The Kevin Jackson Show

Exhausted Democrats - Ep 26-244

38 min · 22 jun 2026
aflevering Exhausted Democrats - Ep 26-244 artwork

Beschrijving

Father’s Day. What happens when credibility becomes a commodity? When narratives matter more than facts? When the referees start betting on the game? Because that's where we seem to be. Source: Washington Free Beacon [https://freebeacon.com/media/a-media-watchdog-is-helping-to-train-ai-models-it-says-chinese-propaganda-is-more-reliable-than-many-american-news-sources/] [X] SB – John Stossel on media suck-ups Obama’s Library Opens to the Sound of America Shrugging The most remarkable thing about the opening of Barack Obama’s presidential library wasn't who showed up. It was who didn't. Nobody. Not literally, of course. The television cameras found enough dignitaries, donors, former staffers, and professional applauders to fill the frame. But for a man once marketed as a political messiah, the public response resembled the grand opening of a new Department of Motor Vehicles. No protests. No celebrations. No national conversation. Just a collective shrug from a country that looked at the event and decided to reorganize its garage instead. The media desperately tried to present the ceremony as a historic moment. Yet something felt off from the beginning. It was as if everyone involved understood they were participating in a reunion tour for a band whose biggest hits came twenty years ago. And then Joe Biden arrived. Watching Biden at these events has become a uniquely American experience. It's like watching a tourist wander into the wrong wedding reception and decide to stay because the food looks good. At one point, Biden appeared to be searching for his granddaughter on stage. This is no longer surprising. Biden's public appearances increasingly resemble scavenger hunts conducted without clues. Somewhere in the middle of this search party, Barack Obama managed to perform his favorite political magic trick. He made Biden disappear. Again. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

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aflevering Detached from Reality - Ep 26-252 artwork

Detached from Reality - Ep 26-252

Folks, I have never seen a group of people more detached from reality than today's Democrats. I'm talking about a complete separation from observable facts. The kind of disconnect where everybody in the room is pretending the emperor is wearing Armani when the poor guy is standing there in tube socks and regret. Take Kamala Harris. Because Democrats have a problem they don't want to discuss. Because if you were transported here from ten years ago and I told you that the sitting vice president became the party's presidential nominee, you'd naturally assume she'd be the frontrunner for the next election cycle. That's how politics works. Or at least that's how it used to work. But we aren't living in the old political order anymore. We're living in Trump World. Everything changed. The rules changed. The assumptions changed. The media changed. The voters changed. And Democrats still haven't figured out they're playing a different game. So Kamala Harris sits down for an interview and gets asked about running for president. Simple question. Not quantum physics. Not the origins of the universe. Not whether pineapple belongs on pizza. A straightforward question. And what does America get? We get one of Kamala's patented verbal escape rooms. [X] SB – Harris Want to believe in systems. Lost trust in systems. Debris at the end of this administration. Worse before better. She says people have lost trust in the system. Okay. Fair enough. Then she says at the end of this administration there will be a lot of debris. Debris? Debris from what? A government? An election? A demolition project? Did she accidentally switch over to The Weather Channel? Then she says it's irresponsible to talk about what we need to do. Wait. What? That's literally why you're there. Imagine going to a doctor. "Doctor, my arm is hanging off." "It would be irresponsible for me to discuss treatment." Imagine calling a plumber. "My basement is flooded." "It would be irresponsible to discuss pipes at this time." Then she says people want things to be better. Really? What an astonishing discovery. Next she'll reveal that people enjoy oxygen and generally prefer food to starvation. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

26 jun 202638 min
aflevering Metaphors and More - Ep 26-251 artwork

Metaphors and More - Ep 26-251

You know what's funny about politics? Most of us didn't sign up for it. We got drafted. There was a time when politics occupied about the same amount of space in your life as competitive curling. You knew it existed. You assumed somebody was doing it. And every four years you'd glance up from your life, vote for somebody, and then go back to worrying about things that actually mattered. Now? Politics has become America's most invasive species. People who couldn't name their city councilman twenty years ago can now explain the federal budget, judicial appointments, international trade, election law, and the dietary habits of every member of Congress. We have accidentally created a nation of amateur political scientists. And the reason is simple. We had no choice. I'd wager that your political knowledge has increased every decade for the last forty years. Not because you wanted it to. Because reality kept forcing itself into the conversation. It's like golf. When you're a beginner, golf is wonderful. You hit the ball. You chase the ball. You lose the ball. Everybody laughs. You buy a hot dog. Great day. Then you get better. Suddenly you're studying swing planes, grip pressure, club faces, launch angles, wind conditions, green speed, and whether Mercury is in retrograde. The game stops being a game and becomes a graduate-level physics experiment conducted by emotionally unstable people wearing khakis. Politics works the same way. At first, you think elections are simple. The best ideas win. Then you learn how money works. Then you learn how media works. Then you learn how bureaucracy works. Then you learn how narratives are manufactured. Then you discover that half the game is being played backstage by people you've never heard of. That's when you find yourself staring into the political rabbit hole thinking, "Wait a minute...who exactly wrote these rules?" And perhaps more importantly... Can they be changed? For millions of Americans, Donald Trump answered that question. Not because people agreed with him on everything. Not because he's perfect. Not because he arrived riding a unicorn carrying the Constitution in one hand and a bald eagle in the other. He answered it because he proved the rules weren't laws of nature. The establishment had spent decades convincing Americans that everything was fixed. This is just how Washington works. This is how trade works. This is how immigration works. This is how government works. Nothing to see here. Move along. Then Trump walked in like a guy who had entered the wrong conference room. He started asking  See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

26 jun 202638 min
aflevering Crooked Optics - Ep 26-250 artwork

Crooked Optics - Ep 26-250

So Italy’s Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni is out there saying, “Italy and I never beg.” Strong line. Very cinematic. You can almost hear the orchestral music and see the wind machine doing its thing. But then comes the part that makes you tilt your head like a confused newsroom intern: the suggestion that the leader of the United States shows up, and somehow there’s resistance to the photo op. With Donald Trump. Now pause right there. Because in today’s political ecosystem, Trump could walk into a room, solve a Rubik’s Cube blindfolded, donate a million dollars to charity, and the headline would still somehow be: “Man With Opinions Causes Mild Atmospheric Disturbance.” So when Meloni says she doesn’t understand why the President behaves this way toward allies, and that it’s “a pity he doesn’t show the same determination with the enemies of the West,” I have questions. Not rhetorical ones. Real ones. The kind that come with raised eyebrows and a slow sip of coffee. First, “behaves this way” is doing a lot of emotional lifting there. That phrase is like a diplomatic suitcase stuffed with assumptions, interpretations, and at least three editorial board meetings. Because what exactly is the behavior? Is it negotiating aggressively? Is it not doing the usual global handshake ballet where everyone agrees on everything in public and contradicts it in private? Or is it simply that Trump doesn’t perform the “everyone is my best friend” theater that global politics has quietly standardized? And this is where the irony starts doing gymnastics. We’re told constantly that Trump is unpredictable, brash, difficult. Yet somehow he’s also the only president who manages to trigger simultaneous confusion and moral disappointment across continents for not behaving like a polite bureaucratic suggestion box. Meanwhile, the idea that leaders might not always be thrilled about photo ops with him gets treated like breaking news. As if international diplomacy is supposed to be a yearbook signing session where everyone writes, “Stay cool, best ally ever.” But let’s step back into Meloni’s critique: why not show the same determination with the enemies of the West? That’s the part that sounds noble until you realize the assumption baked inside it. It assumes everyone agrees on who the enemies are, how you “show determination,” and what counts as effective action versus performative action. Because in modern geopolitics, “determination” can mean anything from sanctions, to speeches, to carefully worded statements that are strong enough to trend on social media but soft enough to survive translation. So here’s the quiet question underneath all of it: are we talking about real policy disagreement, or are we talking about style disagreement dressed up as moral clarity? Because style is where things get interesting. Trump operates like a geopolitical highlighter. He doesn’t just underline the sentence, he circles it three times and writes “FIX THIS” in the margin. That’s not subtle. That’s not delicate. But it is unmistakable. And unmistakable is something global politics often pretends it doesn’t need, while secretly relying on it when things get messy. Now add the media layer, and the whole thing becomes a hall of mirrors with press passes. One leader says something. Another reacts. A third interprets the reaction. Then analysts interpret the interpretation. And somewhere in there, the original sentence has evolved into something that barely resembles its birth certificate. So when headlines suggest tension, disagreement, or “pity,” what I hear is something simpler: different expectations colliding in a very public room with very expensive lighting. And let’s be honest, photo politics matters more than people admit. A picture with a world leader is no longer just a picture. It’s a signal. It’s a caption waiting to be written by someone who already knows the ending they want. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

Gisteren38 min
aflevering Measuring Motivation - Ep 26-249 artwork

Measuring Motivation - Ep 26-249

So here we are again, staring at the political scoreboard like it’s a football game where one team keeps showing up with less than half their player, but still swears they’re the team to beat. Let’s start with the question floating around the room like a smoke alarm nobody wants to admit is real. Who’s more motivated to vote? Democrats or Republicans? Because if you listen to the data chatter being passed around, Democrats allegedly lost something like 2.1 million voters during the Biden years while Republicans picked up ground. Now, whether you treat that like gospel or just political weather patterns, the narrative being built is clear: one side looks like it’s tightening its boots and heading to the polls with purpose, while the other looks like it’s misplacing its keys and calling it “a coalition strategy.” And motivation matters. Voting isn’t a philosophy exam. It’s a turnout machine. It’s who shows up when the coffee is bad, the weather is worse, and the ballot line is longer than a TSA checkpoint in August. Republicans, right now, are being portrayed as the side that treats elections like a pit stop in a NASCAR race. Quick in, decisive, loud, and slightly suspicious of anything that looks like it might slow them down. Democrats? They’re often described, fairly or unfairly, as the side that needs a three-part documentary, a focus group, and a mood board just to decide whether they’re energized. Now layer in the political earthquakes people are talking about. There’s the narrative of Trump tightening influence inside the GOP, where endorsements feel less like suggestions and more like gravitational fields. Even Republicans who used to treat him like a weather system they could ignore are now adjusting their calendars around his forecast. And depending on who you ask, there’s talk of foreign policy wins being reinterpreted through wildly different lenses. Some say decisive strength, others say dangerous theater. Either way, the temperature rises, and everyone argues about who actually owns the thermostat. Inside the GOP, you’ve got the usual tension between establishment instincts and populist momentum, and the establishment is starting to look like it keeps showing up to a mosh pit wearing a necktie asking for quieter music. Meanwhile Democrats are dealing with a different kind of pressure. Border policy debates, crime narratives in major cities, inflation hangovers that still echo in grocery aisles, and constant arguments about messaging that somehow always ends in the phrase “we need better communication,” which is political code for “nobody agrees on what we’re saying but we all agree it didn’t work.” Then comes the fundraising ecosystem debates, where critics and defenders of major platforms like ActBlue get dragged into arguments about transparency, influence, and whether modern fundraising is a digital democracy engine or a high-speed blender for political cash. Everyone claims the moral high ground, and nobody trusts the terrain. So you end up with two parties telling two completely different stories about enthusiasm. One side says: “We are consolidating, energized, and expanding.” The other side says: “We are evolving, diverse, and structurally misunderstood.” And the voters? They’re somewhere in the middle, wondering why every election feels like it was designed by two rival improv troupes who refuse to acknowledge the other is on stage. Here’s the irony that keeps slipping through the cracks. If one side is really losing millions of voters, and the other is gaining, then motivation isn’t just a talking point. It’s the whole engine. Because elections don’t care about speeches. They care about who shows up when nobody feels like showing up. And that’s where this gets interesting. Because if the enthusiasm gap is real, it doesn’t just shape elections. It reshapes strategy, messaging, and maybe even what “base” means in the first place. So the question becomes less about who is right, and more about who is willing to walk through the rain, stand in line, and treat voting like it’s not optional entertainment. And that brings us to the real tension for tonight. If one party is gaining motivated voters and the other is allegedly shedding them, is this a temporary swing… or a long-term identity shift in American politics? Or put differently: Are we watching political momentum… or political erosion? And if voters are truly shifting this dramatically, what does that say about the issues nobody in Washington wants to admit are driving it? Call me on this one: Is turnout becoming the only poll that actually matters anymore? And if so, which party do you believe shows up more reliably when it counts? And finally, is the enthusiasm gap real… or just the most expensive illusion in modern politics? See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

Gisteren38 min
aflevering Democrats Can't Win - Ep 26-248 artwork

Democrats Can't Win - Ep 26-248

Democrats can’t win, because they have no money, no message… [X] SB – African Union top diplomat on USAID She said essentially, the best thing to happen to Africa is the disbanding of USAID Sole purpose. Act as if they are rescuing Africa. Filling gaps. Gov’t advocacy. On paper good. Wolf in sleep’s clothing. Destabilizing governments. [X] SB – Talarico Imagination limited by background and identity. whiteness, masculinity… Limits his imagination of what’s possible. Targeting Elon Clearly the Left want to destroy the world’s first trillionaire who happens to be African American. https://x.com/JohnLeFevre/status/2069182772728451498 [https://x.com/JohnLeFevre/status/2069182772728451498] NYT headline yesterday: A driver in a Tesla vehicle that was engaged in automated driver-assistance mode crashed into a house in Texas and killed a woman. Today: Tesla logs confirm the driver manually overrode the self-driving system and had the accelerator floored the entire time. The first headline (lie) gets all the clicks. The facts get overlooked. And the NYT doesn't bother with a correction because it doesn't fit their narrative. [X] SB – Black guy describes Leftist racism Bite you with a smile. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy [https://art19.com/privacy] and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info [https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info].

24 jun 202638 min