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August 7, 2024 43 mins

Kamala Harris has chosen Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as her VP. Walz has been called out in the past for dodging deployment. Jesse Kelly is very fired up about this and other news as well. This come as Cori Bush has just been ousted in a primary election. Jesse compares her positions to Kamala Harris and gets reaction from Inez Stepman. Jesse also speaks with RNC Chairman Michael Whatley to get the GOP's plan for ending the Harris Honeymoon. Plus, Caitlin Sinclair provides an update on the grassroots efforts to register voters.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
I have thoughts on Tim Walls. Tonight we're going to
talk about grassroots with Caitlin Sinclair and as Stepman's here
to talk about women voters. All that and more coming
up on I'm right, let's talk about Tim Walls, something

(00:24):
that is eating me up. But before we talk about
Tim Walls, I want to talk about something that's not separate.
I'm going somewhere with us to just stay with me.
You remember I was gone. It was a couple of
weeks ago. I was gone for a couple of days.
And one of the places I was, I was all
over the place was I was at a reunion for
the Marine Corps guys. I went to Iraq with We

(00:46):
had a little Marine Corps reunion. We didn't do anything fancy.
We're not fancy people. We rented some ratty little house
on a lake and we made cheeseburgers, had a couple beers,
caught up on old times. That's what we did. But
one night we were sitting around was actually the first
night we were sitting around, just laughing, joke and talking
about people we miss, some times we had, and we

(01:07):
decided we wanted to talk to our old first sergeant
for you non military types. That is a very very
senior enlisted guy. He's a very senior enlisted guy. Okay.
We decided we wanted to talk to him now. I
got out of the Marine Corps in two thousand and four.
I was a four year infantry Marine and we all

(01:29):
as we discussed him, we said, yeah, I wonder do
you think should we call him? I don't know, it's
too late. Should we call him? So I pick up
my phone, I shoot him a text message and say, hey,
sergeant major because he was a sergeant major when he retired, Hey,
sergeant Major. Were sitting around gab and me and the fellas,
you want to talk to us. Thirty seconds my phone

(01:49):
beeped back, Oh, absolutely call me. This was at eleven
thirty at night. We called him. We put him on
speaker at eleven thirty at night, and he just sat
and talk to us. He wasn't in charge of us anymore.
We wanted to know how we were, how were our lives,
how were our families, how are our jobs? Do we
need help? That was one of the first things he asked, Hey,

(02:10):
you guys need anything, are you okay? I can't properly
explain to you better than that. What a senior enlisted guy,
what a staff and CEO noncommissioned officer, is just a
senior guy like that? What he means to the troops,

(02:30):
especially the young troops, the eighteen, nineteen, twenty twenty one
year olds. When you're in, even when you're out, they
are father figures. I'm still in touch again. I've been
gone for twenty years. I'm old and gray and fat.
I've been gone for twenty years, and I still talk

(02:51):
to multiple, multiple staff and CEOs of mine because they
guide me, their mentor me friends. When you're in there everything,
they are father figures for you. And that brings me
to this story about Tim Walls. Now, I know you're
not a big fan of Tim Walls. I'm not a

(03:12):
big fan of Tim Walls, his crazy positions and all
these things, and I just set that aside for a moment.
I already know he's a dirty communist. It's not that
Tim Walls was about to be the command sergeant major
of his National Guard unit as they deployed to Iraq.

(03:34):
That means he was going to be the senior enlisted
man in his unit. He was going to be the
father figure to all those young men who were about
to leave the safety of home and walk into a
combat zone at a time in Iraq when it was

(03:55):
nasty over there, IED's and death and misery. And this man,
with all these young soldiers under his charge, after he
found out he was going to be deployed, quickly turns
in his retirement papers so he can go and run

(04:16):
for Congress and not deploy with his troops. Now, if
you are a military or a veteran, your blood pressure
is already spiking through the roof. If you are not
one of those, that's fine. I'm not certainly not talking
down to anyone. I hope I properly conveyed what that means.

(04:37):
And how despicable that is, how cowardly and despicable and
gutless that is. You are the mentor father figure, trainer. Yes,
you are the disciplinarian. As a senior enlisted guy, you
are essentially the dad for the troops underneath you. And

(05:02):
when his sons were getting ready to deploy to combat,
Tim Walls said, have a good time, boys, I want
to go be in Congress. That is so revealing about
who this person is in the worst possible way. And
I know about he wanted tampons and put tampons in boys' restrooms.

(05:26):
I know about his gun grabbing ways. I know about
his acquiescence during the Saint George Floyd riots. I know
all the terrible things about Tim Walls and his positions.
There is nothing more despicable about that human being than
knowing when his troops were getting ready to go into hell.

(05:49):
Tim Walls said, nah, not for me. I'm going to Congress.
It is an indictment on the man. And if he
agreed with me on every single issue, I would hate
that human being until the day I die. You don't
do that to your troops. I cannot believe this human

(06:10):
being is anywhere near the Oval office. I can't believe
he's a governor. I can't believe he was ever a congressman.
And of course, of course, having bailed on his deployment,
having bailed on his troops, Tim Walls is mister stolen valor.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
Hope woke up like many of you did five weeks ago,
and Dad said, Dad, you're the only person I know
who's an elected office. You need to stop what's happening
with this. I'll take my kick in the butt for
the NRA. I spent twenty five years in the army,
and I hunt and I gave the money back. And
I'll tell you what I have been doing. I've been
voting for common sense legislation that protects a second Amendment.
But we can do background checks, we can do CDC research,
we can make sure we don't have reciprocal carry amongst states,

(06:56):
and we can make sure that those weapons of war
that I carried in war is the only place where
those weapons.

Speaker 3 (07:00):
Were are.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
Weapons of war that I carried in war? What war
zone was that, Tim? You sent your men over there,
you stayed back and sat on your fat butt in
Congress while your men went over there and died. What
war zone did you carry a weapon in, Tim, Minneapolis,
It certainly was in Iraq, and it certainly wasn't with

(07:28):
your men. What a despicable human being. And of course,
because all the Communists do is lie Dome and her
surrogates are running to the television to question jd Vance's service.

Speaker 4 (07:43):
Well, here is Tim Walls, who enlisted when he was
seventeen years old. He served in the National Guard for
twenty four years. And I'm not aware of any military
service that jd Vance has ever served. So let's just
make the comparison there and what happened in the tragedy
of the employed and then the UNREPP.

Speaker 5 (08:07):
Yeah, okay, pardon.

Speaker 6 (08:07):
Me for that.

Speaker 1 (08:12):
These people are awful and JD Vance, who is killing
it on the campaign trio? Might I add? He responded
and responded, well, bothers.

Speaker 7 (08:22):
Me about Tim Waltz as a Marine who served his
country in uniform when the United States Marine Corps, when
the United States of America asked me to go to
Iraq to serve my country, I did it. I did
what they asked me to do it, and I did
it honorably, and I'm very proud of that service. When
Tim Waltz was asked by his country to go to Iraq,
you know what he did. He dropped out of the
army and allowed his unit to go without him, a

(08:42):
fact that he's been criticized for aggressively by a lot
of the people that he served with. I think it's
shameful to prepare your unit to go to Iraq, to
make a promise that you're going to follow through, and
then to drop out.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
It's more than shameful, it's cowardice. Could not possibly think
lower of anybody than I think of guys like Tim
Walls who pull that crap. All right, now, enough of that,
I want to talk very briefly about Corey Bush. I
know we have a huge, huge show for you, and
as Stetman, you're not gonna want to miss Caitlin Sinclair,

(09:17):
Michael Wattley. We have so much here, but Corey Bush
lost her primary last night. She's the radical nutjob communists.
Here's a little montage of Corey Bush, and we're gonna
explain again why she was challenged and why she lost.
Here's who she is.

Speaker 8 (09:32):
The white supremacy happening is unbelievable. The first step in
that process is to root out white supremacy, starting with
impeaching the white supremacist in chief. Thank you, and I
yield back. Republicans have used the Special Council's report to
further their long standing efforts to re elect re elent,

(09:52):
the former white supremacist in chief, Donald Trump. How many
Palestinian children must die before we stop bear hugging net
and Yahoo's stream is far right government with our taxpayer
sponsored bombs and weapons. Police killings of unarmed black people
are responsible for more than fifty million additional days of
poor mental health days per year.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
If you.

Speaker 8 (10:16):
Could do it again, would you still double down or
use that slogan defunction?

Speaker 1 (10:22):
Absolutely?

Speaker 3 (10:22):
Yes.

Speaker 8 (10:23):
So look, this place is where seventeen hundred members of Congress,
this elected body, enslaved black people. It's not surprising because
they thought it was right. It's not surprising because this
is a place where members continue to claim that the
insurrection on the Capitol just appear to look like a
normal tourist visit. It's not surprising because this is the
place where our black and brown staff members repeatedly speak

(10:46):
of experiencing racism and sexism. It's lomaphobia get pushed off
of elevators, xenophobia more right here in this workplace.

Speaker 1 (10:56):
So why did she leave? Why did she get challenged?
Why did she lose her primary? As we've discussed many
times before, there are elite communists com and there are
street communists COUM. The street communists all want to become
elite communists. They want the fancy steak dinners in private jets.
Very rarely can they make the transition. But if they do,

(11:17):
if they like Corey Bush, if they make that transition
and they get elected to Congress, that's fine. They're allowed
to be radical, they're allowed to be crazy, they're allowed
to burn down America. But what they're not allowed to
do is create problems for the elite communists. The elite
communists are trying to burn down America much more subtly.
They're trying to walk more of a tight rope. People

(11:39):
like Corey Bush, the street communists, scum. They oftentimes don't
last with the elites because they create problems. The streets
are not allowed to create problems for the elites. That's
exactly why Jamaal Bowman is gone. It's why Corey Bush
is gone. It's why Rashida Tale will be gone. Not
this election cycle, probably, but over the next couple election

(12:01):
cycles she will be gone to the streets are not
allowed to create problems for the elites. All that may
have made you uncomfortable, but I am right. We have
a huge show for you tonight. You know what else
is huge? Pure talk. Pure talk is going gangbusters right now,
and it's not surprising. The American people have finally had

(12:25):
their fell of corporate America and their filthy communist activism.
They're tired of it, and they're starting to make choices.
They're starting to be purposeful with where they spend and
don't spend their money. It's wild how much filthy communism
we fund. Do you pay Verizon every month? Do you
make a payment to AT and T or T Mobile

(12:47):
every month? These companies hate your guts. Puretok loves you.
They love America so much. This is probably my favorite thing.
They hire Americans who speak English. When you talk to
some when at pure talk, you're talking to an American citizen,
a pleasant one who speaks English. She can't find that
anywhere anymore. Switch to pure Talk saved some money. Same

(13:08):
five G network, Keep your phone, keep your numbers, easy,
puretalk dot com, slash jessetv. We'll be back.

Speaker 3 (13:25):
She is running a flawless campaign.

Speaker 9 (13:28):
She has not made one single mistake.

Speaker 1 (13:31):
And I think Democrats like to say, but she.

Speaker 4 (13:33):
Will, she might not.

Speaker 1 (13:38):
Republicans have nominated Trump three times. I mean she is
running a flawless campaign. In this choice, even eight hours ago.

Speaker 4 (13:47):
I think wasn't as obvious as it is now.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
You know, in a weird way, I think that moron
Nicole Wallace might actually be correct flawless in the fact
that Dome doesn't know anything. She can't speak about any
issue eloquently in the positions she's taking a horrific all
across the board. So she's just hiding, just not doing
any interviews. Why wouldn't she joining me? Now, the big
cheese at the RNC, the chairman, Michael Wattley, Michael, you know,

(14:13):
I honestly think I think it's a really smart strategy.
They raise a boatload of money, lie about everything she's
ever said, and hide her under the desk so no
one can find out what an idiot she is.

Speaker 10 (14:23):
It certainly was the plan under Joe Biden. It appears
to be that's the plan they're going to run here.
You know, I think that what the Trump go ahead?

Speaker 1 (14:33):
Good? No, the Trump campaign, how do you counter act that?
Because he's out there, he's always out there, he's doing rallies,
he's doing the hostile interviews, doesn't matter. Trump will sit
down with it. How do you counteract the fat that
she's just in hiding.

Speaker 6 (14:47):
Well, I think a couple different things.

Speaker 10 (14:48):
First off, you know, Jade Vance has been doing a
fantastic job of highlighting that every time he talks to
the press and using opportunities even to visit the Vice
resident's airplane today. To go over and have a conversation
about this. And also there is a lot of video
that we have, I mean, and you just look at

(15:09):
the video clips of her overtime, you know, and these
are not like, you know, a high school editorial that
she posted or an article in her yearbook. These are
fairly recent of her time when she's been the vice president,
and she has been saying the things that she has
been saying. You know, at the end of the day,
her record is her record, and we need to do
a good job of articulating for everybody the difference between

(15:31):
Donald Trump's record of four years of success and her
record as four years of failure in the White House.
And it's just a matter of having that conversation.

Speaker 1 (15:43):
I have to say nothing of her time as a
United States Senator, which is maybe just as bad as
her time as VP. How obviously, people are looking at
the polls now. I'm sure you're emailing boxes as full
as mine of people getting nervous because polls are tightening.
There's a couple out there that show her in the lead.
I've been trying explain to people this is the honeymoon phase.
They finally got rid of the albatross that was Joe Biden.

(16:06):
People don't even know who she is yet. This, hopefully
Lord Willing, is as high as she'll get. She probably
goes down from here. Am I wrong? No?

Speaker 6 (16:15):
I think you're absolutely right.

Speaker 10 (16:16):
And the other thing that you got to keep in
mind is Donald Trump has not gone down in a
single pull. When we look at all of the battleground
state polls, where he was at forty nine percent a
month ago, he's at forty nine percent today. Where he
was at forty seven, he's at forty seven. So you know,
Kamala may have gotten a bump up a little bit
from where Joe Biden was when he was.

Speaker 6 (16:37):
Falling off a cliff, but you know.

Speaker 10 (16:39):
That, like you said, this is a sugar high, and
the more people are exposed to her radical ideas and
her conversations, she is going to return to earth. We
still see a very clear path for President Trump to
win this election because he is going into every single
battleground state talking directly with every single voter and putting

(17:01):
out a message that says, I hear you, I know
the issues that you care about, and I'm going to
fight every day to put solutions on the table. When
we talk about things like our southern border, we talk
about inflation, grocery prices, gasoline prices, housing prices, when we
talk about our standing in the world. Donald Trump wins
on every single one of those pulls in a head

(17:22):
to head matchup. That's why he's in a good place
to be for all of his races.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
Michael speaking of the path to victory, and I'm not
going to put words in your mouth, but it looks
to me like Trump has a very good chance of
running the sun Belt stage, which would mean he needs
Michigan or Wisconsin or Pennsylvania. So that brings us to
how those states are run. Their elections are shaky, to

(17:49):
put it mildly, they do everything in their power to
make sure their election laws are as loose as humanly possible.
What's the RNC doing to counteract that?

Speaker 10 (17:59):
Well, j Yes, yesterday I was in Pittsburgh having a
Protect the Vote Tour stop with former Florida Attorney General
Pam Bondi. This is part of a tour that co
chaired Laura Trump and I have been doing all across
the country. We are recruiting and training one hundred thousand volunteers.

Speaker 6 (18:18):
To serve as pole observers.

Speaker 10 (18:20):
We are working in every single state to try and
make sure that we have the right rules of the
road in place when it comes to laws, when it
comes to regulations, to make sure that we're going to
have a fair, accurate, secure and transparent election cycle.

Speaker 6 (18:35):
We want to get these rules in the road before.

Speaker 10 (18:39):
Voting starts, and then once voting starts, we got to
be in the room. You want to be in the
room when they vote. You want to be in the
room when they're counting the votes. And so that is
the program we're running, the first ever national election integrity program.
This was the number one topic that I had with
President Trump when we were talking about having Laura and
I take over the RNC, and it remains our number

(19:01):
one priority today.

Speaker 1 (19:04):
Did you get any of those sandwiches with the fries
on them when you were in Pittsburgh. I used to
grow up around Pittsburgh, and man, I miss those. They
were still good.

Speaker 10 (19:11):
You know, there's an absolute one hundred percent appeal to
being in the steel in the Orange City, to being
there in Pittsburgh. And I think that it just really
matters when you talk about getting out there and having
these conversations we have held to protect the vote. Tour
stops in every single battleground state. This is our second
one that we've had in Pennsylvania, and Laura and I

(19:35):
are fully committed to getting this done. But the fact
that Jade Vance was also in Pennsylvania just yesterday, he
was over in Philadelphia shows you how important we think
that Pennsylvania is. When you look at all of those
battleground states, you're going to be able to tell by
President Trump, by jd Vance, by the surrogates, by me,

(19:55):
by Laura, you could tell where we're living is going
to be in each one of those battlegrounds.

Speaker 1 (20:02):
The debates are they actually going to happen? Trump famously
has said, hey, I didn't agree to any debates with
Kamala Harris. He's talking about switching venues. She obviously is
not going to be that excited about standing on stage
trading punches with Trump. Is this something that's actually going
to happen.

Speaker 6 (20:20):
We hope it will happen.

Speaker 10 (20:21):
I think the President has been very clear that he
would like to have debates. But you know, when you
set up one set of debates with Joe Biden, I
would argue, could you could say straight up Joe Biden
is the one who pulled out of the second debate,
not Donald Trump, but we know right now that he
would like to have debates. He said that on multiple occasions.

(20:41):
Those conversations are taking place today. I hope that we
will have some of the announcements coming soon.

Speaker 1 (20:48):
Michael Wattley, Thank you so much, sir, I appreciate it.
All right, We're going to talk to Inez Stepman about
many things. One of the main things we're going to
talk about is women voters, single women voters, married women voters.
Who should you be going after? Who shouldn't you be
going after? Should you go after men? Why does nobody
go after the mail voter? But talk to Inez about

(21:10):
that in a moment. Before we do that, let's do this,
Let's talk about glorious sleep. There are a few better
feelings than waking up in the morning and as soon
as your eyes open up knowing, oh my gosh, I
got a great night to sleep, I'm gonna be awesome today.
And there are a few worse feelings. And when you
wake up and you still feel heavy, tired, and you

(21:31):
just know you know work's gonna suck. You know everything
you have, everything you do is gonna suck. That's where
a dream powder from Beam comes in. It's not the sleeping. Oh,
dream powder will put you to sleep, it's the waking
that matters. Dream powder. It's just a cup of hot
chocolate before bed, but it's all natural stuff, melatonin and things.
And when you wake up, you don't feel all groggy

(21:52):
and heavy like you do with everything else you'd take
to sleep. You feel good. Okay, dream powder every night
if you want. Forty are sent off at shopbeam dot
com slash Jesse Kelly. Go get a bag and tell
me how you slept. All right, we'll be back.

Speaker 9 (22:17):
Ut me just talk about masculinity for a moment, as
being second gentleman changed your own view of perceived gender roles,
of what it means to be a man's.

Speaker 11 (22:30):
This is something I've thought about a lot, and something
I've spoken about a lot. There's too much of toxicity,
it's masculine toxicity out there, and there we've kind of
confused what it means to be a man, what it
means to be masculine.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
I'm sorry, I didn't mean to laugh over the clip.
I'm sorry. It's just the second gentleman thing and the
effeminate way. The question was even asked, this is these
people make me laugh, joining me now and as Stepman,
Senior Policy and Alyst, Independent Women's Forum, and more importantly,
my friend, and as if you and Doug were the

(23:07):
last two people on the planet.

Speaker 5 (23:09):
Do you no.

Speaker 1 (23:20):
What where do these people learn to talk like this?
What women prefer guys like this?

Speaker 5 (23:28):
I don't know. I can't speak to their their.

Speaker 12 (23:30):
Specific relationship, but I do think that our discourse more
broadly is going in this direction.

Speaker 5 (23:39):
Right.

Speaker 12 (23:41):
It seems like this very like therapeutic, sort of feminine
talk about toxicity and all the other therapy terms that
have been slipped into our normal discourse in terms of politics.
And I do think that actually reflects a larger trend,
which maybe we can talk about when we get to
voting numbers between men and women.

Speaker 1 (23:58):
No, let's talk about them now. Obviously this is not
a new thing. Cook Political Report has a report on it.
But this is something that's been as old as me
older than me. Women are voting for Dome and men
are voting for Trump. This is how it goes consistently.

Speaker 12 (24:14):
Why so, the interesting thing about those numbers is that
they're hiding something which is that unmarried men, married men,
and married women all vote to varying degrees for Republicans,
and actually unmarried men aren't that far off from married men.

Speaker 5 (24:31):
So all of those those groups vote.

Speaker 12 (24:34):
Somewhere between fifty three and fifty six seven percent for Republicans.
And then the outlier is single women who are voting
sixty eight sixty nine seventy percent for the Democratic Party.
And so we've only seen this gap between male and
female voting patterns on the whole really open up in
the eighties. It's not a fixed a fixed piece of

(24:56):
our sort of political landscape. In the nineteen fifties, women
vote did in larger numbers for Republicans than they did
for Democrats, So this isn't a permanent fixture. And actually
underlying it is. What's happened that if you look at
the underlying numbers, is that we simply have a lot
more single women who are voting very disproportionately for the

(25:18):
Democratic Party, and that's opening up that gap in the
overall numbers between men and women. And I think that
just doesn't get you know, it doesn't get broken down
like that a lot very often. But what we're actually
seeing is a marriage gap of a family gap, a
family formation gap where men and women when they do
form families when they get married. And this is obviously
talking on the aggregate. There are plenty of exceptions to this,

(25:39):
but they tend to see their interests as more aligned politically,
whereas when women in particular are single, they tend to
see their interests as oppositional to men's. And that's why
we see those numbers pulling apart the way that they do.

Speaker 1 (25:56):
Yeah, and it's getting worse. We actually talk about that
a lot about how now it's a marriage thing, you know,
a male thing, and it's the single women who are
going nuts. What drives me crazy about it. That is
how the two different sides approach that issue. The Communists
see that, and they understand that single women are right
for the picking, and so they do everything in their

(26:17):
power to keep them single forever. The Republicans, of course,
are stupid and cowardly and worthless like they always are,
and they look at that and they decide they need
to message better to single women. We need to hand
out essential oils or something stupid instead of creating something
culturally that encourages marriage, which will in the end benefit you.
It's the two different approaches that drive me insane about that.

Speaker 12 (26:40):
Yeah, I would add something even further to what you said,
which is the Republican Party isn't going after a demographic
that is potentially very interested and trending in their direction.

Speaker 5 (26:50):
Right, what about talking to men? What about Republican Party doubling.

Speaker 12 (26:54):
Down on its advantages with men which have mostly been
As I said in the fifth, well, if men started
voting in the numbers that single women do for the
Republican Party, it would be a wipeout, right, And there's
no interest to continually messaging to men, even though I
would argue that the Democratic Party is overtly hostile to

(27:15):
men in both policy and rhetoric. Right, just to pick
a couple examples, the due process regulations that the Biden
administration just returned the Obama rags on on Titles nine
basically strip due process from college men. If you're accused
of sexual assault, you don't have the right to representation,

(27:35):
You don't even have the right to know fully what
you're being accused of until you walk into these single
adjudicator hearings with a Title nine officer who is incredibly biased,
Like this is something that First of all, not only
men should be concerned about, but a lot of married
women are concerned about with regard to their sons. Like
that would be an issue where the GOP could message

(27:56):
effectively to married women, to married men, and to single men.

Speaker 5 (28:00):
But they just.

Speaker 12 (28:01):
Drop that issue. It's just not something that they talk
about a lot. But that's just one example, right, even
talking about the decline of manufacturing jobs in comparison say
to administration or you know, college college administrator jobs or
something like that that tend to heavily favor a feminized
career path. Like these are issues that the Republican Party

(28:23):
could take advantage of and I think, very effectively to
increase their share of the mail vote. But you're right,
they don't seem interested in doing that. They seem interested
in getting pats on the head from a demographic that
is predisposed not to take their ideas, you know, very
seriously or even to sort of answer.

Speaker 5 (28:41):
Frankly, I think what we've seen with JD.

Speaker 12 (28:42):
Vance has been an answer right to answer those ideas
with the label of weird or creepy or whatever, not
a real answer, right, And is.

Speaker 1 (28:53):
Why I know Republicans are stupid and cowardly. I get
that that's built in, but it's such an obvious answer.
Everything you just said there's one hundred percent correct, and
it's so obvious. There's a number of single men who
don't vote, who aren't even registered to vote. They're disenfranchised.
They're waiting there to be plucked and made part of
your voting coalition, and the GOP would rather go after

(29:16):
the liberal white women. I don't understand the why explain
it to me, you know.

Speaker 12 (29:21):
I think it has to do with appealing to new
audiences quote unquote. You always hear that phrase, we have
to put our message in front of people who are
new audiences.

Speaker 5 (29:29):
And that's true. I mean, I totally support the idea.

Speaker 12 (29:32):
Of talking to anybody who will give you a hearing. Right,
we're trying to convince and persuade our fellow Americans on
this or any host of issues.

Speaker 5 (29:40):
I'm not against talking.

Speaker 12 (29:41):
To people who are sort of predisposed to be against you.
I think that's an important part of politics. But it's
like we've forgotten the other part of politics, right, which
is making sure that you're talking to the people who
are predisposed to agree with you. And we see the
same thing racially right for In twenty twelve, there was
the famous gop Autok Say report and it said, basically,

(30:02):
the Republican Party lost because we don't appeal enough to
Hispanic and black voters. We need to do more outreach
on that. The way that Donald Trump actually won in
twenty sixteen was by bringing in a different new audience,
which was working class white men who had not been
voting mostly for either party, or they had been voting Democrat.

Speaker 5 (30:20):
And he brought that new audience.

Speaker 12 (30:21):
And somehow that was never part of the new audience discussion, right,
how do we increase our share of white men voting
for the Republican Party? That was that was never a
part of the And it seems like they really value
some votes more than others in a strange way, in
a strange like sort of liberal accepted a check box
kind of way, and when in reality, you should go

(30:43):
where the votes are and if you're your votes and
you're more likely to pick up votes in this case
among single men, then you know, that's what a competent
political party would do. But what we're seeing is instead,
we want to we want a party that looks you know,
it gives us a good rejoinder to the New York
Times what they write about this, and that's not serious politics.

Speaker 1 (31:03):
Yeah, please stop calling me a racist. That's been Republican
Party politics for years now. It freaking drives me crazy.
On that note, I just want to touch on this
really briefly with you, the Josh Shapiro thing. If Josh
Shapiro didn't refuse it, which I'm hearing a lot of
things that say Josh Shapiro said no. But let's just
assume for a moment that Dome wanted Shapiro, considered Shapiro

(31:25):
and rejected him because he's a Jew. Which it's pretty
obvious to everybody right now what's happening in the Democrat Party.
They hate Jews, They have an anti Jewish problem bad
in that party. Do you see Jews in America? Jewish
Americans who've traditionally voted two out of three for Democrats,
do you see that shifting? No. I don't mean they're
all going to go Republican now, but they're going to

(31:48):
shift eventually, right, I.

Speaker 5 (31:51):
Guess it remains to be seen.

Speaker 12 (31:52):
You're referencing a poll that came out recently in New
York as showing the Jewish vote in New York basically
fifty to fifty, forty nine to fifty one. And that's
New York, right, And New York is a liberal state
across the board. That being said, that pole because Jews
are such a small part of the population. I mean,
in that poll, you're talking about about one hundred voters, right,

(32:14):
So I would just be really careful with some of
those some of those early polls that show huge swings
in the Jewish vote. I'm not sure whether that will
happen or not. I mean, I'd be very pleased to
see it happen. I think it's long overdue, it's been
This has been part of the left for a long time,
the hostility to Israel, and then more domestically speaking, the
hostility to the idea. You know, Jews are are lumped

(32:38):
in with oppressors, right, with white oppressors. The liberal ideology
is anti white, and it's anti Semitic. In addition to
being anti white, right, anybody who's perceived as a colonializer
and oppressor, you know, god forbid, they're actually successful in
the economy as well. Like that just adds all kinds
of layers of a different oppression tag. So that one

(32:59):
can be tagged with. So I think that's that's really
what's going on. But that being said, you know, look personally,
I have a lot of I have a lot of
liberal leaning Jewish friends, and I'm not sure they're pulling
the lever for Donald Trump. I'd be really, like very
happy to see that that firewall break. I'm just not
going to predict it before I actually see it, because

(33:21):
I mean, look, same thing with the black vot right.
We get every single four years, we get a bunch
of these poles that say, like, actually, the black boat
is going thirty five percent for Republicans this year, and
every time it's like Lucy in the football. So I
wouldn't I wouldn't get ahead of us on the basis
of one pole, ahead of ourselves on the basis of
one pool that is based on one hundred and you know,

(33:41):
nine people or whatever it is.

Speaker 1 (33:44):
Yeah, it has, Thank you, ma'am. Appreciate it all right.
Caitlyn Sinclair is going to join us next to talk
about grassroots that matters a lot.

Speaker 13 (33:55):
Good evening, good evening, good evening, everyone, good evening.

Speaker 1 (34:20):
Good evening.

Speaker 14 (34:22):
I gotta tell you, pointing out just an observation of
mine that I made. I just have to say it.
You know it, you feel it. These guys are creepy
and yes, just weird as hell.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
That's what you see.

Speaker 6 (34:34):
That's what you see.

Speaker 1 (34:38):
Dome's voice is so hard to listen to, isn't it
hard to listen to? Anyway? Let's talk about the weird thing.
Cayln Sinclair, official spokeswoman of Turning Point Action, joins me, Now, Kaylin,
the weird thing. Jd Vance's weird. They're weird, this is weird.
I am not a young voter. You are a young voter,
and I am told repeatedly that this kind of branding

(35:00):
it works with young voters. They don't expect it to
work on you, But does it?

Speaker 8 (35:06):
Jesse?

Speaker 15 (35:07):
To me, this whole weird tactic is like ex boyfriend
level projection.

Speaker 12 (35:12):
Right.

Speaker 15 (35:13):
We all have that ex partner that was an expert
in gaslighting, and to me, having liberal snowflakes calling conservatives
weird is just simply that. So let's break this down.
You have Tim Walls calling conservatives creepy and weird. This
is the same man that signed laws into plays requiring

(35:34):
tampons to be in men's bathrooms, the same man that
thinks it's okay to chop off children's private parts. And
the same man that wants pornography in our schools, Jesse,
this is the same party that gets upset when you
use the wrong pronouns, that thinks purple hair looks good,
and that was willing to be experimental lab rats and
take about twenty to thirty experimental jabs. So I don't

(35:57):
know what's more weird than that, But let's get this straight.
The Kamala Harris camp Tim Walls now calling us weird
is the same tactic they use back in twenty sixteen
with Hillary Clinton calling us deplorables. So you're asking if
this is working on young voters. You know this is
not working on It's not working on the American that

(36:19):
can't afford groceries. It's not working on the American that
can't afford gas. It's not working on the American who
can't afford to buy a home. It's not working on
the American that believes there's only two genders, does not
want to transition their kids at a young age, and
believes in the America First agenda.

Speaker 1 (36:35):
Jesse, Yeah, I dated a girl with purple heroines. I
wish I hadn't done that. Let's talk I'm so sorry
gas lighting. Let's talk about gas lighting really quickly. She
brought up that term. People don't understand because they're not
involved in the political world and the way we are.
How many people they see online social media, which is

(36:57):
obviously huge now, are paid. So many of these Kamala
Harris fans all of a sudden are paid to do it,
and it works. It creates a momentum. That's why they
do it. This stuff can be very effective. Even a
garbage candidate like Dome can be made to look popular
and like it's the new thing if you pay enough
big accounts to do it.

Speaker 5 (37:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 15 (37:20):
So I think in this highly curated world of social media,
we have to make sure that Americans are seeing pass this,
especially the young generations.

Speaker 5 (37:28):
You have Kamala Harris.

Speaker 15 (37:30):
Alongside the DNC propaganda machine, which we call the media.
Now we all know that there's no such thing as
media now in this country, especially when it's just propaganda's
heads that are they're just talking heads, Jesse, They're undiagnosed
mental illness folks that are just talking heads for the DNC.
And so two weeks ago, two and a half weeks ago.

(37:53):
This was the same media that was telling us, because
of how historically unpopular Kamala Harris was at the time,
that Joe Biden was going to try to repl her.
This was the same media that told us that twenty
twenty election was the fairest and safest election of our lifetime.
The same media that told us just seventeen twenty days
ago that Joe Biden was a complete legitimate candidate and
there was nothing to see here. And now, all of

(38:15):
a sudden, the script has flipped, and the love that
we are seeing for Kamala Harris coming out of the
mainstream media is not real.

Speaker 5 (38:24):
It's completely fake.

Speaker 15 (38:25):
And now you have her campaign that is trying to
buy rappers, buy streamers, buy whoever whatever instagrammable influenzers they
can to come to work at their rallies and take
cringe worthy selfies.

Speaker 1 (38:38):
I don't know who that's fooling.

Speaker 6 (38:40):
I don't know who that's going to fall.

Speaker 1 (38:43):
I don't know. Maybe we should have twerking. No, I
don't think we need that at our rallies, but we
do need to chase down ballots. Caitlin, that is obviously
something that is very real. Whatever people think about elections.
Chasing ballots where it's legal is something that we have
to do, and we have to do it very well
because they do it very well. I don't to expect
us to be the professionals that the dirty communists are,

(39:05):
but are we getting better at that? The view from
the ground, what is it?

Speaker 6 (39:11):
Well.

Speaker 15 (39:12):
I'm here in Arizona working with Turning Point Action and
from our standpoint, this is what this game is all about.
And we are doing all of the groundwork, all of
the grassroots Jesse and it's so important because guess what
this is how we win elections. You don't win elections
by having great rallies, big rallies, having an American flag
in your front yard and posting on TikTok, torking and

(39:35):
complaining on social media. You win rallies by registering voters,
and you win elections, I'm sorry, by registering voters and
chasing those ballots. And that's what we're doing here at
Turning Point Action. You saw the primary with Carrie Lake
just last week, that amazing win, and we're so proud
to be involved and doing everything we can to making
sure that folks are registered to vote. That you're engaging

(39:57):
in your community. You're having these hard conversations, You're getting involved,
because we cannot have November fifth come around and have
any American out there that's going to take to Twitter
to complain or be upset in the results if they
had nothing to do with saving their country and getting involved.

Speaker 5 (40:13):
So we say to everybody.

Speaker 15 (40:15):
Out there that Donald Trump is not there to save
you if you don't do anything to save him.

Speaker 5 (40:21):
First.

Speaker 15 (40:21):
You have to get involved in this fight. There's many
ways to do that. You can download our app, Turning
Point Action, go online Turningpoint Action dot com. We have
our Chase the Ballot Initiative JESSE, which is basically encouraging
all walks of life to get involved in this movement
to help.

Speaker 5 (40:37):
Us chase ballots, to help us.

Speaker 15 (40:39):
Have one friend, have a barbecue, have a pool party,
I don't know, have these conversations, make sure that all
your community members, all of your friends, all of your
family members are registered to vote, and then chase those ballots.

Speaker 1 (40:52):
But Caitlyn, what if I'm not in Arizona. What if
I'm stuck in some commie hell hold like California, or
I'm in a blood red state like Southmolta. And then
we pray for you.

Speaker 6 (41:02):
No, I'm kidding.

Speaker 5 (41:04):
I'm kidding.

Speaker 15 (41:05):
Well, I am born and raised New Yorkers still spend
a good amount of time there, and that's okay. There
are still ways you can get involved. We have postcards,
we have phone calls. If you download our app, you
can see the areas that you're in Jesse and you
can see the low propensity voters in your area. We
make it very easy. Technology is amazing these days, and
that's again a turning point action app that you can

(41:26):
download no matter what city and what state you were in.
There is something here at turning point action for everyone
as far as making a difference, as far as getting
involved in your community and being around like minded people.

Speaker 5 (41:39):
So we have our coalitions.

Speaker 15 (41:40):
You can go to coalitions dot com to find out
more about that, and Jesse we have coalitions for something
for everyone. We have a Faith Coalition, we have a
Mom's Coalition, Black America Coalition, We just launched our gen
Z Coalition. So again we're really engaging people from all
walks of life to get involved in this movement, and
it starts simply by just downloading an app and having

(42:00):
one conversation a day.

Speaker 1 (42:03):
There you go don't tell me how much you care,
show me how much you care. Get involved, Caitlin, thank
you so much. I appreciate it. All Right, we have
lighting the mood next. All Right, that was a big show.

(42:24):
It's time to lighten the mood. And when it comes
to Nancy Pelosi, some people will get confused why I
call her Grandma Vodka. I think if you watch a
little bit of her most recent interviews, you will understand
how she earned that name.

Speaker 3 (42:41):
Whether it's well it's the first bill, the first build,
protect so built, COVID, shots in the arm, money in
the pockets, children in school, people at work, the infrastructure bill,
building building in a way that is respectful of communities,

(43:03):
chips and science.

Speaker 1 (43:07):
It's painful to listen to these people run the country.
And I didn't say that's probably the most powerful person
in Washington, d C. Anyway. Stamo
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Jesse Kelly

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