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April 24, 2025 45 mins

On this explosive episode of I'm Right with Jesse Kelly, Jesse dives into the seismic resignation of Klaus Schwab from the World Economic Forum, unpacking what it means for the globalist agenda and the future of international power plays. Plus, Jesse breaks down the looming collapse of China's economy with Steven W. Mosher, revealing the ripple effects for the world stage. Joining the show is Dustin Grage, who brings a critical update from Minnesota, shedding light on local battles with national implications.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
I think it's important that we check in on the
global communist cabal that's trying to destroy us. All we'll
do that tonight. Is China about to collapse? Maybe the
elites are working with the streets again. All that and
more coming up on I'm writing sometimes there is a

(00:26):
monster under the bed, So let's talk about this. Because
there are fears that are ridiculous. We all have them.
You do, I do. Everyone does know. There's no reason
to actually be afraid of that cockroach. I know it's gross,
but it can't really hurt you. And then there are
fears that are legitimate. I don't want to stand on

(00:48):
the edge of a thousand foot tall cliff. What if
I fall off and die? Now, the question always is
with our fears, how much of it is legitimate? How
much of it have we concocted in our minds. You
are somebody who consumes information, Otherwise you wouldn't be watching
I'm right here. You pay attention to the news, the headlines,
not just locally, nationally internationally. The World Economic Forum is

(01:13):
something that you've heard of before. You've definitely heard it
if you watch this show Klaus Schwab World Economic Form,
But beyond that bigger than that, the globalists. You've heard
this term before, the globalists, the globalist communists, the communists
that I mean, you've heard all these terms before. So
what's going on? What's the actual truth behind that? Is

(01:37):
there actually a group of people who have joined together
secretly trying to take over the world. Yeah, actually that's real.
It sounds like it's not, but it's not, And it's
very easily understandable when you dig down into communism really
and how it originated. Communism's cry was what we're workers

(02:00):
of the where should unite? Workers of where of Berlin,
workers of Philadelphia, maybe countries, workers of Sudan. That's not
what I said, workers of the world unite. Communism was never, ever, ever, ever,

(02:21):
ever supposed to be for one city or one country.
Communism understood by the communists was always supposed to be
for everyone, and had to be for everyone. If there
was even one country, one place out there that escaped
its grasp, the belief was the whole system would collapse.

(02:43):
It must be for everyone. That is the essence of communism.
In fact, it was one of the huge arguments that
Stalin and Trotsky got into. It was one of those
main dividing lines between those two. Do we keep pushing
this to the whole globe From as soon as the
Soviet Union became the Soviet and you when it collapsed

(03:04):
to the Communists, the first thing they did was form
an army and Mark John Poland by the grace of
God that failed her. They would have gone on to
all of Europe. It was always supposed to be for everyone,
always and it hasn't changed, Which brings us to a
man by the name of Klau Schwab, you see, and
his organization, the World Economic Forum. He founded it back

(03:24):
in nineteen seventy one. Remember Klaus Schwab, for whatever else
you call him, is a communist. This is something that
you can look at with your own eyes. You don't
just need me to say it. If there are plenty
of pictures out there, He's done a million interviews. And well,
I'll tell you this. If you look at me in
front of the bookshelf, in front of the desk in

(03:46):
my home, you'll see some family pictures behind me. You'll
see I have a really cool Marine Corps thing of
the flag raising on Eerojima. You know what Klaud Schwab
has on his bookshelf a bust of Vladimir Lenin. He's
a communist and he founded the World Economic Forum to
implement global communism. Now that's quite a It's quite a goal,

(04:11):
isn't it. I mean, what would you do if you
founded a group? Right, where do you even begin? Let
alone a group bent on worldwide domination as if you're
the James Bond movie villain. Well, first you have to
get your people in the right places.

Speaker 2 (04:25):
You see what we are very proud of now, it's
a young generation like Prime Minister.

Speaker 3 (04:33):
Trideau, President Argentina and so on.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
So if we penetrates the.

Speaker 1 (04:40):
Cabinets, penetrate Zick cabinets, you didn't you didn't think they
were just going to try to persuade populations to embrace
global communism. Communism doesn't do that. They know they're never
going to persuade you to embrace that kind of horror.
So you just get your people in positions power to

(05:00):
force things. That's what Kaules Schwab, that's what his organization believes,
and every brand of communism. Klaus Schwab and his very
powerful group have been right behind it, push right behind it,
pushing it. And the one they seem to love the most.
Is this whole climate communism thing. Klaus Schwab famously said,

(05:21):
he said it what his organization said. I don't know
if it was him specifically, you will own nothing and
be happy. They said that. They meant that. And as
I've said so many times before, climate communism, the whole
you know, going green thing, it's communism's final form. It's
communism's most murderous form. In fact, it is the most

(05:46):
murderous religion that has ever existed on the planet. If
the climate communists got their way, and they're trying every
single day, they will kill more people than Stalin, Mao Hitler,
Pol pop Genghisne, all of them combined by orders of magnitude.
That's how murderous and deadly it is. The entire essence

(06:07):
behind it is your poison. You, you human being, You
just being here. It's killing everything. Let alone the car
you drive, the productivity, the things you enjoy, all these
things are killing mother Earth. If you would just die,
it would take care of a lot of problems. That's

(06:28):
what these people believe. While Schwab has been a leader
on this issue for a very long time.

Speaker 2 (06:35):
To limit global warming, you are demanding to help to
coal oil and gas exploration. You are asking firms to
replace any corporate port directors who is unwilling to transition
to clean energy.

Speaker 1 (06:53):
Sauces wild. How communists love this client change stuff. Isn't
it so funny how often those two worlds just seem
to merge. It's almost like it's almost like it's the
same religion, which, of course it is. Which brings us
back to Schwab and his organization, the World Economic Forum.

(07:14):
We'll get to the turnover and leadership here in just
a moment. But Schwab was also famously famously he has
talked about this thing called stakeholder capitalism capitalism.

Speaker 3 (07:27):
We should make here again a let's say, a differentiation.
On the one hand, we have state capitalism. On the
elsa hand, we have shareholder or private capitalism. So it's
a clash between two systems. I believe that state capitalism

(07:50):
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. But I
believe such a future is not state capitalism or shareholder capitalism.

(08:10):
It's the future, is what I call steak hold oil capitalism,
which is combined with a social responsibility.

Speaker 1 (08:23):
Now, that was a lot of lying, I have you
know what lying maybe too strong a point there, Massaging
the truth a little bit, changing terms, using different terms
to try to do what confuse you, get you to
either buy in and if they can't, remember the communism

(08:44):
is always trying to get you to buy The communist
is always trying to get you to buy in. And
if they can't, they at least want to get you
to let your guard down. Hey, it's no big deal,
after all. What wat those big words even mean? Shareholder
capitalism versus stakeholder capitalism? He says, they're compute. But you
love the free market, don't you. I love the free market.
It's all capitalism. Let's not worry too much about it all. Oh,

(09:07):
you should worry about it, because this is really the
basis of so much of what they're already doing, what
they've already done, what they're still doing, and what they
intend to do. Here's the difference. Shareholder capitalism. What does
that mean? Well, when there's a publicly traded company, we
call it Coca Cola, right, Coca Cola. Coca Cola has

(09:31):
a board of directors. They're gonna have a CEO, board
of directors, and that board that's CEO. They actually do
not have did you know this. They don't have total
freedom to do whatever they want with the company. In fact,
publicly traded companies, they have one mission, only one mission.

(09:54):
It's actually not corporate responsibility. It's not picking up trash,
it's not charitable giving. Their mission is to enrich the
shareholders of the company, to maintain and in fact increase
the value of the company, thus rewarding the people who
own shares in the company. A publicly traded company, that

(10:18):
is its only job. The job of its board is
to increase the shareholder's wealth. That's its job, period and
of story and everything, I must serve that. But you
see the communists. The communist is constantly looking, constantly looking.
I want you to think about him as if he's

(10:39):
a predator, because he very much is. And what he's
looking for is power. Power he can grab. Okay, power
he can grab and use for his purposes, use to
reward his friends, and use to punish his enemies. So
when you see the corporate world, the fortune five hundre

(11:00):
corporate world, yes, of course I know you see the
same things I see, the fancy suits and the private
jets and the lake house and all those other things. Yes,
of course all that stuff is true. But what the
communists sees is vast quantities of wealth that can be
used to promote communism and punish his enemies. How is it?

(11:21):
How is it that you have noticed in your lifetime?
And I know you have, because I certainly have. All
these corporations are political now when that was nothing. Corporations
would never touch that stuff. When I was a kid,
and I'm only forty three, you never saw these companies
take a political stance. Now George Floyd dies, every single
company brags publicly about its Black Lives Matter donations. All

(11:43):
these companies now fund drag races, pride parades all over
the place. How did it come to be? Because Klaus
Schwab and his band of global communists infiltrated those boards,
and those boards no longer work to enrich the shareholder.
That would be shareholder capitalism. Instead, they've shifted into something

(12:04):
called stakeholder capitalism. But who is a stakeholder? Everybody doesn't
matter whether you own Coca Cola shares or not. If
you're a citizen of the planet. They love using language
like that. See, they're going to use that corporate money
for everyone. Almost sounds like communism, doesn't it. That's what

(12:30):
they've done, and they've been very successful. And of course
the story is that Klaus Schwab is stepping down. Now.
My final point on all this is we're gonna move on.
We have a great show. He's stepping down, he's resigning.
There are one of two stories going on here, and
I don't know which one it is. I suppose that
we will find out very shortly. Because these gigantic evil corporations,

(12:55):
they always are full of evil people, which of course
it makes sense, right there are gonna be evil people
the bottom. If I'm starting an evil criminal organization, I
don't want saints, I don't want good people. I want
to find scumbags. The World Economic Forum is full of
scumbags top to bottom. And so these organizations are always
full of corruption. There's always somebody swindling this and swindling that.

(13:16):
And I know there are allegations of Klaus schwabs ritzy spending.
So I'm here to say this and we'll find out
actually the truth about this in the coming days. There
are one of two things that are happening here. Either A,
he did swindle a bunch of World Economic Forum money,
spend it on private jets and fancy hotels, as these

(13:39):
people always do. He got caught and now he's stepping down.
That's option A. Or Option B is a bunch of vicious,
extremely motivated ladder climbing communists inside of the organization wanted
to take out the kings so they can take over

(13:59):
the top spot, and so they simply invented and created
these allegations in order to cause problems for Klaus Schwab.
It's always one of the two things. Anyway. That's a
quick update on global communism. Don't think because klau Schwab
is leaving that suddenly we're fine and the World Economic
form is going to just implode. It will not. They

(14:21):
will keep marching on, they will keep destroying, and you
and I will keep fighting them. All that may have
made you uncomfortable, but I am right. Have you taken
your chalk? Are you ready to fight them? I take
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(14:41):
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(15:03):
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Speaker 4 (15:33):
My relationship with presidency is great. It was, It's been
great for a long time. We've had a very good relationship.
And I think we'll make a deal with China. If
we don't make a deal, we'll set it. We'll just
set the number, and you know, I think they'll want
to be a part of the United States. We're doing great.
We're gonna this is the golden age. As Paul said,
we're talking about the golden age. It will never be

(15:55):
a time like this. In my opinion, and uh, China
wants to be a part of that too.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
Okay. I gotta be honest with you. I follow this
stuff for a living. Do you follow this stuff? You
know because you enjoy it. I'm in the same way
as you. I don't know what's going on with the tariffs?
Are they in place? Are they coming? Are they not
in place? With I don't know, but I know Steven
probably knows because he's really good at all this stuff.
Joining me now, Stephen W. Moser, President of the Population

(16:23):
Research Institute. He also wrote a wonderful book about the
fall of China, Hopefully the Devil in communist China. Okay, Steven,
the tariffs specifically, when it comes to China, what is
in place? What is not in place? What is coming
the in place? Where are we at with all this?

Speaker 5 (16:41):
Well?

Speaker 6 (16:41):
Where are we at?

Speaker 4 (16:42):
Is?

Speaker 5 (16:43):
Where are we at?

Speaker 6 (16:44):
Is that China can candition it out, but they sure
can't take it because they've been They've been dishing it
out to us for decades, and they put tariff barriers
on our goods, and they have used economic pressure to
try to get us to do what they want. They've
been cheating, lying, and stealing the Communist Party I'm talking
about now since the beginning, Stealing intellectual property, sending fentanyl

(17:07):
here to make money and killing Americans in the process,
Sending agents across the open southern border, sleeper agents who
are going to I'm afraid, plague us during an eventual conflict.
So they've been doing a lot of things, and they've
been getting away with it because no one, no one
has responded in the way that they should happen. Now
we finally have a president who is responding to China appropriately,

(17:32):
and what he's doing is he's putting the same kind
of tariffs on Chinese goods that they're putting on us,
and taking into account their theft of intellectual property and
their non terior barriers and all the rest. And so
we've got these tariffs now. Of I think they're totaling
up to I have trouble too, because they keep going up. Right,
they started ten percent, and we had an extra ten

(17:54):
percent because of Feanyl. Then we went up one hundred
and fifty four percent. Then China foolishly responded, and now
we're at two hundred and fifty percent. So the science Look,
China's economy is going to collapse. You can see it
collapsing in real time right now, and we can talk
about what's happening on the ground in China. People are desperate.

Speaker 1 (18:18):
Yes, I actually would love to talk about exactly that.
I have about a million things I want to talk
about with you, but I really I realize we don't
have time for that. So I want you to explain
to me the Chinese economy it's collapse or it's impending collapse,
because I'll tell you something that has blown away me
as I just watched Steven, I'm not an expert like
you are. Is how much money they throw around everywhere,

(18:39):
all over the globe. Everywhere you look. They're buying off this,
they're paying for that, spending an inhuman amount of money
on their military. There's no way they have this kind
of money.

Speaker 6 (18:48):
Well, the only way they have this kind of money
is from the export sector of the economy, right, the
things that they produce using virtual surf labor, slave labor
actually and produce goods. You know, if you slaves, you
can produce goods very cheaply, especially if they're hard working
people like the Chinese, who have great work ethic. And
these people are being worked seven days a week, twelve

(19:09):
hours a day in amazing shifts, lengthy ships that Americans
wouldn't tolerate. They can't organize labor unions, they can't strike
for higher wages. If they object, they're met with police force.
So you know, they work long and hard for slave wages.
So they have this export sector the economy all along

(19:30):
China's coast. A couple hundred million people are involved in that.
It's based in Guangong and Shanghai and up north in
kean Jan, and so every day you have these tens
of millions of Chinese workers, these minions working producing goods
for export. Where do those goods go? Well, a lot
of those goods come to the United States, about about

(19:50):
sixteen percent of the goods set, so that's one in
every six of the shoes that they make comes to
the United States. We've got the biggest consumer economy in
the world. And actually some other stuff comes for the
US too, indirectly from Vietnam and Indonesia and Hong Kong,
which is transshipped. Because the Chinese Communist Party is trying
to trick us into thinking that not all of these
cheap labor goods come from China, but they do. They're

(20:14):
just shipped through other places. So right now with the tariffs,
no one is buying those goods because all of a sudden,
they're not the cheapest place to get shirts and shoes.
And so the containers, they are huge piles of containers
piling up in China's major ports that will never be
shipped anywhere because they're filled with goods that were ordered

(20:37):
months ago from the United States and those orders have
now been canceled. There are huge numbers of ships sitting offshore,
most of which are owned by China. I mean talking
about dozens of containerships off guang Nong, dozens of container
ships off Shanghai waiting in ports for cargo that will
never come.

Speaker 5 (20:56):
So about half of.

Speaker 6 (20:58):
All the container voyages between China and the US are
being canceled right now, right now, in real time, and
that will only make the current backlog worse. Those those
ships aren't going anywhere because no one wants to buy
the cheap Chinese goods. And many of these goods look
were made the China for the American market. For example,
the Christmas orders should be coming in now for things

(21:21):
like artificial Christmas trees. Who buys artificial Christmas trees were
not the Europeans, not the Southeast Asians. Americans do and
we're not going to be buying them this year. Who
buys trampolines for your backyard for kids? Spend three or
four five hundred dollars on a trampoline for your kids
so they can bounce around happily. For the Europeans don't

(21:42):
do that. The South Americans don't do that. The Americans
do that. That market is now gone, so there are
lots of goods that have been produced that can't be sold.
I look at Chinese videos of warehouses filled with piles
of shoes and piles of clothes, and piles of other
goods that are now being sold for pennies on the

(22:02):
dollar to people in China. They're basically going to be
have to be giving away these goods for less than
the cost of manufacturing them. I'm looking at factories now
that are closing down, workers being sent home with their
last paycheck, or maybe not being paid at all, because
if you don't pay the workers, what can they do?
They have no recourse. Empty streets and shuttered shops in

(22:24):
the surrounding cities where those workers would have gone to
buy lunch right, the noodle shops, the convenience stores, the
small retailers, they're all going out of business. Tea shops,
they're all going out of business. So for every one
factory job you lose, you lose two or three other
jobs in the surrounding area. TIMU used to do big
business in the United States. Well, guess what, they just

(22:46):
officially turned off all of their Google shopping campaigns because
they're goods which they were shipping you by mail to
the United States can't be shipped here anymore because they're
now subject to tariffs because Trump eliminated the loophole which
enable you to send a package worth less than eight
hundred dollars to the US without terraffs. Now all those

(23:07):
packages are going to be tariff and all those goods
are no longer as dirt cheap as they used to be.
So America only absorbs about, you know, one sixth of
China's exports, but consider that the next largest customer, Vietnam,
accounts for about four percent. So yeah, they're selling little
bits of stuff here and there around the world, but
they will never be able to make up over the

(23:29):
short term. The loss of the American market and that
American market is gone. China's GDP is going to take
a tremendous hit. They're going to be I estimate twenty
million workers out of a job in China over the
next couple months. That hemorrhaging has already started, it's going
to continue. That's on top of the already high youth

(23:50):
unemployment rate, where about forty percent four out of ten
of young people from sixteen to twenty five are unemployed
in China. They're going to be millions of people in
China's cities who don't have jobs and can't afford to live,
can't afford to buy food.

Speaker 1 (24:07):
Stephen, my concern, Look, it's just a concern. I'm not
saying anyone's doing anything wrong. What is China do in
response to this? We know they have a totalitarian at
the top. He doesn't have complete iron clad control. Obviously.
I've heard from several people he's afraid of his generals.
He's afraid of this. China has to respond right. If

(24:29):
she can't afford to just have the economy collapse, they
have to do something right.

Speaker 6 (24:36):
Well they do, and I think they're going to be
so caught up in the internal turmoil the social unrest
that is coming. I mean, we're talking about the fate
of tens of millions of Chinese. And consider this that,
you know, it's only a matter of time before they
take to the streets demanding what demanding food? I mean,

(24:56):
they're not they're they're not making a demand for an
increase in wages, for example. They're demanding the right to live,
the right to survive. And look, these people have nowhere
else to go. You know, I spent ten years in age.
I spent many years in China, and I lived in villages.
I lived in small towns. Forty years ago, the people

(25:18):
now out of work could have gone.

Speaker 1 (25:19):
Back to the villages.

Speaker 6 (25:20):
That's where they came from, that's where their families were.

Speaker 5 (25:23):
They could go back.

Speaker 6 (25:24):
They would have a room, they would have a house,
they could farm in the fields. Twenty years ago, they
could have gone back to the villages, and people in
the villages would have been older now, and some of
the fields would have not been farmed, but they still
could have survived. But this generation was raised by their
grandparents in the villages. Their parents grew up in the cities.

(25:44):
They grew up in the cities, and those villages are
now empty. Those grandparents are now in their seventies and
eighties and dying out. The fields aren't being farmed anymore.
Some of the villages in the marginal areas are completely abandoned.
In other words, they can't go back. There's no place
for them to go back. Two, they're stuck in the cities.
So there's a huge boat floating population of people in

(26:05):
the cities. And I think, so there's no soft rice
paddy to land on this time, there's no going home.
So yeah, I expect food ryots and sure, you've got
China with the People's Armed Police one point one million
members of something called the People's Armed Police. What is
the People's arm Police. Well, it's one million members of

(26:26):
the Chinese military who were transferred into the police force
after the Chinaman demonstrations of thirty some years ago. These
are military units. They have tanks, they have armored personnel carriers,
they have heavy artillery, and they're there specifically to make
sure there's not a rebellion against the Chinese Communist Party.

(26:47):
But I think there's going to be turmoil in China.
And here what do we do. Well, you know, we
may be paying a little more for goods from China,
which most of us can afford to do, and we
can do without the extra brands of Christmas lights or
the trampoline for the kids to jump in. But in China,
we're talking about literally a life and death situation, with

(27:08):
millions of people going to bed hungry every night, and
there's a real possibility first time since the nineteen sixties
of a famine. China can't feed itself. China imports a
third of all the grain that the people eat every year,
the soybeans, the corn, all of the other grains. They
can't grow enough food to feed their own people. So

(27:30):
I'm thinking, and actually I'm hoping that Shijian thing, the
leader of China, the Chinese Communist Party, will be so
caught up dealing with the internal turmoil and trying to
prevent the complete collapse of the economy that they won't
engage in any foreign adventures. But it's going to be
a close run thing, because what's the best way to

(27:51):
distract your people from the fact that they have hungry
bellies and they're having to tighten their belts. Will engaging
in a little far war will sometimes do that. China
has already the Chinese people have already been told by
Shi jan Ping, the leader of the Communist Party, that
they must be prepared to eat bitterness.

Speaker 7 (28:12):
Sure Kou.

Speaker 6 (28:12):
In the Chinese phrase eat bitterness, that means prepared for
hard times. And that doesn't mean just kipping a meal.
In China, that means that hard times you may starve
to death.

Speaker 1 (28:24):
Well, China has, They've had a famine or two in
the past. Steven, thank you so much. I appreciate you,
sir very much. That's good right, But I think the
same thing you think. There's going to be a response
an economy of country that size and not just going

(28:45):
to collapse without a fight. Might be some interesting times coming. Whatever.
I'm still going to sleep tonight, wake up and deal
with China tomorrow after you have your dream powder from beam.
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(29:28):
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Jesse Kevin, we'll be back, all right. Let's talk about
the DOJ. Let's talk about a suspicion that I I

(29:53):
I guess I have it. I was gonna say I
have it, and then maybe I don't completely have it,
but I believe I'm officially suspicious. And here's my suspicion.
Just I'll vent it out to you right here, and
it is what it is. I feel like we're being played,
a little played. Here's what I mean by that, because

(30:16):
this will come back to the latest, the latest announcement
from Pam Bondi and the DOJ. You know, I used
to play basketball my whole life because I'm really tall,
but that wasn't the main reason I got into basketball.
My dad was a great athlete. He was he got
a college scholarship, He had a football scholarship if he
wanted it. He was one of those guys right could

(30:38):
do anything, and he wanted that for me. Sorry, Dad,
but I didn't love basketball. I only played because he
wanted me to play, and so I didn't want to practice.
He put up a basketball hoop at the house and
he expected me to just go out there hours at
a time practice like he used to. But I didn't
want to do that. It was lazy whatever. He didn't
like it. So you know what I would do. This

(31:00):
is before the age of the cell phone, right. I
would bother my mom over and over and over again
to find out when Dad was coming home. Hey, Mom,
if you talked to Dad, Dad, call Dad coming up?
When time's Dad coming home from work? And if I
thought I knew he was coming home, I would go
out there. I'd try to time it so I went
out there right before he pulled in the driveway, and

(31:23):
I'd be practicing. I wanted him to see me practicing,
playing them, giving him a little taste of what he
wants to see. So I don't get yelled at for
not practicing. Just give him a taste of what he
wants to see. Hey, good to see out there practicing.
And then look, I don't have to actually practice. I

(31:44):
don't have to actually work hard five minutes, go shoot
some mops. Oh hey, Dad had no idea that you
were coming playing them. Pim body made it an announcement yesterday,
and if this was just like an isolated thing, I
wouldn't have any problem with it. In fact, if you
just take just this announcement sounds okay.

Speaker 8 (32:06):
Here she was, thank you all for joining us today.
We're excited to be here for the launch of the
Task Force to Eradicate Anti Christian Bias, as outlined in
the President's Executive Order. Together, this task Force will identify
any unlawful anti Christian policies, practices, or conduct across the government,

(32:31):
seek input from the faith based organizations and state governments
to end anti Christian bias.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
Okay, I like the sounds of that. Don't think that
this is me complaining about that. I like the sounds
of that. It's not hard whether you're a Christian or not.
It's not hard to look at the actions of the
United States federal government and figure out that it's a
hostile entity to you and your belief It was like
five minutes ago we had a memo from the FBI

(33:04):
announcing its intention to infiltrate the Catholic Church. Right, But
that's actually the point I want to make here. Task
force sounds good. I'm gonna get rid of that anti
Christian bias. I like the sounds of it. Who's been
arrested in the government, all the abuse of you and

(33:30):
your liberty, the insane criminality in the government. It didn't
just happen by a blob, by a fictional person. People
did this to you, people with names, people with addresses,
people who I'm assuming have risks that you can put

(33:54):
handcuffs on. I get these news conferences all at time time. Now,
look at this drug bust, look at our task force.
I'm still waiting for the government people to go to prison.
I feel like we're being played, all right, that's my suspicion.
Let's talk a bit more about local justice systems, shall we.

(34:17):
Before we get to that, let me talk to you, well,
remember that talk we just had in the opening of
the show about corporate America, how they got infected with
communism and now they use your money against you. That
means now we can't just buy whatever's on sale. We

(34:37):
can't just go whatever's easiest, most convenient. We have to
be more purposeful with where we spend our money. We
have to You do, and I do, and we all
have improvements we can make myself included. Your cell phone
might be the easiest way, might be the easiest route
to take to avoid the people who hate you and
avoid the people who love you. Verizon hates you AT

(34:58):
and T hates you T Mobile. You don't have to
take my word for it. Go look up their charitable giving.
There's your example. Pure talk doesn't do that. When Pure
Talk does give back, they don't get political with it.
They take care of veterans, getting veterans back on their feet,
getting them the healthcare they need. That's what pure talk does.

(35:20):
And they do this while charging you half. Come on,
isn't that worth switching puretalk dot com slash jessetv. We'll
be back. We talk all the time about how the

(35:42):
there is two different There are two different divisions to communism,
always has been everywhere it's ever been. There are the elites,
the ones who actually hold power. There's only a few
of those. Usually it's one, but sometimes it's committee. And
then there's the street animals. They need to go do
the leg breaking, the vandalizing, the murdering, the hurting people.
But they have to work together. You see, the street
animals aren't going to do that if they go to

(36:03):
prison every time they break the law. Breaking the laws,
what they do You need the elites to get you
out of jail. Happens all the time in every communist country,
including right here in the United States of America. Joining
me now, Dustin Greggi columnists good one from town Hall
to talk a little bit about this Minnesota story, because
Dustin I saw this interesting story. This man does twenty

(36:26):
thousand dollars in damage to a tesla and he's not
going to prison. Wow, he must have a great lawyer.
What happened?

Speaker 7 (36:34):
Yeah, you know, I wish we all had that type
of experience when we break the law, but it just
isn't the case here. But in this instance, Mary Moriotti,
she's a DA or a county attorney. In this case,
that's our turn in Minnesota for the prosecuting authority for
head of Bean County, which includes Minneapolis and the Greater
Twin Cities. Ramsey's in there too, but Joy, a different

(36:58):
attorney out there, is pretty similar, not nearly as bad
as Moriotti. But in this case, yeah, we basically are
just giving the green light here. Hey, liberals, if you
do political activism and you comuit some crimes on the process,
we're gonna let you off the hook. But of course,
Mary Moriotti, and the reason you just know this is
all political is because if a cop pulls a gun

(37:21):
on someone who's threatening the life of.

Speaker 5 (37:23):
The cop, she will go after them. Fully.

Speaker 7 (37:26):
She went after murder charges for a recent state trooper
who ended up shooting an individual suspect who ended up
pulling the car and dragging an officer. One of the
officers ended up shooting that individual to try to stop
them because their lives are at stake there in that moment.
The charges ultimately end up getting dropped at the end

(37:49):
because there's no case. The only person who was actually
pushing that forward was Moriotti herself.

Speaker 5 (37:56):
She ended up.

Speaker 7 (37:56):
Spending allocating millions of dollars for that case that never
ended up coming to fruition because it was such a
bad case. But she will go all in against someone
in a law enforcement uniform. But when it comes to
liberal activism, you know you're just gonna walk free in
these cases. And the real kicker here, in my opinion, Jesse,

(38:20):
when you look at how they're diverting and gay not
of charges. Here, they're going under a subdivision rule called diversion,
which is basically create a supplementary program that basically says, well,
if I agree to do these things, I'm gonna be
able to avoid criminal charges.

Speaker 5 (38:37):
Well, in that specific.

Speaker 7 (38:38):
Clause in Hennepin County's rules for eligibility, it caps it
at five thousand dollars in property damage. This guy committed
twenty thousand dollars. That's four times the amount. But she's
using diversion as the way it means to be able
to avoid these charges. So across the board, it's absolutely insane.
The only way to describe it is this is a

(39:00):
Soros backed county attorney who had five hundred thousand dollars
thrown into her campaign from supporting groups from him. And
this is just the way it rolls when it comes
to liberal activism in Minnesota.

Speaker 1 (39:14):
God have mercy, Your ag ain't any better. Keith Ellison
people probably know the name here is Old Keith on
the television.

Speaker 9 (39:21):
A biological male recently took first place in the girls
triple jump and is now in the school records for
three girls events. No one wants to see kids bullied
or denied opportunities. But is it fair to the girls
who have trained hard only to lose out to athletes
with clear biological advantages from their perspective, couldn't this be
considered a form of bullying.

Speaker 10 (39:41):
Well, I'm at a disadvantage because that particular case I'm
not aware of. I do know of other children in
that school district who are you know, ten, nine, eleven,
And they don't really care about winning. They just want
to be on the team. We're talking about kids who

(40:01):
have always identified as female, never have identified any other way,
and they just want to be on the team. They're
there just because they want to be a member of
the team and learn something about sportsmanship and teamwork and cooperation,
which is really the real lessons of sports.

Speaker 1 (40:22):
Dustin, I don't understand Minnesota. It's not California, it's not Connecticut.
It's not one of these places, Yet the most looney
Democrats get elected in that state. I love Minnesota. I
used to go muskie fishing in Minnesota. Could you please
explain this to me?

Speaker 7 (40:39):
Yeah, you know, I love the sidebar clip there with
Allison and Jim Schultz actually ended up helping on that
AG campaign and how frustrating it is to see some
of these voters both the way they do, especially when
these were all warnings we put out there in that campaign.
We explained step by step, Hey, here's what's happening. But unfortunately,

(41:00):
I mean the real problem in this state ultimately is
that every legacy media outlet, and I mean every single
one of them, unless you're basically Dustin Gregory or Elpha
News or Michelle Dafoya, you're not getting the full story
ever in any case. And what I love at least
about Tim Wall's ranging for VP this last time, is it.

Speaker 5 (41:21):
Put a spotlight on all of this.

Speaker 7 (41:22):
I mean, you wouldn't know my name if Tim Walls
never ran for VP.

Speaker 5 (41:26):
That's just the case, that's the reality.

Speaker 7 (41:28):
But people finally started paying attention to the state and
they started taking all this.

Speaker 5 (41:32):
APO that we have used up over all the years.

Speaker 7 (41:36):
All it's been ignored for decades, but people finally picked
up on it.

Speaker 5 (41:40):
And this is the beauty of it. I think going
to the.

Speaker 7 (41:43):
Midterms, we're gonna be in a much better position to
win these seats. I mean, in that case, Ellison, we
ended up losing by like one percentage point, even though
the topic ticket member ended up almost losing by double digits,
so we were really close.

Speaker 5 (41:55):
In that race.

Speaker 7 (41:55):
And the other good news in Moriotti's case as well,
Now we have like a record with her, we have
a record with Allison and it's a little bit longer.
But also just we actually have the ability to get
this appo out there to the public, where in some
cases we have a larger platform than the Start Tribune

(42:16):
depending if we're able to blow some up like this,
and it's the only way you guys know about this,
it's because of X, It's because of the way we've
been able to put this all together. But coming back
to Ellison there with that case, I just have to
laugh a little bit because in committee, when Riley Gaines
came to the state legislature here in Minnesota, we kept

(42:37):
hearing from representatives on the Democrats side, well, this doesn't
even happen, This isn't an issue. There aren't boys competing
in women's sports. But here we have the Attorney General
of Minnesota not only saying, oh, I'm just learning about
this instance of a girl, a boy winning the triple
jump in a girls competition. But by the way, I'm

(42:58):
gonna let you know that I know element and middle
school level kids from the same school district who are
currently doing it, and they will eventually be in high
school and be able to.

Speaker 5 (43:06):
Compete in these sports. So before it was.

Speaker 7 (43:09):
Never happening, but now it's happening at three different levels
in the one school district. So it just find it
fascinating that this has been their messaging the whole time,
but now that it's actually come here, it's in front
of their faces and they have to address the issue,
which is an eighty twenty issue. Normal people don't agree
with them on this. Now they're just avoiding it completely

(43:31):
and just hoping for the best. But now's our opportunity.
We can actually hammer down on these issues, bring them
to the voters, and actually win these elections and hopefully
bring the state back to normalcy again.

Speaker 1 (43:45):
Fingers crossed because I like Minnesota, Dustin, Thank you, sir,
I appreciate it. All right. It's a big fun of
Communist John Denver. Next, it's time to lighten the mood,
and I do I do enjoy. I enjoy Randy Winegarden.

(44:10):
She's known as Communist John Denver on this show. I
enjoy her because her lack of self awareness creates entertainment
for you, in entertainment for me. For instance, she's not
a good speaker by any stretch of the imagination voice.
It's just it's so much. Yet because of her role,
she just does speeches all all the time, and she

(44:33):
goes on television shows all the time. And she went
on with Martha McCallum and she called her, sweetheart. That
was a mistake you have.

Speaker 6 (44:44):
Actually, Martha, sweetheart, sweetheart listened to me, she does, I'm sorry,
my bad.

Speaker 3 (44:51):
It actually does matter.

Speaker 1 (44:57):
It's a good nat but now a zero
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