Illegal Immigration - podcast episode cover

Illegal Immigration

Jan 18, 202535 min
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Speaker 1

Is the Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 2

Another hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on an Ask Doctor Jesse Friday, a Friday where we had more confirmation here is We've already played you some of that.

Speaker 1

We're about to talk about the cultural ratchet that only goes left. Is that gone now or has that situation changed? We'll discuss that here in just a moment. Someone wants to know why does liberal and Peggy find value in communism? What's the appeal in it for her? We'll talk about that. Maybe a little medal of honor Japan stuff. All that and more coming up on the world famous Jesse Kelly Show. Now.

Someone said, in this one, Jay Steele, you aptly described our politics as a ratchet rather than a pendulum, never swinging back and forth, but always ratcheting further and further left. With Trump's return and countries across the West rejecting their leftist line, are we finally done ratcheting? She said, I'm emailing from a Puertoc phone. Her name's Diana, and she requested the bar. Are we finally done ratcheting? I don't know.

I doubt it, but I don't know. So let me let me first of all explain the concept really quickly for in case you're unfamiliar with it. Our culture overall, not focusing on one election or one year or something like that, but overall, our culture, for the entirety of my life, the entirety of your life, has only gone to the left, only to the left, sometimes super super fast, sometimes really really slow, but only left. That's not even debatable. Honestly,

it's not even debatable. Gay marriage is actually a great example of this. Barack Obama was not exactly a president from ancient history. Barack Obama was president from two thousand and eight to two thousan sixteen, like five minutes ago. He was president when Barack Obama was starting out. In fact, for really the entirety of his career, he was loudly and vocally anti gay marriage. Today, every single Democrat in the United States House and Senate says that trannies exist.

That is, that is warp speed moving to the left. It's just one example, but warp speed moving to the left. Why is that? Well, A big part of that is the niceness of the right. The right does not have a conquering mentality, and without an aggressive, offensive, conquering mentality, you will be conquered by the communists eventually, maybe it'll be really fast, maybe to be really slow. But because communists are aggressive, it's it's a religion of conquest. They're

aggressive and they believe in conquest. If you don't, if you feel differently, that only ends one way. And one of the greatest examples of that is actually what we're about to experience illegal immigration, immigration, mass deportation, that did all the things that come with that. So before we even get to what's coming with Trump and his presidency, let's talk about something that's been happening in this country

really since the sixties. They figured out this, of course, was a Democrat thing, and Rhino Republicans helped them with it. They figured out, Hey, these Americans, we want to do all these things, all these great society welfare programs. We want to figure out how to massively increase the size of the government and buy off as many votes as possible. How do we pass law that will ensure we can win elections in the future more of them than we're

winning Now, that's really all it came down to. And Democrats back then figured out what tyrants and evil people have known for the longest time. I read that quote from Plato a long time ago. If I remember right where they talk about a tyrant, an evil person in government, he prefers the company of foreigners because people who are citizens of his country, patriotic citizens, they don't want him to rip apart the country. They have a loyalty to

the country. You have a loyalty to America. So if you're an evil tyrant and you don't care about the country, well I'll just bring in some people from out of town. They don't love this place like you do. You're an annoyance, so I'll bring them in and they'll be my new friends. Well that happened years and years and years ago. So for decades, people were brought into this country in mass I don't mean legal immigration. I worked hard, I got

my citizenship. That I'm talking mass importation of foreigners, legal and illegal. I should point out every year there's a new legal immigration program. Wow, we definitely need fifty more thousand people from Somalia. That's what Minneapolis needs. Right. So this has been decades of this, and Republicans who love the cheap labor, Republican politicians, they wanted to keep going too.

So decade after decade after decade after decade, what we got sixty plus years of the mass importation of foreigners into the United States of America. Sixty plus years. Bringing us to now, the year twenty twenty four. How many should we deport? Let's call let's pick a number. Whatever number you pick, someone will argue against it. I would say fifty million is a good number to start on. It's probably more than that. Let's say fifty miss million

illegals are here. It's more than that if we're going over the decades, But fifty million, that's our number, fifty million illegals. Now those illegals, amongst those fifty million there are most definitely going to be hardened criminals, murderers, rapists, all those things. Everybody, for the most part, everyone wants those people gone. Well, yeah, of course, so prioritize the criminals. Everyone wants it sounds good, it sounds good. Okay, let's

move past them. Let's say there were there were five million of them. Okay, so we still have forty five million left. Some of those are women, children, Some of those are dudes. Maybe maybe not hardened criminals, but guys got a drinking problem, got a dui let's let's you know, we'll focus on the Dui group. Let's say there's two million of those. How many Americans on the right want those guys gone too? Why know you're at the radio? I do, I do?

Speaker 2

I do?

Speaker 1

Okay, good me Too's that's good? Now they're gone. Now we have forty three million left. Do we want all of them gone? Every single one? And even if you are a yes on that, think about the norms and normas in your life. Do they want all of them gone? Men? Women, children, all fifty million gone? Most people, if they're answering, honestly say no, Well no, not the kids.

Speaker 3

No. No.

Speaker 1

If they've been paying taxes here for a while, well no, he's a law abiding citizen. He's been my landscaper for some time. But look, most people will get there. But we're not even having an immigration talk. This is about the cultural pendulum. If they imported fifty million and you deport forty nine million, we've still gone left. The ratchet has still gone their way. We're still not back to where we were before they started the mass importation of foreigners.

We are still further left than we were before. But because we don't have an aggressive mindset of conquest. We try to bail water out that they purposely let in on every issue. This goes well beyond immigration. On every issue. We will slowly, but surely, but surely try to bail water out on this and bail water out on that. But you're never gonna get all the water. I mean, look, we don't want to just focus on the bailing water after all. We want to we want to be kind

about things. And you know what, DEI is actually a great example of this. Joe Biden's White House. This just came out earlier today. The I offices are closing all over the country, private corporations, the FBI just shuttered their DEI office, the Biden White House. Of course, they're Democrats. They're not laying off it. They put this out today.

Speaker 3

President Biden promised that he would have a cabinet that looks like America, and he did.

Speaker 4

We're talking about this incredible, full throated commitment to equity.

Speaker 3

There's more women, more women of color, more people on the cabinet with perspectives that have never been around a decision making table before.

Speaker 1

I'm a member of President Biinen's cabinet. We got we got, we got we got varies, so equalis allus. Well, what's DEI? DEI is aggressive cultural Marxism that has open institutionalized anti white racism. That's exactly what it is, anti white man racism. That's what DEI is. It is the open, very very open and honor acknowledgment that you will be prejudiced against what against white men. That's what DEI is. Now, does closing a DEI office, let's say, at the FBI, we'll

make it about the FBI. Does closing the DEI office of the FBI. Does it get us back to where we should be. Let's talk about that briefly, and then we'll move on to some other ass doctor Jesse things. But it is.

Speaker 2

The Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday. Member, you can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. I just want to finish this thought about the cultural ratchet and how we've only gone left, and I brought it up when it comes to immigration, illegal immigration, you bring in fifty million people, even if you deport forty nine, you have not done enough.

Speaker 1

You haven't even gotten back to where you were before period. Now culturally, right now, DEI is on the news by and puts out a DEI video from the White House. Today, the FBI announced last night their DEI office is shutting down, and we're all celebrating. That's very nice, okay, but does that get us back to where we should be? How did the how'd the DEI office start? How did institutionalized anti white man racism? How did it get there? Who put it there? What are their names? And let's say

their names are Chris and Corey. If Chris and Corey are at the FBI, working anywhere in the government, and they decided to institutionalize anti white man racism known as DEI and start an entire DEI wing for the federal Law Enforcement arm so the FBI could fill itself up with a bunch of evil communists who will infiltrate your church. Then I need Chris and Cory arrested. They have to be arrested. Closing down the DEI office does not get

us back to where we should be. Getting us back to where we should be involves closing down the DEI office and throwing Chris and Corey in prison. So the next little animal in the government who wants to do things like that is too afraid to do so, and then we put into place rules that we used to have in this country that say you're not allowed to

discriminate against anyone for any reason. Or if you want to take it a step further when it comes to private businesses, maybe we do what we should have done all along and say you should be able to discriminate against anyone for any reason. That's part of living in a free country. If I want to announce that I'm all hiring Asians, well I should be allowed to do so. If I want to announce that I'm not serving the Indians in my restaurant, no more Indians in here, I

wouldn't recommend it. Probably not morally right, but legally it should be. But you see, you have to untie, not after, not after, not after, not after, not to get back to where you were originally. And the truth is we are way too soft and nice on the right to do those things. That's why you've heard me yeo. When it comes to illegal immigration about this line, so many of them are taking, well, we got to start with

the criminals first. They're all freaking criminals. The public voice, the messaging should be, if it is in large part it is I want to give them credit. They've really been great. But in large part the messaging sho be if you're here illegal and we find you, you are gone. Period. In fact, if your children are illegal and they're in school, better pull them out and go back home. We'll find them. Period.

If you're illegal and you seek out emergency medical care in this country, you'll get the medical care you need, but you will never leave the hospital and step foot in the United States of America again. You go right from there to the bus back to where you came from. That should be the messaging, loudly, all of you gone. And then then you find the people responsible, and I should note the evil demons responsible for what they've done

to this country. They're currently worried about being found. That's why you're even starting to get a little bit of finger pointing. Alejandro Majorcis head of DHS, took over his head of DHS and use his pole to open up the United States of America to murder and rapists. He flew and bust as many foreigners into this country as he possibly could. And now the books are about to be opened because Donald Trump won an election. May Orcis is worried about exactly what I just talked about.

Speaker 5

I think none of those things. If you could go back, you would do differently.

Speaker 4

Yes, And you have to understand something and this is not specific to government, but to any large organization, including a government administration. People have different views on what the correct policies should be, what the correct operational measures should be. Those disagreements, those different views are voiced, decisions are made, and then everyone marches in unity together. That is the nature of a large organization, and the government is no different.

Speaker 5

But just so I'm clear that are you suggesting you your view, your own personal views about how to operate this or at odds or there was a distinction between your personal approach and how you would have wanted to do it and how maybe your bosses wanted to do it.

Speaker 4

I don't want to get into the deliberative process where one team and it's one effort. But this is not a revolutionary concept that there are disparate views when one has many people involved in the decision making process.

Speaker 1

He was real delicate about it, but you heard exactly what I just heard. What's he doing there? He's making sure if the hearings do come after he's gone, that he's setting himself up for what and me I didn't want to do. I didn't want to open up the border. I didn't want to bring fourteen thousand Haitians in overnight. I didn't want to fill up Springfield, Ohio. I didn't want to bring that rapist me. Whatn' me? Whatn't me? The communist fears being found for his crimes, and the

right has never had the will to do it. And that's why that ratchet stay a ratchet that will stop when government people start getting arrested. As I've said many times before, not one or two government people arrested. They need to be obliterated, just like my blender, what Chris, the Obliterator blender is the best freaking thing I've ever bought in my entire life, premium blender. And I know there's all these well we're the best blender out there. Obliterator.

You realize Chefman went out and found the motor guy. They like, how can the thing handle twenty years of daily use? You can't believe the stuff we put in ours? How can it handle that? Well? Quality was a focus. Quality was a supreme focus of Chefman, and now they have the Obliterator. It won the red Dot Best Designed Concept Award. My wife loves it on the counter. We use ours every day, oftentimes twice a day. Want the

best blender you've ever had in your life? Chefman dot com, C H E F M A N dot com, or you can go pick it up in the nearest Walmart if you want it. The obliterator gosh, I love this freaking thing. All right, let's talk, you know what, Let's talk a little bit of history. Then we'll go back to normal times.

Speaker 2

Hang on, it is the Jesse Kelly Show.

Speaker 1

On a for Friday. Remember, if you missed any part of the show, you can download the whole thing on iheard Spotify iTunes. You can leave us voicemails since we don't really do phone calls here eight seven seven three seven seven four three seven three.

Speaker 2

I live on the East Coast and I've had it.

Speaker 1

What's the better choice? Montana or Wyoming? Seriously? Thanks? Wyoming or Montana. Okay, So, first of all, for you Easterners, Southerners, Californians, people thinking about making the trek into the Rocky Mountains, one great move, great move. It's just the most beautiful place in the country. But I'm just going to explain a couple of things about living there that I'll get into the Montana Wyoming thing because they're very similar. First, I know this is a very very obvious point, but

winter is an entirely different animal there. I'm not saying you can't handle it, or you know, they're all superhuman up there. I'm not saying that at all. But you have to prepare yourself for seven months of winter. Eight months of winter. I remember in Montana. Just look, it's just a mindset. It's just your cold weather gear is going to have to improve you. I used to sit around and this happened to all of us. You would end up longing for things that normal people will take

for granted. For instance, enter can it's not consistent. Can last for so long that by the end of it, you'd be driving around and you would find yourself longing to drive on dry roads, just a regular paved road. Something. If you don't experience it, you take for granted all the time. Everyone listening in Alaska is nodding their head right now. Something you take for granted, something I take

for granted. Now that I live in Texas, I've never gone extended periods of time at all without having a dry road surface, having to adjust your driving because everything's snowy or everything's ice. In Montana, you can go six, seven, eight months without laying eyes on dry roads. It's I'm not talking you out of it. I'm really not. I'm trying to prepare you. It's a different mindset in places like that. Another thing, and this is really basic for

everyone ever wear. But I'll tell you something. I try to teach my sons, although I could freaking kill them because this message is not getting through enough yet when we're leaving maybe it's raining here, maybe it's cold here,

maybe it's hot here. I tell them, whenever we're getting ready to get in the car and go somewhere, practice or something, you need to dress as if you will walk as if your car is going to go into the ditch, as if something you don't, dress as if you're in a climate controlled car, Dress as if you have to walk at all times. Dress that way, right, that's kind of a fairly old lesson. Yet still those

little medias, Uh, we were only going to school. I can wear shorts, you know whatever, butt in Montana and play in Wyoming. This applies to that to people die all the time die because their car goes into a ditch and they're not prepared. It is not an option for you to have a foil blanket or some granola bars,

some waters something like that. You must at all times keep something in your car that will allow you to survive the night in your car in ten twenty below zero, because it is something that may happen to you there. And there are remote roads where no one's gonna drive by or even see you if they do until the next day. What Chris Chris says, why would you want to move to the eighth circle of Hell? Okay, So Texan, allow me explain this to you. What's the appeal of it? Well,

like I just said, it's very very remote. Wyoming's the same way, very sparsely populated. Montana is theact same way, very sparsely populated. And there are positives and negatives that as I just said, you're out on some two lane road, you're up a canyon somewhere. You might be on your own for a day or two before anyone sees you. But remember I told you I used to go elk hunting with my own man, and we would have we'd go elk hunting in various places in Montana. But he

had this bow camp where we'd go bow hunting. That's a different kind of hunting for you hunters. I know you already know you use a bow, but you totally hunt differently. You have to bugle the elk in and then shoot him at the arrow when he comes in. It's intense. Anyway, we at elk camp during the summer months, you would have to prepare, meaning we would go, we'd get our horses, we get our mules packed, and we would ride up into the mountains. And when it was

dry in summertime, you would dig your facilities. We would bring non perishable foods, bury them up there in barrels. We would bring I mean, we built a little toilet. We dug out toilet ditch and brought a toilet set up there, so you can like it was that kind of elk camp where you had to prep it ahead

of time. But then winter would come and we would get back on the horses and we would ride into Montana and you would be up up in the mountains and you would look around and you were alone miles and miles and miles any direction, fifty miles in any direction. There may not be another human being. You are alone in the mountains. See look look at Chris coming around on it already, he's already doing that. Sounds kind of cool. You see what I mean? Why would you live like that? Well,

that's part of the appeal of living like that. The danger of it, the remoteness of it, is also part of the appeal of it. It's a very different way to live than what you're used to if you grow up, if you grew up in Mobile or you grew up in Boston, or you grew up And I'm not saying it's better or worse or really not. I prefer it over most of those things, but it is different and you are going to have to prepare yourself for that

kind of difference. Now, the last thing I will say on this because I do want to answer your question. Then we'll get back to politics. And I know we have to get to the Japanese World War II stuff, which I will get to next. I teased it, and I didn't get to it because I got distracted. So these rocky mountain areas like Wyoming in Montana, in a smaller way, they suffer the same thing the rest of

the state suffer. You know, here in Texas, Texas is red. Now, it's very red, but it should be the reddest state ever. Why isn't it Dallas, Houston, Austin, San Antonio, California. California should be blood red. Go look at a congressional map at California. It's just red except for San Diego, San Francisco, except the big cities. Now, big cities don't necessarily exist

in Montana or Wyoming. But when you get into a beautiful mountain city that is kind of one of the central hubs, like Bozeman, like where I grew up, Bozeman is completely left. Now if you go into the city limits of Bozeman, you're gonna have pride parades the same way you are in Manhattan. Same thing happens in Austin, Texas. Same thing happens in Birmingham, Alabama. Same thing happens every place is in Florida. You know, we all love the Free State of Florida. Gosh, but we practically live there

anymore now, bouncing back and forth. Florida's got these little blue places. There are little blue places in Montana and Wyoming. So don't just pick a city and move there. And think you're moving to Red America. It's further to the right than Sacramento, but it's further to the left than you think you're getting. But you get outside of those places the most wonderful, hospitable people. I remember it growing up. I've never lived in a place like it in Montana.

When it's a two lane road, just jew and the other lane right, two lane road. That's how we described it. People described that differently. Every single person who drove by waved at you, even if it was just a finger off the steering wheel, not the middle finger, Chris, and you waved back. It was how you did things. You because it's remote, you help people. You never drove by someone in a ditch or someone. You help other people. It's part of living there. And it was wonderful there.

Now I'll do Japan and back to politics. Hang on the Jesse Kelly Show on a Friday. Remember you can email the show Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. Jesse consider reading the Medal of Honor for Commander O'Kaine US Navy. After the sinking of the USS Tang, he and his crew were taken to Japanese pow camps where they remained until the war ended. After the war, Okine was awarded the Medal of Honor, while the Tang was awarded four

Battle stars in two presidential unit citations. The Tang was ultimately credited with sinking thirty three ships totally one hundred and sixteen thousand, four hundred and fifty four tons. I'll get to that in a moment. I'm a submarine, a submarine ner vet in twenty years older than you. Love your show, and knowing someone younger is watching out for the young Vets gives me hopes. Stay on the air as long as you can go Navy, he says, gosh, jeez,

why are you no? In all seriousness, Okay, so tons, I just wanted to do a couple quick things on this because because some of this stuff can get confusing if you're not a history nerd. When you hear World War two vets war in the Pacific Vets in particular, although this took place in the Atlantic as well, When you hear them describe the tons, the tones, what about the tons? I want to explain what they're talking about. Like, the Tang was credited over one hundred and sixteen thousand tons.

Those are goods that were heading to Japan or from Japan as Japan was trying to supply their other outposts in the Pacific. What we did to Japan and World War Two, it's very, very fascinating. It's essentially a more modern version of an ancient siege. If I brought my army to your city, and I laid siege to your city, what's the idea behind a siege. I'm hopefully going to take the city. I'm going to make efforts to take

the city. But whether I can take the city soon or take the city later, your city's going to be getting weaker as I surrounded. Why I'm starving you to death. I'm starving you. You're not allowed to bring things in in mass, You're not allowed to send things out. Trade stops. Your city under siege gets cut off. We during World War Two did the most ridiculously massive build up of the navy of any navy in the history of mankind.

There are guys, and there were guys during World War Two who argued to this day a pretty good argument that we overbuilt it, that we under that we that we underserved other portions of the military by going all in with the navy. We had more ships than you can imagine. And what we did with that was, I'm gonna set the Atlantic aside. What we did with Germany,

but not. What we did with that was we shut the waters in the Pacific down around Japan, sinking ship after ship after I'm not just talking about their navy ships. We were singing sinking merchant vessels in mass You were not allowed to bring shipments of stuff into Japan. The United States of America stopped it. If it was on the water and it wasn't our ship. It was going down to the bottom of the Pacific. And remember, as we talked about before, nineteen forty two was our bad

year really all around. That was our bad year where they were still on the move. They were beating us up pretty good. They beat us up in the water pretty good. But after nineteen forty two, for the Nazis and the Japanese, that ended, they were they never had the upper hand again. They were always losing ground from

that point. Post nineteen forty two, we just simply filled up the waters of the Pacific with submarines, destroyers, cruisers, battleships, aircraft carriers, all these different wonderful ships and we just sunk everything we saw and he brought up Okaine. I believe his name was Dick. I think it was Richard Okaine, if I remember right. I didn't look this up for him, and Chris looked it up. Commander of the Tang, Commander Okain,

and I believe it was Dick Okaine. But Dick Okaine and the Tang and his and his crew to be on a submarine in World War two, really anytime. As much as I hate give giving credit to the Navy, I really admire the service. It's a tough service. During World War Two. I don't know if it's still this way. It was purely volunteer, purely volunteer, and understandably so it was insanely dangerous. Remember back then, if your submarine went down under the water, you were it was Dick Okaine,

it was Richard Okain. Okay, I thought that. So you were so slow, you were borderline, not even moving. You wonder how these submarines got blown up while they're under the water. The planes fly over and they see them, and you can't move. Destroyers on the surface looking for you will run you down like nothing if you're under the water, so you have to be on the surface if you want to move at any speed. But the idea of being on the surface, yeah, you need the speed,

but you have no armor. You're not a battleship with layers of armor and aircraft carrier. It is paper thin on a submarine. And submarines died by airplane all the time. Airplanes would find them, stray them, You're finished. It was insanely dangerous to be a submariner in World War Two.

Or sub mariner, I know, everyone pronounces that differently. These guys like Dick o'caine were alpha male hunters, though when you read their stories, and there were a lot of these guys, mush Morton, there were a lot of great

submarine or captains. These guys all they wanted, give me working torpedoes and send me out, and they would go out into the deepest depths of enemy territory and they would go try to shoot down everything Japanese they could find, and a lot of them died because the Japanese knew what was happening, and they knew how important it was to stop the submarines from stopping their merchant shipping, so they constantly had planes on patrol ships on patrol trying

to find it, and these guys they cruisy submarines right into some big Japanese harbor and start sinking ships. Now that feels good when the torpedoes are landing. It doesn't feel quite as good when they're dropping depth charges on top of your face. Crazy bravery from the United States Navy and World War Two. As much fun as I have mocking the other branches, really admire the service man.

I've told history stories about that before that. To be on some big floating ship full of fuel and bombs and bullets and all around you the steel is shrapnel if something explodes. To be on a major ship exchanging gunfire with another major ship, I couldn't do it. I don't have the guts. I could never do it. It terrifies me. All right, let's talk about the communist mindset. Let's go back to some politics, shall we. Why do they find value in communism

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