Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Up next c J Pierson Uncensored. Part of the yanguish
D network cancel culture is a form of tyranny. Is
this idea that one side of American just go around
and just tell you that you're not allowed to like
someone or something because of their own sets of morals
and stayers that that's how we should judge society off
of their prescribed set of ideals and beliefs or whatever,
(00:23):
that they decide what's good and what's bad. People are
tired of tyranny in all regards, tyranny at all levels
of government. But now I think we're starting to wake up.
Welcome to a fresh, new, brand new episode of c J.
Pierson Uncensored. Guys, I mean, I would ask you if
(00:44):
you're surprised, but all of you are really smart people,
so the answer is obviously going to be no. How
many of you would have thought that they would have
tried to cancel Doctor Seuss because apparently I woke up
one day and that is where we decided to be
as a country one day, that we were just going
to wake up in the morning and try to cancel
Doctor SEUs because apparently Dr Seuss is emblematic, symbolic of
(01:08):
racism and apparently white supremacy. Now that is something that
I'm a little bit confused about. Seriously. You know, I
grew up reading Dr Seuss books. My progressive, liberal parents,
black parents, for the record, bought me said Dr Seuss books.
I never, at one point ever thought that the book
(01:32):
that I was reading was racist. I never felt triggered
by it. I never felt confused by it. I never
felt attacked by it, probably because back then I had
the luxury of growing up in a time where America
still had a little bit of spot and now we
were still pretty soft, still kind of snowflakers. But the
worst of it hadn't really said in. This was pre
(01:52):
you know, Toddler's having sex changes. This was pre pronouns
and people's instagram bios. This was pre you know, all
of that mumbo jumbo. We actually had a little bit
of sanity, not much, but still a little bit of
sanity left in the tank. And so, you know, I
read Dr. Seuss books. My teachers read them to me,
My Black teachers read them to me, my minority teachers
(02:14):
read them to me. I when I whenever they would
say bring a book to class, I would bring Dr SEUs,
and I never got in trouble for spreading bigotry or
white supremacy because no one at that time was really
all that concerned about being woke or was so woke
that they saw racism and everything just as you know,
these types of people what maddens me about them, And
(02:36):
they are single handily cable of seeing racism in every
single thing that exists in the world. They walk outside,
why is the sky boo as oppressive to green? They
walk outside, they see why is the grass green as
oppressive to blue? You know, they are literally cable of
seeing racism, bigotry, and discrimination in every single thing that exists.
(02:57):
And I can't imagine living a life so sad and
just so full of despair, right Like, if everything is
racist and you're constantly saying that this thing is oppressing me,
that thing is oppressing me, how can you really live
like a happy life if everything that you do, every
interaction you have, is a trigger warning for you, or
(03:18):
something that is a microaggression again, or that didn't exist
when little C. J Was six or seven years old
reading Dr Seuss books, because who in the hell knew
what a microaggression was. I still don't know what a
microaggression is, because it's not a real thing. It's just
some some word that these random snowflake liberals made up
(03:40):
one day because they didn't really know how to describe,
because there really wasn't a word to describe it, the
complete emotional turmoil they were going through, because when you
were that unstable, that unhinge is a human being that
the smallest little things make you want to literally have
a pinnic attack, and you create petition and cancel people
(04:01):
and call people to boycott products because oh no, there's
a black woman on a syrup bottle. Oh no, and
Jemima has to go. They there was no word to
describe that type of insanity in the American dictionary and
in the English language there wasn't a word. So they
created one, and that word was microaggression. Something so small,
(04:25):
so minute, so mundane to any real normal human being
that it's called a microaggression. And rightfully so, I'll actually
back the creation of that word, because I think it's
right for them to have created it, because seriously, can
we just talk about the things that these people get
obsessed about. They are trying to cancel a children's book
(04:47):
Dr Seuss a children's book, Cat in the Hat, Green
Eggs and Ham. That is what they're coming for. But really,
again I asked you at the open of the show,
can we really find our sells all that surprised? These
are the same people that came for paw Patrol. These
are the same people that came for syrup and and
(05:08):
and god knows what's next, because already they're starting to
come for women's sports, women's sports, certain women's History month.
It is Women's History Month, and they're sitting they're saying
that women can't even have women's sports anymore. And then
apparently you're transphobic if you say that maybe just maybe
biological men shouldn't be able to compete against well, non
(05:31):
biological men, or you know, maybe that just shad be
a thing. Because women's sports are women's sports, and male
sports are male sports, and that is just how life works.
And if you're triggered by it, if you're upset by it,
I've got to really be frank with you. I've got
to be honest. I can't lie to you. I really
don't care. And most same people in this country, in America,
(05:55):
they also don't care. We are past the point of
tolerance for this insanity. Guys, there should not be a
reason why I should be talking about a Doctor Seuss
book on the podcast this week. I have not talked
about Dr Susan's I was a ten year old boy, like,
why are we talking about Dr Seuss? Why is he
being discontinued from publishing houses? Why is he being taken
(06:19):
off the shelves? Why is that happening? But more importantly,
I think the question we have to ask is why
is it happening in America today? What is wrong with
the fabric of our culture that is enabled this type
of cowardice to be so mainstream that we don't even
(06:40):
get surprised by it anymore. Like I said a few
years ago, when I was young, if someone had told
me that Dr shus was racist, everyone would look at
them like they were crazy, and rightfully so. But now
we're just like, well, that's just the left being the left,
that's just liberals being liberal, that's just democrats demming right.
Why is this normal? And why do we treat it
as if it is so? Because it is not normal
(07:02):
for you to want to go cry and ball up
in a corner in the fuel position because of a
children's book. It's not normal for you to go out
and create petitions about syrup bottles, syrup bottles because you
think that looking at a black woman on a syrup
bottle is oppressing you. So you're saying, okay, and it
(07:22):
was also crazy about this guy's is the lack of
consistency from these people, right, the same people that say
that the age of mama putting her on a syrup
bottle is racist, it's a it's a stereotype or whatever
of black women, of black people whatever. These are the
same people that complaining about black people not being represented enough,
not being saying in mainstream spaces is the phrase that
(07:44):
they like to use. So you make one of the
most recognizable women in advertising anchie mama, and you take
her off the syrup thing, and what what sex are
they gonna be plaining about? Now we're taking off a
black woman off of this, we're ripping away the sure
what like you cannot have both, you cannot live in
(08:05):
both worlds. And guys, I hate I hate it here,
I hate it here, and you can't help but hate
it here if you still have an ouns of sanity.
These people are crazy, absolutely crazy, and we share oxygen
with these people, these people, Oh my god, like I can't.
(08:30):
I literally cannot. And I think that's the feeling that
a lot of people have today. And I never knew
that I would have to make this political, or this
would ever be a political position. But to doctors suits,
even though that you were a raging liberals, some you
can called you a socialist or a communist. I stand
by you. I stand by green Eggs and Ham. I
stand by a cat in the hat. Those were hits,
(08:52):
those were bops. They were great. I'm gonna read them
to my children. Hell, you make me want to go
order a few now, all right. Never thought that would
be a political position to stand with Dr SEUs. Well,
Dr Seuss, I've got your back. I'm with you. But
more importantly, I'm against the cancel culture BS that has
ravaged our nation. It needs to end, and it needs
(09:13):
to end now. People are fed up. But they're not
only fed up with all this stuff, all of these
these cancelations where they're fed with a lot more. They're
fed up with tyranny in general. And this itself, cancel culture,
is a form of tyranny. Is this idea that one
side of American just go around and just tell you
that you're not allowed to like someone or something because
of their own sets of morals and stayers, that that's
(09:35):
how we should judge society, off of their prescribed set
of ideals and beliefs or whatever, that they decide what's
good and what's bad. But people are tired of tyranny
in all regards, tyranny at all levels of government. But
now I think we're starting to wake up. I'll talk
to you about what's happening in Texas, states like Mississippi.
(09:56):
It looks like soon to be Alabama right after the break,
Welcome back, guys. I'm sorry if I got a little
bit loud in that intro of my producer. Maybe he
can turn that down for you guys sake. But oh
my god, I just had some things to get off
my chest, Like seriously, this it's pissing me off at
(10:18):
this point because it's like it's crazy and it's unsurprising.
At the same time, it's still not any less ridiculous,
not any less ridiculous at all. But that's just typical
of the left. But thankfully there's some reason to actually
be happy and hopeful. Um and I'll tell you what
happened yesterday that actually brought me some hope. On Wednesday,
(10:41):
a governor of Texas, Greg Abbott, announced that he was
fully reopening the state of Texas and he was going
to be lifting coronavirus restrictions, basically telling businesses you could
have as many people as you want and mask mandate.
It's gone. Now. This was one of the first states
to do it outside of Florida. And I've got to
tell you a lot of people are rooting for Texas.
(11:01):
I tweeted yesterday that Texas has essentially becomes synonymous with freedom,
because that's really I think that the point that we
have to get at, you know. You know, I've talked
about COVID in previous episodes and and one of the
biggest things that have always infuriated me about the cyclo events,
this entire pandemic is how much we've been lied to
from the people and by the people who were supposed
(11:23):
to trust. You know, our leaders are our policymakers. People
told us in the beginning that we just needed to
wait two weeks. We need to wait two weeks we
had social distance and the pandemic would magically be over.
And then they said that we needed to flatten the curve.
And then we did that. The curve was flattened, and
they said no, no, no, no, no no no, no, just
kidding psych you actually actually real life though, you need
(11:44):
to wait until there was a vaccine, all right, So
we wait months and months and months as vaccines being
developed by Maderna visor Johnson and Johnson. Now all these
different companies, they get emergency authorization to get this, uh
these vaccines approved in record time under President Trum's administration.
It happens, they get approved not thought percent effectiveness, right
for some of these vaccines. We get this vaccine, they
(12:06):
ship it out all across the country. Of course, first
responders get it first. Our frontline workers are elderly people,
and rightfully so. And then for some reason though, you
see states like California, New York saying what hold up, guys,
hold up? We can't actually open up yet we can't.
There's not a vaccines. And I think it comes down
to the fact that we have to come to a
conclusion that we're just not going to allow these people
(12:29):
to tell us what to do anymore. We're not continue
to be bossed around and oppressed. We're gonna have to
actually do something about it. We're either going to fight
for our rights, so we're gonna have them taken away.
And I think what we've seen in places like Florida
where they never really close down. Governor de Sanchel said
that he wasn't going to do that to his state
because he knew the business owners would suffer and that
(12:51):
the economy would be decimated, and so he never closed down.
And look at what's happening there. You see less infections,
less hospitalizations, and that state that you see in states
like New York and states like California with far more
stringent COVID measures. But they're supposed to be the stayer
we compare ourselves to. We're supposed to hold ourselves the
(13:11):
Cuomo Sayer, the man who literally sits sick people into
nursing homes and killed killed your grandmother, your grandpa, your
elderly aunt and uncle. He killed them. But yet he
was the gold standard for what we were supposed to
do in response to COVID. He was the person who
just to model ourselves after, compare ourselves too. But yet
(13:33):
what we see is the media lied to us once
again that they're crazy measures don't actually work. That taking
freedom away from the people, shutting down businesses, enforcing these
ludicrous and assa nine masked mandates would work. But they lied,
and they lied, and we know that they lie because
we see the statistics, We see how Florida is doing,
(13:55):
we see the numbers, and the lie has ended. They
realize that people have woken up that we see through
the Couomo facade, and now they're calling for his resignation.
They went him out of office and aw all of
a sudden, they're trying to get rid of them. And
you know they're trying to rid of him when they
just find all these people who are all of a
sudden coming forward and saying that Cuomo touched me, Kuomo
(14:16):
did this, Cuomo fortunately kissed me. All of this guys,
I love to see the Democrats eat their own and
I gotta say, you know, they're calling for Koomo to
resign now. It should have been a long time ago.
This is a new news, and maybe new to the
American people who only listen to MSNBC and CNN because
they never gave this story the time of day. But
for those of you who were tuned in, who watched
(14:36):
this pandemic. Closely who have stayed on top of the news,
you know that what happened in New York, the basic
suicide or serial killer mentality that Koomo had when he
sent all these sick people into nursing homes. We all
knew about that. We all knew about that, and Koma
failed the people of New York and he should not
(14:57):
only be impeach from office, but that's a strong argument
that he should be currently charged for being just negligent
full stop. But there's hope. There's hope we had because
we're seeing states like Texas say that we're reopening, We're
back open for business. We're done governing by fear, We're
walking by faith. We're gonna look at the fact and
what the facts, Goddess and the facts say. The facts
(15:19):
show that the numbers are trending downward, and unlike other states,
we're not gonna continue just a lie to people and say, well,
one day you're just gonna do this. Guy do that,
I do that. We're actually gonna do what we said
and we're gonna reopen. And then shortly thereafter we saw Mississippi,
led by Governor Tate Reeves, do the same exact thing,
decided to reopen the state because of the numbers that
(15:39):
are being shown. And what I just saw recently before,
shortly before recording this episode, is that the Governor of
Alabama kiv of course where I go to the University
of Alabama, because that she will end the mass mandate
this coming week. Guys, this is how we respond to
all of this. We need to stop allowing tyranny to
prosper and oppression to accepted, and we need to actually
(16:02):
stand up and fight for the rights. And we so
claim to love because for some reason for us so
love all this, all this freedom talk and liberty and
all that stuff. I've never seen people, unfortunately, so willing
to give up their freedom just because it was socially
mandated that they do. But there is a path forward
(16:22):
from here, and I think that people are aware that,
and and and and really it's important that they know this.
And I think people have forgotten is that this is
a government for the people bother people. The government has
power because they have the consent of the government. They
have consent from the people to be governed by them.
The moment they lose that consent, the entire system crumbles.
(16:43):
The House of cards falls, it all goes away, and
all these leaders like Newsom and Cuomo, they work for us.
We don't work for them. You see with Newsom, you
know he has these crazy COVID measures, you sort of
recall petition, gets crazy mass signatures, and what does he
do immediately loosens restrictions. And so that makes you think,
(17:06):
like I thought this was about science. Y'all said that
all these measures, all these regulations, all these laws that
you guys had, they were about science. But when politically
it got tough for you, when it got hard for you,
you just reround me his side. Well, damn, we don't
need those regulations anymore. Besides is telling it's a different thing.
Or maybe it's because the science ever told you a
(17:28):
damn thing and you just contorted a figure political narrative
in an attempt to make Donald Trump look bad and
Biden look good. And maybe that's what this was all about.
Maybe this was all really political, as we all thought
it was for a long long time, and maybe just
maybe now we're all seeing it in vision. Maybe that's
(17:51):
what's happening. And I think a lot of small people
are saying that, And I've got to tell you when
smart people say things like that, maybe it's important that
we listen, and I'm listening. I'm clear out about this,
But I think what's so important is that we don't
fail to learn a lesson from all of this. As
the country begins to reopen and we see states led
(18:14):
by Republicans finally decided to grow a pair and fight
for their freedom, I think what we learned from this
is that we will only lose our freedoms if we
allow it to be lost, and we don't have to
elected leaders who read the Constitution, who know the Constitution,
who know the powers that they have, elected politicians who
aren't concerned about political pageantry but are actually considered about
(18:36):
serving the people of their state. That is what we
should be doing as a country, as a nation, as
a people. But also in addition to that, you also
need leaders who aren't afraid to just tell the left
in the media, I don't even damn what you think, right,
That is what we need to do more of. We
less people in Republican politics tap dancing for CNN and
(18:58):
MSNBC producers and actually serving the people that actually got
them elected. Because you know, I see the laugh they're
like saying Abbot's killing all these people takes killing all
these people, ka kill all these people because they decide
to loosen these restrictions. Here's the deal. All that these
governors have decided to do is reduced these mandates. They
(19:19):
have not said that you can't wear a mask if
you want to. If you want to wear a mask,
go wear a mask. If you want a social distance,
go social distance. If you don't want to go to bars,
don't go to bars. No one is dragging you out
of your house, throwing you into rounders. And for those
of you who talk them about rounders, who are listening
their bravery big bar here in Toscaloosa, no one is
(19:40):
throwing you into the bar. No one is throwing you
into a crowded movie theater or taking you to a
full capacity stadium. You make the choice to go, and
if you're really that scared of COVID, they don't leave
your house. That is also a freedom, the freedom to
make the choices about your life that you want. But
to all those people who are living their lives so fearful,
(20:03):
so scared, you don't get to control my life based
on your fear. You don't have that right. You will
never have that right and I will never give you
that rent. We'll wrap it up after the break. Once up, guys,
welcome back. So, of course we talked about the entire
(20:26):
Dr SEUs thing going all. We've talked about the good
news coming out of Texas, Mississippi, and hopefully soon Alabama.
But what we're also seeing, thankfully, is that Republicans actually
decided to have some backbone this week. And unfortunately I
don't get to talk about that often on this show
because it unfortunately doesn't happen too often. But near A Tandon,
(20:46):
who was the nominee to leave the Office of Management
and Budget by the Biden administration, failed had her nomination
with drawing because it lacks support on the hill after
Senator Joe Mansion of West Virginia Conservative Democrats decided that
he would be voting against it, and they they actually
stood up for themselves and they said that we're not
gonna take it, We're not gonna deal with approaches. Just so,
(21:08):
being this non Parson position, who's who said the most
vile things about Republicans, the most vile things about even
progressives in our party, who is truly just a Hillary
playing Lackey, We're not going to take it. Uh, and
so I'm gonna commend the Republican Caucus for doing that
great job to all of you. But also moving ahead
some personal news here. Um. Actually, guys had the honor
(21:30):
of this past week. You probably didn't see much on
Twitter from me because I was actually in the middle
of a campaign for s g A sitting here at
the US of Alabama, UM, which I am excited to
say that I I won that race and it was. UM.
It's the honor of a life time these serving the
students of Alabama and really having the opportunity to give
back and bring a diverse perspective UM to student government
(21:52):
here at the university. You know, conservative students asked me
all the time. They message me, they text me, they
DM me. They're like, how do I stop my univer
receive from becoming so far left, so liberal, and so
far gone. I think the way that you do that
is by answering the call to lead, by rising up
and saying that I'm going to stand up and fight
for the campus that I love. Because here's the deal.
(22:14):
Most of these people who go to these liberal schools,
we love our schools. We do like if you go
to you g A, You love you g A even
if it's a pretty liberal school. If you go to Clemson,
even though I don't know why you would go to Clemson,
you love Clemson because it's Clemson. To you. There's an
emotional connection to it. Even if you hate how far
left the professors are, how some far left some of
(22:36):
the students there are, you still love Clemson. You want
the best for Clemson. The same hold true for me
when it comes to Alabama. Guys, you have to care enough,
love your university enough, love your institution enough, loved the
movement enough to rise up and say, well, guys, you
want to talk about diversity, equity and inclusion, Let's talk
about the diversity of viewpoint. Let's talk about the equity,
(22:58):
the equality between liberals and conservatives. Let's talk about the
inclusion of conservative viewpoints. If you really believe in the
things that you professed and the progressiveness that you profess,
then let's actually put that into practice. Why won't you
support a conservative? Why won't you support someone who has
ideals different from your own? Get them on the record.
And the way that you do that is by running
(23:19):
for office. Guys, these student governments across the country. They
hold so much power, but it's up to you to
take advantage of It's up for you to answer the
call and say, well, guys, I hate how liberal university
is getting. I think that I could actually do something
to change that. And I think that there's a group
of people who feel the same way as me, who
offered me a platform and an opportunity to get elected
(23:40):
to office and to do some really good things. Because
I'll tell you, you know, I'm fortunate to get to
yourself and where it's probably one of the the more conservative
public universities in the country, But not everyone has that luxury,
and my university even is still not perfect. There's still
work to be done here, which is why I ran
the reason conservatives are such a rare breed is not
because I actually don't think we're all that outnumbered. I
(24:02):
think there are a lot of conservative young people. I
think it's just because so many young people are scared
of what people are gonna say, and how people are
gonna feel, and how people are going to react to
their conservative ideals. But I want you to realize the
influence you can have on being the courageous person in
the room has the audacity to raise their hand as
the audacity to stand up and fight for the things
that they believe in, because it inspires others to fight
(24:25):
and speak up. It really does, Like seriously, when people
see other people doing what they wish they have the
courage should do, it makes them think and become introspective
and look within themselves and say, maybe I actually do
have the courage to do that thing. Maybe I am
stronger than I think I am. Maybe I actually do
have it in me to go lead, to go be
(24:47):
the conservative ambassador that I want to be, to go
be the person who was going to fight for our
country and speak up about the things in which I believe.
Maybe I can be like Candis Owens or Charlie Kirk,
Ryan Fournier or me if you like me, I actually
get too much like they're like, how do I do
what you do the way that you do what I do?
It's simple. You go out, you speak up for you
(25:10):
believe in, and you don't give a damn about the
backlash you're going to get. All you care about saying
true to yourself and fight for the country that you love.
Does no matter who you piss off, who you offend,
what snowflake gets upset, has to cancel. You make some
bs petition you kicked out of school that comes with
the job. Unfortunately, Hey, you's gonna hate, but you do
it because your heart is in the right place, because
(25:33):
you love this country. And there are so many ways
for us to change our campuses, and I sometimes feel
as if we don't take advantage of it enough. But
I need you, guys, my listeners on college campuses and
high schools. You need to fight where you are and
parents listening, you need to let your kids know that
(25:54):
you have their back and let them see you fight,
let them see you care enough to go out and
speak out for what you believe. I think it's inspiring
and that can be the impetus that changes a campus,
a community, or country. Hey guys, c J. Pierson here,
join us right here on Apple podcast, I Heart Radio
(26:16):
or wherever you get your podcast for the same hard
hitting truth because we'll never stop fighting for you right
here on c J. Pierson noncensored c J. Pierson uncensored
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