Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is a Jesse Kelly Show, the Jesse Kelly Show.
Let's have some fun on a Thursday. And yes, I
am back. It was not my fault yesterday, not my fault.
I was here, Chris was here, Corey was here, and
(00:34):
the weather apparently was here and knocked out several city
blocks worth of power and it didn't come back. So
it was well, you had to do the day without me.
But I am here, yes, and man, because I missed
yesterday and I had a lot of things to say yesterday,
and then things happened today. There are just a lot
of things, things and things and things have piled on top.
(00:58):
So I guess, may me, the easiest way to do
this would be, I'll just go through a little bit
of a list here for you. The World Economic Forum,
Global Communism, it's had a little bit of a shake up.
We're going to discuss the history of that. We're going
to discuss why it matters, what the plot is. We'll
get to that in a little bit. The Biden administration
(01:20):
was worse than you can imagine, and part two of
it would have been positively horrific. Half of young people
hate the United States of America. We're going to talk
about the communist filtration system. Why is your doctor most
likely a dirty comedy? Older Americans hate Trump more than
younger Americans do. Of Venezuelan got snatched up and deported.
(01:41):
I find it hilarious. Kaitanji Brown Jackson is a moron
and a communist. All that Dick Durbin is retiring, Russia,
Ukraine emails, so much more coming up tonight on the
world famous Jesse Kelly's Show.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
Now.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
Sometimes sometimes the monster under your bed is real. Here's
what I mean by that. We all have fears, all
of us do. Young people do, old people do. Maybe
if you're young listening, I know a lot of kids listen.
We love that. Maybe you think to yourself, Dad's not
(02:23):
afraid of anything. Mom's not afraid that they are. They
are your fears changed, But everybody has them, and some
fears are unfounded. They're not legitimate. I said, the monster
under the bed is real, but it's not. Obviously there's
no monster there. There's no boogeyman. My wife, to this day,
(02:44):
if I tell her the wolf from that movie Never
Ending Story is under her bed, she'll run and jump
into the bag. She thinks it's there. But it's not there, obviously,
But there's a fear you have and a fear I
have that is very, very and that is that there
is a global group of tyrannical communists trying to destroy
(03:09):
your country, your prosperity, your entire way of life. And
they take massive amounts of wealth and influence, and they
dedicate their wealth and influence to that end. They don't
really have loyalty to any nation. Their loyalty is to power,
(03:31):
to each other and to destruction. This is not an
invention of the Internet, or of talk radio, or of
people who wear tinfoil on their heads. It's been real
since the inception of communism. You see, what was Communism's
rallying cry? This is important to understand. This is going
(03:54):
to come to the World Economic Forum and what's happening.
In fact, we'll bring it all the way back to
the United States of America at some point in time.
But what was the rallying cry of communism. Workers of
the world unite, Workers of the world unite, Not workers
(04:15):
of Berlin, not workers of Russia, not workers of America,
Workers of the World unite. What are they? What was it?
What was that about? Well, the thinking was in communisms
and invention, I'll put it that way. In the eighteen hundreds,
the thinking was that all parts of the globe, every
(04:37):
bit of it, it's all structured wrong, it's all out
of order, and doesn't matter what your country is. We
if we want to destroy the current order, if we
want to make things more equal, better for you, spread
the wealth around, that kind of a thing, then we
have to ignore borders and things like that, religions, whatever,
(05:00):
we all, all of us, we have to unite to
bring down the entire global order. And you should know
that the Soviet Union after the Russian Revolution, after the
communists fought a terrible war, won that revolution, they looked
around and thought, okay, well let's begin, and they tried
(05:21):
to invade and take over Poland. Poland was going to
be the first stop. The Soviet Union had plans to
take over and conquer all of Europe. The brave Polls
stood up to them and stopped them where they were,
and communism didn't immediately spread to the entire globe. But
(05:41):
remember it was always supposed to. And every communist, you know, democrats,
every communist you know, still wants that a global upheaval,
a global destruction of all of the order. Remember, Stalin
and Trotsky had a famous falling out. They never really
(06:01):
got along, but had a huge falling out that ended
with Trotsky getting an ice pick stuck in his head.
But they had a famous falling out. And the real
falling out was how committed are we to the global thing?
Should we just stay inside the Soviet Union and make
it about us? Should we continue? That was a big
part of it. Communism has to be for everybody. But
(06:22):
you see that wasn't unique to Stalin or Lenin, or
Marx or Mao or any of these people. Every communist
to this day believes it. They look around and they
think everything is wrong, Everything needs to be burnt down
and destroyed, and I should take over how we distribute everything.
(06:45):
From this point forward, along comes an organization that has
worked day and night to this end, known as the
World Economic Forum. Now, if you're the World Economic Forum,
it started in the seventies, noineteen seventy one. I believe
you're Klau Schwab. You start the World Economic Forum. And
Klaud Schwab is a communist. You can go look at
(07:07):
a picture or video of him. Look at the bust
that sits on his bookshelf. If you look at my bookshelf,
you'll see family pictures that have a really cool Marine
Corps thing on there. If you look at Klaud Schwab's bookshelf,
you will see a bust of Vladimir Lenin. You can
look at it with your own eyes. He's a communist.
If you're Klaud Schwab and you start this international communist
(07:30):
organization to implement communism around the globe, how do you
do that when nobody likes it? You can't get people
to buy in. Communists have always run into this problem.
They ran into it in Russia. Nobody liked them. Even
during the Revolution when they hated the czars, the communists
said about twenty five percent approval. People didn't want to
be a communist, they didn't want to live under communism. Well,
(07:53):
you have to penetrates the combinants.
Speaker 3 (07:56):
You see, we are very proud now young generation like
Prime Minister Trideau, President del Argentina and so on. So
if we penetrate the cabinets.
Speaker 1 (08:12):
You don't try to sell your ideas as being something
people want to buy. You have to force them. It's
always about force. You have to make people do this.
We have to make people buy into this communism thing.
It doesn't matter whether they want it or want it's
or not. It's not up to them. We're going to
make them all do it. How do we make them
(08:32):
all do it? We have to locate, we have to
identify the positions of power, the critical government positions of
power around the globe, and we have to send our
little communist minions into those positions of power. Therefore they
can use those that power for our ends. That's the idea,
(08:54):
that's the goal, and that's what the World Economic Form
and other groups. That's what they've been doing and are
still doing. Remember this is about currently. Okay, that was
a little past preview of what it was. This is
going to come back to today because it still goes on,
it still exists. Now, let's discuss for a moment. Let's
(09:16):
discuss the language they use. Because someone wrote in a
fascinating email, I don't have it. In fact, I think
I probably threw it away. Sorry about that. But someone
wrote in a fascinating email asking about the names of everything.
You know, it's always the People's Republic, of the Democratic
Republic of this every one of these communist countries, they
(09:38):
all have some really freedom sounding name, the People's Republic.
It's always a republic for the peoples, a democracy for
the peoples. Well, remember, the communist knows language matters, words matter,
and he chooses his words extremely carefully, always trying to lie.
(10:02):
He's trying to lie and manipulate. He's trying to sell
his demonic religion of domination to the masses in a
way that will be palatable to them if they won't
buy in and become his loyal foot soldier. In the
very least, he wants to kind of get them to
let their guard down, which brings us to shareholder capitalism
(10:23):
versus stakeholder capitalism. Are you angry about the state of
corporate America? Are you tired of what Pride Month's coming?
Are you tired of rainbow oreos? How did that come
to be? We'll talk about that next misstost.
Speaker 4 (10:41):
Catch up.
Speaker 1 (10:44):
Jesse Kellyshow dot com. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a wonderful Thursday, and I almost forgot that Tomorrow
is an ask Doctor Jesse Friday, and you need to
get your questions emailed in right now to Jesse at
Jesse kellyshow dot com. All three hours dedicated to you
and your questions. Ask me anything, it doesn't matter, doesn't
(11:06):
even have to be political. Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
Back to global communism and shareholder capitalism versus stakeholder capitalism.
Now I want to caution you against something. I mean,
we'll do the best I can. I know it's my job,
but try not to let your eyes glaze over and
be bored. I'm going to explain this. It's important to
(11:29):
understand what they mean, how they think, how they operate,
because they will choose their words carefully, and if you
don't identify it and know what they're doing, it will
go right by you. Klaus Schwab, head of the World
Economic Forum, I want you to listen to this and
listen very closely. This is going to come back to
(11:51):
America's corporations. Why are they so political?
Speaker 2 (11:55):
Now? We have state capitalism on zielsa hand, we have
shareholder or private capitalism. So it's a clash between two systems.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
I remember that little part. Okay, it's a clash between
two systems means I.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
Believe that state capitalism in the short term, in the
short term provides certain advantages because you can mobilize in
a concentrated way a lot of resources to reach a
specific objective that I believe that's the future is not
(12:32):
state capitalism or shareholder capitalism. The future is what I
call stake hold capitalism, which is combined with the social responsibility.
Speaker 1 (12:47):
Okay, first, let's address the beginning of this, because this
is really, really really important for you to understand. You
are at war, a political war, a power war. You
don't get a say in the matter. It does not
take two to tango. When one person decides you're in
(13:09):
a fight. You're in a fight. I don't want to
punch Jewish producer Chris right now. I have no desire
to do so. I usually do, but not right now.
If Jewish producer Chris decides to get up from his
weird little producer desk with all his buttons and walk
in here and sock me in the face, I don't
have any choice in the matter. Okay, now we're in
a fight. It's out of my hands. They view it
(13:32):
as a fight. It doesn't matter if you do sorry,
you don't get a vote. You're in a fight. They
have declared war on your way of life. They're very,
very honest about it. He lays it out as clearly
as he possibly can.
Speaker 2 (13:49):
We have state capitalism on Zielsa hand, we have shareholder
of private capitalism. So it's a clash between two systems.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
Now, let's discuss the shareholder capitalism that he seems to
be at war with. That your liberal and Peggy is
at war with that. Chuck Schumer is at war with.
Speaker 5 (14:11):
What is that?
Speaker 1 (14:14):
Well, let's talk about corporate world, the corporate world, Fortune
five hundred companies and things like that, because this can
be misunderstood by a lot of people. Did you know
that the board when there's a publicly traded company, we'll
call it Coca Cola. I'm just using them as a
placeholder because it's one everyone knows, Coca Cola. They have
(14:36):
and there's probably a parent company over Coca Cola. I'm
just doing this for simplicity sake. Coca Cola huge company,
global company. They have a board. They will have a CEO.
He is not the owner. He's the chief executive officer.
He's not the owner. He's in charge of the board,
the head of the board. But they will have a board.
The CEO's part of the board. Did you know that
(14:57):
they actually don't have. They don't have a lot of
leeway in what they do with Coca Cola. And here's why.
Whether they're not supposed to, here's why. Their job, their
only job in a free market system is to maintain
and in fact increase the profit of the shareholders. If
(15:21):
I own one share of Coke stock, that board's obligation,
whenever they meet, whenever they think, whenever they come up
with charts and graphs or whatever. Their professional lives are
dedicated to me to making sure my share in Coke
either maintains its price. But really that's not it increases
in price. The gigantic company that is Coke and all
(15:45):
that incredible financial power that Coke brings in because it's
so popular and it's so international, it's not subject to
the whims of the latest board, the latest HR, the
latest COEO. It's not supposed to be subject to any
of those those things. It's only loyalty, and I do
mean only loyalty. Is too profit, the profit of the
(16:07):
people who own shares in the company. That is what
he's describing when he describes shareholder capitalism. And that is why,
for most of your life, depending on your age, if
you're younger, this is not the true. This is not true.
But for most of my life, and if you're older
than me, for virtually all of your life, corporations have
(16:29):
a complete ban on getting political. We don't get political.
We're not Democrats, we're not Republicans. Member Michael Jordan famously
was asked to me, hey, why don't you get more
involved in all this? And he said, Republicans buy shoes. Two.
That wasn't radical. That's how every business did business for
(16:49):
most of my life up until I know this is
unbelievable if you're young, but up until I would say,
ten years ago, I don't ever remember one time in
my entire life a corporation getting political. It never ever
ever happened, because well, how does that help the shareholder?
But Klaus Schwab and his communist minions identified something with
(17:13):
the corporate world, something they wanted that we will get
to next. Before we get to that, we got a
box today at the house. I was not there or
I was not standing in the kitchen. When Ab opened
the box, I said, go ahead and open it. She
opened it up and I heard her go ooh, you
(17:36):
know what was in the box? The brand new compact
Launcher actually two of them from Berna Compact Launcher. It's
a little bit over four inches long. I looked at it.
I think this is not exact. I think it's only
(17:56):
an inch thick. If that, it's super gentlemen, ladies, this
is the easiest concealed carry of your life. It's non lethal.
Speaker 2 (18:09):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
Security guards carry it, swap teams carry it. People carry
it across the country. It shoots tear gas balls or
kinetic rounds. It will stop a bad, violent, evil man
from hurting you. And it's nothing to carry it. It's light,
it's thin. Check out the new Burnot Compact Launcher. I'm
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(18:32):
mine actually on me as we speak. You want a
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Jesse Bernard dot com slash Jesse. We'll be back fighting
for your freedom every day. The Jesse Kelly Show. It
(18:54):
is the Jesse Kelly Show on a Thursday, a wonderful Thursday.
Speaker 5 (18:59):
Member.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
If you miss any part of the show, you can
download the whole thing on iHeart, Spotify iTunes. We're talking
about global communism. We're going to get to the shakeup
at the w e F. Bring it all the way
home to what we're what we're witnessing, what we're experiencing
here in America with these judges and the Trump injunction
today and all this stuff. But for now, we're going
back to this conversation Klaus Schwab has where he's talking
(19:23):
about shareholder capitalism versus stakeholder capitalism. You see, this is
something you have to understand if you're frustrated today with
the latest injunction from the judge. Yet another lower court
judge stepped up and said, no, no, no, no, the
Trump administration has to has to fund all this DEI.
(19:46):
He has to fund all this cultural Marxism. How does it?
How do we how do we get to this place? Remember,
the communist does not view power the way you view power,
and that's good. You shouldn't view it the way he does,
because he's unbelievably evil. The communist sees every little bit
(20:09):
of power as an opportunity for his revolution, an opportunity
to do one of two things, reward his friends or
punish his enemies. And I mean even the tiniest bit
of power that communists can recognize it right away he
gets into it and he uses it. I've used this
(20:31):
example before because it's maybe the most true example in
the world. Your public library. When's the last time you
walked into your public library? Hey, Chris, when's the last
time you walked into the public library? He never had,
Corey never has the public library. When's the last time
you even okay, forget about walking into it. When's the
(20:54):
last time you really even gave it a second glance
as you drove by or walked by. Chris just said
he doesn't even know where his is. Okay, it's very okay,
I got it, and that's very normal. I don't want
to act like I'm different. The only reason I know
about ours is our oldest had to do a school
project there and whatnot. So I've been in it several times.
But otherwise it be me too. But here's how the
(21:19):
communist thinks. He looks at that library and he doesn't
ignore it, he doesn't dismiss it. You see, he's a predator,
always looking to eat up and destroy something. He sees
that library and he says to himself, well, wait a minute,
that's a place where people in the community. They will
(21:40):
walk into it, and they will grab things, they will
grab books to read, they will study there. Why shouldn't
I seize that choke point of information and then I
can help the revolution with it.
Speaker 6 (21:55):
Do you know.
Speaker 1 (21:55):
Why there's a child drag show where they bring in
some freaked read children's books to your kid and your
red town because you drove by the public library didn't
give it a second thought. The communists saw it immediately
and thought, wow, I can use that. Now that's the
public library. Let's go back to what we were discussing,
(22:18):
corporate America. I'm forty three years old. For probably the
first thirty years of my life, if not more, corporations
never got involved in politics. Ever, there were no pride flags,
there were no Black Lives Matter rallies, no nothing. Now,
(22:38):
I guarantee, with five seconds of research, I could find
some kind of gay parades sponsored by the biggest corporations
in the country this weekend. I guarantee they're all over
the United States of America. Now come June, my sons
will come back snickering at me in the grocery store
with all the cookies in the cookie section, Oreos being
(22:59):
the worst and most heartbreaking that now have rainbow packs.
How did we go from corporations never ever, ever trying
to get political to now being hyper political. Well, Klaus
Schwab laid it out pretty well here. I'll let it
play again.
Speaker 6 (23:17):
The communists saw that vast quantity of wealth in corporate America,
all those billboards, all those TV commercials, the billions a
bit trillions of dollars, and he didn't sit back and
think to himself, Wow, that's too bad, thought he thought
to himself, Man, think about what I could do for
(23:40):
the revolution if.
Speaker 1 (23:41):
I got my hands on all that money and made
it work for me. When he talks about shareholder capitalism
being at war with stakeholder capitalism, what he's saying is,
Coca Cola's job should no longer be to reward me
the shareholder of Coca Cola. Coca Cola has a duty
(24:04):
to take all that money they have and use it
for global communism, and use it for whatever evil, demonic
cause I want. That's what claud Schwab is saying here.
And this is exactly how global communists. This is way
beyond Cloud Schwab, It's way beyond the World Economic Forum.
This is how every communist in every country thinks.
Speaker 2 (24:26):
We have state capitalism. On the eler hand, we have
shareholder or private capitalism, So it's a clash between two systems.
I believe that state capitalism in the short term, in
the short term provides certain advantages because you can mobilize
(24:49):
in a concentrated way a lot of resources to reach
a specific objective. But I believe such a future is
not state capital or shareholder capitalism. It's the future is
what I call steakhold oil capitalism, which is combined with
(25:11):
the social responsibility.
Speaker 1 (25:14):
Combined with social responsibility. But who is a stakeholder? Everybody?
You see, Coca Cola doesn't have a job just toward
me the shareholder. Since we're all stakeholders, Coca Cola needs
to do the right thing for everyone. Now what kind
(25:34):
of a quote right thing is he talking about?
Speaker 5 (25:38):
Things like this? To limit global warming?
Speaker 2 (25:41):
You are demanding to help to coal, oil and gas exploration,
to the development and to the financing of this exploration
as well.
Speaker 5 (25:55):
You are asking firms to replace any corporate port direct
who is unwilling to transition to clean energy sources.
Speaker 1 (26:07):
Are you the head of Coca Cola? Have you transitioned
your country into all solar panels? You haven't time to
replace somebody on that board. You owe it to all
the stakeholders to do what's best for the earth. You see,
But surely this hasn't happened. This is just an Internet
(26:29):
conspiracy theory. Allow me to reintroduce you to Larry Fink.
He's the head of Blackrock. There are three finance giants
who control roughly twenty trillion dollars in money. That's Big
Boy Money, Blackrock, Vanguard, State Street. Hey, head of Blackrock,
are you implementing this shareholder capitalism?
Speaker 4 (26:50):
Well, behaviors are going to have to change, and this
is one thing we're asking companies. You have to force behaviors.
And at Blackrock we are forcing behaviors. Fifty four percent
of the incoming class or women. We added four more
points in terms of diverse employment this year. You know
what we're doing internally is if you don't achieve these
(27:12):
levels of impact, your compensation could be impacted. Okay, we're
doing the same day. And so it's just you have
to force behaviors and if you don't force.
Speaker 1 (27:23):
It, that'll be fine. The system is not something some
filthy communists with the James Bond accent came up with.
It's been implemented, and it didn't go away because we
won an election in November. It has been implemented. It's
everywhere now. Now you drive down the road and the
(27:43):
Coca Cola ad. Instead of it being mean Joe Green
sucking down a coke after the super Bowl, now it's
somebody sucking down something else. It's awful, what, Chris, I
didn't say anything wrong. It's fine. Look, I've been taking
a lot of chalk lately, Okay, so I'm super amped
up about everything. I might even what you call reckless.
(28:05):
At this point in time, I'm so full of energy,
I'm so full of pep. I'm so ready to go
at all times. That's how I killed the mosquito. You know,
I really have to give credit for that mosquito killed
to chalk more than anything else I have, what, Chris,
I have to give credit to chalk. I don't know
if I could have taken down that mosquito if my
tea levels weren't so high, my hands probably wouldn't have
(28:27):
been as fast. I might not have even had the strength.
But it was just so easy for me. It was
like Samson taking apart that lion. It was almost the
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(28:52):
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be back. He doesn't care if you believe him, but
(29:13):
he's right. Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly Show
on a wonderful, wonderful Thursday. Don't forget tomorrow's and ask
doctor Jesse Friday. And you need to get your questions
emailed in now to Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
Of course, the reason I wanted to have this talk
is I wanted to remind everybody we haven't had this
(29:35):
talk in a long time, that the Communists have been
at this game for a very long time, and just
because we won an election in November doesn't mean they
haven't already put their people into critical positions of power
across the planet, not just across the American government. Not
just across America, across the planet. There are in place,
(29:59):
see committed communist revolutionaries that believe their job is to
reward their friends and punish their enemies. So when you
wake up like you woke up this morning and you
find out yet another lower court judge is trying to
stop Donald Trump, that lower court judge views himself as
a revolutionary, as a soldier for the revolution. You can
(30:24):
scream at him until you're blue in the face that
what he's doing is wrong, it's unjust, it'll do. He
does not care he has been put there. He views
his role as a judge as fighting for the revolution.
The communist always sees himself as a communist first. And
the reason this throws people off is they think the
(30:46):
communist sees himself as whatever title they happen to have first,
and he's a communist in his spare time. No, that's
how you think. That's how I think. I'm a political activist.
In the extra time I have when I'm not at
work or i'm not at home, or I'm not doing
something like that. That's when I'm a political activist. The
(31:07):
communist doesn't think like that at all. If he's in
the local library, he's a communist first, a librarian. Second.
If he's wearing a judge's robes, he's a communist first,
a judge. Second. If he takes over the cub Scouts,
he's a Communist first, a cub Scout leader. Second. If
he's at the State Department, he's a communist first, State department.
Speaker 5 (31:27):
Second.
Speaker 1 (31:27):
If he wears a general's uniform, he's a communist. First,
he's a general. Second. If he's a CEO, he's a
common You get the idea. He only wears these titles
in uniforms as a skin suit to hide his warrior nature.
On behalf of the revolution, and it is ongoing all
(31:49):
the time. And this is why I have told you,
and I will tell you again, you will never in
your life, and neither will I see total victory over
the Communists who have been fighting this war for one
hundred years, putting their people into place for one hundred years.
(32:09):
That doesn't mean we won't win. I actually believe we
will win. But victory is a thousand battles away. It's
not one election, not one presidential election or gubernatorial election,
or water board or city council or school board, a
thousand victories, because there are millions of these little demons
(32:32):
out there seeking power all the time, and unless we
choose to fight them, we will lose. Now, we will
win if we fight them. Our ideas are good. Their
ideas are sick. Our ideas are right, and we want
people's lives to be better theirs are not. If we
(32:54):
choose to engage, we will win. The final thing on
this world canonomic form thing. Because look, there's a bunch
I'm going to piggyback off of this into. There's so
much sound and so many different things I want to
talk about today. But there is a shake up at
the World Economic Forum. They're investigating Klaus Schwab for well
(33:15):
doing what all these people do, investigating them for stealing.
For lack of a better way to put it, you
take the corporate credit card, World Economic form credit card
and you go a little crazy at the local steakhouse
with you book yourself some first class tickets with it.
And these organizations are stocked full of the most evil
(33:36):
people you can imagine. We just talked about the organization
it's purpose. Just listen to this one more time, one
more time. What kind of a person do you think
works for this organization.
Speaker 2 (33:48):
We have state capitalism on zielsa hand. We have shareholder
or of private capitalism. So it's a clash between two
systems I believe set down.
Speaker 1 (34:02):
Do you think some just good, down home folks work
for an organization like that, No, it's full of vicious
little monsters. Klaus Schwab's a vicious little monster too. Do
I think he did these things? Probably?
Speaker 2 (34:14):
Do?
Speaker 1 (34:14):
I also think this is about to be a standard
communist power grab. Probably you want to feel better about
something that was a lot of heaviness, here's something for you.
The Communists are always eating each other. In fact, we're
gonna get to the latest on that with David Hogg,
the shakeup of the DNC. This is not new. They're
(34:35):
always taking each other out because there's no loyalty, right.
It's all evil, It's all full of bad people. They're
constantly kneecapping each other, killing each other depending on the country,
taking each other out, always in an endless pursuit of
power and money. That is how these people operate at
(34:55):
all times. I just thought it would be necessary to
have this tou because I know you're ma doctor Jesse.
Judge blocks Trump from withholding funds from sanctuary cities. Judges
consider blocking executive orders. Why can't the administration just ignore
these judges and find Republican judges? So on and so forth.
The administration can't ignore the judges. It's just a matter
(35:15):
of will. That's it. It's a matter of will. People
have a natural hesitation and understandable hesitation of escalating things,
of pushing things too far. And the Trump administration is
no different. And I'm not dogging on this is not
(35:37):
an insult. It is quite a thing. It's quite I
won't say it's unprecedented because it's happened several times before
in American history, but it is quite a thing for
an American president to say, you know what, I don't
care what the judge says, no, try and enforce it.
Very Andrew Jackson line, Well, the judge made is ruling.
(35:57):
Let's see him enforce it. But Andrew ain't here anymore.
It's the year twenty twenty five, and when when you're
the Trump administration, and remember it's not just Donald Trump.
The Trump administration is full of people who want a
political future, and you're considering that political future, and you
(36:18):
consider putting out a statement that says, ah, I don't
care what the judge says. The answer is no. It
feels like a real crossing the Rubicon moment, and that
puts us in quite a pickle. Let's make fun of
democrat dysfunction, then we'll do some other things. Let's first
take care of your dog. Let's get some nutrition in
(36:40):
your dog. I am so grateful to Rough Greens for
what they did for Fred and his stomach problems. You see, Fred,
Fred has anxiety issues, seasonal allergies. I'm not even making
that up. He has seasonal allergies. I can't. And he
also gets physically sick if he eats any food that
(37:05):
doesn't have Roughgreens on it. Roughgreens saved our lives. It's
a nutritional supplement you sprinkle on your dog's food. It's
got live vitamins and minerals and digestive enzymes and probiotics.
You will see physical differences in your dog, behavioral differences.
Is your dog hyperactive or even to lethargic? Dog doesn't
(37:29):
get nutrition from dog food. The dog food is brown
because it's dead. Gets your dog some real nutrition eight
three three three three. My dog gets you a free
jumpstart trial bag, or you can go to roughgreens dot
com slash Jesse. We'll be back