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So, um, so that's my news.
Is that we're not going to have election results tonight in my opinion,
based upon what specifically is taking place in Dallas County.
Unfortunately, this is what Republicans like to do.
And so they specifically target it, Dallas County,
and I think we all know why.
So, um, I want you to enjoy yourselves,
but I won't be back tonight because I have no idea of when we're going to get results
and I fully anticipate it won't be until tomorrow.
Some.
I love you all too.
Thank you so very much for being here.
Love you down.
I love you down, Dallas.
Welcome to the Harmony Channel.
I'm Jason Whitlock, your host, Jasmine Crockett last night.
The results did come in last night.
Jasmine Crockett lost the Democrat Senate primary.
She will not be moving to the Senate from the house.
Jasmine Crockett's political career.
Now in jeopardy, we will talk about that with Virgil Walker,
with Chad O'Jackson, and with Shamika Michelle.
Is this a good thing?
Is this, is she, is there a television gig on MSNBC or CNN?
Just around the corner for Jasmine Crockett?
Or are we done with Jasmine Crockett and all of her ghetto ratchetness?
Has she played this into some sort of media role?
Or will she be a political factor moving forward?
There's a couple of.
Comparables.
Cory Bush in St. Louis was one of these woke black Democrats
that came in loudly, talking nonsense, and then disappeared.
Let's play slot 13 just to remind you all just in case you forgot who Cory Bush was.
And back, I'm coming to tear your kingdom down.
I believe Cory Bush was a member of the squad or wanted to be a member of the squad.
You know, she was a problem, a loud ghetto voice from St. Louis until she wasn't.
And then she went out threatening APAC because she says APAC is why she went down.
Of course, you guys remember Jamal Bowman, another member of the squad,
another one of these woke leftists.
Let me refresh your memory of him.
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
Bowman!
You remember Jamal Bowman, he pulled the fire alarm because on accident or whatever.
A nut job, a woke leftist clown, he has disappeared and gone quietly into the night.
Well, the same thing happened to Jasmine Crockett.
I want to play you a highlight from this was part of her campaign for the Senate.
And I'm hoping I'm saying the guy's name right, James Tarliko.
I hope I said this name right.
He won.
I think he's a far leftist and probably be worse than Jasmine Crockett.
But here's how Jasmine Crockett, she didn't campaign against her number one opponent.
She campaigned against Donald Trump.
Let's play sock 15.
How about this new one they have?
The new star, Crockett.
How about her?
She's the new star of the Democrat Party, Jasmine Crockett.
They're in big trouble.
But you have this woman, Crockett.
She's a very low IQ person.
I watched her speak the other day.
She's definitely a low IQ person.
Crockett!
Oh man, oh man.
She's a very low IQ person.
Somebody said the other day she's one of the leaders of the party.
I said you got to be kidding.
Now they're going to rely on Crockett.
Crockett's going to bring him back.
Who told her that was going to work?
Who...
I letting Trump talk accurately about you on camera for 30 seconds.
That somehow was going to win you election.
I guess it was going to...
How dare you call Jasmine Crockett low IQ?
She presents herself in a low IQ way?
I don't blame Donald Trump for doing that.
And finally, here's another one of Jasmine Crockett's best moments
when I think Marjorie Taylor Green maybe questioned her weave
or eyelashes or something and Jasmine Crockett snapped.
Play the clip.
Calm down.
No, no, no, no.
Because this is what I'm going to do.
Hey, Ms. Crockett, you're not recognized, Ms. Crockett.
I can't see you with your yelling.
Calm down.
No, please calm down.
Don't sound me to calm down.
Calm down.
Because y'all talk calm down.
No way.
And then you're out of control.
Because if I come in and talk to you about her,
y'all don't have a problem.
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Yeah, that's when she went in.
Well, a bad built bee.
I think she called a Marjorie Taylor Green.
But Jasmine Crockett for now is done.
Shemika Michelle, Virgil Walker, Chad Jackson.
Welcome to the show.
I'm going to start with Chad just because he's from Texas,
lives in the Dallas area and would be directly impacted
by Jasmine Crockett or the death of Jasmine Crockett.
Should we be celebrating or what's your feeling, Chad,
about the Jasmine Crockett losing last night?
Yeah, so I think that we shouldn't be so quick to do
a victory lap or to gloat about this,
simply because of the fact that her opponent,
James Talleriko, as far worse than Jasmine Crockett,
is in terms of his effectiveness in pushing
the agenda that they're pushing.
It's interesting because, you know,
Jasmine Crockett has become this kind of household name
in a negative way for a lot of Republicans and conservatives.
For the very reason that she's very boisterous
and she's, you know, very out there
and what many people would call ghetto
and the cameras are always quick to pick that up.
Her antics on those congressional hearings
has made her a bit of a spectacle in the eyes of many
and as a result of this,
people wanted for her to be defeated in this primary race.
However, I don't think that people are looking at this
in a three-dimensional way.
People tend to look at it in a two-dimensional way.
As I say, the squeaky will gets to Greece
and so for that reason a lot of people wanted her defeated
when James Talleriko is much more silent
but he's much more deadly.
Talleriko represents this.
He represents a lot of what's wrong
but he also is a heretic and he's a fraud.
He is a proponent of the social gospel,
the liberation theology.
He has his so-called faith-forward agenda
where he adheres to a kind of progressive theology
and he's been effective in terms of pushing leftist, secularist policies.
Here in the state of Texas,
when you look at the seat that Crockett is vacating,
it's going to be occupied.
I'm sure here in District 30,
by Freddie Haynes,
who is also a proponent of liberation theology in the social gospel.
This has been around for well over a century
and when you look at people like
whether it's the Georgia Senator, Raphael Warnock
and his whole contingent,
these people, they kind of play it cool,
common, collected,
but they are effective in pushing detrimental policies.
Somebody like a Jasmine Crockett or an AOC,
they're easy to point at and say,
oh, these people shouldn't be in Congress,
they shouldn't be in politics and not fully agree with that.
But for the very reason that, you know,
in the same way that they're very loud and boisterous
and they make no bones about what it is they stand for.
And so it's really easy to defeat their policies.
These more silent and yet deadly people are more effective
and they're for more dangerous.
And so, you know, it's interesting.
I know people and this is my topic there, Chad.
Let me, let me land your plane there
and let me get, circle back,
we'll give you a second cut,
a second bite of the apple,
but Virgil, are you celebrating?
No, I tweeted out this morning,
God is good all the time.
And all the time, God is good.
So while I may not be taking a victory lap,
I do see this as a positive,
as it relates to this class of Congress persons,
women and men who use Congress for content creation.
And that's what they're doing.
When I woke up, I thought about,
there was a movie in 2003 that had Chris,
not Chris Tucker, it was Chris Rock.
It was called Head of State.
And he was playing this role of this character
who the Democrats decided should run for the office of the president.
They had the Democrats polished him up, pushed him out there,
had him use all their talking points.
At the time, he didn't do well.
So what did he do?
In typical fashion, as these movies are done in 2003,
he unplugged, you know, all of what they told him to do,
got ghetto, got loud, got boisterous,
encouraged his brother play by Bernie Mac
to come up and kind of run his campaign.
And so they were kind of tag team
and doing their whole thing during the typhoon.
The crux to the movie was where he gets up and he says,
he asked the question.
And the question he asked is he said,
I asked my niece what was four plus four.
And you know what she said?
She said 44.
And you know what?
That ain't right.
And all the people that were listening to him say that they said,
that's right.
That ain't right.
Now fast forward to 2026.
And we have the same situation.
The ghetto fabulous actions of Jasmine Crockett.
The difference is, at least in the movie,
that character actually wanted to push forward policies
that helped the people in his area,
whereas Jasmine Crockett's got all of the bells and whistles
and all of the vernacular without anything
in the way of production.
She's been in the Senate, she's been in the Congress
rather for three years, zero bills passed.
She's sponsored 40 of them
and not one of them came across the finish line.
She's missed more votes than she did,
than she has television appearances.
She missed 70 votes but had made 120 television appearances.
She's made more in her social media platform
in the way of followers than she ever has
in serving the people in her area.
So at the end of the day, you know,
when people use Cardi B and Kamala Harris
to promote them, they get exactly what they deserve.
And that is to be sent back home, back packing,
and starting from scratch all over again.
Shemeka, do you think this is the last we hear
from Jasmine Crockett in politics and or on television?
I don't think this is the last we'll hear from her.
Simply looking at the financials
and the way that she raised money
when she was actually running during her campaign.
I don't think it's the last that we're here from her
because I do believe that she has people with deep pockets
willing to just throw money behind her.
So we'll see her again in politics or maybe on TV.
I just don't think she's going to completely go away.
However, I am taking a victory lap.
I feel a warm glow in my lower intestines.
I am like, they not like us, they not like us
because while Chad went a bit deeper
and he stuck to politics and I have to respect that,
I feel like this is a black eye to the culture
and I'm so happy about it.
Simply because Jasmine Crockett
was putting on this pretend act that she was ghetto,
that she was hood.
When we know that she was raised elite
and so I'm so glad that this was rejected.
Maybe people will actually be who they are
and represent themselves in a classy way
with some dignity and feel like they don't have to appeal
to the lower ranks of black society
to be accepted or to be heard.
So for me, this is a victory that she was rejected
and I'm excited, I'm celebrating all day.
Chad, I want you to respond to that
in terms of Corey Bush had her ghetto stick
and it blew up in her face.
Jamal Bowman had his ghetto stick, it blew up in his face
and now Jasmine Crockett can't we at least call that a victory
that perhaps black politicians will realize
they got to bring a bit more subsist and just ghetto stick.
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In order to come to that conclusion,
one must first contort the reality to make it fit into one's perception.
What I mean by that is when you look at the number of colored people
who actually voted for Crockett versus those who voted for Telleriko,
the majority of colored people in Texas voted for Crockett.
And so the reality is that Telleriko really
appealed to this kind of mindset that people tend to have
that yes, I'm a Christian, but I believe in progress.
I believe that we should kind of change the way that we think
on homosexuality and transgenderism and all the things.
That Jasmine Crockett didn't exactly lose by a landslide here in Texas.
She got a pretty good turnout.
In fact, people showed up more Democrats showed up more
in this in a tutorial election, this primary election,
than Republicans.
For the first time in the 21st century,
more Democrats showed up to vote than did Republicans.
And so when I look at this thing,
and I look at once again, the effectiveness of the manipulative tactics
and the manipulative, I would say, kind of gift that Telleriko has
when you look at his campaign.
His whole campaign was Republicans want Jasmine Crockett to win
because they know that she's easy to beat.
I'm not so easy to beat.
He appealed to white suburban women.
He appealed to a lot of churchgoers who tend to be progressive.
He appealed to this idea that he was able to win
a kind of Trump favorite district for state representative
at the first time.
He appealed to the fact that he was able to get a lot of legislation
passed and the Texas State House.
Those are the things that he appealed to his effectiveness
in terms of pushing this anti-American, anti-god agenda.
And so if we're looking at this as well at least,
at the very least, it's a kind of referendum on ghetto behavior.
I don't know that colored people are going to take that message
from the loss of Jasmine Crockett.
It might move the needle a little bit,
but not enough to be noticeable.
It sounds like, and answer this quickly,
because I want to follow up,
I want Virgil and Chimiquita respond to what you just said.
But it sounds like you think Teleriko has a chance to win in November.
There are factors that indicate that.
I mean, when you look at the last several senatorial elections,
it wasn't as if Republicans were able to blow Democrats out of the water
by any noticeable degree.
They've been too close for comfort,
especially in a state like Texas.
And so every year people argue that Texas is becoming more and more purple.
And each time the Republicans are able to pull it off.
But when you look at the fact that there has been over the past decade
an influx of people moving to Texas from places like California
and bringing their politics with them.
And when you look at the kind of tactics of Teleriko,
and you look at the fact that once again,
more Democrats voted in this senatorial election than Republicans,
the factors indicate that we are,
we are at the very least moving more to a purple state
if not an all out blue state.
Virgil, what, man, Chad's throwing a wet blanket on our party here.
Teleriko may be worse and has a chance to win.
And black people, or as Chad likes to say, colored people,
are just going to reject the message from this, your reaction.
Yeah, I, you know, I look at it kind of like a, you know,
a game of football game.
And in that, I'm going to celebrate the win today.
And then we'll pivot, you know, we've got, we've got some time.
I do, I do, I don't, let me say it this way.
As far as what, what Chad is sharing, I think he's sharing
what he knows to be true and what actually is true.
Republicans don't get out in primary elections very much.
We have to have something that really stirs us.
All of the energy around this particular election
in the state of Texas was around the Democratic Party.
So that's why you saw them come out in the numbers that they did.
At the, at the end of the day, I, I don't,
I don't think it's difficult to overcome the world view of,
of, of, of, of, I believe it's Teleriko.
I've got, I've, I've, I've got his name up.
I think I'm saying that right.
I don't think it's difficult to, I don't think it's difficult to defeat.
I also think it isn't incumbent upon the Republican party
to identify electable candidates.
Like they've got to start identifying people
that can get elected, that can get across the finish line
and get a message out.
This isn't, you know, this isn't, you know, years and years ago
where we didn't know how to use tools like social media
and, uh, and get a message out.
We, we've got to be more effective.
Um, we have to do more.
I wouldn't, if I were a Republican candidate in that space
that guy would not, would not cause me any consternation at all.
Uh, you know, I, I would just deal with all of the,
the socialistic policies that, that those who are,
who are on the left, want to promote in that space
and just ask the question, is that where we are?
There is a population transfer that's taken place
with all of the illegals that have moved in,
that is transforming what's happening in Texas.
Uh, that's got to be recognized.
But, but, you know, voting, voting rightly,
having candidates that are, that are electable
is incredibly important for the Republican Party.
Shameka, what, what do you think of Chad's contention
that black people are going on?
So what, so what if Jasmine Crocker got beat?
So what if Jamal Bowman, Corey Bush,
um, we'd like our authentically black candidates.
You know, I'm still going to be celebrating
and taking a victory lap because at least the white people
are saying stop.
This is as far as it goes, you know,
it may be entertaining,
but we don't think she's the one that could actually
beat Republicans.
So while this ghetto stick, you know,
keeps us laughing, keeps us entertained,
it's not going to do the job.
And so I am glad that they pushed back
and put a barrier up for that.
Now, if you look at the big picture,
I do hate that James is actually,
um, maybe a better candidate to actually win
a over-ever Republican,
but I am just glad that we stopped her here.
Like, I have to celebrate even the small victory
because, um, in the big picture, yes,
we do want people to see it our way,
but it shows that Jasmine just wasn't running
on anything other than being a super ghetto,
super ratchet, super, let me tell it like it is.
I'm so sick of that.
At least I would have been able to respect her
if she had said these are the policies that I stand on.
These are the things that I am going to push
if I am your Senate choice, you know,
but she didn't do that.
And so I can respect the people of Texas
that said, you know, James, at least,
present policies that we agree with,
even if they're against what I personally believe myself,
it just for me shows that people are sick of the whole stick.
And it may be entertainment,
you may be able to be some type of menstrual,
but it only goes so far.
And so I'm happy about that.
Chad, you got a final fault?
Yeah, so I will concede to what Shemika just said,
particularly the part about in virtual for that matter
that it's a victory for now in terms of kind of repudiating
the antics and the kind of caricature that Crockett has presented.
Although, you know, when it comes specifically to the policies,
once again, that Tolerico stands behind.
These are just, they're really detrimental
to our constitutional republic,
they're detrimental to just our economy,
just the whole gamut.
And one of the things that I really like about what Virgil said
is about, you know, these ideas and these principles,
specifically the heretical principles
for which Tolerico stands, they can be defeated.
And so for me, when it comes to politics and partisanship,
that's not something that I'm into, I know enough about it.
But I think that part, in particular, what Virgil just said,
is the thing that I think is most important,
kind of coming against these principles,
not as it pertains to the republican party,
but as it pertains to the church.
How is it that someone like Tolerico has been able to win
so many Christians and will continue to do so
as he kind of makes his quest to the senatorial seat?
The church has a job to do,
and that is to stand on the gospel first and foremost
and to repudiate this heresy that Tolerico pushes,
not only Tolerico, but again,
so many other proponents of the social gospel
and of liberation theology.
That's the most important thing
because at the end, in the end,
the church will bow in heaven on earth and under the earth.
More important than any election of old,
now or in the future,
is what will be your kind of status,
as you stand before the King of Kings and Lord of Lords.
That's the most important election that matters.
And so we, the church, have an obligation
to preach Christ and him crucified,
and yes, he's running for a senatorial seat, Tolerico,
but he's gone to church after church, after church,
preaching all kinds of heresies on his way
to winning this primary election.
And I think that's what we, the church,
need to look at and to take notice of.
Virgil, I'll give you a final thought if you got one.
No, I thought that was...
I thought what Chad said is absolutely spot on.
He actually stole all of my thunder for the end of it all.
I think that's exactly...
He's exactly right.
I've been in Georgia where I've watched
that kind of thing unfold with other elected officials
who went church to church preaching a false gospel.
They are normally defeated.
Ultimately, God is sovereignly in control.
That doesn't abuse us of our responsibility to get out and vote.
But I go back to what I said at the very beginning.
These people who are engaged in this stick,
they have got to go.
This idea that you can get to Congress
and use Congress for content creation
and TikTok videos for the sake of your own personal population.
Your own personal popularity.
Those days are over.
And those people who have engaged in that,
the Cory Bushes of the world,
the Jasmine Crockets of the world,
I'm glad they're at home.
They need to stay there.
Thank you guys.
I got a final thought I'll do without you guys.
Thank you so much.
Great job as always.
Listen, I think that this is a good thing.
And I think it's a promising thing.
And we should feel hopeful that voters in Texas,
not by a wide margin,
but they still rejected Jasmine Crocket and her ghetto stick.
And I think I'm going to tie it to, like,
the influence of commercial rap music
is starting to wane in America.
And I think in politics,
like this whole ghetto stick that people are doing,
that influence, that popularity,
that influence is starting to wane
in the political sphere.
I do think there's enough Americans,
black and white,
that have had enough.
Like, this ghettoness,
and we have to be tolerant of it.
We have to pretend like it's a part of diversity,
equity, and inclusion.
And that's a part of some good thing
that we're doing by allowing this ghettoness
to influence our culture.
I think America is over it.
And so, yeah, I think Jasmine Crocket is done.
I think Cory Bush is done.
I think Jamal Bowman is done.
I think moving forward,
Americans are going to expect more from black politicians
and black people than just,
hey, show me how ghetto you are.
I'm glad that's over.
We'll see you next time on Harmony.
Music
How did we end up so divided?
Stop fighting and stand far.
Fearless with Jason Whitlock
