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October 29, 2025 45 mins

Jesse Kelly touches on some big news surrounding the New York City mayoral race involving Zohran Mamdani. What is the bigger issue at play here? Jesse reveals it alongside Steve Deace. Plus, Jennifer Galardi joins the show to discuss some emerging news regarding the 2028 election.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
We have to deport a lot of people to save
the United States of America. Steve Days is here, Jennifer
Gallardi is here.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
All that so much more coming up on.

Speaker 1 (00:10):
I'm right, let's talk about deportation, Let's talk about foreigners.
Let's look, this is going to come to New York
City and what's about to happen to New York City
with the election of this man, Donnie Guy. So before

(00:32):
before we get to Mamdannie in New York City specifically,
I need to I need to explain a couple of
things to you. First of all, you how you think
about government, what you want government to do and be,
And none.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
Of us are exactly alike.

Speaker 1 (00:45):
You and I may differ on this issue or that issue,
taxes or the border, or abortion or something like that.
But if I were to tell you that there was
this candidate running for office, and this candidate aligned with
you on all of your issues, no matter what your
issues are, every one of them, taxes and spending and everything.
They aligned with you on every single thing, would you

(01:07):
vote for that person? Probably rolling your eyes, that's obvious, right,
the answer is yes. But why I didn't I didn't
tell you what they looked like I didn't tell you
what their skin color was, didn't tell you their religion,
didn't even tell you their sex male female. I didn't

(01:29):
tell you any of that. But you just said you
would vote for that person. You know why, because you
think about politics in the correct way.

Speaker 3 (01:38):
For you.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
Government itself obviously something that should be kept at bay,
should be kept restrained. But government itself, it's not there
to reflect your tribe, whatever that tribe may be.

Speaker 3 (01:51):
It's there to.

Speaker 2 (01:53):
Do the things you want done, to carry.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
Your values into Washington, d C. And get those things done. Now,
this may sound like an obvious point, but that brings
me to so many peoples from all over the world
and how differently they look at politics than you do.
This is this is a central part of what we're

(02:17):
about to talk about when it comes to what's about
to happen in New York City and what's happened in
many parts of the United States of America. First, many
peoples around the globe, of various nations, religious, many many
peoples around the globe. They vote transactionally and tribally.

Speaker 2 (02:35):
The two teams. Remember this.

Speaker 1 (02:37):
You have to remember this because it's much much different
than most people like you.

Speaker 2 (02:40):
Vote.

Speaker 1 (02:41):
They vote transactionally and or tribally. Let's focus on transactionally first.
They don't have this foundation, this DNA that you have
about government and government should be limited and people should
be free. That that don't that's not their history of
where they came from. That's not what their family has
always known. When you're selecting somebody to lead you politically,

(03:03):
it's purely transactional. Yeah, what are you gonna give us?
What's your plan? What are you going to give us?
Is it gonna be money, it's gonna be food, or
you're going to pave the roads specifically, It's not like
they're against pork spending or something like that. That's what
they demand. What are you going to give me? Transactionally

(03:24):
and tribally? Very very foreign concept to most people in
the United States of America, certainly most people on the right.
I shouldn't say most people in the country, most people
on the right. This is very foreign to us. For me,
it would honestly never ever cross my mind to I'm

(03:47):
really tall, to choose the tall candidate, what do I care?
It would never cross my mind to choose the bald candidate.
It would never cross my mind to choose the white candidate.
I'm obviously white. I would never look at the field
and be like, oh, oh he's black, and nah, he's
the Mexican, he's Asian, ooh the white guy. It's not

(04:10):
how I vote. Tell me how they align with me
on the issues, and that's how I'll choose. But for
so many peoples around the globe, so many, that's how they.

Speaker 3 (04:21):
Vote the issues issues. You're kidding me.

Speaker 1 (04:26):
I'm a Muslim, where's the Muslim. I'm a Mexican. Where's
a Mexican. I'm black, where's the black guy. I'm from Zimbabwe,
where's the zimbabwe guy. I'm from Smalia, where's the Somali guy.
That's how so many people vote now and have historically
always voted. It brings us to New York City, our

(04:47):
most important city, the most important city in the world. Frankly,
New York City is about to elect a communist. It's
going to happen this Mandanna guy, an open Islamist, an
open communist. And people, even people who've never visited New
York City, who don't live in New York City. You
probably don't live in New York City. They're just sickened

(05:07):
by the whole thing. How could this happen? Why would
they do this? But there's something we already know, an
amazing thing, a sad thing. American born New Yorkers have
completely rejected Mandonni. He is getting slaughtered in the pools
by American born New Yorkers. If you were born in

(05:29):
the United States of America and you live in New
York City, you completely reject Mandonnie, no interest at all, Nope,
doesn't want him to be my mayor. But foreign born
New Yorkers, those tribal peoples, they love him. He is
their overwhelming favorite. And so this is the point where
the right doesn't understand what we're dealing with, because this

(05:50):
is the point where we will start to explain why
Mamdannie's ideas are bad. But you can't give out free
bus fairs. This is gonna happen. You can't just open
Rikers Island. This is going to happen.

Speaker 2 (06:02):
You can't do this.

Speaker 3 (06:03):
This won't work. That won't work.

Speaker 1 (06:05):
If he does this, this will be the result. But
emails will be talking to the wall. You're talking to
people who vote tribally. They don't vote the way you vote.
It's transactional and it's tribal. Did you know over a

(06:26):
million Muslims now live in New York City. I believe
the number is one point five million. Why do you
think ma'am Donnie tells these nine to eleven stories all
the time.

Speaker 4 (06:36):
Now, I want to use this moment to speak to
the Muslims of New York City.

Speaker 2 (06:44):
Hmm.

Speaker 4 (06:47):
I want to speak to the memory of my aunt
who stopped taking the subway after September eleventh because she
did not feel safe.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
If in your head, Jet Okay, first of all, that's fake,
and now he's already had to come out and try
to explain it.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
He made that thing up, the whole thing his aunt.

Speaker 1 (07:10):
His aunt wasn't even in New York City. His aunt
wasn't wearing a h job. He just made the whole
thing up. So that, of course bakes a question, why
would you make up that story? That's how you get
elected in New York City. Now there are legions and
legions of Muslims in New York City. That's how they
want their mayor to think, talk, and act. The story

(07:34):
being made up couldn't possibly matter less. That was a
story where ma'am Donnie was throwing up the signals saying, hey.

Speaker 2 (07:43):
I'm part of your tribe. I'm part of your tribe.
Vote for me.

Speaker 1 (07:49):
You can scream at these foreigners till you're blue in
the face about what will work won't work. You can
scream at them all day long. They don't vote like
you vote, they don't think like you think. And this
is why the United States of America has got to
be so much more careful with who we bring here,

(08:10):
and now we have to be so much more aggressive
with who we've brought here. Do you understand To truly
save the United States of America, it's not just going
to be deporting murders and rapists. That's an obvious first step.
We are going to have to deport fifty million people.
We are going to have to denaturalize people who we've
allowed to become citizens and deport them as well. I'm

(08:32):
going to play you something. You've probably probably seen it already,
but this man, Donnie Scumbag, who's about to be mayor
of New York City. The video I'm about to play
it was his father. But before we play it, I
want I want you to understand something. He got to
the United States of America in nineteen sixty three, he
became a communist street activist in nineteen sixty five. We

(08:54):
brought him here from some dump, and he promptly began
to start destroying the United States of America. Now that's
all bad enough, but he's been allowed to do this
in the open for sixty years. A foreigner we pluck
out of a dump, bring here, allow him not only

(09:15):
to reside here, he's a professor at one of our
most prestigious universities, and he has chosen to tear this
country down for sixty years without that much fear of
being denaturalized, deported, and sent back to the dump where
he came from. What kind of a country allows foreigners

(09:36):
to come here and tear the place down for sixty
years without ever sending him home. As you watch this
video and the anger wells up inside of you, do
please reserve a lot of that anger for the politicians
who allow this crap.

Speaker 5 (09:53):
America is the genesis of what we call settler Colonialismmerican
model was exported all around the world. Abraham Lincoln generalized
the solution of reservations. They herded American Indians into separate

(10:15):
territories for the Nazis. For the Nazis This was the inspiration.
Hitler realized two things. One that genocide was doable. It
is possible to do genocide. That's what Hitler realized. Second

(10:38):
thing Hitler realized is that you don't have to have
a common citizenship. You can differentiate between people. The Nuremberg
laws were patterned after American laws anyway. The US put
Indians in reservations. The US invented the model.

Speaker 2 (11:04):
Sixty years.

Speaker 1 (11:06):
It's not like he was passing notes in some underground
communists cell sixty years, standing in front of classrooms, sitting
up on stage, on camera with a microphone in his hand,
taking a steaming dump all over the country that brought
him here. This is why New York City is no

(11:30):
longer America. It's why Chicago, Los Angeles, so many of
our formerly wonderful urban centers are no longer America. And
people ask how can we save them? Because we can't
go on forever with hostile foreign city states operating within
our borders. How can we save them? We have to

(11:51):
deport people, lots and lots and lots of people. It's
time to send a message to everybody. If we allow
you to come here, you be on your best behavior
or you will go back all that may have made
you uncomfortable, but I am right. We have an incredible

(12:13):
show for you tonight. In fact, along these lines, Trump
Administration doing something that should make you feel really really good,
like pure Talk makes you feel. Pure Talk probably makes
you feel good too. Listen, Pure Talk is near to
my heart because they share my values, and there simply
aren't many corporations that do anymore, especially the big cell

(12:34):
phone companies, the Verizons, the AT and ts and the
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companies hate you. They work against you out in the
open all the time. Pure Talk, out in the open
works for you. Do you know what they're doing right now?
When you switch your cell phone service to pure Talk,
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(12:56):
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Speaker 2 (13:03):
That's their values. Go to pure talk dot com, slash
Jesse TV. We'll be back. Okay.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
So I want to give the Trump administration a lot
of credit right now for something mass deportations, as we've
talked about so many times. We just mentioned it a
couple minutes ago too, But mass deportation. Deporting tens of
millions of foreigners is necessary in order to save the
United States of America. We can't keep bringing people in.

(13:40):
We can't allow so many of these disloyal scumbags to
stay here, so we have to deport them.

Speaker 2 (13:45):
All right, I got that. You got that.

Speaker 1 (13:47):
But there's wanting to be able to run a marathon,
and then there's actually being able to run a marathon.
We don't have currently the systems in place that will
allow to deport fifty million people.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
We don't have it yet. We don't have the.

Speaker 1 (14:03):
Judges, we don't have enough ice ice officers. But just
the machine is not built. The machine is not built.

Speaker 2 (14:09):
I got that. You got that.

Speaker 1 (14:10):
We want to run the marathon. We're kind of fatten
out of shape. So we have a lot of work
to do. But we have to start to work now.
Even if that even if it means going for a
walk tonight, maybe we're gonna go go jog a mile tonight,
the work does have to begin. The Trump administration as
of right now, this includes self deportations, is at two

(14:32):
million in ten months, two million, two million in ten months.

Speaker 3 (14:38):
Now.

Speaker 1 (14:38):
We have a story that there is a big shakeup
in Ice. Remember Ice, they're the ones that actually have
to deport people major cities across the country.

Speaker 2 (14:48):
They're having their leadership.

Speaker 1 (14:50):
Tossed, and the reports are they're being replaced with more
aggressive people.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
From border patrol.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
I want to give the Trump anddministration all the credit
in the world for this.

Speaker 2 (15:02):
They deserve it.

Speaker 1 (15:03):
If we are ever to get to fifty million, which
will take years, Trump administration can't do that, it's not
humanly possible. But if we are ever to get to
that number, and that's just the number I picked, it
might be higher. If we are ever to get to
that number, then we need the Trump administration to do
exactly what they're doing. And how many times have you
had a chance to say that about any politician.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
In your life. He's doing exactly what we need him
to do.

Speaker 1 (15:31):
And it has been a relentless media campaign, Democrat campaign
against all these deportations. I don't even have to play
it for you. You've heard it all, Nazi Hitler, gas stopo.
And yet, for once, Republicans are not caving. They're not
backing off. The Trump administration is not apologizing, they're not
promising to do things differently. They are demanding more aggression

(15:56):
in the face of relentless communist campaigning against what they're doing.
They want it more, they want it faster, they want
more people gone, and.

Speaker 2 (16:08):
They should be celebrated.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
If you not, if we're going to freak out and
yell and scream whenever they do something wrong, and we
have and we will again, if we're going to do that,
then I think you would agree with me that we
need to give credit where credit is due. The Trump
administration is full steam ahead. There's not a sign they're
backing off or slowing down. In fact, things like this

(16:31):
ice shakeup they tell you, they tell me they want more.
That's something to celebrate. Put a smile on your face.
All right, all right, we're going to talk to Steve Days.
In a moment. Before we talk to Steve Days, I
want to talk to you about your gut. Look, when

(16:52):
you're fifteen years old, you can eat nails and you'll
be fine. I'm kidding, don't eat nails, but you understand
when you're forty four kind of have to be a
little more careful, a little more careful when it's brought
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(17:13):
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Speaker 2 (17:25):
I put two scoops in my coffee in the morning.

Speaker 1 (17:28):
It not only is delicious, I essentially have chocolate coffee
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Speaker 2 (17:44):
We'll be back.

Speaker 6 (17:53):
Here is what we stand it for, my friends. We
are going to free in the red for more than
a two million rent and stabilize his hens and to
use every resource that also to build housing for everyone.

Speaker 3 (18:10):
Who needed in it.

Speaker 6 (18:14):
We are going to eliminate end of the air on
every single lust line.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
They're not booing, they're cheering.

Speaker 1 (18:26):
Joining me now, my friend, even though he's extremely dressed down.

Speaker 2 (18:29):
Today host of the Steve Days Show, Steve Dave.

Speaker 1 (18:32):
Steve, the truth is you import a bunch of foreign leeches.
You can get up and give speeches and tell them
how much crap you're gonna give them, and it gets
you elected. This is what they want. You can tell
them to the blue in the face it's not gonna work.

Speaker 2 (18:45):
They don't care.

Speaker 7 (18:47):
Brother, There is some there's some devil's arithmetic, and all
of this we should lay out for your audience. Number one,
the average voter turnout. I know you are rightly railing
against Republican primary voters on a consistent basis as the
root of all American evil, essentially for our complacency. And
you're right, well, the average turnout in New York City
mayoral elections in the twenty first century is twenty five percent,

(19:11):
and it is estimated about twenty five percent of the
City of New York is currently non English speaking. That
can't possibly be a coincidence, and so these are almost
like providential forces. Secondly, if you look at his two predecessors,
there's some talk on our side about how this is
some kind of outlier, and he's not an insurgent. He's

(19:33):
a fulfillment. The city already tried godless Republican corporatism, where
corporations are god. It tried that under Michael Bloomberg. It
then tried godless Sandinistaism under the Blasio, a literal Sandinista,
not a euphemism, not an exaggeration, not a metaphor. He
literally worked out of the offices of the Sandinistas in

(19:54):
the city of New York as a younger man. So
it tried two forms of godlessness. It only makes sense
now that it will try another form of godlessness, provided
that it is shrouded around the false God that Mamdanni represents.
This is a plus B equal C stuff culturally and

(20:16):
in many respects. New York City Post Rudy tried the
two wings of the unibrow. It tried them both, didn't
like the answers it was getting. And so you know,
eventually something has to rule and something has to be
worshiped Jesse. And so the false God that Mamdanni represents,
he's going to be worshiped and ruled in New York City.

Speaker 1 (20:35):
Now, Steve, can you make this connection for me, because
this is right up your alley, cause I think about
this stuff a lot. Nobody, not a single person on earth,
of any religion, of any race, of any anywhere, nobody
wants to live in a dirty place nobody wants to
live in a crime filled place. These are just these

(20:57):
are just universal human things. I want things to be clean,
I want to feel safe, I want my wife, my kids.
These are universal human things. Yet people, over and over
and over again New York City, most definitely they vote
for dirt and crime.

Speaker 7 (21:13):
Yes, help me understand, because ultimately, desire isn't worldview world
or isn't destiny. Worldview is destiny. And ultimately, yes, human
beings want those things Jesse, but not at the expense
of not having their worldview affirmed. And if their worldview
gets in the way of those needs and instincts being fulfilled,

(21:36):
they will just lie and incorporate them into their worldview
as if that is happening. So, for example, hey, you know,
I'm on my third generation. I'm black in an inner
city like Chicago. We're in our third generation of dysfunction.
And a Republican hasn't won a mayoral seat here literally
since Columbus and his three ships landed in the New

(21:56):
World Right, So clearly it must be the Republicans you
hate me and are a bunch of racists, who are
the reason why I've done all the policies of all
the people I have voted for, and yet I continue
to get exactly what I say I don't want, and
then I vote for more of it again because to
admit otherwise, human beings as a species brother outside of
the God of the Bible, we are not really good

(22:17):
at humility. Nobody really gets up in the morning and
says I can't wait to admit when I'm wrong. We're
not good at that. And so if my narrative of
my worldview all right, my religious conviction, and we all
have one, we all have the God shaped hold in
our heart, as Blade Pascal once said, if that is
being questioned, even if it means there are people who
buried their loved ones out of the rubble of nine

(22:39):
to eleven, not twenty five years ago, Jess, and they're
going to go vote for Mom Donnie on Tuesday and
then say people like us are racist and Nazis for
asking why would you do this? Because my worldview must
be affirm, my religion must be confirmed, even if it
doesn't line up with the facts on the ground. I
will make the facts on the ground change in order

(23:00):
to line up with my worldview, because otherwise I would
be forced to admit my worldview is a scam.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
Steve, Then how do we save our cities? Because I've
set it over and over and over again, we don't
really have These are not America anymore. There are hostile
foreign city states that reside within our borders. And while
you and I can move out, you know people who can,
people who find an opportunity can move out and get

(23:28):
away from it, it's still not good for the country.
We both love to have hostile foreign city states inside
of our borders.

Speaker 7 (23:36):
Can they be saved, yes, But the first thing we
have to do is make sure and you know this
better than me. You're a soldier, I'm not. We have
to have a secure home front first, brother, all right,
we need to make sure our red states are every
bit as red as the blue states are blue.

Speaker 2 (23:53):
All right.

Speaker 7 (23:54):
We Alabama's got to Alabama, Mississippi, Texas, Tennessee, Arkansas, Georgia,
South Carolina have to be every bit as red as Oregon, Maryland, California,
Washington State, Vermont, Delaware are blue. We have to have
a home front first, because you're right, these are foreign countries,
which means you're really talking about liberating them a form

(24:16):
of invasion, and we're not talking militarily here, but culturally,
what you're describing is we have to invade them, but
we need to make sure our own home front is
secure before we do that. Otherwise we get spread too
thin and we've just launched a two front war. We
can't win either way, and we're caught in a no
man's land. So state step number one is, we have
to secure the homeland.

Speaker 3 (24:37):
First.

Speaker 7 (24:37):
Our red states have to be as red as the
blue states are blue. That's a non negotiable. Attempting to
do anything for these cities withou accomplishing that is just
literally wasting of resources and time and talent and treasure
we don't have. They must be as red as the
blue states are blue. But then after that occurs, which
you're really talking about as a form of cultural invasion,

(24:57):
and there's no way to successfully accomplish that, and in
some respects you'd even describe it as missionary work. You're
going to need mass spiritual awakening and revival. You're going
to need whether it's not whether the existing churches in
these blue cities are not capable of it, then missionaries
are going to have to go in there. As if
these massive, you know, churches like tim Kellers aren't really
there and begin just literally preaching the Gospel to people,

(25:20):
which is the always step one into understanding that you
can be a free person is that you are you
can be freed of your own sin. I mean, that's
why we had great awakenings and then had and then
had a revolution. You can't have rights that come from
God if people are disconnected from God. And that's what's
really happening in these blue cities, jes they become godless.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
Steve, let's talk about deportations.

Speaker 1 (25:47):
Obviously, I'm happy they're happening, but you know, we're about
fifty million away from actually getting ourselves right. Does the
GOP have the stomach to continue in build I understand,
and I already gave him credit for the Trump Administration's
not only doing it, they're building the machine to make
it accelerate and do it harder and faster.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
That's good.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
Do we have the will to continue this for another
ten twenty years, because that's what it's going to take.

Speaker 7 (26:13):
I think in our age group and younger, the answer
is yes. And I think the question then becomes, how
soon can that generational group assume positions of leadership within
the hierarchy of the party. And I think what you're
seeing right now with the government shut down is you're
watching one of the great shibalists of our era, the
McConnell mythology that Republicans going back to the Tea Party era,

(26:35):
remember how frustrated we all were that that Bayner just
negotiated against himself and never pushed any of his leverage
because we slek Kevim has said, then we always live. Well,
you're watching that heterodoxy. Trump is smashing that shibalith right now.
Republicans have held together on this longer than probably you
or I thought was possible. Their messaging on it has
actually been fairly decent. So Trump, to me is just

(26:57):
stage one of a generational account offensive. Here stage one,
we have to blow up these media narratives that have
been the shibboleth of the dam the fig leaf of
these Republicans for their excuses for a generation of being
simps and subservience to the spear.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
Of the age.

Speaker 7 (27:12):
If probably the greatest accomplishment of Trump's era is going
to be that he violated all these media norms and
was politically successful. Nevertheless, and what you're hoping then is
the generation that comes after him, whether it's Advance, you know,
whether it's a DeSantis. More names that they then are
now able to deepen the theology of that disruption and

(27:33):
point out that there's actually now a counter way of
life that we need to pursue. That it's not just
enough to disrupt the systems that destroyed us. We now
have to implement an entirely new system and framework, which
means we get to decide as a country, who's a
citizen here and who's not, who gets access to our
social safety that and who does not, who gets to
be educated and who does not, and who gets to

(27:55):
even have a single you know, appendage on the soil
known as the United States of America, and who does not?
All right, that we are the United States of America
is a nation, all right. It's a nation made up
of its people. And here the people rule, and that's
going to probably come in the era to come, provided
we can be politically successful enough in this era to
pass the baton on to such people.

Speaker 1 (28:17):
Steve, final one from me here the government shut down.
It feels to me like Democrats have the tiger by
the years here if Republicans won't negotiate and to your point.

Speaker 2 (28:28):
I thought they would cave. I even said they would gave.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
They haven't if they won't negotiate. Democrats can't cave for
their base. But it's not looking good for them in
the polls. How do they let go with this tiger?

Speaker 7 (28:42):
So you know, there's a line, there's a movie line
we quote on my show all the time, Jesse from
The Hunt for Red October. The hardest part of playing
chicken is no one win to flinch. Okay, and so
right now we're heading into November one, and a different
layer of people are going to be impacted by this
shutdown that have been for the previous few weeks, and
so Democrats are banking on is that new layer of
people who are who are going to be injured by

(29:04):
this will turn the numbers and the data around and
the heat on Republicans around, and they'll cave. And so
the next couple of weeks, if this goes on, that's
what the real pressure point comes upon Republicans. If they
withstand that, then all that pressure and heat goes on
the Democrats because the longer this goes on, the more
used to only having government in Washington operated about sixty

(29:25):
five percent of what it normally does. People that kind
of get used to And so that's what's occurring right
now is can the Democrats create enough people in the
short term that find themselves injurious enough that they might
otherwise vote Democrat when they were going to vote Republican
and that will get your squishy Republicans to cave. So
far they've not been able to do that. And then

(29:46):
the longer this goes on, you're right and your analogy
is right on the money, the more this pressure shifts
to the Democrats because many of their conventional wisdoms are
being dispelled. And frankly, you get to a point where
the only people who really care if this thing really reopens,
provided we're funding the military, where a lot of our
voters are provided that the people, the only people otherwise
who care, were never voting for us in the first place.

(30:08):
And that's kind of what's being sifted out right now.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Steve, thank you, brother, you got a man.

Speaker 3 (30:15):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (30:18):
Let's talk about Gavin Newsom next. There's this exhausting thing
in politics. If you've been in politics or paid attention
to it for longer than fifteen minutes, you know this
to be true.

Speaker 2 (30:37):
This is not gonna be.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
News to you where all these people who run for office,
most definitely who run for president, they all they all
have to pretend like they're not power hungry animals. They
all have to pretend like they're these reluctant civil servants
who might run. They haven't really given a lot of thought.

Speaker 3 (30:57):
But oh, I guess all the people have did? They
just really really.

Speaker 1 (31:00):
What Gavin Newsom's doing this thing? I saw this headline
from CBS, New York Times and others that Gavin Newsom
is considering a twenty twenty eight run for president?

Speaker 2 (31:11):
Do we have to do this thing all the time?

Speaker 1 (31:13):
Joining me now, Jennifer Galardi, senior policy analyst at the
Heritage Foundation.

Speaker 2 (31:18):
Hey, Jen, he's considering it. He hasn't made the decision yet.

Speaker 8 (31:22):
Of course he hasn't. He's been considering it for the
past four six, eight years. I mean, this was always
his goal.

Speaker 3 (31:32):
Jen.

Speaker 1 (31:33):
You are, I believe, a former resident of California, possibly current,
but I know you were a former resident of California.

Speaker 2 (31:41):
How's it been under Gavinusom?

Speaker 8 (31:44):
Well, it was terrible. I'm just thanking the Lord that
I made it out when I did, probably the end
of twenty twenty three, because it's just gotten worse. The
Palisades fire destroyed the town that I once lived in
and loved to paying the fires, the homelessness got worse.
It wasn't always like this. I moved to California in

(32:04):
nineteen ninety eight and it wasn't as bad as it
is now. It's just untenable, unsustainable the cost of living.
From what I understand, they are erecting low cost housing
in the Palisades now, kind of socialist type homes. Yeah,
so you know, we'll see what happens. But anybody who

(32:26):
wants to export California to the rest of the country
I think is in for a surprise. I don't think
the rest of the country will buy it. But he's slick, Willie,
I mean the hair, He's got the whole stick. He's
been working that for years now. So we'll see what happens.
I mean, if they're going to vote Zorn Mundami, I
can't imagine why they wouldn't go for this guy either,

(32:48):
But we'll see.

Speaker 1 (32:51):
Yeah, speaking of the whole stick, there's this hilarious thing
and I realized politicians on all sides tend to pander
from time to time.

Speaker 2 (32:59):
It's what they do.

Speaker 1 (33:00):
But watching democrats do it, especially with black people, it's
one of the funniest things I've ever seen in my
entire life. Gavin Newsome went on an NBA podcast and
started talking about Wonderbread.

Speaker 9 (33:12):
But also, you know, it was also about paying the
bills man, and it was just like hustling and and
so I was out there kind of raising myself, turning
on the TV. Started you know, just getting obsessed, you know,
sitting there with the you know, the Wonderbread and five
stacks of you know, come on every day every day

(33:43):
in the backyard, just bouncing the basketball, throwing the ball
against the wall until the ball is just like fraying.

Speaker 8 (33:49):
Man, Oh my gosh, shouldn't they do it?

Speaker 3 (33:53):
They do it because it works.

Speaker 8 (33:56):
Well, that's the question. I don't know which is worse,
his stick or the fact that the hosts buy it.
They are the black community bidness. I mean, thank goodness
for the Internet. I don't know if you saw those
pictures around that are coming out of him, like back
in the eighties when he was a youngster, and all
I could think of is that character do you remember

(34:18):
from one of my favorite John Hughes movies, pretty in pink.
The rich socialite Blaine.

Speaker 10 (34:23):
His name was Blaine, and at least Blaine had the
self awareness to know he hung around with a holes.
Like Blaine was somewhat self aware that his friends were jerks.

Speaker 8 (34:36):
And and Newsome doesn't seem to get it. He thinks
he can pull this off and he That's what shocks me,
is they fall for it. I don't know if they
think it's good entertainment or he was from like Getty Money.
His father managed Getty Money Oil like Getty Oil Money.
It's it's and he's got the popped collar and like
I think he was voted like the most slick dressed,

(35:00):
don't know what it was. And in his high school, I'm like, yeah,
you grew up in the ghetto. Of course, Jen.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
Let's just talk about human nature, shall we. They do
this because people want to be pandered to, right, even
if they know it's not honest all the way. If
you were construction, you want to see your politician in
a hard hat. If you hunt, you want to see
him working a shotgun out there somewhere.

Speaker 3 (35:26):
On some level, people like to be pandered too, don't they.

Speaker 8 (35:30):
I don't think so. I don't know, Like it's one
thing to kind of put the hard hat on in
the construction area. It's another thing to take on a
completely false persona with a false accent, attending you're Jamaican
one day and a black person the next, Like yum
on when Kamala did the yum on and he said,
I can't even remember what Newsom just said. He was like,

(35:52):
it was, you know, it was wonderbred. I was just
I was struggling. I was, you know, hustling, hustling. The
word rustling would never come out of my mouth as
a white woman. It just never would be like I
was hustling. I don't hustle, I work hard. I don't know,
So it's it is. I don't think people like to
be pander two, So I don't know what they think

(36:13):
they're getting with these candidates. It's it just reeks of inauthenticity.
I mean, you have I just don't see this on
the right as much. You have people with their quirks
and their personalities. But like Kennedy, Senator Kennedy from Louisiana,
you know what you're like, he is hilarious because he's
him all the time, every single time. He's funny and

(36:36):
he's authentic. Now you may not like it, you may
not like what he has to say, but he's always
who he is. Trump is always who he is. You
know what you're getting. It's just the left that seems
to have this weird tendency to try to pretend who
their voters are. And I think it is We've talked
about this before because they have no principles. They don't
stand on principles. They just have to shift wherever the

(36:59):
wind goes to get boats.

Speaker 1 (37:02):
Speaking of shifting whichever way the wind blow is doing,
I mean whatever's necessary.

Speaker 2 (37:08):
Here's Kamala Harrison.

Speaker 8 (37:10):
When are they going to see a woman in charge
in the White House in their lifetime?

Speaker 2 (37:14):
For sure?

Speaker 3 (37:16):
Could it be you?

Speaker 2 (37:17):
Possibly?

Speaker 8 (37:19):
Have you made a decision yet?

Speaker 3 (37:20):
No? I have not.

Speaker 8 (37:21):
But you say in your book I'm not done. That
is correct.

Speaker 6 (37:25):
I am not done.

Speaker 10 (37:26):
But when you look at the bookies' odds, they put
you as an outsider, even behind Dwayne the Rock Johnson.

Speaker 8 (37:34):
I mean, is that underestimating you?

Speaker 9 (37:39):
I think there are all kinds of polls that will
tell you a variety of things.

Speaker 8 (37:42):
I've never listened to Poles.

Speaker 2 (37:44):
If I listen to polls.

Speaker 10 (37:45):
I would have not run for my first office or
my second office, and I certainly wouldn't be sitting here.

Speaker 2 (37:50):
In this interview. She's running again. The question is when,
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (37:59):
I am shocked.

Speaker 8 (38:00):
If she runs again, I will be shocked. I mean,
she got such a spanking the last time, and it
really was a case of kind of the like the
what do we call it when it's like two really
bad candidates. People saw Trump as bad, they saw her
as bad the least the least of the worst, right,
the least worst of the two. But we're gonna have
strong candidates on the right. We're gonna have jd. Vance,

(38:23):
We're gonna have Marco Rubio, We're gonna have really great
We got a strong, solid, deep bench and they got
her and Gavin Newsome. I don't know when she announces.
I mean I would think she would have to do
it sooner than later, because her big excuse last time
was we didn't have enough time, right, just give us
more time. Well, you've got all the time in the
world now, and let's see how you do. It's just

(38:45):
I mean, please, for the for the entertainment value, for
people like you and me that get to kind of
laugh about something. It'll provide endless fodder. But you know,
so I hope she does it sooner than later.

Speaker 1 (38:58):
Well, she's been spanked before. Let's talk about in New
York City, ma'am. Donnie's about to be elected mayor in
New York City and it breaks my heart, Jen because
I love the place. But the truth is, when you
import tens of millions of foreigners, they're going to vote
the way they vote, and American born New Yorkers are
not voting for him.

Speaker 3 (39:16):
We know that now. This is what happens when you
open up your borders.

Speaker 8 (39:20):
Yeah, And I guess it's this message of socialism, Marxism.
I don't think it's just foreigners. That's definitely part of it,
because they get promised free stuff, and that's what socialism is.
It sounds really nice, but we all know in America
that there's no such thing as a free lunch. And
if it sounds too good to be true.

Speaker 9 (39:40):
It is.

Speaker 8 (39:41):
But I also think he appeals to younger Americans, particularly
in urban areas, who have become very disillusioned, who can't
afford homes, who don't want to get married and have children.
At least that's one of their excuses. And so the
other side of the coin is, how do we inoculate
young Americans against the propaganda that people like zoron Mondami

(40:01):
cells that socialism is good. You can call it democratic socialism,
you can call it big government socialism. You know, no
matter how much lipstick you put on a pig, it's
still a pig. And it does. It all sounds so good,
free bus rides, rent control, free childcare, But you'll never
achieve anything beyond what the government allows you to do.

(40:22):
You are a surf to the government. Everybody who knows
history knows this. So how do we make it so
that these young people aren't so disillusioned about life and
that makes them susceptible to this kind of propaganda. How
do we teach them about the satisfaction and fulfillment that
comes from struggle and sacrifice and overcoming obstacles. How do
we fortify them with resilience and self reliance and the

(40:45):
notions of the good and the true and the beautiful.
You know, I have my own ideas. I think getting
them into church is a good idea. Looking upward, give
our youth something to aspire to, to strive for, and
not indoctrinate them in theories of the lowest common denominator,
which is what programs such as DEI and race based
Equity do. So, you know, I think we really need

(41:06):
to do a better job of teaching this next generation
what it means to be free and what it looks
like under a socialist society. It never ends well. We
know that youth, particularly know that.

Speaker 3 (41:19):
Jen.

Speaker 1 (41:20):
Before I let you go, I want to talk about
this piece you did for The Blaze. Time for RFK
Junior to expose the dark truth about the pill.

Speaker 2 (41:28):
What pill are we talking about here? What's the dark truth?

Speaker 8 (41:32):
We are talking about the birth control pill that nobody
seems to want to touch. It's a sacred cow in
our society because it's given women quote unquote sexual freedom
and the ability to choose whether they want a family
or not without looking at the very serious potential side effects.

(41:52):
Every drug has them. We've just kind of buried these
under the rug and patients women are not being told
from their doctors what these are and what birth control is.
It is medicated menopause. I would love a twenty year
old to go into their doctor's office and have the
doctor say we're actually going to put you into menopause.
Does that sound good to you? So we're lacking informed consent.

(42:15):
We're lacking in the transparency of the side effects of
the birth control pill, especially long term potential of decreased
fertility once you come off it, weight gain. It actually
changes kind of the It can change the whole cultural dynamic.
There's a great book on it. But the changes the
way men are attracted to women because women aren't menstruating essentially.

(42:39):
So it's just these things need to be examined. We're
not saying end the birth control pill. We're saying, just
be transparent about it, and let's have the research that's
been done in Europe that shows some of these things.

Speaker 2 (42:53):
Jen come back soon. Appreciate you.

Speaker 1 (42:58):
Now, before we go to lightning the mood, I want
to reminds you we have elections coming up next week.
Early voting is already underway. Twenty twenty eight is a
long way away. Have you been to your Secretary of
State's website? Do you have elections coming up? I bet
you do. I have local ones coming up next week.
Check all right, lighten the mood next. All right, it's

(43:29):
time to lighten the mood. I was on Megan Kelly's
live tour last week and to say I was wonderful
putting it mildly.

Speaker 8 (43:39):
Please tell us who big Chungus is.

Speaker 2 (43:44):
Okay, all right, so I'm sure you saw the video.

Speaker 1 (43:48):
Everybody here has probably seen the video of the stupid
No Kings protests, and everyone saw that gigantic monster of
a woman making fun of Charlie Kirk's assassination, doing this
and that and this and that thing just just just
you know, sticking her fingers in her fat rolls and
being terrible about the whole thing. They are fighting a
communist revolution. It's not an accident. They're doing it. It's

(44:09):
not an accident. They're going after kids. They decided long
ago they couldn't use the workers because American workers were
buying large, happy and prosperous. So they had to find
a different group of malcontents. And now it's every feminist
in a subaru. Their souls are broken, they're angry, they're bitter.
That radiates from them and they spread it everywhere and
it feels ugly. So even ones that are kind of hot,

(44:32):
like AOC, you get around her and you think, oh,
that's gross. I would rather not We woke up one
day and wait, they're taking Aemima off the pancakes and
there are more and there are more lesbians in the
kids movies than the WNBA game. We have to think
beyond that and realize we are dealing with an enemy
and that sucks that you have to deal with an enemy.
I wish you didn't have to. I wish I didn't
have to. I don't want to have enemies here.

Speaker 2 (44:53):
That's not why I am. I don't want to.

Speaker 3 (44:54):
I want to eat.

Speaker 2 (44:55):
I want to eat red lobster.

Speaker 3 (44:56):
That's what I want to do.

Speaker 1 (44:57):
I want to enjoy. I don't want to eat red lobster.
But that's it's not the life we've been given. We
have enemies here. We have to acknowledge their enemies and
act as if their enemies.

Speaker 2 (45:06):
Isn't he so great?

Speaker 7 (45:11):
Can I tell you?

Speaker 2 (45:11):
Like the show is doing really well, The Megan Kelly
show is doing really well.

Speaker 8 (45:16):
It's because of guys like that. Honestly, we have just
the best guess and well, i'd love to say it's
all me, It's not all me. It's because I get
like guys like that to talk to me, and they're
so interesting. Right, isn't your life just better for knowing
Jesse Kelly.

Speaker 3 (45:29):
It just is.

Speaker 2 (45:33):
I agree Let's suitable
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Jesse Kelly

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