Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
Let's talk about open borders, unending immigration. The governor of
West Virginia is here to talk about diet. Let's hope
he's not going to be annoying about it, Tutor Dixon.
All that more coming up on I'm writing, Oh my gosh,
(00:23):
what to day. Obviously I know what the headlines all
are right now. Everybody's talking about terriffs and everything else
U in the sun and just the heads up, we
are going to get to tariffs with John Carney here
in just a little bit on I'm right tonight, But
I wanted to I wanted to address something that I've
been seeing and something we have to keep at the
front of our minds at all times, the mass importation
(00:45):
of foreigners.
Speaker 2 (00:46):
What is the purpose of it? And what do we
have to do about it? Not an option?
Speaker 1 (00:51):
What do we have to do about it? First, understand
that this is not unique to America. Maybe that makes
you feel better, maybe it makes you feel worse. Virtually
all the leaders of Western civilization now they hate their countries.
They're only in it for money and power, and they
realize the patriotic citizen of their country, whether you're in
America or Canada or UK wherever, the patriotic citizen is
(01:15):
the biggest threat to the evil people who want to
destroy the country.
Speaker 2 (01:18):
You.
Speaker 1 (01:19):
You are the biggest threat to the people who run
the United States of America. So what do they do
about that? Well, they have to find a way to
replace you. We live in a representative republic. If they
don't represent you, in fact, if they hate you, they
have to figure out way to get some new voters
in here, a new support base. And so that's the
(01:40):
reason country after country after country has imported foreigners as
fast as the law and the people will allow them
to do so. What we saw in the United States
of America under Joe Biden is one of the most
evil things, if not the most evil thing ever done
by the United States government in any form. The Joe
(02:00):
Biden government opened up the borders of this country on
purpose and brought in as many people as they could.
They were so desperate to bring in as many as
they could, they created an app for foreigners to invade
the country, legal, illegal. They brought them in as fast
as possible. Twenty million is the estimate. And again, because
(02:21):
these are evil demons, they didn't care if they were rapist, murderers, thieves,
and of course so many of them were. They were
only interested in power and burning down America. And you
know what else they were not interested in. They were
not interested in the law, the constitution, any of those
other things. They have no regard for those things at all.
(02:42):
They're only interested in doing evil deeds for money and power.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
And they did it.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
They harmed this country in ways that may be irreparable,
which brings us to the Trump administration. They've announced record
lows at the border.
Speaker 2 (02:55):
That's a good thing.
Speaker 1 (02:57):
They've also announced after a couple months months, one hundred
thousand people have been deported.
Speaker 2 (03:03):
That's good.
Speaker 1 (03:04):
It's not near enough, but it's good, which brings us
to how do we handle this because of course, I
know what you're probably already thinking, well, it would be
more if it wasn't for these judges and all these things.
And we have judges like this, Judge Boseburg. Trump administration
those two hundred and fifty animals on a plane and
sends them to El Salvador. We're talking the worst of
(03:25):
the worst, to face tattoos, the murders, to everything. Judge
steps up and says, no, no, no, no, bring them back
to America. I want them here, bring them back to America.
So what do we do, Well, we have to get
them out.
Speaker 2 (03:44):
We have to get them out.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
And notice I didn't qualify that with anything. Notice I
didn't say we have to do everything possible under the
law to get them out.
Speaker 2 (03:57):
Nope, we have to get them out.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
I'll use this analogy for you, because we on the right,
we love rules, we love the law, we love.
Speaker 2 (04:07):
The Constitution, and I'm glad you do.
Speaker 1 (04:09):
The Constitution is wonderful and it is wonderful to be
a lawful country where people follow the law.
Speaker 2 (04:15):
So I'll use this example.
Speaker 1 (04:17):
Let's say my boys are older now, but let's say
they're little. We're little five six years old, okay, And
because they're boys, they're meat heads. So they're not allowed
to play with knives and scissors because they're just going
to hurt somebody, most likely themselves with it. And let's
say I tell them don't touch the fire extinguisher. Ever,
(04:38):
we have this big fire extinguisher right there. You are
not allowed to touch the fire extinguisher because I'm worried
about them hurting themselves or each other with it. Let's
say I'm at work, maybe Mom is out back watering
the garden or something no one's inside, and a raging
fire starts in the kitchen. Six year olds looking at
that fire extinguisher. Do I want him to grab it
(05:01):
and use it? Or do I want him to follow
the law the rules? Well, okay, that begs the question.
What was the point of the rule. The point of
the rule was to ensure that everybody was safe. It
was to ensure the betterment of the people who live
in my home. That was the point of the rule.
The rule didn't just didn't exist for fun. It didn't
(05:24):
exist just to be a rule. The rule had a purpose. Well,
if one political party is intent on bringing in as
many barbarians into the country as humanly possible, then no
matter what, the other political party must get them all out,
(05:47):
every man, woman and child. They must all go the
second the other political party takes over. Because here's what
absolutely positively will not work, and we don't have a country.
I don't care about your arguments otherwise, we do not
have a country if Democrats get elected and do well,
(06:07):
exactly what Joe Biden said he was going to do, and.
Speaker 3 (06:11):
So we're trying to make it easier for people to
get here.
Speaker 1 (06:15):
Opening up the capacity to get here, trying to make
it easier for people to get here. He said during
the debate, there's going to be a rush at the border.
Speaker 2 (06:25):
Rush the border. He told them to do it. They
did it. They fled to the border.
Speaker 1 (06:29):
So Democrats get elected, and because now the modern Democrat
party is full of evil communists, they're just going to
bring it as many people as possible, with no regard
to laws. Member, they didn't care about the law. The
Biden administration sued so they didn't have to build the
border wall. And after Trump won the election, the Biden
administration took the border wall materials and sold it off
so the wall couldn't be built. They have no regard
(06:51):
for the law at all.
Speaker 2 (06:52):
Just destroy, destroy, destroy as fast as humanly possible. So
that's what they did. And now if we take over,
then we start.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
To twiddle our thumbs naval gaze, Oh, we need a
deport twenty million people.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
But hold on one second.
Speaker 1 (07:07):
If you actually look at Article three, Section five, and
if you study the Supreme Court case Apple versus Johnson,
the Supreme Court President actually says, by the letter of.
Speaker 2 (07:17):
The dah, then we're finished. We're finished.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
We can't survive as a country that way. We cannot
survive as a country that way if they are going
to burn it down as fast as possible, and every
time we have a chance to put the fire out, well, sorry,
Dad told me I couldn't touch the fire extinguisher.
Speaker 2 (07:34):
Those are the rules, and I want to be a
rule follower. It doesn't work.
Speaker 1 (07:39):
And rest assured every single Democrat in this country, from
the House to the Senate, State legislature, City Council, there
hasn't been an inch of daylight between any of them
on this issue.
Speaker 2 (07:54):
They want the border open.
Speaker 1 (07:56):
They want the barbarians here as many as they can
get here, and once they get them here, they will
fight tooth and nail to keep them here. Here's Jamie Raskin.
Speaker 4 (08:06):
Here's one person of many who wasn't a terrorist on
that flight or a gangbanger. His name's Kilmer Garcia. He's
a Marylander married to a US citizen who is a
five year old son with autism, and he went to
pick up his son, but he was picked up first
by ice and then he was shackled and put on
(08:28):
that airplane and shipped off to the torturers of El Salvador.
I call on my colleagues right now to call off
the campaign.
Speaker 5 (08:38):
To impeach federal judges for doing their jobs. I call
on them to demand that the Trump administration comply with
all judicial orders while appealing whichever ones they want to appeal,
and to demand the return of people unlawfully taken to
El Salvador on that so called plane full of gangbangers.
Speaker 2 (09:02):
Maryland father with an autistic son. That's weird.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
I almost feel like there was more of that story,
Caroline Levitt, Was there more of that story?
Speaker 6 (09:12):
The error that you are referring to was a clerical error.
It was an administrative error. The administration maintains the position
that this individual who was deported to El Salvador and
will not be returning to our country was a member
of the brutal and vicious MS thirteen gang. That is
fact number one. Fact number two, we also have credible
intelligence proving that this individual was involved in human trafficking.
(09:35):
In fact number three, this individual was a member, actually
a leader, of the brutal MS thirteen gang, which this
President has designated as a foreign terrorist organization. Fact number
four is that foreign terrorists do not have legal protections
in the United States of America anymore.
Speaker 1 (09:54):
Maryland father a non citizen, not an American citizen. MS
thirteen gang leader, and I have watched in recent days
a significant portion not the left, we know what the
demons what a significant portion of the rights. And well,
I mean maybe we do need more due process, so
we can't risk this. We can't even get through the
(10:14):
gang members. We can't even get through deportation of the
gang members without the rights. Well, guys, I actually hold
on a minute, let me study the constitution.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
I'm not going to I don't know what you want
me to say. I can't save the country like this.
Speaker 1 (10:32):
The barbarians must go all twenty million, and that's a
good start because there were about thirty forty million here
before Joe Biden took over. We have so much work
to do. And if we're gonna stop install and have
to justify ourselves every time there's a little snaffoo here
or there, well, we can't defeat people like this.
Speaker 7 (10:57):
Even if you tell me and you prove that they're
gang member. I'm not so sure that I'm okay with
them being sent off to be tortured in a foreign country,
but I'll leave that aside.
Speaker 2 (11:10):
They have a mission. They are executing the mission.
Speaker 1 (11:14):
They are not concerned with the law, precedent, the constitution.
They're not concerned with anything but power and burning down
the country.
Speaker 2 (11:25):
If we are.
Speaker 1 (11:26):
Going to handcuff ourselves when they are cuff free. Doesn't
matter how many Trumps get elected, We've already lost all
that may have made you uncomfortable, but I am right now.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
Let's talk tariffs.
Speaker 1 (11:40):
I know that's on everybody's mind today. Tear if this,
tari if that. I love them, I hate them. Their
opinions all over the place. John Carney, he's always here
to talk economics. I don't know why I couldn't say
that word. Let's talk to John in a moment. Before
we talk to John, let me talk to you about
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Is n't it the worst when you feel tired? When
(12:01):
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Especially when it's one two in the afternoon You're looking
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(12:23):
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(12:48):
slash jessetv.
Speaker 2 (12:50):
We'll be back.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
Americans. This is Liberation Day waiting for a long time.
April second, twenty twenty five will forever be remembered as
today American industry was reborn, the day America's destiny was reclaimed,
and the day that we began to make America wealthy again.
(13:24):
Gonna make it wealthy, good and wealthy.
Speaker 2 (13:28):
Okay, that was the Do we even call that a
press conference?
Speaker 1 (13:32):
Little speech yesterday from Donald Trump, Liberation Day as he
called it, Joining me now one of my favorites.
Speaker 2 (13:38):
John Carne, Breitbart.
Speaker 1 (13:39):
News and Finance and News Finance and Economics editor. I
don't want always screw up poor John's tighter. Okay, John,
Beyond the opinion portion, which we will get to, what
did he actually do yesterday. There's a lot of bunk
information out there what happened.
Speaker 8 (13:56):
So he announced that we were putting on two different
kinds of terror to the rest of the world. The
first is what I'll call a baseline universal tariff, which
is ten percent tariff. That's what every it's called like
a cover charge. Everybody wants to sell into the US
market is going to face a ten percent tariff on
everything they sell into the US market. Then there is
(14:17):
the reciprocal tariffs, which I'll just call the penalty tariffs,
which is to say, the tariff that if you have
been running a trade surplus against the US, so our
trade deficit for a long time. If you have a
structural trade deficit, you are going to face a much
(14:38):
higher tariff than the ten percent is going to be
keyed off the size of the trade imbalance. So that's
what we're doing here. We are putting in place the
trade a tariff that is meant to offset the trade
imbalance that already exists.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Okay, let's talk about that whole trade deficit thing, because
the opposite of that argument is, well, why do we
care about having a trade deficit? It sounds bad, but
I buy things from the grocery store. The grocery store
doesn't buy things with me. We have a trade deficit,
but it works out for both of us. So what's
the answer for that.
Speaker 8 (15:17):
Well, sure you have a trade deficit with your grocery store,
so do I. But you have a trade surplus with
your employer. In other words, you are getting a lot
more from your employer than you spend with them. If
you were to have run systemic trade deficits with everybody else,
you would not have any savings at all. What you
(15:39):
would be doing is slowly going broke, maybe quickly going broke,
depending on how fast you're running up your deficit. The
normal way trade is supposed to work is sure, you
have a trade deficit with some countries or at some times,
and sometimes you have a trade surplus. That's not the
way the trade system, the global trading system, has been working.
(16:01):
The US is, in fact the absorber of the surplus
production of everybody else.
Speaker 9 (16:08):
In the world.
Speaker 8 (16:10):
Most countries sell us much more than we sell to them,
and there's not somebody else who's absorbing that access besides us.
So what that means is that we are like in
your example, the guy who doesn't have a trade surplus
to offset the trade deficit. He's running against the grocery store.
(16:31):
It's just deficit all the way down. We're slowly deteriorating
our economy. It was basically a managed decline of the
US economy. And what Trump announced this week is that
that's over. We're not doing it the way we have
been doing it. We're changing things so that the system
will be more balanced towards the US workers than it
(16:55):
has been frankly for a few generations since World War Two.
Speaker 1 (17:01):
Treasury Secretary Scott Bissin is issuing a little warning to
other countries here, he was.
Speaker 10 (17:07):
My advice to every country right now is do not retaliate.
Sit back, take it in. Let's see how it goes.
Because if you retaliate, there will be escalation if you
don't retaliate. This is the high water.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
Mark, okay? Or are they going to retaliate?
Speaker 8 (17:27):
So I think some countries will put it to the test,
right you, you know, this is like you they we
put our chips on the table. We made a bet.
Some countries are going to see if we're bluffing, right,
So they'll they'll they'll call or they'll raise and we'll
see what happens. I think most countries are going to
reasonably conclude that Donald Trump isn't bluffing about trade, that
(17:49):
he came out with tariffs that were even higher than
people thought they would be. So what does that tell you?
It tells you that he's not getting around here. You
really don't want to try to retaliate. I think a
lot of countries are going to very quickly say, whoaoa,
We didn't realize we were treating you that bad. We
didn't know how serious you were about this. Let us
(18:10):
come in, see what we can do. We'll try to
set this right. We're already hearing, in fact that trade
ministers around the world are in touch with Washington, DC, Vietnam.
They came out of this with a very high terror
saying let us come in, let's fix this. We think
we can repair this. So I don't think we're gonna
get retaliation. I think we're going to get cooperation.
Speaker 1 (18:33):
Okay, speaking of Vietnam, we'll make it about them, because
they already said they're going to cooperate. And it's not
that I'm emotionally invested in Vietnam or their economy at all,
but if they're going to cooperate. That means on some
level they're going to bring in less money. Are we
concerned at all about other nations going into the toilet
(18:55):
economically because they're trying to accommodate US?
Speaker 8 (18:59):
I actually don't think so. So a lot of these
things that are going on in these countries benefit a
small segment of their country, but not their entire countries. So,
in other words, they benefit the special interests in their
country who, let's say own the manufacturer. The Chinese owners
of manufacturing plants in Vietnam or frankly, Nike may benefit
(19:23):
a lot, but they actually are helped by wage suppression
in their country. One of the ways a country like
Vietnam can fix this is by increasing the incomes of
its own workers, allowing more of the share of their
GDP to go to their workers. That will create more
demand for stuff from the US. It'll make the Vietnamese
(19:44):
people better off and create more demand for US stuff.
Trade wars really are class wars. They are the elites
of countries all around the world cooperating with each other
to make each other rich. I think we can enrich
US workers while also helping the Vietnamese workers.
Speaker 1 (20:07):
John most Americans don't work in factories. Now, everybody who
watches this show knows I am very much pro factory,
pro manufacturing, pro American. But most Americans, when it comes
to their economic interests, are worried about the costs of
goods and services. That's just most people buy things, and
they want those prices to go back down in some
way to what they used to be because you can't
(20:28):
afford a dagon thing anymore.
Speaker 2 (20:31):
Does this help? If?
Speaker 1 (20:32):
When will it help? When do we see prices come down?
Speaker 2 (20:35):
Is what I'm asking.
Speaker 8 (20:36):
So I do think it will help on a longer
term basis, not immediately. Do you think there will be
some price increases. I don't think they're going.
Speaker 11 (20:44):
To be that much.
Speaker 8 (20:45):
I don't think they're going to whe we won't see
anything like what we saw during the Biden years in
placere got up to nine percent. But I do think
we'll see a half point of extra inflation. I don't
think that lasts. So in other words, we'll get a
one time price hike in some things subject to tariffs,
(21:07):
but it only part of the teriff will get passed
through to consumers, and once that comes through, you won't
get year after year after year of price. So I
think we'll have a one time adjustment, but further on
down the road, as we are producing more goods and
services more efficiently in the United States, when production is
not being captured by the inefficient communist industrial policy of
(21:31):
Beijing or the inefficient policies of Berlin. Frankly, it's not
just the communists in China. It is the socialist and
protectionist mercantilist predatory class in Europe that is also doing this.
When we are able to move trade away from where
they have located it into places where it stuff could
(21:52):
actually be efficiently produced. I think we're actually going to
see cheap goods, more reliable production, more reliable supply chains.
The next time we have some kind of catastrophe, whether
it's a war or a pandemic, we won't be facing
the shortages of things that like. Remember there was a
period where we couldn't even make cars in the United
(22:12):
States because we didn't make microchips.
Speaker 11 (22:15):
Here.
Speaker 8 (22:16):
That era is covering to an end. We're going to
be safer and more secure economically because of what we're
doing today.
Speaker 2 (22:24):
How about that?
Speaker 1 (22:25):
I feel better already. Thank you, John, John, come back soon.
I appreciate you. Sir, all right, talk to Tutor Dixon next.
She's gonna be a governor.
Speaker 9 (22:35):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
Before we talk to tutor, let me talk to you
about getting a good night's sleep. I wonder if Tutor
slept well. I'm gonna ask her no, that'd be weird. Anyway,
I slept well. I sleep well all the time because
of dream powder from being I don't like drugs. Everyone
knows that medications things like that. I do not like them.
I don't want them in my body. So when I
(22:57):
need something to sleep, what do I do? I have
a couple of hot chocolate, only it has dream powder
in it. You see, it's delicious mine cinnamon chocolate, and
it has things like melatonin and magnesia. But he does
all these natural things in it. What that does is, yes,
it puts me to sleep. But when I wake, I
don't feel heavy and groggy with that medication hangover. You
(23:20):
know what you get? No, I feel good, ready to go.
That's what dream powder can do for you. I want
to try it up to forty percent off a shopbeam
dot com slash Jesse Kelly, We'll be back.
Speaker 9 (23:43):
I have watched my entire life, I have watched plant
after plant after plant in Detroit and in the Metro
Detroit area close. There are now plants sitting idle. There
are now plants that are underutilized, and Donald Trump's policy
are going to bring product back into those underutilized plants.
(24:03):
There's gonna be new investment, there's gonna be new plants built.
And the UAW members and I brought twenty of them
with me, they're sitting right over here. We support Donald
Trump's policies on tariffs one hundred percent. So mister President,
we can't thank you enough. And in six months or
a year, we're gonna begin to see the benefits. I
(24:24):
can't wait to see what's happening three or four years
down the road.
Speaker 1 (24:30):
Never thought to see the day, big old group of
UAW workers cheering on a Republican joining me now another
Republican host of the Tutor Dixon podcast.
Speaker 2 (24:40):
Her name is Tutor Dixon.
Speaker 1 (24:42):
And I guess potentially she might be governor again or
something like that, or anyway.
Speaker 2 (24:46):
Tutor UAW cheering on Donald Trump.
Speaker 12 (24:50):
Somebody pinched me, Yeah, I know, but they are looking
for jobs in the state of Michigan. I mean, that's
that's Brian and he's from the state of Michigan and
he sees what's happening here. And when you hear the
mainstream media ripping on these tariffs, you have to understand,
in this state, we haven't seen an auto plant built
in years. We have seen too many clothes and we
(25:12):
pay many, many millions of dollars to make sure that
the auto industry stays open and stays here in the
United States, from our taxpayer dollars, right here in the
state of Michigan, under the promise of getting jobs, which
we have not received. All of these incentives that we're
paying haven't brought jobs to the states. So when Brian
Pannabecker talks about this, this is from his heart. This
(25:34):
is from the auto workers who want to have jobs here,
and this is from generations of auto workers who would
like to see their children working in the state of Michigan.
Speaker 1 (25:43):
Tudor, you are there obviously in Michigan. Why haven't we
seen a plant?
Speaker 2 (25:49):
What is it?
Speaker 1 (25:49):
Because that's crazy of it. Auto plants are what built
this country.
Speaker 12 (25:54):
I think probably every automaker that has ever come to
the state of Michigan will tell you it's because of
regulation taking too long to build.
Speaker 13 (26:02):
So you heard Brian say in six months to a year, we're.
Speaker 12 (26:05):
Going to hear changes in my heart, just kind of
saying because I thought, if we continue on the path
that we're on with the regulations that we have in
the state of Michigan, it won't be here because we
can't get the permits in time. And that's simply the
biggest barrier is getting through the bureaucracy of government. And
then you have some other factors, which are energy energy security.
Here in the state of Michigan. With a governor who's
(26:27):
saying we're going to be one hundred percent renewable energy
by twenty thirty five, energy security and over regulation is
just too challenging. The barriers to enter business in the
state of Michigan are too challenging right now with this
Democrat government in state.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
Talk to me about this energy security. It's such a
wild thing. When we have so much coal.
Speaker 1 (26:47):
And natural gas, we have endless amounts of energy in
this country.
Speaker 2 (26:51):
Why would that be a struggle for any US state.
Speaker 12 (26:54):
Well, when you have a governor who's trying to shut
down the traditional sources of energy when they say they
don't want any energy coming from oil, which we know
that's coming from oil. We know that the electricity that
they put into their cars are coming from coal, I mean,
but they want that all to be shut down. So
they want to use electricity, but they don't understand the
sources of where electricity comes from. In the state of Michigan,
(27:17):
you also have a radical attorney general who is trying
to close down one of our pipelines. You know, the
Democrats hate a pipeline, so they're trying to shut down
the pipeline that goes runs through Canada into the Upper
Peninsula of Michigan and then into the Lower Peninsula of Michigan.
Speaker 13 (27:33):
They want to shut that.
Speaker 12 (27:34):
Down, and that would not only be our energy sources,
but our pro paine sources for the up for all
of the sixty percent of people that heat their homes
with propaine. The Democrats are trying to get that shut
down as well. So when you have that policy out there,
when you know as a business owner or a CEO,
when you know that the policies of that state are
(27:55):
to go after businesses and to go after energy, it
makes you much more or reticent about coming into the state.
When you can go to Indiana, and you can go
to Ohio and you know you're comfortable with the policies
there and that the energy is going to be not
only available, but continuously available. We had a storm a
couple of days ago in Michigan, and I think we
have still about one hundred thousand people out of power
(28:17):
in the state.
Speaker 1 (28:18):
Ooh, a couple days ago. That's ridiculous, Tutor, you have
a background in steel.
Speaker 2 (28:25):
Is this going to help the steel industry?
Speaker 11 (28:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 13 (28:28):
Absolutely.
Speaker 12 (28:29):
I think that when people don't understand the importance of steel,
they don't necessarily understand the.
Speaker 13 (28:34):
Importance of these tariffs.
Speaker 12 (28:36):
So I was in the steel foundry industry and then
the steel forging industry, where I worked out of a
major steel mill in the Midwest. The foundry industry has
almost closed across the country. I mean our foundry closed
in twenty thirteen. Under Obama, more foundries closed than ever
before in the United States. And what you're making in
(28:56):
a steel foundry are it's military equipment, it's farming equipment,
it's construction equipment, it's mining equipment.
Speaker 13 (29:02):
Everything that makes the world go round.
Speaker 12 (29:04):
And so when people don't understand the importance of having
that ability to manufacture that in the United States, they
may not understand the importance of these tariffs, But if
you think about the fact that you may not have
these abilities. You may not be able to make your
own farm equipment, you may not be able to make
your own truck frames, you may not be able to
make your own railroad frames, and you may not be
(29:25):
able to make your own military equipment. Suddenly you're relying
on China for that. Imagine the dangers of China suddenly
shutting off our steel supply and we are no longer
capable of taking care of our own fields, protecting our country.
The national security implications of not being able to make
our own steel are significant. And I think we're now
down to about three universities in the entire country that
(29:48):
even offer a metallurgical degree because so many of our
metal factories have closed that they don't even see it
as necessary anymore.
Speaker 13 (29:56):
Imagine not even knowing.
Speaker 12 (29:57):
The recipes to make the appropriate to make sure our
country is safe. It's crazy, and it's something only the
Trump administration has really looked into.
Speaker 1 (30:08):
Tudor, how's the Mexican food in Michigan. I can't see
it being very good. It's just too far from the border.
Speaker 12 (30:15):
I live on the West side, and so it's it's
a little bit of an exotic food desert here, I
will say, but we do love anything that we can
any restaurants we can get to come into the state
of Michigan. Because Gretchen went, We're closed over three thousand
of them, so it is a little rough.
Speaker 13 (30:31):
I can't even comment on that.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
I think that tells you everything you need to know
about Michigan Mexican food. That Tutor Dixon just referred to
it as exotic. I think I'll just stay right down
in Texas speaking of Michigan. Speaking of Michigan, Tutor, you
have a can I call it cryptic something out there
about you might be running for office. Maybe it's going
to be senator, maybe it's going to be governor. Are
(30:53):
we going to see another hot off for the governor's
race or something?
Speaker 2 (30:56):
What's happening.
Speaker 12 (30:59):
I'm definite, definitely looking at both of those races right now.
The state of Michigan, as we just talked about, the
State of Michigan, definitely needs to restructure and get rid
of all these regulations. I know Jocelyn Benson has already
announced in the governor's race. The Lieutenant Governor Garland Gilcris
has announced on the Democrat side.
Speaker 13 (31:18):
Both of those people would be total radicals.
Speaker 12 (31:20):
I mean, Garland Gilchrist has been by the side of
Gretchen Whitmer this whole time and run the state into
the ground. We're forty first in the nation in almost
every category, including education, which.
Speaker 13 (31:30):
Is a disaster for our future.
Speaker 12 (31:32):
Jocelyn Benson, she's the secretary of State that allowed the
Chinese national to vote in our election and didn't do
anything about it. She's just launched a new Secretary of
State website that's pretty much crashed the whole state. Both
of these people would be a disaster. So I'm certainly
very interested in making sure that we get our state
back on track.
Speaker 1 (31:51):
Why, Senator, when you know how about it would suck
to be a senator and tutor.
Speaker 2 (31:56):
It would be horrible.
Speaker 1 (31:56):
All those committee meetings would be horrible, it would be off.
Speaker 12 (32:01):
The opportunity to enact Donald Trump's agenda in this country
would be unbelievable, And I would absolutely jump at the
chance to be able to support this wonderful president that
we have.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
See that's why you do it, and I don't. You
are about helping people. I'm only about me.
Speaker 2 (32:18):
Tutor I'm associated, all right. You know what?
Speaker 1 (32:26):
I love my cell phoned company makes me feel good.
It makes me feel good to be part of Pure Talk,
that's the truth. It makes me feel good because I
believe in putting my money where my morals are. We
talk about this all the time, about the movies you
go see or don't go see. We talk about what
(32:47):
to avoid a lot, and that's good.
Speaker 2 (32:48):
We have to do that.
Speaker 1 (32:49):
We don't want to send our money to companies who
crap on our country. Who do you support though? Where
does your money go? Verizon hates you, they hate your
value us. They've they've done everything they can with your
money to dump on this country at and T E
tem But with these companies are awful.
Speaker 2 (33:06):
Pure Talk is wonderful.
Speaker 1 (33:09):
They support America veterans, They hire Americans.
Speaker 2 (33:12):
They were doing that before.
Speaker 1 (33:13):
Trump got elected. They were doing that before it was cool.
Switch to Pure Talk. Your bill will go down. They're
on the same network. There's no reason not to switch.
And I know that's a double negative. Pure Talk dot
com slash Jesse TV.
Speaker 2 (33:28):
We'll be back.
Speaker 14 (33:37):
I got to know. I said to Dr Morris, or
Governor Morris, the first time I saw him, I said
you look like you ate, Governor Morrisy and and there
was a lot of talk about getting healthy again. And
I'm very happy, and he's invited me to be his
personal trainer. I'm gonna put him not really rigorous red man,
(34:01):
and we're going to put him on a carnivore diet.
We're going to make him do raise your hand if
you want Governor Morrissey to do a public way in
once a month, and then when he's lost thirty pounds,
I'm going to come back to this state and to
(34:22):
a celebration and a public way and with him.
Speaker 1 (34:28):
I have grave concerns about all this joining me now,
great governor from the state of West Virginia, Governor Patrick Morrissey,
former state Attorney General.
Speaker 2 (34:36):
Governor. I'm very very.
Speaker 1 (34:37):
Happy you're getting healthy and losing weight and doing all
those things.
Speaker 2 (34:41):
My concern is.
Speaker 1 (34:43):
Are you going to become a diet guy Because every
single person who starts diet, they have to tell everybody
about the diet.
Speaker 2 (34:50):
They have to bother everyone.
Speaker 1 (34:52):
If someone goes carnivor, you can pick up a piece
of bread, you're getting lectured about the whole thing. I
don't want to be lectured. Governor please tell me you're
not going to become diet guy.
Speaker 15 (35:00):
I am not going to lecture you, but I will
say this. I think it's great to go out and
do the Mountaineer mile. We all want to work and
get healthy, and I'll be the first one to tell
you that I'm sure that I'm going to struggle along
the way.
Speaker 11 (35:14):
I know that in my life I've not always made
the best.
Speaker 15 (35:17):
Choices, but I can tell you at one point in
my life, I was a lot more athletic. I used
to run a lot, bike a lot, play tennis, play
tennis in college for a few years, and so I
think it's good to get back in shape. But you know,
I'm not going to be holier than now because I
certainly am in no.
Speaker 11 (35:34):
Position to do that.
Speaker 15 (35:36):
But I think that what you saw with RFK, there
was a lot of lighthearted banter back and forth. And
the truth is that I was joking with him. He
was sizing me up like a major renovation project and
that he's going to be my personal trainer, and he
responded in a fun way. And I'm excited about all
the good things that we can do for our state
(35:57):
because unfortunately we lead the nation and a lot of
these terrible categories and we need to begin to turn
it around.
Speaker 11 (36:04):
So that was the point behind it.
Speaker 15 (36:05):
But it was a great event, and I'm glad that
RFK is taking such a big interest in West Virginia.
Speaker 1 (36:13):
Governor, let's actually talk about that leading the nation in
some bad categories when it comes to health. Why is that?
Because you hear that a lot states like West Virginia,
states like Mississippi. Certain states just tend to be and
you know, as you know, West Virginia is my old
stomping grounds. I say this with all love. Unhealthy, less
healthy than other states. Is it an exercise thing? Is
(36:37):
it too many Bojangles meals?
Speaker 2 (36:39):
What is it?
Speaker 15 (36:41):
You know, there are a lot of different factors that
happened over a long period of time. But I know
that a lot of people in West Virginia are disabled,
and it could be some from folks who used to
work in the mines or manufacturing jobs. There are other
reasons in terms of the wellness and the access to
healthcare and some of the lack of economic opportunities in there.
Speaker 11 (37:05):
Usually when you have.
Speaker 15 (37:06):
Challenges from an economic perspective, that can obviously tie in
to other socioeconomic problems like healthcare. But the good news
is while some of the stats today are not what
we want, we can change that and we need to.
Speaker 11 (37:21):
Begin changing that.
Speaker 15 (37:22):
And that's certainly what this is attempting to do, not
only through exercise, but looking out, trying to get the
crap out of the foods that we eat, trying to
make sure that people.
Speaker 11 (37:31):
Are healthy, but also purposeful.
Speaker 15 (37:34):
That's why one of the announcements we made last Friday
was about having work requirements for SNAP and then ensuring
that there's no tax payer subsidy of soda that's not
part of the entitlement under SNAP. So there are a
lot of things we can do to get it better.
That's what I'm focusing on. But obviously this has been
going on for a while. I just think we're well
positioned now to fix it.
Speaker 1 (37:56):
Devin, to talk about food dies in the school lunches,
because oh, that's something you're wrong too.
Speaker 11 (38:02):
Absolutely.
Speaker 15 (38:02):
I think one of the things that motivates a lot
of people, including myself, is that you want to look
out for the kids. You want to make sure that
they're not eating all the crap that may be in foods.
And we know that there are healthy ways that you
can put many, many foods together.
Speaker 11 (38:17):
We've seen this.
Speaker 15 (38:18):
There have been enough studies talking about the negative effects
of some of these dyes, what it does for ADHD,
for hyperactivity and other types of diseases. And so when
you can start to clean that up, you're looking out
for the kids. So when you change it in the schools,
when you start to send a message that you care
about what kids eat, that's great. And so I think
(38:39):
this is the first place that it's starting, and in
West Virginia we're getting on that quickly. Separately, then we
know that we expect that the broader changes to dies
will take a few years as other states step up,
and then the Feds ultimately probably come up with one
federal standard, which probably makes the best sense in terms
(39:00):
of how the supply channel operates.
Speaker 1 (39:04):
Talk about some other things you'd be doing as governor
as it pertains to DEI illegal immigration.
Speaker 2 (39:10):
You're in the big.
Speaker 1 (39:11):
Chair now, you were ag last time to talk. Not
that that's a small position at all. Well, now that
your governor, you have even more authority.
Speaker 11 (39:18):
Look, it's kind of cool.
Speaker 15 (39:19):
So there was a lot of low hanging fruit here
when I arrived that we had the opportunity on day
one to say there'll be no DEI within state government,
and we immediately learned that there were still DEI that
was going on, and so we've been making progress through
our executive order and cleaning that up. So that's certainly
very very positive. And then we issued a series of
(39:40):
executive orders on day one trying to unleash what we
call the economic backyard brawl between West Virginia and all
the states that we touch. We're looking for waste within
our state agencies, and then we're doing comparisons in terms
of regulations, in terms of the tax code, workforce rules,
licensing rules. There's a new bill that's coming to my desk.
(40:02):
It's a universal licensing bill.
Speaker 11 (40:04):
You know. It's really cool about that in West Virginia. Now,
if you're.
Speaker 15 (40:07):
Listening to it, it's so easy to get an occupational
license because if you have one in another state, we're
going to supercharge it. You come in here, we'll get
you to work right away, and that's going to help
lure people to West Virginia. So we're really focused on
economic development, but also we look out for common sense
conservative values. We were able to pass and I was
(40:29):
able to sign the Riley Gains a law that's a
great piece of legislation showing that there are distinctions between
men and women, not just for ensuring that men don't
play sports with women, but that women's safe spaces and
locker rooms and if they're in other locations, that they're
(40:50):
not vulnerable to these men coming in and trampling all
over them. I think that these are a lot of
good bills that were getting done. And then on the
executive side, we're going to make sure that we're right sizing,
repurposing government, and this is going to be something good
to watch. A lot of low hanging fruit things we
could do to really transform West Virginia and really help
our people shine.
Speaker 1 (41:13):
Devin, I can't let you go without asking about April second, yesterday,
obviously tear if day, the tariff announced by the Trump administration.
Speaker 11 (41:21):
What are you.
Speaker 1 (41:22):
Anticipating that means for states like West Virginia. Is this
good thing? Bad things in the short term, good things
in the long room? What's coming for people?
Speaker 11 (41:30):
Look?
Speaker 15 (41:31):
I think that this, like anything, is going to evolve,
and we see that there have been changes as quickly
as the administration is announcing it. You see other countries
announcing responses.
Speaker 11 (41:41):
So I think the key thing is whatever happens.
Speaker 15 (41:44):
I think people are excited to get it happening quickly
and lock in so that you can have some predictability
and certainty in the markets.
Speaker 11 (41:52):
But I think that's we're watching and waiting.
Speaker 15 (41:55):
Look, you know, I'm a big fan of the Trump administration,
and so I want them to be very, very successful.
We're obviously watching all the impact of what's going on.
But I will tell you this, President Trump, so many
of his actions, he's been aggressive and proactive from day one.
I praise a lot of the things that he's doing,
and I know that we're excited to work with him
(42:16):
because he inherited a big mess and he's going to
fix it up. He's dealing with the economic challenges. He's
dealing with the bloated federal government. I'm working on some
of the same kinds of things out of West Virginia,
So I'm.
Speaker 11 (42:30):
Excited to partner with him.
Speaker 15 (42:31):
We're going to watch and see what happens in this
other area because I want to make sure that we're
able to continue to grow as a state economically. I
think we certainly will under Donald Trump's leadership.
Speaker 2 (42:44):
Governor appreciate you very much.
Speaker 1 (42:46):
Best of loft on the diet as long as.
Speaker 2 (42:48):
We don't have to hear about it. Appreciate you blighting
the mood.
Speaker 1 (42:55):
Thanks all right, it is time to lighten the mood,
and chicken wings lighten my mood. I just I love
me some chicken wings. And I'm not even a purist.
(43:17):
I like bone in chicken wings, all right. I prefer
the flats over the drums, but I'm okay with the drums.
Speaker 2 (43:24):
I'll eat boneless wings. I'll go crazy.
Speaker 1 (43:27):
I'm a chicken fan, and everybody knows. Everybody knows the
chicken wings have to be dipped in something, okay. And
it's not that the wing itself isn't good. I'm not
saying that. If you have a delicious buffalo wings sitting
there with a good buffalo sauce with the right amount
of heat and right amount of tang, and I know
(43:48):
that that. I know that it's good in and of itself.
But you can always use an improvement, right, Everything could
use an improvement.
Speaker 2 (43:55):
That's why women wear makeup.
Speaker 1 (43:57):
I had a conversation with one of my radio there's Corey,
about chicken wings.
Speaker 2 (44:01):
Here's how it went.
Speaker 1 (44:03):
Now, everybody knows. Everybody knows that wings they need to
be dipped in something ranch, blue cheese.
Speaker 2 (44:11):
It's it's the mixture of both flavors.
Speaker 1 (44:14):
It's it's a party in your mouth, right, That's that's,
that's the essence of it. Corey walks out without touching
the bag of dips and me, you know, mister nice,
I said something I don't know. I'm paraphrasing Corey. Could
I bring you a dip or something like that that
you could dip your wings in. I think that's how
(44:34):
I put it. It was something close to that. And Corey
then informs me that this psychopath doesn't eat his wings
dipping them in anything at all.
Speaker 2 (44:47):
Nothing.
Speaker 1 (44:48):
It's deranged, Chris, Why are you defending him?
Speaker 11 (44:52):
What?
Speaker 2 (44:52):
Corey?
Speaker 1 (44:52):
Defend yourself first, Corey, what defend yourself? Please?
Speaker 2 (44:57):
The buffalo is not the sauce.
Speaker 1 (45:00):
The buffalo is one of the two sauces. The dip is.
So you get a yang a ying and yang you
get a white, creamy sauce of some kind of tangy
sauce mixed with the buffalo sauce.
Speaker 2 (45:15):
They cut through.
Speaker 1 (45:17):
You seriously, never have ranch or blue cheese with your wings.
Speaker 2 (45:21):
And you think this is normal.
Speaker 11 (45:23):
Don't tell me.
Speaker 1 (45:23):
I'm the only person that's ever pointed this out to
you that that's weird and abnormal. A producer, Corey said,
it sounds like I can't handle the heat. It's not
a manliness thing. Okay, I can handle the heat. And
by the way, this from the guy who ordered medium wings.
Maybe you forgot who put in the order. I can't
(45:44):
handle the heat, but Corey got the freaking children's wings.
Medium wings that's for kindergarten class.
Speaker 2 (45:54):
Said what I said, I'll see you
Speaker 11 (46:00):
Mu