
give your opinions out, but also set the Jennifer everybody
else during the speeding.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
Okay, so now we have John Thune. There's no going
back now. John Thune's was obviously not my choice. What
do we expect out of John john Thune going forward?
Are we expecting he is going to go along with
what the people want in the country. Are we expecting
him to buck that? I understand talking to Rick Scott
yesterday that Mitch McConnell ran things pretty tyrannically in the Senate.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
Is that going to stop? What do we expect going forward?

Speaker 6 (17:37):
I think it'll be more open.

Speaker 8 (17:39):
John Thune spoke today and he spoke about that, about
giving everybody an opinion.

Speaker 6 (17:44):
Mitch McConnell been in it way too long.

Speaker 8 (17:46):
He he'd got his army around him, basically, and it
was hard to crack into that, into that leadership role.
But you know then, you you know, different leaders use
different techniques. We'll wait and see what John Thune does
and how does it. As we speak, he is meeting
with President Trump. He is being the new leader. He

(18:08):
will he uh uh spoke to the press and now
he's he's sitting down to the President Trump. Try to
give him his agenda. But uh, you know, Jesse, he's
gonna work with President Trump. He has no choice.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
Uh.

Speaker 8 (18:22):
Anybody in there that we'd devoted for would have been
in that situation. And he's going to prove himself early.
President Trump is gonna be hard to work with because
he's gonna be He's gonna be demanding a lot, and
he should demand a lot. We have a short period
of time in which to get President Trump's confirmations through.
Uh as much as we can with the tax reform,
the border, uh inflation, all those things.

Speaker 6 (18:44):
We have got a.

Speaker 8 (18:45):
Short period of time and the Democrats are going to
try to block everything we do. And John Dune's going
to have to be a fighter on the floor of
the United States Senate.

Speaker 1 (19:01):
He certainly is okay speaking of those confirmations. Last night
it was announced that Pete hag Seth, combat veteran two
tours total stud Pete haig Seth is going to be
Trump's nominee for Secretary of Defense. Very out of the
box pick, not someone you would traditionally think, no generals,
no admirals.

Speaker 2 (19:20):
I love it.

Speaker 1 (19:21):
I think we need a new, younger, fresh way of thinking.
But then that brings us to the Senate, where a
man like Pete has to get confirmed. Do you view
these confirmations as having serious roadblocks with the majority we
have as thin as it is.

Speaker 8 (19:40):
I would love for Pete to be the first person
up for confirmation when we take over in January. Of course,
President Trump will not be inaugurated to the twelfth. We
need a Secretary Defense immediately. To me, he's a perfect choice.
I've spent hours working and try to fight against the

(20:00):
woke DEI that's in the military as we speak, Secretary
of Austin has been a disaster. Mark Milly was a disaster.
I spent hours a week with all these military people
coming in for hearings. We've got some good people in
the military. We've got people that want to have the
strongest and best military in the world. The problem is
it starts from leadership in the Pentagon, which is an

(20:22):
absolute disaster. And we have so many generals that they
fall over each other trying to make a decision, and
so we need somebody like that's gonna go in and

(20:43):
shake it up and start from the Pentagon down and
get wokenship of the world last second and let people
know that hey, we're back, we're here to stay, and
we're one of the most lethal fighting machines that's ever
been assembled. And Pete can do that. We just got
to give him the ability to get out there and
get it started.

Speaker 1 (21:02):
Yeah, senator or sorry, coach, thank you as always.

Speaker 2 (21:06):
I appreciate y'all. See soon.

Speaker 1 (21:10):
I am hopeful. Like I said, before we get to
anything else, let's save a life real quick. I'd like
to always try to save at least one life every
single night on I'm right, that's what preborn does. They
save lives. This is not a normal organization. This is
an organization that is setting up pro life clinics in
the belly of the beast, the highest abortion areas in

(21:32):
the country, Baltimore, Buffalo, New York, places like that. They
put up these little pro life centers and they give
these women who are about to abort their babies free ultrasounds.
There is a baby right now who is going to
die if its mother does not get that ultrasound. If
she gets it, she chooses life almost every time. Once
she hears that heartbeat, it's over. Twenty eight dollars is

(21:55):
what buys her that ultrasound. Preborn dot com jesse go
give what you can, We'll be back. The people who
run this country are deeply evil. I don't say that

(22:16):
as a partisan person, although I am very much partisan.
I say that because the numbers are right in front
of you. They are replacing you on purpose. They are
they are tearing the country away from you because.

Speaker 2 (22:30):
You love it and you won't let them burn it down.

Speaker 1 (22:33):
And they're handing it to foreigners for a five hundred
dollars visa card.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
Did you know that in the last well, what is it.
The last five.

Speaker 1 (22:41):
Years, we have added half a million jobs, less than
half a million jobs for US born workers. You know
how many jobs we added for foreign born workers in
that time. Three point six million Democrats took over this country.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
Opened up the border, took your job away.

Speaker 1 (23:00):
From you, and handed it to somebody whose loyalty can
be bought for a welfare check.

Speaker 2 (23:05):
Sit and think about that.

Speaker 1 (23:06):
Joining me now, Dan Lyman, founder of border hawk News,
who's been all over what's been happening to this country for.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
A long time.

Speaker 1 (23:14):
Dan, please explain to me why this isn't treasonous what
these people have done.

Speaker 2 (23:19):
Well, it is treasonous.

Speaker 9 (23:20):
And as you mentioned, the number of foreign born workers
in the labor force now is just exploding. We've seen
that actually for decades now, but it's certainly gotten worse
under this administration. Eighty eight percent of labor force growth
now is foreign And if that's not a great example
of the great replacement, I don't know what is. And
it's basically it's de facto government policy at this point

(23:41):
to prioritize foreign workers. We see that with the H
one B, H two B programs. We see that with
the CHNV program by which more than half a million
illegal aliens have entered the country and have been given
work visas. And that's just happened in the last eighteen
months alone. And we also see that board. We see
that when the DOJ sues Elon Musk and SpaceX for

(24:04):
not hiring refugees to work at SpaceX, where of course
we have really high level sensitive secrets and technology being
worked on, and Elon Musk is supposed to prioritize refugees.

Speaker 2 (24:16):
Quote unquote to work in those programs.

Speaker 9 (24:18):
It's totally insane and as you mentioned, it is treasonous,
and I think that we just really need to go
back and examine what the United States is at its foundation.

Speaker 2 (24:28):
Is it an an.

Speaker 9 (24:29):
Economic zone for foreigners to enrich themselves at our expense?

Speaker 2 (24:33):
Or are we a nation?

Speaker 9 (24:34):
Are we a homeland for American citizens who are supposed
to not only survive but thrive in the years to come.

Speaker 2 (24:43):
Dan, can you walk us back when did this begin?

Speaker 1 (24:47):
I didn't just begin with the Buyed administration, as you mentioned,
It's been happening for years. It's been happening for decades.
But how long have the politicians in this country, Democrats
and Republican sought to replace us troublesome citizens with foreigners
who are a lot easier to deal with.

Speaker 9 (25:04):
Well, of course, we can go back to nineteen sixty five,
the Heart Celler Act. Prior to that, for about forty years,
there was a de facto freeze on immigration because we
had taken in so many immigrants into this country, many
of them hardworking, of course, many of them from Europe
up until the nineteen twenties, and then it was government
policy at that point to allow these people to assimilate
and allow our economy to absorb them in a way

(25:27):
that made sense. But since since the nineteen sixties, we
have seen a total change, and we have seen our
nation being totally overrun with people who come here. Some
of them come to work, some of them just come
to commit crimes, many of them come to leech off
the system. Many of them are sending their earnings home.
And as a result, we see that Americans are suffering.

(25:48):
We are now watching more than one hundred thousand Americans
on an annual basis die of opioid overdoses.

Speaker 2 (25:55):
These are, in many cases, deaths of despair.

Speaker 9 (25:57):
We see fewer and fewer heritage Americans, White Americans in
the workforce, being admitted into university, and we see them
being left behind at this point in favor of foreign workers.
And we know, of course the government is enabling this,
but of course this is the corporations that are really
benefiting from this. And even down to the mom and pops,

(26:18):
we see in many cases where a business will be
taken over by a foreign manager or owner and they'll
just clear out the ranks and bring in a bunch
of their own people to work in these businesses, whether
it's hotels, motels, convenience stores, gas stations, you name it.

Speaker 2 (26:32):
So it's from the bottom up and from the top down.
That is.

Speaker 1 (26:38):
Donald Trump does not have a magic wand and he
didn't get elected king. What can he do without legislation?
What can he do to reverse some of this?

Speaker 9 (26:49):
Well, of course we need to be putting in place
higher American first policies, which we don't really see that
right now. That needs to just be de facto Trump policy.
Trump gets in on day one, I think there's a
lot of things that he can do. We saw how
much Biden was able to do on day one and
rolling back so much of the Trump immigration agenda. But

(27:09):
I think that Trump needs to go doubly as hard
when he comes in on day one, and we need
to be signing a raft of executive orders on that
day in order to write the ship here. We need
to restart the border wall. We need to reinstate, remain
in Mexico. We need to end all of these programs
by which the Biden Harris administration has brought in millions
and millions of foreigners quote unquote legally vi ch N

(27:30):
v CVP one, Family Reunification, the CAM program, So we
need to end all those on day one. We needed
task force assembled immediately for mass deportations. We need a
task force to find the missing children, hundreds of thousands
of missing children that are being trafficked around this country.
We need a task force to tackle the criminal networks
that are we're operating within this country and outside of

(27:52):
our borders.

Speaker 2 (27:53):
And you know, there's just a whole raft of things
that need to happen.

Speaker 9 (27:57):
And we also need to work with the States in
order to search National Guard, law enforcement to the border
and make a show of force that no longer will
we tolerate this invasion at our borders. And also we're
not going to allow these people to keep flying into
the country or being brought into work in our economy.

Speaker 1 (28:13):
Tom Holman talks to talk is the man who very
much wants to walk the walk as the new borders are,
and he's not backing off here. He's been recently.

Speaker 10 (28:22):
Criminals and gang members getting no grace period But while
we're out prioritizing the public statety threats and national security threats,
if you want to self deport, you should self deport,
because again, we know who you are and we're going
to come and find you. So if you want to
self deport, that's fine. But criminals and gang members, they
get no favorites from this administration. You came to this
country legally, which is a crime, you're committed crimes against

(28:45):
the United States city some Haines crimes. You get no
grace periods. So we're coming for you.

Speaker 8 (28:49):
How are they going to get home?

Speaker 2 (28:50):
How do they get home?

Speaker 10 (28:55):
Well, the ones we're going home wrestl won't put an
airplane and send them home. And the ones that want
to go home on their own, they found their way
across the world to come to the greatest nation on
earthing and find their way home. Either that or I'll
give them a free airline ticket. That we put them
on our airplane and we'll take them home.

Speaker 2 (29:11):
Okay, what does this look like locally? Dan?

Speaker 1 (29:15):
Are we going to be seeing National Guard troops walking
the streets? What does mass deportation look like? I can't
wait for it, but I want to know what it
looks like.

Speaker 9 (29:25):
Well, I'll tell you what I would like it to
look like, he says. People ask him how they're going
to get home. Put them on ce fives, put them
on Sea one thirties, load them up the same exact
way that we brought them in from Afghanistan.

Speaker 2 (29:35):
We can send them back that same way.

Speaker 9 (29:36):
We can be flying cargo planes back to these countries
of origin. We can be sending cargo ships, we can
be sending railroad cars back to Mexico.

Speaker 2 (29:44):
Whatever it takes.

Speaker 9 (29:45):
But of course the administration probably won't be that extreme.
But definitely, like I said, day one, task force, figure
out how it's going to look and who's going to cooperate.
We need to go after sanctuary jurisdictions that that include cities, counties,
and entire city states and not allow them to continue
operating in this way. We also need to be working
with local law enforcement, the National Guard. This needs to

(30:08):
be effectively a military operation. However, that needs to be
laid out. I mean, this is an invasion of the
United States. This is a nation at war. We are
at war with people that are coming into this country.
For instance, Trenderragua, MS thirteen, the cartels, they all need
to be designated as terrorist organizations. It's my opinion that
Donald Trump his first foreign trip needs to be straight

(30:31):
to Mexico City. He needs to sit down with a
coalition of governments from across the Western hemisphere, whoever will participate,
and he needs to say this ends now.

Speaker 2 (30:40):
We need your cooperation.

Speaker 9 (30:41):
If you're not going to cooperate, we're just going to
handle this ourselves. We need to go secure the Darien
Gap with the help of the Panamanian government. I'm sure
that they will be very sympathetic to that. Their new
president there has expressed intentions to do that himself. We
need to support him in securing the gap. We need
to secure the border. We need to show a force
that is it's so overwhelming that nobody will want to

(31:02):
attempt to come into this country anymore. And in the meantime,
we start ridding ourselves of tens of millions of invaders
from within the homeland, Dan.

Speaker 1 (31:12):
What do we make of christinome head of DHS. Is
it just figurehead things? Should I be a concern? Should
I be doing backflips?

Speaker 9 (31:20):
I am very cautious about this perspective appointment. I will
say I don't see anything in her history that indicates
that she'd be necessarily the right pick for this job.

Speaker 2 (31:32):
That remains to be seen. I'm going to give Trump
the benefit of the doubt here.

Speaker 9 (31:35):
Personally, I think there are other people that I would
like to see there, whether it's Ken Kuchinelli or Mark Morgan,
or to be honest, it could be you, Jesse Kelly.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
You have military experience.

Speaker 9 (31:45):
You're a former Marine, and I think that someone like
you thinks the way that you do would be great
Because for the last few years we've had just a
diet in the world, communist globalist running DHS. I think
the guy who wrote the anti communist Manifesto would be
a great antidote to that, at least for the years
to come.

Speaker 1 (32:03):
I appreciate you, Dan, Thank you, brother. I appreciate you
very much. You know I would very much enjoy a
lot of that job. But no, no, I'm not leaving you,
all right, I am going to tell you to switch to.

Speaker 2 (32:14):
Pure Talk though.

Speaker 1 (32:16):
I'm gonna save you a little bit of money right now,
and I'm going to have you stop sending money to
a company who hates you and your values. You see,
Verizon hates you at and T and T mobile. These
are dirty communist companies. They take your money and they
spread it around to the grossest causes and grossest people
on Earth. Go look how many times pure talk has

(32:37):
given your money to Black Lives Matter. When pure Talk
gets involved in charity, and they do, it's always about veterans.
A Vietnam veteran leads pure Talk. They hire Americans who
speak English. Switch and keep your phone and keep your number.
There's no trouble, same five G network. There's no reason
not to switch to pure Talk. Pure talk dot com

(33:00):
slash jessetv switch, We'll be back.

Speaker 2 (33:13):
Who is John Ratcliffe.

Speaker 1 (33:15):
He's gonna be the new head of the Central Intelligence Agency,
which is kind of a really important thing. Well, he's
the former DNI, big cheese, former congressman. He also exposed
the Clinton's nefarious Russian collusion hoax stuff.

Speaker 2 (33:29):
So on paper he looks great, but I don't know.

Speaker 1 (33:33):
John Kevin Ship, I'm sure has some ideas joining me now.
Former CIA officer, author of the book Twilight of the
Shadow Government, Kevin Ship. Okay, Kevin John Ratcliffe. He's the
one I'm least certain of. Not that I'm doubting him
at all, but he's the one I've been texting everybody
I know about what do we think about Ratcliffe? What
do we think about Ratcliffe? Because I know how important

(33:54):
CIA is for this country. So Kevin, what should we
think about Ratcliffe?

Speaker 11 (34:00):
Well? I think the most important thing about Ratcliffe is,
by all accounts, he's an honest man. He's a good conservative,
and he was the only one in the intelligence community
that stood up for Donald Trump during the Russia collusion
hoax when even the CIA and John Brennan were leaking
the information as if it was intelligence. So he's a

(34:21):
man in integrity, a man of honor. As you mentioned,
he was the Director of National Intelligence, so he has
that experience. He was a good five year congressman, so
he knows the system and he knows Washington personally.

Speaker 7 (34:32):
I think he's a great choice.

Speaker 1 (34:36):
Okay, Well, that heartens me a great deal to hear
you say it. Now, first of all, let's begin with you.
What did you do for the Central Intelligence Agency?

Speaker 7 (34:46):
Oh goodness.

Speaker 11 (34:47):
I started off as a protective agent on a protective
detail of William Casey during Iran Contra. I was in
the special investigative unit of the Counter Ashprina's group searching
there was a mole in the CIA that was turning
information over to the Soviets.

Speaker 7 (35:03):
We were doing the search for him.

Speaker 11 (35:05):
I was the assistant team leader, and they want me
to call it an anti.

Speaker 7 (35:09):
Terrorism assault team.

Speaker 11 (35:11):
I was the assistant team leader on a team that
went into counter the New People's Army in Manila, Philippines,
who were gunning down entire police departments, killing Marines, and
retarding our US embassy.

Speaker 7 (35:25):
So I did that.

Speaker 11 (35:26):
I was a second in command on a secret base
in the Midwest, and in the event of all of this,
I uncovered a vulnerability to the cover of our agents overseas.
And that's kind of what started my journey to come
out and discuss the CIA.

Speaker 1 (35:44):
Okay, so basically, you had the coolest career in the
history of mankind.

Speaker 2 (35:47):
How do you hunt for a mole? What do you do?

Speaker 11 (35:50):
Oh goodness, Graciers. So well, it's an extensive process. The
CI of course has records and connection to records all
over the world, all over the globe, with assets and
informants and their databases. We go through all of that
and try to link the information that was leaked in
this case to the Soviets to the person who would
have access to that. And that's like sometimes finding a

(36:12):
needle in a haystack, but it's possible. It can take months.
The case I had eventually went to the desk of
the President of the United States. It was a GS
fifteen senior CIA official. The main mole, however, turned out
to be FBI Special Agent in charge Robert Hanson, so
we eventually eventually did get him. But it is a massive,

(36:33):
basically digital and overseas intelligence manhunt tracking down where this
information that's coming from, that's being given to the Soviets
or whatever foreign intelligence service.

Speaker 2 (36:45):
Why are you no longer in the CIA.

Speaker 11 (36:48):
Well, when I was in the cioncovered of vulnerability, I
did an investigation on our connections through US embassies and
I found it appeared pretty strongly that any foreign intelligence
service to go into the open visa section to the
unclassified computers penetrate easily the system, going and look at
the codes and identify the identities of our covert agents

(37:13):
in that country, the chief of stations, and by extension,
their assets. I put together an extensive report, submitted it
to CIA management and the division responsible. My report was
destroyed four times. Even after giving it to a division personally,
I received a phone call on the telephone saying drop

(37:34):
this investigation or it's the end of your career. My
report was leaked to the Department of State Inspector General's office,
who called me and said they thought there was something
to my report. They were going to do a global investigation,
but this is a secret. Do not tell the CIA
they were going to do this investigation without their knowledge
because they had been covering it up.

Speaker 7 (37:54):
Turned out to be the case.

Speaker 1 (37:58):
Why in the world with the CIA not want a
report like that, Kevin, My mind goes to a bunch
of very nefarious places, But I read a bunch of
spy novels. Why in the world would the CIA not
want that?

Speaker 7 (38:10):
Well?

Speaker 11 (38:10):
When I provided them all When I provided them Sorry,
I'm geting a little bit of feedback, When I provided
them all the information they needed to fix this. The
documents were destroyed and I was threatened, and the investigation
had to go outside. Why in the world would the
CIA not want to fix this when I gave them
all the tools to do it, but instead covered it
up and actually destroyed my documents from the server in

(38:33):
CI headquarters. The only conclusion I can reach is that
they wanted that open door there for plausible denial. If
there was a chief a station who wasn't playing by
the rules, or if they wanted to write off some
assassination or other operation to a foreign power, they could
say that foreign power went in through the visa section.

Speaker 7 (38:52):
I identified that person.

Speaker 11 (38:54):
I think, and this is just my opinion because everybody's
still scratching their head, but I think it was for
plus causible denial in case they needed a scapegoat.

Speaker 1 (39:03):
Oh that's freaking wonderful. Why didn't the JFK files get released?
Mike Pompeio famously told Donald Trump, Hey, don't do this,
And it's so odd for those of us who are Look,
we just want information. Everybody who could have been involved
in something like that domestically is dead or in the
very least they're about to be.

Speaker 2 (39:23):
They're ancient by now.

Speaker 1 (39:25):
Why still the secrecy it creates distrust?

Speaker 11 (39:29):
Yeah, and Mike Pompei is a good man West Point graduate,
but I think he went native when he got into
the CIA. As a matter of fact, he put out
an assassination order for Julian Assange. He called Tucker Carlson
and threatened him with the rest for talking about it.
So and then Mike later has stated that he regretted
not doing the reform that he should have while he
was in there. Those five thousand pages that remain on

(39:53):
Kennedy should be released.

Speaker 7 (39:54):
There's no reason that they shouldn't.

Speaker 11 (39:55):
But people shouldn't get their hopes too high, because I
can guarantee you, knowing how some of these operations go,
that the files directly related to the operation itself and
how it was to be conducted were probably immediately destroyed
after the assassination and no longer exist. The other files
are probably holding on to because they're like pointers, indicators

(40:17):
or puzzle pieces that people could put together.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
Tell people again about your book. I'm going to be
buying your book like thirty seconds after we hang up, Kevin.

Speaker 7 (40:28):
Oh, thank you.

Speaker 11 (40:29):
It's called Twilight of the Shadow Government, How Transparency will
Kill the Deep State? And I wrote this defied the
CI and wrote this without their approval, knowing that they
would redact most of it if they even let it
be published at all.

Speaker 7 (40:41):
So I wrote this at.

Speaker 11 (40:42):
Some personal risk, reason being for people to know what
the CI is all about. The CI will probably take
the royalties my royalties from this book, and it's a bestseller.
So my wife has set up a go fundbe page
to counter that. So I am taking some risk, but
that is how strongly I believed that the American people
need to know what the CIA is doing without their knowledge.

Speaker 2 (41:07):
I cannot wait to find out.

Speaker 1 (41:09):
Kevin ship Twilight of the Shadow Government is the book.
You come back soon, please, sir. I can spend a
long time with you. That's freaking awesome. I didn't even
get to a lot of the CIA stuff that I
wanted to get to.

Speaker 2 (41:21):
He gave me his resume and I started nerding out.

Speaker 1 (41:23):
I'm sorry. Whatever, we have lightened the mood. Next it
is time to lighten the mood. And I realized, in
this world of partisan politics, we can just only insult
each other and attack each other all the time. I

(41:44):
get that that's the partisan world we live in, and
certainly we on this show. We have blasted away at
the ladies of the view several times because they're miserable
kami hags who have completely destroyed the minds of so
many women in this country. However, Goldberg's birthday today, and
to celebrate birthdays here, so we put together a montage

(42:06):
of the finest WHOOPI Goldberg moments and joy.

Speaker 9 (42:09):
If you can't handle a part, you can't handle me.

Speaker 12 (42:13):
He cared enough about his wife to pay the That
was gas. Thank you will be You're very welcome.

Speaker 11 (42:21):
And you know what, well, not a minute, what happened?

Speaker 12 (42:28):
Well, we'll get an air biscuits. Yeah, oh, excuse me,
just blew a little brown out of the air.

Speaker 10 (42:41):
I don't want to inject something into my skin.

Speaker 12 (42:43):
That's gonna excuse me. Yeah, esperrito on.

Speaker 9 (43:00):
All right, not the matter.

Speaker 2 (43:07):
Happy birthday, whilpee, I stable.

Speaker 10 (43:11):
M hm

Speaker 2 (43:13):
Hm hmmmmmmm.
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