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October 29, 2024 47 mins

(Full Show) Former and potential future president Donald J. Trump held a historic rally at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Jesse Kelly reacts to the rally alongside Tucker Carlson. Jesse and Tucker also make predictions for what's going to happen on election day, but not before announcing a major event with Trump himself. Plus, appearances from Kara Frederick, Corey DeAngelis and Dr. Abby Johnson.

I'm Right with Jesse Kelly on The First TV | 10-28-24

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Tucker Carlson is here. We have some things to talk about.
We have culture war, things to war on children stuff,
but mostly I want to talk to you about violence.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Next.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
Let's have a talk about violence, shall we, and the
necessity of violence?

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Just stay with me for one.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
I need to let you know Tucker Carlson is going
to join us like ten minutes from now, so that
will always be a good time. But let's talk about
something that makes people uncomfortable. Maybe you're already uncomfortable violence. Okay,
So here is a concern of mine. We human beings,

(00:48):
all of us, you, me, all of us. We will
oftentimes say we want things without really processing what that means.
For instance, I want to lose weight. You ever said
that before? I've been there, believe it or not. I
know I look tall and skinny. I've been a little
too frumpy from time to time. I want to lose weight.

(01:09):
You want to lose weight? Okay, that sounds good. Everyone
who's a little too heavy wants to lose weight. Do
you want to sweat? Do you want to hurt? Do
you want to sit down in your chair and ah
do that every time you sit down because your legs
are so sore.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
Is that what you want?

Speaker 3 (01:27):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:27):
I know you want to lose weight. Everyone wants to
lose weight. Do you want what it takes to lose weight?
So let's get to the violence portion of this. Do
you want to secure country? Do you want a country
that is safe from people coming into it illegally? And

(01:49):
do you want the people who are here illegally to
go home? I'm assuming the answer to that is yes.
Even the Kammists who hate watch it, most of them would.
I would say, you're probably saying yes to the television
right now. Okay, all right, hang on to that for
a moment. Trump did a big rally. It caught a
bunch of headlines. He filled Madison Square Garden, which actually

(02:09):
is extremely impressive. He did a big rally last night
and won. One of his campaign talking points, which I
love consistently, has been about mass deportation.

Speaker 4 (02:18):
On day one, I will launch the largest deportation program
in American history, but you get the criminals out. I
will rescue every city in town that has been invaded
and conquered, and we will put these vicious and bloodthirsty
criminals in jail. And they kicked them the hell out
of our country. As fast as possible.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
That's right, it's good. I'm glad we're talking about that.
I bet you just cheered just now. If you didn't.

Speaker 2 (02:50):
Already see that glip, I bet you bet you went. Yeah,
that's right. Get them out.

Speaker 1 (02:54):
Okay, So let's have a talk, because this is not
specifically about Trump or Congress or anything. It's actually about
you and me and what's inside of us, and what
is right versus what is wrong, what is good versus
what is evil? Securing something, Securing anything has to one

(03:19):
hundred percent of the time come with at least a
threat of violence.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
Here's what I mean.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
Let's say you want to walk into my home and
take my ice machine.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
You are jealous that I have a countertop ice machine.
You do not you want mine.

Speaker 1 (03:39):
And I stand in front of my home and I
say no, I'm running security for my home and you
can't come in. Well, why not just walk past me
and come in? If you can just walk past me
and come in, And I'm never allowed to physically stop,

(04:00):
whether that.

Speaker 2 (04:01):
Means hurting you or maybe even killing you.

Speaker 1 (04:04):
If I'm never allowed to physically stop you, if that's
not on the list of things I'm allowed to do,
if things get that bad, then come take my ice machine.
And if you happen to slip past me and get
into my home, I have to if I really want

(04:24):
you out, if I want to protect my home and
more importantly, protect my ice machine, I have to commit
violence against you of some kind. To get you out
of my home and to stop you from taking my
prized ice machine.

Speaker 2 (04:43):
I have to grab you, tackle you, restrain you.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
Even if I try to go non lethal, I have
to shoot you with pepper spray. And I'll be honest,
if I actually did catch you in my home, you
would not be lucky enough to have pepper spray. I
would fill you full of holes and drag you out
front and toss you on the sidewalk on the That's
just how it would go. I have to commit acts

(05:08):
of violence when necessary to secure something anything. The bouncer
who won't let you in the club is here, just
a husky guy who says.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
No, you can't come in.

Speaker 5 (05:19):
No.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
The reason they hire.

Speaker 1 (05:21):
That husky husky guy is if you try to force
your way in, he's going to knock your head off
of your shoulders. It has to be part of the equation.
So let's go back to something you and I may
have to deal with very very shortly.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
We are here in the.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
United States of America. We now have according to estimates,
fifteen percent of the people who reside around US are
in this country illegally. The globalist communists, not just the
ones leading this country, the ones internationally, are completely committed
to flooding every Western nation with barbarians whose vote can

(06:05):
be bought for a five hundred dollars visa card. They
are brought here so they will commit acts of violence.
They are brought here so they can eliminate your vote.
They are brought heres so the elites stop having to
worry about.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
The patriotic American.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
They can simply discard you and bring in fifteen million
new ones and never have to worry about you at all.

Speaker 2 (06:25):
It is a.

Speaker 1 (06:26):
Focused, intentional effort to destroy the United States of America.
And if it is not reversed, not just stopped. If
it is not reversed, this country has already finished. Goodbye,
see you later. We don't even have one hundred years left.
That's a guarantee. So let's say Donald Trump is elected

(06:49):
a couple weeks whatever, and a less than two weeks,
I've lost track of time. It's week in to day.
Let's say Donald Trump is elected. What are you comfortable with?
We have this thing on the right and I'm not
even going to say at its core it's a bad thing.
But we have this obsession with niceness even when we

(07:13):
want laws enforced.

Speaker 2 (07:15):
We want it done, and can we be nice?

Speaker 1 (07:18):
We have to be empathetic, we have to be How
are we to being nice? You are going to have
to take that part of you when you were going
to have to set it aside, because the truth is,
there's no nice way to tell somebody you're not welcome here,
stay out, And even.

Speaker 2 (07:37):
More so, there is no nice way to.

Speaker 1 (07:42):
Take twenty thirty million people, men, women and children walk
into their homes, into their schools, into the hospitals and
tell them, men with uniforms, come with me, you are

(08:02):
leaving this country. It cannot be done nicely. It cannot,
and it will involve tears. The propaganda effort around stopping
this will be the largest, most pervasive, most evil propaganda
effort you have ever seen in your life. It will

(08:25):
dwarf the propaganda around BLM, around COVID, The propaganda effort
to stop what's happened to this country will be the
largest thing. And what you need to understand now because
maybe right now you're puffing out your chest and you're saying,
not hey.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
Won't work on me. It's not gonna work on me.

Speaker 1 (08:45):
Maybe I hope you're saying that. Actually, maybe that's what
you're saying. But you need to understand. The propaganda effort
is not going to be just a bunch of screaming harpies.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
Now that are the illegal state.

Speaker 1 (08:56):
The propaganda effort is going to be aimed directly at
that kind heart that beats in your chest. Tom Holman,
great Man's put on the show before he went on
the news, and he said something, and what he said
is wonderful, don't get me wrong. But I want you
not just to wait for the Tom home and response.

(09:19):
I want you to listen to the question because this
is but a taste of what's to come.

Speaker 6 (09:26):
We have seen one estimate that says it would cost
eighty eight billion dollars to deport a million people a year.

Speaker 2 (09:35):
I don't know if that's accurate or not.

Speaker 6 (09:37):
Is that what American taxpayers should expect?

Speaker 5 (09:40):
What price do you put on a national security?

Speaker 2 (09:42):
Is it worth?

Speaker 6 (09:42):
It is there a way to carry out mass deportation
without separating families.

Speaker 2 (09:48):
Of course, families can be deported together.

Speaker 1 (09:55):
It's a great answer. And what I've seen a lot
of today.

Speaker 2 (09:59):
Is, Wow, look how hardcore that is. And I'm here
to tell you that's not hard core.

Speaker 1 (10:08):
That's how every country in the history of mankind that
wanted to continue being a country. That's how immigration laws
are enforced. If you come here illegally, no matter what
your age, no matter what your sex is, you will
be arrested and you will be sent back to the

(10:30):
country you came from. Maybe you'll even do a prison
sentence first.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
That's not barbaric or based or right wing. That's basic
national security. And allow me to finish it up with
this one.

Speaker 1 (10:44):
And I know you're gonna get well, Nashily, you won't
get mad, but people will get mad about this. And
please remember, if you're offended or mad, I don't give
a crap. People at the border should be turned away
at gunpoint with the threat of violence. If they continue
on in the exact same way. You're not allowed to

(11:06):
enter my home and take my ice maker. I will
use violence if necessary to stop you. That's what should
be done. At the American border. I know that may
hurt your nice heart, and we don't want to.

Speaker 3 (11:21):
I just want to.

Speaker 1 (11:21):
Can't we enforce laws and be nice. No, the enforcement
of laws in the preservation of a nation demands niceness
be set aside in the interest of higher things, of
better things.

Speaker 2 (11:37):
Niceness is not a goal to seek out.

Speaker 1 (11:40):
In fact, you're gonna have to tear it out of
your heart and set it on the shelf because we.

Speaker 2 (11:44):
Have a country to save.

Speaker 1 (11:46):
All that may have made you uncomfortable, but I am
right now, Tucker Carlson.

Speaker 2 (11:52):
Won't be uncomfortable with any of that.

Speaker 1 (11:54):
My buddy, Tucker joins us in a moment, he was
actually at that Trump rally in Madison Square Garden. We'll
find out if he's hopeful or not in many other
things before we get to that with Tucker. As you
take that niceness out of your heart and you set
it on the shelf, I needed to reach up on
that shelf and grab your chalk and take it off
because you're going to need some. If you're a male,

(12:16):
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your herbal supplements. Twenty percent increase in your testosterone in
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the weepies? If people are getting deported, that's because your
tea levels are too low. We can't afford that. Now
we have a country to say it's Choctober. There's huge discounts.

(12:39):
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Speaker 2 (12:56):
Chalk dot Com use the promo code.

Speaker 1 (13:00):
Jesse TV when you get your subscription, save you some money.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
We'll be back. Donald Trump's gonna win.

Speaker 3 (13:17):
He's gonna win.

Speaker 7 (13:19):
I know that that's true. Why is Donald Trump gonna win?
The people he's about to defeat have no idea and
they're panicked.

Speaker 2 (13:28):
They have no idea.

Speaker 7 (13:29):
Why people like Donald Trump. The first reason that people
like Donald Trump is.

Speaker 3 (13:32):
Because he likes them. That's why.

Speaker 7 (13:35):
And the second reason that people love Trump, and I
put myself in this category, it's why I'm here today,
is because he's liberated us in the deepest and truest
sense and the liberation he has brought to us is
the liberation from the obligation to tell lies. You know
what the big lie is.

Speaker 3 (13:51):
The big lie is that they're impressive. That's what.

Speaker 7 (13:53):
The big lie is that the people in charge have
somehow earned the right to rule over you, and they haven't.
And you know that these are the single most useless
people in the United States.

Speaker 3 (14:04):
They have no skills whatsoever.

Speaker 7 (14:08):
They've got three quarters of the money and they didn't
earn it. They set up a system precisely for the
purpose of awarding themselves wealth and power when it's undeserved.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
It feels hopeful now in a way that it didn't
a month ago. I would say, I wonder if Tucker
agrees that it's really felt like it's recently changed.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
Anyway, Let's ask him.

Speaker 1 (14:33):
Joining me now, Tucker Carlson, of course, Tuckercarlson dot com.
I'm sure everyone has already subscribed and watches religiously.

Speaker 2 (14:42):
I know my mother does.

Speaker 1 (14:43):
Joining me now, my friend, Tucker, Tucker, does it feel
like it's changed recently? If you'd asked me a month
ago the RNC, even a couple months ago, whenever that
thing was.

Speaker 2 (14:54):
It didn't feel hopeful. You know, it felt like maybe
we'll have a shot. It's going to be a grind.
He was hopeful. Right now, Does it feel like that
to you?

Speaker 3 (15:04):
Absolutely?

Speaker 7 (15:04):
I think Trump is going to win, and I think
he's going to win for a lot of different reasons.

Speaker 3 (15:10):
But here's the main reason. I think it all.

Speaker 7 (15:13):
Around you, people are saying what they really think in
a way that they haven't you know, probably in the
last eight years. The crackdown began the second Trump was elected.
The crackdown on speech and thinking for yourself, doing your
own research went into for sort after Trump was elected
in twenty sixteen and is just now breaking. The spell
is breaking. I think Elon Musk had a lot to

(15:34):
do with that. I mean, the idea that the most
successful person in the world, with the most at risk,
the guy with the most government contracts, the guy with
the most prestige to lose, would risk at all to
support Trump and public was really heartening and inspiring for
the rest of us.

Speaker 3 (15:52):
For people who are you know, kind.

Speaker 7 (15:54):
Of felt, you know, they know they've been lied to.
You know, the COVID thing was just an extended lie.
They know the wars that this country has funded and
fought over the past twenty years have hurt the country.
You know, all the kind of realizations that people have
in private but don't feel free to say in public.
All of a sudden, they can say it because people
like Elon Musker saying it. You know, maybe Donald Trump

(16:16):
isn't the problem, Tucker.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
You mentioned people feel free to say things.

Speaker 2 (16:23):
Now. It feels like.

Speaker 1 (16:25):
The social shame system of this country made it shameful
in sixteen and frankly in twenty to be a Trump supporter.
And I realized there were pockets of people who didn't
show any shame for that at all. I get that,
but for the most part, as the country as a whole,
that felt like a shameful thing.

Speaker 2 (16:42):
Maybe I am in my own bubble.

Speaker 1 (16:43):
I admit I have put myself in as much of
a bubble as possible because I don't want to hang
out with dirty communists. But it feels like the social
shame system has completely done.

Speaker 2 (16:53):
A oneint eighty.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
And now if you're actually someone who votes for supports
a just despicable human being like Kamala Harris, it almost
feels like you're ashamed of it. Even the actors and actresses,
you know, all the pedophiles in Hollywood, even they don't
seem that into the little stupid ads they do. Now, hey,
vot comal, it's democracy, doesn't it seem like that?

Speaker 3 (17:16):
Absolutely?

Speaker 7 (17:17):
I mean so for eight years, the only people who
would admit to liking Trump were the people with not
much to lose. They were the people in the you know,
bottom quartile for income in the United States. They were
the so called working class, you know, his base, because
they were the only people who could say out loud
that they liked Trump. What are you going to do
to a tow truck driver, you know, nothing. First of all,

(17:39):
we have to have them. It's not like being a
Deloitte consultant. We can just get another you know, girl
from whatever University of Maryland to take your job. We
have to have a tow truck driver. And they're sort
of below social sanction. But everyone above that, everyone in
the striving middle class and above, had to kind of
toe the line and tell the lie. And that group

(18:02):
of people has been liberated. So like in the deep
rural areas, everyone was always for Trump, and they still are.
But in the suburbs and among young people on college campuses,
that's where I really noticed it because I've got kids
that age, and you see their friends and like, there's
nobody who would admit to voting for Kamala Harris. At
this point, You're a loser, Kamala Harris. Like, no one

(18:22):
would admit we're voting for Kamala Harris. And that's the
mark of the end of something. Like they thought they
could bully us into supporting Kamala Harris because she's sort
of black or something, and they've just played that card
too much. And people are like, I don't care what
color she is. She's a loser and a freak, and
I'm not going to pretend otherwise. I think that really
is real.

Speaker 2 (18:44):
Tucker, You've been doing this tour.

Speaker 1 (18:46):
Everyone's been watching the tour, the highlights, the guests. I
got to be one of those guests. It's a great tour.
But you're bouncing around the country talking to normal people.
I was there watching you talk to normal people, roomful
of normal peo. What have you learned that you didn't know?
And oh, I should note everybody?

Speaker 2 (19:05):
What is it?

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Thursday Thursday night? The thirty first that is Thursday Thursday
Night is the big It's the finale, right the blowout?
Tucker Trump Glendale, Arizona. I will be in attendance with
my wonderful mother. So what did you learn crisscrossing the
country and now the finale in Arizona.

Speaker 7 (19:25):
Well, I mean, I learned what I knew, but I
was just reminded of it that America is a beautiful
country filled with really nice people. There's less hatred than advertised.
You know, you read endless stories about the race hatred
in America. I've never seen any American yell at another
on the basis of race. Like people kind of want
to get along, and for the most part, they do

(19:46):
get along. So that's nice to be reminded of. It's
they're really nice people. Even the people who vote differently
from me, they're mostly nice. It's a small group in charge.
They're horrible. Most other people are pretty decent, I would say.
And the second thing you learn is that the people
in charge have really betrayed the country in a physical way,
like it's falling apart. The infrastructure's bad, the cities are tired.

(20:08):
No one's built anything in a long long time. You
never see a building built in the last thirty years
that you would be proud of or want to live in.
You know, even the McMansions are depressing and ugly and
made out of vinyl. You know, it's like there's been
a massive dereliction on the part of the people in charge.
On the most basic level, if you're in charge, you

(20:29):
build things, you make things, you improve the physical surroundings
of your people. And they just haven't done that. They've
been busy stealing it all they've been They're Larry Fink.
They're just making money off what other people built. And
there's something infuriating about that. It really put me in
a revolutionary mood.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
The election of Trump, if we get that, I don't
want to get ahead of my skis here. We got
to go out and vote and do our thing and
all that. But the election of Trump, and let's hope
a lot of down ballot wins as well, may stop
or at least slow the bleeding.

Speaker 2 (21:03):
But can we be reversed?

Speaker 1 (21:05):
Can what we're going through right now be reversed on
a macro level?

Speaker 2 (21:09):
Historically it has not.

Speaker 1 (21:11):
When a nation gets too wealthy, too powerful, it's it
leads get too corrupted, start to loot it like a
bunch of bank robbers. That is historically very very difficult
to overcome and reverse. In fact, I can't really think
of a time when it happened. Can we do it here?

Speaker 7 (21:27):
I mean, look, the precedent suggests no. But we can't
see the scope of history. We're just on a little
dot on a very long timeline, on a continuum, and
so we can't know what the future holds. We could
only do our duty, and our duty is to fight
for civilization, for order, and for justice and for decency,
for kindness, for concern for individual people, not communities or groups,

(21:50):
but for the people around us.

Speaker 3 (21:51):
I mean, that's what we're tasked with doing.

Speaker 7 (21:53):
That's what every living person at any point in history,
from the Fall of Rome to the present day, you
know that's your job. Do your job, period, and you
do it to the best of your ability, period. And
you can't be hopeless. You're not allowed to be hopeless.
If you're a Christian. You're required by Christian law, by
God's law, to be hopeful. There's faith, hope, and love,

(22:14):
and love may be the greatest, but it's preceded by hope,
so you have to be hopeful.

Speaker 3 (22:19):
What do I think about this election specifically?

Speaker 7 (22:21):
I think Trump's gonna win, and I think if they
tell me on November sixth that he didn't win, that
Kamala Harris won because she's a historic black lady, you know,
or whatever, and that she got eighty five million votes
because people love her. They're gonna have to prove to
me that's true. I'm not going to accept that at
face value. Why would I. They've lied consistently for decades.
We now know that they're liars. They'll say anything to win.

(22:44):
They will kill people to win. They allowed Trump to
get shot in order to keep control. That's a fact.
And so they're not gonna It's not gonna be as
simple as saying to me, no, no, no. She's like
much more popular than we ever imagined she was. It
was just a ground swell of support for Kamala Harris
because she's so enlightened and great and competent. Like, you're
gonna have to show me how that happened. I'm not

(23:06):
going to accept it. And if you can show me
how it happened, I'm a citizen, I'm an owner of
this country. I'm an equity partner here. I'm not an employee.
So it's not enough. You've got to show me the books.
I think that's fair I mean, it is fair. It's
inherently fair, and I think a lot of people have
the same feeling that I do. It's not that I
won't accept the outcome. It's that I won't accept fraud.
And you're gonna have to show me how this is
not fraud, and so you know it's my position, I'm not.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
And then don't get to order us to accept it
like were peasants.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
I love that way of thinking, we're not not.

Speaker 3 (23:33):
Going to accept that. I'm not going to accept that.

Speaker 7 (23:35):
And I had a former employee of meet of mine
last night, you know, text me, oh, saying stuff like that.
You know, he's a full neo con liar, doesn't care
about America at all. But I'll just say text about this. Oh,
it's really bad for America to say something like that.
How is it bad for America to prove what you say.
I am not your employee, I am not your slave.

(23:56):
I am an owner. I own a share of this
country by virtue of my birth in it.

Speaker 3 (24:01):
I'm a citizen.

Speaker 7 (24:02):
And so if you're going to force me to do something,
you're going to have to prove to me that it's legitimate,
that you're legitimate, that your power derives from popular consent.
That's democracy, which we have. It's constitutional republic. But the
principle is democratic. The people rule, and so it's not
enough to just tell me or shame me, or wave
a gun in my face. I'm not going to accept that,

(24:22):
and I mean, I'm not going to accept that. And
I think I speak for a lot of people in
saying that that's totally reasonable. That's consistent with Founding principles,
that's consistent with justice. And you're not going to bully
me into accepting more destruction, including the destruction of my
children's future, because you claim you're morally superior to me.
I'm not going to accept that, and I would advise
every other American not to accept that until they can

(24:45):
show that they're telling the truth.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
Man, he is Tucker Carlson Tuckercarlson dot com. Make sure
you tune into this huge rally in Glendale. It's going
to be sick, Tucker. I'll see you there, my friend.
All right, that was awesome. I feel better. Tucker always
makes me feel better whenever we hang out and feel better.
Now we have to feel worse. No, No, we're going

(25:10):
to talk about kids, the War on Children. Why they're
going after children. We'll dig into that in a moment.
Before we do that, you need a laugh, especially in
these days, you need a laugh every now and then. Well,
Matt Walsh's comedy Am I Racist? It's a documentary. It's

(25:30):
a documentary that just happens to be hilarious, pants wedding funny.
Obviously you know about all the records. It broke Matt Walsh,
the driest curmudgeon I know in this business, going undercover
in this sick DEI industry and all the biggest names

(25:51):
in the industry. He ends up getting an interview with him,
and to watch how flabbergasted they are with him, it
murders me.

Speaker 2 (25:58):
It murders me.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
Thirty five percent off your Daily Wire Plus subscription. That's
the only way you can watch it. You have to
become a Daily Wire Plus subscriber. Here's what you do.
You get a Daily wire dot com slash subscribe and
use the code d EI. All right, DEI, we'll be back.

(26:45):
We have some problems in this country. Joining me now
to discuss problems just like that.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
Kara Frederick.

Speaker 1 (26:52):
She is the director of Tech Policy at the Wonderful
Heritage Foundation and coridiangelist who's done many many things, as
a wonderful book out there called The Parent Revolution.

Speaker 2 (27:04):
Okay, Kara, let's begin here.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
I'm trying to understand how twisted one has to get
to scream in the face of a young child, especially
as a young lady, young women.

Speaker 2 (27:19):
Maybe I'm just old and stereotypical.

Speaker 1 (27:22):
I consider young women to be nicer and more empathetic,
you know, more motherly. How screwed up do you have
to be to do that?

Speaker 8 (27:32):
Well, first and foremost, it looks like you have to
be on the Kamala Harris side to do that because
we as women, frankly, we have been derelict in our
duty to, like you said, to reach out to the
more nurturing parts of our nature, to understand biological realities,
to frankly, be pro child in our culture today. Unfortunately,

(27:54):
you know, I'm a young mom and I am seeing
the exact opposite among my cohort and those that are younger.
It's this anti child idea, right, Like, you're in your
late thirties and you get to travel, and you get
to buy a chanell perse and you get to be
on your own buying prosecco whenever you want you know
what that is bankrupt? I tell you I was a
girl boss on the way, you know, I like some

(28:16):
people have said, I cut the last chip chopper out
and on in this regard in terms of meaning a
great guy, having a family and understanding that there is
so much more to life. There's so much more to life.
It is so sanctifying if you're pro child, pro family.
But unfortunately, our culture and one party in particular, is

(28:37):
giving us the exact opposite message. And frankly, it's a
lot of female's fault. We should be embracing this idea
of family and children. That's all there is to it.

Speaker 2 (28:49):
Corey.

Speaker 1 (28:50):
How much does the education system play into young ladies
like that? I mean, Kara correctly points out our culture.
How much the does the education system bear the blame
of young women like that turning into let's be honest,
that's a vicious animal. That's that's a vicious animal that
used to be a human being.

Speaker 2 (29:07):
What happened to her?

Speaker 5 (29:09):
Yeah, she must have attended public schools. Maybe she went
all thirteen years for the K to twelve education where
they're teaching you to hate each other, to hate children,
and they're not focused on the basics. They're not teaching
kids how to read, write, and do math properly. So
these culture wars are inflamed by people like Randy Winingarten
and the teachers' unions who want to indoctrinate kids with

(29:31):
their leftist ideology. The only way that we take American
culture back is to strike at the root, to allow
families to have school choice, to take their kids' education
dollars to a school that's actually teaching the basics, that's
doing a good job, that's teaching their family's values, and
not trying to divide our country like we see in
this FIRL clip.

Speaker 1 (29:52):
Speaking of Randy Winegarden, affectionately known as communist John Denver,
on this show, she, for some reason, I'm not sure
what happened, there has been doing a lot of public
speaking recently. I don't know who told her she was
good at it, but here she is.

Speaker 9 (30:07):
We're gonna make sure that there's housing benefits, that people
can have home ownership, that we can attack the price gougers,
that we can have unions, that we can have a
public school system, that we ban as thought weapons, not
banned books, that we lift up history, we don't erase it.

(30:28):
That's who Lissa Slopkin is, That's who Kamala Harris is.
They want to solve problems, they want to lift things up.

Speaker 1 (30:39):
Sorry, I had to adjust my earpiece. That was just
that was a lot to go in there at once. Kara,
could you explain what you think Randy Winegarden sees in
herself before she gets up to speak publicly.

Speaker 2 (30:51):
If I couldn't speak, I just wouldn't speak. But she
shouts and speaks a lot.

Speaker 8 (30:57):
Jesse, I would say that Randy needs to stay in
her lane, but she has been just absolutely destructive when
it comes to her specific lane. So I think Randy
just needs to retire altogether. You look at where she's
Why was she in Ukraine? Why is she talking about
all of these other you know, having houses and economic
policy and whatnot. She has failed at her one job,

(31:21):
which is, as Corey knows well, you know, supposed to
be helping advance the education of America's of America's youth,
and she's done so poorly at that that she just
needs to get off the stage completely. Somebody's got to
give her the hook because she can't even do her
one job.

Speaker 2 (31:38):
Well, Corey, why did she go to Ukraine.

Speaker 1 (31:43):
I almost forgot about that until Kara just brought it up.
Why did the head of the teachers you didn't go
to Ukraine?

Speaker 2 (31:50):
Who knows.

Speaker 5 (31:50):
I guess she wanted another paid vacation, or she was
trying to get away from the country when the nation's
report card scores came out showing decades of learning loss
that were partially caused her union induced school closures when
they held children's education hostage during the COVID era for
ransom payments from taxpayers. But look, I don't think she
should quit her job. I think she should continue go

(32:11):
and talk more and more. Look what happened in twenty
twenty one when she went and stumped for Terry mccauliffe
in Virginia Glenn wont Youngkin, the Republican one on the
issue of education, education freedom. And now she's going out
stumping for Kamala Harrison, looking like an idiot every step
of the way. She should continue doing that because she's

(32:32):
inadvertently done more to advanced school choice in homeschooling than
anyone could have ever imagined.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
Every time she opens her mouth.

Speaker 5 (32:39):
That should be counted as an inkind contribution to the
school choice movement. And to Donald Trump because she really
hates him, and she's just doing a horrible job at
running the education system. She tried to say that they
made Detroit schools powerful when only four percent of kids
are proficient in math, the worst schools system in the country.

(33:01):
She's taking responsibility for that failure. It is her fault,
but it's because they care more about politics than education.

Speaker 1 (33:10):
Kara, your particular area of expertise you and I've talked
about it many times is big tech. And obviously we've
all lamented how biased and twisted and frankly evil big tech.

Speaker 2 (33:20):
Has been over the years.

Speaker 1 (33:22):
We're not talking about that a lot. Now, what aren't
we seeing? I have a very hard time believing they've
believing they've moderated things over there at Google these days.

Speaker 2 (33:31):
What aren't we seeing?

Speaker 10 (33:33):
Yeah, they haven't.

Speaker 8 (33:34):
What we're not seeing because is a lot. Because there
is an extensive CYA campaign. You might have seen. Mark
Zuckerberg came out and said, oh, you know, we did
wrong when we've suppressed COVID nineteen misinformation. Right, we did
wrong when we suppressed the Hunter Biden laptop story. Because
I think these guys are hedging their bets yet as

(33:56):
I tell everyone, don't take that victory lap for free
speech because somebody like Mark Zuckerberg says maya kulpa to
a degree, because we know that in the background, they
are continuing to censor a pace. We've seen it again
and again, not just with Meta actually down ranking that
photo of Trump raising his fist defiantly in the air

(34:18):
during his assassination's first assassination attempt, but we've seen.

Speaker 10 (34:22):
It with Google.

Speaker 8 (34:22):
We've seen it with their search results. You know, when
people tried to search for Trump assassination, they weren't getting
what happened. They weren't getting proper search results. Google was
not surfacing real information. You might have seen Amazon's Alexa.
They came out and said that there was no reason
to vote for President Trump, that they couldn't talk about it,
but the reasons were legion to vote for Kamala Harris.

(34:45):
So big Tech, make no mistake, they're continuing to do
what they've always done in election cycles and suppress information
that is not going to help the left. Right now,
they're just being a little bit more savvy in the
public eye about it because they know there was such
a backlash given what they did in the twenty twenty
election cycle. I'm telling everyone they are smart. Don't fall

(35:08):
for it, guys. All of the censorship is happening in
the background.

Speaker 2 (35:13):
No doubt. Kara Corey, thank you both. I appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (35:17):
Didn't think you were going to be able to save
a life while watching on Rights and I did you.

Speaker 2 (35:21):
But you can costs money twenty eight dollars.

Speaker 1 (35:25):
You see, right now, there is a baby growing in
its mother's womb, and this baby is about to die
because mom's going to kill it.

Speaker 2 (35:35):
She's seeking out an abortion, and Preborn.

Speaker 1 (35:39):
Is going to try to get to her first and
offer her an ultrasound for free. And if she goes in,
if they can get her in for that free ultrasound,
if she hears the heartbeat, she will choose life. Almost
every time they choose life without that ultrasound, that baby's
going to die. That's what Preborn does. I love them,

(35:59):
I have loved them forever. They have saved so many babies.
I take that back. You and them have saved so
many babies. It's tax deductible. You can give whatever you want.
Twenty eight bucks buys the ultrasound and give whatever you want.
Preborn dot Com slash Jesse is where you give, we'll
be back.

Speaker 11 (36:27):
What concessions would be on the table? Religious exemptions, for example,
Is that something that you would consider.

Speaker 10 (36:31):
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 11 (36:37):
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 10 (36:49):
I'm not going to engage in hypotheticals.

Speaker 2 (36:54):
No religious exemptions.

Speaker 1 (36:55):
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 2 (37:12):
Abby. These people, they've.

Speaker 1 (37:15):
Made an entire election about killing babies. 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 12 (37:32):
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

(37:54):
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 1 (38:07):
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, one
election or anything like that.

Speaker 2 (38:19):
I realize there's a lot to it.

Speaker 1 (38:21):
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.

Speaker 2 (38:30):
Matter what else is at stake. How did we do that?

Speaker 12 (38:35):
Yeah, that's a good question, Jessee. 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

(38:57):
that if abortion is not accept 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 life

(39:21):
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 pro life

(39:43):
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 2 (39:57):
How could anyone be dumb enough to believe that?

Speaker 12 (40:02):
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

(40:23):
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

(40:44):
course is a strong Democrat, right, she's going on TV saying, yeah,
saying 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,

(41:05):
took pills to kill my grandchild and that's what ended
up taking her life. 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

(41:29):
your life will be taken as well. And that's the
unfortunate consequence of abortion.

Speaker 2 (41:34):
We can't escape it.

Speaker 12 (41:36):
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 1 (41:45):
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 12 (41:55):
Yeah, there's about a dozen right now where we're looking
at constitutional and men ments 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

(42:15):
any current pro life legislation in that state. The one
that everybody is looking at, I think the most closely
is Florida with their Amendment for and so many of
us have been on social media encouraging people to vote
no on Amendment for. Florida is, as most of us know,

(42:35):
a pro life state. 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 this is what Donald Trump wanted.

(43:00):
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 vote yes
on these amendments in the state of Florida, if people

(43:21):
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

(43:42):
what's on the line in these many states.

Speaker 1 (43:49):
We have come a 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 12 (44:05):
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

(44:26):
good right because that's what Roe was argued on. They said,
if Roe is passed, 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

(44:49):
not what 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, wh why do you want
it to be rare?

Speaker 7 (45:02):
Right?

Speaker 2 (45:03):
Like I think.

Speaker 12 (45:06):
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 steak in
this country, right. I want it to be accessible to everyone.

(45:26):
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 to everyone, and that's

(45:48):
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 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. It does not
have to be safe, it does not have to be legal,

(46:10):
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 1 (46:25):
What a place we're at. Abby, you are the best.
Thank you for come back soon. All right, final thoughts next.
All right, it is time to lighten the mood, and
I just thought there's no better way to lighten the

(46:47):
mood than to celebrate the latest Kamala Harris accent.

Speaker 10 (46:52):
Whipping May in door fortnight.

Speaker 3 (46:56):
My joy come.

Speaker 10 (46:58):
In the morning. The path may seem hard, the work
may seem heavy, but joy cometh in the morning, and
church morning is on its way.

Speaker 2 (47:17):
I'll see you tomorrow
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