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March 28, 2025 46 mins

President Trump just made a big mistake when it comes to his Senate endorsements. Jesse Kelly cautions him against making another. This comes as the GOP is working towards defunding NPR for the millionth time. Will they actually do it? Jesse chats with White House correspondent Monica Paige about that and more. There's also big news out of the FBI and DOJ as Kash Patel took in one of America's top targets. Jesse speaks with Steve Deace about that and other judicial matters. Plus, a MAHA conversation with Tracy Beanz.

I'm Right with Jesse Kelly on The First TV | 3-27-25

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Okay, let's talk about the GOP endorsements of Donald Trump.
Let's talk about great things from the FBI. Let's discuss
health things, the arc of the government. I'll covenant that's weird.
All that and more coming up.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
I'm right, Okay, let's talk.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
And the talk we're about to have. I'm just gonna
warn you right now it might be hard to hear.
We're gonna have a talk about good bad, being an
uneven person. We're gonna talk about Trump's endorsement of Lindsey Graham.
Before I get to that, let me just say this
for the record. We are all all of us, every

(00:50):
single person, you, me, everybody walking the planet. We are
all uneven. If I had to put it that way,
uneven meaning there are going to be things you are
good at and things you are terrible at. Doesn't matter
what you do in life, that's just how we are.
There's only been one perfect person whoever walked the planet.

(01:11):
We're all uneven.

Speaker 3 (01:13):
Me.

Speaker 1 (01:15):
You know, I can't write. I know, I wrote a book,
only one, and I had to have my buddy Nick
Rizuto helped me write it. But I hated every single
minute of it. Did you know that if you told
me to write a thousand words right now, A thousand
it's not even much a thousand words. I would get this,

(01:35):
not in the pit of my stomach, like you can't imagine,
like most people would get if they were standing on
a thousand foot cliff. That's how much I hate writing.
I can't do it. I can't get my thoughts and
my words on a piece of page. I can't do it.

Speaker 4 (01:48):
Now.

Speaker 1 (01:48):
You asked me to sit and talk. I talked for
four hours a day TV radio. No problem. I'm uneven.
Donald Trump, just like all of us, is amazingly unevil,
and honestly, the bigger figure you are, the more seminal
figure you are, the more uneven you seem to be.

(02:10):
Michael Jordan was the greatest basketball player ever. Rumor has
a horrible family man. Elon Musk might be the most
intelligent person to ever walk the planet. He's gotten more
kids than gang Is Khan. Donald Trump is very very
good at many things. When it comes to internal politics
inside the GOP, moving chess pieces around, getting the right

(02:31):
people in the right place, making the right endorsement. He
might be the worst person I've ever seen in my
entire life. It's true I want you. I want to
show you something. This is Lindsay Graham, just some of
Lindsay Graham's greatest hits.

Speaker 5 (02:47):
So this bill would allow judges to take guns away
from a guy like this before it's too late. My
bill with blimenthal the grant program for red flag laws.
I think we've got in a really good spot with
a house. But that's just part of the package. If
the Committee decided to say, increaes by one hundred million
dollars your budget, could you spend it wisely?

Speaker 6 (03:09):
I can assure you that any money that this committee
thinks good fifty I promise it'll be good.

Speaker 1 (03:16):
I believe you.

Speaker 6 (03:17):
Parting the people who went into the Capitol and beat
up a police officer violently, I think was a mistake
because it seems to suggest that's an okay thing to do.
This idea give up on Ukraine makes the world safer.

Speaker 5 (03:31):
If you pull the plug on Ukraine cause you don't
have enough capability, there goes Timewant for you.

Speaker 4 (03:36):
And your people.

Speaker 5 (03:37):
You're the ally I've been hoping for all my life.
Now what American has died defending Ukraine. You've taken our
weapons and you've kicked there and I'm very proud to
have you as our ally.

Speaker 1 (03:53):
Lindsey Graham isn't a bad senator for a Republican. Lindsey
Gram's just bad. Do you know? You know heritage they
give these senators scores? You know how you hate the
GOP Senate, How I hate the GOP Senate. You can't
name more than four or five Bill wins, you like,
you know what the average heritage score of the GOP

(04:14):
senator is? You know, seventy eight percent? Okay, that's bad, right,
seventy eight percent? You know what Lindsey Graham's score is?
Fifty six. Lindsey Graham is the enemy of everything you hold. Dear,
Lindsey Graham works day and night wearing a GOP uniform

(04:37):
to undercut every single thing you want for your country.
And last night I was getting ready to go to bed.
I wouldn't even pay attention to this. Trump puts this
out on social media and it's a long post. I'm
not even gonna read the whole thing. Senator Lindsey Graham
has my complete and total endorsement for reelection. He will
not let you down. Letting me down is what Lindsey

(05:00):
Graham does for a living, and again, I can't look
at the Trump presidency so far and complain that much.
It's been a great couple months. Obviously, we need some
things to move forward. We need deportations to increase and things.
I get all that. I get all that, and there's
been some hiccups here and there. I get that, But

(05:21):
man alive. We have a thousand battles to fight, a
thousand of these battles. Winning the presidency was one of
a thousand. How many times have we had that talk?
We have to win set after seed after seat, Senate seat,
house seat, local state house, state senate, city council, school board.
A thousand battles we have to fight, and we elect

(05:42):
Tunnald Trump and it gets in there. He does all
these things we want, and then he starts kneecapping us
on the battles we need. I'm so I'm so incredibly
frustrated with this stuff, because there's no more powerful influential
Republican in the United States of America than Donald Trump
by a mile. I can already see all the hate
mail that's going to pour into the show after this rant.

(06:05):
And by the way, I don't give a crap about
your hate mail. I'm telling you the truth, and you
know I am put the pomp poms down. It's embarrassing,
and I'm worried about Texas. Texas is one of these
states that could have the reddest senator, the senator furthest
to the right, further to the right thing you can
imagine in this red state of Texas. Anybody who gets

(06:26):
through the GOP primary would be elected senator in this state.
John Cornyan is up next year for re election. This
John Cornyn.

Speaker 4 (06:36):
In President Trump's first term, he made America great and.

Speaker 7 (06:39):
Texas Senator John Cornyan had his back.

Speaker 8 (06:42):
And we're specially grateful to your wonderful Senators John Cordon
and Ted Cruz.

Speaker 7 (06:51):
This is John Cornyn. It's an honor to represent Texas
in the US Senate. And President Trump's first term, I
was Republican whipped delivering the votes for his biggest whims.
Now I'm running for reelection and asking for your support
so President Trump and I can pick up where we
left off.

Speaker 1 (07:11):
It's going to be two years of this, two years
of this Senate boob sucking up to Trump, pretending he's
like Trump, trying to get the Trump endorsement. And I'll
tell you right now. I'm worried sick, because we have
a real opportunity next year, if the rumors are true

(07:33):
in Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is going to challenge
John Cornyn in the Senate primary. We have a real
opportunity next year to take out a rhino, to ditch him.
That opportunity probably disappears if Donald Trump steps in and
does exactly what he did last night. Choose the swamp side,

(07:57):
choose the rhino side. I mean, here's something of John
Corn's greatest hits.

Speaker 7 (08:02):
Hi, I'm Texas Senator John Cornyn. The last year has
proven quite a challenge as we've navigated the impact of
COVID nineteen. But with safe and effective vaccines finally being administered,
there's light at the end of the tunnel. Getting vaccinated
is the fastest way that life can return to normal.
Under the effective leadership of Director Ray, the agency has

(08:25):
remained committed to doing things independently and.

Speaker 1 (08:28):
Buy the book.

Speaker 7 (08:29):
Section seven oh two of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
I've called this.

Speaker 7 (08:35):
The most important law that most people have never heard of.
It's been called the crown jewel of US intelligence.

Speaker 1 (08:47):
Please, anybody in the White House listening. Please speak to
President Trump. Implore him to do the right thing when
it comes to the Texas Senate next year, because we
have an opportunity, and it is when Trump can take
away like that. All that may have made you uncomfortable,

(09:09):
but I am right. We have a huge show for you.
Talk about the White House, the ap so many things,
but first let me talk to you about getting yourself
a good night's sleep every night. It's important. Changes your
entire world, changes how you feel all day long, changes
how you work your relationships. But what do you take

(09:30):
to sleep? There's so many things. You can ask the
doctor and he'll prescribe something for you. You can take
something from the over the counter in the pharmacy. Why
would you do that when you have something natural. You
could have a delicious cup of hot chocolate before bed
and it'll put you to sleep. It's dream powder. From
being me. I take a little club cup of milk,

(09:52):
I nuke it, microwave it, mix in some dream powder.
This is about half hour before bed, sip on it
and I rifted off to sleep like a baby. Every time.
I never missed a good night's sleep because of dream powder.
I want to try it back just try one bag,
You'll always have it, I promise. Shopbeamed dot com slash

(10:14):
Jesse Kelly, I'll be.

Speaker 8 (10:15):
Back, Miss Mahr. I'm sure you're aware that Hunter Biden
had a laptop, I am, sir. Yes, okay, And there
were many stories written about said laptop, yes, sir. And
in twenty twenty, unfortunately, and PR's managing editor for News

(10:36):
refused to cover the story and he branded it a
quote waste of time. How many times did y'all interview
Adam Schiff about the Russia collusion?

Speaker 9 (10:44):
I'm sorry, sorry, I don't have that number.

Speaker 1 (10:45):
It was twenty five times.

Speaker 8 (10:46):
You don't how many times NPR interviewed chairman of this
committee Oversight Committee, Jamie Coomer, about the Biden impeachment inquiry,
the Hunter Biden tax evasion, and Elysia business dealings with
the Biden family.

Speaker 9 (10:57):
I'm sorry, sorry, I don't know.

Speaker 8 (10:58):
I believe that's zero. You believe your reporters are fair.
You said that you're fair and they're working at it.

Speaker 9 (11:03):
I believe that they work to the everyday, sir.

Speaker 8 (11:05):
They're non biased, and yet you have the voter registration issue.
I mean, we're all human beings, we're all going to
see through the world through a certain lens. And do
you are you aware of any Republicans, any registered Republicans
in your newsroom.

Speaker 9 (11:19):
I couldn't say we're registered, but I know we have
conservatives in our newsroom.

Speaker 4 (11:22):
Yes, Okay.

Speaker 8 (11:23):
So the recent registration, when it was looked at eighty
seven Democrats and zero Republicans.

Speaker 9 (11:30):
Registered, I found that very concerned. A.

Speaker 8 (11:31):
Yeah, I would not even forty to thirty or fifty
to twenty eighty seven to zero. But it shouldn't be
surprising when their own CEO says things like I'm so
done with late States capitalism, or cause the President of
the United States a deranged racist sociopath, or that America's
addicted to white supremacy.

Speaker 1 (11:50):
That made me uncomfortable and it takes a lot to
make me uncomfortable joining me now, Monica Page White House
correspond to a turning point, Usay, Monica, look, I hate
NPR as much as the next man, but I also
hate the fact that we're still funding it. Where's the GPI?
I love the hearings. Hey, I like Pat, I know Pat.
Where's the d funding coming? I promised that every other.

Speaker 3 (12:10):
Day, you and me both Jesse I mean, I feel
the same way. Did you know that just last year alone,
NPR received just about eleven million dollars in federal funding
and for what I don't know, but I listened to
NPR only when I'm in an uber For some reason,
the uber drivers always seem to be playing NPR on
the radio on my way to the White House or

(12:30):
back home, and sometimes I'm interested, what are they talking about.
It's always interesting to hear what NPR has playing or
what they're reporting on, and it's always it's always either
a half truth or it's something that they just never
did their full research on. So it's about time that
Doge really gets the chainsaw and starts, you know, ripping
through these organizations like not only NPR, but PBS and

(12:53):
these state funded, federally funded news organizations that aren't bringing
the American people the truth. They've been lying their propaganda.
This is what they do, and it's about time that
we need the full truth brought by our outlets like
yourself and like us here at Turning Point in front
Lines and other you know, small little organizations here that
are really have a big voice in the grand scheme
of things.

Speaker 1 (13:15):
Monica. As people can see from your background, you are
inside the belly of the beasts. So maybe you can
help me understand why why does the GOP not do
these basic popular things like things Trump campaigns on, and
then the House, so the Senate they won't do it,
but those are the things people like it. It's but
way beyond NPR or any of these other things. Why

(13:39):
what is it about that place that makes gopers just
their brain and their guts fall out.

Speaker 3 (13:44):
It's a very interesting dynamic, and I'm kind of glad
that you brought this up because I feel like sometimes
the GOP and Republicans really need to be pushed a
little bit, and President Trump is always the one to
push things forward. I mean, he's a doer, you know,
he'll do everything that he says he's going to do.
That's what makes him popular, that's what won him the
popular vote in November. So when you see these House
Republicans or just as these establishment Republicans here, who are

(14:07):
really slow walking what the American people want and these
great ideas that will truly make America great again, it's
a little bit concerning, and it kind of makes me
a little wary as to what the future would look like.
Post President Trump, will you know, whoever comes next, if
it's not JD. Vance, will they do what they say
they're going to do? And I think that, you know,
a lot of the changes that have been brought here,

(14:28):
whether it's with the media, with the economy, immigration, you
name it, it's all because of President Trump. He is
a king maker, but he also is a doer. And
I think that this is you know, something that many
people have been asking themselves for years. Why why isn't
anything done? Why are we slow walking? Why aren't we
doing this or that? And these are just questions that
everybody should be asking themselves. But you know, the man

(14:49):
in the White House right now, he always fulfills the promises.
He brings results, real results, saving people money, abolishing you know,
these sanctuary cities perhaps that might come today or in
the coming future, and just making life easier for everybody
and safer for everybody. And makes you wonder what the
true agenda is with the establishment GOP. Are they in

(15:10):
it because of the money? Are they in it because
other people have something on them? It is a very
interesting dynamic between President Trump and the establishment GOP.

Speaker 1 (15:20):
It is extremely interesting. Monica, I personally am greatly enjoying
watching the Associated Press get treated like the pond scum
they are. How enjoyable is it for you to have
a front row seat to all this?

Speaker 3 (15:35):
Oh it's hysterical. I mean it's funny to kind of
watch all the mainstream media and the legacy media outlets
kind of rallying around the AP. We got a very
long email from the White House Correspondents Association president Eugene
Daniels just last night saying, you know, hey, the AP
is back in court for their second hearing. They're really
hoping that everybody can rally around them. Show up to

(15:56):
the courthouse where you know your pro First Amendment, pin
on your lapels, share this email on social media to
show that you stand with the First Amendment and with
the AP. And what's interesting is that I don't understand
why exactly this is such a big thing, because when
I was, you know, under the Biden White House, I
was never called on, I was always silenced. I never

(16:16):
got my emails returned. Every time I try to get
a question or an answer from anybody in the White House,
my emails went deleted or ignored. So I think it's
a very hypocritical situation. That the AP is putting themselves
in and yes, they do appear in court. I believe that,
you know, the judge in this case refused the injunction
that the AP was asking the White House to stop

(16:38):
banning them from events in the Oval Office or Air
Force one. So it'll be interesting to see what the
future is for the AP, if there even is one.
Many people have seen through the lives that the AP
has spread over the last four years, especially covering up
for Joe Biden's you know, mental cognitive decline because they
were also contributing to that as well, and just the
lives that they spread about President Trump. I mean, I

(16:59):
don't this administration for banning the AP. The AP, what
does it contribute to America? It contributes just as much
as NPR or PBS. If you're not going to, you know,
call the Golf of America the Golf of America, if
you're not going to call it Mount McKinley instead of
you know, why would you even want to have their
respect of the president or even just be in the
room where hundreds of other people like myself would love

(17:21):
to be in that space and treat it with respect
and at the apiece disrespect time over time. You know,
it's about time that this has.

Speaker 1 (17:28):
Happened, Monica. Finally, there are things that sound amazing but
turn out to kind of suck like stuff. Crossed pizza
is a great example. It sounds great, looks great, it's
never adds up. It's never as good as you think
it's going to be. What's it like in the White
House to be in that room? It's it's big, it's important.
I've never been. I'm sure I'll never get invited. Is

(17:50):
it cool?

Speaker 3 (17:52):
Well, I would say for the past year and a
half covering Joe Biden, it was a very different White
House compared to what we've been seeing in just two
and a half months. I mean, you go to some
of the press briefings under Joe Biden and there'd be
people not even sitting in their seats, to be empty
seats across the entire room. Now, good luck even trying
to find a little space of the carpet in the
press briefing room because everybody's standing, everyone's crowding in. Everyone

(18:13):
wants to know what the president is doing because he's
doing so much. But here being a reporter who is
about common sense, it's not about maybe conservative valleyes. It's
about bringing common sense and representing the American people. It's
been a little bit of a challenge. I mean, you
walk around here and seems like the legacy media knows
you because they've seen articles written about you. But it's

(18:34):
a pretty vile space. I mean, you've had You've had
reporters here for the decades that have really made this
entire White House their entire personality about how they show
up for the past fifty years, for decades that they've
covered and chasing after these politicians, and it really is crazy.
The Biden White House really bred a sense of elitism

(18:54):
among some of these reporters that just because you have
a seat, it means you're definitely going to get called
on in the briefing room. But that's not the case anymore.
This White House that we're seeing right now has completely
transformed that and turned it upside down. Now people who
never had a voice, like myself, finally have a voice,
and it's refreshing. So I definitely encourage, you know, more
small you reporters or those who you know, maybe haven't

(19:16):
had a voice, to step up to the step up
to the plate and really join the White house. I mean,
it is definitely a fun experience, but it's not for
the week because there are a lot of people that
are looking to, you know, try and get you for everything.
You kind of have to watch what you say, watch
every move that you make here because you never know
who's watching, especially that front row of the briefing room.
Caitlin Collins, AP, NBC, CBS, you name it, they watch

(19:40):
it like hawks. It's pretty crazy.

Speaker 1 (19:44):
Wild Monica, enjoy yourself, get some stuff, crosspeeds. All right now,
FBI made a big arrest. We'll talk about that. Talk
to Steve about a few things before we get to that.
Let me talk to you about your phone. You know
what I do if I was in the white else,
probably step outside because I don't think I would enjoy
it very much. I'd step outside and I call somebody,

(20:05):
and you know what my calls will go through because
I have pure Talk. And when you switch to pure Talk,
it's not just that you're supporting the patriotic cell phone company.
They're on the same network. You realize that there's no
reason hear me here, There is no reason not to
switch to pure Talk. You save money, it's painless, You

(20:25):
keep your phone you keep your number or get a
new phone. They have all that They're on the same network,
so your service is the same, and you deal with
a pro American company, why haven't you switched? It's cake?
Thank you a few minutes. Puretalk dot com slash jessetv
is where you go to switch switch to pure talk.

(20:47):
We'll be back.

Speaker 10 (20:56):
Early this morning.

Speaker 11 (20:57):
One of the top lead of MS thirteen was apprehended.
He was the leader for the East Coast, one of
the top three in the entire country, right here in Virginia,
living half an hour outside of Washington, DC. He is
an illegal alien from El Salvador, and he will not

(21:19):
be living in our country much longer.

Speaker 12 (21:21):
I've been working on this literally for the first three
years of our administration, with little to no help from
the senior leadership in the federal government and the Biden administration.

Speaker 8 (21:31):
This is what happens when you let good cops be cops,
and we're going to continue to let good cops be
cops across this country.

Speaker 1 (21:39):
Look, there's a lot to love right now, celebrated. I
certainly don't want to be Debbie Downer, but I can't
help but think we keep rounding all these people up
in the first two months, so the Biden administration knew
where they all were joining me. Now, my friend Steve
Day's host of the Amazing Steve Days Show. First of all, congratulations,
my friend. Is my understanding you were going to be

(22:01):
with the wonderful Blaze for a few more years. That's
one two Steve.

Speaker 12 (22:07):
I know I am just as surprised as everyone else
as they fell for it again, Jesse, so thank you.

Speaker 4 (22:11):
Yes, I will be.

Speaker 1 (22:14):
Do democrats want rapists and murders in the country, Steve?
How am I supposed to take it any other way?

Speaker 4 (22:19):
I don't know that you I don't know how you could.

Speaker 12 (22:22):
I think ultimately you have to understand that for the left, Jesse,
and I know you understand this, but I think our
audiences need to understand that for the left, everything is
about power and control. Everything they do is about what
grants them power in control. So do they want rapists
and drug dealers in the country as long as it's
not in their neighborhoods and allowing destabilizing forces in other

(22:45):
places where they don't live will give them the power
in control that they seek. The answer to that question
is yes, It's it's why you're watching them turn on
electric vehicles like, I'd never buy one of those in
a million years, even have I could afford it right
to me, I just think there's just something un American about,
you know, a vehicle limiting the amount of I can
travel until I charge it for thirty minutes, and of

(23:07):
course then you know, gives the government the power to
decide whether to shut the spigott off on me or not.
But now they're turning against the very electric vehicles. Two
Super bowls ago, Jesse, every ad was an electric car,
shoving them down our throats, mandating that we buy them.
Now they're lighting them on fire and literally defecating on them.

Speaker 4 (23:25):
Why well, because Elon musk Is is.

Speaker 12 (23:27):
The best selling electric car dealer in the world, and
you know, he's close to the President of the United States,
who they loathe because he's in the way of them
acquiring power in control. And this is why, you know,
woke white women think they can tell Dave Ruman who's
really gay, and think they can tell Thomas Soul who's
really black. Okay, because you are in the way of
us acquiring the power in control.

Speaker 4 (23:49):
We want. Whatever grants them more power in control is
what they're for.

Speaker 1 (23:55):
Yeah, these people are freaking monsters. It is speaking of monsters, Steve.
I'm I'm not going to say I have an issue yet,
but I'm starting to have an issue with the Trump
administration as it pertains to these judges. Judge Boseburg, of course,
the same loser that wanted a plane full of murderers
turned around. He, of course has now gotten the signal

(24:17):
chat law suit. So we are now two months into
the Trump presidency. We can't have those cuts. We can't
import rapists, we can't import So at what point in
time does the Trump administration stop putting out social media
posts complaining and just start ignoring, Because if it's four
years of this, then it was four years of nothing.

Speaker 4 (24:36):
I agree with you.

Speaker 12 (24:37):
At the very minimum, there's an argument taking place. I mean,
we've never had an advisor as close to a president
of the United States saying the things about the judiciary
and judicial branch in wide open public view that Stephen
Miller is saying right now. So that tells me one
of two things that either a he is doing this
at the direct request of Trump in order to till
the soil for the confrontation to come, or Trump is

(24:59):
made playing coalitions within his own administration off of one another,
and Steven Miller at least has enough of a green
light to try to win enough opinion on the right
to his side, and his side is the right one.
What's happening here is that if you're trying to put
down a populist revolt, Jesse, then you take bodies that
are not popularly elected and therefore not directly accountable to

(25:21):
the people to do it.

Speaker 4 (25:22):
In Trump's first term, we saw this manifest two ways.

Speaker 12 (25:24):
You saw the unelected intelligence community attempt to do this
with Russia collusion, which they were the source for those bureaucrats.

Speaker 4 (25:31):
And of course, we're all patriots here.

Speaker 12 (25:33):
It's post nine to eleven, and you know that we
hold these institutions guarding us and defending our honor, you know,
from sea to shining sea at a high esteems you
don't want to question them, of course, And then when
that failed, ultimately did again with the scandemic, and so
now it's our public health officials, unelected bureaucrats we'd previously
never heard of, Debbie Burke's Anthony Fauci, Francis Collins, and
of course, I mean they have our best interest in heart.

(25:55):
We put all seventy five shots in our kids. They
demand no questions asked. You don't want to hate grandma, right,
you know? And so now the new unelected bureaucracy are
the judges, all right? And this is the most dangerous
siop of them all, because all of our lives, the
right has assumed the position in ankle grab that the
mere use of the four words, the courts.

Speaker 4 (26:12):
Have spoken right.

Speaker 12 (26:13):
And we thought, because it was a nice grift for
people on our side, frankly, that we can play judicial
Russian roulette as well. We'll win about twenty five thirty
percent of the time if we're lucky. But that gives
somebody a power base and a banquet circuit to find
the next crop of judges and access to the system,
where where we've exhausted that now and we're at the
point now that they're not going to let him be

(26:34):
president of the United States unless he defies them, and
he's going to have to defy them.

Speaker 4 (26:38):
That's the only way out. And peaching a judge sounds great, Jesse.

Speaker 12 (26:41):
We've done it fifteen times, ever, the last one was
in twenty ten over bribery. If we don't have the
capital or unity to do that. We're going to get
two thirds of a vote of the Senators to do that.
We can't get them to fifty one votes right now
for a friggin tax cut. What needs to happen is
Trump's Trump's got a moment here to be a Jefferson
Lincoln kind of a figure. Lincoln defied this Supreme Court
over dred Scott when he issued the Emancipation Proclamation.

Speaker 4 (27:03):
Trump needs to do the same thing.

Speaker 12 (27:05):
Don't issue a statement, don't put out a post on
truth social just do it.

Speaker 4 (27:09):
Just do what to people elect you to do. Use
the power they gave you and.

Speaker 12 (27:13):
The authority that they have as the government by the
consent of the govern Just do it. Let them whine,
let them complain and moan, and then take your case
to the people in the next election and say, hey,
if you like my interpretation of the Constitution, then we
get rid of Ms. Thirteen and Venezuelan drug lords, vote
for me and my party. If you like the Supreme
Court and the Democrats where we just let these people
live here in a perpetuity, vote for them.

Speaker 4 (27:33):
That's the way it's supposed to work.

Speaker 12 (27:35):
No one, single branch gets the final word on interpreting
the Constitution. They all have that authority under the Constitution.
And then the final word on the Constitution is actually
not anyone branch, it's the people.

Speaker 4 (27:46):
So Trump should fulfill his oath, fulfill the power.

Speaker 12 (27:49):
The Constitution gives him, use the power and authority the
people granted him, and then if the courts disagree, take
that argument to the people and let them ultimately render
the verdict.

Speaker 1 (28:00):
Should be noted. Just on my own personal note that
if Donald Trump chooses to go full Lincoln, I want
him to go full link In and arrest journalists. But
that's another story entirely joining me now to move on.
I could be convinced conversation. All right, all right, focus,
I didn't want to I don't want to put that
on you say. I just wanted to own that. I

(28:20):
didn't want to put that on you now. RFK Junior
has a new CDC director. Trump has a new CDC director,
a Susan Monarez. What do we know about this woman?

Speaker 4 (28:32):
Well, apparently not as much as we thought we did.

Speaker 12 (28:34):
Here's the thing. It seems to me that Trump is
assembling a cabinet of rivals on the public health front.
You have a variety of views. Many of them represent
my own, some represent other views. He's going to kind
of play him off one another and say, hey, you guys,
figure this out.

Speaker 4 (28:49):
I think that's probably what's happening here.

Speaker 12 (28:51):
My real problem with Susan Minarez is why go get
someone if you wanted someone to represent the conventional medicine,
big farm of viewpoint, so they have a voice in
the room as these things are being debated. Fine, but
there's plenty of people that are loyal to our side
that have these exact same views. I don't know why
we needed to get a Biden Kamala Obama person to
do that, you see. I mean, if we're going to

(29:12):
grant agency across the spectrum of thought on an issue,
reward your own people. I find it funny that I've
got to convince the Trump people to practice patronage.

Speaker 4 (29:21):
It's one of the things they're actually the best at,
you know. So I don't understand why we give a
seat chair then, you know, give it to one of
our people.

Speaker 12 (29:28):
We have plenty of people, people with big audiences, you know,
that love big pharma and like to remind people their
wife's a doctor. Give them a seat then, I mean
they're loyal to us on many other issues. Do not
give a seat to somebody from the from the Obama
wing of the of the bureaucracy. That's the part I
really don't like. What I'm also fascinated about here, Jesse
is RFK Junior. I mean, he knighted her. He transferred

(29:52):
a lot of his extensive political capital in this arena
onto her, you know. And so I don't know how
many gangster movies and mafiam movies you've seen, but you know,
being Sicilian, I've seen quite a few.

Speaker 4 (30:03):
And whatever what ends up happening.

Speaker 12 (30:04):
If you're the guy that brings the informant into the family,
it's not just the informant that gets taken out to
Miller's crossing brother, you go with him. Okay, So this
is gonna be fascinating. I mean RFK Junior did not
just simply say, hey, you know, support her. He gave
her a vote of confidence with his own credibility.

Speaker 4 (30:21):
So she better deliver.

Speaker 12 (30:23):
Otherwise people are going to reflect back on him every
bit as much as her.

Speaker 1 (30:28):
Is there a chance. Look, I'm trying to put a
sunny face on this whole thing, because I'm still esteemed
about the Lindsey Graham incident, which we haven't even gotten
into yet. But is there a chance that the solid
people like doctor j Martin McCarey, there's enough solid people
in the health area of this administration where this woman,
even if she is a freak, doesn't matter.

Speaker 4 (30:47):
One hundred percent.

Speaker 12 (30:48):
I mean, this is listen, this is this is the
most contrarian healthcare bureaucracy you know that's ever been appointed
in American history.

Speaker 4 (30:57):
I mean, even if just one of the.

Speaker 12 (30:58):
Guys McCary, Badicharia, even if there are just one, RFK Junior,
of course.

Speaker 4 (31:02):
Is the head of them all.

Speaker 12 (31:03):
He's the tribal chieftain of this entire tribe. So even
if we had just gotten one of those people, man,
could you imagine if one of those people were put
in a room in March fourteenth, fifteenth or sixteenth of
twenty twenty, with Debbie Burks and Anthony Fauci, If just
one Jay Bodicharia, one Harvey Rish, one Peter McColo, we

(31:23):
got none, Okay, So even one is tremendous progress. For
Trump to nominate several of them. I think we should
still be very optimistic on this front.

Speaker 1 (31:35):
Okay, Steve, Finally I talked about this in the opening.
Trump is very good at many things, and like many
people who are very good at many things, he's also
very bad at many things. We're all probably guilty of that.
His internal politicking inside the GOP is so horrible that
it makes me want to pull out the very little

(31:56):
remaining of the hair on my head. Were they league
getting calls to primary Chip Roy and Thomas Massey, and
yesterday we got a full throated pardon the Pond endorsement
of Lindsay Graham. I just Steve helped me understand.

Speaker 12 (32:15):
At some point, I just have come to the conclusion
that in exchange for a couple of positive appearances on
Meet the Press and Deface the Nation every year, Trump
agrees to keep Lindsay Graham's homosexuality closeted. And there's some
faustian bargain has been struck there. I can't make any
other sense of it. Although, let me tell you, brother,
Lindsey Graham is not an anonymous anomaly in the South

(32:37):
Carolina GOP.

Speaker 4 (32:38):
Like a lot of these red states, like the state
you live in. Frankly, Okay, there's a lot.

Speaker 12 (32:41):
Of these states man that have a lot of cache
and don't mess with Texas, and we're a red state
where the buckle, the Bible bell and all this other
kind of garbage branding. And for every Lindsay Graham's hydra,
maybe his vices are different, you know, than Shelley Capito's
and West Virginia's. Okay, but I mean, the system just

(33:03):
spews out so many of these figures from so many
of these red states. Much of the representation and why
I mean my home state of Iowa, Jesse, we've done
a phenomenal job making it on the ground one of
the red estates in the country. We still have not
been able to penetrate the veil of who we send
to Washington. Pretty much our entire congressional delegation sucks, you know,

(33:24):
And so the amount of money that it takes to
get into one of these federal positions and then to
hold these federal positions, how captured all these people are.
If you got rid of Lindsay Graham, you might get
somebody that's not a closet and homosexual, but they'd have
many of the exact same issues. Unfortunately, these are deep
seated issues in the GOP. I think in many cases.
Trump has just decided he can't solve them all. So

(33:45):
if you're going to be willing to be semi loyal
to me, then I'll tolerate you. And Lindsey Graham. I'm sorry.
Thomas Massey and Ship Roy are more about those guys
think for themselves a little too often.

Speaker 4 (33:56):
I think for Trump.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
So true, it's so right about the Texas GOP too.
The cowboy boots oftentimes come with leather chaps. Steve, thank you,
my friend. I appreciate it. We'll be back, Okay.

Speaker 4 (34:18):
I Uh.

Speaker 1 (34:19):
Before I bring in Tracy, I just have to point
out what a bunch of godless heathens I must work
with on this show, because I'm gonna ask Tracy first
of all, just to give away the game a little
bit about the arc of the Covenant. Maybe they have it,
and I kid you not, I kid you not. Producer Matt,
I think it was producer Matt called it's right here
on my paper. He called the Ark of the Covenant

(34:40):
Covenant a wooden storage chest. These savages joining me now,
Tracy Beans, editor in chief of Uncovered DC. Hey, Tracy,
tell me what you know or what you think you
know about this wooden storage chest.

Speaker 10 (34:58):
How do you do that to me?

Speaker 1 (35:03):
Really, I don't know. I don't know anyway. Okay, little
things like the Ten Commandments are in there, but either way.

Speaker 4 (35:11):
Oh.

Speaker 10 (35:13):
Listen.

Speaker 13 (35:13):
The way that this is being presented to the world
is that there were CIA documents that were declassified that
explained the remote Viewing project where a remote viewer was
sent to find and was able to and you know,
they successfully went through the process of remote viewing and

(35:34):
found the box.

Speaker 10 (35:35):
Now, there's been a lot of talk going on.

Speaker 13 (35:38):
Lately, especially since the podcast the Telepathy Tapes came out,
about human consciousness, what we're capable of, and what's been
suppressed for like thousands of years from us to keep
us kind of like docile and not realizing, you know,
the kind of power we have telepathically or otherwise. I
one hundred percent believe this only because I've done so

(35:59):
much work and study into remote viewing and other programs.
The government is run in that sphere. So that's my
comment on it.

Speaker 1 (36:08):
Hold on, hold on, and we are not even going
to move on to hell stuff until you clarify a
couple of things for me, What in the world is
remote viewing? I need you to break this down in
a way that a moron can understand. That would be me.

Speaker 10 (36:23):
Remote viewing.

Speaker 13 (36:25):
It was a project that the CIA did to use
psychic people to view targets around the world so that
they could then conduct better warfare.

Speaker 10 (36:34):
And many countries around the world had done this throughout
the years.

Speaker 13 (36:38):
The United States had a program for a very very
long time that checked out. I'll just say people can
look into and a gentleman named Joseph McGonagall who was
the one who led this program and kind of trained
everybody in remote viewing who was capable of doing it.
It is an actual real thing that the CIA used
for decades. So that's what it is for the CIA,

(37:01):
who had a program running it forever.

Speaker 10 (37:05):
I know it's crazy.

Speaker 1 (37:06):
Oh my gosh, I'm I'm so on the ads with
all these things. I don't even know what's going on.
I do know what's going on with Bill Gates though,
and I do know that if he's allowed to do
the things he wants to do, he'd kill more people
than Stalin, Mao and Hitler combined.

Speaker 14 (37:20):
Here he is, as we make the world healthier, is
the population going to get so big that feeding everybody
and maintaining the environment is going to be impossible. Here
we can see a chart that looks at the total
world population over the last several hundred years, and at

(37:42):
first glance, this is a bit scary. And we go
from less than a billion in eighteen hundred and then
three four, five, six, and seven point four billion where
we are today is happening even faster. So Milinda and
I wondered whether providing new medicines and keeping children alive
would that create more of a population problem. What we

(38:05):
found out is that as health improves, families choose to
have less children, and this effect is very, very dramatic.
Now eleven billion people still a lot. But the good
news is that the faster we improve health, the faster
family size goes down, and so we can feel great.

Speaker 1 (38:28):
Tracy, there's so much horrific about that. I don't even
know where to begin. And I've heard that audio before,
I've seen that video before. Just the most basic part
of it is, look at all these human beings who
now live. How frightening is that these people really are monsters,
aren't they?

Speaker 10 (38:45):
They are?

Speaker 13 (38:45):
And you know, for him to say we were actually
worried about helping people remain healthy, because there'd be too
many of them.

Speaker 10 (38:51):
That's the crux of the entire clip right there.

Speaker 13 (38:54):
It's so many levels of wrong, down to the fact that, honestly,
I would argue that Bill Gates is not making any
more healthy. Literally, no one is more healthy because of
anything that Bill Gates has done. I would argue he's
decreasing the population because of his quote health. So if
he wants to pretend for the public's consumption that he's
trying to make people healthy, that's fine for him. But

(39:16):
he's done the opposite, and thankfully people are waking up
to that more and more every day.

Speaker 1 (39:23):
Tracy Rfk Junior and Bill Gates can't possibly get along
with RFK out there talking about possibly banning pharmaceutical ads
on television. Now, I don't like turning on the TV
and every other commercial being some ad for zoloft or
whatever other weird thing they're pushing. But can even do this.

Speaker 13 (39:45):
He can do it, and I think that it's something
that he may be seriously considering.

Speaker 10 (39:50):
He talked about it on the campaign trail quite a bit.

Speaker 13 (39:53):
It's it's almost like you have to put a bunch
of disclaimers about how these drugs can hurt you, which
is why people are chuckling more and more, because most
of the side effects also include death for most of
these medications.

Speaker 10 (40:04):
But big Pharma is running media.

Speaker 13 (40:07):
All of that ad money goes into media, a lot
of it anyway, So if that funding goes away, I
would be so curious to see which new stations stay
on air and which ones don't. I don't know the
last time we marketed a drug to people. The rest
of the world doesn't do it, save another country. I
forget which one it is. There's only one other country
in the world that actually markets pharmaceuticals directly to the consumer,

(40:31):
with pretty green bushes and chirping birds and people dancing
around while they talk about how you know, terrible things
will happen to you if you take the drug.

Speaker 10 (40:40):
Take them off the air? Not needed?

Speaker 1 (40:43):
Okay, what's the controversy around soda and snap and look? Look,
you're the health freak. I'm the unhealthy one. But I
will say this, this is the only health freak contribution
I'm going to make to this conversation. The difference for
me was soda or not is five to ten pounds
if I'm drinking it five to ten pounds up. I
don't have to make a single other change if I

(41:04):
stop five to ten pounds down. So what's the controversy.

Speaker 13 (41:08):
So there's a host of other things going on when
you're drinking soda outside of we gain. I'm going to
get on you, but we'll make you into a fit
young whipper snapper and noes. But the controversy here is
only that the government snap benefits that are meant to
help support needy families who need food, are allowing for

(41:30):
the purchase of soda and junk food and all kinds.

Speaker 10 (41:33):
Of other stuff.

Speaker 13 (41:34):
And states have to get waivers to make it so
that that doesn't happen anymore. And when you're going out
and you're buying soda, and you're buying twinkies, and you're
buying all this other stuff with tax dollars, you know.

Speaker 10 (41:45):
My money.

Speaker 13 (41:45):
I don't want to be feeding a lifetime of metabolic disease,
weight gain, diabetes, and everything else, which then makes the
person who unfortunately can't afford all of their own food
dependent also on government run healthcare. And it's just a nasty,
violent wheel. So nobody's banning soda or advocating for banning soda.
People are just saying we don't want tax funds being

(42:08):
used to buy things that are going to ultimately make
you more of a you know, make you more sick
and more dependent. We want to empower you to buy
food that is going to make you healthy and less dependent.
And that's basically what.

Speaker 4 (42:19):
The goal is.

Speaker 1 (42:20):
RFK right now is reviewing baby formula. Now, if you
ask my wife, she'll go on a long rant about
baby formula. But so I'm going to allow you to
take the stage here. Do you like it? Do you
hate it?

Speaker 3 (42:34):
Well?

Speaker 13 (42:34):
I think it's important for some mothers who can't breastfeed
or don't want to breastfeed. The problem is that every
single baby formula that was tested by moms across America,
an organization run by Zen Honeycut, had heavy metals and
some even had like other chemicals in them. So one
hundred percent of the formulas tested had heavy metal contamination,

(42:56):
far above the legal limit, which I argue should be zero.
So we're not only feeding our babies high fruit, doose,
corn syrup, and all kinds of other nasty stuff, but
heavy metals. And so what the AHHS is doing right
now is saying we're going to take a look into
how the FDA can work to make our baby formula
not toxic for babies. Seems pretty common sense to me.

(43:20):
People don't realize this, but baby formula at this point
in time is sickness formula. It's got a whole bunch
of nonsense in it that babies shouldn't really be consuming.
So if you can breastfeed, breastfeeding is best. But if
you need to supplement with formula, you should be able
to buy formula that's actually pure and not contaminated with

(43:41):
mercury and aluminum and other metals.

Speaker 10 (43:43):
That's what that's all.

Speaker 1 (43:44):
About, Tracy, Can you help me understand really quickly before
I let you go why heavy metals are in anything
at all? I guess, I guess I don't understand. There
has to be some explanation. Who's creating baby formula and saying, hey,
we need to put metallica in there.

Speaker 13 (44:01):
I think that it's more a case of the methods
that they're using. The things that they're grinding up were
probably treated with chemicals, and they're not being you know,
they're not sourcing ingredients. Well, it's a manufacturing issue. It's
a cutting corners issue. It's a nobody's ever going to
really notice issue, and they were tested and noticed, so
now it's time to fix it. And I would argue

(44:22):
that corporations shouldn't be allowed to cut corners to the
point where we're getting metals in baby formula, just like
you just said. I don't want metallica in my Similac.

Speaker 1 (44:31):
So yeah, no doubt about it. Nothing else matters after all, Tracy,
thank you. I appreciate it. Lighten the mood. Next, all right,
it is time to lighten the mood. And look, I

(44:55):
always enjoy lightening the mood with beating up on dirty
communist reporters. And hey, for a long time, for the
longest time, I was understanding if you wore a mask.
Wearing a mask was never my thing. But again, I'm
a big personal preference guy. You want to wear a mask,
it's hey, it's it's your business. If you're still wearing

(45:17):
a mask in the year of Our Lord twenty twenty five,
you're an insane person. It was just a couple of
weeks ago we were at the airport and some mask
wearing absolute tub of goog tsah and decided to start
screaming at my son because he couldn't understand her. Because
you're rhying, frying for prying in the mask on. So look,

(45:40):
at some point in time you have to start shaming people.
Trump does it pretty well.

Speaker 3 (45:45):
How would you handle it at a state like California
where to put in place education?

Speaker 1 (45:49):
You know, I haven't seen a mask in so long.
You're wearing a mask. So nice of you. I haven't
seen anybody wearing a mask in a long time. It's good.

Speaker 10 (45:57):
You feel more comfortable, right, good, good, she'll go ahead.

Speaker 1 (46:06):
That's so condescending, God good, good for you. Concedable. Mm
hmmm mmmmmmm

Speaker 10 (46:17):
Mmmmm hmm
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