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May 1, 2024 44 mins

Everyone is talking about Kristi Noem's hunting dog. Jesse Kelly has some brief thoughts on that, but instead thinks we should be talking about abortion. So, he brought Abby Johnson on the show to discuss what the GOP can ACTUALLY do in the fight for life. So who is this dead hyena we speak of? You'll have to watch and find out. Also joining the show is Alexis Wilkins with an update on street communists and Rebecca Velo for a discussion about language.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Some twenty twenty four talk.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Tonight. We're gonna talk pro life stuff tonight. We're gonna
talk about street communists, what's happening out there, all that,
so much more coming up.

Speaker 3 (00:11):
And I'm right, welcome to I'm right.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
It is time for Dome and Dummer. How am i
John here?

Speaker 2 (00:27):
You know what scares me but also makes me laugh?
Maybe you're right there with me. Joe Biden, Kamala Harris,
those people leave the country.

Speaker 1 (00:43):
I know we talk.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
About this all the time, and to screw ups and
how embarrassing he is and how embarrassing she is. And
I know we talk about this all the time.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
But Joe Biden and Kamala.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
Harris, they run the United States of America. Before we
get to Joe, we'll get to Joe here in a minute.
Kamala Harris is going to be president. Maybe let's let's
let's put it this way. You've seen Joe Biden, and
we'll get to his latest screw ups. You've seen Joe.

(01:17):
It's getting worse. Joe Biden's getting worse. He's getting worse quickly.
He even does it. You'll see this in a little bit.
He does that like the mouth hanging open thing. Now
like your mouth weighs like your jawways a thousand pounds
is done, right, He's done. He looks bad. But Joe
Biden has to be president for the remainder of this year,
and if he doesn't, medical scare God forbid, something happens.

(01:42):
Kamala Harris is going to be President of the United
States of America. Like we think about her, and we
know that that's the possibility, but we haven't really put
our minds there quite yet. And let's talk about November, right,
because that's really what we're talking about here. What are
their chances? How bad do they look?

Speaker 1 (02:01):
What if they win? They could You never know?

Speaker 2 (02:04):
Don't you dare fall in love with poll numbers in April, right,
don't do that. There's a long way away. The selection
could be. It's anyone's game right now. If they win,
it turns into what a guarantee, a ninety percent chance
that Dome is going to be the president of the

(02:26):
United States of America. And well, remember when I went
on Tucker and talked about her laugh a long time ago.
Everybody watching you right now has worked for or worked
with somebody who just has ambition just dripping off of
their pores.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
And that's Kamala Harris. Those types of.

Speaker 2 (02:44):
People will do anything to get ahead. They treat their
bosses like crap, they treat their employees like crap. That's
why she knifed Joe Biden in the debate with all
that race nonsense.

Speaker 1 (02:53):
There was no need to do that.

Speaker 2 (02:55):
It's the same reason she cackles like a dead hyena
every time she's asked an uncomfortable question. It's the same
reason she started out her political career as Willie Brown's
brought worst bund Kamala Harris will do anything to get ahead.
Cackling though, Let's focus on that, because clearly her team
has brought the information to her that it's a problem.

(03:17):
She's done it all the time. You remember, we could
play you, we won't. We can play you a montage.
It's an hour long of her laughing. She'll make some
terrible joke and then laugh. Terrible joke, laugh, terrible joke.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
Laugh. And now while she's out there saying.

Speaker 4 (03:29):
This, my staff, for example, sometimes they'll show me little
things that just amuse me, like apparently some people love
to talk about the way I laugh.

Speaker 5 (03:39):
Oh yes, okay, I love your laugh.

Speaker 4 (03:42):
Well, let me just tell you something. I have my
mother's laugh, and I grew up around a bunch of
women in particular who laughed from the belly. And I
think it's really important for us to remind each other
and our younger ones, don't be confined to other people's

(04:03):
perception about what this looks like and who how you
should act in order to be right. It's really important,
it's important.

Speaker 6 (04:15):
I love your laugh and I love that message.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
What does that mean?

Speaker 2 (04:26):
Don't be confined by others to what this looks like
and what it's important to be.

Speaker 1 (04:34):
Who talks like that? What do those words even mean?
And let me tell you something, Dome.

Speaker 2 (04:40):
The reason why people talk about your laugh, I'll be
honest with you, it's because it makes us nervous. And
you know why it makes us nervous, Dome, because.

Speaker 1 (04:50):
You're a fifty seven, fifty seven, fifty eight year old woman.

Speaker 2 (04:52):
Whatever she is, she's older, you're fifty seven fifty eight,
No insult to that, but you're getting up there in years,
your fifty seven year old old woman. You should know
who you are by now and be comfortable in your
own skin. How many fifty seven year old women are
watching me?

Speaker 1 (05:08):
Right? Now, you're very comfortable with who you are. You
know what you are, you know who you are.

Speaker 2 (05:12):
But you the fifty seven year old woman who's one
heartbeat away from taking over the reins of the United
States of America.

Speaker 1 (05:21):
You are so uncomplete that you feel.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
The need to nervous laugh every time you say something.
And what it does is it makes us believe that
you're not quite ready for the job. And so this
is what we're going to have to suffer. Remember, if
Dome takes over and whatever that day comes, if that
day comes, what Drew Barrymore did in this next little

(05:50):
clip with Dome is something we're going to have to endure.
The most nauseating, dishonest media slobbering you've ever seen in
your life.

Speaker 7 (06:01):
I've been thinking that we really all need a tremendous
hug in the world right now. But in our country,
we need you to be Mamla of the country.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
We need you to be Mamala. We needed to be
Mamala of the country.

Speaker 2 (06:33):
And Dome since they're awkwardly like she always does.

Speaker 1 (06:36):
Yeah, I mean absolutely absolutely, these are the people.

Speaker 2 (06:40):
These are the people who leave the United States of America.
I can't believe and let's move on to the other guy.
This is one of the best things in the world.
I'll tell you something about running for office. Let me
tell you something. You may not know this, maybe you do,
but you know I ran for Congress twice.

Speaker 1 (06:57):
Here's something you need to know about.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
Politicians run for office, whatever that office may be.

Speaker 1 (07:03):
But I'll just make it about me.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
When you run for office, you have to talk to
people all day long, all the time. You have to
go to this pancake breakfast and this rotary club meeting
and this Republican club meeting. You got to give a
speech here, but it's all shaking hands and kissing babies, stuff,
retail politics. You know, Hey Marty, how you doing, Hey Barbara,
how's the kids?

Speaker 1 (07:23):
To all that kind of stuff.

Speaker 2 (07:25):
And because that's your life, you will find yourself speaking
to people and you don't care at all what they're saying.
And I know that sounds really, really mean, but I'm
a really mean person. I'm here to tell you I
had a guy stop me once. We were at some
big event and I was meeting and greeting people. I
had a guy stop me one time because he wanted

(07:46):
to take twenty minutes twenty minutes at this big event
and tell me his seven point invasion plan for Iran.
I'm not making this up. And that he proceeded to
launch into his invasion plan. And I'll tell you what master,
When you're running for office, every politician has mastered it,
even the ones who tell you they haven't.

Speaker 1 (08:05):
They're lying to you.

Speaker 2 (08:06):
Know what, you master her when you run for office,
you master getting this look on your face like you're listening.
So you're not listening, you're daydreaming. Oh, I think I'm
gonna have nachos later, maybe a meet Lever's pista.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
But you're looking at the person line and you just
learn to get that look on your face. Now, let's
talk about Joe.

Speaker 2 (08:28):
You see, he's been a politician for many years and
he obviously has learned those skills over time.

Speaker 1 (08:35):
But now he appears to be losing his touch.

Speaker 2 (08:39):
You see, Joe, it is important when you're done with
the looking to.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
Say something something. Whatever the something is.

Speaker 2 (08:48):
It can be all, wow, that's great, that's very interesting. Hey,
reach out to my staff, shoot us an email. Hey, thanks, Bob.
It could be something, but it has to be something, Joe.
That that part of it's important which you can't do.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
Is this.

Speaker 8 (09:03):
We've been trying to catch up with you, and I've
probably be making by the president.

Speaker 1 (09:07):
But whenever you're out there, we.

Speaker 8 (09:09):
Want to talk to because I feel like I don't
know I got you back.

Speaker 9 (09:12):
I'm just trying to, like President Biden gets you.

Speaker 10 (09:15):
To pull up.

Speaker 11 (09:19):
Sterns sir, anyway, else gotta go. And now the White
House is out because they're putting out a mistake counter
for the man that gets embarrassing. One forty eight already
so far in twenty twenty four. Apparently that's the Joe
Biden mistake calculator that're just gonna call every dirty lie
he says out there a mistake.

Speaker 1 (09:40):
Here's a little here's a little sampling of the Joe
we've enjoyed this year. This is the president of the
United States of America.

Speaker 12 (09:46):
Keep in mind Lincoln Lincoln Riley, an innocent young woman
who was killed by an illegal How many times do you.

Speaker 1 (09:56):
Have to prove we can't be trusted? Pennsylvania.

Speaker 3 (10:02):
I have a message for you.

Speaker 1 (10:04):
Send me to Congress.

Speaker 2 (10:06):
Are you ready to choose freedom of her democracy?

Speaker 1 (10:09):
Four more years? Oh year?

Speaker 2 (10:19):
I'm sorry that one gets me when he keeps reading
the teleprompter as the president of the United States of America,
and look take joy in the fact that it's making
the communists nervous. Nancy Pelosi, Grandma Vodka, has been known
to get short tempered, especially in her later years, and
she went on MSNBC didn't take too kindly.

Speaker 1 (10:39):
At all this stuff.

Speaker 10 (10:42):
Donald Trump as the worst record of job loss of
any president, So we just have to make sure people.

Speaker 12 (10:49):
Know that was a global pandemic.

Speaker 10 (10:53):
She had the worst record of any president. We've had
other concerns in our country. If you want to be
an apologist for Donald Trump, that that may be your role,
but it ain't mine, and he has.

Speaker 6 (11:03):
Any I love her, though.

Speaker 2 (11:11):
Wouldn't you like to see your GOP representatives treat the
media like that?

Speaker 1 (11:15):
I would, Gosh, I love you.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
See anyway, all that may have made you uncomfortable, but
I am right. Abortion makes me uncomfortable, probably not as
uncomfortable as.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
It makes the kids.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
Anyway, we'll talk to Abbi Johnson about that in just
a moment. Before we talk to Abby Johnson about that,
let's talk to you.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
About your plan. What's your plan to stay safe?

Speaker 2 (11:36):
I'm just gonna lock the doors and hope when you
walk out to the parking lot at night, when you
send your wife off to the gas station, the grocery store,
your daughter goes off to college. Your plan just to
kind of cross your fingers, hope for the best. Or
do they have burn a pistol launchers. Burn a pistol launchers.

(11:57):
Everyone needs one, whether you carry concealed like I do,
whether you hate guns, whether you're a seasoned veteran brand new,
a non lethal option shoots pepper balls or tear gas
balls or a mixture of both. SWAT teams around the
country use berna b why arena legal in all fifty states,

(12:18):
no background check, no permit needed. Everyone in your life
needs one. Protect yourself, please, and may I just add
their fun to practice with you. You'll see what I
mean BYRNA. Burna dot com slash jesse, have a plan
to protect yourself.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
We'll be back.

Speaker 13 (12:44):
Well.

Speaker 1 (12:44):
I certainly don't want to distract.

Speaker 2 (12:46):
Anybody from what's happening on Columbia University. I know that
it's really applicable to most of us, and I certainly
don't want anyone looking away from Christy Nomes hunting dog
twenty years ago. But we do have some bigger issues
going on in the United States of America. Joining me
now to talk about maybe the biggest one.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
Abby Johnson. You know we love.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
Her plan Parenthood former Planned Parenthood director, pro life advocate. Now, Abby,
the United States of America. We love our dogs, and look,
I love mine, big fluffy idiot that he is.

Speaker 1 (13:16):
Fred I love my dog. I do, I really do.

Speaker 2 (13:19):
But man alive, we just we can't get people to
care at the same level about babies.

Speaker 1 (13:24):
Can we.

Speaker 4 (13:26):
No.

Speaker 6 (13:26):
I gotta tell you, Jesse, I am flabbergasted at the
amount of conservatives freaking out about this Christino story. I mean,
I don't know. I mean, I've got a dog too.
I like my dog, but gosh, there are so many

(13:49):
other pressing issues in this country. And I mean, I
put on my Twitter, I'm like, you think shooting a
dog is bad, Let's talk about what it's like to
rip a baby from a woman's womb. Like we're so
we have dehumanized children so desperately in our culture, and

(14:11):
we have elevated animals to the status of humans in
our culture. I mean, that's really what we're seeing I
think here in our nation.

Speaker 5 (14:21):
And it's pathetic.

Speaker 6 (14:23):
It is sad, and I don't really understand how it's
even happened. And I mean not to mention, of course,
all the liberals that are freaking out. We knew that
was going to happen, right, We knew that we expected that,
But to see all these conservative conservatives up in arms
about it, that is, honestly has been kind of shocking

(14:46):
to me.

Speaker 1 (14:48):
Abby.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
Do you think maybe you nailed it when you just
brought up dehumanizing You were talking about ripping.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
The baby out. I think we've dehumanized the process. And
I know that's intentional.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
Obviously, you're much better acquainted with all these issues than
I am.

Speaker 1 (15:03):
The language we.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
Use about abortion, around abortion, women's health, reproductive rights, they
talk about everything, and they talk about it in every
way except for the real way of what actually happens.

Speaker 1 (15:16):
People. I know, it's crazy. They just don't realize.

Speaker 2 (15:19):
I don't think many people realize what the process is.

Speaker 6 (15:23):
Yeah, you know, Jesse, I think you and I have
talked about when that whole Kate Cox story was going on,
you know, the woman from Texas that was, you know,
basically using our child as a political pond to get
an abortion here in Texas or baby it tries me eighteen,
and you know, all the media stories were, like, all

(15:43):
the secular media stories were.

Speaker 5 (15:45):
Like, oh, she's suffering.

Speaker 6 (15:47):
So you know, it's just this great suffering from Cake
Coox because she can't get an abortion in the state
of Texas.

Speaker 5 (15:56):
And there are none of them, None of them.

Speaker 6 (16:00):
We're talking about the great suffering that her twenty week
old child was going to go through as it was
literally ripped limb from limb, arm from torso, leg from torso,
head crushed in its mother's womb, in her mother's womb

(16:27):
during that abortion. I mean, let's talk about suffering. And
then Biden takes this woman and elevates her at the
State of the Union as some sort of hero. I mean,
why aren't we talking about that? Why aren't we talking
about true suffering?

Speaker 5 (16:48):
But no, let's focus on a dog. Let's focus on
a dog.

Speaker 6 (16:53):
Which, by the way, was a dog that was biting people.

Speaker 5 (16:59):
But no, it's fine, let's not worry about children.

Speaker 6 (17:04):
You know what, Jesse, we had a woman who used
to work in an abortion clinic and she came to
one of our healing retreats. Now firmly pro life, she
came to one of our healing retreats, and she told me,
she said, Abby, I can't even eat potato chips anymore.

(17:26):
And I was like, oh, really, why is that? She
worked in a second trimester abortion clinic. Okay, so all
day they murdered babies in the second trimester. Okay, she said,
I can't eat potato chips anymore because every time I
hear the crunch of a potato chip, I think about

(17:47):
what it sounded like. That's exactly what it sounded like
when they would crush the head of a second trimester baby.

Speaker 5 (17:56):
But yeah, let's focus on a dog.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
God have mercy.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
I saw yesterday, Abby that Planned Parenthood over the last
three years got one point eight billion dollars of your money,
of my money, of everybody watching this show, one point
eight billion in taxpayer money. And I honestly I thought
it must have been a misprint when I first saw it, Abby,
because I've shoot, I've been involved in politics for fifteen
years now. I would say I've seen so many Republican

(18:24):
ads for Congress and Senate and president, and I can't
count how many you have promised me that they're going
to defund Planned Parenthood.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
In fact, if I was to dig through my phone.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
I could find probably a thousand emails in here about
elect me and I'll defund Planned period. I've been promised
this over and over again by the GOP. Abby, So
could you explain to me why one point eight billion
went to an organization that I was promised would be defunded.

Speaker 6 (18:48):
Well, you know, it's it's good fundraising money. It's it's
good for fundraising to convince pro lifers over and over
and over again that you are going to defund our
country's largest abortion provider.

Speaker 5 (19:07):
And so I mean, how are you going to get
all those.

Speaker 6 (19:11):
Pro life dollars if you actually do what you say
you're going to do. I mean, that's that's the real answer, Jesse.
You know, nobody wants to actually hear the truth. The
truth is that with each president, Planned Parenthood gets.

Speaker 5 (19:33):
Funded more and more and more.

Speaker 6 (19:37):
So nobody wants to hear that Trump funded Planned Parenthood
under his presidency. Planned Parenthood was funded more under him
than Obama. Nobody wants to hear that. But it's true.
I've done the math. It's true. Could he have stopped it, Yeah,
he could have, But they don't. No, nobody does. Nobody wants

(20:02):
to actually take Planned parenthood's money away, and you know
what it mean that, you know they have to take
them out of the budget and maybe things shut down.

Speaker 5 (20:15):
Yet, maybe is.

Speaker 6 (20:16):
That worth it to stop billions of dollars from going
into our country's largest murder factory.

Speaker 1 (20:27):
Yeah?

Speaker 6 (20:28):
I think so, But nobody actually has the balls to
do it. Nobody actually has the courage to do what
it takes to shut down these murder mills.

Speaker 2 (20:40):
Abby, you've obviously been at this for a while, and
I'm glad you do what you do. So you've gotten
to know plenty of Republican politicians, I have no doubt,
how senate and whatnot. You don't have to name names.
How many genuinely care?

Speaker 1 (20:55):
Do you believe? I know they call, they text you,
they do the same to me. How many do you
thing genuinely care?

Speaker 5 (21:03):
I would say a handful.

Speaker 1 (21:07):
Would what I'd say?

Speaker 5 (21:08):
I would be able to think of more than five.

Speaker 1 (21:13):
That's about what i'd say too. Wow.

Speaker 2 (21:14):
Okay, Well, let's move on and talk about birth rates,
because they suck, and of course they're historically low.

Speaker 1 (21:19):
We're not making enough babies.

Speaker 2 (21:21):
Young people don't want to get married, they don't want
to make babies.

Speaker 1 (21:24):
They don't even want to do all the fun things
that come with that, which I can't even understand this
generation today and now the Blue states have the lowest
of the birth rates. And that's not a coincidence, is it? No?

Speaker 5 (21:36):
Definitely not.

Speaker 6 (21:37):
I mean states with the lowest birth rates also have
the highest abortion numbers.

Speaker 5 (21:42):
Shocker, right, And I.

Speaker 6 (21:46):
Have to wonder if I mean, I don't know that
this study has been done.

Speaker 5 (21:50):
It should if it hasn't been, But.

Speaker 6 (21:52):
I wonder if our birth rates are low birth rates
are tied with increasing rates areography? You know, why why
even entertain a real person if you can go on
only fans twenty four hours a day. You know, I

(22:13):
don't know. But we have an addiction. We have a
sexual addiction in this culture. The problem is that we're
killing our babies. The problem is that we don't value marriage.
We don't value we certainly don't value traditional marriage, and

(22:33):
we don't value children. And I mean, you saw all
the video I know you've seen all the videos of
you know, people talking bragging about being danks. Right, double income,
no kids, that's a you know, that's a big trend.

Speaker 5 (22:48):
Right. They can go anywhere, they could travel anywhere. They
don't have to worry about kids, you know, lugging around
kids everywhere they go. Oh, the freedom. Freedom.

Speaker 6 (22:58):
The abortion industry is not actually selling abortion. The abortion
industry is and has been selling this idea of freedom
that children enslave you, that, you know, being a parent,
being a father, being a mother, it is. It is bondage, right,
I'm gonna tell you something. I'm a mother of eight.

(23:21):
I've done my job, okay, and repopulating. I'm a mother
of eight. The most freedom I've ever felt is accepting
and living.

Speaker 5 (23:31):
Out my vocation as a mother.

Speaker 6 (23:35):
These people, these dinks, they do not understand what they
are missing. Their life is going to be unfulfilled for
the rest of their life. And that's sad to me.
It's sad to me. And not only is it affecting them,
but it's affecting our society. It's affecting our culture, it's

(23:56):
affecting our economy, it's affecting the world around it.

Speaker 1 (24:01):
It is abby, Keep on moving. I appreciate you as always.
All right, let's talk about the street communists. Before we
talk about the street communists, let's talk about something amazing.
Blackout coffee. I love it. I can't help it. I
love it all right. I love it. I love the
ease of ordering it online. I love having my coffee

(24:24):
delivered to me.

Speaker 2 (24:26):
I love that they're patriots. I'm so sick of these
big coffee companies. You pay them, you go in, you
get the coffee from the grocery store, you get the coffee.

Speaker 1 (24:33):
From here, and then you look and they've got an ESG.

Speaker 2 (24:36):
Page and not DEI this America sucks, not Blackout Coffee.
They talk about things like god, guns, freedom, family. You
want to save twenty percent off your first order, twenty
percent off your first order, Blackoutcoffee dot com slash Jesse
saves you that twenty percent. Go enjoy the greatest coffee

(24:58):
ever in grab a mug or two.

Speaker 1 (25:00):
These are my favorite.

Speaker 2 (25:02):
As you can see, pro life, god, guns, and coffee.
Does that sound like something that appeals to you. Blackout
Coffee dot com slash Jesse, We'll be back.

Speaker 1 (25:55):
Oh I'm sorry. I'm really enjoying this. I woke up
this morning, I roll a, I got my phone.

Speaker 2 (26:01):
I see the news that these dirty comedies are occupying buildings,
taking hostages. I hate the Ivy League, So I think
this is wonderful. But maybe alexis Wilkins feels differently than
I do.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Joining me now.

Speaker 2 (26:12):
Alexis Wilkins, host of Between the Headlines on Rumble. Also,
she's a country music artist, so she's fancy. Alexis, I
think this is wonderful. These universities are terrible, The dirty
street communists are terrible.

Speaker 1 (26:24):
They're all just throwing poop at each other. I think
it's awesome.

Speaker 14 (26:28):
Honestly, I think you're right. I think we're seeing Marxist
do what Marxists do. And the IVYS have been an
institution for a long time now that have promoted leftist ideology,
acting as if it's this thing that you can't get
into unless you're special, and by special we mean some
kind of dei thing that has been deemed on constitutional

(26:50):
at this point by the Supreme Court. So it's really layered.
And at this point these videos, it's hard to believe
it's America, but it's not shocking that these are leftist
college students.

Speaker 2 (27:02):
Alexis, how far along do you think American parents are
with the whole don't go to college thing? Because I
know in my era, even though I'm sure I'm about
three times your age, that was the norm.

Speaker 1 (27:13):
That was everything. But what was told.

Speaker 2 (27:14):
You got to go to college. You got to go
to college. That was what we were all told, and
that turned out to be a load of crap. Do
you think parents are getting away from that now?

Speaker 1 (27:23):
I do.

Speaker 14 (27:24):
I think that they're starting to see that what they're
setting off, they're sending their kids off to college to learn,
isn't something that's constructive not only to their lives but
to society. They come home at Christmas or Holidays or whatever,
and they fight with you and tell you that you
raise them wrong. You know, I'm not a parent, but
I can't imagine the position. And I've talked to parents
who their kids come home from college and they're like,

(27:46):
don't I don't know.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
I don't know my kid.

Speaker 14 (27:49):
I don't know who this kid is, who raised this kid,
because this isn't my kid. And so I've met some
of those parents, and I think that we're seeing the
tides turn from like you said, you have to go
to college and you have to do these certain steps
to wait a second, was that built into us by
you know? I do de dives on the whole Prussian system,
where you know, you're not raising people who will think
for themselves, You're raising employees and you're sending employees to school.

(28:13):
This was a whole thing that was institutionalized within the
United States when when really the country industrialized and needed employees.
And so I think that even just from a technical source,
from a societal source, we're just seeing the fact that
you know, maybe college isn't something that's absolutely necessary to
hammer into kids unless you want them to be leftists soldiers.

Speaker 1 (28:36):
What were the Prussians doing elaborate?

Speaker 14 (28:40):
So the Prussian system came about during kind of the
Rockefeller era, and it was to it was really off
the Prussian German system to build kids into employees, into
good employees who would go to work from nine to five,
who would be dutiful to the company and loyal to
the company, but not necessarily, you know, for themselves go

(29:01):
off start their own businesses. It really moved away from
that model of thinking. And so that's the exact model
that was adopted here, especially with the way that the
education system was built up and when it was purchased
by these different big family or institutions organizations like I said,
the Rockefellers. It all leads into the fact that that's

(29:23):
how the American education system is built ultimately like that.

Speaker 2 (29:29):
Figures always comes back to those thirty Germans. What's going
on in Tennessee right now, Alexis, because there's a lot
more than just this Israel Palestine stuff.

Speaker 1 (29:37):
What's going on in Tennessee right now?

Speaker 14 (29:40):
Well, I live in Nashville, which is definitely a blue city,
and Mayor our mayor is interesting, for sure, we contend
with him all the time. But the main thing that's
fascinating is that Tennessee students have had a bill pass
that actually works on their behalf. It makes it so
teach can carry guns in the classroom as long as

(30:03):
they've had forty hours of training and have gone through
a full psych evaluation. So these are educated, you know,
gun educated people carrying in order to keep the students safe.
We've seen shootings in Tennessee. We want to mitigate against that.
And the student's response they walked out. They did a
student walk out, and they marched the capitol and they
said we don't want this, and they did. And I

(30:23):
think what we're seeing here is they did a die
in where them along with the Tennessee three who were
reinstituted after the Gun Reformed conversation last year into Congress.

Speaker 5 (30:35):
They did a die in.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
Speaking to younger folks and stupid things like dye ins
and things like that. I saw Joe Biden and AOC
rolled out some idiotic ad with all this green stuff
here it was.

Speaker 10 (30:52):
I'm Joe Biden, I'm Alexandria Casio, I'm ed Marquis.

Speaker 15 (30:57):
We're here to share some next sety news, you Americans
can now apply to join the American Climate Corps.

Speaker 6 (31:03):
Those who become American Climate Core Members will get paid
to fight the impact of climate change while learning the
skills to be part of tomorrow's clean energy and climate
resilience workforce.

Speaker 1 (31:13):
Right now, we're recruiting for more than two thousand positions
located all across the country. So apply for an American
Climate Core job. Visit climate Core Dot up or County nine.

Speaker 2 (31:24):
You, Alexis, how much do younger people believe all this crap?
Because you see all these poles, and you see I
have climate anxiety. I have anxiety over this whole thing.
Every young person has anxiety today. How much do people
buy all this garbage?

Speaker 14 (31:40):
You know, I don't know, because the Aviator Brigade comes
out with a you know this commercial, they didn't really
even do anything for birthday because they were so distracted
by everything going on within the country. And I think
that young people nowadays look at something like this and
besides hearing about the opportunity that they can be paid
for essentially learning about how to fix the climate.

Speaker 5 (32:02):
I'm still not.

Speaker 14 (32:03):
Sure how that works, other than we will pay you
to be a fan of us because we're doing a
really bad job of retaining voters. That's what I hear
when when they say that. But I think that young
people are finally starting to turn the corner. Not the
young people protesting at universities, might I add, but some
young people who even might have been left us before
look at this and go, Okay, great climate, climate anxiety.

(32:26):
I get it, But I can't buy a house. I
went to school, I studied gender studies. I can't graduate
and do anything with my degree. I think the rubbers
finally meaning the road on actual real life. This is
when everyone starts to turn the corner right and see
what reality actually means. And I think things like this
they might cloud the vision for people who are already

(32:47):
very climate focused, but I think they're starting to see
the reality.

Speaker 5 (32:51):
I really do.

Speaker 1 (32:54):
I hope you're right, all, let's just come back to
it and I appreciate all right.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
Remember, communism is based on deception. You have to lie
if you're a dirty Communist at all times. So they
focus on language.

Speaker 1 (33:09):
They have to.

Speaker 2 (33:10):
Choose the right words, the right words, words intended to deceive.
We're going to talk to Rebecca about that next. Before
we talk to Rebecca about that, let me talk to
you about your feet. You never shortchange yourself on anything
you put on your feet. Socks are your shoes. They
are everything to you. Your feet are your life. Talk

(33:31):
to somebody who has foot problems, maybe you yourself have
foot problems.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
Take care of them. That's what jediphies about.

Speaker 2 (33:39):
It's about getting a pair of shoes that are made
for you. Every pair of these gravity to fire shoes
come with custom orthought. Its custom for you, not for me,
not for anyone else. Try one pair. Start out with
one pair and tell me how your feet feel at
the end of the day, and don't change your routine.

Speaker 1 (34:01):
Go walk around, work, stand all day, chasing the kids around.

Speaker 2 (34:05):
Try them gedefy dot com promo code Jesse saves you
a pile of.

Speaker 1 (34:11):
Money, So go we'll be back. Language. Language really matters,
and that sucks, doesn't it. It shouldn't matter.

Speaker 2 (34:27):
You should just be able to just speak whatever words
come out of you. But language matters to the Communists,
therefore it must matter to us. They speak with the
intention of deceiving because you can't exactly broadcast your plans
to burn down everything everyone loves.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
That's not a great sell.

Speaker 2 (34:43):
So you lie, and they lie all the time with
every single issue. They've carefully selected their words, so we
can never use their words. But we do, don't we.
I'm sure I'm guilty of it too. You find their language,
you use it. But we have to stop doing that.
Joining me now, Rebecca Vello, opinion editor at Wrong Speak Publishing, Rebecca,
you have a piece up titled why we must reject

(35:06):
the language of the Left?

Speaker 1 (35:08):
Dump it on me? Why?

Speaker 15 (35:09):
Yes, absolutely so, we have to reject it in its entirety.
And the reason we have to do that is because
when you control the language, when you can manipulate the language,
you can manipulate our thoughts. Because when we think we're
using language, and when you manipulate our thoughts, in turn,
you manipulate our behavior because our thoughts determine our behavior.

(35:33):
And so this is a way for them to very
innocuously control us. And so that's why we have to
reject the pronouns and all of that entirely.

Speaker 5 (35:45):
We have to reject it.

Speaker 2 (35:48):
Why haven't we rejected it, Rebecca, Because traditionally the right,
in my forty two years on this planet, has been
terrible at this. We'll take whatever they say and we'll
feel like, well, I want to meet them halfway. So
why did we get so far along and shift the
Overton window this much?

Speaker 1 (36:04):
Why did we catch on?

Speaker 15 (36:06):
Because we are the ones that are having our empathy
weaponized against us.

Speaker 5 (36:10):
You constantly hear that.

Speaker 15 (36:12):
The left is just too good, they're just too good
for themselves. They can't help it. They're so empathetic, they're
so kind, they care for everybody, but in reality they don't.
The real issue here is that we are the ones
who are having our empathy weaponize against us, and we
want to compromise and we want to meet them halfway. Oh, well,

(36:35):
this guy's really nice and he thinks he's a woman,
so I'll just go ahead and use the pronoun she.

Speaker 5 (36:39):
He says he's going to vote for Trump, so he's
a nice guy.

Speaker 15 (36:42):
I'll go ahead and do that for him, And that's
how they worm their way in. They get you to
agree to a little bit of it, and then before
you know it, your thoughts have been manipulated. So now
some men, the nice men, can become women and then
before you know you've adopted all of their agenda. And

(37:03):
so that's why we need to be careful with having
too much of our tolerance used against us.

Speaker 2 (37:15):
If anyone wants a great example of exactly what Rebecca's
just talking about, I'm gonna play you a little clip
of Jamal Bowman. Now, Jamal Bowman is a dirty street
communist from way back.

Speaker 1 (37:24):
He got elected to Congress.

Speaker 2 (37:25):
He'll be there for fifteen minutes and then they're going
to primary amounts.

Speaker 1 (37:28):
He's too much trouble.

Speaker 2 (37:29):
But Jamal Bowman hates this country with the fire of
a thousand sons.

Speaker 1 (37:32):
That's all he wants is to burn it down.

Speaker 2 (37:34):
But he's doing this sit down interview and he's asked
about these illegals.

Speaker 1 (37:37):
Craping on the country.

Speaker 2 (37:39):
You want to talk about language, using language to appeal
to your empathy, Just like Rebecca just said, watch him exactly.

Speaker 11 (37:46):
The United States.

Speaker 8 (37:47):
Bring in well, we are a land of immigrants and
we are a land of assignment, seeker, anyone escaping persecution
and violence.

Speaker 13 (38:02):
The United States has always been an open home to
those people. So whether they're coming from Palestine, Honduras, Guatemala, Alsalvador, Mexico, Haiti,
they're coming here to contribute to our economy, which nine
or nine point nine percent of them all. We've always
been a place to open our doors to immigrants coming here.

(38:24):
So yeah, fully support that, and also fully support amnesty
for the migrants who have been here for quite some time.

Speaker 2 (38:34):
Rebecca, I thought the police sirens in the background were
just a.

Speaker 1 (38:38):
Chef's kiss on top of that.

Speaker 15 (38:41):
Well, and this is a really great example of it.
So if you ask people, do you want illegal immigrants
coming into our country, of course they're going to say no.
But do you want hard working migrants to come into
this country? And of course the answer is yes. So
you can see how you can just change the framing.
You can just switch the wording up and you're going
to get two different opinions. You can open people up

(39:04):
to something that they normally wouldn't be open to by
just shifting the language. And when you do that enough,
and you do that in as many places as you
can in media, on the social platforms, in the colleges
and so forth. You're getting hit from it everywhere possible,
and so eventually you start thinking, well, these are migrants.
I'm going to call them migrants. I'm not going to

(39:25):
call them illegal immigrants. And so your thoughts change, and
then therefore your behavior and your attitudes towards them are
going to change. And this is how they can shift
public opinion very easily.

Speaker 2 (39:39):
White supremacists Nazi is another excellent example of how they
describe the opposite side. The right will bend over backwards
to of course describe the left, and the most glowing
terms we go while they're liberal, Ah, she leans left,
she's a little progressive. In the meantime, this is what
you get from their side.

Speaker 12 (39:57):
Donald Trump and the Miga Republicans represented extremism that threatens
the very foundations of our republic.

Speaker 16 (40:05):
A lot of people have tried to draw similarities between
Mussolini and Hitler and the use of the terminology like
vermin and the drive that those men had towards autocracy
and dictatorship. The difference, though, I think McDonald Trump even
more dangerous, and.

Speaker 17 (40:25):
I think the Republican Party is sort of this extremist,
anti science, nativist, you know, embracing white supremacists, insurrectionist party.

Speaker 18 (40:38):
At this point, terms like fascism and Nazi are considered
to be polarizing terms, but unfortunately those are the correct
ways to describe what is happening with Republicans.

Speaker 2 (40:49):
People can complain about that, Rebecca, but the people on
the left believe that they believe they're fighting against Nazis.

Speaker 1 (40:55):
That kind of language is effective.

Speaker 15 (40:57):
Exactly, You and I are Nazis, were terrorists. Were really
no different from al Qaeda. You know, I'm a mom
of five. I spend my days taking my kids too
and from school, changing diapers. But because I don't believe
in transgenderism, I'm no different from a domestic terrorist. And
what's interesting about this is you hear leftists constantly say
things like they're kind, they're inclusive, they're diverse, and yet

(41:20):
anything that's not associated with them is bad. And when
you stop and you really look at their policies and
you look at the polls, and you look at all
the issues in which they're trying.

Speaker 5 (41:32):
To push, they're extremely unpopular.

Speaker 15 (41:35):
And so anyone who you know doesn't believe in transgenderism
the high crime rate, insane, insanity at the border. They
are labeled in such a way that they're they're viewed
as you know, not Nazis, terrorists and so forth. And

(41:58):
how does that make them kind? How does that make inclusive?
Shouldn't we be included in that? And if we are
on the side of the vast majority and they're the
tiny minority who is promoting these issues that aren't very popular,
how can they be as diverse as they say that
they are?

Speaker 2 (42:17):
No doubt, Rebecca, thank you so much. I appreciate you
very much. All Right, we have light in the mood next.
You know what I miss a lot. I miss professional sports.

(42:37):
Isn't that embarrassing? As we go into Light in the mood?
I miss professional sports? And I was never obsessed, mind you.
I'm not one of these guys crying after losses and
throwing things.

Speaker 1 (42:47):
It's not that.

Speaker 2 (42:47):
But I miss kicking back my feed up on a
Sunday and watching the NFL. I miss professional sports, and
more importantly, I missed it when it just there was
no politics involved, none of this comedy garbage.

Speaker 1 (43:01):
Black lives matter, none of that.

Speaker 2 (43:04):
But you knew there was a streak, a strain of
patriotism that ran through these guys.

Speaker 1 (43:09):
It came out all the time.

Speaker 2 (43:10):
Now they all have to act like their dirty comedies
in order to keep that Nike shoe deal. But remember
it's actually this is the anniversary forty eight years ago
this week. Do you remember this wonderful video when a
couple of anti American pieces of trash tied to go
out and burn Old Glory and Cubs outfield or Rick
Monday was having none of it.

Speaker 9 (43:33):
Two of them. All right, I'm not sure what he's
doing out there. It looks like he's gonna burn a flag,
and Rick Monday runs and takes it away from him.
And on Monday, I think a guy was gonna set
fire to the American flag. Can you imagine that? Well,

(43:55):
I got to lose him and Ari and Monday when
he realized what he was gonna do, raised over and
took the flag away from him.

Speaker 1 (44:07):
Still gets me, man, I missed that anyway. I see
him up
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