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November 1, 2024 40 mins

(Full Show) Jesse Kelly thinks Kamala Harris is going to lose the election. In this special, he gives his top five reasons for thinking that, which include three critical issues facing Americans. Jesse then expands on that list with Senator Ron Johnson. Kamala does have one issue on her side though. Jesse Kelly discusses it with Abby Johnson. Plus, some insight from Joe Penland on what issues Trump should tackle if elected.

I'm Right with Jesse Kelly on The First TV | 10-31-24

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:09):
Kamala Harris is going to lose.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
What I'm saying right now is not exactly going to
be groundbreaking, because I know you already feel it, don't
you As you look around all the radio, all the TV,
all the news stories, it feels like she's going to lose.
And I try the best I can not to ever
put myself and you in any kind of a bubble

(00:34):
where we don't have perspective, where we can't see things.
I know inevitably we're all going to be in a
bubble anyway. We want to live, work, and worship around
people who share our values. Our friends are going to
be people who share our values, So we create for
our own selves bubbles. We all do it. I do it,
You do what everyone does it. But what I'm about
to say, I feel it, don't you feel? It feels

(01:00):
like not only does Trump have all the momentum, it
feels like Kamala Harris is just simply historically bad. And
as unbelievable as this sounds, I think Joe Biden would
have done better.

Speaker 1 (01:18):
I don't get me wrong.

Speaker 2 (01:19):
It's not that I think Joe Biden would have won,
but I think Joe Biden, even with his Brain gone
would have been better than Dome. She's just historically bad.
Digest is for a moment, digestic for a moment. If
she does lose, and it feels like she's gonna lose,
and I'll give you my reasons why in just the moment,

(01:40):
I have some specific reasons. But if she does lose,
think for a moment about all the things, all the
different extremely powerful entities that are not only on her side,
that really under sells it. They're not only full out
campaigning for her, but they they have been calling Donald

(02:01):
Trump Adolf Hitler for ten years. So all these people,
the media, the education system, Hollywood, the government itself, all
of them completely in the tank for Dome, all of
them calling Donald Trump a Nazi.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
And yet she's losing.

Speaker 2 (02:23):
And more than just losing, I feel like there's a
social stigma now about voting for her in the way
that there was for Trump. Now, let me clarify, I
don't think you ever held a social stigma whether you
voted for Trump or not. Maybe you're Trump super fan,
maybe you're on the right, but you don't like it
for one reason, But you would never have voted or

(02:44):
not voted for him based on a social stigma.

Speaker 1 (02:46):
But let's be frank.

Speaker 2 (02:47):
In twenty sixteen and twenty twenty, because of the power
of those institutions and their propaganda, Trump's Hitler, Trump's Hitler,
there was kind of a I'm gonna vote for Trump
and I'm gonna do it quietly. There was kind of
a lot of that out there, a lot of.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
That out there.

Speaker 2 (03:05):
Ooh, it's shameful, it's embarrassing, or I'm not really a
shame but I don't want to advertise it to my friends.
Tell me you don't see that flipping in real time
to being shameful to vote for her. And so let's
get on list. What are the reasons? There are reasons?
What are the reasons? Why is she so bad? First

(03:26):
of all, she's dumb. Now there's different kinds of dumb.
Keep in mind there are different types of people, and
you have to decide for yourself whether you consider.

Speaker 1 (03:37):
One dumb or not.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
There are people who are intelligent with other people, and
psychologists have all the iq EQ stuff. But there are
just people who are just You get them in a
room and they're mister charisma, and everyone loves them.

Speaker 1 (03:50):
All the men one of them, all the women.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
Want to hurt. Great, I'd say that wrong. All the
men want to be him, all the women want them.
It's just there are those guys who are great with people,
but you put them in front of calculus, they couldn't
do it to say their lives. And then there are
people who can do calculus all day, every day, but
you ask them to have a five minute conversation with somebody,
they can't do it. The words don't come out, they
can't do it. So dumb is a strong way to

(04:12):
put it. What I mean when I talk about Kamala
Harris being dumb, it's not actually a reference to her IQ.

Speaker 1 (04:19):
It's really genuinely not.

Speaker 2 (04:22):
Her brain has atrophy because she hasn't used it. She's
never had to use it. She came up in the
California Democrat run system, and she came up as a
minority woman in the California Democrat run system. That is
the ultimate leg up in any Democrat state like California.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
She's a Democrat. Check.

Speaker 3 (04:46):
Wait, she's a minority whoa check? Wait, she's a woman
whoa just hand her the office check. And so as
a result we know this from studying her career. Now,
she has never had really really tough, quoest questions. She's
never had to sit down and do a town hall
and answer hard questions. She's never had hard hitting media interviews.

(05:09):
She's always been able to essentially do that, I'm.

Speaker 2 (05:12):
A minority woman and a Democrat. Every answer has always
been a version of that for the entirety of her career,
all the way up to California Senate, California AG. She
didn't even really have to do much to be VP
because no one really gives a crap about the VP. Well,
now she's under the bright lights, she's on the main stage,

(05:33):
and she gets asked questions and we all make fun
of her for these word salad answers. But her brain,
she's sixty years old, give or.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
Take a year.

Speaker 2 (05:42):
Her brain just has never been used.

Speaker 4 (05:46):
Some voters that might ask, you've been in the White
House for four years.

Speaker 5 (05:49):
You were vice president, not the president, But why wasn't
any of that done.

Speaker 6 (05:53):
For the last four years?

Speaker 7 (05:55):
Well, there was a lot that was done, but there's
more to do. Anderson, and I'm pointing out things that
need to be done that haven't been done but need
to be done.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
She never says anything. Why, I know, it's crazy. She
doesn't know how you have kids, younger kids today because
of social media, because of iPhones and things like that,
you have.

Speaker 1 (06:22):
To be more focused.

Speaker 2 (06:23):
I have to be more focused with my kids and
teaching them how to have conversations because that used to
be something that happened naturally for kids, but it doesn't anymore.
So you have to teach them how to speak, how
to have a conversation, ask questions of others. You know,
they have to learn it otherwise they will never know.
That's Kamala Harris. When it comes to answering tough questions.

(06:44):
She's never done it. No one taught her how. It's
never been a necessity. She simply can't. And that also
brings me to my next point on why she's going
to lose. It's her personality. I hate this about politics.
Maybe you hate it about politics, but oftentimes politics is
a personality contest. It really is. We don't want that,

(07:06):
and frankly it shouldn't be. It shouldn't be the vote
for prom king for prom queen. But that's really what
it is. Dom doesn't have one.

Speaker 8 (07:18):
You've been reluctant to lean into to talk about the
historic nature of your candidacy on the campaign trail.

Speaker 9 (07:23):
Why is that, Well, I'm clearly a woman. To point
that out to anyone, it's not funny.

Speaker 2 (07:34):
Why does she do all that laughing ha? Why all
the time at inappropriate times? She's never had to develop
a personality either. Do you ever hear remember those dumb
blonde jokes? I don't even know if those are around anymore,
but when I was a kid, there were all these
hilarious dumb blonde jokes, and the whole thing was all
blondes or dumb blondes or dumb blonde women are dumb.
That was the idea, the idea behind the joke. Well,

(07:56):
why was that a thing? It's not always true, obviously,
but why was that a stereotype? Well, because, well, she's
so hot. She's never had had to learn anything, never
had to develop a personality, and now she doesn't have
one at all. That was kind of the essence behind it.
That's Kamala Harris. For different reasons, but that's Kamala Harris.
And people hate that. People will vote for the most

(08:19):
despicable policies in the world if they like your personality.
Ask Barack Obama. That's how he got elected. So that's
a big reason she's going to lose. Another reason is
simply this, the tangibles. You and me were political people,
so we care about things that I don't want to
say small, they're not small. But we care about things
that the average norm the norma, the average voter doesn't

(08:41):
care about.

Speaker 1 (08:43):
But everyone cares about prices.

Speaker 2 (08:44):
Everyone now they're looking at their bank account, they're looking
at how their money just doesn't go as far, and
they're angry, they're depressed, they're sad, whatever. And Kamala Harris
doesn't have a good answer for these questions.

Speaker 9 (09:01):
I am very clear costa grocery is still too high.

Speaker 2 (09:04):
The voters know what I know it what you've been
in power for four years? What does that mean? So
that's one thing people were angry about. The second thing
norms and normas are angry about is all the illegals.
They have eyes, they see, even if they don't know
what you know about politics, they understand when Joe Biden

(09:25):
and Kamala Harris got elected, the border got thrown wide open.

Speaker 1 (09:29):
And she doesn't have an answer.

Speaker 7 (09:31):
I have personally prosecuted everything from low level offenses to homicides.
I know what a crime looks like and I will
tell you an undocumented immigrant is not a criminal.

Speaker 1 (09:45):
She's on record wanting them to be here.

Speaker 2 (09:49):
Tons of video, So now she has no answer. Oh
you're angry about illegal immigration.

Speaker 6 (09:54):
Uh uh, me too.

Speaker 1 (09:55):
She doesn't have an answer.

Speaker 2 (09:57):
And finally, the rat echalism of the training stuff.

Speaker 1 (10:02):
How long have you been watching this show?

Speaker 2 (10:04):
Because this is something I've talked about for the longest time,
that embracing the training madness. It was a colossal mistake
on the part of the Democrat Party because it's such
a minuscule portion of the population. That's one reason. The
second reason is it grosses people out. It just simply

(10:24):
does I know your liberal And Peggy acts like she
loves them, even she doesn't want to walk beside the
guy in target who's six ' five with a dress
on and his penis hanging out the bottom. She doesn't.
It grosses her out. She's weirded out. Everyone thinks it's
gross and weird. And yet the Democrats have decided to
embrace this, and now the Democrat nominee for president is

(10:47):
on camera saying things like this.

Speaker 9 (10:50):
They were standing in the way of surgery for prisoners
for prisoners, and there was a specific case and when
I learned about the case, I work behind the scenes
to not only make sure that that transgender woman got
the services she was deserving. So it wasn't only about
that case. I made sure that they changed the policy

(11:11):
in the state of California so that every transgender inmate
in the prison system would have access to the medical
care that they desire and need.

Speaker 2 (11:26):
That doesn't play well in an election. You look like
a freak. She's gonna lose. Feel good about it. That
may have made you uncomfortable, especially the target training, But
I'm right. We have Senator Ron Johnson joining us.

Speaker 1 (11:41):
Thanks.

Speaker 2 (11:57):
Election season is different for normal people than it is
for you and me. I'm sorry, you're not normal. I'm
not normal. We are hyper political people. Normal people don't
care about all the issues we do. What do normal
people care about? Well, why don't we talk to somebody
who's gotten elected in a purple state. It is amazing
that Ron Johnson keeps getting elected in a purple state

(12:18):
because he's one of like five good senators we have.
He's awesome joining me now, Senator Ron Johnson and the
state of Wisconsin. Senator you managed to keep getting elected
in a state that is not bloodthirsty read like my
state of Texas.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
You get elected in Wisconsin.

Speaker 2 (12:33):
Clearly you're somebody who understand what people care about.

Speaker 1 (12:37):
What do they care about this year?

Speaker 10 (12:39):
Well, Jesse, Well, first and foretant most.

Speaker 11 (12:41):
What they care about when they're electing somebody or voting
for somebody, is that person honest, is that person genuine.
They may not always agree with that individual, but as
long as they believe that that person believes what they're
actually telling the public, that goes a long way. So
I think I've I think I've earned the trust. I
made two promises when I first ran for election. I said,

(13:03):
I'll always tell you the truth, I'll never vote and
by extension, I won't conduct myself worrying.

Speaker 10 (13:07):
About re election.

Speaker 11 (13:09):
I have on those promises, So you know, right now,
I think in today's environment, I mean, I think that's
basically table stakes for the candidates. But in terms of issues,
it's the pocketbook issues.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
You know.

Speaker 11 (13:20):
It is the open border, which is crowding out housing,
which is crowding out education, healthcare, law enforcement. It's flooding
our streets with the fetanoyl and methanphetamine, dangerous drugs killing Americans.
I mean people are experiencing this that they know people
who have died from overdoses, and it's the economy. They

(13:43):
can't afford things, and hopefully they're connecting the dots the
master Jeffic's spending that has sparked for your high inflation
to value the dollar from a buck at the start
of the by administration down to eighty three cents. So
to me, those are the main the main issues right there.
Inflation in the open world.

Speaker 2 (14:02):
Inflation doesn't surprise me, although we can get to that
in a moment. But the immigration thing, which I've always
been super hot on, it does surprise me how national
that issue has gotten. I've lived in California and Arizona
and Texas, and of course it was always big in
those places, but when I lived in Montana, when I
lived in Ohio, it really wasn't something that ever came up.

(14:22):
You're in Wisconsin. Last time I looked at a map,
not a border state, but people in Wisconsin care about
this issue now.

Speaker 10 (14:29):
Well, again, not a southern border state.

Speaker 11 (14:31):
But no best estmate I have is hard because DHS
is not honest with us. They released about seven point
eight million people into the countries and.

Speaker 10 (14:40):
Started the bidministration.

Speaker 11 (14:41):
That's the number that is larger than the population of
thirty eight states. That's the magnitude of the problem. Although
we don't have a huge migrant population here, we do
have pockets. You know, a thousand people in Whitewater, which
is a city of fifteen thousand, definitely overwhelmed their law
enforcement education systems. But again it's the drug trafficking. We

(15:01):
used to have a basic drug trafficking hub in Chicagra.
Now we have multiple hugs in Wisconsin. And again people
see that. They feel that when somebody, when one of
their sons or daughters are diving overdose, so they know
somebody who does, so they definitely are aware of that.

Speaker 2 (15:20):
Senator, Let's go back to the pocketbook issues you brought
up in the very beginning. You mentioned you hope people
are making the connection between Washington's spending and inflation. I
think people feel inflation and they blame Washington, but maybe
specifically they.

Speaker 1 (15:36):
Don't know what the cause is.

Speaker 2 (15:37):
But am am I speaking out of turn there, You're
the one out there talk to the normal people. Do
they get that it's every trillion dollar bill and two
trillion dollar deficit. That's the reason you can't afford eggs anymore.

Speaker 11 (15:49):
In one side of the brain they might acknowledge that.
But on the other side of the brain, they love
getting free federal money. Of course it's not free. But
everybody loves the ear marks. Tammy Baldwin has, uh, you know,
brought home close to three quarters of billions of dollars
worth of earmarks.

Speaker 10 (16:06):
I don't vote for ear marks.

Speaker 11 (16:07):
I don't request any uh, And so that's a pretty
popular thing to do. So that's the real problem. You know,
the other issues that I should mention because this is
on people's radar screen again, just these insane social issues.
The fact that now biological males are competing with their
girls and being forced, you know, being allowed to show
her in their locker rooms and use their bathrooms. I mean,

(16:29):
the vast majority of Americans believe that is insane. That
is crazy. That was being normalized by the radical left,
by the Democrat Party, by their allies and the media
to the point where, you know, one of these biological
males gets named Women of the Year.

Speaker 10 (16:43):
I mean, this is this is crazy town.

Speaker 2 (16:46):
Uh.

Speaker 11 (16:46):
And again, unfortunately, too many of our fellow citizens don't
listen to people like you, don't listen to conservative talk radio.
They get their they get their news, they get information
from the legacy of the corporate media, which is corrupt,
it's biased and basically advocates for the left.

Speaker 2 (17:04):
This election that's coming up, obviously we're hopeful. I'm hopeful
that it possibly could be. I don't want to get
ahead of myself some sort of a red wave or
it looks like we could have a really, really good,
good election. But if we don't stop spending, doesn't help
that much. We get better border security, but no better
spending policies. Unless you tell me the mood is shifting

(17:27):
within the walls of the GOP. Do they talk about
the fact that the GOP really does spend as much
as the Democrats do to is that discussed at all?

Speaker 11 (17:38):
Well, a few of us pointed out for our colleagues
who pretty well just shrug and keep spending. So that's
that's why again I'm I hope you make a lot
of noise you and we need Rick Scott as our
majority leader. Here's a serious individual, very successful person in
the private sector, successful governor of Florida. You know he
wants to challenge these issues. I'm not sure the other

(17:59):
people running Nessley do. I certainly know that Bish McConnell
could have cared less about accessive spending. I'm hopeful with
President Trump, you'll be one term president. The fact that
he's bringing Eli Musk into the picture, hopefully being part
of his administration efficiencies are.

Speaker 10 (18:18):
Love what Elion Musk to do for Twitter. We've tired
about eighty percent.

Speaker 11 (18:21):
Of people on Twitter, and it seems like Twitter is
doing just fine. I think we tailor in the federal
government that Taylor all these federal employees that have never
come back to work, they're still keller working, sure they are.
You know, we need a top to bottom evaluation of
federal government.

Speaker 2 (18:39):
Let's talk a little bit about and immigration again, because
I'm very worried as I normally am, about the GOP
backing in this, and honestly I'm worried about Trump. I'm
worried about losers like James Langford, Mitch McConnell, these these
amnesty loving Republicans. We have Trump cave last time on
child separation. We have to begin deporting people by the million,

(19:01):
which is a horrible, ugly process. It's going to involve
tears and arrests and all kinds of things that don't
look good on television. And You'll have to forgive me, Senator,
if I'm worried about the GOP's spine to actually follow
through with any of these things.

Speaker 11 (19:16):
So I understand the first step is securing the border.
I have no doubt that President Trump wants secure the border.
I have no doubt that will all be very supportive
of deporting, you know, the resting and then deporting criminals.
After that, we probably will need some law changes because
people in this country now have legal rights which which

(19:36):
we as Republicans actually respect the rule of law. So again,
it's going to get very messy.

Speaker 10 (19:42):
That's why I keep.

Speaker 11 (19:42):
Saying that the negative impact and negative consequences of this
open border policy we're going to be dealing with for
years of not decades to come. This is this is
ugly what the President, Biden and Kamala Harris have done
in this country, and it's not going to be a
simple solution. But again, I think we can secure the border.
I think rather quickly. Trump knew how to do it

(20:03):
the first time. He's gonna be hiring some very serious people,
hopefully people like Mark Morgan and Tom Holman who know
how to do it, and then you know, we we
absolutely have to crack down on the criminals. I mean
the fact that Martha Raddims on this week with the
on ABC with the JD Vance when when he was
talking about Venezuelan gains taking over these apartments and she

(20:23):
kind of fact checks the MIT Center it's only a
handful of apartment buildings.

Speaker 10 (20:28):
I mean, are are you?

Speaker 11 (20:30):
I mean jd Vance had the great the best comebacks
that Martha, are you.

Speaker 10 (20:33):
Listening to yourself?

Speaker 11 (20:35):
You honestly believe that it's okay to have Venezuelan gains
taking over apartment buildings. And by the way, justin that's
just the tip of the iceberg. When I was chairman
who Land Security Committee, you go down to Central America,
the brutality of those gangs, I mean, we're.

Speaker 10 (20:50):
Not used to that kind of criminal.

Speaker 11 (20:51):
Activity, the kidnappings, the murders, the rapes, the extortion.

Speaker 10 (20:55):
You know, you're a police officer, you get.

Speaker 11 (20:57):
A little DVD with the videos of your children and
wife to church into school. That's that's the minor threats
right there. If you're a cab driver, you either paid
the extortion or they put a bullet in your head
and they sent your cab on fire, and a lot
of taxi drivers start paying the extortion. So that that's
what we have led in this country. We're starting to
experience that a little bit with these gangs taking over

(21:18):
apartment buildings.

Speaker 10 (21:19):
It's just the tip of the iceberg.

Speaker 2 (21:22):
Senator, what's the message to Wisconsin voters in the final
days of the election here?

Speaker 1 (21:28):
What do you want them to hear from you?

Speaker 11 (21:31):
Well, it's the age old question, are you better off
today thanywhere four years ago?

Speaker 10 (21:36):
And you know, I know we're in the pandemic.

Speaker 11 (21:37):
But but go back a little bit further before the
pandemic recession and take a look at what Donald Trump
had delivered as president the United States. You know, a
record economy. Wages were growing for every demographic group, Inflation
was low, energy prices were low. I mean, government regulations
have been cut, taxes have been cut. Those are the
policies that work. So take a look at, you know,

(21:59):
actually what work, and vote for those successful policies. Even
Kama Harris wants to turn the page, she's just not
realizing Americans want to turn the page on her and
her administration. So again, vote your pocketbook, take a look
at who actually has a record and who has nothing
but lies and deception, and that's Kama Harrison the Democrats.

Speaker 2 (22:24):
Yeah, she doesn't strike me as a big reader anyway, Senator,
thank you so much. I appreciate you as always one
of the few good ones we have right there. I
wish we could freaking clone that guy about one hundred times. Anyway,
we have more than.

Speaker 5 (22:54):
How much do you think we can rip out of
this wasted six point five trillion dollar harvest Biden budget?

Speaker 10 (23:03):
Well, I think we can do at least two trillion.

Speaker 1 (23:05):
Yeah, yes, two trillion.

Speaker 10 (23:10):
I mean, at the end of the day, you're being taxed.
You're being taxed.

Speaker 5 (23:15):
All government spending is taxation. So whether it's it's direct
taxation or govern spending, it either becomes inflation or it's
a direct taxation.

Speaker 10 (23:23):
Your money is being wasted, and the.

Speaker 5 (23:26):
Department of Government DIVISIONCY is gonna fix that. We're going
to get the government off your back and out of
your pocketbook.

Speaker 2 (23:42):
Well, I'm all for it. Color me skeptical, but I'm
all for it. I did like that it was met
with cheers joining me. Now, Joe Penland, better known as
Joe from Texas. He's a businessman can find him at
Joe from Texas dot Com. Joe, Okay, the national debt
is a national crisis. People say they want spending cuts,

(24:03):
and I'm glad they say that.

Speaker 6 (24:04):
But do they Joe, Absolutely they do.

Speaker 12 (24:09):
You know, the last two and a half years, I've
visited with thousands, tens of thousands of people one on
one and many more than that from the stage on
the Tucker tour, which I've seen you in Fort benn
which that was a great a great night that night.
But yes, they want they want, they want us to
rein in this spending. There's no two ways about it.

(24:29):
That inflation has just about got a grip on this
country that most Americans cannot tolerate. But yes, they do
want us to ring it in and they want something
positive in this next election.

Speaker 2 (24:40):
Do we have, or I should say, will we have
after this election? Will we have politicians with the guts
to do it?

Speaker 1 (24:48):
It's very very difficult to.

Speaker 2 (24:49):
Find those, really, frankly on either side of the aisle.
Politicians love to give things, not take things away.

Speaker 1 (24:55):
That's how you keep getting elected.

Speaker 12 (24:58):
Well, you know, this time, we have a president that's
just gonna be there four years. He doesn't have to
worry about trying to stay and get re elected. He
has the backbone to do what it takes to get
this country back on track. I think he was on
that course, kind of like I guess Bill Clinton. When
Bill Clinton got in, he had to get a handle
on the spending. He had to get I guess millions

(25:20):
of people back to work.

Speaker 6 (25:21):
Donald Trump had that going.

Speaker 12 (25:23):
We had the best economy that this country ever knew,
and then we got the China virus and the whole
world has been back peddling since that. But I think
Donald Trump's got a great plan. I think he'll rain
in this spending. I think he'll get a handle on
that border, go back and finish the job that he
started on right there. We need to put millions of
people to work in this country. But Jesse, you know

(25:44):
and I know that we've got to decline in birth
rate in this country in order to get our economy
booming like it needs to be. We're gonna have to
We're gonna have to bring some people in this country
like we did during the war.

Speaker 6 (25:54):
But we need to do it the right way.

Speaker 12 (25:56):
We need to do it like we did at Ellis
Island at the turn of the century. We had twenty
million people came in this country the right way, started businesses,
raise their family. You still got thirty eight million people
in this country that have a tie to Ellis Island today.
But we've got to get control of the board where
we are in control who comes, how many come, and
we get to vet people like we need.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
To Joe, how big of a deal is the national debt?
If it seems like people have always been saying it's
a big deal. I talk about it all the time,
but for a lot of people, it's hard to make
that connection. Thirty five trillion dollars in debt. How does
it affect me, my life, my pocketbook? Why is it
a big deal?

Speaker 12 (26:37):
Well, it's a big deal because governments or taken your
taxes and they have to pay the interest on this debt.
We're going to pay one trellion dollars this year. We're
going to go two treeon dollars in the hole this year.
The Congressional Budget Office has already said we'll go to
tree and in the whole the next ten years.

Speaker 2 (26:54):
Now.

Speaker 12 (26:54):
Jody Errington, chairman of the Budget Committee here in Texas,
but nationally, he has a budget that it will take
ten years to balance our budget. That doesn't mean we're
gonna pay anything down. That means just get to where
we start balancing our budget.

Speaker 10 (27:09):
Now.

Speaker 6 (27:09):
We have to do that. We have to have Donald
Trump for four years.

Speaker 12 (27:12):
We have to have JD for additional eight years, so
we'll have twelve years to make sure this budget works
its way into furition. We have got to do this,
There's no two ways about it. You cannot continue to
stack debt on top of the back of the American people.
At the two to two treeion dollars a year. We're
born a lot of that money foreign from countries that

(27:32):
don't like us. That's a dangerous scenario right there. You
look at China, they're aligning theirselves with Russia and Iran.
They don't like us, but they're loaning us trellions of dollars.

Speaker 6 (27:42):
That's not a good scenario.

Speaker 1 (27:43):
Jesse.

Speaker 6 (27:43):
We have got to get back the hand of our
own debt.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
Well, we certainly do, thank you. All right.

Speaker 2 (27:50):
We are going to talk about abortion next.

Speaker 8 (28:08):
What concessions would be on the table? Religious exemptions, for example,
is that something that you would consider.

Speaker 9 (28:13):
I don't think we should be making concessions when we're
talking about a fundamental freedom to make decisions about your
own body.

Speaker 8 (28:19):
Two Republicans like, for example, Susan Collins Lisa Murkowski, who
would back something like this on a Democratic agenda. If
in fact Republicans control Congress, would you offer them an
olive branch? Or is that off the table? Is that
not an option for you?

Speaker 9 (28:31):
I'm not going to engage in hypotheticals.

Speaker 2 (28:35):
No religious exemptions. You see, you're a Catholic doctor, Christian nurse. Sorry,
too bad, so sad kill it. These people. You think
we're not against evil. They tell you all the time,
we are joining me now. Abby Johnson, former Planned Parenthood
director turned probably the best pro life advocate in the country.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
Abby.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
These people, they've made an entire election about killing baby.
So I've honestly never seen anything like it. I've known,
you know, abortions, the Democrat position, I got all that,
but they've based an entire election off it. They think
this issue was popular enough nationally they can win the
presidency on it.

Speaker 13 (29:14):
Yeah, I mean, you're absolutely right, And unfortunately it has
become so popular that the GOP felt like they needed
to become, you know, really tolerant of abortion instead of
being no compromise pro lifers, which is essentially what the
GOP has been for decades, and so they felt like

(29:36):
they had to moderate on abortion, which shows how much
pressure the Democratic Party has put on our country to
normalize and accept abortion.

Speaker 2 (29:49):
How how did we twist up young ladies in particular
so much on this issue. I know there's not one thing,
and I know it didn't happen in one day, a
let or anything like that.

Speaker 1 (30:00):
I realize there's a lot to it.

Speaker 2 (30:02):
But man alive, the numbers say abby that a young
especially young single women, they will vote on this issue
and this issue alone, it doesn't matter what else is
at stake.

Speaker 1 (30:14):
How did we do that?

Speaker 13 (30:17):
Yeah, that's a good question, Jesse. I think one thing
is that we have, or the Democratic Party has told
women a bunch of lies. So they have told women
that their rights are at stake, they have told women
that their bodily autonomy is at stake, and they have
told them, probably the biggest lie at all of all,

(30:39):
that if abortion is not accessible to them, that they
will die. And they've used these examples of women who
have died from abortion, like Amber Thurman in Georgia, and
they have said to these women, if you don't have abortion,
you will die like Amber Thurman, and they blame pro

(31:02):
life laws for women like Amber Thurman. They blame pro
life laws or her death instead of looking at the
reality and saying, if Amber Thurman would have never had
an abortion, she would be alive today. And so they're
just lying to women, and they are instead of saying

(31:24):
pro life laws are here to protect you and your child,
they're saying pro life laws are here to kill you,
instead of looking at the reality and saying abortion is
actually something that could kill you.

Speaker 1 (31:39):
How could anyone be dumb enough to believe that?

Speaker 13 (31:44):
Well, I mean, the real answer is that the enemy,
our enemy, which is not really Kamala Harris, I mean,
the enemy is Satan. The enemy is sin, very very
seductive and is very tricky. And if you say something

(32:05):
enough times, people will believe it. And the Democratic Party
and the secular media has said it so many times
that people believe it. And then you even have these
people's family going on TV. Amber Thurban's mom, who of

(32:25):
course is a strong Democrat, right, She's going on TV saying, yeah, saying.

Speaker 4 (32:35):
The pro life laws are what killed my child, because
she's looking for someone to blame instead of saying The
problem was that my daughter went to an abortion facility
took pills to kill my grandchild, and that's what ended
up taking her life.

Speaker 13 (32:52):
Because we can't actually call abortion what it is, and
that's murder. And when you participate in murder, there are
sometimes consequences. There are sometimes earthly consequences, and unfortunately, with abortion,
sometimes that earthly consequence is that your life will be
taken as well. And that's the unfortunate consequence of abortion.

(33:16):
We can't escape it. But they don't want to call
abortion what it is, and they don't want to actually
talk about the real risks of abortion.

Speaker 2 (33:27):
How many states have abortion on the ballot this coming November?
How many states do we have to worry about legions
of women coming out and voting on something.

Speaker 13 (33:36):
Yeah, there's about a dozen right now where we're looking
at constitutional amendments where this whatever ballot initiative it is,
whatever they're calling it, referendums could actually change the state's constitution,
which in a sense, would wipe out any current pro

(33:58):
life legislation in that state. The one that everybody is
looking at, I think the most closely is Florida with
their Amendment four, and so many of us have been
on social media encouraging people to vote no on Amendment four.
Florida is, as most of us know, a pro life state.

(34:18):
Governor DeSantis obviously very staunchly pro life, but people are
now voting on which this is not how we do legislation. Okay,
by the way, this whole popular vote thing that's happening
right now, this is not how we legislate, okay, But

(34:39):
this is what Donald Trump wanted. So Donald Trump wanted
the will of the people. He wanted everybody to go
to a ballot box and basically check yes or no
on the murder of innocent human beings. And so that's
what we're doing now. The consequences are going to be
whether states allow if people vot vote yes on these

(35:01):
amendments in state of Florida, if people go to the
ballot box and they vote yes on Amendment for in
the state of Florida, they are going to be allowing
abortion potentially up to nine months gestation, up until the
date of birth, for any child for any reason, and
it could possibly be taxpayer funded. That's what's on the

(35:25):
line in these In these many states, we have come a.

Speaker 2 (35:32):
Long way from safe, legal and rare haven't we. I mean,
which was of course always a lie. That was that
was the gateway drug to bring us to well, I
mean where we are now a Phoenician society of monsters.

Speaker 13 (35:47):
Yeah, I mean safely go and rare was that was
simply a talking point because if we if we think
about that argument, Jesse and I know you'll agree with me,
but if we think about safe, legal and rare, that
on its own doesn't even make sense, right, because the
abortion industry has always thought that abortion was a societal good, right,

(36:09):
because that's what Roe was argued on. They said, if
Roe is past, if Roe is the law of the land,
then crime is going to be down. Then you know,
these unwanted children living in these impoverished homes, it's going
to be down. Domestic violence is going to be down,
child abuse is going to be down. That's not what

(36:31):
we've seen. We've seen quite the opposite. Right, So they've
always believed that abortion is a societal good. So if
something is good, why do you want it to be rare?

Speaker 11 (36:44):
Right?

Speaker 13 (36:44):
Like I think steak is a good thing. I don't
want steak to be rare. Well, you may want it
to be rare the temperature, but I don't want. I
want it to be plentiful, Right, I don't want I
don't want it to be hard for me to find
a stake in this country, right. I want it to

(37:06):
be accessible to everyone. So if they believe that abortion
is a societal good, why do they want it to
be hard for a woman to access it? See, that's
always been a lie. And that's how we know it's
been a lie because their goal, at the end of
the day, has been for abortion to be accessible, accessible

(37:28):
to everyone, and that's what they've been trying to do.
That's why we see some states like California where you
don't even have to be a doctor to commit abortions anymore.
A nurse can commit an abortion in the state of Florida,
and I mean in the state of California, and it's
like that for many other states. And that's their goal.

(37:48):
It does not have to be safe, it does not
have to be legal, and they certainly do not want
it to be rare. They just want access. And if
that means the woman dies, they're fine with that. As
long as she was able to kill her child. That's
the only thing that matters.

Speaker 2 (38:07):
What a place we're at, Abby, you are the best.
Thank you for come back soon. All right, final thoughts next, Okay,

(38:31):
let's wrap this up. Elections they are about issues. I
know that's really shocking, but political people like us, we
oftentimes lose sight of what the issues are.

Speaker 1 (38:43):
Now here's the truth.

Speaker 2 (38:45):
The issues you care about the most are probably the
most important issues. The issues I care about the most
are probably the most important issues.

Speaker 1 (38:54):
Honestly, the national death of the national debt. Is there
a more boring topic than the national There's not. There's not.

Speaker 2 (39:01):
No one wants to talk about the debt. No one
really cares about the debt. They care about inflation. But
the national debt will end the country. I mean, there
are a lot of issues that are really frightening. The
national debt and illegal immigration will end the country. But
you can't necessarily campaign on the national debt. In fact,
you haven't heard either candidate bring it.

Speaker 1 (39:20):
Up at all.

Speaker 2 (39:21):
So yeah, issues you care about, issues I care about.
They are the most important issues that are out there.
But issues like the national debt will not decide the election.
It really comes down to this. If the election is
about inflation, the American people will blame Democrats more than
they'll blame Republicans, and Republicans will win if the election

(39:42):
is about immigration. If it's about illegal immigration, which people
are angry about, the stories, the crimes, the rapes, the murders,
the murders. If it's about that, Republicans will win because
Democrats are blamed for that more than Republicans, and justifiably so.

Speaker 1 (39:58):
If the election is about.

Speaker 2 (40:01):
Well, there are a bunch of demonic women in this
country who want to murder their babies, and we will
lose the election. What are the issues that are going
to actually move the needle.

Speaker 1 (40:11):
Oh, that's where we are, all right, all right, we'll
do it again.
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Jesse Kelly

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