Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Let's talk about the Supreme Court, Let's talk about the
JFK files, the assassination. Is the FBI finally doing something decent?
All that and so much more coming up on omrite. Okay,
(00:22):
so let's talk about something good, because it is really
really good. Whistleblowers remember doing the Biden presidency. Of course,
you remember how evil that whole thing was. But there
were people inside of the government, oftentimes democrats, I should
point out, but people working inside of the system that
looked on in horror at what the system was doing.
(00:45):
They were watching their country turn into the Soviet Union,
and they.
Speaker 2 (00:50):
Spoke up and spoke out.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
Have you ever ever in your life spoke up and
risked your job, your livelihood, your mortgage payment, And look,
maybe you have, maybe you haven't. I don't know, but boy,
if you have, that takes frigging guts. It takes serious guts.
And they did it. And when you were a whistleblower
who speaks out against the evil of the organization you're in,
(01:16):
you not only deserve to be protected, that's the bare
minimum protected.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
You deserve to be rewarded. That should.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
Heroism should come with rewards when you commit acts of heroism.
In the military, they'll hand you a medal. People inside
the government, inside of an evil communist system losing it
all to speak out against that system deserve rewards. And
Scott Bissent, who has really really impressed me, he impresses
me every single day now, came out and said something
(01:45):
about the IRS. Whistleblowers. You remember the IRS whistleblowers. Remember
the IRS because it's evil too. Also tried to run
cover for Hunter Biden. And we only know this because
some brave men stepped forward.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
Here was Scott.
Speaker 3 (01:59):
The culture of being able to come forward when you
see wrongdoing is a central part of our democracy. I
saw these two fellows before the President's addressed to Congress
in Speaker Johnson's office. They came over to me and said,
you know, sir, we're still being harassed.
Speaker 2 (02:18):
So I went and decided.
Speaker 3 (02:21):
I would bring them into Treasury, give them a year
to investigate the wrongdoing that's going on at the IRS,
and then they will go back in. Mister Shaffley will
serve as the senior Deputy for Investigations and Enforcement. So
we'll have them in Treasury. We'll learn what's been going
(02:43):
on at the IRS, what's been wrong, how could this
hunter Biden a nonsense have happened and we're going to
make sure it doesn't happen to anyone again.
Speaker 1 (02:53):
That's wonderful and good for Scott Assent, and good for
the Trump administration for not only making these two brave people,
for giving them a reward. And that brings me to
another part of this something I'm not yet willing to
declare a problem, but believe me, I'm getting close to
(03:14):
declaring it a problem. We didn't just have brave irs
whistleblowers during the Biden administration. The cheka the FBI, the
evil secret state police agency that can and will destroy
your life. We had brave men inside of that agency
(03:34):
willing to give up their careers in law enforcement and
risk the full wrath of the FBI in order to
expose the Cheka to us. You know their names, You've
seen them on the show many times. Steve Friend, Garrett O'Boyle,
Marcus Kyle, these guys, you remember these guys, mis a friend.
Speaker 2 (03:54):
You've ever been to a school board meeting? Yes, FBI
ever sent youed the parking lot of school board meeting?
Speaker 3 (04:00):
I have, And in the parking lot of a school
board meeting where the FBI sent you. You are taking down
information regarding people's license plates.
Speaker 2 (04:07):
That's correct, But the FBI will crush you.
Speaker 3 (04:10):
This government will crush you and your family if you
try to expose the truth about things that they are
doing that are wrong.
Speaker 2 (04:17):
And we are all examples of that. Where are their rewards.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
I have all the faith in the world as of
right now that something will be done, but these men don't.
Don't don't think for a moment that these men have
it on easy Street that they've been made whole. They're
still suspended, can't in a living families in limbo. And
I understand that things take time. I totally get it.
Speaker 2 (04:53):
I am not yet willing to make a stink.
Speaker 1 (04:57):
But these better heroes, who, oh God, on your behalf,
on my behalf, under an evil, evil presidency, and they
have paid dear prices, all of them have paid dear
prices for speaking out. They better get their rewards too,
or I'm going to start not being nice about this.
(05:20):
I'm going to be patient and I'm going to have
faith because I don't know cash Betel, but everyone I
do know who knows him says, this is a good
man who's going to do a good thing. Dan Bongino,
I know, is a stud I have no doubt if
he has the power, he'll get these guys done right.
Speaker 2 (05:35):
I don't know what the hold up is. I don't know.
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (05:37):
Maybe they're just busy. Maybe they're signing the paperwork as
we speak. Maybe this is coming from the AG's office.
I don't know what the hold up is. But these
FBI whistle blowers had better be made whole or I'm
going to start being extremely impolite about it.
Speaker 2 (05:53):
There.
Speaker 1 (05:54):
Just wanted that out there now. Finally, speaking of impolite,
we elected Donald Trump as president, and I'm glad we did.
And as we've talked about many times before, we have
a thousand battles to fight to save the country. The
battle for the presidency is simply one of those battles.
It's an important one, but it's one of those battles.
(06:15):
And we won that one and it's good. But electing
Donald Trump as President of the United States of America
didn't cure the terminal cancer we have as a nation,
the cancer of Marxism that has infected every single part
of our country.
Speaker 2 (06:29):
It's in our bones.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
It bought us some time so that brings us to
the courts and everything we're seeing now the courts, these
lower courts, and just off the top of my head,
they've ruled that all the corrupt USAID money has to
keep flowing. They've ruled that we have to return rapists
and murderers, illegals back to our shores. They've ruled that
(06:52):
we have to keep trannies in the military. The Trump
administration is trying to save this country from the evils
of communism, and the lower court judges without the proper authority,
are stopping it. And the Trump administration started to speak out,
started to talk about impeaching them, and the big cheese
on the Supreme Court, John Roberts, came out and said this.
(07:13):
For more than two centuries, it has been established that
impeachment is not an appropriate response to disagreement concerning a
judicial decision. The normal appellate review process exists for that purpose.
John Roberts is pointing his lectures in the wrong direction.
John Roberts does not seem to understand at all the
time we are in. John Roberts needs to bring these
(07:34):
lower courts to heal. The Supreme Court needs to hold
this back, or we are left with two terrible options,
and we must choose a path. If the Supreme Court
does not reign in the lower courts, if they choose
to not hear this case, or if they even rule
against us, then the Trump administration has two choices. They
can ignore these courts, which opens up an entirely new
(07:54):
can of worms. It's an awful choice to have to make.
Or the second choice is we simply allow our country
to be taken over by communism, because even electing the
person we want as president won't stop said communism. We
are in very, very dangerous times right now, unprecedented times,
and I don't know how this will work out. But
don't you for a second think that everything is cured
(08:17):
in all this hunky dory. Because Donald Trump's portrait now
hangs in the White House. We are in dangerous times.
All that may have made you uncomfortable, but I am
right now. You know what RACI is probably not no
one does, but that's part of the dream powder that's
in being.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
That beings dream powder.
Speaker 1 (08:38):
I keep telling you it has all these natural things
in it, and you know, people don't know what these
things are. But what you do need to understand is
dream powder is drug free, drug free, it's natural. You
have a cup of hot chocolate with all kinds of
natural things in it, and that's why, not only will
it put you to sleep, but when you wake up
(08:58):
you feel good. That's the important part. There are so
many things that will.
Speaker 2 (09:01):
Help you sleep.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
You can get something in the gas station that will
put you to sleep, and then you wake up and
you want to die because you're so tired. But all
these natural things in dream powder, that's what makes the
difference with the waking. You want to sleep like a
baby and wake up feeling like you didn't take anything
at all. Shopbeam dot com, slash Jesse Kelly, we'll be back.
Speaker 2 (09:33):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (09:33):
The JFK files, As promised, We were about to talk
about them, but I thought maybe it would be better
if you heard it from more of an expert on
the subject than me.
Speaker 2 (09:44):
Larry Hancock joins us. Now he's the author of the
book The Oswald Puzzle.
Speaker 1 (09:48):
Okay, Larry, before we get into the files, what you
believe the truth to be and all that? What has
been the consensus behind the JFK assassination which it rattles
us to this day.
Speaker 4 (10:03):
The consensus has certainly been that it was some form
of conspiracy. I think primarily it's leaned towards people associated
with the CIA. There are other possibilities, organized crime in
some fashion, Lyndon Baines Johnson in some fashion, but it's
it's in recent years it's more centered around the CIA
(10:25):
and particular their Operations group, the group that was working
on anti castro activities. And that's that's largely because JFK
had shut down so many of the anti castro activities.
It was taking it away from the CIA, giving it
the military. A lot of this satisfaction within the CIA
(10:47):
about JFK and and several of their officers really considered
them almost treasonous.
Speaker 1 (10:55):
Okay, help me understand that, particularly because just presented that
way on its face. Because he's shutting down your department
at CIA.
Speaker 2 (11:04):
You may be angry about it.
Speaker 1 (11:06):
You may go home, get drunk, scream at your scream
at your wife, cry and your cheerios. But to take
the leap to the assassinate the president of the United
States of America is quite a leap.
Speaker 4 (11:18):
That is a leap, and I think that's why it
needs to be qualified. Over time, people have painted with
real broad brushes like oh it was the CIA in general,
or it was Godfathers and the mafia in general, and
that's a mistake. In the CIA, there was a very
particular group of people that things were very personal too.
(11:40):
These were CIA officers and the anti Castro exiles that
they had been working with for three years from before
the Bay of Pigs, people that had been involved with
the Bay of Pigs. These are people who have been
trying to bring down the Castro regime and kill Castro.
And that group included Johnny Roselli, who was had contacts
(12:02):
with organized crime. But there was a very special group
of people who had been risking their lives literally for
three years to bring down Castro in one way or
the other. And in the fall of nineteen sixty three,
the message came down from Washington that JFK was actually
beginning covert negotiations with Videl Castro at his request and
(12:25):
those Castro had literally floated the offer that he was
fed up with Russians. They demanded him, he wanted to
get rid of them. He was open to discussions of
neutrality accommodation with the US. He had reached out to JFK,
and by that fall JFK was taking it seriously enough
(12:47):
so that he had detached State Department personnel and they
were ready to go to Cuba for direct talks with Castro.
And you can imagine when these people in Miami who
were trained to military operatives, who have been trying to
on SAT Castro, they already considered JFK to have been
(13:07):
betrayed them at the Bay of Pigs. They considered that
he had turned against them with the missile crisis. This
is kind of the third strike. So when they hear
that everything they've been doing, the people, the friends, they've lost,
everything is about to go away unless JFK goes away.
(13:28):
That was the tipping point. Very personal.
Speaker 2 (13:32):
Okay, I'm sure we'll come back to that.
Speaker 1 (13:34):
Let's talk about the JFK files, because now we have
I think it's sixty three thousand pages, so it's a
friggin lot. And unless you are a much faster reader
than I am, I doubt you've combed through every single document.
But I'm sure you've looked at it. What have you
seen anything that blew your skirt up?
Speaker 4 (13:52):
I have looked at it, and I have some friends
who are looking at it all night. So basically, what
we've got to understand is what we've seen so far,
which is some sixty thousand pages are almost all re releases.
These are documents that already were at the National Archives.
Many of them have been released three or four times.
(14:13):
I looked at documents last night that I've seen five
versions of before now, and they're simply being re released
with fewer reactions. In most cases, there are still some reactions.
Some documents are now totally unredacted, so that's good news
in an historical sense. It gives us some names that
(14:33):
we didn't have, some CIA identity, some sources, good good information.
It's some good historical material like s Lessinger's advice to
JFK to literally take apart the CIA, and JFK was
considering that. But it's good historical information. But there's certainly
(14:54):
no smoking gun in regard to the assassination itself. And
as they say, it's almost all re releases. We may
get some new documents from the FBI. They say they
found twenty three hundred documents that they had not associated
with the JFK assassination before. We haven't seen those yet.
Those will be interesting. But some interesting things for me,
(15:18):
for example, having written the oswal puzzle. There's a lot
of speculation that Oswell went to Russia as a CIA asset,
they sponsored him. One of the documents I saw last
night was the CIA talking internal document talking about how
it didn't understand how Oswald had gotten too Russia through Helsinki,
how he'd gone there so quickly. They were concerned about
(15:42):
how he had gone to Russia coming back with the
Russian wife. Certainly doesn't sound like they were behind is
going or coming. So that sort of information is helpful
as well. But that's not about the assassination. That's about Oswald.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
Okay, I guess something has me a little bit confused.
It's not that I thought there was going to be
some bombshell in this, but for sixty plus years, a
bunch of documents have been kept from the American Publican
president after president after president, including Donald Trump himself, has
talked about releasing them, and then someone's in their airs
(16:20):
saying please don't, please don't, and then we finally get
them and it's just not it's just not anything that
blew me away.
Speaker 2 (16:27):
So why the secrecy? Why wasn't this out in nineteen
sixty four?
Speaker 4 (16:32):
Well, I think that at least maybe we can explain.
It would be good to be able to explain something
right the CIA in particular, not so much the FBI,
But the CIA always said it was withholding documents because
of names, names of people, identities of people, names of
sources that might you know, endanger people back then or
(16:55):
might certainly hurt their reputations. I looked at a document
last night, a lengthy document that listed the names of
a whole series of CIA media assets, okay, and that
a lot of that had been with Hell now, is
that going to be embarrassing to the families of people
who said that they were, you know, totally objective and
(17:17):
open journalists to see that they have been taking information
from the CIA for years and would be and the
CIA had file names for them and considered them assets
that could be embarrassing. I looked at other documents last
night that talked about sources, how the CIA was getting
information from the British, the Australians, how they were getting
(17:41):
domestic information and sharing it with the FBI. Those are
all things that certainly at that time could have been
embarrassing for individuals, but could have compromised programs. Another thing
that we saw was actually names of people in some
of the CI operations. Names of people in some of
(18:02):
these Cuban operations. We didn't we knew about the operations before,
we didn't know exactly who was involved. Now we can
see who was involved, what their cryptonyms were, really trace
their activities. Might that shock some of their relatives, some
of their relatives who might even still be in Cuba
(18:23):
to know you know that their relatives have been actively operated.
There are also documents that show list of Castro supporters
Cuban intelligence personnel, and we're seeing true names, so to
some extent that is related to individuals and their roles,
(18:44):
maybe to living relatives. That's the closest I can see
to explain the reactions up to date.
Speaker 1 (18:53):
Okay, now let's talk about THEE. Harvey Oswald because you
wrote the book on it.
Speaker 2 (18:59):
Who was this guy? Was he? Do you believe?
Speaker 4 (19:02):
Was he being.
Speaker 2 (19:03):
Controlled by somebody?
Speaker 1 (19:05):
Look like you mentioned in the beginning, everyone has a theory.
If you asked my old man, may God rest his soul,
he swore to to the day he died, that Lyndon
Johnson killed JFK. If you ask me, I'd tell you
I think the mob worked with the CIA to kill JFK.
Speaker 2 (19:19):
But I don't know. I just know what I read.
Speaker 4 (19:21):
What do you think I can tell you more about Oswald.
One of the reasons I can tell you more about
Oswald is Oswald did he talked a lot. He did
have friends, Contrary to what you might be led to believe,
he had friends that he talked about politics and international
relationship with, even in the Marines. He wrote a lot.
In nineteen sixty three, he was writing a lot about
(19:44):
what he thought the world should be like. He was
very much in favor of economic justice, the availability of
medical care, racial justice. So we get a lot of
insight into what he said. He was interviewed on TV,
he was interviewed on radio, he wrote a lot, So
(20:04):
we have good insights with him, and in the book
we offer a very contrariant picture to what you get
in the Warrant Commission and to some JFK conspiracy. Basically,
the first two thirds of the book is what we
consider a solid biography as Oswald as an individual, you know,
(20:24):
just set aside speculation, this is his real history. The
last third of the book is what we see. It's
a scenario speculation on our part, but we think pretty
solid of how he was set up by people who
engaged with him in New Orleans that summer anti Castro
exiles who were representing themselves as Procastro, and essentially hooked
(20:49):
into a situation where he was essentially available to be
framed as part of the assassination pointing to Castro, because
the people that carried out not only wanted to kill JFK,
they wanted to point it towards Castro, and for the
parties that were directly involved were told that that would
(21:10):
stimulate the US to attack Cuba and eliminate Castro later on.
I've talked to some people of their families. They felt
that they were misled in that part, but that's another story.
Oswald's a very unique individual, So we think we can
give a perspective that you didn't get in the warrant Commission,
(21:30):
who had to pay him as a blaner. They had
to pay him as asocial, violent radical, and that's not
what you see in the real Oswald. They needed to
do that because they could come up with no motive.
Everybody they talked to about he and JFK said yeah,
he talked positively about JFK. He said JFK was maybe
(21:52):
the only president who could deal with Krushev and reach
some sort of detion and avoid war. So the War
Commission was really hard pressed to present him with any
kind of motive, so they essentially had to adjust the
picture of him as someone who could be considered a
lone nut, which he was neither. He was not loan,
(22:15):
He was not a nut. His IQ tested at one
hundred and eighteen, very bright, and he's one of the
best spoken and actually, as marine officers complained that he
could talk geopolitics about as well as they could and
the Marines, and this is a marine officer who graduated
in political science from Georgetown.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
Okay, so Jack Ruby, I mean, I can't let you
go without asking about Jack Ruby, because that's always the thing, right.
You have this Dallas area strip club owner who most people,
I mean, I guess a lot of people don't realize this.
At one point in time he was an enforce or
a leg breaker from Mayer Lanski's Jewish mob. So we
had mafia eyes, a tiny mob, Jewish mob all over
(23:02):
the place. He was got filled up with patriotic fervor
all of a sudden, But where do you explain Jack
Ruby to.
Speaker 4 (23:11):
Me, Yeah, I can do that. Almost do that for change. Okay,
you mentioned Mayor Lansky. Jack Jack Ruby was connected to Lanski,
to Lanski's casino activities in Cuba before the Castro Revolution.
He actually was a FBI criminal witness in gun running
(23:37):
to Cuba. Jack Ruby had a lot of Cuban connections,
but the most important was to a fellow named Johnny Rosselli.
Johnny Rosselli was basically a consultant. He was mentored by Lanski.
He had gone to Cuba to run Lanski's casinos and
straighten up things in Cuba. He was very important because
(23:59):
he was trust by godfathers. He placed money for them,
he got talent for them. His business card, says strategist.
I got to love that Roselli had a direct connection
based in Cuba to Jack Ruby, and we can paid
a pretty concrete trail that actually Roselli was used as
(24:22):
a cutout. Rosselli was part of this same team that
I talked about before that had been working to first
poison Castro then attack him with rifle teams. He'd been
in this same team that had been trying to kill
Castro and overthrower regime for some three years with the
(24:43):
CI officers that had been involved, and he was brought
into the plot because they were comfortable with him and
because they specifically could provide him a deniable connection into
Dallas to get a fee old guy on the ground
to new dirty cops who knew how to get information
(25:05):
inside Dallas about the motor cater route to could support
this team in Dallas. And we pretty much have that
laid out as to how Roselle served as the cutout
using Jack Ruby, and how Jack Ruby was brought in
as field support to this team that went to Dallas
for the assassination.
Speaker 1 (25:29):
Totally fascinating. I can't wait to read the book. Thank
you so much, sir.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
It is the OZ. Would go read the book the
os wal and puzzle.
Speaker 1 (25:37):
All right, Speaking of all this stuff, the FBI apparently
is arresting some criminals and things like that for the
first time in quite some time. I guess we should
bring that up. We'll talk to the ladies about that
in a panel next. Before we talk about that, let
me talk to you about your cell phone service.
Speaker 2 (25:55):
You see, the battle for our culture is far far
from over. We won an election. We want a battle,
an important battle. We did not win the war.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
American corporations are still completely invested against us in the
culture war. AT and T, T Mobile they hate you,
They hate your guys. Verizon, they hate you. They take
your money and they use it against your country. Don't
give them your money anymore. Pure Talk never does that.
Pure Talk would never do that to you. Puretalk the
patriotic cell phone company. They share your values, they promote
(26:30):
your values. You pay way less. My bill got cut
in half. Keep your phone, keep your number, or get
a brand new one. Puretalk dot com slash jessetv.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
We'll be back. You know. The FBI just caught.
Speaker 1 (26:53):
Its third fugitive on the top ten most wanted list.
Now that's the third fugitive since January twentieth, which that's
so weird. They've knocked out thirty percent of that list
in just a couple months, which of course begs the question,
what were they doing before joining me? Now, Hey, Lee Karnia,
I hope I said that right. I hope what you're
(27:14):
a host of The Nightly Scroll and Vita Duffy Alonso,
host of The Bongino Report Early edition. Avita, could you
help me understand why the FBI couldn't seem to do
any of these things the previous four years. And it's
been like five minutes and they've snatched up three of
these scumbags already.
Speaker 5 (27:33):
Well, they were so busy corraling grandmas who were praying
on January sixth, that they didn't have time to go
after criminals. Listen, the priorities have been completely backward for
this entire for the FBI for a very long time.
We're finally seeing some reform. Dan Mangino, our former boss,
he just got in. He's already cracking skulls. He's already
(27:56):
preventing DEI. They were asking questions about out whether you
were how you gender identify. This is a completely corrupted agency.
They were not focused on law enforcement. They were focused
on DEI. They were focused on political persecutions. I know
for a fact that Dan Bongino cash battel President Trump.
Speaker 2 (28:17):
They have their priorities straight. Yeah. I would just man,
I'd love to be a fly on the wall.
Speaker 1 (28:23):
When they asked my buddy Dan what his preferred pronouns
are Hayley, I just I'm hoping Dan is going to
walk into that building and do, well what we all
three know he's going to do.
Speaker 2 (28:33):
Start shaking things up. But what does shaking things up
look like?
Speaker 6 (28:38):
Well, shaking up means going after criminals and bad guys.
Like he's put on his new official X account. You know,
today is whatever day it is, and it's President Trump
is the President of the United States. And not only that,
we have Cash Battel as the FBI director and Dan
of course is a deputy director. These are two men.
(28:59):
By the way, Cash Battel wrote a book called Government Gangsters.
Dan wrote a book called Follow the Money. These are
exactly the men I want in charge of getting the
bad guys. So Cash Bttel recently just put out a
badass recruitment video. It is no longer the dei FBI.
We are now not going after concerned parents at school
(29:21):
board meetings. We're not going after pro life activists who
are praying outside of planned parenthood. We are finally going
after bad guys. Thank goodness.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
Avida Tucker calls and spoke recently about the cartels, their religion,
and since the United States military and the FBI are
currently going after these organizations, I thought it would be helpful.
Speaker 7 (29:43):
Here was MS thirteen, and there are a couple of
different organized criminal gangs and Severn and Throught Latin America
are religious organizations yep, that worship Satan. This is the
indigenous religion and it's continuing. And you don't want it
here because because it's you know, it's one thing to
like take down the gi and Kanas or whatever. It's
(30:05):
much harder to fight a religious cult that has high
tech weapons systems.
Speaker 2 (30:12):
Avida.
Speaker 1 (30:13):
Most people have never seen the little shrines they put
up to death. They don't know that these guys get
all coked out and methed out and have actual religious ceremonies.
Speaker 2 (30:23):
It's got you thinking, though, didn't it.
Speaker 8 (30:25):
Yeah, they did.
Speaker 5 (30:27):
And so this is actually Tucker's referencing Santa Werte, which
is a real cult that is growing in prominence. It
has about twelve million followers worldwide. This is not just
something that's only followed by the cartels, although it is
a demon worshiped by the cartels. They'll create these shrines
and they will put the heads of their enemy cartel
(30:48):
victims on these shrines, offering these killings to this demon.
There is a spiritual battle going on. And Jesse, I
know that people talk about it very often, but I
know that Dan is somebody who's recognized this stand as
somebody who said we are in a spiritual battle. And
what's really interesting about Santa Werte is there's some left
wing articles that you can actually read where they talk
(31:09):
about how.
Speaker 2 (31:10):
This demon, this demon deity.
Speaker 5 (31:12):
That they're worshiping, the anti Mary in Latin America, is
actually somebody that is a welcoming force for LGBTQ minorities
and people who are marginalized by society. The Catholic Church
is so oppressive, so Santowerte is the great alternative, and
that I think tells you everything you need to know
about them.
Speaker 1 (31:33):
Yeah, the cartels are going to be thrilled with all
the gay stuff. Hayley, speaking of demons, we have a
bunch of judges in this.
Speaker 2 (31:39):
Country who believe that they are what they believe.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
Their role is to protect the communist revolution from the
Trump administration, holding it back and stopping it.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
The question is where do we go from here?
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Are we just supposed to sit back for four years
and allow these communists and black robes to destroy everything
the American people voted for.
Speaker 6 (32:00):
No, of course not. And I think if we've seen
the events of the last week, borders are Tom Homan
doesn't really care what these activist judges think or what
they say. The Trump administration is going to act. I
keep calling this the get ish done administration because they
keep getting ish done. It is like their job, which
it is. They work for the American people. This is
(32:22):
what the American people voted for. You talked about these
demonic cartels. This is the battle right now, demonic cartels
and cults. You know what they do. They sacrifice women
and children. That's exactly what these cartels are doing. Everyone
talks about the fentonal crisis in this country, which is horrific,
but little do people know and talk about that the
(32:43):
human trafficking that is occurring. Cartels make tens of billions
of dollars smuggling women and children across the border. And
that's thanks to Biden's open border. So if Tom Hoban
the borders are can put an end to it. Thank goodness.
Speaker 1 (32:58):
Speaking of Joe Biden, we had a couple astronauts returned
from space yesterday. It was a wonderful little scene out
of the movies. Even the dolphins showed up for the
whole affair, and it was lovely. But one couldn't help
to wonder why exactly were these astronauts up there for
so long?
Speaker 2 (33:15):
Why wouldn't Joe Biden just go get them? That's a
pretty easy political win.
Speaker 5 (33:18):
IVIDA, Yeah, I mean this is a great question. This
is something that Elon Musk is actly actually brought up.
Why why not bring them home right away? And the
problem is they didn't want to have SpaceX, which is
owned by Elon muss right copet founded by Elon Musk,
to bring these astronauts home because he was politically aligned
with President Trump. So it was completely apparently for political reasons.
(33:39):
And if your thinking, I mean, if you imagine yourself
being stuck in space for nine months, I mean this
takes a physical toll on their like a massive physical
toll on their buddies. I mean, but bone astrophy and
the muscle astrophy and your bone density lost. And there's
also a spiritual component to this too, and that you're
separated from Earth. Humans are meant to be on Earth.
Speaker 2 (34:01):
To be up in space for that.
Speaker 5 (34:04):
Long is profound takes a profound toll on the human psyche.
And so I think they were tortured for nine months.
They were tortured up there for nine months, and they
were not allowed to come back for political reasons, and that,
to me is one of the most egregious legacies of
this bided administration. These are human beings and that we
(34:24):
would leave them up there for political purposes is disgusting.
Speaker 1 (34:28):
That is speaking of torture. Don Lemon apparently has a
new show, and on this show he says all the
same stupid things he used to say on CNN.
Speaker 9 (34:36):
Here he was Haley, people love AOC, people love Jasmine Crockett,
people love Eric Swarwell and the like. And I think
that the Democratic Party should put the people out there
who the people want.
Speaker 2 (34:50):
They should put the.
Speaker 9 (34:53):
Politicians out there who the people want, who they're asking for.
Speaker 2 (34:57):
Please do really?
Speaker 1 (34:58):
I totally agree, Yeah, please, yeah, go ahead.
Speaker 6 (35:03):
Yeah. If the Democrat Party wants to put up AOC
who's unfortunately old enough to run for president in twenty
twenty eight, and the Jasmine Crockets of the world, who
is best known for her you know, takedowns and her fiery,
bleach blonde, bad built butch body attack on Marjorie Taylor Green,
if this is the future of the Democrat Party, then
(35:24):
by all means, keep going. They're pulling at astronomically low levels.
They even CNN reported the approval rating among Democrats is
that at twenty nine percent right now. That's the lowest
that CNN has reported in thirty years. So if this
is what they want to keep doing, and they want
to double down on this, and you know, if AOC
(35:44):
and Jasmin Crocket are the next Kamala Harris's of the world,
run them.
Speaker 2 (35:48):
I dare you, ladies, appreciate you as always. Come back.
All right, we're not done yet. Light the move. Okay,
(36:09):
it's time for Daddy Jesse to step in.
Speaker 1 (36:11):
And have a frank conversation with you before I bring
Susan in here.
Speaker 2 (36:15):
Gavin newsoon.
Speaker 1 (36:16):
I know this is not exactly breaking news, but that
guy is going to run for president in twenty twenty eight.
He's one of these people that's just ambitions just dripping
out of him and that greased up ahead of his
He's a horrific human being who has destroyed maybe my
favorite state. I just adore California. I know everybody dumps
on it, but California's paradise. He has a new podcast
(36:37):
out where he's routinely inviting people on the right onto
his show, and they keep accepting these invitations when he's
obviously trying to moderate himself and appear to be the
very reasonable guy instead of the complete scumbag that he
actually is. This is all very transparent and anyone with
an IQ above a durabil can see it. But apparently
(36:59):
I had to come on here here and say it.
Joining me now, Susan Crabtree, author of the book Fools,
Gold California Dream, and now threaten us all. Okay, Susan,
First of all, let's discuss Gavin Newsom. For some reason,
people buy into this garbage sometimes and it dries me crazy.
Speaker 8 (37:22):
It absolutely drives me, sorry, absolutely drives me crazy too.
Everything about Gavin Newsom is performative. It's not performance based
from his college admission that he lied about said it
was based on his baseball prowess, to the launch of
his wine business with Getty Oil money, even though he
(37:42):
cries climate change every time he gets a chance to.
To his political rise that was bolstered by Willie Brown
and his dad's ties to him. All were handed to
him on a silver platter. So that's why he thinks
he can run for president via podcasts while his states
just in shambles. And we go into this. In the book,
(38:06):
we talk about his CCP ties, how he let all
these prisoners out under false pretenses during COVID thousands. Basically,
he is directly responsible for all of the state's failures
and they've only accelerated during his time in office.
Speaker 2 (38:25):
Susan, how did he get there? California?
Speaker 1 (38:27):
Yeah, it's blue and you have to be a Democrat,
but there are many Democrats who run for these seats
and tear each other apart trying to rise to be
governor of the most powerful state in the Union.
Speaker 2 (38:37):
Said, how did this sleeves ball get there?
Speaker 8 (38:40):
He was anointed. He was anointed by Willie Brown in
the power class in San Francisco. That's where all of
the state's top leaders come from. Nancy Pelosi was his aunt,
and his dad actually helped William Newsom helped Pat Brown,
so Jerry Brown's father. They're very tight in with the
(39:02):
Browns from their time at Saint Ignatius High School to
private Jesuit school in San Francisco. All the connections stemmed
from there and then the moneyed class and some bloodlines too,
So it's really you know, that's they just basically took turns.
He actually tried to challenge Jerry Brown at one point
and got smacked down by the power class there. And
(39:26):
he waited his time and abided his time as lieutenant
governor until he was allowed to run for He'd run
for mayor first to San Francisco, then he became a
lieutenant governor, then he became governor. And it's just it's
an annointment in California, Susan.
Speaker 1 (39:46):
How did he do what he did to California so quickly?
It's not easy to rec estate that's that powerful. But
I'll tell you I have to go back there once
a year or so for various business things. You see,
it gets worse every time. I'm just slowly going down
and down and down.
Speaker 2 (40:02):
What did he do?
Speaker 9 (40:04):
So?
Speaker 8 (40:04):
An Ata Californian? And I went to Washington, d C.
After college. I spent twenty three years in DC. I
came back in twenty seventeen. And that was right when
he was coming into power in twenty eighteen. The state
had its problems, certainly under Jerry Brown. He was soft
on crime. Certainly, the crime spree was happening already starting
(40:24):
brewing there, and the homelessness was a problem, but it
all accelerated because Gavin Newsom, like I said, he does
not earn what he gets. He is not used to
having to perform, so he just you know, pretends. And
he even talks about this during his Charlie Kirk podcast
where he says, he talks about it the mask you
live in and then you have this mask on that
(40:46):
somebody puts on you, and then you fill in the
mask to live up to their expectations. It's kind of
a creepy concept if you really examine it. And it's
actually the name of one of his wife's had gender
Justice documentary, so it's not like he came up with
that all by himself. But yeah, he accelerated during COVID.
(41:09):
He wrote a book about trying to make and when
he was a lieutenant governor because he was wared. He
talks about how bored he was as lieutenant governor for
eight years that said he was promising to make government
more transparent and get it digitized, but it all fell
apart when he became governor and they couldn't even get
(41:31):
the unemployment payments out the door, and there were so
much fraud. It was thirty billion dollars in fraud, the
biggest largest amount of fraud in the state's history, all
under his watch, and there were people he locked down
the state. He was pushing people out of work, except
for of course, Hollywood carve outs. But he couldn't even
(41:51):
get those people that he was pushing out of work
the unemployment checks they deserved. I mean, this is just
one of the many things we go into, you know,
we really because I worked with Peter Schweizer's group. The
top research director is my co author, Jed macfratter, and
we delve into his ties to the CCP in China,
and it's really startling what he did with that and why.
(42:13):
What we believe why he did that was to get
his own wine trademarked and pushed into China. And it
was a personal self dealing. This Gavin News who knows
no bounds because the California media do not hold him
into account. We couldn't fit all of the corruption and
self dealing and bad policies into one book. It was
(42:36):
hard to fit it all because we found so many
things that hadn't been reported yet in the California media.
Speaker 1 (42:43):
Did he fund a bronze statue of himself? Because I've
thought about doing that.
Speaker 8 (42:47):
For me, don't we all want a bronze statue of
ourselves somewhere, a monument to me. Basically, if somebody else
makes a bronze statue of you, or carves you into
Mount Rushmore or you know, that's an honorable situation. But
if you pay for it yourself is what we found.
So there he has a bronze statue of himself in
(43:09):
San Francisco City Hall. They scrubbed all the pictures after
it came out last week because we uncovered it in
the book and he paid for it. We found that
he paid for it with two of his own companies partially.
One was his plump Jack Winery and then another was
a restaurant he owned, and it was all in the
form of behested payments. And behested payments in California is
(43:32):
like a pay to play scheme. It is politicians are
allowed to direct charitable corporations to give to their pet
charity of choice, and in this case, gavinusm directed his
own companies to give to his pet charity, which was
the paying for the monument to himself.
Speaker 2 (43:54):
Susan, thank you so much. Come back soon. That was wonderful.
All right, We'll be back.
Speaker 4 (44:09):
An.
Speaker 1 (44:10):
It's time to lighten the mood, and to lighten the mood,
I just want to speak out. I just want to
take a minute tonight on a heavier topic instead of
lightening it. Discrimination. It's ugly, isn't it. You've seen it
throughout history, you still see it today. And most people
don't speak out on behalf of those who are discriminated against.
(44:32):
But I do, and so I'm going to speak out
on behalf of the most discriminated against minority in the
United States of America today, and that is those of
us who prefer sauces dips with our food. When we
go out to eat, we ask for a side of ranch,
extra side of ketchup?
Speaker 2 (44:50):
Can I get some barbecue sauce with that?
Speaker 1 (44:53):
I just went out to dinner, Actually, just went out
to dinner with producer Matt, who's in my ear right now,
Me Matt, bunch of dudes. We went out to dinner.
I ordered a beer cheese cheeseburger was on the menu.
I asked for an extra side of beer cheese. The
waiter washed him, do it, wrote it down, beer cheeseburger,
extra side of beer cheese, simple request, right? Did I
(45:18):
get my beer cheese with my meal. Oh god, no, no,
those of us sauce people, we know you never ever, ever,
ever ever get it with the meal. That's a guarantee.
You usually have to ask. You ask most of the time.
You will then wait fifteen to twenty minutes, as if
it's the most unimportant thing in the world, while your
food gets cold before your sauce gets there. This particular night,
(45:41):
this is what pushed me over the edge. This particular night.
I never saw it at all, and it was probably
an hour after we got our food, From the time
we got our food at the time we walked out
of the restaurant, an hour I sat there, no beer, cheese.
Speaker 2 (45:59):
I don't know why.
Speaker 1 (46:00):
I don't know what we've done to restaurant people that
we have been so oppressed, so degraded.
Speaker 2 (46:07):
But I want you to know I'm here to defend you,
and I will do so. I'll see it about
Speaker 9 (46:15):
Mm hmmmmmm