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April 9, 2025 • 35 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from woor Jesse Kelly Show. Let's
have some fun on a Tuesday, a fantastic Tuesday, and
there is so much to get to. I'm just gonna

(00:20):
warn you now I'm in a sour mood. We're gonna
talk about Amy Cony Barrett and violence here in the
very beginning. That'll be fun. Speaking of violence. Yes, we're
doing part two of our World War One history show
starting an hour two, so get ready for that. We'll
talk about mass deportation, what's the progress on that, what's

(00:43):
the hold up on that? The Pentagon, Christy Nole, Elon
Musk is sparring with other White House people. All that
and so much more coming up tonight on the world
famous Jesse Kelly Show. Now, this is gonna come back
to the Supreme Court and Namey Cony Barrett and things
like that. So just stay with me on that. But

(01:05):
I'm going to talk about something. I'm gonna do a
little analogy if we will, and then we'll talk about something.
So you know that I work here in the studio
with Jewish producer Chris and producer Corey. So I want
you to I want you to picture this now and
for for the purpose of our scenario, I can't fire Chris, Okay,

(01:28):
so just that's the that's that's the one rule of
our scenario. I want you to picture that every time
I insult Chris, Chris himself or maybe he hires somebody,
he keys my car. Every time I do something Chris
doesn't like, he keys my car. Maybe we order something

(01:49):
that has bacon in it. Chris keys my car. Maybe
I make fun of him on the air, not that
I would ever do such a thing. Chris key's my car,
and maybe, hey, look, maybe maybe I'm even fire Ris
every time he does it, suspending Chris every time he
does it. Yet, no matter what, every time I make
Chris angry, he keys my car. How long would it take?

(02:12):
How many times would this happen before it started to
creep into the back of my mind? Maybe I shouldn't.
Maybe I shouldn't insult Chris again. You know what, Chris
doesn't want us to get that pizza with extra bacon
on it. You know, maybe I shouldn't this time. How
long how many times having the car keyed before it

(02:36):
creeps into my mind and I start adjusting my behavior
based on his violent, despicable actions. It would happen at
some point, right, I think we could all agree. At
some point it's going to be in your mind. It costs.
It costs a thousand dollars to get that buffed out
every time he does it. I don't want to have
to go back to the I'm just sick of it.

(02:56):
You know, it's just no more bacon, Corey, no bacon. Sorry,
We're just not doing it. Would creep into your mind
at some point in time. I get emails all the time.
This is going to be about the Supreme Court. Just
stay with me here. I get emails all the time. Jesse.
I don't understand why they're so violent. Jesse. I don't
understand why they act this way. Why do communists talk

(03:19):
this way? Why did they do this? Why do they
loot stores? Why do they assault people? Why do their
elected representatives encourage them with the most violent sounding language? Why? Why? What? Jesse?
I don't understand it. Well, I need you for the
purpose of our of understanding it. I need you to
set aside your morality for a moment. And I know

(03:40):
that is very, very difficult. I'm not asking you to
set it aside for your life. I'm asking you to
set it aside to understand the other side who doesn't
share your morality, So let's take all morality out of it.
Isn't violence a wonderful way to get what you want
if you have no moral nothing moral against it? Isn't

(04:03):
it a wonderful way to get what you want if
there's no morality, if morality doesn't matter. And let's make
it about a husband and a wife. What if every
time he didn't take out the trash, she just grabbed
a frying pan and just bopped him over the back
of the head with it as hard as she could,
stitches bleeding every single time, pow pow. Well, you think eventually,

(04:27):
even if he's the most forgetful, negligent person in the world,
do you think maybe he'd remember to take out the
trash vice versa. What a piece a piece of crap?
Who beats women? Dinner isn't ready? W wops are won
every single day, over and over and over again. Do
you think eventually dinner would be ready every time he
got home? Of course it would violence if you have

(04:52):
no moral reservations about it. Violence is an extremely effective
way to not just get what you want, to intimidate
the other side into bowing before you out of fear.
A couple good things happen at the Supreme Court, and

(05:12):
I don't want to act like they're bad things. Okay,
they're good, but there's bad stuff inside of them. Here's
a few headlines. Supreme Court halts judges orders to reinstate
federal probationary workers. Justice Roberts John Roberts lifts the midnight
midnight deadline for the US to bring back a man
who was wrongfully deported at El Salvador. I didn't write
the headline that was from Politico, but I want to

(05:34):
talk about this Alien Enemies Act. Stephen Miller went on
Fox News talked about the Alien Enemies Act and what
the Supreme Court.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
This is a monumental, colossal victory for the rule of law,
for the Constitution, for our founding generation John Adams who
signed this law into effect in seventeen ninety eight, and
for President Trump and fulfilling his mandate and campaign pledge.
What does this mean for you and your family watching
it home tonight?

Speaker 1 (06:00):
Okay, what happened? What's so monumental? Trump had put in
a had used the Alien Enemies Act as justification to
round up in deport the most violent, vile criminals who
are here illegally. We're talking trend de aragu with types, the
tattoos on their faces, career murderers, child rapists, the works.

(06:22):
Because the United States of American America is completely neutered,
we'll get to that in a minute. Because the country's
completely neutered, we now have to comb through the legal
books and find some old law and use that as
a justification to send the freaking savages back. From Wednesday
came except the vote was interesting on that whole Alien
Enemies Act thing. It was huh, five to four. Well,

(06:48):
that's weird, But we have a bigger majority than that
on the Supreme Court. What what happened? Oh oh, would
you look at that? Amy Cony Barrett voted with the left.
So let's talk about this for a moment. Why this

(07:09):
isn't even one of those issues that's difficult at all. Honestly,
it's an eighty to twenty issue for the entire country.
Anybody would acknowledge that that, Well, of course the United
States of America should be able to deport disgusting gang
members who aren't citizens. Of course they should be able

(07:29):
to send them out, even if Amy Coney Barrett forget
about forget about being not a hardcore writing Okay, she's
not Clarence Thomas, we got that. But even Mitt Romney,
even one of those types, would be well, yeah, you
can send MS thirteen back home. But not Amy Coney Barrett. Huh, Why,

(07:51):
I'm gonna play something for you. This was Amy Coney
Barrett at her confirmation hearing.

Speaker 3 (07:59):
Here she was, as I said, when I was nominated
to serve as a justice, I'm used to being in
a group of nine. My family. Nothing is more important
to me, and I am very proud to have them
behind me. The confirmation process and the work of serving
on the Court, if confirmed, requires sacrifices, particularly from my family.

(08:22):
I chose to accept the nomination because I believe deeply
in the rule of law and the place of the
Supreme Court in our nation.

Speaker 1 (08:32):
Yet Amy Cony Barrett just spit all over the rule
of law. Why would she do that? Well, as deeply
as she may believe in the rule of law and
the Constitution. Well, she told you in the beginning.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
As I said, when I was nominated to serve as
a justice, I'm used to being in a group of nine.
My family. Nothing is more important to me, and I'm
very proud to have them behind me.

Speaker 1 (09:04):
Amy Cony Barrett, on top of being a Supreme Court justice,
is a wife and a mother large family. Amy Coney
Barrett will publicly speak about how her family is everything. Okay, Now,

(09:25):
combine that, and by the way, I'm not talking on
that good, good, glad she feels that way. But combine
a mother's love. Combine that with this. I want to
tell you, gor sach I want to tell you, Kavanaugh,
you have released the whirlwind and you will pay the price.

Speaker 2 (09:48):
You won't know what hit you if you go forward
with these awful decisions.

Speaker 1 (09:54):
Combine her love of family with this.

Speaker 4 (09:57):
We might call this getting strike ready. I think of
it as getting us strike ready or street ready. And
part of that is understanding our own strength and as
we develop that strength, being able to assess our risk
tolerance because we know that risk tolerance increases as the
severity of the situation increases.

Speaker 1 (10:19):
I believe Amy Cony Barrett is afraid and she is
no longer able to serve as a Supreme Court justice
because I believe she is afraid for her family. I'll
put another point on this in a moment. This is
the chick the Jesse Kelly's Show on a Tuesday. Member,

(10:41):
you can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
Why does the communist use violence? Why do they all
talk about it all the time? It's the modern communist.
You see them all over social media so much a
shot drop. They talk like this all the time. They
talk about hurting Republuplicans all the time, all the way

(11:02):
back to len and Mao revolution without and all political
power comes from the barrel of a gun. Why does
the communists love violence so much? Because violence is effective?
Why does Amy Cony Barrett continue to vote with the
left time after time after time after time when there's
absolutely no legal justification for her to do so. She's
not even necessarily pretending otherwise, because Amy Cony Barrett is

(11:25):
afraid and the Communists know that they sniffed her out
from a mile away, and now they've found the one
they're going after. Do you remember the little story we
talked about it on the show that there was a
bomb threat called in kind of weird. I believe it
was out of the Carolinas. If I remember right, that
bomb threat Supreme Court Justice Amy Coney. Barrett's sister was

(11:49):
the one the communists targeted with that bomb threat. Amy
Cony Barrett family woman, mother, wife, loves her family. They're everything.

Speaker 3 (12:00):
As I said when I was nominated to serve as
a justice, I'm used to being in a group of nine.
My family. Nothing is more important to me, and I
am very proud to have them behind me the confirmation process.

Speaker 1 (12:16):
They sent an assassin to murder Brett Kavanaugh, they sent
bomb threats to Amy Cony Barrett's sister. Violence is the
language of the communist And in fact, I want to
go back to this quote. This is from a few
days ago. I played it by Representative Jaya Powell. Let's
talk about what she's saying here, because she does the

(12:37):
best she can as an elected representative to say it
without saying it, but she says it. As long as
you're listening, let's go through this.

Speaker 4 (12:45):
We might call this getting strike ready. I think of
it as getting us strike ready or street ready. And
part of that is understanding our own strength. And as
we developed that.

Speaker 1 (12:57):
Let's pause right there. Part of that is understanding our
own strength. What she mean by that, what is their
own strength? Part of that is understanding our own strength,
because the second part she puts on it is really
going to emphasize this point. Well, what strength would that be.
They don't have the White House, they don't have the Senate,

(13:21):
they don't have the House. In fact, they just got
creamed in the popular vote. And unbelievably, the Democrat Party
has gone downhill nationally in popularity ever since the election.
It's not like there was a honeymoon phase. And now
Aberic is kind of looking at them again politically. If

(13:43):
we're talking about popularity, they are at a low that
I've never seen before in my life. So what what
strength is she talking about? Understanding our own strength? What
she mean by it.

Speaker 4 (13:56):
We might call this getting strike ready. I think of
it as getting us strike ready or street ready, and
part of that is understanding our own strength.

Speaker 1 (14:07):
The mob. The mob has always been the strength of
the communist That's how it's always been. It's always been
a revolutionary religion where you whip the mob up into
a frenzy. And what you do is you use the
power of the mob. You use the violence, the intimidation

(14:28):
that comes with the mob, and that is your strength.
When you don't have the White House, when you don't
have the Senate, when you don't have the house, when
you don't have popularity, you were not powerless if you
were a communist. You have the mob, and you understand
you have legions of people who will hurt others on

(14:48):
your behalf. And the last part of what she says
here really puts quite a bow on this.

Speaker 4 (14:56):
As we develop that strength being able to assess our
risk tolerance, because.

Speaker 1 (15:01):
We know as we developed that strength, being able to
assess our risk tolerance. Wow, that sounds very corporate, doesn't it.
That's a lot of corporate jargon. But what would she
mean by that? Assess our risk tolerance? Are you willing
to be arrested? That's what you mean? Are you willing

(15:24):
to commit criminal acts? She already said, we're street ready,
strike ready. Are you? Are you a good enough communist
foot soldier that you're willing to commit criminal acts? Are
you willing to go to prison for the revolution? What
is our risk tolerance? Are you? Do you not believe
in the revolution enough to commit crimes? Is that too

(15:45):
risky for you? It's what she said, Oh.

Speaker 4 (15:46):
The risk tolerance increases as the severity of the situation increases.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
You're not willing to go to prison. Don't you realize
how risky it is. We're in dire times here. You
better be willing to go to prison.

Speaker 4 (15:59):
And as our own under standing of what's happening increases,
so overall, the more we understand what's effective, what the
risks are, and who's ready to participate, the more impact
we can have.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
That's a call to arms, That's what that is. Everyone
knows what that is. And the street animals across this country,
all the mentally ill CAMMI freaks across this country who
are angry with whatever. They they're always angry about something,
angry about this, angry about that. They will listen to

(16:31):
words like that, are you street ready, are you strike ready? Hey?
Situations dire? Are you ready to risk it? You gotta
risk it. They know exactly what they're saying. And they
don't do this just because they're demons, Yes, they're demons.
They do this because violence is an effective tactic and

(16:52):
always has been, and it works on useless losers like
Amy Coney Barrett who shrinks before them and tries to
straddle that line. Just don't hurt me.

Speaker 3 (17:03):
I'm a mother.

Speaker 1 (17:05):
That's why they called in a bomb thread on her sister.
They found the weakling, they found them at Romney, and
now they squeeze. That's how they operate. Now let's talk deportation. Really,
it is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful Tuesday.
I know I sound sour. I telled you I'm in

(17:26):
a terrible mood. So it just is what it is.
I swear on my life, I'm gonna walk away from politics.
In a half hour. We're gonna do history. Maybe that'll
calm me down. I'll be fine, Chris. We'll get some
tacos or something. All right, we'll get well, whatever we want.
When we get something, I'll get a good meal. I mean,
I'll be in a better bood. So otheris to it.
The communist loves violence because violence is effective. Especially un
weak people people like Amy Cony Barrett get eaten alive

(17:49):
by violence. They get eaten alive by communists. The left
is inherently violent. Here's a couple of charts for you.
This one is courtesy of a network contained what percentage
say that it is at least partially justified to murder
Donald Trump? All respondents, Only about thirty eight percent of

(18:11):
them said it was partially justified. That's a little scary.
What percentage of the left fifty five percent the majority?
That's interesting. What percentage of the left say it's at
least partially acceptable to destroy a Tesla dealership fifty seven percent?
What percentage of the left say it's at least partially

(18:31):
justified to murder Elon Musk forty eight point six percent?
Do I need to pull up the old COVID charts?
What percentage of American Democrats thought you should have your
children taken from you if you weren't vaccinated, thought that
you should be hauled away to a quarantine camp. Communists
are violent human beings. They have no morality against it,

(18:52):
and unless you realize it, you will succumb to it.
That's why they talk like this over and over and
over and over it over again, because they know it.
I just don't even know why there aren't uprisings all
of the country, and maybe there will be. People need
to start taking to the streets. This is a dictator.

Speaker 3 (19:11):
You know.

Speaker 4 (19:11):
There needs to be unrest in the streets for as
long as there's unrest in our lives.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
Enemies of the state, show me where it says that
protests are supposed to be polite and peaceful.

Speaker 3 (19:21):
Do something about your dad's immigration practices.

Speaker 4 (19:24):
Effectless moment they.

Speaker 3 (19:25):
Go low, we ki, how do you resist the temptation
to run up and wring her neck?

Speaker 1 (19:29):
Biggest terror bread? Yeah, yeah, you got you got it.
That's why they talk like that, because it works, and
there's there's always a weak link. Look, how many movies
have you seen or books have you read where they're
going off on a dangerous military expedition of some kind
and they say, hey, uh, no married men, no fathers.

(19:55):
You've heard of that before. Right, by the way. That
was quite common for select units, even especially World War
two select units American units. The commander would say that
often if he had discretion, if he had the ability
to choose no married men, no, no married men, no fathers.
Why because he didn't want to risk when the rubber

(20:18):
meant the road, when the rubber met the road. Where
when the rubber met the road, he didn't want to
risk that thought creeping into your mind, a loyalty to
something beyond the mission, beyond the men around you. Maybe
I shouldn't charge that machine gun, ESK, What about my
daughter if she's just a baby, What about my wife?

(20:40):
I love her so much. That's a real thing. The
American Communists, you may have forgotten about it. I bet
you did. The American Communists were watching amy Cony Barrett's
confirmation hearing, and believe me when I tell you, they
jotted this one guy.

Speaker 3 (20:56):
As I said when I was nominated to serve as
a justice, I'm used to being in a group of
nine my family. Nothing is more important to me, and
I'm very proud to have them behind.

Speaker 1 (21:08):
And that's why they're going after her. And it's sad.
And that's where we are. Now. Let's just talk for
a moment about something else. As long as I'm sour
on something, let's talk for a moment about it. The
Trump administration is unveiling a plan which I support. I

(21:29):
should note, to start finding every illegal for every day
they don't self deport could add up to a million dollars.
They're going to start seizing property to pay the fine. Okay, okay,
let me be clear. That's good that they're doing that.
It's good, all right, So what they're doing is good. Also,

(21:51):
we are in we're in some very deep trouble in
this country. It is April eighth, and I want you
to think about this. It's April eighth. Trump was sworn
in in January, and we just had to contort ourselves

(22:13):
and jump through eight thousand hoops in order to get
the Supreme Court to give us permission to deport the
most evil, violent illegals among us. We're not talking about
the family of twelve in a shack up the street.
We're talking the actual devil worshipers, the prison gang rapists

(22:35):
who were among us. We had to spend until April
eighth to get the Supreme Court to allow us to
deport those people. And now the United States of America
has been so unbelievably neutered through decades of Democrat rule
and Republican weakness that now the new president, who actually

(22:59):
wants to do something thing about deporting these people, is
stuck handing out fines like they have unpaid parking tickets.
Do you know how unbelievably pathetic that is, how embarrassing
that is. Now we have to send Christyome out there
to do these stupid deportation Barbie videos which she looks
like this complete smoke holding a gun. Oh my gosh,

(23:21):
I'm signal I ever did it today? This is where
we are now as a country, we have to do
these stupid little things and jump through these stupid hoops
in order to send these barbarians home. We are in
deep freaking trouble. I know Donald Trump is president, and
I know things are going better now, but I was
sitting and dwelling on this today. It's April eighth, and
we had to go through eight million steps to get

(23:43):
the Supreme Court to allow us to deport the most
vile freaking scum in this country, and now to get
some of the others. Hey, guys, there's gonna be a
fine if you don't go home. How About we'll throw
you in a dark cage for the rest of your
natural freaking life if you don't pick your barbarian self

(24:04):
up and carry yourself back to the country from whence
you came. How about that. That's how sane countries handle
illegal immigration. That's how countries that are going to continue
to exist. That's how they handle it when people are
in their country illegally. This country has been so newtered
with feminized niceness, we're now handing out fines. Gosh, that's

(24:28):
so freaking embarrassing. That's embarrassing that that's where we are
I tell you, I need to I need to move on.
I do I listen to this crowd.

Speaker 4 (24:41):
God, go around the country and educate people about what
immigrants do for this country or the fact that we
are a country of immigrants, right right. The fact is, ain't.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
None of y'all trying to go in farm right now?

Speaker 3 (24:54):
Okay, so I'm lying, raise.

Speaker 4 (24:56):
Your hands, you're not You're not?

Speaker 1 (25:03):
We done picking kuite? Oh, Jasmine Crockett such a clown.
She wants them all here. Yep, She's an evil demon
who wants them all here. And the gopis two week
to stop her. Remember James Langford, Senator from the blood
red state of Oklahoma. Oklahoma could have the reddest senators
in the Union. James Langford is instead their ginger, useless senator.

(25:25):
James Langford tried to give amnesty last year. The reddest
state in the Union, maybe one of the reddest states
in the Union. Their United States senator tried to strike
an amnesty deal with Democrats in the final year of
Joe Biden's presidency. Decade after decade after decade of this

(25:47):
patheticness has brought us to the point the poor Trump
administration they have to bend over backwards to get the
Supreme Court to allow the most basic stuff, and now
there having to figure out how we can find the
illegals if they don't don't deport themselves. Good freaking grief.

(26:09):
We've got a lot of work to do. I'm gonna
do some emails in a minute before I just completely
pop off and lose it on the year. Before I
do that, let's do some pure talk, shall we. Let's
switch our cell phone service. I uh, I haven't forgotten
about all the corporations who've done this to us. I'll
tell you that. I know everyone else likes to forget.

(26:32):
I haven't forgotten. I had an argument with a friend
actually last night. That's probably about when my bad mood started.
I had an argument with my friend last night about Disney.
Now I don't harp on my friends about that stuff.
I'll bring it up. But he brought it up to me, Jesse,
you sign up for Disney Plus. They got a great
news show, And I said, you know my thoughts on
Disney Plus I cancel that. I'm not patronizing them. You

(26:55):
remember all the filth FAF done. Oh that was last year. Yeah,
you can caught me up on that. I hope grudgets
a lot longer than that. Verizon At and T and
T Mobile have been crapping on this country forever, and
peer talk doesn't do that. They've never done that. They
didn't wait till it got popular to be pro America.
Puretalk always was dial pound two five zero and say

(27:18):
Jesse Kelly Pound two five zero, Say Jesse Kelly. We'll
be back. It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful,
wonderful Tuesday. Don't forget. You can email the show Jesse
at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Ten minutes from now we
fire up history again, part two of our Italian campaign

(27:41):
of World War One. That's fascinating. Final hour. We're gonna
get to more FBI stuff. Jim Jordan had an eye
opening thing today, loss of trust in the media, all that,
so much more still to come in fighting inside the
White House, which I don't like. Do some emails here, Hey, Jesse, FYI,
I love your history shows. Keep it up. Don't think

(28:04):
that they were all good by the way. Like I said,
if you love it half you hate it. Jesse, we
missed your regular format. We don't understand the relevance of
the history lessons to our current events. Another one, Hey,
Jesse talking about the Italians, would you mind sharing a
book you read on the Italian front? Guys enjoying the
book you read? One of them? I'll tell you is

(28:24):
The White War very very good? The White War very informative.
A bit of a slog of a read. If you're what, Chris,
I'm not insulting the book. It's a wealth of knowledge.
You better be into it. Okay. There's a lot of
a lot of names and dates and names and dates

(28:45):
and names and dates and locations. It'll some people. I'm
not insulting the book. It's a very good book. It's
called The White War. Okay, not insult in the book.
Some people who talk about history, including in books, they
can really make it storytelling interesting. Okay, really? Uh, who's

(29:07):
somebody really good at that? Hampton sides, Actually, because it's
it's easier to do it by by verbal format. To
tell stories by writing, it's more difficult. Hampton sides, he's
a I don't know him. He's not a friend. I'm
just telling you. When he writes a history book, go
pick it up. It's true. It's it's an honest accounting

(29:28):
of what happened. And it's interesting most people who write
history books, they'll just grind you down to the nubs.
What General Cardona would have met with twenty five Johnson
and on the fifteenth of April. But then the sixteenth
of April they moved up the river twenty five kilometer
to the Oh gosh, just murder me. Now there's a

(29:49):
lot of that. So again, by the way, again, half
you love the history stuff, half you hate it. I
don't care. I'm not stopping. I enjoy it. Jesse, why
would the DOJ make a statement that Garcia go to L.
Salvador prison was an administrative error? This is ill? Okay.
So he's asking about he's asking about the guy that
we now don't have to bring back from the jail

(30:10):
because he wasn't an American citizen anyway. And Judge steps
in and says, okay, no, no, no, don't don't. Justice
Roberts actually, to his credit, stepped in and said, okay, no,
you don't bring him back. Why do we have to
justify these things with This goes to what I was
talking about America's system. The system we have doesn't change

(30:34):
when we get new management. That's not how it works
not when it comes to large organizations in large countries,
large governments. If well, shoot, we've used this example before.
In fact, I used it recently. Jeff Bezos bought the
Washington Post. The Washington Post is one of the most

(30:54):
insane communist far left rags in this they've been telling
lie in trashing America forever. Jeff Bezos, I don't think
he's on our side, by the way, but Jeff Bezos
sees the subscription numbers. This newspaper loses money. This is
a businessman who got to be one of the richest
men in the world, not by buying things that lose money.

(31:16):
So Jeff bezos issues are directive. Now, this is one
of the most richest powerful men in the world. He
tells his bunch of nerd COMMI journalists, Hey, we're gonna
be a lot more pro freedom here, a lot more
pro America. And the whole Washington Post was just a yeah, No,
I don't think so. We lie about how much power

(31:40):
the chief executive has in certain situations. Let me ask
you something. Let me ask you this. It's not even
football season, but I remember this. When was the last
time the New York Jets were good anybody. Corey's a
big football friend, Nameth, I'm talking super Bowl winning. It's

(32:02):
how many years, decades? Well, how many head coaches have
they had? Well, a ton of head coaches. Maybe the
problem is above the head coach. Maybe it's beyond the
head coach. Donald Trump took over, doing very well. Jd
Vance is there's doing well. Pam Bond a head of

(32:24):
dog Cash, Betel Fbi, Ratcliffe, Cia, on and on down
the list. Maybe you love these appointments, maybe you hate some,
but very solid group of people. We got this solid
group of people in there. And now what we want
is we want the results we voted for. I voted
for mass deportation. Did you? Oh you did too? So

(32:45):
why isn't it coming? Why do we have to do
all these things? Because the system that has been put
in the place, put into place for decades in this
country is a system where immigrants are protected at any cost.
That has become systemic inside the borders of the United
States of America, in blue states and at the federal level,

(33:08):
law after law, statute after statute, this judge, this ruling,
this law, this all of it designed to bring in
as many foreigners as humanly possible and keep them here
while providing for them. That is the system of government
we have. And that system of government doesn't disappear overnight,

(33:29):
and it doesn't change when Pambondi goes on Fox News.

Speaker 5 (33:32):
Is a landmark victory for the rule of law. And
this is what we've been arguing on behalf of President
Trump from day one. These are enemies of our state,
of our country and they should be deported. And what
the judge ruled was going forward from this day forward,
all those planes that are gone are there. Those people

(33:53):
are staying. So there are a lot of reasons why
Americans are safer from this point forward. The hearing will
be held. It's a Habeus hearing in the Court of Confinement,
which means in Texas, so it will be a much
faster hearing. They can't do class actions. It will be
a much smoother, simpler hearing, and these people will be deported.

(34:13):
Americans are safer and domestic terrorism.

Speaker 1 (34:17):
Yeah, sounds good. Do you realize how insane it is
that we have to we have to bend over backwards
like this to deport foreigners. You know how easy it
should be to deport foreigners. How it's always operated in
every country on the planet. Hey, you just made contact
with law enforcement. Are you an American citizen? Nope, Get

(34:40):
on the freaking plane. That's your due process. Get on
the plane. Goodbye. Here. Decades of rotting has brought us
to the point we need permission to send trendy Aragua
out of the country. Gosh, jeesz, it didn't used to
be this way. This has been a podcast from wor
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